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JUDITH OF BLUE LAKE RANCH

by

JACKSON GREGORY

Author of
The Joyous Trouble Maker, Six Feet-Four, Etc.

Illustrated by W. Herbert Dunton







[Frontispiece: Judith's spurs answered him, and the bit . . . brought
him about, whirling . . . bucking as only . . . a devil-hearted horse
knows how to buck.]




New York
Grosset & Dunlap
Publishers
Copyright, 1919, by
Charles Scribner's Sons
Published March, 1919
Reprinted April, 1920
Copyright, 1917, 1918, by the Ridgeway Company




CONTENTS


CHAPTER

      I. BUD LEE WANTS TO KNOW
     II. JUDITH TAKES A HAND
    III. AND RIDES AN OUTLAW
     IV. JUDITH PUTS IT STRAIGHT
      V. THE BIGNESS OF THE VENTURE
     VI. YOUNG HAMPTON REGISTERS A PROTEST
    VII. THE HAPPENING IN SQUAW CREEK CAÑON
   VIII. RIFLE SHOTS FROM THE CLIFFS
     IX. THE OLD TRAIL
      X. UNDER FIRE
     XI. IN THE OLD CABIN
    XII. PARDNERS
   XIII. THE CAPTURE OF SHORTY
    XIV. SPRINGTIME AND A VISION
     XV. JUST A GIRL, AFTER ALL
    XVI. POKER FACE AND A WHITE PIGEON
   XVII. "ONCE A FOOL--ALWAYS A FOOL"
  XVIII. JUDITH TRIUMPHANT
    XIX. BUD LEE SEEKS CROOKED CHRIS QUINNION
     XX. THE FIGHT AT THE JAILBIRD
    XXI. BURNING MEMORY
   XXII. PLAYING THE GAME
  XXIII. THE WRATH OF POLLOCK HAMPTON
   XXIV. A SIGNAL-FIRE?
    XXV. THE TOOLS WHICH TREVORS USED
   XXVI. JUDITH'S PERIL
  XXVII. ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS
 XXVIII. BACON, KISSES, AND A CONFESSION
   XXIX. LEE AND OLD MAN CARSON RIDE TOGETHER
    XXX. THE FIGHT
   XXXI. YES, JUDITH WAS WAITING




ILLUSTRATIONS

Judith's spurs answered him, and the bit . . . brought him about,
whirling . . . bucking as only . . . a devil-hearted horse knows how to
buck . . . . . . _Frontispiece_

A lean, muscular hand fell lightly upon his shoulder and he was jerked
back promptly

Quinnion was down and shooting, with but ten steps . . . between him
and the man whom he sought to kill

"You'll find your work cut out for you."




Judith of Blue Lake Ranch


I

BUD LEE WANTS TO KNOW

Bud Lee, horse foreman of the Blue Lake Ranch, sat upon the gate of the
home corral, builded a cigarette with slow brown fingers, and stared
across the broken fields of the upper valley to the rosy glow above the
pine-timbered ridge where the sun was coming up.  His customary gravity
was unusually pronounced.

"If a man's got the hunch an egg is bad," he mused, "is that a real
good and sufficient reason why he should go poking his finger inside
the shell?  I want to know!"

Tommy Burkitt, the youngest wage-earner of the outfit and a profound
admirer of all that taciturnity, good-humor, and quick capability which
went into the make-up of Bud Lee, approached from the ranch-house on
the knoll.  "Hi, Bud!" he called.  "Trevors wants you.  On the jump."

Lee watched Tommy coming on with that wide, rocking gait of a man used
to much riding and little walking.  The deep gravity in the foreman's
eyes was touched with a little twinkle by way of greeting.

Burkitt stopped at the gate, looking up at Lee.  "On the jump, Trevors
said," he repeated.

"The hell he did," said Lee pleasantly.  "How old are you this morning,
Tommy?"

Burkitt blushed.  "Aw, quit it, Bud," he grinned.  Involuntarily the
boy's big square hand rose to the tender growth upon lip and chin
which, like the flush in the eastern sky, was but a vague promise of a
greater glory to be.

"A hair for each year," continued the quiet-voiced man.  "Ten on one
side, nine on the other."

"Ain't you going to do what Trevors says?" demanded Tommy.

For a moment Lee sat still, his cigarette unlighted, his broad black
hat far back upon his close-cropped hair, his eyes serenely
contemplative upon the pink of the sky above the pines.  Then he
slipped from his place and, though each single movement gave an
impression of great leisureliness, it was but a flash of time until he
stood beside Burkitt.

"Stick around a wee bit, laddie," he said gently, a lean brown hand
resting lightly on the boy's square shoulder.  "A man can't see what is
on the cards until they're tipped, but it's always a fair gamble that
between dawn and dusk I'll gather up my string of colts and crowd on.
If I do, you'll want to come along?"

He smiled at young Burkitt's eagerness and turned away toward the
ranch-house and Bayne Trevors, thus putting an early end to an
enthusiastic acquiescence.  Tommy watched the tall man moving swiftly
away through the brightening dawn.

"They ain't no more men ever foaled like him," meditated Tommy, in an
approval so profound as to be little less than out-and-out devotion.

And, indeed, one might ride up and down the world for many a day and
not find a man who was Bud Lee's superior in "the things that count."
As tall as most, with sufficient shoulders, a slender body,
narrow-hipped, he carried himself as perhaps his forebears walked in a
day when open forests or sheltered caverns housed them, with a lithe
gracefulness born of the perfect play of superb physical development.
His muscles, even in the slightest movement, flowed liquidly; he had
slipped from his place on the corral gate less like a man than like
some great, splendid cat.  The skin of hands, face, throat, was very
dark, whether by inheritance or because of long exposure to sun and
wind, it would have been difficult to say.  The eyes were dark, very
keen, and yet reminiscently grave.  From under their black brows they
had the habit of appearing to be reluctantly withdrawn from some great
distance to come to rest, steady and calm, upon the man with whom he
chanced to be speaking.  Such are the serene, dispassionate eyes of one
who for many months of the year goes companionless, save for what
communion he may find in the silent passes of the mountains, in the
wide sweep of the meadow-lands or in the soul of his horse.

The gaunt, sure-footed form was lost to Tommy's eyes; Lee had passed
beyond the clump of wild lilacs whose glistening, heart-shaped leaves
screened the open court about which the ranch-house was built.  A
strangely elaborate ranch-house, this one, set here so far apart from
the world of rich residences.  There was a score of rooms in the great,
one-story, rambling edifice of rudely squared timbers set in
field-stone and cement, rooms now closed and locked; there were
flower-gardens still cultivated daily by José, the half-breed; a pretty
court with a fountain and many roses, out upon which a dozen doorways
looked; wide verandas with glimpses beyond of fireplaces and long
expanses of polished floor.  For, until recently, this had been not
only the headquarters of Blue Lake Ranch, but the home as well of the
chief of its several owners.  Luke Sanford, whose own efforts alone had
made him at forty-five a man to be reckoned with, had followed his
fancy here extensively and expensively, allowing himself this one
luxury of his many lean, hard years.  Then, six months ago, just as his
ambitions were stepping to fresh heights, just as his hands were
filling with newer, greater endeavor, there had come the mishap in the
mountains and Sanford's tragic death.

Lee passed silently through the courtyard, by the fountain which in the
brightening air was like a chain of silver run through invisible hands,
down the veranda bathed in the perfume of full-blown roses, and so came
to the door at the far end.  The door stood open; within was the office
of Bayne Trevors, general manager.  Lee entered, his hat still far back
upon his head.  The sound of his boots upon the bare floor caused
Trevors to look up quickly.

"Hello, Lee," he said quietly.  "Wait a minute, will you?"

Quite a different type from Lee, Bayne Trevors was heavy and square and
hard.  His eyes were the glinting gray eyes of a man who is forceful,
dynamic, the sort of man who is a better captain than lieutenant, whose
hands are strong to grasp life by the throat and demand that she stand
and deliver.  Only because of his wide and successful experience, of
his initiative, of his way of quick, decisive action mated to a marked
executive ability, had Luke Sanford chosen Bayne Trevors as his
right-hand man in so colossal a venture as the Blue Lake Ranch.  Only
because of the same pushing, vigorous personality was he this morning
general manager, with the unlimited authority of a dictator over a
petty principality.

In a moment Trevors lifted his frowning eyes from the table, turning in
his chair to confront Lee, who stood lounging in leisurely manner
against the door-jamb.

"That young idiot wants money again," he growled, his voice as sharp
and quick as his eyes.  "As if I didn't have enough to contend with
already!"

"Meaning young Hampton, I take it?" said Lee quietly.

Trevors nodded savagely.

"Telegram.  Caught it over the line the last thing last night.  We'll
have to sell some horses this time, Lee."

Lee's eyes narrowed imperceptibly.  "I didn't plan to do any selling
for six months yet," he said, not in expostulation but merely in
explanation.  "They're not ready."

"How many three-year-olds have you got in your string in Big Meadow?"
asked Trevors crisply.

"Counting those eleven Red Duke colts?"

"Counting everything.  How many?"

"Seventy-three."

The general manager's pencil wrote upon the pad in front of him "73,"
then swiftly multiplied it by 50.  Lee saw the result, 3,650 set down
with the dollar sign in front of it.  He said nothing.

"What would you say to fifty dollars a head for them?" asked Trevors,
whirling again in his swivel chair.  "Three thousand six fifty for the
bunch?"

"I'd say the same," answered Lee deliberately, "that I'd say to a man
that offered me two bits for Daylight or Ladybird.  I just naturally
wouldn't say anything at all."

"Who are Daylight and Ladybird?" demanded Trevors.

"They're two of _my_ little horses," said Lee gently, "that no man's
got the money to buy."

Trevors smiled cynically.  "What are the seventy-three colts worth
then?"

"Right now, when I'm just ready to break 'em in," said Bud Lee
thoughtfully, "the worst of that string is worth fifty dollars.  I'd
say twenty of the herd ought to bring fifty dollars a head; twenty more
ought to bring sixty; ten are worth seventy-five; ten are worth an even
hundred; seven of the Red Duke stock are good for a hundred and a
quarter; the other four Red Dukes and the three Robert the Devils are
worth a hundred and fifty a head.  The whole bunch, an easy fifty-seven
hundred little iron men.  Which," he continued dryly, "is considerable
more than the thirty-six hundred you're talking about.  And, give me
six months, and I'll boost that fifty-seven hundred.  Lord, man, that
chestnut out of Black Babe by Hazard, is a real horse!  Fifty
dollars----"

He stared hard at Trevors a moment.  And then, partially voicing the
thought with which he had grappled upon the corral gate, he added
meditatively:  "There's something almighty peculiar about an outfit
that will listen to a man offer fifty bucks on a string like that."

His eyes, cool and steady, met Trevors's in a long look which was
little short of a challenge.

"Just how far does that go, Lee?" asked the manager curtly.

"As far as you like," replied the horse foreman coolly.  "Are you going
to sell those three-year-olds for thirty-six hundred?"

"Yes," answered Trevors bluntly, "I am.  What are you going to do about
it?"

"Ask for my time, I guess," and although his voice was gentle and even
pleasant, his eyes were hard.  "I'll take my own little string and move
on.

"Curse it!" cried Trevors heatedly.  "What difference does it make to
you?  What business is it of yours how I sell?  You draw down your
monthly pay, don't you?  I raised you a notch last month without your
asking for it, didn't I?"

"That's so," agreed the foreman equably.  "It's a cinch none of the
boys have any kick coming at the wages."

For a moment Trevors sat frowning up at Lee's inscrutable face.  Then
he laughed shortly.  "Look here, Bud," he said good-humoredly, an
obvious seriousness of purpose under the light tone.  "I want to talk
with you before you do anything rash.  Sit down."  But Lee remained
standing, merely saying, "Shoot."

"I wonder," explained Trevors, "if the boys understand just the size of
the job I've got in my hands?  You know that the ranch is a
million-dollar outfit; you know that you can ride fifteen miles without
getting off the home-range; you know that we are doing a dozen
different kinds of farming and stock-raising.  But you don't know just
how short the money is!  There's that young idiot now, Hampton.  He
holds a third interest and I've got to consider what he says, even if
he is a weak-minded, inbred pup that can't do anything but spend an
inheritance like the born fool he is.  His share is mortgaged; I've
tried to pay the mortgage off.  I've got to keep the interest up.
Interest alone amounts, to three thousand dollars a year.  Think of
that!  Then there's Luke Sanford dead and his one-third interest left
to another young fool, a girl!"

Trevors's fist came smashing down upon his table.  "A girl!" he
repeated savagely.  "Worse than young Hampton, by Heaven!  Every two
weeks she's writing for a report, eternally butting in, making
suggestions, hampering me until I'm sick of the job."

"That would be Luke's girl, Judith?"

"Yes.  Two of the three owners' kids, writing me at every turn.  And
the third owner, Timothy Gray, the only sensible one of the lot, has
just up and sold out his share, and I suppose I'll be hearing next that
some superannuated female in an old lady's home has inherited a fortune
and bought him out.  Why, do you think I'd hold on to my job here for
ten minutes if it wasn't that my reputation is in making a go of the
thing?  And now you, the best man I've got, throw me down!"

"I don't see," said Lee slowly, after a brief pause, "just what good it
does to sell a string of real horses like they were sheep.  Half of
that herd is real horse-flesh, I tell you."

"Hampton wants money.  And besides, a horse is a horse."

"Is it?"  A hard smile touched Lee's lips.  "That's just where a man
makes a mistake.  Some horses are cows, some are clean spirit.  You can
stake your boots on that, Trevors."

"Well," snapped Trevors, "suppose you are right.  I've got to raise
three thousand dollars in a hurry.  Where will I get it?"

"Who is offering fifty dollars a head for those horses?" asked Lee
abruptly.  "It might be the Big Western Lumber Company?"

"Yes."

"Uh-huh.  Well, you can kill the rats in your own barn, Trevors.  I'll
go look for a job somewhere else."

Bayne Trevors, his lips tightly compressed, his eyes steady, a faint,
angry flush in his cheeks, checked what words were flowing to his
tongue and looked keenly at his foreman.  Lee met his regard with cool
unconcern.  Then, just as Trevors was about to speak, there came an
interruption.




II

JUDITH TAKES A HAND

The quiet of the morning was broken by the quick thud of a horse's shod
hoofs on the hard ground of the courtyard.  Bud Lee in the doorway
turned to see a strange horse drawn up so that upon its four bunched
hoofs it slid to a standstill; saw a slender figure, which in the early
light he mistook for a boy, slip out of the saddle.  And then,
suddenly, a girl, the spurs of her little riding-boots making jingling
music on the veranda, her riding-quirt swinging from her wrist, had
stepped by him and was looking with bright, snapping eyes from him to
Trevors.

"I am Judith Sanford," she announced briefly, and there was a note in
her young voice which went ringing, bell-like, through the still air.
"Is one of you men Bayne Trevors?"

A quick, shadowy smile came and went upon the lips of Bud Lee.  It
struck him that she might have said in just that way: "I am the Queen
of England and I am running my own kingdom!"  He looked at her with
eyes filled with open interest and curiosity, making swift appraisal of
the flush in the sun-browned cheeks, the confusion of dark, curling
hair disturbed by her furious riding, the vivid, red-blooded beauty of
her.  Mouth and eyes and the very carriage of the dark head upon her
superb white throat announced boldly and triumphantly that here was no
wax-petalled lily of a lady but rather a maid whose blood, like the
blood of the father before her, was turbulent and hot and must boil
like a wild mountain-stream at opposition.  Her eyes, a little darker
than Trevors's, were the eyes of fighting stock.

Trevors, irritated already, turned hard eyes up at her from under
corrugated brows.  He did not move in his chair.  Nor did Lee stir
except that now he removed his hat.

"I am Trevors," said the general manager curtly.  "And, whether you are
Judith Sanford or the Queen of Siam, I am busy right now."

"He got the queen idea, too!" was the quick thought back of Bud Lee's
fading smile.

"You talk soft with me, Trevors!" cried the girl passionately, "if you
want to hold your job five minutes!  I'll tolerate none of your high
and mighty airs!"

Trevors laughed at her, a sneer in his laugh.  "I talk the way I talk,"
he answered roughly.  "If people don't like the sound of it they don't
have to listen!  Lee, you round up those seventy-three horses and crowd
them over the ridge to the lumber-camp.  Or, if you want to quit, quit
now and I'll send a sane man."

The hot color mounted higher in the girl's face, a new anger leaped up
in her eyes.

"Take no orders this morning that I don't give," she said, for a moment
turning her eyes upon Lee.  And to Trevors: "Busy or not busy, you take
time right now to answer my questions.  I've got your reports and all
they tell me is that you are going in the hole as fast as you can.  You
are spending thousands of dollars needlessly.  What business have you
got selling off my young steers at a sacrifice?  What in the name of
folly did you build those three miles of fence for?"

"Go get those horses, Lee," said Trevors, ignoring her.

Again she spoke to Lee, saying crisply: "What horses is he talking
about?"

With his deep gravity at its deepest, Bud Lee answered: "All L-S stock.
The eleven Red Duke three-year-olds; the two Robert the Devil colts;
Brown Babe's filly, Comet----"

"All mine, every running hoof of 'em," she said, cutting in.  "What
does Trevors want you to do with them?  Give them away for ten dollars
a head or cut their throats?"

"Look here--" cried Trevors angrily, on his feet now.

"You shut up!" commanded the girl sharply.  "Lee, you answer me."

"He's selling them fifty dollars a head," he said with a secret joy in
his heart as he glanced at Trevors's flushed face.

"Fifty dollars!" Judith gasped.  "Fifty dollars for a Red Duke colt
like Comet!"

She stared at Lee as though she could not believe it.  He merely stared
back at her, wondering just how much she knew about horse-flesh.

Then, suddenly, she whirled again upon Trevors.

"I came out to see if you were a crook or just a fool," she told him,
her words like a slap in his face.  "No man could be so big a fool as
that!  You--you crook!"

The muscles under Bayne Trevors's jaws corded.  "You've said about
enough," he shot back at her.  "And even if you do own a third of this
outfit, I'll have you understand that I am the manager here and that I
do what I like."

From her bosom she snatched a big envelope, tossing it to the table.
"Look at that," she ordered him.  "You big thief!  I've mortgaged my
holding for fifty thousand dollars and I've bought in Timothy Gray's
share.  I swing two votes out of three now, Bayne Trevors.  And the
first thing I do is run you out, you great big grafting fathead!  You
_would_ chuck Luke Sanford's outfit to the dogs, would you?  Get off
the ranch.  You're fired!"

"You can't do a thing like this!" snapped Trevors, after one swift
glance at the papers he had whisked out of their covering.

"I can't, can't I?" she jeered at him.  "Don't you fool yourself for
one little minute!  Pack your little trunk and hammer the trail."

"I'll do nothing of the kind.  Why, I don't know even who you are!  You
say that you are Judith Sanford."  He shrugged his massive shoulders.
"How do I know what game you are up to?  Wayward maidens," and in his
rage he sneered at her evilly, "have been known before to lie like
other people!"

"You can't bluff me for two seconds, Bayne Trevors," she blazed at him.
"You know who I am, all right.  Send for Sunny Harper," she ended
sharply.

"Discharged three months ago," Trevors told her with a show of teeth.

"Johnny Hodge, then," she commanded.  "Or Tod Bruce or Bing Kelley.
They all know me."

"Fired long ago, all of them," laughed Trevors, "to make room for
competent men."

"To make room for more crooks!" she cried, her own brown hands balled
into fists scarcely less hard than Trevors's had been.  Then for the
third time she turned upon Lee.  "You are one of his new thieves, I
suppose?"

"Thank you, ma'am," said Bud Lee gravely.

"Well, answer me.  Are you?"

"No, ma'am," he told her, with no hint of a twinkle in his calm eyes.
"Leastwise, not his exactly.  You see, I do all my killing and highway
robbing on my own hook.  It's just a way I have."

"Well," Judith sniffed, "I don't know.  It will be a jolt to me if
there's a square man left on the ranch!  Go down to the bunk-house and
tell the cook I'm here and I'm hungry as a wild-cat.  Tell him and any
of the boys that are down there that I've come to stay and that Trevors
is fired.  They take orders from me and no one else.  And hurry, if you
know how.  Goodness knows, you look as though it would take you half an
hour to turn around!"

"Thank you, ma'am," said Bud Lee.  "But you see I had just told Trevors
here he could count me out.  I'm not working for the Blue Lake any
more.  As I go down to the corral, shall I send up one of the boys to
take your orders?"

There was a little smile under the last words, just as there was a
little smile in Bud Lee's heart at the thought of the boys taking
orders from a little slip of a girl.  Inside he was chuckling, vastly
delighted with the comedy of the morning.

"She's a sure-enough little wonder-bird, all right," he mused.  "But,
say, what does she want to butt in on a man's-size job for, I want to
know?"

"Lee," called Trevors, "you take orders from me or no one on this
ranch.  You can go now.  And just keep your mouth shut."

Bud Lee stood there in the doorway, his hat spinning upon a brown
forefinger, his thoughts his own.  He was turning to go out and down to
his horse when he saw the look in Trevors's eyes, a look of consuming
rage.  The general manager's voice had been hoarse.

"I guess," said Lee quietly, "that I'll stick around until you two get
through quarrelling.  I might come in handy somehow."

"Damn you," shouted Trevors, "get out!"

"Cut out the swear-words, Trevors," said Lee with quiet sternness.
"There's a lady here."

"Lady!" scoffed Trevors.  He laughed contemptuously.  "Where's your
lady?  That?" and he levelled a scornful finger at the girl.  "A
ranting tough of a female who brings a breath of the stables with her
and scolds like a fishwife. . . ."

"Shut up!" said Lee, crossing the room with quick strides, his face
thrust forward a little.

"You shut up!"  It was Judith's voice as Judith's hand fell upon Bud
Lee's shoulder, pushing him aside.  "If I couldn't take care of myself
do you think I'd be fool enough to take over a job like running the
Blue Lake?  Now--" and with blazing eyes she confronted Trevors--"if
you've got any more nice little things to say, suppose you say them to
me!"

Trevors's temper had had ample provocation and now stood naked and hot
in his hard eyes.  In a blind instant he laid his tongue to a word
which would have sent Bud Lee at his throat.  But Judith stood between
them and, like an echo to the word, came the resounding slap as
Judith's open palm smote Trevors's cheek.

"You wildcat!" he cried.  And his two big hands flew out, seeking her
shoulders.

"Stand back!" called Judith.  "Just because you are bigger than I am,
don't make any mistake!  Stand back, I tell you!"

Bud Lee marvelled at the swiftness with which her hand had gone into
her blouse and out again, a small-caliber revolver in the steady
fingers now.  He had never known a man--himself possibly
excepted--quicker at the draw.

But Bayne Trevors, from whose make-up cowardice had been omitted,
laughed sneeringly at her and did not stand back.  His two hands out
before him, his face crimson, he came on.

"Fool!" cried the girl.  "Fool!"

Still he came on.  Lee gathered himself to spring.

Judith fired.  Once, and Trevors's right arm fell to his side.  A
second time, and Trevors's left arm hung limp like the other.  The
crimson was gone from his face now.  It was dead white.  Little beads
of sweat began to form on his brow.

Lee turned astonished eyes to Judith.

"Now you know who's running this outfit, don't you?" she said coolly.
"Lee, have a team hitched up to carry Trevors wherever he wants to go.
He's not hurt much; I just winged him.  And then tell the cook about my
breakfast."

But Lee stood and looked at her.  He had no remark to offer.  Then he
turned to go upon her bidding.  As he went down to the bunk-house he
said softly under his breath: "Well, I'm damned.  I most certainly am!"




III

AND RIDES AN OUTLAW

Wrinkled, grizzled old half-breed José, his hands trembling with
eagerness, stood in the smaller rose-garden culling the perfect buds, a
joyous tear running its zigzag way down each cheek.

"_La señorita_ ees come home!" he announced triumphantly as Lee drew
near on his way to the bunk-house.  "_Jesús Maria_!  Een my heart it is
like the singing of leetle birdies.  _Mira, señor_.  My flowers
bloomin' the brighter, already--no?"

Bud Lee paused.  "So you know Miss Sanford then?" he asked.

José threw out his hands and opened his night-black eyes to their most
enormous extent.  "Do I know God?" he demanded.

"Well," smiled Bud, "as to that. . . ."

"But, señor," cried the devout José, "like on holy days I feel that
Dios comes to sit down in the corner of my heart, so without seeing _la
señorita_ I know she ees come home!  She ees in the air like the light
of sun, like the sweetness of my roses!"

"You've known her a long time, Joe?"

"Seence she ees born!" and José, unashamed, wiped away a tear upon the
back of a leathery hand.  "Señor Sanford and me, señor, we teach her
when she ees so leetle!"  José's shaking hand was lowered until it
marked the stature of a twelve-inch pigmy.  In all things must the old
fellow gain his emphasis by exaggeration which more often than not took
the form of plain lying.  "Never at all unteel one year ago does she
leave us and the _rancho_.  We, us two who love her, señor, learn her
to walk and to ride and to shoot and to talk.  You shall hear her say,
'_Buenos dias, José, mi amigo_!'  You shall see her kees the cheek of
old José."

Again his leathery hand was put in requisition, this time to wipe clean
the cheek to be honored.  "And one theeng I tell you, señor," he added
confidentially.  "Her papa was a wild devil before her.  Her mama ees
grow up on the ranch; and when she marry _el señor_ Sanford was like a
wild boy.  And _mi señorita_, she ees the cross be tween a wild devil
and a sweet saint, señor _Madre de Dios_!  I would go down to hell for
her to bring back fire to warm her leetle feet een weenter!"

Lee went thoughtfully on his way to the bunk-house.  The cook, an
importation of Bayne Trevors, a big, upstanding fellow with bare arms
covered with flour, was putting on the breakfast to which a dozen
rough-garbed men were sitting down.

"I've got orders for you fellows," said Lee from the doorway.  "The
boss of the outfit, the real owner, you know, just blew in.  Up at the
house.  Says you boys are to stick around to take orders straight from
headquarters.  You, Benny," to the cook, "are to have a man's-size
breakfast ready in a jiffy."

Naturally Benny led the clamor with a string of oaths.  What in blazes
did the owner of the ranch have to show up for anyway?--he wanted to
know.  He accepted the fact as a personal affront.  Who was this
owner?--demanded Ward Hannon, the foreman of the lower ranch, where the
alfalfa-fields were.

Bud Lee explained gravely that the newcomer was some sort of relative
of old Luke Sanford, who had recently acquired a controlling interest
in the ranch.  Ward Hannon grunted contemptuously.  "The Lord deliver
us!" he moaned.  "Eastern jasper!  One of the know-all-about-it brand,
huh, Bud?  I'll bet he combs his hair in the middle and smokes
cigareets out'n a box!  The putty-headed loons can't even roll their
own smokes."

"Don't believe," hazarded Lee indifferently, "from the looks of our
visitor that--that the owner smokes anything!"

"Listen to that!" grunted Ward Hannon.

"Softy, huh?"

"Well," Bud admitted slowly, "looks sort of like a girl, you know!"

"Wouldn't that choke you?" demanded Carson, the cow foreman, a thin,
awkward little man, gray in the service of "real men."  "Taking orders
off'n a fool Easterner's bad enough.  But old man or young, Bud?"

"Just a kid," was Lee's further dampening news.  And as he nonchalantly
buttered his hotcakes he added carelessly: "Something of a scrapper,
though.  Just put two thirty-two calibers into Trevors."

They stared at him incredulously.  Then Carson's dry cackle led the
laughter.

"You're the biggest liar, Bud Lee," said the old man good-naturedly, "I
ever focussed my two eyes on.  I'll lay an even bet there ain't nobody
showed a-tall up this morning."

"You, Tommy," said Lee to the boy at his side, "shovel your grub down
lively and go hitch Molly and old Pie-face to the buckboard.  That's
orders from headquarters," he grinned.  "Trevors is to be hauled away
first thing."

Tommy looked curiously at his superior.  "On the level, Bud?" he asked
doubtingly.

"On the level, laddie," was the quiet response.

And young Burkitt, wondering, but doubting no longer, hastened with his
breakfast.

The others, looking at Lee's sober face questioningly, fired a
broadside of inquiries at him.  But they got no further information.

"I've told you boys all the news," he announced positively.  "Lordy!
Isn't that an earful for this time of day?  The real boss is on the
job: Trevors is winged; you are to stick around for orders from
headquarters.  If you want to know any more'n that, why--just go up to
the house and ask your blamed questions."

Out of the tail of his eye he saw the swift approach of Bayne Trevors.
The general manager's face was black with rage and through that dark
wrath showed a dull red flush of shame.  He walked with his two arms
lax at his sides.

"Give me a cup of coffee, Ben," he commanded curtly, slumping into a
chair.  "Hurry!"

Benny, looking at him curiously, brought a steaming cup and offered it.
Trevors moved to lift a hand; then sank back a little farther in his
chair, his face twisting in his pain.

"Put some milk in it," he snarled.  "Then hold it to my mouth.  For the
love of Heaven, hurry, man!"

Then no man there doubted longer the mad tale Bud Lee had brought them.
Down from Trevors's sleeves, staining each hand, there had come a
broadening trickle of blood.  Trevors set his teeth and waited.  Benny
at last cooled the coffee and held it to his lips.  Trevors drank
swiftly, draining the cup.

"Get this coat off me," he commanded.  "Curse you, don't tear my arms
off!  Slit the sleeves."

Benny's big, razor-edged butcher-knife cut away coat and shirt sleeves.
And at last, to the eager gaze of the men in the bunk-house, there
appeared the two wounds, one upon the outer right shoulder, the other
upon the left forearm.

It was Lee who, pushing the clumsy cook aside, silently made the two
bandages from strips of Trevors's shirt.  It was Lee who brought a
flask of brandy from which Trevors drank deep.

And then came Judith.

They stared at her as they might have done had the heavens opened and
an angel come down, or the earth split and a devil sprung up.  She
looked in upon them with quick, keen eyes which sought to take every
man's measure.  They returned her regard with a variety of amazed
expressions.  Never since these men had come to work for Bayne Trevors
had a woman so much as ridden by the door.  And to have her stand
there, composed, utterly at her ease, her air vaguely authoritative, a
vitally vivid being who might, suddenly, have taken tangible form from
the dawn, bewildered them.  Bud Lee had told of the coming of the Blue
Lake owner; he had not mentioned that that owner had brought his
daughter with him.

"I am Judith Sanford," she said in her abrupt fashion, quite as she had
made the announcement to Lee and Trevors.  "This outfit belongs to me.
I have fired Trevors.  You take your orders straight from me from now
on.  Cookie, give me some coffee."

She came in without ceremony and sat down at the head of the table.
Benny gasped, stood for a moment rooted to the floor, and then,
Judith's eyes hard upon him, hastily brought the coffee.  From some
emotion certainly not clear to him he went a violent red.  Perhaps the
emotion was just sheer embarrassment.  He brought hot cakes with one
hand while with the other he buttoned his gaping shirt-collar over a
bulging, hairy chest.

Men who had finished their breakfasts rose hastily with a marked
awkwardness and ill-concealed haste and went outside, whence their low
voices came back in a confused consultation.  Men who had not finished
followed them.  In an amazingly short time there were but the girl,
Lee, Trevors and the cook in the room.  Then Trevors went out, Benny at
his heels.  Bud Lee, moving with his usual leisureliness, was following
when Judith's cool voice said quietly:

"You, Lee, wait a moment.  I want to talk with you."

Lee hesitated.  Then he came back and waited.

The men outside naturally grouped about the general manager.  His angry
voice, lifted clearly, reached the two in the room.

"I'm fired," said Trevors harshly.  "As soon as I can get going I am
leaving for the Western Lumber camp.  Every one of you boys holds his
job here because I gave it to him.  Do you want to hold it now, with a
fool girl telling you what to do?  Do you want men up and down the
State to laugh at you and jeer at you for a pack of softies and
imbeciles?  Or do you want to roll your blankets and quit?  To every
man that jumps the job here and follows me to-day I promise a job with
the Western.  You fellows know the sort of boss I've been to you.  You
can guess the sort of boss that chicken in there would be.  Now I'm
going.  It's up to you.  Stick to a white man or fuss around for a
woman?"

He had said what he had to say and, cursing when his shoulder struck a
form near him, made his way down to the stables.  Burkitt was ahead of
him, going for the team.

"Well, Lee," said Judith sharply, "where do you get off?  Do you want
to stick?  Or shall I count you out?"

"I guess," said Bud very gently, "you'd better count me out."

"You're going with that crook?"

"No.  I'm going on my own."

"Why?  You're getting good money here.  If you're square I'll keep you
at the same figure."

But Bud shook his head.

"I'm game to play square," he said slowly.  "I'll stick a week, giving
you the chance to get a man in my place.  That's all."

"What's the matter with you?" she cried hotly.  "Why won't you stay
with your job?  Is it because you don't want to take orders from me?"

Then Lee lifted his grave eyes to hers and answered simply: "That's it.
I'm not saying you're not all right.  But I got it figured out, there's
just two kinds of ladies.  If you want to know, I don't see that you've
got any call to tie into a man's job."

"Oh, scat!" cried the girl angrily.  "You men make me tired.  Two kinds
of ladies!  And ten thousand kinds of men!  You want me to dress like a
doll, I suppose, and keep my hands soft and white and go around like a
brainless, simpering fool!  There _are_ two kinds of _ladies_, my fine
friend: the kind that can and the kind that can't!  Thank God I'm none
of your precious, sighing, hothouse little fools!"

Gulping down a last mouthful of coffee, she was on her feet and passed
swiftly out among the men.

"You men!" she cried, and they turned sober eyes upon her, "listen to
me!  You've heard that big stiff rant; now hear me!  I'm here because I
belong here.  My dad was Luke Sanford and he made this ranch.  I was
raised here.  It's two-thirds mine right now.  Trevors there is a crook
and I told him so.  He's been trying to sell me out, to make such a
failure of the outfit that I'd have to let it go for a comic song.  He
got gay and I fired him.  He tried to manhandle me and I plugged him.
And now I am going to run my own outfit!  What have you got to say
about it, you grumbling old grouch with the crooked face!  Put up or
shut up!  I'm calling you!"

The men turned from her to Ward Hannon, the field foreman, who had been
Trevors's right-hand man and who now was sneering openly.

"I'm saying it's no work for a kid of a girl," grumbled Hannon.  "You
run an outfit like this?"  He laughed derisively.  "It can't be did."

"It can't, can't it?" cried Judith.  "Tell me why, old smarty.  Spit it
out lively."

Jake Carson's shrill cackle cut through a low rumble of laughter.
"That's passing it to him straight," said the old cattleman.  "What's
the word, Ward?"

Ward Hannon shrugged his shoulders and spat impudently.  "I ain't
saying nothing," he growled, "only this: I got a right to quit, ain't
I?  Well, I'm quitting.  Any time you ketch me working for a female
girl that can't ride a horse 'thout falling off, that can't see a pig
stuck 'thout fainting, that can't walk a mile 'thout getting laid up,
that can't. . . ."

"Slow up there!" called Judith.  "Didn't I stick a pig already this
morning, and have I keeled over yet?  Didn't I ride the forty miles
from Rocky Bend last night and get here before sun-up?  Listen to me,
chief kicker: If you've got a horse on the ranch I can't ride I'll quit
right now and give you my job!  How's that strike you?  I tell you the
word on this ranch is going to be: 'Put up or shut up!'  Which is it,
Growly?"

Again the men laughed and Hannon's face showed his anger.

"Mean that, lady?" he demanded briefly.

"You can just bet your eyes I mean it!"

Hannon turned toward the stable.  "All right.  We'll see who's going to
put or shut up!" he jeered over his shoulder.  "You ride the Prince
just two little minutes and I'll stay and work for you!"

Bud Lee from the doorway interfered.  He was a man who loved fair play
and he knew the Prince.  "None of that, Ward," he called sternly.  "Not
the Prince!"

But Judith, her eyes aflame, whirled upon Lee, her voice like a whip as
she said: "Lee, you keep out of this.  The sooner you learn who's
running things here the better for you."

"Maybe so," said Lee quietly.  "But don't you fool yourself you can
ride Prince.  There's not a man on the job except me that can ride
him."  It was not boastfully said, but with calm assurance.  "He's an
outlaw, Miss Judith.  He's the horse that killed Jimmy Carpenter last
spring, and Jimmy----"

"Go ahead, Ward," ordered Judith.  "You don't have to stop every time
the wind blows, do you?"

Even Bud Lee smiled.  But old Carson spoke up, saying: "Bud's right,
miss.  And if Ward wants to know, he's a low-down dawg to try to turn a
trick like this. . . ."

"Go ahead, Ward," Judith repeated.  "I've got something to do to-day
besides play pussy-wants-a-corner with you boys."

Ward went, his eyes filled with malice.  Two or three of the other men
joined their voices to Bud's and Carson's, expostulating, telling of
that fearful thing, an outlaw horse.  Judith maintained a scornful
silence.

In due time Ward came back.  He was leading a saddled horse, a great,
wild-eyed roan that snapped viciously as he came on, walking with the
wide, spreading stride of a horse little used to the saddle.  Judith
measured him with her eyes as she had measured the men in the
bunk-house.

"He's an ugly devil," she said, and Lee, at her side, smiled again.
But the girl had not altered her intention.  She stepped closer,
looking to cinch, bit, and reins.  She commanded Ward to draw the
latigo tighter, and Ward did so, dodging back as the big brute snapped
at him.

Judith laughed.  "Look out, Ward," she taunted him.  "He's after your
hair!"

Two men held the Prince.  At Judith's command they shortened the
stirrups and then blinded him with a bandanna handkerchief.  Then,
moving with almost incredible swiftness, she was in the saddle, the
reins firmly gripped.  The Prince, a sudden trembling thrilling through
him, stood with his four feet planted.  The girl leaned forward and
whipped the blind from his red-rimmed eyes.

"There's a good boy!" said Judith coolly.  "Buck a little for the lady,
Prince!"

Slowly the great muscles of Prince's leg and shoulder and flank corded.
The trembling passed; he was like a horse carven in bluish granite.  He
shook his head a little.  Judith, her hand tightening upon the reins,
held his head well up, the severe bit thwarting the attempt to get his
nose down between his forelegs.

Then suddenly, without sign of warning, the horse whirled, leaping far
out to the left, striking with hard hoofs bunched, gathering himself as
he landed, swerving with the quickness of light, plunging again to the
right.  And again he stood still.  Judith, sitting securely on his
rebellious back, laughed.   Her laughter, cool and unafraid, sent a
strange little thrill through Bud Lee--who, with fear in his heart, was
watching her.

"Look out for him now!" he called warningly.

In truth the Prince had not yet begun.  He had tried a trick which
would have unseated any but one who rode well.  He knew that he had to
do with something more than a rank amateur.

Now he plunged toward the corral, his purpose plain, the one desire in
his heart to crush his rider against the high fence.  But Judith's
spurs answered him, and the bit, savage in his jaws, brought him about,
whirling, sidling, striking, bucking as only a strong, fearless,
devil-hearted horse knows how to buck.  He doubled up under her; he
rose and fell in a quick series of short jumps which tore and jerked at
her body, which strove to tear her knees away from his sides and break
the grip of her hand on the reins.  But it seemed to the men watching
that the girl knew before the horse which way he would jump, that she
knew how to sway her body with his so that she and he were not two
separate beings but just one, moving together in some mad devil's
dance.  The Prince, in the midst of the vicious bucking, tried to rear,
seeking to throw himself backward; a quick, sharp blow of a loaded
quirt between his ears brought his forefeet back to earth.

"Can she ride!" whispered Bud Lee.  "I want to know!"

Again the maddened Prince reared and again she brought him to earth.
Again he resumed the terribly tearing series of short, sharp bucks.
And still, her hair tumbling, blown about her shoulders, she rode him.

Old Carson was muttering and pulling at his lip nervously.  Out of the
corner of his mouth in a voice that was almost a whimper, he kept
cursing and saying to Ward Hannon: "You skunk!  You ornery skunk!  Hunt
your hole after this!"

Suddenly, with a quick, concerted action of spur, whip, and rein,
Judith swung the Prince about so that he was headed for the open
valley, running toward the west, giving him his head only a little,
driving him.  He broke into a thundering run, snorting as, with mane
and tail flying, he dashed through the men who fell away from his
furious rush.  And as he ran, Judith spurred him so that his only
thought lay in running away from the menace upon his back.

"She ain't giving him time to buck!" laughed old Carson hysterically.
"Mama!  Ain't she sure enough--God!  She's goin' to get a fall."

For horse and rider had come to the wide irrigating ditch which, since
Judith Sanford had lived here, had been constructed to carry the water
of Blue Lake River down to the alfalfa-fields.  She saw it when she was
too close to swerve.

The men watching saw her lean forward in the saddle, gather her reins,
lift her whip.  Then the lifted whip came down, the spurs touched the
Prince's sweating sides, the big horse leaped far and clear of the
ditch and there floated back Judith's laughter.

Three minutes later she rode back to the bunkhouse and slipped from the
saddle.  Bud Lee, going to her, had his hat in his hand.

"Now, Ward," she said quickly, her breathing hurried, her cheeks red,
"what do you say?"

"I said I'd stick if you rode him," muttered Ward.  "And----"

"And," cried the girl with quick passion, "I'll tell you something.
You're a great big lumbering coward!  Stick with me?"  She laughed
again, a new laugh, ringing with her scorn.  "Here's your outlaw; I've
gentled him a bit.  You ride him!"

His fellows laughed at Ward; for the field foreman was no horseman and
the timorous way in which he had brought out this snapping, vicious
animal had testified to the fact.  He drew back now, muttering.

"Ride him!" cried Judith, her voice stinging him.  "Ride him or get off
the ranch!  Which is it?"

Ward Hannon, glad of the opening, answered surlily: "Aw! think I want
to take orders off'n a woman?  You're right, I'll get off'n the ranch!"

"That's two down," said Judith.  "Now, take this horse back to the
stable; I'm going up to the office.  You men come there in five
minutes.  If you want to stay, and are worth your salt, you can.  Or
I'll give you your time.  It's up to you: it's a free country.  But--"
and she said it slowly, confronting them--"if you all throw me down and
leave me short-handed without giving me time to take on another set of
men, you are a pretty low-lived bunch!"

Then, without turning, she went swiftly to the ranch-house.  Old man
Carson wiped the sweat from his forehead.

"I remember hearing about Luke Sanford's girl," he said simply.  "This
is her, all right."




IV

JUDITH PUTS IT STRAIGHT

"Old man" Carson--so-called through lack of courtesy and because of the
sprinkling of gray through his black hair, a man of perhaps
forty-five--filled an unthinkably disreputable pipe with his own
conception of "real tobacca" and chuckled so that the second match was
required; before he was ready to say his say.

"You just listen to me, you boys!" he said.  "I worked with the Down
River outfit a year before Trevors sent me word he had a job open here
at better pay.  That's only seventy-five miles, and news does
percolate, give it time.  None of you fellers ever saw old Luke
Sanford?"

"I'd been working here close to two weeks when he got killed," Bud said
as Carson's twinkling eyes went from face to face.  "I got my job
straight from him, not Trevors."

"That's so," said Carson.  "Well, Bud knows the sort Luke Sanford was.
He was dead and buried when I come to the Blue Lake, but I'd saw him
twice and I'd heard of him more times than that.  Quiet man that
'tended to his own business and didn't say so all-fired much 'less he
was stirred up.  And then--!"  He whistled his meaning.  "A fighter.
All he ever got he fought for.  All he ever held on to he fought for.
He bucked Western Lumber for a dozen years, first and last.  And, by
cripes, he nailed their durned hides on his stable-door, too!

"Well, I heard tell about this same Luke Sanford ten years ago and
more--about him and his little girl.  From what folks said I guess
there never was a man wanted a boy-baby worse'n Luke Sanford before
Judith come.  And I guess there never was a man put more stock in his
own flesh and blood than Luke did in her as soon as he got used to her
being a she.  I don't know just exactly how old she was ten years ago,
women folks being so damn' tricky in the looks of their ages, but I'd
say she was eight or nine or ten or eleven years old.  Anyhow, Luke had
took her in hand already."

"Taught her to ride, huh?" asked one of the men.

"You're shouting, Poker Face," nodded Carson with vehemence.  "He sure
did!  Why, that girl's rid real horses since she was the size of a pair
of boots.  Luke took her everywhere he went, up in the mountains, over
the Big Ridge, down valley-ways, into town when he went off on his
yearly.  And they say Luke wasn't no poky rider, either.  You've rode
his string, Bud?  What are those for horses, huh?"

"I'm a little particular when it comes to a saddle-horse," Bud
admitted.  "But I never asked any better than old Sanford's string."

"You hear him!" said Carson.  "Well, that Judy girl has rid horses like
them for a dozen years.  And her dad--anyway, folks say so down on the
river--showed her his way to ride and his way to shoot and his way to
play cards!  I guess," and he spoke with slow thoughtfulness, "that
she's a real chip off'n the old block.  It's my guess number two that
she ain't just shooting off her face promiscuous when she says there's
something crooked in the deal Trevors has been handing her.  And, third
bet, there's most likely going to be seven kinds of hell popping around
this end of the woods for a spell."

"What are you doing about it, Carson?" asked the man whose unusually
vacuous expression gave him his name of Poker Face.  "Stick on the job
or quit?"

"Me?"  Carson sought a match, and when he had found it, held it long in
his grimy fingers, staring at it thoughtfully.  "Me stay an' let a
she-girl boss me?  Well, it ain't the play a man might look to me to
make, an' I ain't saying it's the trick I'd do every day in the week.
But here there's some things to set a man scratching his head: she's a
winner, all right, an' I'm the first man to up an' say so.  She's got
the sand an' she's got the savvy.  Take 'em together an' they make what
you call gumption.  Sure it ain't no woman's job to step in an' run an
outfit like this one; a woman ain't nacherally cut out for that sort of
thing any more'n a man is to darn socks an' drink tea with lemon in it.
Again, tipping it over so's you can look at the other side, like a fair
man ought to, what's she going to do?  She lands here sudden, striking
all four feet in a mess of trouble.  She grabs holt of things, seeing
they belong to her in a way, an' seeing she's fed Trevors his time.  I
might go trailing my luck some other-where, if I did the first fool
thing that plopped into my nut.  But playing fair, I'm going to stick
an' do my damnedest to see Luke Sanford's girl put up her scrap.  Yes,
sir."

"What did she want to fire Trevors for?" asked Benny, the cook.

Carson, looking at him contemptuously, spoke in contemptuous answer
about the stem of his pipe.  "Any man on the job can answer you that,
Cookie.  It's been open an' shut the last month Trevors is either crazy
or crooked.  I said, didn't I, Western Lumber's itching to get its
devil-fish legs wropped aroun' Blue Lake timber?  They've busted more
than one rancher up in the mountains.  Trevors is in with 'em.  Any man
on the ranch that don't know that, don't want to know it!"  He removed
his pipe at last, and his look upon Benny was full of meaning.  "Roll
that in your dough, Cookie, an' make biscuits out'n it."

"Go easy there, grandfather," growled Benny.

"That's something I ain't learned," was old Carson's ready answer,
lightly given.  "I've told you before, if you don't want your name
printed plain don't come around asking me to spell it."

Benny growled an answer but did not take up the quarrel.  He knew
Carson well enough to know that there was no man living readier for a
fight or abler to conduct his own part of it.  Carson, smaller than
Benny, was wiry, quick-footed, hard-eyed.  There was something about
him that caused a man of Benny's sort to stop and think.


"_Qué hay_, Bud?" called a voice, and old José, his face shining with
his joy--Bud was certain that Judith had actually kissed the leathery
cheek and wondered how she could do it!--came down the knoll.  "_La
señorita_ wants you!"

"Haw!" gurgled Bandy O'Neil facetiously.  "It's your manly beauty, Bud!
You ol' son-of-a-gun of a lady-killer!"

Bud Lee swung about upon his heel to glare at Bandy.  But suddenly
conscious of a flush creeping up hotly under his tan, he turned his
back and strode away to the house.  Bandy's "haw, haw!" followed him.
Lee's face was flaming when he entered the office.

"What do you want with me?" he said shortly, angered at Bandy, Judith
Sanford and himself.

"Bow, wow!" retorted Judith, looking up from Trevors's table.  "Whose
dog art thou?  Do you want me to think you are as fierce as you look?"

"You sent for me?" he said coolly.

She looked up at him critically.  "What's come over you, Lee?  I took
you for a cool head--Heaven knows I need a few cool heads around me
right now!--and here you show up with red in your eye, barking at me."

"Let's pass up what I look like," said Lee stiffly.  "What can I do for
you. Miss Sanford?"

"Hm," said Judith.  "On your high horse, are you?  All right, stay
there.  What I want is some information.  How long have you been on the
Blue Lake pay-roll?"

"A little over six months," he answered colorlessly.

"_Over_ six months?"  A quick look of interest came into her eyes.
"Trevors hired you?  Or dad?"

"Your father."

"Then"--and a sudden, swift smile came for the first time that morning
into the girl's eyes--"you're square!  Thank God for one man to be sure
of."

She had risen with a quick impetuosity and put out her hand.  Lee took
it into his own, and felt it shut hard, like a man's.

"Just how do you know I'm square?" he asked slowly.

"Dad was human," she replied softly.  "He made some mistakes.  But he
never made a mistake in a horse foreman yet.  He has said to me a dozen
times: 'Judy, watch the way a man treats his horse if you want to size
him up!  And never put your horses into the care of a man who isn't
white, clean through.'  Dad knew, Bud Lee!"

Lee made no answer.  For a little Judith, back at the long table and
looking strangely small in the big, bare room before this massive piece
of furniture, stared into vacancy with reminiscent eyes.  Then, with a
little shrug of her shoulders, she turned again to the tall foreman.

"Why did you tell Trevors this morning that you were going to quit
work?" she asked with abrupt directness.

"Because," he answered, and by now his flush had subsided and his grave
good-humor had come back to him with his customary serenity, "I felt
like moving on."

"Because," she insisted, "you know that there was some dirty work afoot
and did not care to be messed up in it?"

Now here, most positively, Bud Lee said within himself, was a person to
reckon with.  How did she know all that?  She was just a girl,
somewhere, as old Carson put it, between eighteen and twenty-two.  What
business did a kid like this have knowing so blamed much?

"You've got your rope on the right pair of horns," he said after his
brief pause.

"How did you know that Trevors was working the double-cross on this
deal?" she demanded.

"I didn't know," he said stiffly.  "I just guessed.  The same as you.
He was spending too much money; he was getting too little to show for
it; he was selling too much stock too cheap."

"What's the matter with you?" cried the girl, surprising him with the
heat of her words and the sudden darkening of her eyes.  "Why do you
insist on being so downright stand-offish and stiff and aloof?  What
have I done to you that you can't be decent?  Here I am only putting
foot on my own land and you make me feel like an intruder."

"I am answering your questions."

"Like a half-animated trained iceberg, yes.  Can't you act like a human
being?  Oh, I've got your number, Bud Lee, and you are just as narrow
between the horns as the rest of the outfit.  You are narrow and
prejudiced and blindly unreasonable!  I know as much about ranching as
any man of you; I know more about this outfit because the best man that
ever set foot on it, and that's Luke Sanford, taught me every crook,
and bend of it; and now, just because I'm a girl and not a boy, you
stand off like I had the smallpox; just when I need loyalty and
understanding and when, the Lord knows, I've already got a double
handful of trouble, I can't count for a minute on men that have been
taking my pay for months!  Get some of the mildew and cobwebs out of
your head and tell me this: What reason in the world is there why you
choose to think I haven't any business wearing my own shoes?"

"That's sure putting it straight," said Lee slowly.

"You just bet it's putting it straight!" she announced vigorously.
"And you'll find that it's a way I have, putting things straight.  I
was trained to the business by a better man than you'll ever be, Bud
Lee."

"Maybe so," he admitted without heat.  "I'll take off my hat to Luke
Sanford for a man.  And I'll take off my hat to you, if you want to
know.  But, training or no training, this is no job for a lady, and
shooting up Trevors and riding the Prince isn't going to make it so.
Sure enough it's none of my butt-in what sort of thing you do.  But at
the same time there's no call for me to say you're doing fine when I
don't see it that way."

"What you're looking for," sniffed Judith contemptuously, "is a female
being extinct this one hundred years!  You'd have every girl wear tails
to her gowns, and duck and dodge behind fans and faint every time she
jabbed her thumb with a pin!"

"I can't see that a woman's place is riding bucking broncos and
rampsing around. . . ."

"A woman's place!" she scoffed.  "Her place where a blunder-headed man
puts her!  How do you know what her place is?  Do you suppose the blood
in a healthy-bodied, healthy-minded woman is any different from your
blood?  How would you like to be told just what your place is?  To be
jammed, for instance, into a little bungalow in a city; to be squeezed
into a dress-suit and told 'Stay there and look sweet'; to be commanded
not to get up a natural sweat, nor to kick over the traces with which
some woman had hitched you to the cart of convention.  How'd _you_ like
it, Bud Lee?"

Bud Lee grinned and a new look crept into his eyes.  "Being Bud Lee,"
he answered frankly, "I wouldn't stand it for one little tick of the
clock!  If you want me to swap talk with you; all day at ninety bucks a
month, all right.  I'd say there's two kinds of men, too.  There's my
kind; there's the Dave Burril Lee kind.  You see, he's a sort of
relation of mine, is Dave Burril Lee, and I'm not exactly proud of him.
He's the kind that wears dress-suits and sticks in a bungalow.  He's
proud of his name Burril and Lee, both, because big men down South wore
'em before he did, and they were relations.  He's swelled up over the
way he can dance and ride after a fox, and over the coin he's got in
the bank.  Then there's Bud Lee who ducks out of that sort of a
scrap-heap and beats it for the open."

"I get you!" broke in Judith, her eyes very bright.  "And you men here,
my men, want me to be the sort of woman that your precious cousin, Dave
Burril, is a man?  Is that it?  Where's your logic this morning?"

"Meaning horse sense?" he smiled.  "It's in these few little words:
'What's right for a man may be dead wrong for a woman.'"

"Oh, scat!" she cried impatiently.  "What am I wasting time with you
for?  You're right when you say that if I am paying you ninety dollars
a month and grub and blankets I'd better get something out of you
besides talk."  She swung back to her table.  "What was Trevors's
latest excuse for selling at a sacrifice?" she asked, her tone dry and
businesslike.  "Why was he selling those horses at fifty dollars a
head?"

"Told me he just had a wire last night from Young Hampton, asking for
three thousand," he explained in a similar tone, though his eyes were
twinkling at her.

"Pollock Hampton has his nerve!" she snapped.  She took up the
telephone instrument at her elbow and demanded the Western Union at
Rocky Bend.  "Judith Sanford speaking," she said crisply.  "Repeat the
message of last night for the general manager, Blue Lake Ranch."

In a moment she had it.  "So Trevors wasn't lying about that part of
it," she said reluctantly.  And to the Western Union agent, "Take this
message:


POLLOCK HAMPTON, Hotel Glennlyn, San Francisco:

Impossible send money now or for some time.  Have fired Trevors.
Running outfit myself.  Need every cent we can raise to pay interest on
loans, men's salaries and keep going.  This is final.

JUDITH SANFORD, _General Manager_.


"That may start his gray matter working," she ended as she clicked up
the receiver.  "Now, Lee, will you stick with me ten days or so and
give me time to get a man in your place?"

"Yes, I'll do that, Miss Sanford."

"You will help me in every way you can while you are with me?"

"When I work for a man--or a woman," he added gravely, "I don't hold
back anything."

"All right.  Then start in right now and tell me about the gang Trevors
has taken on.  Are they all crooks?"

"I wouldn't say so.  I wouldn't put it that strong."

"That little gray, quick-spoken man with the smelly pipe--he's
straight, isn't he?"

"That would be old Carson?  Yes; he's a good man.  You won't find a
better."

"Is he going to quit, too?  Just because I've come?"

Lee shook his head.  "If you work him right Carson will stick right
along.  Being white clean through, being broader-minded than I am"--and
the twinkle came again into his eyes--"Carson'll show you a square
deal."

"Has he any love for Bayne Trevors?"

"Maybe you'd better ask Carson."

In a flash she was on her feet and had gone to the door.  "Carson!" she
called loudly.  "Come here, will you?"

There was a little silence, a low sound of laughter, then Carson's
sharp voice answering: "I'm coming!"

Judith went back to her chair.  She did not speak until Carson's wiry
form slipped through the doorway.  Then with the old cattleman's
shrewd, hard eyes upon her she turned from a clip full of papers she
had been looking through and spoke to him quietly:

"You used to work for the Granite Canyon crowd, didn't you, Carson?"

"Yes'm," he answered.

"Cattle foreman there for several years?"

"Yes'm."

"Helped clean out the Roaring Creek gang didn't you, Carson?"

Carson shifted a bit, colored under her fixed eyes, and finally
admitted:

"Yes'm."

"Haven't had a real first-class fight for quite a bit, have you,
Carson?  Not since that gash on your jaw healed?  Not since you and
Scotty Webb mixed with the Roaring Creekers?"

Carson rubbed his jaw, flashed a quick look at Bud Lee as though for
moral support, looked still further embarrassed, and finally choked
over his brief:

"No'm."

Judith sat smiling brightly up at his hard features.  "I've heard dad
talk about that," she said thoughtfully.  "I guess I've got at least
one real man on the ranch, Carson.  Oh, don't dodge like that!  I'm not
going to put my arms around you and kiss you on the top of your head.
But I do love a man that loves a fair fight. . . .  Lee, here, has
given me his promise to stick on the job for ten days or so, to give me
time to get some one else to look after my horses."

"Yes'm," said Carson, fingering his pipe and looking down.

For a few moments the girl sat still, now and then flashing a quick,
keen look from one to the other of her two foremen.  Then, abruptly,
her eyes on Carson, she snapped: "You've found out, more or less
recently, haven't you, that Bayne Trevors is a crook?  You've perhaps
even guessed that he's been taking money from me with one hand and from
the Western Lumber with the other?"

"Yes'm," said Carson.  "I doped it up like that."

"Why," cried the girl, "he's fired all of the old men and Heaven knows
how many of his sort he's put in their places!  Help me clean 'em out,
Carson!  Where will we begin?  I've chucked Trevors and Ward Hannon.
Who goes next, Carson?"

"Benny the cook," said Carson gently.  "An' I'd be obliged, ma'am, if
you'd let me go boot him off'n the ranch."

"That's talking," she said enthusiastically.  "You can attend to him.
Any one else?"

Carson shook his head.  "I got my suspicions," he said.  "But that's
all I'm dead sure on."

"The others can wait then.  Now, I'm taking a gamble on you and Lee.
You have all kinds of chances to double-cross me.  But I've got to take
a chance now and then.  I'm going to tell you something: Trevors is
trying to sell me out to the Western Lumber people.  He is one of their
crowd and has been since they bought him up six months ago.  They want
our timber tract over the north ridge but they don't think they will
have to pay the price.  They want the lake; they want the water-power
of Blue Lake River!  They want pretty well all we've got.  The ranch
outside the stock we've got running on it, is worth a clean million
dollars if it is worth a nickel.  Well, the Western Lumber Company has
offered us exactly two hundred and fifty thousand!  Only quarter of
what it's worth!  They know we're mortgaged; they know the interest we
have to pay is heavy; they know Pollock Hampton, for one, is a spender
who knows nothing about big business; they think that I, because I'm a
girl, am a fool.  It looks to them like a melon easy to cut and ripe
for the slicing."

She paused a moment, frowning thoughtfully at the floor.  Then suddenly
she lifted her eyes to Carson's, saying crisply: "Trevors took time at
the end to tell me something.  That something was that he was going to
make me sell.  He was excited a bit, I'll admit, or he wouldn't have
spoken quite so plainly.  And he counted upon the fact of my sex, of
course, to feel confident that he could throw a scare into me.  He even
threatened, if I hadn't come to my senses before the ranch was dry in
the summer, to burn me out!"

Carson blinked at her.  "How's that?" he asked.

She told him again, coolly indifferent, it seemed to Carson.

"The durned polecat!" whispered the cattle foreman.

"Now then," cried Judith, "you've got your first job cut out for you.
Let Bayne Trevors or one of his gang set foot on Blue Lake land, and
I'll tell you what I think of you, Carson!  Or is the job going to be
too big for you?"

Carson smiled deprecatingly.  "I'd like to see 'em try it," he said in
that soft, whispering voice which upon occasions was characteristic of
him.  "I sure would, Miss Judy!"

"That's all this morning, Carson," she said quietly.  "On your way
don't forget to look in on your friend Benny."

Carson went hastily down the knoll, his eyes bright.  Judith laughed
softly.

"I've got his number, Bud Lee!  All that's needed to keep that old
mountain-lion on the job is to show him a real fight ahead!  And by
golly, Mr. Man, there's going to be scrap enough from the very jump to
make Carson forget whether he's working for a woman or John W. Satan,
Esquire!"




V

THE BIGNESS OF THE VENTURE

"And now," said Judith Sanford to the stillness about her--she was
alone in the big ranch-house--"not being constructed of iron, I'm going
to take a snooze."

She yawned, stretched her supple young body luxuriously, and passed
slowly through the empty rooms which, at her command, José had opened
to the sweet morning air.  Through the great living-room, library, and
music-room, where the grand piano stood dejectedly in its mantle of
dust, she came to her own chambers at the southwest corner of the
building.  Her bed was made, the sheets clean and fresh and inviting,
dressing-gown and slippers were upon the window-seat, and from her
table a vase of glorious roses sent out a welcoming perfume.

"Good old José," she smiled.

Vivid blossom that she was upon the tough, hardy stalk of her pioneer
ancestry, creature of ardent flame and passion which her blood and her
life in the open had made her, she was not devoid of the understanding
of the limit of physical endurance.  Last night, through the late
moonlight and later starlight, through the thick darkness which lay
across the mountain trails before the coming of day, on into the dawn,
she had ridden the forty miles from the railroad at Rocky Bend.
Certain of treachery on the part of Bayne Trevors, she had arrived only
to find him plotting another blow at her interests.  She had ridden a
mad brute of a horse whose rebellious struggle against her authority
had taxed her to the last ounce of her strength.  She had shot a man in
the right shoulder and the left forearm. . . .  And now, with no one to
see her, she was pale and shaking a little, suddenly faint from the
heavy beating of her own heart.  She had had virtually no sleep last
night.  She was glad of it.  For now she would sleep, sleep.

"I am not to be called, no matter what happens," she said to José who
came trotting to the tinkle of her bell.  "Thank you for the roses,
José."

Slipping out of her clothes, she drew the sheet up to her throat--and
tossed for a wretched hour before sleep came to her.  A restless sleep,
filled with broken bits of unpleasant dreams.

At two o'clock, swiftly dressing after a leisurely bath, she went out
into the courtyard, where she found José making a pretense of
gardening, whereas in truth for a matter of hours he had done little
but watch for her coming.

"José," she said, as he swept off his wide hat and made her the bow
reserved for _la señorita_ and _la señorita_ alone, "you will have to
be lady's maid and errand-boy for me until I get things running right.
I am going to telephone into town this minute for a woman to do my
cooking and housekeeping and be a nuisance around generally.  While I
do that, will you scare up something for me to eat and then saddle a
horse for me?  And don't make a fire, either; just something cold out
of a can, you know."

She went to the office, arranged over the wire with Mrs. Simpson of
Rocky Bend to come out on the following day, and then spent fifteen
minutes studying the pay-roll taken from the safe, which, fortunately,
Trevors had left open.  As José came in with a big tray she was running
through a file of reports made at the month-end, two weeks ago, by
certain of the ranch foremen.

"Put it down on the table, José.  Thank you," and she found time for a
smile at her devoted servitor; "Now, have a horse ready, will you?" And
without waiting for José's answer, taking up the telephone, she asked
for the office at the Lower End, as the rich valley land of the western
portion of the ranch was commonly known.

Briefly making herself known to the owner of the boyish voice which
answered, she asked, for "Doc" Tripp and was informed that the ranch
veterinarian was no longer with the outfit.  Judith frowned.

"Where is he?"

"Rocky Bend, I think."

"When did he leave us?"

"Three days ago."

"Why?"

"Fired.  Mr. Trevors let him go."

"Hm!" said Judith.  "Who has taken his place?"

"Bill Crowdy is sort of acting vet, right now."

"Thanks," she said.  Clicking off, she put in a call for "Doc" Tripp in
Rocky Bend.  "Get him for me as quick as you can, will you, please?"
she asked of the operator in town.

For five minutes she munched at a sandwich and pored over the papers
before her, dealing with this or that of the many interests of the big
ranch.  When at last her telephone-bell rang she found that it was
Tripp.

"Hello, Doc," she said cordially.  "I haven't seen you for so long I
almost have forgotten how you comb your hair!"  Tripp laughed with her
at that; across the miles she could picture him running his big hand
through the rebellious shock.  "Yes, I'm back to stay, and from the
looks of it I didn't come any too soon.  Yes, Doc, we do miss him," and
her voice softened wonderfully to Tripp's mention of the man who had
been more than father to her, more than friend to him.  "But we are
going to buck up and show folks that he _knew_.  He would have made a
go of the thing; we are going to do it.  What was the trouble with you
and Trevors?"

Tripp explained succinctly.  He and the general manager had disagreed
openly and frequently about that part of the work in which, until the
coming of Trevors, the veterinarian had been entirely unhampered.  Two
months ago Trevors had reduced Tripp's wages and had threatened another
cut.

"Just to make me quit, you know," he added.  "And I would have quit if
it had been any other outfit in the world."

"I know," she said, and she did understand.  "Go on.  What was the
excuse for canning you?"

"Case of lung-worms," he told her.  "Some of the calves, I don't know
just how many yet.  He insisted on my treating them the old way."

"Slaked lime?  Or sulphur fumes?" she said quickly.  "And you insisted
on chloroform?"

"You've hit it!" he exclaimed wonderingly.  "How'd you know?"

"I haven't been loafing on the job the last six months," she laughed.
"I've been at the school at Davis and hobnobbing with some of the
university men at Berkeley.  They're doing some great work there.  Doc,
I'll want to talk to you about it.  You're going down there, expenses
paid, to brush up with a course or two this year.  Now, how soon can
you get back here?--Trevors?  Oh, Trevors is fired.  I'm running the
ranch myself.  And, Doc, I need a few men like you!  Can you come early
to-morrow?--To-night?  You're a God-blessed brick!  Yes, I'll stop that
murderous sulphur treatment if it isn't too late.  Good-by."

She lost no time in calling for Bill Crowdy, the man whom Trevors had
put into Tripp's place.

"By the way," she said when the man with the voice which had sounded so
boyish in her ears answered again, "who are you?"

"Ed Masters," he told her.  "Electrician, you know."

A glance at the pay-roll in front of her showed that Edward Masters,
general electrician, was a new man and was drawing eighty-five dollars
monthly.

"What are you doing this afternoon?" she demanded sharply--"just
hanging around the office?  Is that the way you earn your eighty-five
dollars?"

"Not always.  But Trevors told me to be on hand to-day to take some
orders."

"What work?"

"Don't know," he said frankly.  "He didn't say."

"Well," said Judith, "I'll tell you one thing, Ed Masters.  If you are
one of the loaf-around kind you'd better call for your time to-night.
If there's anything for you to do, go do it.  Don't wait for Trevors.
He's gone.  Yes, for good.  You can report to me here the first thing
in the morning.  Now send me Crowdy."

"He's down in the hospital and the hospital phone is out of order."

"And you're an electrician, hanging around for orders!  That's your
first job.  Send the first man you can get your hands on to tell Crowdy
I say not to touch one of those calves with the lung-worm.  And not to
do anything else but get ready to talk with me.  I'll be down in half
an hour."

She clicked up the receiver, drank a cup of lukewarm coffee, noting
subconsciously that José must have had a fire ready against the time of
her awakening, and again consulted the files before her.  Then again
she used the telephone, ringing the Lower End office.  This time it was
another voice answering her.

"Where's Masters?" she asked.

"Gone down to the cow hospital," was the answer.

"Where's Johnson, the irrigation foreman?"

"Out in the south fields."

"And Dennings?"

"Went to look the olives over."

"Send out for both of them.  I'm coming right down as fast as a horse
will carry me and I want to talk with them.  Wait a minute--I'll tell
you when I'm through with you.  Who are you, anyway?"

"Williams, the ranch carpenter."

"What _are_ you doing to-day?  Repairs needed at the office where you
are?"

"No.  You see----"

"You bet I see!" she cried warmly.  "The first thing I see is that I've
got more men on this job than I need.  If there's no work for you to
do, call tonight for your time.  If you've got anything to do, go do
it."

She clicked off again, waited a brief second and rang three for the
dairy.  After she had rung several times and got no answer, she
murmured to herself:

"There's some one too busy on the ranch to be just hanging round after
all, it seems."

And she went out to José and the waiting horse.

As she rode the five miles down to the office at the Lower End, her
thoughts were constantly charged with an appreciation of the wonders
which had been worked about her everywhere since that day, ten years
ago, when she had first come with Luke Sanford to the original Blue
Lake ranch.  Then there had been only a wild cattle-range, ten thousand
acres of brush, timber, and uncultivated open spaces.  Nowhere would
one find rougher, wilder stock-land in California.  But Luke Sanford
had seen possibilities and had bought the whole ten thousand acres,
counting, from the first sight of it, upon acquiring as soon as might
be those other thousands of acres which now made Blue Lake ranch one of
the biggest of Western ventures.

It was late May, and the afternoon air was sweet and warm with the
passing of spring.  The girl's eager eyes travelled the length of the
sky-seeking cliff almost at the back door of the ranch-house, which
stood like some mighty barricade thrown up in that mythical day given
over to the colossal struggle of a contending race of giants, and she
found that there, alone, time had shown no change.  Elsewhere,
improvements at every turn were living monuments to the tireless brain
of her father.  Stock-corrals, sturdily built, out-houses spotless in
their gleaming whitewash, monster barns, fenced-off fields, bridges
across the narrow chasm of the frothing river, telephone-poles with
their wires binding into one sheaf the numerous activities of the
ranch, a broad, graded road over which she and her father had come here
the last time together in the big touring-car.

Here the valley was only a mile across, shut in on both sides by cliff
and steep, rocky mountain, walled by cliffs at the upper end, where the
river from three-mile distant Blue Lake came down in flashing
waterfalls.

But, as she rode, the valley widened, changed in character.  At first,
wandering herds of beef-cattle, with now and then a riding cowboy
turning in his saddle to wonder at her; then a gate to be opened as she
stooped forward from her own saddle, and wide fields where the grass
stood tall and untrodden and blooded Jersey cows looked up in mild
interest; yonder a small pasture in which were five Guernseys, kept in
religious seclusion, under ideal conditions, to further certain
investigations into the ratios of five different kinds of fodder to the
amount of butter-fat produced; across a green meadow a pure-blooded
Jersey bull, whose mellow bellowings drew Judith's eyes to the clean
line of his perfect back, over which, with pawing hoofs, he was
throwing much trampled earth; in a more distant pen, accepting the
trumpeted challenge and challenging back, a beautiful specimen of
careful breeding in Ayrshire.

The road wound on, following generally the line of the river, which
began a generous broadening, flowing more evenly through level fields.
Looking down the valley, Judith could see the whitewashed clump of
buildings where were the second office, the store and the blacksmith's
shop, the tiny cottages.  And beyond, the barns, the dairy, the tall
silos standing like lookout towers, the alfalfa-fields crisscrossed
with irrigating ditches, and still farther on, the pasture-lands where
the big herd of cows was grazing.

Here the valley was spread out until from side to side it measured
something more than four miles.  The bordering mountains, like the
river, had grown into a softer mood; rolling hills scantily timbered,
rich in grass, were dotted with herds, cattle and horses, or fenced off
here and there, reserved for later pasturage.

Across the river, to the south, Judith marked the wandering calves,
offspring of the herd; to the north, along the foothills, the subdued
green of the olive-orchards.

"It's a big, big thing!" she whispered, and her eyes were very bright
with it all, her cheeks flushed.  "Big!"

Passing one of the great barns, she heard the trumpet call of a
stallion and, turning, saw in the corral one of those glorious brutes
which Bud Lee had spoken of to Trevors as "clean spirit."  From the
instant her eyes filled to the massive beauty of him, she knew who he
was: Night Shade, sprung from the union of Mountain King and Black
Empress; regal-blooded, ebon-black from silken fetlock to flowing mane;
a splendid four-year-old destined to tread his proud way to a first
prize at the coming State fair at Sacramento, a horse many
stock-fanciers had coveted.

She stopped and marvelled afresh at him, paid him his due of unstinted
admiration, and then spurred on to the little clump of buildings
marking the lower ranch headquarters.  At the store, where a ten-by-ten
room was partitioned off to serve as office, she swung down from the
saddle and, leaving her horse with dragging reins, went in.

"Hello, Charlie.  You're still left to us, are you?" she said, as she
stepped forward to shake hands with Miller, the storekeeper and general
utility man of the settlement.  "I'm glad to see you.

"So'm I, Miss Judy," grinned Charlie, looking the part.  "Howdy."

"I wanted to see Johnson and Dennings.  Are they here yet?"

"No," answered Miller.  "Johnson, the ditch man, you mean?  He's
somewhere at the Upper End.  Has got a crew of men up there making a
new dam or somethin' or other.  Been at it purty near a week, now, I
guess.  They camp up there."

"How many men are with him?" she asked quickly.

"About a dozen," and he looked hard at her.  Judith frowned.  But
instead of saying what she might be thinking, she inquired where
Dennings was.

"Out in the olive-orchards, I guess."  He paused, filled a pipe he had
neither desire nor intention of smoking, and said abruptly: "What's
this I hear about Trevors?  Canned him?"

"Yes."

"Um!" said Miller.  "Well, Miss Judy, I ain't sayin' it wasn't purty
near time he got the hooks.  But, lemme tell you something.  While
you're riding around this afternoon, if I was you I'd pike over to the
milking corrals."

She looked at him sharply.

"What is it, Charlie?"

"You just ride over," said Miller.  "It ain't more'n a step an' I'll
just shet up store an' mosey along after you."

Vaguely uneasy because of Charlie Miller's manner, Judith galloped down
toward the four corrals where the cows were milked.  From a distance
she saw that there were a number of men, ten or twelve of them,
standing in a close-packed group.  She wondered what it was that had
drawn them from their work at this time of day; what that big,
bull-voiced man was saying to them.  She heard the muttering rumble of
his words before the words themselves meant anything to her.  A quick
glance over her shoulder showed her Charlie Miller hastening behind
her, pick-handle in hand.

Her way carried her by a long, narrow building standing out like a
great capital E, the cow hospital.  She thought of Bill Crowdy and the
sick calves as she drew near, but was passing on to the men at the milk
corrals, when the breeze, blowing lightly from the west, brought to her
nostrils a whiff of sulphur.

A quick tide of red ran into her cheeks; that fool, Ed Masters, had not
told Crowdy to refrain from the old-fashioned, deadly treatment!
Almost before her horse had set his four feet at the command of a quick
touch upon the reins, the girl was down and hurrying into the middle
door of the three, calling out as she went:

"Crowdy!  Oh, Crowdy!"

She came into a small whitewashed room where were a table, two chairs,
and a telephone; passed through this into the calf-yard.  Here were
several compartments with doors which allowed of making them almost
air-tight.  And here she was met by a stronger smell of sulphur fumes.

"Crowdy!" she called again.  "Where are you?"

Bill Crowdy, a heavy, squat figure of a man, shifty-eyed, with hard
mouth and a nervous, restless air, came down a long hallway, smoking a
cigarette.  His eyes rested with no uncertain dislike upon Judith's
eager face.

"I'm Crowdy," he said.  "Want me?"

"I told Masters to tell you to stop the sulphur treatment for the
lung-worm calves.  Hasn't he told you?"

"Mr. Trevors said I was to give it to them," said Crowdy.  "I can't be
taking orders off'n every hop-o'-my-thumb like that college kid."

"Then Masters did tell you?"

"Sure, he told me," said Crowdy in surly defiance.  "But if I was to
listen to everything the likes of him says----"

Judith's eyes were fairly snapping.

"You'll listen to the likes of me, Bill Crowdy!" she cried
passionately, a small fist clinched.  "You get those calves out into
some fresh air just as quick as the Lord will let you!  Into a pen by
themselves.  Doc Tripp will attend to them in the morning."

"Tripp's gone."

"He's on his way back, right now.  And you're on your way off the
ranch.  Understand?  You can come to the office for your pay to-night."

Crowdy shrugged his shoulders and turned away.

"If I'm fired," he growled in that ugly voice which was so fitting a
companion to that ugly mouth of his, "I quit right now.  Get some of
your other Willies to turn your calves out."

For a moment, in the heat of her anger, Judith's quirt was lifted as
though she would strike him.  Then she turned instead and ran to do her
own bidding.  A moment later Miller was with her.  The two of them got
the calves--there were seven of them--out of the sulphur-laden air and
into the corral.  The poor brutes, coughing softly in paroxysms, some
of them frothing at the mouth, two of them falling repeatedly and
rising slowly upon trembling legs, filed by in a pitiful string.  One
of the youngest lay still in the hospital, dead.

"He would have killed them all," said Judith, her teeth set as she
looked at the living calves in the corral where, with necks thrust far
out, they fought for each breath.  "And Bayne Trevors ordered a
treatment that he knows has gone into the discard!  Charlie, that man
has gone further than I thought he had the nerve to go."

"Crowdy did something else that don't look just right," said Miller,
gazing with eyes of longing after the burly, departing figure.  "I saw
him do it just after Masters carried him your message.  He drove three
of the sick calves--there's a dozen or more got the worms, you
know--out into the pasture with the well calves."

Judith didn't answer.  She looked at Miller a moment as though she
thought this must be some wretched jest of his.  And when she read in
his eyes the earnestness in his heart, there rose within her the
question: "How far has Bayne Trevors gone?"

"Charlie," she said finally, "I want you to close store for the rest of
the day.  Get some one to help you and cut the sick calves out from the
bunch.  Haze them back here into the detention corral.  Tripp will
attend to them all in the morning.  Now, tell me--what's wrong down at
the milk corrals?  What are all of those men up to?"

"We're going to see, me an' you," answered Miller.  "I don't just know.
But I do know there's a big guy down there that come onto the ranch a
couple of hours ago an' that don't belong here.  He's that guy talking.
Name of Nelson.  He ain't done any talking to me, but from a word or
two I picked up from one of the milkers I got a hunch he's been sent
over by Trevors."

Nelson, the big emissary for Trevors--for he admitted the fact openly
and pleasantly--took off his hat to Judith and said he guessed he'd be
going.  And the men with whom he had been talking, including all of the
milkers and all of the other workmen upon whom Nelson could get his
meddlesome hands at short notice, all men whom Trevors had placed here,
made known in hesitant speech or awkward silence that they were going
with Nelson.  There were good jobs open with the lumber company, it
seemed.  Nelson even expressed the hope that the quitting of these men
wouldn't work any hardship to the Blue Lake ranch.

Judith, her eyes flashing, asked no man of them to remain, seeing that
thus she would but humiliate herself fruitlessly, and turned away.  And
yet, with the herds of cows with bursting bags soon ready for the
nightly milking, she watched the men move away, her heart bitter with
anger.

"They've got to be milked, Charlie," was all that she said.  "Who will
milk them until I can get a new crew?"

"I'll tuck in an' help," answered Miller ruefully.  "I hate it worse'n
poison, an' I can't milk more'n ten cows, workin twenty-four-hour
shifts.  I'll try an' scare up some of the other boys that can milk."
But he shook his head and looked regretfully at the pick-handle.  "Good
milkers is scarce as gold eggs," he muttered.  "And the separator men
has quit with the rest."

"Get Masters, the electrician, on the job.  Get anybody you can.  I'm
going back to the ranchhouse pretty soon and I'll try to send some one
from there."

"Cowboys can't milk," said Miller positively.  "An' besides, they
won't.  But somehow we'll make out for a day or so."

"We've got to make out!" exclaimed Judith.  "We've got to beat that man
Trevors, Charlie, and do it quick.  If he'll try to keep us
short-handed, if he'll spend money to do it, if he'll do a trick like
giving sulphur for lung-worm and then send infected stock out into the
herds, I don't know just where he will stop--unless we stop him."


In spite of her intentions, it was nearing the time of dusk when she
returned to the ranchhouse.  As she came up the knoll from the barn,
she saw for the first time a thin line of bluish smoke rising from the
north ridge.  Saw and understood the new menace.

For that way had Benny, the discharged cook, gone.




VI

YOUNG HAMPTON REGISTERS A PROTEST

It was after eight o'clock when Tripp rode in on a sweat-wet horse.
Judith met him in the courtyard, giving him her two hands impulsively.

"I'm so glad you've come, Doc!" she cried softly.  "Oh, you don't know
how glad--yet."

She called José to take Tripp's mount and then led the way into the
great living-room where deep cushions and leather chairs made for
comfort.

"I'll give you time to draw a second breath," she told him, forcing
into her tone a lightness which she did not quite feel, even though a
surge of satisfaction had warmed her at the first thud of his horse's
hoofs.  "Then we'll talk."

She switched on the lights and turned to look at Tripp.  He was the
same little old Doc Tripp, she noted.  His wiry body scarcely bigger
than a boy's of fourteen, he was a man of fifty whose face, like his
body, suggested the boy with bright, eager eyes and a frank, friendly
smile.

"Prettier than ever, eh, Judy?"  Tripp cocked his head to one side and
gave his unqualified approval of the slim, supple body, and superb
carriage of this girl of the mountains, warming to the vivid, vital
beauty of the rosy face.  "Been driving those cow-college boys down at
Berkeley plumb crazy, I'll bet a prize colt!"

Judith laughed at him, watched his slight form disappear in the wide
arms of a chair which seemed fairly to smother him in its embrace.
Then from her own nook by the fireplace she opened her heart to him:

"It's not just that Trevors has crippled me by taking all of my milkers
away; not just that he has come near doing I don't know how much harm
in having Crowdy turn those calves with the lung-worm out into the
fields with the others; not just that during the last few months, he
has lost money for us right and left; not just that Benny, the cook,
has tried to fire the range."

"What's that last?" said Tripp quickly.  "Tried to smoke you out, huh?"

She told him briefly.  How she had first seen the smoke as she came
back to the ranch-house; how she had sent José on the run to get some
of the other hands to see that the fire did not spread; how, a little
while ago, Carson, the cattle foreman, had come in and assured her that
the damage was negligible.

"It was just a brush fire," said Judith.  "Thank Heaven, things are
pretty green yet.  Carson says it might have been lighted by Benny,
who, it seems, is one of Trevors's hirelings and not above this sort of
thing; or it might have been accidentally started by some careless
hunter.  Anyway, and that's enough for me, the fire broke out close to
the trail that Benny travelled on his way to the Western Lumber camp.
But it isn't just these things which have set me to wondering, Doc.
What I want to know is this: in how many other, still undiscovered
ways, has Trevors been knifing us?  And what else will he have ready to
spring on us now?"

"Just what do you mean?" Tripp looked a  her keenly.

"This case of lung-worm, to begin with: where did it come from?"

"Imported," said Tripp.  "Trevors bought those calves, or at least four
of the sick ones, last month.  Brought them in from somewhere down the
river.  Smuggled 'em in, so far as I am concerned.  Never gave me a
chance to look them over."  He paused a second.  "Specially imported, I
might say."

"I knew it!" cried Judith.  "That's the sort of thing I am afraid of.
If he has gone to the limit of introducing one disease among our
cattle, what other plagues has he brought to the ranch?  Has he
imported any other outside stock?"

"No.  He's been busier selling at a sacrifice than buying, just as I
wrote you.  Never another head has he bought lately--unless," and
Tripp's eyes twinkled at her, "you count pigeons!"

"Pigeons!" repeated Judith.

Tripp nodded.

"Funny, isn't it," he went on lightly--"that a man like Bayne Trevors,
hard as nails and as free of sentiment as a mule, should fancy little
cooing, innocent-like pigeons?  You'll hear them in the morning."

But Judith was not to be distracted by Tripp's talk.  She smiled at
him, however, to show him that she had understood and appreciated the
purpose back of his light words.

"We're all going to have our hands full for a spell, Doc," was what she
said.  "To Trevors, with a free swing here, it must have appeared
rather a simple matter to make so complete a failure as to force us,
encumbered as we are, into selling out to the highest bidder inside the
year.  Especially when he counted young Pollock Hampton as a man
without business experience and Judith Sanford as a girl without
brains!  But, Doc, he must have known, too, that at any time there
might occur the very thing which has happened--that he'd lose his job.
He strikes me as a rather long-headed man, doesn't he you?  Now, a man
who saw ahead, figuring on this very contingency, would have more than
one trick up his sleeve.  We've caught him, luckily, at the sick-calf
game, before it is too late.  I think that the obvious thing for you to
do is to make certain that all the rest of the stock are in shape.
Will you begin to-morrow making a thorough investigation?"

"Yes," he answered.  "You're right there, Judith.  There's nothing like
making sure."

"He's not through with us," continued the girl thoughtfully; "you could
read that in the look of his jaw and eye when he left.  Just what he
stands to make on his play, I don't know.  But I do know that the
Western Lumber crowd is offering us only a quarter of what they'd be
willing to pay if they had to.  That means that they could afford to
bribe Bayne Trevors pretty heavily and still save half a million on the
deal if he succeeded in the thing he has begun."

"In his way," admitted Tripp thoughtfully, "Trevors is a big man.  Big
men cost big money.  And, besides, it looks to me as though he were a
heavy stockholder in the Western Lumber.  He'd stand to win two ways."

"Another thing I want you to do," Judith went on, "is to try to locate
all of dad's old men whom Trevors let go.  Johnny Hodge and Kelley and
Harper and Tod Bruce.  We'll need them.  We've got to have men that
crooked money can't buy."

"Aren't you magnifying things, Judith?" asked Tripp quietly.  "There's
such a thing as law in this country, you know."

But she shook her head.

"Maybe I am seeing the dangers too big.  But I don't think so.  And it
will be a lot better for Blue Lake ranch if I see them that way at the
beginning.  And as for the law, it costs money.  I'm not sure that
Trevors or the lumber people would be averse to getting us involved in
a lot of legal intricacies.  Oh, he has been careful not to leave any
definite proof behind him."

"You hit the bell that time!" laughed Tripp, and Judith smiled with him
as there came to their ears the faint tinkle of the telephone-bell in
the office.

Judith excused herself and hastened to answer the summons.  Hastened
because she wanted to be back with Tripp as soon as might be.  So,
knowing her way so well about the big house, she went quickly through
the dark hall-way without turning aside to switch on the lights and
came into the office, dimly lighted by the stars shining in through the
windows.

"Doc!"  Her voice rang out suddenly and Tripp sprang to his feet,
wondering what had put that note into her exclamation.  "Doc!  Come
here, quick!"

He ran into the hall that was suddenly illuminated as at last Judith's
groping hand found the office switch.  He saw Judith running ahead of
him, out of the door opening on to the veranda and down into the
courtyard.

"What is it?" he asked sharply.

"There was some one here," she told him quickly.  "He went out that
way, I think.  Look through the lilacs."

She ran on one way, Tripp hurrying the other, wondering.  They saw the
lilacs standing still in the starlight, saw the thick shadows thrown by
the columns and grape-covered trellises, heard the murmuring of the
fountain.

"José, perhaps," suggested Tripp, coming at last to her side.

"No!" cried Judith.  "It wasn't.  It was somebody in his stocking feet,
standing in the hallway, listening to us.  I heard him run before me; I
saw him for a second, framed against the square of the window as he
slipped through and out on the veranda.  Who could it have been, Doc?"

But a close search through the shrubbery showed them nothing.  It was
clear that if a man had been listening at the door he could have had
ample opportunity to slip away into the darkness.  He would not be
loitering here now.

The telephone-bell was still insistently ringing and they turned back
to the office.

"Judy," said Tripp solicitously, "don't you go and get nerves, now."

"You think I imagined the whole thing!"  She looked at him with clear,
confident eyes.  "Don't you fool yourself for one little minute, Doc
Tripp.  I'm not the imagining kind--yet!"

She snatched up the telephone instrument.

"Hello," said Judith.  "Who is it?"

It was the telegraph operator in Rocky Bend.  A message for Miss Judith
Sanford from Pollock Hampton, San Francisco.  And the message ran:


What were you thinking of to chuck Trevors?  Thoroughly excellent man.
You should have consulted me.  Don't do anything more until I come.
Send conveyance to meet Saturday train.  Bringing five guests with me.

POLLOCK HAMPTON.


Judith turned frowning to Tripp.

"As if I didn't have enough on my hands already," she exclaimed
bitterly, "without Hampton dragging his fool guests into the mix-up!  I
could slap his face."

"Do it!" chuckled Tripp.  "Good idea!"




VII

THE HAPPENING IN SQUAW CREEK CAÑON

Busy days followed for Judith Sanford and for every man remaining upon
Blue Lake ranch.  A score of men, including the milkers, Johnson, the
irrigation foreman and his crew of laborers, had quit work, going over
openly to Bayne Trevors at the Western Lumber camp.  He had work there
for every man of them, and Judith was not the only one upon the ranch
who came to wonder how much money Trevors--or the lumber company--was
prepared to spend in fighting her.  From the first day she found the
outfit short-handed.

Almost her first answer to Trevors's _coup_ was to telegraph San
Francisco for a Firth milking-machine, together with an expert sent out
by the Firth Company to install and superintend its working for the
first few days.  At the same time she hired from one of the Sacramento
dairies a man who was to be foreman of her own dairy industry, a
capable fellow with an intimate practical knowledge of automatic
milkers.  He, with a couple of strippers paid overtime wages managed
until the dairy crew could be builded up again.  Her new foreman from
the first took the greater part of this burden off her shoulders.

Mrs. Simpson, the matron from Rocky Bend, arrived, true to her promise
and, motherly soul that she was, took a keen interest in Judith's
comforts and in caring for the big house, of which she immediately
waxed proud with an air of semiproprietorship.  José, from the first,
bestowed upon the cheerful, bustling woman a black hatred born of his
thoroughgoing Latin jealousy.  From this or that corner, appearing
unexpectedly, glaring darkly at her in a manner which ruffled her
placidity and suggested to her lively imagination terrible visions of
knives in one's back, he brought an actual thrill into Mrs. Simpson's
long days of routine.

Busy days also for Bud Lee, who had already begun the education of a
string of colts.  Busy days for Doc Tripp who, unhampered, trusted,
aided at every turn by his employer, was from dawn until dark among the
ranch live stock, all but feeling pulse and taking temperature of
horses, cows, colts, calves, hogs, and mules.  He stopped the calf
sickness; effected cures in every case excepting one.  And the rest of
the stock he finally gave a clean bill of health.

Busy days for Carson.  Painstakingly he estimated, to the head, the
number of cattle the pastures should be carrying, counting from long
experience upon the hard months to come from August until December;
estimating values; appearing at the week's end to suggest the purchase
of a herd of calves from the John Peters Dairy Company, to be had now
at a very attractive figure.  And suggesting, almost insistently, upon
buying a certain Shorthorn bull worth twice the twelve hundred dollars
asked for him.  Busy days for the foremen who had held over from the
management of Trevors or who had been taken on since.  The first crop
of alfalfa, shot through with foxtails, must be cut without delay and
fed into the silos before the beards of the interloping growth could
harden.  Busy days for the short-handed milking crew; busy days of
installing the new milking-machines.

Judith and Doc Tripp had sought to find some trace of the man who,
Judith insisted, had listened at the door in the hall.  They had found
nothing.  So that episode, as well as Trevors himself, was shoved aside
in their minds, in the stress of activity demanding attention
everywhere.

With Saturday came Pollock Hampton and his guests.  Trevors had
misnamed him a fool, sweepingly mistaking youth, business inexperience
and a careless way, for lack of brains.  Just a breezy young fellow,
likable, gay-hearted, keen for the joy of life, scarcely more than a
boy after all.  One of those rare beings whose attitude toward his
fellow mortals was one of generous faith, who sought to see the best in
people, who had an outspoken admiration for efficiency in any form.  He
came to the ranch prepared to like everything and everybody.

"Look here!" he exclaimed to Judith, before she had had time for more
than a sweeping appraisal of his friends.  "Why didn't you tell me you
were up to a thing like this?  Great Scott, Judith, you don't know what
you are tackling, do you?  It's ripping of you; you're a sheer wonder
to tie into it; you've got no end of nerve.  But running a ranch like
this--why, it's a big proposition for a thunderingly big man to swing."

"Is it?" smiled Judith.

Beyond that, the only answer he got from this brief conference was the
timely suggestion that his chief concern for the immediate present lay
in making his guests comfortable.

Accompanying young Hampton were "Major" Langworthy, a little short,
fat, bald gentleman, who, so far as the knowledge of his club members
went, had never been connected with any part of the army or navy,
unless one counted his congenial brigades of cocktail drinkers; Mrs.
Langworthy, his supercilious, uninteresting wife; Marcia, his languidly
graceful daughter, in whom Hampton gave certain signs of being
considerably interested; Marshal Rogers, the Oakland lawyer, and Frank
Farris, the artist.  Also Marcia's maid and Hampton's Japanese valet,
Fujioki.  In due course of time this representative of the Flowery
Kingdom grew to be great friends with José, the two forthwith suspected
by Mrs. Simpson of all sorts of dark plots and of a racial sympathy
which must be watched lest it produce "something terrible."

Pollock Hampton, holding a third of the shares of the big venture, with
his legitimate claim upon a third of the income, was of course a factor
which must be taken into account.  Judith, knowing little of him,
sought to know more, watched him when he was talking, got his views
upon many matters that came up haphazard, and found that, while she
liked him, she would have been more than glad if he had not come to
still further complicate matters for her.  For it was open and shut
that his interest and enthusiasm would demand a voice.  She asked
frankly how long he planned to stay?

"I'm here for good," he answered cheerfully.  His explanation followed
with a grin, quite as though he were telling her of some rare good
news: "Money's all gone, creditors are nuisances, there's no prospect
with you here of having you send me anything.  What is left for me but
to stay?"

Judith suggested a monthly allowance.  Hampton laughed good-humoredly.

"Pay me to keep me out of the way?  There's nothing stirring, Judith.
Absolutely.  I'm here to give a hand."

Judith had hopes, even yet, that a couple or weeks or a month at the
most, of life as it runs forty miles from a railroad would dampen and
finally extinguish his bright enthusiasm.  But swiftly those hopes
died.  This was his first visit to the mountains, and for a man sick of
the city's social round, every inch of the ranch, river and cliffs and
rolling hills had its compelling interest.  Perhaps the thing which
Judith overlooked was the blood of his fathers.  For before Pollock
Hampton, Sr., had made his money, he and his wife had been, like Luke
Sanford, pioneers.  Now something in the mountains here called vaguely
to the soul of young Hampton and made him restless and stirred his
heart.  He looked up at the sheer and mighty fall of rock behind the
ranchhouse and his face glowed; he leaned over the rail of a rustic
bridge and forgot Marcia, who was with him, as he watched the beauty of
the foam-flecked water.  As he stood stock-still, looking on while Bud
Lee rode a bucking bronco, his eyes were bright and eager.

"Glory to be!" he exclaimed to the major, who had been coaxed away from
the buffet for a brief half-hour.  "Watch that man ride!  While I've
been learning to dance and play the piano these men have been doing
real things."

"Let's go have something," said the major hurriedly.  For it did not
fit in with his and Mrs. Langworthy's plans to have Hampton risk his
neck at such pastimes--at least not yet.

It soon became obvious that long ago Hampton had given freely of his
admiration to Bayne Trevors.  For Trevors had taken the time, his own
purpose in mind, to look in upon Hampton some months ago in San
Francisco.  Further, he had created the impression which he sought to
make.  An impression, by the way, not entirely erroneous.

"A great man!" cried Hampton warmly.  "The only man I know big enough
to swing a job like this."

To himself he said that the chief good he could do at the outset was to
work to get Trevors back.  With this in his mind and having had no full
account of Judith's manner of ejecting the general manager, he went
straight to her.

"Trevors is a friend of mine," he said lightly.  "I'm going to ask him
over to meet my guests.  No objection, is there?"

She looked at him keenly.

"Do as you please," was her cool answer.  "I imagine he won't care to
come."

Launched upon his first business venture, Hampton went to the
telephone.  That evening at table he surprised Judith not a little when
he said casually that Trevors had said he'd run over in a day or so, as
soon as he could find time.

"What's that?" he asked, breaking off.

For certainly Judith had started to speak.  But now she merely shrugged
her shoulders and sat in silent thoughtfulness.

Mrs. Langworthy had no liking to bestow upon such as Judith.  The girl,
she confided every night to the major, was unladylike, unwomanly,
_outré_, horsy, unthinkable, an insult to any woman into whose presence
she came.  The major agreed monosyllabically or with silent nods for
the sake of peace.  Personally he was rather inclined to fancy Judith's
uncorseted figure, to admire her red-blooded beauty, and he always
touched up the ends of his mustaches in her presence.

Judith, having early taken Mrs. Langworthy's measure, found an impish
joy in murdering the proprieties for her especial benefit.  She said
"Damn" upon occasions when Mrs. Langworthy was there to hear; she rode
her horse at a gallop into the yard and right up to the veranda when
Mrs. Langworthy was there to see, swinging down as her mount jerked to
standstill, as "ladylike" about it all as a wild Comanche; at table she
talked of prize boars and sick calves and other kindred vulgar matters.

But the major admired her; Marcia, as days went by, proved to be a
sweet-tempered, somewhat timid, but highly good-natured, affectionate
creature generously offering her good-will; and Rogers, the lawyer, and
Farris, the artist, both of the sophisticated, self-sufficient type,
were little behind the major in interest.

During the last week of May, a rumor came to Judith's ears of which, at
first, she thought little.  Carson, coming to her upon a bit of ranch
business, remarked dryly before taking his departure, that a report had
got around among his men--Poker Face had mentioned it to him--that Blue
Lake ranch was on its last legs; that it was even to be doubted, if the
men ever saw another pay-day before the whole affair went into a
receiver's hands.  Judith laughed at him and told him not to worry.

"Me?" said Carson.  "I'm not the worrying kind.  But idees like that
ain't good to have floating around.  A man won't do more'n half work
when he's wondering all the time if he's going to get his mazuma for
it."

But, when again the rumor came, this time telephoned up to her from the
Lower End by Doc Tripp, she frowned and wondered.  And she was careful,
upon the thirtieth of May, to send Charlie Miller, the storekeeper,
into Rocky Bend for the monthly pay-roll money.  She gave him her check
for one thousand dollars which, with what was in Charlie's safe at the
store and in her own here, would more than pay the monthly wages.
Charlie left for Rocky Bend in the afternoon, spending the night in
town to get the customary morning start for the ranch.  The men were to
be paid at six o'clock.

Upon this same day Pollock Hampton told Judith that Bayne Trevors was
coming to the ranch to have dinner, spend the night and the following
day.  Judith made no reply beyond favoring him with a quick look of
question.  She had not believed that the man would come.  What next?

The last day of May came, and true to his premise, Trevors was a guest
at the house from which, so short a time ago, he had been evicted.  He
dined there that night, cool and self-confident, casually polite to
Judith, civil and courteous to the other guests, especially to Major
and Mrs. Langworthy and Marcia, leading conversations unobtrusively,
making himself liked.  He watched a game of billiards, but refused to
play, saying carelessly that he had a stiff shoulder.  He and Hampton
strolled out into the starlight and for some two or three hours walked
up and down, talking quietly.

"A gentleman!" cried Mrs. Langworthy with spirit.  "It just shows that
a person can do out-doors work and not sink back into the barbarian!"

The morning after Trevors's arrival, Judith was up betimes and
breakfasted alone.  Lunching early, noon found her in the office
expecting Charlie Miller.  She was at work on the pay-roll book when
her telephone rang.  It was Doc Tripp and there was suppressed
excitement in his voice.

"Bad news, Judy," he began.  "It sure looks as though you were getting
your share."

"What is it, Doc?" she broke in sharply.  "Tell me!"

"It's Charlie Miller.  Hurt.  No, not bad.  Thrown off his horse, back
in Squaw Creek cañon.  And--robbed."

Quickly he told all that had happened.  Miller, hastening back with the
wage money, was riding through the narrow gorge when a man had sprung
out suddenly in front of him.  Miller's horse, shying, swerving
unexpectedly, had thrown him.  Before he could get to his feet the bag
of gold under his coat had been torn off, his revolver wrenched away
and the highwayman, his face masked with a red bandana handkerchief,
had run into the thick timber.

"Charlie just walked in, reeling like a drunken man," Tripp concluded.
"His fall and a rap over the head with a gun-butt have made him pretty
sick.  I am sending out a posse of men from this end to try and get the
stick-up man.  You'd better do the same up there."

For a moment Judith sat staring at the telephone dully.  Robbed of a
thousand dollars, and in broad daylight!  A thing like this had not
occurred on the Blue Lake for a dozen years.

"Bayne Trevors!" she gasped.  For, suddenly, she thought that she
understood the significance of the rumor which had twice in a week come
to her.  Perhaps, as Tripp himself had said, she was getting nerves.
Trevors himself was on the ranch right now. . . .  Her two fists
clinched.  Yes, Trevors was here with triple purpose: To curry  favor
with Hampton against a possible need of it, to establish an alibi for
himself, to witness Judith's discomfiture, when at six o'clock she must
turn the men away with an excuse.




VIII

RIFLE SHOTS FROM THE CLIFFS

Thank Heaven it was just noon!  Judith sprang to her feet, her eyes
bright and hard, and ran down to the men's quarters.  Coming up from
the corral were Carson and Bud Lee.

"Miller with the pay-roll money has been held up and robbed at Squaw
Creek," she told them swiftly.  "Get some men together, Carson, and try
to head the robber off."

The two men, having glanced quickly at each other, stood a moment
looking at her curiously.

"That's on the level, is it, Miss Judith?" demanded Carson slowly.

"Of course it's on the level!" she cried impatiently.  "Oh, I know what
you're thinking.  I'm going to phone immediately to the bank at Rocky
Bend and have another man sent out with more money.  You can count upon
getting your pay at six o'clock!"

"I told you, didn't I," muttered Carson, "that I wasn't worrying none
personal?  But if I was you I'd sure have the money on tap!"

With that he left her, going hastily to round up what men he could find
and get them into their saddles.  Bud Lee, his eyes still on her, stood
where he was.

"Well," demanded the girl, "aren't you going, too?"  Suddenly angered
by his leisurely air, she added cuttingly: "Not afraid, are you?"

"I was thinking," Lee answered coolly, "that the stick-up gent will
most probably figure on a play like that.  If he was real wise he'd
mosey along toward Rocky Bend and pop off your second man.  Two
thousand bucks a day would make a real nice little draw."

Judith paused, frowning.  There was truth in that.  If Trevors really
were behind this, he would have chosen his man carefully; he would have
planned ahead.

"If you'll do my way," continued Lee thoughtfully, "I'll have just
enough time to roll a smoke and saddle little old Climax.  He's in the
stable now.  You're not afraid of my double-crossing you?  Even if a
smart-headed man had planned the hold-up he wouldn't figure on a play
like this.  He'd think we'd have a Rocky Bender bring it out or else
wait until to-morrow."

"It won't do," she decided quickly.  "I want that money here at six
o'clock."

"Eighty miles," mused the horse foreman.  "Six hours.  That's riding
right along, but do it my way and I'll gamble you my own string of
horses--and they're worth considerable more than a thousand--that I'll
be back, heeled, at six."

Judith, quick at decisions, looked him hard in the eye, heard his plan,
and three minutes later Bud Lee, a revolver in his shirt, rode away
from the ranch-house, headed toward Rocky Bend.  Judith already had
called up Tripp, and the veterinarian himself, leading the fastest
saddle-horse he could get his hands on at brief notice, was also riding
toward Rocky Bend, from the Lower End, five miles in advance of Lee at
the start.  He went at a gentle trot, consulting his watch now and then.

So Bud Lee, riding as once those hard, dare-devil riders rode who
carried across the land the mail-bag of the Pony Express, overtook Doc
Tripp and changed to a fresh horse at the end of the first fifteen
miles.  He swung out of his saddle, stretched his long legs, remarked
lightly that it was a real fine day, and was gone again upon a fresh
mount with twenty-five miles between him and Rocky Bend.  The clock at
the bank marked forty-three minutes after two as Lee, leaving a
sweating horse at the door on Main Street, presented his check at the
paying teller's window.  The money, in a small canvas bag, was ready.

"Hello, Bud," and "Hello, Dan'l," was the beginning and end of the
conversation which ensued.  Lee did not stop to count the money.  He
drew his belt up a hole as he went back to the door, found a fresh
horse there fighting its bit and all but lifting the stable-boy off his
feet, mounted and sped back along Main Street.

Judith was to send out another man leading still another fresh horse
for him so that he could not fail to be back at the ranch-house by six
o'clock.  As Bud Lee, riding hard but never without thought for the
horse which carried him, began the return trip, he drew the heavy
caliber revolver from his shirt and thrust it into his belt.  When he
had left Rocky Bend half a dozen miles behind him and was hurrying on
into the outskirts of that country of rolling hills and pine forests,
his hand was never six inches from the gun-butt.

The road wound in and out among the pines, always climbing.  Lee raced
on, his eyes bright and keen, watchful and suspicious of every still
shadow or stirring branch.  Coming up the two-mile-long Cuesta Grade,
he saved his horse a little.  From the top of the mountain, before he
again followed a winding road back to the river's side, he saw a
horseman riding a distant ridge; the glinted upon the rider's rifle.

"Old Carson himself," thought Lee.  "Looking for the hold-up man.
Shucks!  They'll never find him this trip."

Letting his own animal out into its swinging stride as he got down to
more level going, he hammered on at his clip of fifteen miles an hour.
In the thick shade of the forest, three miles before he came to the
line fence of the Blue Lake ranch, he saw another horseman, this one Ed
Masters, the "college kid."  The young fellow's flushed, eager face
passed in a blur as Lee shot by.

Another mile, and Bud Lee was riding through a clearing, with the tall
cliffs of Squaw Creek cañon looming high on his left, when suddenly and
absolutely without warning, his horse screamed, gathered itself for a
wild plunge, staggered, stood a moment trembling terribly, then with a
low moan collapsed under him.

Lee swung out and to one side, landing clear as the big brute fell.  He
did not understand.  He had ridden the animal hard but certainly not
hard enough for this.  And then he saw and his eyes blazed with anger.
He had heard no shot, nothing beyond the metallic pounding of the shod
hoofs on flinty road, but there from an ugly hole in the neck the
saddle-horse was pouring out its blood.

"Smokeless powder and a Maxim silencer!" muttered Lee, his eyes taking
note of the ten thousand possible hiding-places on the cliff's.

In his ears there was a little whine as a second bullet sang its way by
his head.  Again he sought to locate the marksman, again saw nothing
but crag and precipice and brushy clump.  He took time for that thing
which came so hard to him, sent a bullet from his own revolver into his
horse's brain, and then slipped out of the clearing into the shelter of
the pines.

"Two miles left to the border line," he estimated it.  "Afoot."

Stiff from the saddle, he moved on slowly for a little.  But as his
muscles responded and warmed to the effort, he broke into a trotting
run.  Only a little now could he keep under cover; if he went on with
any degree of speed he must keep to the road and the open.  The thought
came to him that he might lie under cover until dark.  The second
thought came to him that he had assured Judith that he would be back on
time, and he forged ahead.

For the second time that day he heard the whine of a bullet.  He
thought that the shot came from the cliffs just at the head of Squaw
Creek cañon.  But he could not be sure.  There was ample protection
there for a man hiding, tall brush in a hollow and three or four
stunted trees, wind-twisted.  He'd make the climb to-morrow and see
about it.  Now he'd keep right on moving.  Little used to travelling
save on a horse's back he was shot through with odd little pains when
at last he came to the border-line fenced and the waiting horse.  Tommy
Burkitt held it for him while Lee mounted.

"Somebody up on the cliffs, head of the cañon," panted Lee at Tommy's
amazed expression when Lee came running into sight.  "Killed my horse.
Go after him, Tommy.  Tell the other boys."  And on he went, pounding
out the last fifteen miles, the canvas bag beating safely against his
side.

Judith, in the courtyard, watched him ride in.  She looked swiftly at
him from the watch on her wrist.  Her eyes brightened.  It lacked seven
minutes to six.  As Bud dropped the canvas bag into her hands she
flashed at him the most wonderful, radiant smile that the long horseman
had ever seen.  She gripped his lean, brown hand hard in hers.

"Bud, you're a brick!" she cried.

Mrs. Langworthy had just come out with Hampton, Trevors, and the major.

Judith turned from Lee to Trevors but managed to keep half an eye on
Mrs. Langworthy.

"You see, it's pay-day with us, Mr. Trevors," she said quietly.  "And
when pay-day comes we pay our men at six o'clock in spite of hell and
high water!"

Bud Lee, leading his horse away, turned for a word.  "A man killed a
horse for me to-day," he said very gently, and his eyes rested steadily
upon Trevors.  "If I ever get him, or the man who put him up to it, I'm
going to get him right."




IX

THE OLD TRAIL

On the Blue Lake Ranch there was more than one man ready to scoff at
the idea of a robbery like this one, frank enough to voice the
suspicion: "It's just a stall for time!"  So much had last week's rumor
done for them, preparing them to expect something that would set aside
the customary monthly pay-day.  But when they had seen Charlie Miller's
bruised head and heard his story; when they had sat on their horses and
looked down at the animal which had been shot under Bud Lee, they were
silent.  And, besides, when long after dark they came in behind Carson
from a fruitless quest, their pay was ready for them as formerly, in
gold and silver.

Major Langworthy imbibed an unusually large number of cocktails and
long before noon of the following day had suggested that the ranch be
put immediately under military law, hinting that a military-mustached
gentleman be appointed commanding general of the Blue Lake forces, and
forming within his own mind the picture of himself in the office,
revolver on table, cocktail at elbow, directing the manoeuvres from
this point of vantage, not to say safety.  Mrs. Langworthy ruffled her
feathers and sniffed when Judith's name was mentioned.  It was
perfectly clear to her that all the ruffians of the West would be quick
to take the advantage arising from the ridiculous condition of a rowdy
girl assuming men's pantaloons.

"I am rather inclined to think, mama," said Marcia, "that you don't do
Judith justice."

Trevors, with little to say to any one, took his departure in the
forenoon, extracting from Hampton the promise to ride over and see the
lumber-camp some day soon.

Judith, held at the office by a lot of first-of-the-month details, did
not get away until close to eleven o'clock that morning.  Then she rode
swiftly down the river, a purpose of her own in mind.  At the store she
stopped for a sympathetic word with Charlie Miller who had long ago
forgotten his own hurt in his grief and anger that he had lost her
thousand dollars for her.

"What's a thousand dollars, Charlie?" she laughed at him.  "We'll lose
and make many a thousand before the year dies."

Just below the Lower End settlement she came upon Doc Tripp.  He was in
one of the quarantine hog-corrals, his sleeves rolled up, a puzzled
look of worry puckering his boyish face.

"What's up, Doc?" asked Judith.

"Don't know, Judy.  That's what gets my mad up.  Just performed an
autopsy on one of your Poland-China gilts."

"Found it dead?" asked Judith.

"Killed it," grunted Tripp.  "Sick.  Half dozen more are off their feed
and don't look right.  A man's always afraid of the cholera.  And,"
stubbornly, "I won't believe it!  There's been no chance of infection;
why, there's not an infected herd this side of the Bagley ranch, sixty
miles the other side of Rocky Bend, a clean hundred miles from here.
But, just the same, I'm taking temperatures this morning and having my
herders cut out all the dull-looking ones and break the herds up."

"Not getting nerves?  Are you, Doc?"  And Judith spurred on down the
valley.

Before she came to the spot where Bud Lee's horse had been shot she
came upon Lee himself.  A rifle across his arm, he was looking up at
the cliffs of Squaw Creek cañon.

"Well, Lee," she said, "what do you make of it?"

He showed no surprise at seeing her and answered slowly, that far-away
look in his eyes as though he were alone still and speaking simply to
Bud Lee.

"Using smokeless powder nowadays is a handy thing for a man shooting
under cover," he said.  "Then rig up your gun with a silencer and get
off at fair range, half a mile and up, with a telescope sight, and it's
real nice fun picking folks off!"

"All of that spells preparation," suggested Judith.

He nodded.  When he offered no further remark but sat staring up at the
cliffs, Judith asked:

"What else have you learned by coming back down here?  Anything?"

"There were two men, anyway.  I'd guess, three.  The one who stuck up
Charlie and then drifted while the drifting was good.  Then the two
other jaspers that tried to wing me."

"How do you know that?"

"My horse that was shot," he explained, "got it in the left side of the
neck.  Now, look at that hole in the little fir-tree yonder."

Judith saw what he meant now.  At this point Lee yesterday had heard
the second bullet singing dangerously near.  It had struck the fir, and
plainly had been fired from some point off to the right of the cañon.
Her eyes went swiftly, after his up the cliff walls.

"I doped it out while I was running," he went on.  "Look at the way the
trees grow here.  If a man was on the cliffs shooting at me, and coming
that close to winging me, why, he'd have to be off to the right.  These
big pines would shunt him off from the other side.  It's open and shut
there were two of them.  And darn good shots," he added dryly.

Briefly he went on to give her the rest of the results of his two-hour
seeking for something definite.  If she'd ride on a little she'd come
to the spot where his horse had been killed; she would see in the road
the signs where, at Tripp's, orders, the carcass had been dragged away.
From there, looking off to the left, up the cliffs, she would see the
spot which Lee believed had harbored one of the riflemen.  High above
the cañon rose the rocky pinnacle he had marked yesterday, with brush
standing tall in a little depression.

"Indian Head," broke in Judith, gazing upward.  "Bud Lee, I'll bet a
horse you're right. . . ."

"And," said Lee, swinging from the saddle, "I'm going up there to have
a little look around."

In an instant the girl was at his side.

"I am going with you," she said simply.

He looked at her curiously.  Then he shrugged his shoulders.  An angry
flush came to the girl's cheeks, but she went on with him.  Not a word
passed between them during the entire hour required to climb the steep
side of the mountain and come under Indian Head cliffs.  Here they
stood together upon a narrow ledge panting, resting.  Again Judith saw
Lee glance at her curiously.  He had not sought to accommodate his
swift climbing to a girl's gait and yet he had not distanced her in the
ascent.  But in Lee's glance there was nothing of approval.  There were
two kinds of women, as he had said, and . . .

"Pretty steep climb from here up," he remarked bluntly.

"For a valley man or a cobble-pounder, maybe," was Judith's curt
rejoinder.

Thereafter they did not speak again until, after nearly another hour,
they at last came to the crest of Indian Head.  And here, in the
eagerness of their search, rewarded by the signs which they found, they
forgot, both of them, to maintain their reserve.

In the clump of brush, close to the outer fringe, behind a low, broad
boulder, a man had lain on his belly no longer ago than yesterday.
Broken twigs showed it, a small bush crushed down told of it, the marks
of his toes in some of the softer soil proclaimed it eloquently.  And,
had other signs been required, there they were: two empty brass
cartridges where the automatic ejector had thrown them several feet
away.  Lee picked up one of the shells.

"Latest thing in an up-to-the-minute Savage," he told her.  "That gun
is good for twice the distance he used it for.  I'm in tolerable luck
to be mountain-climbing to-day, I guess!"

While Judith visualized just what had occurred, saw the tall man--he
must have been tall for his boot toes to scratch the earth yonder while
his rifle-barrel lay for support across the boulder in front--resting
his gun and firing down into the cañon--Lee was back at her side,
saying shortly:

"What do you think?  There's a plain trail up here, old as the hills,
but tip-top for speedy going."

"And," said Judith without looking up, "it runs down into the next
saddle, to the north of that ridge, curves up again and with monuments
all along the way, runs straight to the Upper End and comes down from
the northeast to the lake."

Lee looked at her, wondering.

"You knew about it all the time, then?"

"If we hadn't been on our high horses," she told him quietly, "I should
have told you about it.  It's the old Indian Trail.  If the man we want
turned east, then he went right on to the lake before he stopped
putting one foot in front of the other.  Unless he hid out all night,
which I don't believe."

"What makes you think he went that far?"

"There's no other trail up here that gets anywhere.  If he left this
one for a short cut he'd know, if he knows anything, that he'd have to
take a chance every ten steps of breaking his neck in the dark.  Now,"
and she rose swiftly, confronting him, "the thing for you to do, Bud
Lee, is to get back to your horse, take the road, make time getting to
the Upper End and see what you can see there!"

Hurrying back to their horses, they rode to the ranch-house where
Judith, with no word of adieu, left Lee to go to the house.  Lee made a
late lunch, saddled another horse, and when the bunk-house clock stood
at a quarter of four, started for the Upper End.

"That girl's got the savvy," was his one remark to himself.




X

UNDER FIRE

Blue Lake, while but three miles farther eastward, flashed its jewelled
waters into the sun from a plane fully five hundred feet higher than the
tall chimneys of the ranch-house.  About it stood the most precipitous
granite cliffs to be found hereabouts.  They rose, sheer and majestic,
still another five hundred feet, here and there eight hundred and a
thousand.  The lake, half a mile in diameter, circular like some polished
mirror presented by an ancient giant to his lady-love, was shut in
everywhere by these crags and cliffs save at the west, where the
overflowing water, going to swell the turbulent river, poured like molten
crystal through a wide gorge.  The farther cliffs marked the eastern
boundary-line of the ranch.  Beyond them lay a small plateau rimmed about
on three sides by still other steep precipices.

Lee, coming to the water's edge sought to guess where the old Indian
Trail came down.  And again, startling him for a second time, Judith rode
up.

She, too, had a fresh horse; she too now carried a rifle across her arm.
Bud Lee frowned.

"What makes you so certain, Bud Lee," was her abrupt word of greeting,
"that Bayne Trevors is back of this deal?"

"When did I say that?" he countered.

"Yesterday, when I told you Charlie Miller had been held up, you
intimated that a long-headed man had planned the whole thing.  That means
Trevors, doesn't it?"

"One of us," said Lee calmly, ignoring her question and looking her
straight in the eyes, "is going back.  Which one?"

"Neither!" she retorted promptly.  She even smiled confidently at him.
"For I won't.  And you won't."

"Do you need to be told," he asked her coolly, "that this is no sort of
job for a girl?  You'd only be in the way."

"If you want glittering generalities," she jeered at him, "then listen to
this: A man's job, first, last, and all the time, is to be chivalrous to
a woman!  And not a bumptious boor!"

With that she spurred by him, taking the trail which led off to the right
and so under the cliffs and to the mouth of a great, ragged chasm.  In
spite of him, Bud Lee grinned after her.  And, seeing that she was not to
be turned back, he followed.

They left their horses and followed the old footpath, made their way into
the chasm deeper and deeper and little by little climbed upward.  The
climb was less difficult than it looked, and fifteen minutes brought them
to the upland plateau and to the door of an old cabin, made of logs, set
back in a tiny grove of cedars.

"I haven't been here for a year," cried the girl, forgetful of the
constraint which had held them until now.  "It's like getting back home
for the first time!  I love it."

"So do I," Lee said within himself.

"Look!" exclaimed Judith.  "Some one has been repairing the old cabin!
He's made a bench yonder under the big tree, too.  And he has walled in
the spring with rocks, and . . .  Who in the world can it be?  There's
even a little garden of wild flowers!"

Bud Lee, for no reason clear to himself, flushed.  He offered no
explanation at first.  Here he spent many an hour when the time was his
for idling, lying on the grass, looking out over the immensity of the
wilderness; here he came many a night to sleep under the stars, far from
the other boys, when his soul craved solitude; here upon many a Sunday,
when work was slack, did he come to smoke alone, loaf alone, read from
the few books on the cabin's shelves.

"Maybe," he suggested at last, when it was clear that Judith was going
straight to the door, "this is where our stick-up gents hang out.  Choice
place for a cutthroat to hibernate, huh?"

"I don't believe it," answered Judith positively.  "The man who made his
hermitage here has a soul!"

Behind her back Lee smiled.

"We've got something to do," he said hastily, "without wasting time
poking into old shacks.  Where's the Indian Trail you talked about?"

"Shack!" cried Judith indignantly.  "You make me sick.  Bud Lee!  I'd
rather own this cabin and live here, than have a palace on Fifth Avenue!"

She knocked at the door, knowing that silence would answer her, but
hoping to have a man, calm-eyed, gentle-voiced, a romantic hermit in all
of his picturesqueness, come to the door.

"Going in?" asked Lee in well-simulated carelessness.

"No," she told him freezingly.  "Why should I?  Would you want people
poking about into your home just because it was in the heart of the
wilderness and you weren't there to drive them out?"

"No," answered Bud gravely.  "Now that you ask me, I wouldn't!  Let's go
find that trail."

"But," continued Judith, "not being a fool, and realizing that one of the
men we want might possibly be in hiding in here, I am going to peek in."

"Not being a fool," he repeated after her, adding gently, "and being a
girl, which means filled with curiosity."

A disdainful shoulder gave him his answer.  The door was unlocked, after
immemorial Western custom, and Judith opened it.  Lee heard her little
gasp of pure delight.

"He's a dear, the man who lives here!" she announced positively.  "You
can just tell by looking at his home."

Looking in over her shoulder, Bud Lee wondered just what in his one-room
shanty had caught her enthusiasm.  He was secretly pleased that it had
done so, though that "it" was somewhat vague in his masculine mind.
There was the rock fireplace with an iron hook protruding from each side
for coffee-pot and stew-pot; a bunk with a blanket smoothed over
cedar-boughs; a shelf with a dozen books; little else, so far as he could
see or remember, to catch at Judith's delight.  Yet she, looking through
woman's eyes, read in one quick "peek" the character of the dweller in
this abode.  One who was content with little, who loved a clean, outdoor
life, and who was tranquilly above the pettiness of humanity.  Judith
closed the door softly.

"I'd like to look inside his books!" she confessed.  "But I won't."

The lean horse foreman chuckled.  Judith sniffed at him.

"You haven't any curiosity about such things as books," she retorted.
"To be sure, why should you have?"

Again, leaving the cabin, she went before him.  Going straight across the
plateau, she showed him where one could clamber up a steep way to the
ridge.  Once up there, it was but ten minutes until, in a hollow, they
found the monument marking a trail, a stone set upon a boulder.

It was after five o'clock.  When, following the trail back and forth in
its winding along the side of the ridge, they found the signs they
sought, it was fast growing dark.  But there, in a narrow defile where
loose soil had filtered down, were tracks left by a large boot.  Lee went
down on his hands and knees to study them in the dusk.  He got up with a
little grunt and moved down the trail.  Again he found tracks, this time
more clearly defined.  So dark was it now that they had lighted several
matches.

"Two men," he announced wonderingly.  "Fresh tracks, too.  Made this
morning or last night, I'll bet.  One coming east from Indian Head.  The
other coming west from the plateau behind us.  Who's _he_?  Where'd he
come from?"

"He's the second of the two men who shot at you," said Judith quickly.
"Don't I know every trail in this neck of the woods, Bud Lee?  He
followed another old, worn-out trail on the south side of the ranch.
They met here just as I knew they would!"

"What for?"  Lee frowned through the darkness at her eager face.  "What
would they want to get together for?  If they had any sense they would
scatter and clean out of the country."

"Unless," Judith reminded him, "they don't intend to clean out at all!
Unless they mean to stick to the cliffs and try their hands again at
their sort of game.  They'll figure that we will expect them to be a long
way from here by now, won't they?  Then where would they be safer than
right here in these mountains?  Give me a rifle and something to eat and
I'll defy an army getting me out there.  And think of it:  If this is
Trevors's work, if he means business, think what two gunmen on these
heights could do to us.  They could pick off a three-thousand-dollar
stallion down in the pens; they could drop more than one prize bull or
cow; and," she added sharply, "if they thought about girls as some men
think, they could take a chance on scaring Judith Sanford out of the
country."

Lee stared at her a long time in silence.

"I wouldn't have said," he offered finally, "that Bayne Trevors would
make quite so strong a play as that."

"You wouldn't!  Then look him in the eye!  And where's his risk, if he's
picked the right men, if he sees them through, keeping the back door open
when they want to run for it?  You just gamble your boots, Bud Lee, that
Bayne Trevors . . ."

Without warning, without a sound of explosion came a wiry whine into the
still air, a little venomous ping, and a bullet sped by just over their
heads.  But, through the gloom, they both saw the flash of the gun as it
spat fire and lead, and, as though one impulse commanded them, Judith's
rifle and Bud Lee's went to their shoulders and two reverberating reports
rang out in answer.

"Lie down, damn it!" cried Bud Lee to the girl at his side, as again
there came the flash from the cliffs off to the right and as again he
answered it with his rifle.

"Lie down yourself!" snapped Judith.  And once more her rifle spoke with
his.

For one instant, framed against the darkening sky along the cliff edge
five hundred yards away to the right, they saw the silhouette of a man,
leaping from one boulder to another, a man who looked gigantically big in
the uncertain light.  They fired; he jumped again and passed out of sight.

"Got his nerve," grunted Lee as he pumped lead at the running figure.

As an answer there came the third flash, the bullet striking the trail in
front of them.  And then the fourth flash, from a point a hundred yards
to the left of the other.

"That's  Number Two,"  muttered  Lee.  "They've got us in the open,
Judith.  Let's beat it back to the cabin."

"I'm with you," said Judith, between shots.  "It's just
foolishness" . . . _bang_! . . . "sticking out here" . . . _bang_! . . .
"for them to pop us off."  _Bang_!  _Bang_!

They ran then, Bud slipping in front of her, his tall body looming darkly
between her and the cliffs whence the shots came.  He slid along the
sharp slope to the plateau, putting out his arms toward her.  And as she
came down, Bud Lee grunted and cursed under his breath.  For there had
been another flash out of the thickening night, this one from the refuge
toward which they were running.  A third man was shooting from the
shelter of the cabin walls.  And Lee had felt a stinging pain as though a
hot iron had scorched its way along the side of his leg.

"Hurt much?" asked Judith quickly.  Without waiting for an answer, she
pumped two shots at the flash by the cabin.

"No," grunted Lee.  "Just scared.  And now what?  I want to know."




XI

IN THE OLD CABIN

Bud Lee, in the thicker darkness lying along the edge of the plateau,
sat with his back against the rocks while he gave swift first aid to
his wound.  He brought into requisition the knotted handkerchief from
about his throat, bound it tightly around the calf of his leg, and said
lightly to Judith:

"Just a fool scratch, you know.  But I've no hankering to dribble out a
lot of blood from it."

Judith made no answer.  Lee took up his rifle and turned to the spot
where she had been standing a moment ago.  She was not there.

"Gone!" he grunted, frowning into the blackness hemming him in.  "Now,
what do you suppose she's up to?  Fainted, most likely."

He got up and moved along the low rock wall, seeking her.  A spurt of
flame from the east corner of the cabin drew his eyes away from his
search and he pumped three quick shots in answer.

"Little chance of hitting anything," he muttered.  "Too blamed dark.
Just fool's luck that I got mine in the leg."

Again he sought Judith, calling softly.  There was no answer.  Once
more came the spurt of flame from the shelter of the cabin wall.  Then
fifty yards off to Lee's right, some fifty yards nearer the cabin,
another shot.

The first suspicion that one of the men from the cliffs had made his
way down to join issue at close quarters, was gone in a clear
understanding.  That was the bark of Judith's rifle; she had slipped
away from him without an instant's delay and was creeping closer and
closer to the cabin.

"Damn the girl!" cried Lee angrily.  "She'll get her fool self killed!"

But as he ran forward to join her, he realized that she was doing the
right thing--the only thing if they did not want to lie out here all
night for the men on the cliffs to pick off in the morning light.  He
knew that she could shoot; it seemed that she could do everything that
was a man's work and which a woman should know nothing about.

A fresh thought locked his hand like steel about his gun-stock.
Suppose that Judith, in the mad thing she was attempting, should
actually succeed in it, that she should bring down the man she was
attacking?  How would Bud Lee feel about it when the boys came to know?
What would Bud Lee answer when they asked what he was doing about that
time?  "Nursin' a scratched leg?  Mos' likely!  Huh!"  He could hear
old Carson's dry cackle.

Frowning into the night, he thought that he could make out the dim blur
of Judith's form.  The girl was standing erect; shooting, too, for
again the duel of red spurts of flame told where she and her quarry
stood.

Meantime Lee ran on, changing his original purpose, swerving out from
where Judith was moving forward, turning to the left, hopeful to come
to close quarters with their assailant before she could go down under
that sharp rifle-fire or could bring down the other.  For certainly, if
she kept on that way, the time would come when some one would stop hot
lead.

Lee shifted his rifle to his left hand, taking his revolver into his
right.  From the cliffs came a shot and he grunted at it
contemptuously.  It could do nothing but assure those below that there
was still some one up there.

"Three of them to our two," he estimated, "counting the two jaspers on
the cliff.  Two of us to their one, counting what's down here.  And
that's all that counts right this minute."

A shot from Judith; a shot from the cabin; two shots from the cliffs.
The two shots from above brought fresh news; not only were they closer
together, but they indicated the men up yonder were coming down.  Lee
hurried.

Then, at last, his narrowed eyes made out the faint outline of that
which he sought.  Close to the cabin, low down, evidently upon his
knees, was the most important factor to be considered, now.  Still Lee
was too far away to be certain of a hit and he meant with all of the
grim determination in him to hit something at last.  He ran on drawing
the fire away from Judith.  A rifle-ball sang close to his side,
another and an other.  He lost the dim shape of the kneeling man, who,
he thought, had risen from his knees and was standing, his body
tight-pressed to the cabin.

"Why the devil doesn't he run for it?" wondered Lee.

But evidently, be the reason what it might, the man had no intention of
running.  A bullet cut through Lee's sleeve.  At last Lee answered.  He
ran in closer as he fired and, running, emptied his revolver, jammed it
into his waistband, clubbed his rifle . . . and realized with something
of a shock that there were but the two rifles on the cliffs to take
into consideration.  That other rifle, at the cabin, was still.  Out of
ammunition?  Or plugged?  Or playing 'possum?  Which?

"Stop shooting!" he shouted to Judith.

"I'm coming!" she cried back to him.

Almost at the same instant, their two rifles ready, they came to the
cabin.  Between them on the ground a man lay at the corner, moving
helplessly, groping for his fallen gun, falling back.

"Open the door," said Bud.  "I'll get him inside and we'll see who he
is.  Hurry, Judith; those other jaspers are working down this way as
fast as they know how."

Judith, taking time to snatch up the fallen rifle, ran around to the
door.  Lee slipped his hands under the armpits of the wounded man and
dragged him in Judith's wake.  In the cabin, the door shut, Lee struck
a match and went to a little shelf where there was a candle.

"Bill Crowdy!" gasped Judith.

Almost before Lee saw the man's face he saw the canvas bag tied to his
belt, a bag identical with the one he himself had brought from the bank
at Rocky Bend.

"The man that stuck up Charlie Miller," he said slowly.  "And there's
your thousand bucks, or I'm a liar.  I get something of their play now:
those two fellows up there were waiting to meet him and split the swag
three ways.  And I've got the guess they'll be asking a look-in yet!"

He dropped a heavy bar into its place across the door and then went to
the two small windows and fastened the heavy oaken shutters.  When he
came back to Judith she was bending over the wounded man.  Crowdy's
eyes were closed; he looked to be on the verge of death.  The girl's
face was almost as white as Crowdy's.

Lee knelt and with quick fingers sought the wound.  There was a hole in
Crowdy's chest, high up near the throat, that was bleeding profusely.
At first that seemed the only wound.  But in a second Lee had found
another.  This was in the leg, and this, like Lee's, was bound tightly
with a handkerchief.

"Got that, first rattle out of the box!" commented Lee.  "See it?
That's why he stuck on the job and didn't try to run for it.  Looks
like a rifle-ball had smashed the bone."

He didn't look up.  His fingers, busy with the string at Crowdy's belt,
brought away the canvas bag.  There was blood on it; it was heavy and
gave forth the mellow jangle of gold.

"You win back your thousand on to-night's play," he said, holding up
the bag to Judith, lifting his eyes to her face.

But Judith shrank back, her eyes wide with horror.

"I don't want it!  I can never touch it!" she whispered.

Suddenly she was shaking from head to foot, her eyes fixed in terrible
fascination upon Crowdy's face.  Lee tossed the bag to the bunk across
the room, whence it fell clanking to the floor.

"Now she's going to faint," was his thought.  "Well, I won't blame her
so damn much.  Poor little kid!"

But he did not look at her again.  He tore away Crowdy's shirt to
discover just how serious the wound in the chest was.  The collar-bone
had been broken; the ball had ploughed its way through the upper chest,
well above the heart, and could be felt under the skin of the shoulder.
Unless Bill Crowdy bled to death, he stood an excellent chance of doing
time in the penitentiary.  Lee stanched the flow of blood, made a rude
bandage, and then, lifting the body gently, carried it to the bunk.
Crowdy's lax arm, extended downward at the side of the bunk, seemed to
be reaching again for the canvas bag; the red fingers touched it with
their tips.

"Now," said Lee, speaking bluntly, afraid that a tone of sympathy might
merely aid the girl to "shake to pieces," "we've got a chance to be on
our way before Number Two and Number Three get into the game.  Let's
run for it, Judith."

Judith went to the bench by the fireplace and sank down upon it.  For a
moment she made no reply.  Then she shook her head.

"We'll stay here until morning," she said finally, her voice surprising
Lee, who had looked for a sign of weakening to accord with her sudden
pallor and visible trembling.

"What for?" he wanted to know.  "We'll have another fight on our hands
if we do.  Those fellows, this deep in it, are not going to quit while
they know that there's all that money in the shack!"

"I don't care," said Judith firmly.  "I won't run from them or anybody
else I know!  And, besides, Bud Lee, I am not going to give them the
chance to get Crowdy away. . . .  Do you think he is going to die?"

"No, I don't.  Doc Tripp will fix him up."

"Then here I stay, for one.  When I go, Bill Crowdy goes with me!  He's
going to talk, and he's going to help me send Bayne Trevors to the pen."

Bud Lee expressed all he had to say in a silent whistle.  He'd made
another mistake, that was all.  Judith wasn't going to faint for him
to-night.

"Then," he said presently, setting her the example, "slip some fresh
cartridges into your rifle and get ready for more shooting.  I'll put
out the light and we'll wait for what's next."

Judith replenished the magazine of her rifle.  Lee, watching from under
the low-drawn brim of his hat, noted that her fingers were steady now.
Crowdy moved on his bunk, lifted a hand weakly, groaned, and grew
still.  Presently he stirred again, asking weakly for water.

Lee went to the water-bucket standing in a corner.  It happened to be
half full.  He filled a cup, and lifting Crowdy's head, held it to the
fevered lips.

"Not exactly what you'd call fresh, is it, Crowdy?" he said lightly.
"But the spring's outside and I'm scared to go out in the dark."

Crowdy drank thirstily and lay back, his eyes closed again.  Lee
rearranged his bandage.

"Put out the light now?" he asked Judith.

"No," she answered.  "What's the use, Bud?  There are no holes in the
walls they could stick a gun-barrel through, are there?"

No one knew better than he that there were not.

"You see," said Judith, with a half-smile, heroically assumed, "I'm a
little afraid of the dark, too!  Anyway, since we've got to spend the
night with a man in Crowdy's shape, it will be more cosey, won't it,
with the light on?"

She even put out her hand to one of the books on the shelves which she
could reach from her bench.

"And now," she added, "I'm sure that our hermit won't mind if we peep
into his library, will he?"

"No," answered Lee gravely.  "Most likely he'll be proud."

Lee found time to muse that life is made of incongruities, woman of
inconsistencies.  Here with a badly hurt man lying ten feet from her,
with every likelihood of the night stillness being ripped in two by a
rifle-shot, Judith sat and turned the pages of a book.  It was a volume
on the breeding and care of pure-blooded horses.  Odd sort of thing for
her hermit to have brought here with him!  Her hand took down another
volume.  Horses again; a treatise by an eminent authority upon a newly
imported line from Arabia.  A third book; this, a volume of Elizabethan
lyrics.  Bud Lee flushed as he watched her.  She turned the pages
slowly, came back to the fly-leaf page, read the name scrawled there
and, turning swiftly to Lee, said accusingly:

"David Burrill Lee, you are a humbug!"

"Wrong again," grinned Lee.  "A hermit, you mean!  'A man with a soul.'
. . ."

"Scat!" answered Judith.  But, under Bud Lee's teasing eyes, the color
began to come back into her cheeks.  She _had_ been a wee bit
enthusiastic over her hermit, making of him a picturesque ideal.  She
had visioned him, even to the calm eyes, gentle voice.  A quick little
frown touched her brows as she realized that the eyes and voice which
her fancy had bestowed upon the hermit were in actuality the eyes and
voice of Bud Lee.  But she had called him a dear.  And Lee had been
laughing at her all the time--had not told her, would never have told
her.  The thought came to her that she would like to slap Bud Lee's
face for him.  And she had told Tripp she would like to slap Pollock
Hampton's.  Good and hard!




XII

PARDNERS

From without came the low murmur of men's voices.  Judith laid her book
aside and drew her rifle across her knees, her eyes bright and eager.
At infrequent intervals for perhaps three or four minutes the two
voices came indistinctly to those in the cabin.  Then silence for as
long a time.  And then a voice again, this time quite near the door,
calling out clearly:

"Hey, you in there!  Pitch the money out the window and we'll let you
go."

"There's a voice," said Judith quietly, "to remember!  I'll be able to
swear to it in court."

Certainly a voice to remember, just as one remembers an unusual face
for years, though it be but a chance one seen in a crowd.  A voice
markedly individual, not merely because it was somewhat high-pitched
for a man's, but rather for a quality not easily defined, which gave to
it a certain vibrant, unpleasant harshness, sounding metallic almost,
rasping, as though with the hiss of steel surfaces rubbing.  Altogether
impossible to describe adequately, yet, as Judith said, not to be
forgotten.

Judith noticed a puzzled look on Bud's face.  He called out: "What did
you say out there?"

Word for word came the command again:

"Pitch the money out of the window and we'll let you go."

Lee turned triumphantly to Judith.

"I've got his tag!" he whispered to her.  "I played poker with that
voice one night not four months ago in Rocky Bend!"

"Who is he?" Judith whispered back.  "With Crowdy down, if we know who
one of these men is, the rest will be easy.  Who is he?"

"A bad egg," Lee told her gravely.  "He's done time in the State pen.
He's been out less than a year.  Gunman, stick-up man, convicted once
already for manslaughter . . ."

"Not Chris Quinnion, Bud Lee!" she cried excitedly.  "Not Chris
Quinnion!"

"Sh!" he commanded softly.  "There's no use tipping our hand off to
him.  Yes; it's crooked Chris Quinnion.  You don't know him, do you?"

He had never seen her eyes look as they looked now.  They were as hard
and bright as steel; no true woman's eyes, he thought swiftly.  Rather
the eyes of a man with murder in his heart.

"Then, thank God!" whispered Judith, her voice tense.  "Can you keep a
secret with me, Bud Lee?  Were it not for the man calling to us now,
Luke Sanford would be here in our stead.  Crooked Chris Quinnion served
his time in San Quentin because my father sent him there.  And he had
not been free six months before he kept his oath and murdered my poor
old dad!"

"Well?" came the interrupting snarl of Quinnion's voice, like the
ominous whine of an enraged animal.  "What's the word?"

"Give us five minutes to think it over," returned Lee coolly.  And,
incredulous eyes on Judith's set face, he said gently: "I was on the
ranch when the accident happened.  He must have driven that heavy car a
little too close to the edge of the grade.  The bank just naturally
gave way."

Judith, her lips tightly compressed, shook her head.

"You didn't find him under the car, did you?  And the blow that killed
him might have been dealt with some heavy weapon in the hands of a man
standing behind him, mightn't it?  I know, Bud Lee, I know!"

"How do you know?" he demanded intently.  "You weren't here even."

"No.  I was in San Francisco.  But the day before I had a letter from
father.  He expected me home very soon.  He was going out, he said in
his letter, to look at the road over the mountain.  He wrote that the
grade was dangerous, especially at the very place where the car went
over!  He wanted me to know so that in case he could not get the work
done on it before I came, I would be careful.  On top of that would he
go and run his car into such danger as that?  Oh, I know!" she cried
again, her hands hard upon her rifle.  "I know, I tell you!  From the
first I suspected.  I knew that Chris Quinnion had threatened a dozen
times to 'get' father; I knew that soon or late he would try.  I wrote
Emmet Sawyer, our county sheriff, and told him what I believed, asked
him to go to the spot and see what the signs told.  A square man is
Emmet Sawyer and as sharp as tacks."

"And he told you that you were mistaken?"

"He did nothing of the kind!  He reported that the tracks of the car
showed that it had kept well away from the bank, that evidently it had
stopped there, that again it had gone on, swerving so as to run close
to the edge!  I know what happened: Father got out to look at the
dangerous spot and to put up the sign he had brought with him and that
was found in the road.  Chris Quinnion had followed him, perhaps to
shoot him down from behind, Chris Quinnion's way!  Then he saw a safer
way.  He came up behind poor old dad and struck him in the head with
something, rifle-barrel or revolver.  He started the car up and let it
run over the bank.  He--"

She broke off then.  Bud Lee felt that he knew what she would say if
she could bring herself to go on; that she would tell how crooked Chris
Quinnion had thrown the unconscious man down over the bank to lie,
bruised and broken, by the wrecked car.

"You've got to be almighty sure before you make a charge like that," he
reminded her.  "If Quinnion had done it, why didn't Emmet Sawyer get
the dead-wood on him?"

"Because," she whispered quickly, "a man fooled Sawyer!  Yes, and
fooled me!  Quinnion established an alibi.  A man whose word there was
no reason to doubt said that Quinnion was with him at the time of the
murder.  And that man was--Bayne Trevors!"

"Trevors?" muttered Lee.  He shook his head.  "Trevors is a hard man,
Judith.  And he's a scoundrel, if you want to know!  But frame up a
murder deal--plan to murder Luke Sanford--No.  I don't believe it!"

"Is he the man to miss a chance that lay at his hand?  The main chance
for him?  The chance to hold a man like Chris Quinnion in the hollow of
his hand, to make him do his bidding, to set him just such work as he
is doing now?  Answer me!  Is Bayne Trevors above a deal like that?"

Bud Lee's answer was silence.

"And there is one other thing," went on Judith swiftly, "known to no
one but Emmet Sawyer, whom I told, and me and Chris Quinnion: In
father's letter he told me that a man had paid him some money the day
before, and that he was going to drive to Rocky Bend to bank it.
'There are some tough customers in the country,' he wrote, 'and it's
foolhardy to have too much money in our old safe.'  That money, several
hundred dollars, was never banked.  It was not found on his body.
Where did it go?"

"Even that doesn't incriminate Quinnion, you know."

"No.  The rest is pure guesswork on my part.  Guesswork based on what I
know.  Not enough to hang Chris Quinnion, Bud Lee.  But enough to make
me sure.  He's working at Trevor's game right now.  If we can prove
that it is Trevors's game, it will go to show how worthless his alibi
was."

"Well?" called Quinnion, the third time.  "What about it?  We ain't
goin' to wait all night."

"Tell him," whispered Judith, her hand on Lee's arm, "to come and get
it if he wants it!  One of us can hold the cabin against the two of
them while the other slips out in the dark and rides back to the
ranch-house for help.  If we're in luck, Bud Lee, we'll corner the
bunch of them before daylight!"

Lee stood a moment looking down into her face, his mind filled with
uncertainties.  With all his soul he wished that Judith had not come
with him to-night, that he had only himself to think of now.  Quinnion,
not to be further put off, called again, the snarl of his voice rising
into ugly threat.  Still Lee, thinking of Judith, hesitated.

"It's the only way," she insisted.  "If we gave them the money they'd
want Bill Crowdy next.  If they got Crowdy away with them into the
mountains I am not sure that they could not hide until they got him
safe in Trevors's hands.  Then we'd have the whole fight still to make,
sooner or later.  It's our one bet, Lee!"

And Bud Lee, seeing no better way ahead for them, blew out the candle,
forced Judith to stand close to the rock chimney of the fireplace, took
his station near her, and answered Quinnion, saying shortly:

"Come ahead when you're ready.  We're waiting."

Quinnion's curse, the crack of his rifle, the flying splinters from the
cabin door, came together like one implacable menace.

"And now, Bud Lee," cried Judith quickly, "I don't mind telling you,
not seeing the end of the string we are playing, that you are a man to
my liking!"

"My hat's off," said Lee, with grave simplicity.  "And in any old kind
of a fight a man wouldn't want a better pardner than I can reach now,
putting out my hand.  He'd want--just a thoroughbred!  And now, little
pardner, let's give them--fits!"

Judith, even as Quinnion's second shot tore into the door, laughed
softly.

"Finish it as you began it, Bud Lee!  Even George Washington swore at
Monmouth, you know!"

So Bud Lee amended his words and spoke his thought:

"Then, pardner, let's give 'em hell!"

Crouching in the dark, reserving their own fire while they waited for
something more definite than the bark of a rifle to shoot at, their
hand met.




XIII

THE CAPTURE OF SHORTY

It came about, quite as matters often do, that at the
three-mile-distant ranch headquarters it was one who knew comparatively
little of the ways of this part of the world who was first to suspect
that all was not well with Judith Sanford.  To Pollock Hampton her
failure to appear at dinner was significant.

Together with the other newcomers to the ranch from the city he had
been deeply moved by yesterday's outlawry.  Drawing upon a vivid
imagination, he peopled the woods with desperate characters.  When
after dinner an hour passed without bringing Judith, he began to show
signs of nervous anxiety.  Without making his fears known to his
friends, he went to the office and telephoned to Doc Tripp.  All that
Tripp could tell him was that he didn't know where Judith was and
didn't care; she could take care of herself.  Though the veterinarian
didn't say as much, he was at the moment puzzled by the new sickness
among the hogs and his irritable concern in this matter allowed him
scant interest in other people's affairs.

Hampton learned from Mrs. Simpson that in the afternoon Judith after a
hurried lunch had taken her rifle and ridden away.  Where?  Mrs.
Simpson did not know.  But she grasped the opportunity to confide in
Hampton a certain suspicion which she held in connection with the
robbery and killing of Bud Lee's horse under him--a suspicion which was
growing rapidly into positive certainty.  She didn't like to mention
the matter to him, since Fujioki was his servant.  But had he noted
Fujioki and that other black Spanish, José?  They had a community of
interest which must extend far beyond racial kinship; they were, even
at this very second, out in the courtyard together talking in subdued
voices.  Mrs. Simpson had been raised a lady, Mr. Hampton, sir; and she
knew that in the best families one was not supposed to eavesdrop.  But
at a time like this. . . .  Well, she _had_ crept up behind the
lilac-bushes and they _were_ speaking guardedly about the hold-up!
Almost in whispers, with every sign of guilt----

"Hurried lunch?" said Hampton.  "Took her rifle, did she?"

His eyes had grown very serious as he stared down into Mrs. Simpson's
concerned face.

"Send José to me," was what he said next.

"Aren't you afraid, Mr. Hampton?" she exclaimed, picturing to herself
this pleasant young gentleman at death-grips with the sombre José.
However, she obeyed and called José whom Hampton merely sent to the
men's quarters with word for Carson and Lee to come to the house.  Mrs.
Simpson, witnessing the bloodless meeting from the hallway, was a
little relieved and very much disappointed.

Hampton strode up and down the office, the frown gathering upon his
usually smooth brows.  Plainly if something had happened to Judith the
present responsibility lay upon his shoulders as next in authority.

"Here I am," announced Carson briefly.  "What is it?"

"I am a little worried, Carson," said Hampton, "about Miss Sanford."

"Huh?" grunted the old cattleman.

"Judith hasn't put in an appearance and it's growing late," continued
Hampton hastily "I'm afraid----"

"Afraid?  Afraid of what?  You don't think she eloped with your Jap or
stole the spoons, do you?" snapped Carson.  He had been interrupted at
the crucial point in a game of cribbage with Poker Face and the
cattleman's weak spot was cribbage.  He glared at Hampton belligerently.

"Where is Lee?" questioned Hampton sharply.  "I told José I wanted the
two of you.  Why didn't he come?"

"Dunno," answered Carson, still without interest.  "I ain't seen him.
Wasn't in for supper----"

"I tell you," cried Hampton, angry at Carson's quiet acceptance of
facts which to him were darkly significant, "he, too, was out with his
rifle to-day; I saw him myself.  Now _he_ fails to show up!  Don't you
see what all this points to?"

Carson, who seldom lost his poise with one-half of his brain still
given over to the hand he meant to play with Poker Face, merely sighed
and shook his head.

"I'm real busy down at the bunk-house, Mr. Hampton," at last came his
quiet answer, "where me an' Poker Face is figuring out something
important.  As for worrying about a man like Bud Lee or a girl like
Judy, why, I just ain't going to do it a-tall.  Most likely if you'll
call up the Lower End----"

"I've done it!"  Whirling in his impatient stride across the room,
Hampton came swiftly to Carson's side.  "They're not there.  They left
the Lower End this afternoon and came on here.  Then, both armed, they
rode away again at four or five o'clock.  I tell you, man, something
has happened to them."

"Don't believe it," retorted Carson.  "Not for one little half-minute,
I don't.  What's to happen?  Huh?"

"You know as well as I do what sort of characters are about.  The man
who robbed Charlie Miller--who shot at Bud Lee----"

"Whoa!" grinned Carson.  "Don't you go and fool yourself.  That
stick-up gent is a clean hundred miles from here right now an' still
going, real lively.  If any other jasper lent him a hand, why, he's on
his way, too.  Not stopping to pick flowers.  It's the way them kind
plays the game."

Carson was so cheerfully certain, so amused at the thought of Bud Lee
and Judith Sanford requiring anybody's assistance, so confident
concerning the methods of outlaws, that finally Hampton sent him away,
half assured, and went himself to his friends in the living-room.  Here
he found the major and Mrs. Langworthy reading and yawning.  Marcia
laughed at a jest of Farris's, while Rogers sought to interest her in
himself.  The every-day, homelike atmosphere had its effect in allaying
his picturesque fears.  Hampton noted how her handful of days in the
country had done Marcia a world of good, putting fresh, warm color in
her rather pale cheeks, breeding a new sparkle in her eyes.  She was
good to look upon.

He let half an hour slip by in restless inactivity.  For, no matter
what Carson might say or these people in here do, Judith had not yet
come in.  When Marcia addressed a bright remark to him, he started and
stammered: "I _beg_ your pardon!"  They laughed at him, saying that
Pollock Hampton was growing absent-minded in his old age.  But their
banter failed to reach him; he was telling himself that some accident
might have befallen one or both of two persons whom he frankly admired
for their efficiency.

By half past eight they had caught his uneasiness.  At every little
sound they turned expectantly.  Still no Judith.  Mrs. Simpson,
comfortable woman that she was, came in, bustling with apprehension.
Mrs. Langworthy shook off for a little her listlessness and recounted
how she had watched "that girl" riding like a wild Indian toward the
Upper End.  Perhaps her gun had gone off accidentally.

"Or," she concluded with a touch of venom, "it wouldn't be above her to
run off with that long horse foreman."

"Eh?" said the major.  "Don't believe it.  A fine fig--ahem.  Where
should she run to?  And why run at all?"

Marcia looked a quick distress to Mr. Hampton.

"It _is_ late," she said timidly, "Oh, Pollock!  Do you think----"

No longer to be restrained, Hampton left them and went to his room for
a rifle and cartridge-belt.  He intended to slip out quietly, feeling
that he would get from Farris and Rogers only the sort of disbelief he
had gotten from Carson.  Marcia met him in the hall; she had heard his
quick steps and guessed that he was going out.  Now clearly, though she
was frightened, she was delighted with him.  He had never thrilled her
like this before.  She had never guessed that Pollock Hampton could be
so stern-faced, so purposeful.  She whispered an entreaty that he be
careful, then as he went out, ran back to the others, her eyes shining.

"Pollock is going to see what is the matter," she announced excitedly.
Whereat Mrs. Langworthy stared at her and then indicated facially her
supreme disgust.  The major suggested taking something, the occasion so
plainly demanding it.

Hampton passed swiftly through the courtyard.  He saw the light of the
bunk-house gleaming brightly.  On his way down the knoll he came upon
Tommy Burkitt.

"Is it Mr. Hampton?" asked Tommy, coming close in the darkness to peer
at him.

"Yes.  What is it?  Who are you?"

"I'm Burkitt, Tommy Burkitt, you know--Bud Lee's helper.  I--I am
afraid something has happened.  Lee hasn't come in yet; they tried to
pick him off once already, you know----"

"Neither has Miss Sanford come in," said Hampton quickly, sensing here
at last a fear that was fellow to his own.  "They rode toward the Upper
End.  You know the way, Burkitt?"

He moved on toward the corral; Burkitt turned and came with him.

"Sure I know the trail," muttered Tommy.  "You're goin' to see what's
wrong with 'em!  Miss Judy, too!  My God----"

"Bring out a couple of horses," Hampton commanded crisply.  "We've lost
time enough already."

"I'll go tell Carson an' the boys----"

"I have already told Carson.  He says it's all nonsense.  Leave him
alone."

Tommy, boy that he was, asked no further questions, but ran ahead and
brought out two horses.  In a twinkling he had saddled them, and the
two riders, each with a rifle across his arm, were hurrying over the
mountain trail.

In the blackness which lay along the upper river Hampton gave his horse
a free rein and let it follow at Tommy's heels.  The roar of the
lashing water, the pounding of shod hoofs, the whining creak of
saddle-leather were the only sounds coming to them out of the night.
When, finally, they drew rein under the cliffs at the lake's edge all
was silent save for the faint distant booming of the river below them.

"Now which way?" whispered Hampton, his voice eloquent of suppressed
excitement and eagerness.

Tommy was shaking his head in uncertainty when suddenly from above
there came to them the sharp report of a rifle.  Then, like a bundle at
firecrackers, a volley of half a dozen staccato shots.

"Listen to that, Burkitt," muttered Hampton.  "They're at it now--we're
on time----"

Tommy slipped from the saddle wordlessly, came to Hampton's side and
tugged gently at his leg, whispering for him to get down.  Leaving
their horses there, they slipped into the utter darkness of the narrow
chasm in the rocks which gave access to the plateau above.

"Now," cautioned Tommy guardedly, as they came to the top, "keep close
to me if you don't want to take a header about a thousan' feet.  Look!"
He nudged Hampton and pointed.  "There are two horses across yonder;
Bud's an' Miss Judy's, most likely."

Hampton did not see them, did not seek to see them.  Something new,
vital, big, had swept suddenly into his life.  He was at grips
first-hand with unmasked, pulsing forces.  A tremor went through him
and he was not ashamed of it; for it was not the quaking of fear, but
the thrill in the blood of a man who, plucked from a round of social
artificialities, finds himself with the smell of burnt powder in his
nostrils and who feels a swift eagerness for what may lie just yonder
waiting for him.  "They're at it now!" he whispered to Burkitt.
Men--yes, and a girl--were shooting, not at just wooden and paper
targets, but at other men!  At men who shot back, and shot to kill.

"Listen," said Burkitt.  "Somebody's in the old cabin; somebody's
outside.  Which is which?  We got to be awful careful."

They began a slow, cautious approach, slipping from bush to bush, from
tree to tree, standing motionless now and then to frown into the folds
of the night's curtains.  Abruptly the firing ceased.  They made out
vaguely the two forms of the attackers, having located them a moment
ago by the spurting flames from their guns.  Then, "Got enough in
there?" came the snarling voice of Quinnion.  "If you haven't, I'm
going to burn you out an' be damned to you!"

He got an answer he little expected.  For Hampton, running out into the
open, now that he knew that Bud and Judith must be in the cabin, was
firing as he came.  Burkitt's rifle spoke with his.

"Run for it, Shorty!" yelled Quinnion.  "You know where.  We're up
against the Blue Lake boys."

"Bud!" shouted Tommy.  "Oh, Bud!"

"In the cabin," came Bud's ringing answer.  "Give 'em hell, Tommy!
Coming!"

With his words came the sound of the door snapping back against the
wall, the reports of Tommy's rifle and Hampton's pumping hot lead after
two racing forms.

"They'll get away!" shouted Hampton, a sudden red rage upon him.
"Curse it!  It's too dark----"

Then Tommy gave over shooting and yelled to Lee to hold his fire.  For
instead of two there were three flying forms, three fast-racing,
blurring, shadowy shapes merging with the night.  Pollock Hampton, his
rifle clubbed in his hand, was running with a college sprinter's speed
after Quinnion and Shorty, calling breathlessly:

"Look out, they'll get away!"

Once Quinnion stopped to shoot back.  The hissing lead went wide of the
pursuer and he gave over firing and settled down to good, hard running,
disappearing from Hampton's staring eyes.  But Shorty was still to be
seen, running heavily.

"Don't shoot, Bud!" cried Tommy again as two figures ran out of the
cabin.  "Hampton's out there--the crazy fool----"

"Hampton, come back!" shouted Lee, running after him.

But Hampton was gaining on the heavy-set Shorty and had no thought of
coming back.  Nor a thought of anything in all the wide world just then
but overtaking the flying figure in front of him.  Shorty stumbled over
a fallen log and rose, cursing and calling:

"Chris!  Lend a hand."

That little chance of an uprooted tree saved Hampton's life that night.
Shorty, falling, had dropped his gun and hurt his knee.  For a moment
he groped wildly for the lost rifle, then ran on without it.  Hampton
cleared the log, and with a yell rather befitting a victorious savage
than the young man whom Mrs. Langworthy hoped to call her son, threw
his long arms about Shorty's neck.

"I got him!" shouted Hampton.  "By glory----"

Shorty drove a big brutal fist smashing into his captor's face.  But
Hampton merely lowered his head, hiding it against Shorty's heaving
shoulder, and tightened his grip.  Shorty struggled to his feet,
shaking at him, tearing at him, driving one fist after the other into
Hampton's body.  But with a grimness of purpose as new to him as was
the whole of to-night's adventure Hampton held on.

Judith and Lee and Burkitt came to them as they were falling again.
Now suddenly, with other hard hands upon him, Shorty relaxed, and
Hampton, his face bloody, his body sore, sank back.  He had done a mad
thing--but triumph lay in that he had done it.

"A man never can tell," muttered Bud Lee, with less thought of the
captive than of the captor--"never can tell."

"I am thinking," said Judith wonderingly, "that I never quite did you
justice, Pollock Hampton!"




XIV

SPRINGTIME AND A VISION

Hampton's captive, known to them only as Shorty, a heavy, surly man
whose small, close-set eyes burned evilly under his pale brows, rode
that night between Hampton and Judith down to the ranch-house.  He
maintained a stubborn silence after the first outburst of rage.  His
hands tied behind his back, a rope run round his waist and down on each
side through a cinch-ring, he sat idly humped forward, making no
protest.

Burkitt and Lee, despite Judith's objections because of Lee's wounded
leg, remained at the cabin with Bill Crowdy.  Crowdy had lost a deal of
blood, and though he complained of little pain, was clearly in sore
need of medical attention.  Judith, coming to the bunk-side just before
she left, assured him very gently that she would send Doc Tripp to him
immediately and, further, that she would telephone into Rocky Bend for
a physician.  Crowdy, like Shorty, refused to talk.

"Aw, hell," he grunted as Lee demanded what influence had brought him
with Shorty and Quinnion into this mad project, "let me alone, can't
you?"

And Lee let him alone.  He and Burkitt sat and smoked and so passed the
remaining hours of a long night.  The folly of seeking Quinnion in this
thick darkness was so obvious that they gave no thought to it,
impatiently awaiting the dawn and the coming of the men whom Judith
would send.

The events of the rest of the night and of the morrow may be briefly
told: Shorty's modest request of a glass of whiskey was granted him.
Then, his hands still bound securely by Carson, he was put in the small
grain-house, a windowless, ten-by-ten house of logs.  An admirable jail
this, with its heavy padlock snapped into a deeply embedded staple and
the great hasp in place.  The key safely in Judith's possession, Shorty
was left to his own thoughts while Judith, and Hampton went to the
house.

In answer to Judith's call, Doc Tripp came without delay, left brief,
disconcerting word that without the shadow of a doubt the hogs were
stricken with cholera, and went on with his little bag to see what his
skill could do for Bill Crowdy.

"Ought to give him sulphur fumes," grunted Tripp.  But his hands were
very gentle with the wounded man for all that.

Pollock Hampton had no thought of sleep that night; didn't so much as
go to bed.  He lay on a couch in the living-room and Marcia Langworthy,
tremendously moved at the recital Judith gave of Hampton's heroism,
fluttered about him, playing nurse to her heart's delight.  The major
suggested that Hampton have something and Hampton was glad to accept.
Mrs. Langworthy complacently looked into the future and to the maturity
of her own plans.  In truth, good had come out of evil, and Marcia and
Hampton held hands quite unblushingly.

Before daylight Carson, with half a dozen men, had breakfasted, saddled
and was ready to ride to the Upper End to begin the search for
Quinnion.  But before he rode, Carson made the discovery that during
the night the staple and hasp on the grain-house door had been wrenched
away and that Shorty was gone, leaving behind him no sign of the way of
his going.  Carson's face was a dull, brick red.  Not yet had he
brought himself to accept the full significance of events.  A hold-up,
such as Charlie Miller had experienced, is one thing; a continued
series of incidents like these happening upon the confines of the Blue
Lake Ranch, was quite another.  Hampton, knowing nothing of conditions
in the mountains, had been quick to imagine the predicament in which he
had found Judith and Bud Lee.  To Carson that had been a thing not to
be thought of.  Now, only too plainly he realized that Shorty had had
an accomplice at the ranch headquarters who had come to his assistance.

Carson blamed himself for the escape.  And yet, he growled to himself,
in a mingling of shame and anger, it would have looked like plumb
foolishness to sit out in front of that heavy door all night, when he
himself had tied Shorty's hands.

"Quinnion might have let him loose," he mused as he went slowly to the
house to tell Judith what had happened.  "An' then he mightn't.  If he,
didn't, then who the devil did?"

Judith received the news sleepily and much more quietly than Carson had
expected.

"We'll have to keep our eyes open after this, Carson," was her
criticism.  Remembering the night when she had been so certain that
there had been some one listening to her talk with Tripp she added
thoughtfully: "We've got to keep an eye on our own men, Carson.  Some
one of our crowd, taking my pay, is double-crossing us.  Now, get your
men on the jump and we won't bother about the milk-spilling.  If we are
in luck we'll get Shorty yet.  And Quinnion, Carson!  Don't forget
Quinnion.  And we've still got Bill Crowdy; we'll get everything out of
him that he knows."

The cattleman rode away in heavy silence, headed toward the cabin at
the Upper End, his men riding with him, an eager, watchful crowd.  But
Carson had his doubts about getting Quinnion, his fears that it would
be a long time before he ever put a rope again to Shorty's thick wrists.

During the day Emmet Sawyer, the Rocky Bend sheriff, came, and with him
Doctor Brannan.  Sawyer assured Judith that he would be followed
shortly by a posse led by a deputy and that they would hunt through the
mountains until they got the outlaws.  He listened to all that she had
to tell him and then looked up Bud Lee.

"You didn't see Quinnion?" he asked.  "Could you swear to him if we
ever bring him in?  Just by his voice?"

"Yes," answered Lee.  "I can.  But see if you can't get Crowdy to
squeal.  We're shy Shorty's real name, too, you know."

To all questions put him, Bill Crowdy answered with stubborn denial of
knowledge or not at all.  He had been alone; he didn't know any man
named Quinnion; he didn't know anything about Shorty.  And he hadn't
robbed Miller.  That canvas bag, then, with the thousand dollars in it?
He had found it; picked it up in a gully.

"I won't do any talking," he grunted in final word, "until I get a
lawyer to talk to.  I know that much, Sawyer, if I don't know a hell of
a lot.  An' you can get it out'n your head that I'm the kind to snitch
on a pal--even if I had one, which I didn't."

Crowdy, at Doctor Brannan's orders, was taken to Rocky Bend where
Sawyer promised him a speedy trial, conviction and heavy sentence
unless he changed his mind and turned state's evidence.  And--to be
done with Bill Crowdy for good and all--he never came to stand trial.
A mad attempt at escape a week later, another bullet-hole given him in
his struggle with his jailer, and with lips still stubbornly locked, he
died without "snitching on a pal."


Under fire in the dark cabin with life grown suddenly tense for them,
Bud Lee and Judith Sanford had touched hands lingeringly.  No one who
knew them guessed it; certainly one of them, perhaps both, sought to
forget it.  There had been that strange thrill which comes sometimes
when a man's hand and a woman's meet.  Bud Lee grunted at the memory of
it; Judith, remembering, blushed scarlet.  For, at that moment of deep,
sympathetic understanding touched with the romance which young life
will draw even from a dark night fraught with danger, there had been in
Bud Lee's heart but an acceptance, eager as it was, of a "pardner."
For the time being he thought of her--or, rather, he thought that he
thought of her, as a man would think of a companion of his own sex.  He
approved of her.  But he did not approve of her as a girl, as a woman.

He had said: "There are two kinds of women."  And Judith, knowing that
his ideal was an impossible but poetic She, rich in subtle feminine
graces, steeped in that vague charm of her sex like a rose in its own
perfume, had accepted his friendship during a dark hour, allowing
herself to forget that upon the morrow, if morrow came to them at all,
he would hold her in that gentle scorn of his.

"A narrow-minded, bigoted fool!" she cried in the seclusion of her
bedroom.  "I'll show you where you get off, Mr. Bud Lee!  Just you
wait."

When she and Lee met, she looked him straight in the eye with marked
coolness, oddly aloof, and Lee, lifting his hat, was stiff and
short-worded.

In the long, quiet hours which came during the few days following the
end of a fruitless search for Quinnion and Shorty, he had ample time to
analyze his own emotion.  He liked her; from the bottom of his heart he
liked her.  But she was not the lady of his dreams.  She rode like a
man, she shot like a man, she gave her orders like a man.  She was
efficient.  She was as square as a die; under fire she was a pardner
for any man.  But she was not a little lady to be thought of
sentimentally.  He wondered what she would look like if she shed boots
and broad hat and riding-habit and appeared before a man in an evening
gown--"all lacy and ribbony, you know."  He couldn't picture her that
way; he couldn't imagine her dallying, as the lady of his dreams
dallied, in an atmosphere of rose-leaves, perhaps a volume of Tennyson
on her knee.

"Shucks!" he grinned to himself, a trifle shame-facedly.  "It's just
the springtime in the air."


In such a mood there appeared to Bud Lee a vision.  Nothing less.  He
was in the little meadow hidden from the ranch-house by gentle hills
still green with young June.  He had been working Lovelady, a newly
broken saddle-mare.  Standing with his back to a tree, a cigarette in
the making in his hands, his black hat far back upon his head, he
smilingly watched Lovelady as with regained freedom she galloped back
across the meadow to her herd.  Then a shadow on the grass drew Lee's
eyes swiftly away from the mare and to the vision.

Over the verdant flooring of the meadow, stepping daintily in and out
among the big golden buttercups, came one who might well have been that
lady of his dreams.  A milk-white hand held up a pale-pink skirt,
disclosing the lacy flounce of a fine underskirt, pale-pink stockings
and mincing little slippers; a pink parasol cast the most delicate of
tints upon a pretty face from which big blue eyes looked out a little
timorously upon the tall horse foreman.

He knew that this was Marcia Langworthy.  He had never known until now
just how pretty she was, how like a flower.

Marcia paused, seemed to hesitate, dodged suddenly as a noisy bumblebee
sailed down the air.  Then the bee buzzed on and Marcia smiled.  Still
stepping daintily she came on until, with her parasol twirling over her
shoulder, she stood in the shade with Lee.

"You're Mr. Lee, aren't you?" asked Marcia.  She was still smiling and
looked cool and fresh and very alluring.

Lee dropped the makings of his cigarette, ground the paper into the sod
with his heel and removed his hat with a gallantry little short of
reverence.

"Yes," he answered, his gravity touched with the hint of a responsive
smile.  "Is there something I can do for you, Miss Langworthy?"

"Oh!" cried Marcia.  "So you know who I am?  Yet I have never seen you,
I think."

"The star doesn't always see the moth, you know," offered Lee, a little
intoxicated by the first "vision" of this kind he had seen in many
years.

"Oh!" cried Marcia again, and then stopped, looking at him, frankly
puzzled.  She knew little first-hand of horse foremen.  But she had
seen Carson, even talked with him.  And she had seen other workmen.
She would, until now, have summed them all up as illiterate, awkward,
and impossibly backward and shy.  A second long, curious glance at Lee
failed to show that he was embarrassed, though in truth he had had time
to be a bit ashamed of that moth-and-star observation of his.  Instead,
he appeared quite self-possessed.  And he was good-looking, remarkably
good-looking.  And he didn't seem illiterate; quite the contrary,
Marcia thought.  In an instant she catalogued this tall, dark,
calm-eyed man as interesting.

She twirled her parasol at him and laughed softly.  A strand of blond
hair that was very becoming where it was, against her delicate cheek,
she tucked back where it evidently belonged, since there it looked even
more becoming.

"Mr. Hampton isn't here, is he?" she asked.

"No.  Come to think of it, he did say this morning that he would be out
right after lunch to help me break Lovelady.  But I haven't seen him."

"He wanted me to stroll out here with him," Marcia explained.  "And I
wouldn't.  It was too hot.  Didn't you find it terribly hot about an
hour ago, Mr. Lee?"

As a matter of fact Bud Lee had been altogether too busy an hour ago
with the capers of Lovelady to note whether it was hot or cold.  But he
courteously agreed with Miss Langworthy.

"Then," she ran on brightly, "it got cool all of a sudden.  Or at least
I did.  And I thought that Polly had come out here, so I walked out to
surprise him.  And now, he isn't here!"

Marcia looked up at Lee helplessly, smilingly, fascinatingly.  It was
quite as though she had added: "Oh, dear!  What _shall_ I do?"

Pollock Hampton had fully meant to come.  But by now he had forgotten
all about Bud Lee and horses to ride and to be bucked off by.  A
telegram had come from a nasty little tailor in San Francisco who had
discovered Hampton's retreat and who was devilishly insistent upon a
small matter--oh, some suits and things, you know.  The whole thing
totalled scarcely seven hundred dollars.  He went to find Judith, to
beg an advance against his wages or allowance or dividends or whatever
you call it.  Judith was out somewhere at the Lower End, Mrs. Simpson
thought.  Hampton saddled his own horse and went to find her.  All this
Marcia was to learn that evening.

After the swift passing of a few bright minutes, Marcia and Bud Lee
strolled together across the meadow to the spring.  Marcia, it seemed,
was interested in everything.  Lee told her much of the ways of horses,
of breaking them, of a score of little ranch matters, not without their
color.  Marcia noted that he spoke rather slowly, and guessed that he
was choosing his words with particular care.

She was delighted when they came to the bank under the willows where a
pipe sent forth a clear, cold stream of water from a shady recess in
the hillside.  Here, at Lee's solicitous suggestion, she rested after
her long walk--it was nearly a half-mile to the ranch-house--disposing
her skirts fluffily about her, taking her seat upon a convenient log
from which, with his hat, Lee had swept the loose dust.

"I'm dreadfully improper, am I not?" said Marcia.  "But I am tired, and
it is hot, isn't it?  Out there in the fields, I mean.  Here it's just
lovely.  And I do so love to hear about all the things you know which
are so wonderful to me.  Isn't life narrow in the cities?  Don't you
think so, Mr. Lee?"

The breeze playing gently with the ribbons of her sunshade brought to
him the faintest of violet perfumes.  He lay at her feet, obeying her
tardy command to have the smoke which she had interrupted.  His eyes
were full of her.

"I'd so love," went on Marcia dreamily, "to live always out-of-doors.
Out here I feel so sorry for the people I know in town.  Here women
must grow up so sweet and pure and innocent; men must be so fine and
manly and strong!"

And she meant it.  It was perfectly clear that she spoke in utter
sincerity.  For this long, summer day, no matter how she would feel
to-morrow, Marcia was in tune with the open, yearned for the life blown
clean with the air of the mountains.  In the morning her mood had been
one of rebellion, for her mother had said things which both hurt and
shocked the girl.  Her mother was so mercenary, so unromantic.  Now, as
a bit of reaction, the rebellious spirit had grown tender; opposition
had been followed by listlessness; and into the mood of tender
listlessness there had come a man.  A man whom Marcia had never noted
until now and who was an anomaly, almost a mystery.


Fate, in the form of old Carson, turned a herd of bellowing steers out
into the fields lying between the meadow and the ranch-house that
afternoon just as Marcia, making a late concession to propriety, was
shaking her skirts and lifting her parasol.  It was scarcely to be
wondered at that the steers seemed to Marcia a great herd of
bloodthirsty beasts.  Then there were her pink gown and sunshade. . . .

"Oh, dear, oh, dear!" cried Marcia.

So it was under Lee's protection that she went back through the meadows
and to the house.  At first she was frightened by the strange noises
his led horse made, little snorts which made her jump.  But in the end
she put out a timid hand and stroked the velvet nose.  When finally Bud
Lee lifted his hat to her at the base of the knoll upon which the house
stood Marcia thanked him for his kindness.

"I've been terribly unconventional, haven't I?" she smiled at him.
"But I mustn't again.  Next time we meet, Mr. Lee, I am not even going
to speak to you.  Unless," relenting brightly, "you come up to the
house and are properly introduced!"

As she went through the lilacs Lee saw her wave her parasol to him.




XV

JUST A GIRL, AFTER ALL

Three days later Bud Lee learned that Judith Sanford was, after all,
"just a girl, you know"; that at least for once in her life she had
slipped away to be by herself and to cry.  He stopped dead in his
tracks when he came unexpectedly upon her, become suddenly awkward,
embarrassed, a moment uncertain, but yielding swiftly to an impulse to
run for it.

"Come here, Bud Lee!" commanded Judith sharply, dabbing at her eyes.
"I want to talk with you."

He was at the Upper End where he had ridden for half a dozen young
horses which were to be taken down into the meadow for their education.
And here she was, on a bench outside the old cabin, indulging herself
in a hearty cry.

"I--I didn't know you were here," he stammered.  "I was going to make
some coffee and have lunch here.  I do, sometimes.  It's a real fine
day, isn't it, Miss Sanford?  Nice and warm and--"  His voice trailed
off indistinctly.

"Oh, scat!" cried Judith at him, half laughing, still half crying.  She
had wiped her eyes but still two big tears, untouched, trembled on her
cheeks.  In spite of him Lee couldn't keep his eyes off of them.

"I'm just crying," Judith told him then, with a sudden assumption of
cool dignity which had in it something of defiance.  "I've got a right
to, if I want to, haven't I?  What do you look at me like that for?"

"Sure," he answered hastily.  "It does you good to cry; I know.  Great
thing.  All ladies do, sometimes----"

Judith sniffed.

"You know all that there is to be known about '_ladies_,' don't you?
In your vast wisdom all you've got to do is lump 'em in one of your
brilliant generalities.  That's the man of you!"

"Maybe I'd better go make the coffee?" he suggested hurriedly.  "It's
after twelve.  And it'll do you good.  A nice hot cup."

"Maybe you had," said Judith icily.  "Perhaps I can postpone my
conversation with you until the water boils."

Lee went into the cabin without looking back.  Judith, watching him,
saw that he ran his hand across his forehead.  She sniffed at him
again.  But when Lee had the coffee ready she had washed her face at
the spring, had tucked her tumbled hair back under her hat, and,
looking remarkably cool, came into the cabin.  Lee thought of his
meeting with Marcia, of her repeated assurance that she knew she had
violated the conventions.

"You _can_ make coffee," Judith nodded her approval as she sipped at
the black beverage, cooled a little by condensed milk.  Lee was busied
with a tin containing potted meat.  "Now, have you got over your shock
so that I can talk with you?"

He smiled at her across the little oil-cloth-covered table, and
answered lightly and with his old assurance that he guessed he had
steadied his nerve.  Hadn't he told her a cup of coffee would do
wonders?

"Would it go to your head," began the girl abruptly, "if I were to tell
you that I size you up as the best man I've got on my pay-roll?"

"I'd try to keep both feet on the ground," he said gravely, though he
wondered what was coming.

"I'll explain," she continued, her tone impersonally businesslike.
"Next to you, I count on Doc Tripp; next to Tripp, on Carson.  They are
good men; they are trustworthy; they understand ranch conditions and
they know what loyalty to the home-range means.  But Tripp is just a
veterinarian; simply that and nothing more.  His horizon isn't very
wide.  Neither is Carson's."

"And mine?" he grinned at her.  "Read me my horoscope, Miss Sanford!"

"You have taken the trouble to be something more than just a horse
foreman," she told him quietly.  "I don't know what your advantages
have been; if you haven't gone through high school, then at least you
have been ambitious enough to get books, to read, to educate yourself.
You have developed further than Carson; you have broadened more than
Tripp."

"Thanks," he offered dryly.

"Oh, I'm not seeking to intrude into your private affairs, Mr. Bud
Lee!" she cried warmly at his tone.  "I have no desire to do so, having
no interest in them.  First of all, I want one thing clear: You said
when I first came that you'd stay a few days, long enough for me to get
a man in your place.  We have both been rather too busy to think of
your leaving or my seeking a substitute.  Now what?  The job is yours
as long as you want it--if you'll stay.  I don't want you leaving me in
the lurch.  Do you want to go?  Or do you want to stick?"

What did he want?  He had anticipated an interference from the girl in
his management of the duty allotted him and no such interference had
come.  She left him unhampered, even as she did Tripp and Carson.  He
had his interest in his horses.  It was pleasant here.  This cabin was
a sort of home to him.  Besides, he had the idea that Quinnion and
Shorty might again be heard from--that if Trevors was backing their
play, there would be other threats offered the Blue Lake outfit from
which he had no desire to run.  There was such a thing as loyalty to
the home-range, and in the half-year he had worked here it had become a
part of him.

"I'll stick," he said quietly.

"I'm glad of that," replied Judith.  "Oh, you'll have your work cut out
for you, Bud Lee, and, that you may be the better fitted to do it, I
want you to know just what I am up against."

She paused a moment, stirring her coffee with one of Lee's tin spoons,
gathering her thoughts.  Then, speaking thoughtfully, she explained:

"It's a gamble, with us bucking the long odds.  Dad left me a third
interest, clear, valued, counting stock, at a good deal more than four
hundred thousand dollars.  He left me no cash.  Dad never had any cash.
Just so soon as he got his hands on it he put it to work.  I knew he
had planned taking over another one-third interest, and I went on with
his plans.  I mortgaged my share for two hundred thousand dollars,
which I got at five per cent.  That means I have to dig up each year,
just interest, ten thousand dollars.  That's a pretty big lump, you
know."

"Yes," he admitted slowly.  "That's big; mighty big."

"With the money I raised," Judith continued, "I bought out the third
owner, Timothy Gray.  He let his holding go for three hundred and fifty
thousand.  It was a bargain for me--if I can make a go of it.  I still
owe, on the principal, one hundred and fifty thousand dollars.  I owe
on my mortgage two hundred thousand.  Total of my indebtedness, three
hundred and fifty thousand dollars.  And that's bigger, Bud Lee."

"Yes.  That's bigger figures than I can quite get the hang of."

No wonder she had been crying.  Even if everything went smooth on the
Blue Lake she, too, had her work cut out for her.

"Now," she ran on, her voice stirring him with the ringing note in it,
"I can make a go of it--if they will just let me alone!  I am playing
close to the table, Lee, close!  I have a little money in the bank,
enough to run along for two or three months, that's all.  I said that
dad left no cash.  I didn't mention his insurance."  Her eyes grew
suddenly wet but she did not avert them from Lee's face, going on
quietly: "That was ten thousand dollars.  Close to seven thousand had
to go for his current obligations.  I have about two thousand to run
on."

"Close hauled," grunted Lee.  And to himself, he remarked as he had
remarked once before: "She's got her sand."

Quite naturally Bud Lee thought swiftly of his horses.  He had told
Trevors that he wanted to make no sale for at least six months.  Given
until then--if Judith could make a go of it without forcing a
sale--he'd show her the way to at least seven or eight thousand, with a
good percentage of clear profit.

"To begin with," Judith's voice interrupted his musings, "I am going to
have trouble with Carson.  I admit that he's an exceptionally good
cattle foreman; I admit, too, that he has his limitations.  He is of
the old school, and has got to learn something!  Already he has his
weather-eye cocked for the lean season; he'll be coming to me in August
or September, telling me I've got to begin selling.  That's the way
they all do!  And the result is that beef cattle drop and the market
clogs with them.  What I am going to do is make Carson start in buying
then.  Oh, he'll buck like one of his own red bay steers but he'll buy!"

"We're pretty well stocked up," Lee offered gently.  "Turning the hills
over to the hogs makes a difference, too.  We're going to be short of
feed long before September is over."

"Short of range feed, yes," she retorted warmly.  "But we're going to
put our trust in our silos, Lee, and make them do such work for us as
they have never done before.  Then, when other folks are forced to sell
off for what they can get, we'll hold on and buy.  We won't sell before
December or January, when the market is up."

He shook his head.  Though not of the old school which had produced
Carson, still he put little faith in those tall towers into which
alfalfa and Indian corn were fed to make lush fodder.

"I don't know a whole lot about silos," he admitted.

"Neither does Carson," said Judith.  "He looks at such things as silos
and milking-machines and tractors and fences even as the old Indians
must have looked at the inroads of the white men.  But, do you know
where he has been these last few days?"

"In San Francisco?  Heard him say he was going to take a few days off."

Judith laughed.

"That's Carson for you!  He wouldn't admit where he was going.  I sent
him down to Davis where the State experimental farm and laboratories
are.  He's going to see silo, study silo, think silo until he gets a
new idea into his head.  I have ordered a big extension in our
irrigated area, I have begun the construction of two more silos.  When
Carson gets back he's going to look around for some more shorthorns at
bargain prices.  I have an idea it wouldn't do you any harm either, to
look over what we are doing down at the Lower End."

Again she paused.  Then, her eyes suddenly darkening, she told him
what, after all, lay top-most in her mind.

"I have said that if I am given the chance, I can make a go of this.
It's up to you, Bud Lee, to help see that I get that chance.  An
attempt was made to spread the lung-worm through my calves.  Now it's
the hogs.  Do you know what the latest news is from the pens?  There's
cholera among them."

"Where did it come from?" he demanded.  "Tripp's been keeping the
health of our stock up right along."

"Where did it come from?" Judith repeated after him.  "That's what I
don't know.  We've been so careful.  But where did the calf sickness
come from?  Bayne Trevors imported it."

The inference was clear.  He stared at her with frowning eyes.

"I don't see how he could have done it without Tripp's getting on to
it.  He hasn't bought any new hogs."

"But you understand now why I wanted to talk to you?  If I win out in
the thing I have taken on my shoulders, it is going to be by a close
margin.  I've thought it all out.  We can't slip up in a single deal!
But, it's up to you to give me a hand.  To find out for yourself such
things as where did the cholera come from!  And to look out, that the
next time they don't burn us out, when the range is dry.  To see that
nothing happens to your horses.  To keep your two eyes wide open.  To
help me find the man, working with us right now, who is double-crossing
us, who turned Shorty loose, who is watching a chance to do his knife
act again somewhere else.  Do you get me, Bud Lee?"

"I get you," replied Lee.


From without, gay voices, calling merrily, interrupted them.  Lee went
swiftly to the door while Judith finished her coffee and pulled her
broad hat a little lower to throw its shadow in her eyes.

"Ahoy, there!"  It was Pollock Hampton's voice.  "We saw your horses
and thought we'd catch you picnicking.  Got a fire going, too!  Say,
that's bully.  Come ahead, Marcia."

Marcia, a long riding-habit gathered in one hand, her cheeks flushed
with her ride, her eyes bright as they rested upon the tall form in the
doorway, came on behind Hampton.  As the eyes of the two girls met, a
sudden hot flush flooded Judith's cheeks.  She hated herself for it;
she wondered just how red her eyes were.

"Say, Judith," called Hampton, "I'm glad as the dickens we found you.
Sawyer, the sheriff, telephoned just now.  Said to tell you he'd
located Quinnion.  The funny part of it is that we made a mistake.  It
wasn't Quinnion at all that tried to shoot you and Bud up the other
night."

"How's that?" demanded Lee.  "Who says it wasn't?"

"Sawyer.  Found Quinnion at a sheepman's place thirty or forty miles
north of here.  The sheepman swore Quinnion had been with him two
weeks, was with him that night."

"A sheepman _can_ lie," grunted Lee.

Judith's brief moment of confusion passed, she ushered Marcia into the
cabin.  True to her promise, Miss Langworthy, though she flashed a
quick look toward Lee, did not speak to him.  He found himself flushing
quite as hotly as Judith had done.

"We've just finished our lunch," Judith was saying.  "And we've left
you half of our coffee."

"I've been simply dying to see this place!" cried Marcia impetuously.
"I told Pollock that it was a sure sign he didn't love me any more if
he wouldn't bring me.  And you and--and one of the men," her eyes on
Judith's, "actually were in here, being shot at!  Judith, dear, you are
just the bravest girl in the world.  If I'd been here I'd have simply
died.  I know I would."

Perhaps she would.  At any rate she shuddered delightfully.  She found
a bullet-hole in the door and put a pink forefinger into it, giving a
second little shiver.  She managed to keep her back full upon Lee.

"Oh, by the way," said Hampton, busy opening the parcel of lunch they
had brought with them, "Marcia's heard all about you, Bud.  You said
you wanted to meet Lee, Marcia.  Well, here he is, tall and handsome in
a devilish reckless way, looking at the dimple at the back of your
neck.  Miss Langworthy, Mr. Lee.  Judith, that coffee smells good!"

"You are a naughty little boy, Pollock," said Miss Langworthy coolly.
Nevertheless she turned smiling to Lee and put out her hand to him.
"Mr. Hampton really makes quite a hero of you," she said composedly.
"I think I have seen you--from a distance, you know."

The small whiteness of her hand was swallowed up in the lean brown of
his.

"Hampton's a prevaricator," he said gravely, as he looked down into the
merry blue eyes turned up to him.  "But he's a gentleman I have to
thank for the introduction.  I am very happy to know you, Miss
Langworthy."

"And now," cried Marcia, slipping her hand out of Lee's and going to a
chair near the table, "do tell me all about that terrible, terrible
night.  But do you think we are quite safe here now, Mr. Lee?"


To herself Judith was saying: "Just the type to be Bud Lee's ideal
lady!"


When they left the cabin, an hour later, Judith challenged Hampton to a
ride and so left Marcia and Bud Lee to follow leisurely.




XVI

POKER FACE AND A WHITE PIGEON

Mrs. Simpson had made a discovery.  It was epoch-marking!  It was
tremendous.  Nothing short of that!  So, at the very least, Mrs.
Simpson was prepared to maintain stoutly in the face of possible
ridicule.

Though, as Judith's housekeeper, she had sufficient household duties on
her plump shoulders to send a less doughty woman creeping wearily to
bed with the chickens, she found time before the dawn and long after
nightfall to keep her eye upon that Black Spanish and his recruit and
treacherous ally, Fujioki.

One morning, very early, Mrs. Simpson, from the thick curtains of the
living-room, saw José "prowling around suspicious-like in the
courtyard!"  She thrilled at the sight.  She always thrilled to José.
The half-breed had gone silently, "sneaking-like," by Judith's outer
door.  He had paused there, listening.  He had gone back to the
courtyard, hesitating, pretending that he was looking at the roses!
Such a ruse on the part of so black-hearted a villain inspired in the
scarcely breathing Mrs. Simpson a vast disgust.  As if he could fool
_her_ like that, pottering around among the roses!

She, too, sought to move silently in his wake, though under her ample
weight the veranda creaked audibly.  Still, making less noise than
usual, she peered through the lilacs.  She saw José at the base of the
knoll, going swiftly toward the stables.  She saw another man who,
evidently, was a third of the "gang," and who, of course, had risen
early to creep out of the men's bunkhouse before the others were awake,
to meet José.  Screening herself behind the lilacs, her heart throbbing
as it had not done for many a long year, she watched.

José and the other man did meet.  José stopped.  The two exchanged a
few words, too low for Mrs. Simpson to hear at that distance.  But she
made out that the other man had something in his hand, something white.
A pigeon!  For, suddenly released, it fluttered out of the man's hands
and, circling high above Mrs. Simpson's head, flew to join the other
birds cooing on the housetop!

"A carrier-pigeon!" gasped Mrs. Simpson.  "Taking a message to the
other cutthroats!"

From that instant there was no doubt in her mind.  This fitted in too
well with her many suspicions not to be the clew she had sought long
and unceasingly.

José went on, the man from the bunk-house went back into it, and Mrs.
Simpson fled to the house and hastened excitedly to Judith's room.
Judith, rudely awakened, came hurriedly to her door in her
dressing-gown, her eyelids heavy with sleep.  When she heard, she
laughed.

"You dear old goose!" cried Judith joyously.  "I just love you to
death.  You put fresh interest into life."

Despite Mrs. Simpson's earnest protests, Judith hugged her and pushed
her out again, saying that since she was awake now she would want her
breakfast just as soon as she could get it.  The housekeeper shook her
head and retreated heavily.

"You've got to show some folks a man cutting their throats," she
muttered to herself, "before they'll believe it.  It is a
carrier-pigeon and I know it.  And that Black Spanish--ugh!  He makes
my blood curdle, just to look at him!"

"Carrier-pigeons!" laughed Judith, as she began a hurried dressing.
"The dear old goosie!  And poor old José.  She'll get something on him
yet.  I wonder why she----"

Suddenly Judith broke off.  She was standing in front of a tall mirror,
still only half-dressed.  As she looked into the bright face of the
smiling girl in the glass, a sudden change came.  Pigeons!  Doc Tripp
had said that Trevors had got them; had remarked on the incongruity of
a man like Trevors caring for little cooing birds.  It was rather odd.
Carrier-pigeons--carrier----

Judith whipped on her dressing-gown again and, slipperless, her warm,
bare feet pat-patting upon the cold surfaces of the polished floors,
she ran to the office.

"Send José to me," she called to Mrs. Simpson.  "In the office.  I want
him immediately."

A warm glow came into Mrs. Simpson's breast.  With a big kitchen poker
behind her broad back, she hastened out to call José.  Judith, at the
telephone, called for Doc Tripp.

"Come up immediately," she commanded, "prepared to make a test for
hog-cholera germs, Doc.  No, I am not sure of anything, but I think I
begin to see where it came from and how.  Hurry, will you?"

To José she said abruptly:

"Go down to the men's quarters, José.  Tell Carson and Lee to come
right up."  And as José turned to go, she added carelessly: "Seen any
of the men yet?"

"_Si, señorita_," answered José.  "Poky Face is up."

"Poker Face?  All right, José.  The others will be about, then."

José took little more time for his errand than for his elaborate bow.
Carson and Lee came promptly, Carson a score of steps in advance, for
Lee had tarried just long enough to wash his face and brush his hair;
Carson had not.

"Tell me," demanded Judith, looking at her cattleman with intent
eagerness, "what do you know about Poker Face?"

"One of the best men I've got," answered Carson heartily.

"Square, you think?"

"Yes.  If I didn't think so he'd have been on his way a long time ago."

"How long has he been here?  Who took him on?"

"Trevors hired him.  About the same time he hired me."

Bud Lee, entering then, wondered what new thing was afoot.  He glanced
down and saw a bare foot peeping out from the hem of Judith's heavy red
robe; he saw the hair tumbled in a glorious brown confusion over her
shoulders.  She was amazingly pretty this way.

"I want you two men to just stick around until I send for you again,"
said Judith, her eyes upon Carson alone, a little pink, naked foot
suddenly withdrawn and tucked somewhere under her in her chair.  "And
keep your eyes on Poker Face.  Keep him here, too, Carson.  By the way,
did any of you boys come in late last night?  Or early this morning?"

"Why, no," answered Carson slowly.  "An' yes.  None of the reg'lar
boys, but a man from down the river, looking for a job.  Heard we was
short-handed.  Blew in early.  Just got in a few moments ago, Poker
Face said."

Quick new interest flew into Judith's eyes.

"Keep him here, too!" she cried.  "And I'll give you something to do
while you wait: bring me all the pigeons you can get your hands
on--white ones.  Shoot them if you have to.  And be careful you don't
rub the dust off their feet."

Carson's eyes went swiftly to Bud Lee's.  In Carson's mind there was a
quick suspicion: The strain of life on the ranch was proving too much
for a girl, after all.

Judith, reading his thought, turned up her nose at him and, seeking to
keep her feet hidden as she walked by sagging a little at the knees,
went to the door.  Turning there, she saw in Lee's eyes the hint of a
smile, a very approving, admiring smile.

"Impudent!" she cried within herself.  Looking very tiny, her knees
bent so that her robe might sweep the floor, she continued with all
possible dignity to the hallway.  Once there, she ran for her room, her
gown fluttering widely about her.  In her room, though she dressed
hurriedly, she still took time for a long and critical examination of
two rows of little pink toes.

"Just the same," she said to the flushed Judith in the mirror, "they
are very nice feet--Bud Lee, I'd just like to make you squirm one of
these days.  You're altogether too--too--oh, scat, Judy.  What's the
matter with you?"

In less than half an hour Doc Tripp, showing every sign of a hurried
toilet, rode into the courtyard.  He came swiftly into the office, bag
in hand.  Judith, waiting impatiently for him, lost no words in telling
him her suspicions.  And Doc Tripp, hearing her out, swore softly and
fluently, briefly asking her pardon when he had done.

"I'm a jackass," he said fervently.  "I always knew I was a fool, but I
didn't know that I was an idiot!  Why, Judy, those damned pigeons have
been sailing all over the ranch, billing and cooing and picking up and
toting cholera germs.  Any fool can see it now.  I might have known
something was up when Trevors bought the infernal things.  It's as
simple as one, two, three.  Now this other jasper, pretending to look
for a job, brings on some more of them, so that the disease will spread
the faster.  Let me get my two hands on him, Judith.  For the love of
God, lead me to him."

But, instead, she led him to the dozen white pigeons which Carson
brought in.

Tripp, all business again, improvised his laboratory, washed the
pigeons' feet, made his test, with never another curse to tell of his
progress.  Judith left him and went into the courtyard, where, in a
moment, Carson came to her.

"You better tell me what's up," he said sharply.  "I know something is.
That new guy that just come in is darned hard to keep.  Just as quick
as I grab a shotgun an' go to shooting pigeons he moseys out to the
corrals an' starts saddling his horse."

"Don't let him go!"

Carson smiled a dry, mirthless smile.

"Bud is looking out for him right now," he explained.  "Don't you worry
none about his going before we say so.  But I want to know what the
play is."

Judith told him.  Carson shook his head.

"Think of that?" he muttered.  "Why, a man that would do a trick like
that oughtn't to be let live two seconds.  Only," and he wrinkled his
brows at her, "where does Poker Face come in?  We ain't got no call to
suspicion he's in on it."

"You watch him, just the same, Carson.  We know that somebody here has
been working against us.  Some one who turned Shorty loose.  Maybe it
isn't Poker Face, and maybe it is."

"He plays a crib game like a sport an' a gentleman," muttered Carson.
"He beat me seven games out'n nine last night!"  And, still with that
puzzled frown in his eyes, he went to watch Poker Face and the new man.
To have one of the men for whom he was responsible suspected hurt old
Carson sorely.  And Poker Face, the man with whom he delighted to play
a game of cards--it was almost as though Carson himself had come under
suspicion.

"You're going to stick around just a little while, stranger," Bud Lee
was saying quietly to a shifty-eyed man in the corral.  "Just why, I
don't know.  Orders, you know."

"Orders be damned," snarled the newcomer.  "I go where I please and
when I please."

He set a foot to his stirrups.  A lean, muscular hand fell lightly upon
his shoulder and he was jerked back promptly.  Lee smiled at him.  And
the shifty-eyed man, though he protested sharply, remained where he was.

[Illustration: A lean, muscular hand fell lightly upon his shoulder and
he was jerked back promptly.]

A thin, saturnine man whose lips never seemed to move, a man with
dead-looking eyes into which no light of emotion ever came, watched
them expressionlessly from where he stood with Carson.  It was Poker
Face.

"No," Poker Face answered, to a sharp question from the persistent
Carson.

"Sure, are you?"

"Yes."

At last word came from Judith.  Carson and Lee were to bring both of
the suspected men to the house.  Doc Tripp, wiping his hands on a
towel, his sleeves up, bestowed upon the two of them a look of
unutterable contempt and hatred.

"You low-lived skunks!" was his greeting to them.

"Easy, Doc," continued Judith from her desk.  "That won't get us
anywhere.  Who are you?" she demanded of the man standing at Lee's side.

"Me?" demanded the man with an assumption of jauntiness.  "I'm Donley,
Dick Donley, that's who I am!"

"When did you get here?"

"'Bout an hour ago."

"What did you come for?"

"Lookin' for a job."

"Did Carson say he hadn't anything for you?"

"No, he didn't.  You're askin' a lot of questions, if you want to
know," he added with new surliness.

"Then why are you going in such a hurry?  Don't you like to see any one
shoot pigeons?"

Donley stared back at her insolently.

"Because I didn't fall for the crowd," he retorted bluntly.  "An', if
you want to know, because I didn't hanker for the job when I found out
who was runnin' it."

"Meaning me?  A girl?  That it?"

"You guessed it."

"Who told you that I was running the outfit?" she demanded suddenly,
her eyes hard on his.  "You must have found that out pretty soon!  Who
told you?"

Donley hesitated, his eyes running from her to the other faces about
him, resting longest upon the expressionless, dead-looking eyes of
Poker Face.

"What difference does it make who told me?" he snapped.

"Answer me," she commanded.  "Who told you?"

"Well," said Donley, "he did.  Poker Face told me."

"Who told you that his name was Poker Face?" Judith shot the question
at him.

Donley moved a scuffling foot back and forth, stirring uneasily.  That
he was lying, no one there doubted; that he was but a poor liar after
all was equally evident.

"You ain't got no call to keep me here," he said at last.  "I ain't
goin' to answer questions all day."

"You'll answer my questions if you don't want me to turn you over to
Emmet Sawyer in Rocky Bend!" she told him coolly.  "How did you know
this man was called Poker Face?  Did you know him before?"

Donley's eyes went again, furtive and swift, to Poker Face.  But so did
all other eyes.  Poker Face gave no sign.

"Yes," answered Donley then, taking refuge at last upon the solid basis
of truth.

"Did you know this man?" Judith asked then of Poker Face, turning
suddenly on him.

"No," said Poker Face.

Donley, having guessed wrong, flushed and dropped his head.  Then he
looked up defiantly and with a short, forced laugh.

"Suppose I know him or don't know him," he asked with his old
insolence, "whose business is it?"

But Judith was giving her attention to Poker Face now.

"Where did you get that white pigeon you turned loose this morning?"
she asked crisply.

"Caught it," was the quiet answer.

"How?"

"With my han's."

"Why?"

"Jus' for fun."

"Did you know that pigeons could carry hog-cholera on their feet?"

"No.  But I wouldn't have been afraid, not bein' a hawg."

Donley tittered.  Poker Face looked unconcerned.

"Take that man Donley into the hall," Judith said to Lee.  "See if he
has got any pigeon feathers sticking to him anywhere, inside his shirt,
probably.  If you need any help, say so."

Very gravely Bud Lee put a hand on Donley's shoulder.

"Come ahead, stranger," he said quietly.

"You go to hell!" cried Donley, springing away.

But Bud Lee's hand was on him, and though he struggled and cursed and
threatened he went with Lee into the hallway.  Tripp, watching through
the open door, smiled.  Donley was on his back, Lee's knees on his
chest.

"I'll tell you one thing, stranger," Bud Lee was saying to him softly,
as his hand tore open Donley's shirt, "you open your dirty mouth to
cuss just once more in Miss Sanford's presence and I'll ruin the looks
of your face for you.  Now lie still, will you?"

"Connect me with the Bagley ranch," Judith directed the Rocky Mountain
operator.  "That's right, isn't it, Doc?"

"Yes," answered Tripp.  "That's the nearest case of cholera."

"Hello," said Judith when the connection had been established.  "Mr.
Bagley?  This is Judith Sanford, Blue Lake ranch.  I've got a case of
hog-cholera here, too.  I want some information."

She asked her questions, got her answers.  Triumphantly she turned to
Tripp.

The Bagley ranch, though a hundred miles away, was the nearest
cholera-infected place of which Tripp had any knowledge.  Bagley did
have a flock of pigeons; a man, a month or so ago, had bought two dozen
from him; the man wasn't Trevors.  Bagley didn't know who he was.  The
same man, however, had shown up three days ago and had asked for
another half-dozen of the birds.  There had been three white pigeons
among them.  He was a shifty-eyed chap, Bagley said, old brown suit,
hat with a rattlesnake skin around the crown.  That, point for point,
spelled Donley.

Lee returned with the shirt which he had ripped from his prisoner's
back.  Adhering to the inside of it were little, downy feathers and
three or four larger feathers from a pigeon's wing.

"I guess he rode mostly at night, at that," concluded Lee.  "A great
little fat man you must have looked, stranger, with six of those
birdies in your shirt."

Donley's face was a violet red.  But a glance from Lee shut his mouth
for him.  Poker Face, still looking on, gave no sign of interest.

"Put him in the grain-house," said Judith, her eyes bright with anger.
"And see that he doesn't go Shorty's trail.  Poker Face, have you
anything else to say for yourself?"

"No," answered Poker Face.

"Then," cried Judith hotly, "you can have your time right now!  Donley,
here, I'll prosecute.  He's going to pay for this morning's work.  I've
got nothing on you.  It's up to you to see that I don't get it!  And
you can tell Shorty for me--yes, and Quinnion too, and Bayne Trevors,
if you like--that I am ready and waiting for your next play!  And don't
forget that when San Quentin is full there's still room in Folsom."

Judith telephoned Emmet Sawyer that she had a man for him.  Lee and
Carson conducted an expostulating Donley to the grain-house and jailed
him wordlessly.  Then Carson put a man on guard at the door, daylight
though it was.  When all was done he filled his pipe slowly and turned
troubled eyes after Poker Face.

"She made a mistake there, though," he said regretfully.  "A better
cow-hand I never ask to see, Bud.  An' you ought to see the game of
crib that man plays!  Nope, Judy; you're wrong there."

But Bud Lee, the man who did not approve of the sort of woman who did
man's work, said with unusual warmth:

"Don't you fool yourself, Carson!  She hasn't made one little misplay
yet!"




XVII

"ONCE A FOOL--ALWAYS A FOOL"

Though, under the surface, life upon Blue Lake ranch was sufficiently
tense, the remaining days of June frivoled by as bright and bonny as
the little meadow-blues flirting with the field-flowers.

Since from the very first the ranch had been short-handed, the hours
from dawn to dusk were filled with activity.  Carson, who, true to
Judith's expectations, had brought back some new ideas from his few
days at the experimental farm--ideas not to be admitted by Carson,
however--bought a hundred young steers from a neighboring overstocked
range.  In the lower corrals the new milking-machines were working
smoothly, only a few of the older cows refusing to have anything to do
with them.

Tripp had succeeded in locating and getting back some of the men who
had worked long under Luke Sanford and whom Trevors had discharged.  It
was a joy to see the familiar faces of Sunny Harper, Johnny Hodge, Bing
Kelley, Tod Bruce.  The alfalfa acreage was extended, a little more
than doubled.  Plans were made for an abundance of dry fodder to be fed
with the lush silage during the coming lean months.  Bud Lee broke his
string of horses, and with Tommy Burkitt and one other dependable man
began perfecting their education, with an eye turned toward a
profitable sale in January.

Quinnion, perforce, was left undisturbed upon the sheep-ranch whither
Emmet Sawyer had followed him.  Against Bud Lee's word that he had had
a hand at the trouble at the old cabin were the combined oaths of two
of the sheepmen that he had been with them at the time.

Hampton's guests, who had planned for a month at the ranch, stayed on.
But they would be leaving at the end of June.  That is, Farris and
Rogers positively; the Langworthys, perhaps.  The major was content
here, and to stay always and always, would be an unbounded joy--of
course, with little runs to the city for the opera season and for
shopping trips, and a great, jolly house-party now and then.

The only fly in Marcia's ointment was Hampton himself.  She confessed
as much to Judith.  She liked him, oh, ever so much!  But was that
love?  She yearned for a man who would thrill her through and through,
and Hampton didn't always do that.  Just after his heroic capture of
the terrible Shorty, Marcia was thrilled to her heart's content.  But
there were other days when Hampton was just Pollock Hampton.  If it
could only be arranged so that she could stay on and on, with no day of
reckoning to come, no matrimonial ventures on the horizon . . .

"That's simple, my dear," Judith smiled at her.  "When you get through
being Pollock Hampton's guest, you can be mine for a while."

Hampton was now a great puzzle to Mrs. Langworthy, and even an object
of her secret displeasure.  Not that that displeasure ever went to the
limit of changing Mrs. Langworthy's plans.  But she longed for the
right to talk to him as a mother should.  For, seeking to emulate those
whom he so unstintedly admired, Bud Lee and Carson and the rest of the
hard-handed, quick-eyed men in the service of the ranch, Hampton was no
longer the careless, frankly inefficient youth who had escorted his
guests here.  He went for days at a time unshaven, having other matters
to think of; he came to the table bringing with him the aroma of the
stables.  He wore a pair of trousers as cylindrical in the leg as a
stove-pipe; over them he wore a pair of cheap blue overalls, with the
proper six-inch turn-up at the bottom to show the stovepipe trousers
underneath.  The overalls got soiled, then dirty, then disgracefully
blotched with wagon grease and picturesque stains, and Hampton made no
apologies for them.

Twice he left the ranch, once to be gone overnight, intending that it
should be a mystery where he went.  But, since he rode the north trail
which led to the Western Lumber camp, no one doubted that he had gone
to see Bayne Trevors, in whom he still stoutly believed.

Between the 15th and the memorable 30th of June, Bud Lee saw little of
Judith Sanford.  She was here, there, everywhere; busy, preoccupied.
Marcia he talked with twice; once when they rode together while
Hampton, racing recklessly down a rocky slope for a shot at a deer got
a fall, a sore shoulder and made his debut in certain new swear-words;
once when all of the guests, with the exception of Farris, who was
painting the portrait of the stallion, Nightshade, and the major, who
had "letters to write," came out to watch the horse-breaking.  This
time, introduced to Mrs. Langworthy, Lee got for his bow a remarkably
cold stare.  Others might forget, here in the open, the distinction
between people of the better class and their servants--not Mrs.
Langworthy, if you please.

Having created his imaginary woman, Lee was ripe to fall in love with
her when she came.  He had thrilled to the touch of Judith's hand that
night in the cabin; his thoughts, many and many a day, centred about
the superbly alive beauty that was Judith's.  The fact disturbed him
vaguely.  The thought that he was very deeply interested in her in the
good old way between man and maid, never entered his stubborn head.
She was as far removed from his ideal woman as the furthermost star in
the infinite firmament.  Perhaps it was this very disquiet within him,
caused by Judith, which now turned his thoughts to Marcia.

"That's the sort of woman," he told himself stoutly.  "A man's woman;
his other self, not just a pardner; the necessary other side of him,
not just the same side in a different way."

Marcia had little, feminine ways of helplessness which turned
flatteringly to the strength of the other sex.  Judith asked no man to
aid her in mounting her horse; Marcia coquettishly slipped a daintily
slippered foot into a man's palm, rising because of his strength.

Now, when his thoughts went to Judith, Bud Lee turned them dexterously
to Marcia, making his comparisons, shaping them to fit into his pet
theory.  When, days passing, he did not see Judith, he told himself
that he was going to miss Marcia when she left.  When one day he came
unexpectedly upon Judith and with lips and eyes she flashed her ready
smile at him, he felt that odd stir in his blood.  What a pity that a
girl like her, who might have been anything, elected to do a man's
work!  When, again unexpectedly, he came another day upon Marcia riding
with Hampton, there was no quick stirring of the pulses, and he
contented himself with the thought: "Now, that is the sort of woman.  A
man's woman!  His other self . . ." and so on.


When Judith planned a little party to mark the departure of Marcia on
the 30th of June--it wasn't definitely decided that the Langworthys
were leaving then, but at least Farris and Rogers were--the reasons
actuating her were rather more complex than Judith herself fully
realized or would have admitted.  She liked Marcia; she wanted to do at
least this much for her.  Living-room, dining-room, music-room,
library--they would all be cleared of the larger pieces of furniture,
the double-doors thrown open.  The string band from Rocky Bend would
come.  Judith would send out invitations to the nicer people there and
to the ranches hereabout.  She would have a barbecue, there would be
races and the usual holiday games, then the dance.  Marcia would know
nothing of it until the last day, when her eager enthusiasm would send
her a-flutter to her dressing-room.

Unanalyzed, it was simplicity itself, this giving a farewell party to
Marcia.  Under analysis, it was a different matter.  The boys at the
ranch would be invited, and of course most of them would come.  Bud Lee
would come.  Judith would see to that, even if he should hesitate.

Bud Lee had always been so self-possessed, had so coolly found her
lacking, that, piqued a little, Judith longed for the opportunity to
place him in an atmosphere where a little of his calm self-possession
might be snatched from him.  If she could embarrass him, if she could
see the red rise under his tanned skin, she would be giving Mr. Lee a
lesson good for his soul.

"I've got powerful little use for an affair like that," said Lee
coolly, when she told him.  "Thank you, Miss Sanford, but I don't think
I'll come."

Judith shrugged her shoulders as though it did not in the least matter
to her.

"I'm giving it for Marcia," she said.  "Do you think it would be quite
nice to her to stay away?  I am afraid that she will be hurt."

Not Judith's words, but the look in her eyes changed Lee's intentions.

"If it's for Miss Langworthy," he said quietly, "I'll come."


The day came and Bud Lee began to regret that he had given his promise
to go to Marcia's dance.  All day he was taciturn, aloof, avoiding not
only the visitors from Rocky Bend and the other ranches, but his own
fellows as well.  He took no part in the races, was missing when the
blazing trenches and smell of broiling meat told that the barbecue was
in progress.  He worked with his horses as he had worked yesterday, as
he would work to-morrow.  With the dusk he went, not to the men's
quarters, but to the old cabin at the Upper End.

Again and again that day he had thought of that look in Judith's eyes
when she had asked him to come for Marcia's sake.  What the devil did
she mean by it?  He didn't know exactly, but he did know that in its
own vague way it irritated him.  Her eyes had laughed at him, they had
teased, they had told him that Judith herself wasn't wasting a single
thought upon Mr. Bud Lee, but that she had noticed his obvious interest
in Miss Langworthy.

"Damn it," muttered Lee.  "I won't go."

But he had said that he would go, and in little things as in big ones
he was scrupulous.  He would go, just to dance with Marcia and show
Miss Judith a thing or two.  He felt unreasonably like taking Miss
Judith across his knee and spanking her.  And he did have a curiosity
to see just what Judith would look like in a real party-dress.

"Poor little wild Indian," he grumbled.  "She's got the making of a
wonder in her, and she doesn't even know it.  What's worse, doesn't
care."

He sat with a dead cigarette between his fingers, staring at the
wind-blown flame of his coal-oil lamp.  Judith was doing this as she
did everything that she set her two hands on, thoroughly and with her
whole heart and soul.  In that lay the key to her character.  There was
no half-way with her.  When she gave, it was open-handedly, with no
reservation; where she loved or hated, it was unreservedly; if she gave
a dance it would be a dance for the countryside to remember.

Yesterday Hampton had wondered, grinning, what he'd look like in a
dress-suit again.  Hadn't had a thing on here of late but his war togs.
Whereby he called attention to his turned-up overalls, soft shirt,
battered hat, and flapping vest with the tobacco-tag hanging out.

Bud Lee turned down the wick of his lamp, which had been smoking, and
sat staring at it another five minutes.

"By thunder," he said softly to himself.  "I'll do it."

He shoved the bunk away from its place in the corner, opened a
trap-door in the floor and, lamp in hand, went down into the cabin's
cellar.  Here was a long pine box, hooped with tin bands for shipping,
its lid securely nailed on.  He set down his lamp and with shirt-sleeve
wiped off some of the accumulation of dust and spider-web.  A card with
the words, "David Burrill Lee, Rocky Bend," tacked to it made its
appearance.  Lee shook his head and attacked the lid.

"It's like digging out a dead man," he muttered.  "Well, we'll bury him
again to-morrow."

It was a box of odds and ends.  Clothing, a few books, a pack of
photographs, an ornate bridle, a pair of gold-chased spurs, a couple of
hats, gloves, no end of the varied articles which might have gone
hastily into such a receptacle as this from the hurried packing in a
bachelor's apartments.

Bud Lee, with a dress-suit and the articles it demands, even to tie and
dancing-shoes, went back into the room above.

"Like Hampton," he mused, looking at the things in his hands, "I wonder
what it'll feel like to get back into these!  I'm a fool."  He laughed
shortly and set to work to improvise a flat-iron to take the worst
wrinkles out of the cloth.  "Once a fool, always a fool.  You can't get
away from it."

It was settled.  He was going to Marcia's party.  He insisted upon
calling it in his mind, "Marcia's party."  And he was wondering, as he
shaved, how Judith was going to look.




XVIII

JUDITH TRIUMPHANT

As Bud Lee came through the lilacs into the courtyard, he heard the
tinkle of a distant piano and the tremolo of a violin, so faint as
hardly to be distinguished above the plash and gurgle of the fountains.
The court, bathed in soft light, seemed a corner of fairyland, the
music vanishing elfin strains of some mischievous troop putting sighs
and love dreams into a sleeping maid's breast.  The night was rich with
stars, warm with summer, serene with the peace of the mountains.  He
was late.  They were already dancing within.

He stood a moment, looking in at the outer edge of the flood of light
which gushed through the wide doors.  Behind him Japanese lanterns
hanging from a vine-covered trellis; before him flowers, bright
chandeliers, girls' dresses like fluttering, many-colored, diaphanous
butterfly wings.  He had been saying to himself: "I must hurry if I
want to dance with Marcia."  And something stirring restlessly within
him shoved aside the thought of Marcia and put in its stead the old
wonder: "What sort of a Judith would he see to-night?"

He found it difficult to form any picture of her here, among these gay,
inconsequent merry-makers.  Judith to him spelled a girl upon a horse,
booted, spurred, with a scarf about her neck fluttering wildly behind
her as she rode, the superb, splendid figure of a girl of the
out-of-doors, alive with the hot pioneer blood which had been her rich
inheritance, a sort of wonderful boy-girl.  Remove her flapping hat,
her boots, and spurs and riding-suit, and what was left of Judith?

Outside were half a dozen of the boys who had not mustered courage to
set foot on the polished floors, Carson and Tommy Burkitt among them.
Tommy stared at Bud Lee and his jaw dropped in amazement.  Carson took
swift stock of such clothes as he had never suspected a good horse
foreman owned, and gasped faintly:

"The damn . . . lady-killer!"

But Lee had neither eyes nor thoughts for them, nor remembrance of his
own change from working garb to that of polite society.  The dance came
to a lingering end, the couples throughout the big rooms strolled up
and down, clapping their hands softly or vehemently as their natures or
degree of enthusiasm dictated, and Lee forgot Marcia and sought eagerly
for a glimpse of Judith.

Refused a second encore, the couples stood about chatting, the hum of
lively voices bespeaking eager enjoyment.  There was no early chill
upon the assembly, to be dissipated as the dance wore on; the day of
festivity outdoors had thawed the thin crust of icy strangeness which
is so natural a part of such a function as this.  Already it seemed
that everybody was on the most cheerful terms with everybody else.

Suddenly Lee's eyes, still seeking Judith, found Marcia.  Surrounded by
a little knot of men, each of them plainly seeking to become her happy
partner for the next dance, adorably helpless as usual, Miss Langworthy
was allowing the men to fight it out among themselves.  Lee moved a
little nearer to see her better.  In a pale-blue gown, fluffy as a
summer cloud, her cheeks delicately flushed, a white rose like a
snowdrop in the gold of her hair, she was flutteringly happy, reminding
him of those little meadow blues that had flown palpitatingly about him
that day in the fields.  And she was obviously as much at her ease
here, in an atmosphere of music and flattery, as the tiny butterflies
in their own meadows.

Bud Lee came in, his tall form conspicuous, and went straight to
Marcia.  She saw him immediately; forget herself to stare almost as
Carson had done; smiled at him brightly; waved her fan to him.

He took her hand and told her with his eyes how pretty she was.  The
delicate tint in Marcia's cheeks deepened and warmed, her eyes grew
even brighter.

"Flatterer!" she chided him.  "Are we to talk of the moth and the star
again, Mr. Lee?"

The knot of men about her melted away.  Lee stood looking down into her
upturned eyes, measuring her gentle beauty.  He had thought of her as a
little blue butterfly--she was more like a wee white moth, fluttering,
fluttering . . .

The music, again from a hidden distance, set feet to tapping.  Marcia
plainly hesitated, flashed a quick look from Lee to the others about
them, then whispered hurriedly:

"It's terrible of me, but----"

And she slipped her hand into his arm, cast another searching glance
over her shoulder for a partner who had been too tardy in finding her,
and yielded to the temptation to have this first dance with "the most
terribly fascinating man there"!  Lee slipped his arm about her, felt
her sway with him, and lightly they caught the beat of the dance and
lost themselves in it.  And still, again and again turning away from
Marcia, he sought Judith.

The dance over, their talk was interrupted by an excited and rather
overdignified youth with a hurt look in his young worshipping eyes, who
stiffly reminded Miss Langworthy that she had cut his dance.  She was
so contrite and helpless about it that the youth's heart was touched;
she blamed herself for her terribly stupid way of always getting things
tangled up, gave him the promise of the next dance, which she had
already given to some one else, disposed of him with charming skill,
and sighed as she turned again to Lee.

"I haven't paid my respects to our hostess," he said quietly.  "Where
is Miss Sanford?"

"She sent her excuses," Marcia told him.  "Aren't we in a draft, Mr.
Lee?"

He moved with her away from the soft current of air, a distinct
disappointment moving him to the verge of sudden anger.  What business
had Judith to stay away?

"You mean she isn't coming at all?" he asked quickly.

"Oh, no," she told him, busy with the rose in her hair, her eyes bright
on his.  "Just as the dance was beginning she had to go to the
telephone.  Some ranch business, I don't know what.  But she sent word
she would be here immediately--I believe," and Marcia made her remark
teasingly, though she did want to know, "that a certain mysterious
gentleman who masquerades as a horse-breaker is very much interested in
Judith."

"What makes you say a thing like that?" he asked, startled a little.

Marcia laughed.

"A woman's intuition, Sir Mystery!" she informed him gayly.

"What does the woman's intuition find to be the mysterious gentleman's
interest in a certain Miss Langworthy?" he asked lightly.

"It tells her that he likes her; that it would be fun for him to come
and play with her; that he would be kind and courteous; but that he
considers her very much as he would a foolish little butterfly!"

Again she startled him.  He looked at her wonderingly.  But before he
could frame a bantering reply, Marcia had involuntarily gripped at his
arm with a look upon her face that first was sheer bewildered
astonishment, and was crying for him to look yonder.

Judith had come.

Across the floor, now nearly deserted, Bud Lee and Marcia stared at
her.  She was coming toward them, her dainty little slippers seeming to
kiss their own reflections in the gleaming floor.  It was Judith and
not Judith.  It was some strange, unknown Judith.  A wonderfully
gowned, transcendently lovely Judith.  A Judith who had long hidden
herself, masquerading, and who now stepped forth smiling and bright and
vividly beautiful; a Judith of bare white arms, round and soft and rich
in their tender curves; a Judith whose filmy gown floated about her
like a sun-shot mist; a Judith whose skin above the low-cut corsage was
like a baby's, whose tender mouth was a red flower, whose hair was a
shimmering mass of bronze-brown, whose eyes were Aphrodite's own,
glorious, dawn-gray; a Judith of rare maidenly charm; a glorious,
palpitant, triumphant Judith.

It might have been just because it was fitting that they should greet
their hostess so; it might have been because the men and women who saw
this new Judith were caught suddenly in a compelling current of
admiration, that above the hum of voices rose from everywhere a quick
clapping of hands as she came through the room.  The color of her
cheeks deepened, her eyes flashed a joyous acknowledgment of the
greeting, and bright and cool and self-possessed she came on to Marcia.

"Marcia, dear," she said, taking Marcia's two hands--and Bud Lee found
that even Judith's voice had taken on a new note, deeper, richer,
gladder, fraught with the quality of low music--"forgive me for being
late.  I wanted to be here every little second to see you enjoy
yourself."  She put her lips closer to Marcia's ear, whispering: "You
are the prettiest thing to-night I ever saw!"

Marcia shook her head, her eyes filled with frank wonder.

"Don't fib, Judith, dear," she answered.  And, for Marcia, she was very
grave.  "I know you have a glass in your room.  You wonderful,
wonderful Judith!"

Their voices were indistinct to Bud Lee.  Now at the moment when she
was so rich in the splendor of her own sweet femininity he filled his
heart with her.  Judith had come in the only way Judith could come,
surrendering herself utterly to the hour.

She turned to him, no surprise at his own costume in her happy eyes,
and gave him her cool hand.  A swift tremor ran through him at the
contact, a tremor which was like that of the night in the cabin, which
he could not conceal, which Judith must notice.  She said something,
but he let the words go, holding only the vibrant music of the voice.

She had stirred him, and now he did not seek a theory for a buckler;
the sight of her, the brushing of her fingers against his, made riotous
tumult in his blood.

The first strains of a waltz joined the lure of Judith's warm
loveliness, whispering, counselling, commanding: "Take her."  Marcia
gasped and stepped back, startled by the look she saw in the eyes of
this man who, having spoken no word since Judith came, put out his arms
and took her into them.  Judith flashed at him a look of quick wonder.
His face was almost stern; no hint of a smile had come into his eyes.
He merely caught her to him as though she were his, and swung her out
into the whirl of dancers.

"You are rather--abrupt, aren't you?" said Judith coolly.

"Am I?" he asked gravely.  "I don't know.  It seems to me that I have
been loitering, just loitering while----"

He didn't attempt to finish.  He held Judith in his arms while for him
the room was emptied of its gay throng, the music no longer pulsed; its
beat was in the rhythm of their bodies, swaying as one.

The dance over, she was lost to him in the crowd of men who came
eagerly to her.  His eyes followed her wherever she went.  A slow anger
kindled in his heart that she should let other men talk with her, that
she should suffer another man to take her in his arms.

A number of country dances followed.  He stood by the door waiting a
little before he went again to Judith.  He saw Marcia across the room
beckoning to him with her fan.  There was nothing to do but to go to
her.  He frowned but went, still watching for Judith.  Marcia wanted
him to meet some of her friends.  He shook hands with Hampton, was
introduced to Rogers.  Marcia explained that Mr. Lee was the gentleman
who achieved perfect wonders in the education of his horses.  She
turned to introduce Farris, the artist.  But Farris broke into Marcia's
words with a sudden exclamation.

"Dave Lee!" he cried, as if he could not believe his eyes.  "You!
Here!"

"Hello, Dick," Lee answered quietly.  "Yes, I'm here.  I didn't know
that you were the artist fellow Hampton had brought up with him."

Farris's hand went out swiftly to be gripped in Lee's.  Marcia,
mystified, looked from one to the other.

"You two know each other?  Why, isn't that----"

She didn't know just what it was, so stopped, looking frankly as though
she'd like to have one of them finish her sentence for her.

"But," muttered Farris, "I thought that you----"

"Never mind, Dick," said Lee quickly.  And to Marcia's mystified
expression: "You'll pardon us a moment, Miss Langworthy?  I want to
talk a little with Mr. Farris."

His hand on the artist's elbow, Bud Lee forced him gently away.  The
two disappeared into the little room off the library where José was
placing a great bowl of punch on the table.

"_Que hay_,  Bud," grinned José.  "Your ol' nose smell the booze damn'
queek, no?"

He set down his bowl and went out.  Farris stared wonderingly at Lee.

"Bud, is it?" he grunted.  "Breaker of horses; hired man at a dollar a
day----?"

"Ninety dollars a month, Dick," Lee corrected g him, with a short
laugh.  "Give a fellow his true worth, old-timer."

Farris frowned.

"What devil's game is this!" he demanded sharply.  "Isn't it enough
that you should drop out of the world with never a word, but that you
must show up now breaking horses and letting such chaps as Mrs.
Simpson's Black Spanish chum with you?  Not a cursed word in five
years, and I've lain awake nights wondering.  When you went to
smash----"

"When a Lee goes to smash," said Bud briefly, "he goes to smash.
That's all there is to it."

"But there was no sense, no use in your dropping out of sight that
way----"

"There was," said Lee curtly, "or I shouldn't have done it.  It wasn't
just that I went broke; that was a result of my own incompetence in a
bit of speculation and didn't worry me a great deal.  But other things
did.  There were a couple of the fellows that I thought were friends of
mine.  I found out that they had knifed me; had helped pluck me to
feather their own nests.  It hurt, Dick; hurt like hell.  Losing the
big ranch in the South was a jolt, I'll admit; seeing those fellows
take it over and split it two ways between them, sort of knocked the
props out from under me.  I believed in them, you see.  After that I
just wanted to get away and sort of think things over."

"You went to Europe?"

"I did not.  I don't know how that report got out, but if people chose
to think I had gone to take a hand in the fighting over there, I saw no
need to contradict a harmless rumor.  I took a horse and beat it up
into the coast mountains.  I tell you, Dick, I wanted to think!  And I
found out before I was through thinking that I was sick of the old
life, that I was sick of people, the sort of people you and I knew,
that there was nothing in the world but horses that I cared the snap of
my finger about, that the only life worth living--for me--was a life in
the open.  I drifted up this way.  I've been living my own life in my
own way for five years.  I am happier at it than I used to be.  That's
all of the flat little story, Dick."

"You might have let me know, it seems to me," said Farris a bit stiffly.

"So I might," answered Lee thoughtfully.  "I was going to in the first
place.  But you'll remember that you were off somewhere travelling when
the bubble broke.  When Dick Farris travels," and his grave smile came
back to him, "let no mad letter think that it can track him down.  Then
I hit my stride in this sort of life; I grew away from the old news;
the years passed as years do after a man is twenty-five; and I just
didn't write.  But I didn't forget, Dickie, old man," he said warmly,
and his hand rested on Farris's shoulder.  "You can put it in that old
black pipe of yours and smoke it, that I didn't forget.  Some day I
planned to hit town again, heeled you know, and remind you of auld lang
syne."

"You are a fool, David Burrill Lee," said Farris with conviction.
"Look here: you can take a new start, pull yourself together, come
back--where you belong."

But Lee shook his head.

"That's like the old Dick Farris I used to know," he said gently.  "But
this is where I belong, Dick.  I don't want to start over, I don't want
to come back to the sort of thing we knew.  The only thing in the world
I do want is right here.  And I don't see that it would do any good for
you to go stirring up any memories about the old Lee that was shot
'somewhere in France.'"

When Farris had to go and claim a dance, Lee watched him with eyes soft
with affection.  Then he, too, left the room and went back to the outer
door, to his old spot, looking for Judith.

"The only thing I want is right here," he repeated softly.

He watched Farris join Marcia and Judith.  He noted the eager
excitement in Marcia's eyes, saw her turn impulsively to Farris.  The
artist shook his head and left them, ostensibly going in search of his
partner.  Marcia was speaking excitedly to Judith.  Lee frowned.

Once more that night he held Judith in his arms.  He meant to make
amends for his brusque way with her before.  But again the magic of her
presence was like a glorious mist, shutting them in together, shutting
all of the world out.  They spoke little and the music had its will
with them.  Judith did not know that she sighed as the dance ended.
She seemed moving in a dream as Lee led her through the door.  They
were out in the courtyard, the stars shining softly down on them.  In
the subdued light here he stood still, looking down into her
pleasure-flushed face.  Again the insistent tremor shot down his blood.


Here in this tender light she looked to him the masterpiece of God
striving for the perfect in a woman's form.  Her gown, gently stirred
by the warm breeze, seemed a part of her, elusive, alive, feminine.
The milk-white of bare throat and shoulder and rounded arm, the rise
and fall of her breast, the soft lure of her eyes, the tender smile
upon her lips, drew him slowly closer, closer to her.  She lifted her
face a little, raising her eyes until they shone straight into his.

"Judith," he said very quietly, very gravely, making her wonder at the
tone and the words to follow: "You have had your way with me to-night.
Do you understand all that means?  And now--I am going to have my way
with you!"

He caught her in his arms, crushed her to him, kissed her.  Then he let
her go and stood, stern-faced, watching her.

For a moment he thought that the hand at her side was rising to strike
him full in the face.  But he did not move.

Had such been Judith's intention, suddenly it changed.

"So," she cried softly, "this is the sort of fine gentleman into which
a dress-suit has made Bud Lee, horse foreman!  For so great an honor
surely any woman would thank him!"

She made him a slow, graceful courtesy, and laughed at him.  And so she
left him, her laughter floating back, taunting him.

Lee watched her until she had gone from his sight.  Then he turned and
went down the knoll, into the night.




XIX

BUD LEE SEEKS CROOKED CHRIS QUINNION

Going down the knoll to the bunk-house, Bud Lee cursed himself at every
stride.  He cursed Carson when the cattle foreman, turning to follow
him, addressed a merry remark to him concerning his "lady-killing
clothes."  The words reminded him of Judith's and he didn't cherish the
remembrance.  In the bunk-house Carson watched him curiously over his
old pipe as Lee began ripping off his dress-suit.

"A feller called you up a while ago," said Carson, still bright-eyed
with interest but pretending that that interest had to do with the new
wall telephone recently installed.  "Sandy Weaver, it was.  Said----"

"What did he want?" demanded Lee, swinging suddenly on Carson, his coat
balled up in his hand and hurled viciously under a bunk.

"Wasn't I telling you?" Carson grunted.  "What's eating you, Bud?  You
ac' mighty suspicious, like a man that had swallered poison or else was
coming down with the yeller jaundice or else was took sudden an'
powerful bad with love.  They all treats a man similar----"

"Damn it," growled Lee irritably, "can't you tell me what Weaver said?"

"Said, call him up, real pronto," replied Carson cheerfully.  "Say,
Bud, where in heck _did_ you get that outfit?  By cripes, if I had a
regalia like that I'd be riding herd in 'em ev'ry Sunday!  On the
square now----"

But Lee wasn't listening to him and Carson knew it.  He had gone
quickly to the telephone, had rung the one bell for "Central," and a
moment later was speaking with Sandy Weaver of the Golden Spur saloon.
Carson sucked at his pipe and kept his eyes on Lee's face.

The ensuing conversation, only one side of which came to Carson, was
brief.  Most of the talking was done by Sandy Weaver.  Lee asked three
questions; the third a simple,

"Sure of it, Sandy?"

Then he jammed the receiver back upon its hook, and with no remark
continued his hurried dressing.  When he had come in, his face had been
flushed; now it was suddenly red, the hot red of rage.  His eyes, when
they met Carson's once, were stern, bright with the same quick anger.
When he had drawn on his working garb and stuffed his trousers into his
boots, he went to his bunk and tossed back the blanket.  From the straw
mattress he took a heavy, old style Colt revolver.  Carson, still
watching him, saw him spin the cylinder, slip a box of fresh cartridges
into his pocket and turn to the door.

"Riding, Bud?"  He got to his feet, stuffed his pipe into his pocket
and reached for his hat.  "Care if I mosey along?"

"What for?" asked Lee curtly.

"Oh, hell, what's the use being a hawg," Carson grumbled deep down in
his brown throat.  "If you're on your way to little ol' Rocky hunting
trouble, if they's going to be shooting-fun, why can't you let me in on
it?"

Lee stood a moment framed in the doorway, frowning down at Carson.
Then he turned on his heel and went out, saying coolly over his
shoulder:

"Come on if you want to.  Quinnion's in town."


As their horses' hoofs hammered the winding road for the forty miles
into Rocky Bend the two riders were for the most part silent.  All of
the explanation which Lee had to give, or cared to give, was summed up
in the brief words:

"Quinnion's in town."

To Judith, Lee had said that night they fought together at the Upper
End that he had recognized Quinnion's voice; "I played poker with that
voice not four months ago."  That he had had ample reason to remember
the man as well, he had not gone on to mention.  But Carson knew.

Carson had sat at Lee's left hand that night, across the table from
Chris Quinnion, and had seen the look of naked hatred in two pairs of
eyes when Lee had risen to his feet and coolly branded Quinnion as a
crook and a card sharp.  For a little the two men had glared at each
other, their muscles corded and ready, their eyes alert and suspicious,
their hands close to their pockets.  Then Quinnion had sneered in that
evil voice of his: "You got the drop on me this time.  Look out for the
next."  He too had risen and with Lee's eyes hard upon him had gone out
of the room.  And Carson had been disappointed in a fight.  But
now--now that Bud Lee in this mood was going straight to Rocky Bend and
Quinnion, Carson filled his deep lungs with a sigh of satisfaction.
Life had grown dull here of late; there wasn't a fresh scar on his
battered body.

Though the railroad had at last slipped through it, Rocky Bend was
still a bad little town and proud of its badness.  To the northeast lay
the big timber tracts into which the Western Lumber Company was tearing
its destructive way; only nine miles due west were the Rock Creek
mines, running full blast; on the other sides it was surrounded by
cattle ranges where a lusty brood of young untamed devils were
constrained to give themselves soberly to their work during the long,
dusty days.  But at night, always on a Saturday evening, there came
into Rocky Bend from lumber-camps, mines, and cow outfits a crowd of
men whose blood ran red and turbulent, seeking a game of cards, a
"whirl at the wheel," a night of drinking or any other amusement which
fate might vouchsafe them.  Good men and bad, they were all hard men
and quick.  Otherwise they would not have come into Rocky Bend at all.

Lee and Carson riding out of the darkness into the dim light of the
first of the straggling street-lamps, passed swiftly between the rows
of weather-boarded shacks and headed toward the Golden Spur saloon.

Though the hour was late there were many saddle-ponies standing with
drooping heads here and there along the board sidewalks; from more than
one barroom came the gay ragtime of an automatic piano or the scrape
and scream of a fiddle.  Men lounged up and down the street, smoking,
calling to one another, turning in here or there to have a drink or
watch a game.

The two newcomers, watching each man or group of men, rode on slowly
until they came to the building on whose false front was a gigantic
spur in yellow paint.  Here they dismounted, tied their horses, and
went in.  Carson, with a quick eye toward preparedness for what might
lie on the cards, looked for Lee's gun.  It wasn't in his pocket; it
wasn't in his waistband, ready to hand.  It wasn't anywhere that Carson
could see.  At the door he whispered warningly:

"Better be ready, Bud.  Ain't lost your gun, have you?"

Lee shook his head and stepped into the room.  At the long bar were
three or four men, drinking.  Quinnion was not among them.  There were
other men at the round tables, playing draw, solo, stud horse.  One
glance showed that Quinnion was not in the room.  But there were other
rooms at the rear for those desiring privacy.  Lee, nodding this way
and that to friends who accosted him, made his way straight to the bar.

"Hello, Sandy," he said quietly.

Sandy Weaver, the bartender, looked at him curiously.  A short, heavy,
blond man was Sandy Weaver, who ran a fair house and gave his attention
strictly to his own business.  Save when asked by a friend to do him a
favor, such a favor as to keep an eye on another man.

"Hello, Bud," returned Sandy, putting out a red hand.  All expression
of interest had fled from his placid face.  "Come in right away, eh?
Hello, Carson.  Have somethin'; on me, you know."

Lee shook his head.

"Not to-night, Sandy," he said.  "Thanks just the same."

"Me," grinned Carson, "I'll go you, Sandy.  Same thing--you know."

Sandy shoved out whiskey-bottle and glass.  Then he turned grave eyes
to Lee.

"One of these fellers can tend bar while we talk if you want, Bud," he
offered.

"You say Quinnion has been talking?" asked Lee.

"Yes.  Considerable.  All afternoon an' evening, I guess.  I didn't
hear him until I called you up."

"Then," continued the man from Blue Lake ranch, "I don't see any call
for you and me to whisper, Sandy.  What did he say?"

"Said you was a liar, Bud.  An' a skeerd-o-your-life damn bluff."

A faint, shadowy smile touched Lee's eyes.

"Just joshing, Sandy.  But that wasn't all, was it?"

"No," said Sandy, wiping his bar carefully.  "There was the other word,
Bud.  An'--say, Billy, tell him what Quinnion had to say down to the
Jailbird."

Lee turned his eyes to Billy Young.  Young, a cattleman from the Up and
Down range, shifted his belt and looked uncomfortable.

"Damn if I do!" he blurted out.  "It ain't none of my funeral.  An' if
you ask me, I don't like the sound of that kind of talk in my mouth.
Maybe I can't find my way to church of a Sunday for staggerin' with
red-eye, but I ain't ever drug a nice girl's name into a barroom."

"So," said Lee very quietly, "that's it, is it?"

"Yes," said Sandy Weaver slowly, "that's it, Bud.  Us boys knowed ol'
Luke Sanford an' liked him.  Some of us even knowed his girl.  All of
us know the sort she is.  When Quinnion started his talk--oh, it's a
song an' dance about you an' her all alone in some damn cabin, trying
to crawl out'n the looks of things by accusin' Quinnion of tryin' to
shoot you up!--well, folks jus' laughed at him.  More recent, somebody
must have took him serious an' smashed him in the mouth.  He looks like
it.  But," and Sandy shrugged his thick shoulders elaborately, "if it's
up to anybody it's up to you."

For a moment Bud Lee, standing very straight, his hat far back, his
eyes hard and cold, looked from one to another of the men about him.
In every face he saw the same thing; their contempt for a man like
Quinnion, their wordless agreement with Sandy that it "was up to Bud
Lee."  Lee's face told them nothing.

"Where is he?" he asked presently.

"Mos' likely down to the Jailbird," said Billy, Young.  "That's where
he hangs out lately."

Lee turned and went out, Carson at his heels, all eyes following him.
In his heart was a blazing, searing rage.  And that rage was not for
Quinnion alone.  He thought of Judith as he had seen her that very
night, a graceful, gray-eyed slip of a girl, the sweetest little maid
in all of the world known to him--and of how he, brutal in the surge of
love for her, had swept her into his arms, crushed her to him, forced
upon her laughing lips the kiss of his own.

"My God," he said within himself, "I was mad.  It would be a good thing
if I got Quinnion to-night--and he got me.  Two of a kind," he told
himself sneeringly.

As he made his way down the ill-lighted street, his hat drawn over his
eyes now.  Bud Lee for a moment lost sight of the rows of rude
shanties, the drowsing saddle-ponies, the street-lamps, and saw only
the vision of a girl.  A girl clean and pure, a girl for a man to kneel
down to in worship, a girl who, as he had seen her last, was a
fairylike creature born of music and soft laughter and starlight, a
maid indescribably sweet.  In the harshness of the mood which gripped
him, she seemed to him superlatively adorable; the softness of her eyes
at the moment before he had kissed her haunted him.  As he strode on
seeking Quinnion, who had spoken evil of her, he carried her with him
in his heart.

The horrible thing was that her name had already been bandied about
from a ruffian's lips.  Lee winced at that even as he had winced at the
remembrance of having been brutally rough with her himself.  But what
was past was past; Quinnion had talked and must talk no more.

"He'll start something the minute he sees you," cautioned Carson, his
own revolver loose in the belt under his coat, his hard fingers like
talons gripped about the butt.  "Keep your eye peeled, Bud.  Better
cool off a speck before you tie into him.  You're too mad, I tell you,
for straight, quick shooting."

Lee made no answer.  Side by side the two men went on.  They had left
the sidewalk and walked down the middle of the rusty, rut-gouged
street.  Every man they met, every figure standing in the shadows,
received their quick, measuring looks.

"Most likely," suggested the cattle foreman, "by now he's got drunk an'
gone to sleep it off."

But Lee knew better than that.  Quinnion wasn't the sort that got
drunk.  He'd drink until the alcohol stirred up all of the evil in his
ugly heart; then he'd stop, always sure of his eye and his hand.  It
was far more likely that with a crowd of his own sort he was gambling
in the card-room of the Last Chance saloon, the Jailbird saloon as
"white" men called it.  For there was an ill-famed hang-out at the far
end of the straggling town, just at the edge of the Italian settlement,
that of late had come to be frequented by such as Quinnion; men who
were none too well loved by the greater part of the community, men who,
like Quinnion, had served time in jail or penitentiary.  Black Steve,
who was both proprietor and bartender, and who looked like a low-class
Italian, though he spoke the vernacular of the country, was the god of
the "dago" quarter, the friend of those who had gotten entangled with
the law.  Only last year he had killed his man in his own saloon, then
gone clear, through the combined perjury of his crowd.

The street grew steadily gloomier, filled with shadows.  In front of
the Jailbird the only light came from within and made scant war on the
lurking darkness without.  Lee's ears were greeted with the crazy whine
of an old accordion, and with men's voices lifted in laughter.  He
shoved the swing door open with his shoulder, Carson pushed the other
half back, and the two stood on the threshold, their eyes swiftly
seeking Quinnion.

As though their presence had been a command for silence, a sudden hush
fell over the Jailbird.  The accordion man drew out a last gasping note
and turned black round eyes upon them.  Black Steve, oily and
perspiring behind his bar, caressed a heavy black mustache and looked
at them out of cold, expressionless eyes.

The first glance had shown Lee that Quinnion was not there.  At least
not in the main room, but there were the card-rooms at the rear.  He
gave no sign of having felt the hostility of the many eyes turned upon
him, but went quickly down through the room, turning neither to right
nor left.

"Hol' on there," came the big booming voice of Steve.  "What you
fellers want, huh?"

Lee gave him no answer but strode on.  Carson, at Lee's heels like a
grim old dog, showed his teeth a little.  Steve, striking the bar with
a heavy hand, shouted in menacing tones:

"Hol' on, I say!  Nobody goin' to break in on a play that's running in
my card-rooms.  If you fellers want anything, you ask me."

"Go ahead, Bud," said Carson jocosely.  "It's only the ol' black calf
bawling same as usual."

But Lee needed no urging.  He had heard voices beyond the closed door
in front of him, among them a certain high-pitched, snarling,
indescribably evil voice which he knew.  He put his hand on the knob
and found that the door was locked.  With no waste of time, he drew
back a step, lifted his foot and drove his heel smashing into the lock.
Then, throwing himself forward, driving his shoulder into the door, he
burst it off its hinges.

At last he had found Quinnion.

Here were half a dozen men, not playing cards, but interrupted in a
quiet talk.  Standing on the far side of the table was a man who was as
evil a thing to see as was his voice to hear; his face twisted, drawn
to the left side, the left eye a mere slit of malevolence, the uneven
teeth showing in an eternal, mirthless grin, a man whose hands, when
his arms were lax as now, hung almost to his knees, a man twisted
morally, mentally, and physically.

Bud Lee had eyes only for this man.  But suddenly Carson had seen
another man, seeking to screen himself behind the great, misshapen bulk
of Quinnion, and with new eagerness was crying:

"It's Shorty, Bud!  He's mine!"

But Shorty was no man's yet.  At his back was a window; it was closed
and the shade was drawn, but to Shorty it spelled safety.  Head first
he went through it, tearing the green shade down, crashing through the
glass, leaving discussion behind him.  With a bellow of rage Carson
went after him, forgetful in the instant that there was another matter
on hand to-night.  Shorty, consigned to Carson's care and the
grain-house, had slipped away and had laughed at him.  Ever since,
Carson had been yearning for the chance to get his two hands on
Shorty's fat throat.  Before the smash and tinkle of falling glass had
died away Carson, plunging as Shorty had plunged, was lost to the
bulging eyes which sought to follow him, gone head first into the
darkness without.

Lee kept his eyes hard on Quinnion's.  He moved a little, so that the
wall was at his back.  His coat was unbuttoned; his left hand was in
his pocket, his arm holding back his coat a little on that side.  The
right hand was lax at his side, like Quinnion's.

He had seen the other men, though his eyes had seemed to see only one
man.  One of them he knew; the others he had seen.  They were the sort
to be found in Quinnion's company.  They were the nucleus of what was
spoken of as Quinnion's crowd.

"Quinnion," said Lee quietly, "you are a damned dirty-mouthed liar."

The words came like little slaps in the face.  Of the four men still in
the room with Quinnion three of them moved swiftly to one side, their
eyes on their leader's face, which showed nothing of what might lie in
his mind.

"I have taken the trouble," went on Lee coolly, when Quinnion, leering
back at him, made no reply, "to ride forty miles to-night for a little
talk with you.  You are a crook and a card-cheat.  I told you that once
before.  You have been telling men that I am a coward and a
four-flusher.  For that I am going to run you out of town to-night.  Or
kill you."

Then Quinnion laughed at him.

"Just for that?" he jeered.  "Or because I've been tellin' a true story
about you an'----"

He didn't get her name out.  Perhaps he hadn't expected to.  His eyes
had been watchful.  Now, as he threw himself to one side, he whipped
out his gun, dropping to one knee, his body partly concealed by the
table.  At the same second Bud Lee's right hand, no longer lax, sped to
the revolver gripped under the coat at his left arm-pit.

It was a situation by no means new to the four walls of the Jailbird
nor to the men concerned.  It was a two-man fight, with as yet no call
for the four friends of Quinnion to interfere.  It would take the spit
and snarl of a revolver, the flash of flame, the acrid smell of
burning-powder to switch their sympathetic watching into actual
participation.  No new situation certainly for Chris Quinnion who took
quick stock of the table with its heavy top and screened his body with
it; no new situation for Steve, the big bartender who was at the
shattered door almost as Bud Lee sent it rocking drunkenly.

Since a fight like this in a small room may end in three seconds and
yet remain a fight for men to talk of at street corners for many a day
thereafter, it is surely a struggle baffling adequate description.  For
while you speak of it, it is done; while a dock ticks, two guns may
carry hot lead, and cut in two two threads of life.

Quinnion was down and shooting, with but ten steps or less between him
and the man whom he sought to kill; Bud Lee was standing, tall and
straight, back to wall, his first bullet ripping into the boards of the
table, sending a flying splinter to stick in Quinnion's face, close to
a squinting, slitted eye; and as the two guns spoke like one, a third
from the open barroom shattered the lamp swinging from the ceiling
between Lee and Quinnion.  Steve, the bartender, had taken a hand.

[Illustration: Quinnion was down and shooting, with but ten steps . . .
between him and the man whom he sought to kill.]

The card-room was plunged in darkness so thick that Lee's frowning eyes
could no longer make out Quinnion's head above the table, so black that
to Quinnion's eyes the tall form of Lee against the wall was lost in
shadow.




XX

THE FIGHT AT THE JAILBIRD

As Steve fired his shot into the lamp, Bud Lee understood just what
would be Steve's next play; the bartender had given his friends brief
respite from the deadly fire of the Blue Lake man, and now would turn
his second shot through the flimsy wall itself on the man standing
there.  Lee did not hesitate now, but with one leap was across the
room, avoiding the table, seeking to come to close quarters with
Quinnion and have the thing over and done with.  In the bitterness
still gnawing at his heart, he told himself again that it would be no
calamity to the world if the two men who had insulted Judith Sanford
went down together.

Again Steve fired.  His bullet ripped into the wall, tearing a hole
through the partition where a brief instant ago Lee had stood.  The
light out in the barroom was extinguished.  In the cardroom it was
utterly, impenetrably dark now, only a vague square of lesser darkness
telling where was the window through which Shorty had fled.

A red flare of flame from where Quinnion crouched, and Lee stood very
still, refusing the temptation to fire back.  For Quinnion's bullet had
sped wide of the mark, striking the wall a full yard to Lee's left.
Quinnion's eyes had not found him, would not find him soon if he stood
quite motionless.  The fight was still to be made, Quinnion's friends
would be taking a hand now, Steve had already joined issue.  There were
six of them against him and with one shot fired from his heavy Colt
there were but five left.  No shot to be wasted.

A little creaking of a floorboard, a vague, misty blur almost at his
side, and still Lee saved his fire.  Quickly he lifted the big
revolver, held welded to a grip of steel, throwing it high above his
head and striking downward.  There was almost no sound; just the
thudding blow as the thick barrel struck a heavy mat of hair, and with
no outcry a man went down to lie still.  At the same moment the dim
square of the window showed a form slipping through; one man was
seeking safety from a quarrel not his own.  And as he went, there came
again a soft thudding blow and Carson's dry voice outside, saying
calmly:

"Shorty got away, but you don't, pardner.  Give 'em hell, Bud.  I'm in
the play again."

"Two men down," grunted Lee to himself with grim satisfaction.  "And
old Carson back on the job.  Only two to our one now."

The form in the window crumpled and under Carson's quick hands was
jerked out.  Suddenly it was very still in the little room.  Steve did
not fire a third time; Quinnion held his fire.  For Lee had made no
answer and they were taking heavy chances with every shot now, chances
of shooting the wrong man.  Each of the four watchful men in the narrow
apartment breathed softly.

Once more Lee lifted his gun above his head.  As he held it thus, he
put out his left hand gently, inch by inch, gropingly.  Extended full
length, it touched nothing.  Slowly he moved it in a semi-circle, the
gun in his right hand always ready to come crashing down.  His fingers
touched the wall, then moving back assured him that no one was within
reach.  Lifting a foot slowly, he took one cautious step forward,
toward the spot where he had last seen Quinnion.  Again his arm,
circling through the darkness, sought to locate for him one of the men
who must be very near him now.  Suddenly it brushed a man's shoulder.

There was a sharp, muttered exclamation, and again a flare of red flame
as this man fired.  But he had misjudged Bud Lee's position by a few
inches, the bullet cut through Lee's coat, and Lee's clubbed revolver
fell unerringly, smashing into the man's forehead.  There was a low
moan, a revolver clattered to the floor, a body fell heavily.

"A new situation," thought Lee.  Three men down before a clock could
tick off as many minutes and not a single man shot.  It was a place for
a man like Charlie Miller with his old pick-handle.

"Bud," called Carson's voice sharply, "are you all right?"

"Yes," answered Lee briefly, and as he answered moved sharply to one
side so that his voice might not draw a shot from Quinnion or the other
men.  There came two spurts of flame, one from each of the corners of
the room opposite him, the reports of the two shots reverberating
loudly.  But this was mere guesswork--shooting at no more definite
thing than a man's voice, and Lee having moved swiftly had little fear.
And he knew pretty well where those two men were now.

So did Carson, who from without fired in twice through the window.
Then again it grew so silent that a clock ticking somewhere out in the
barroom was to be heard distinctly, so that again the men guarded their
breathing.

Lee thought that he knew where Quinnion was, in the corner at his right
close to the rear wall.  Not square in the corner, of course, for
having fired he was fox enough to shift his position a little.  True,
no sound had told of such a movement.  But Quinnion could be trusted to
make no sound at a time like this.  Lee, equally silent, again set a
slow foot out, moving cautiously toward the spot where his eyes sought
Quinnion in the dark.

He was calculating swiftly now: Quinnion had fired twice from the
screen of the table just as Steve shot out the light; he had fired
again just now, it was a fair bet that at least one of the other shots
had been his.  That meant that he had fired four times.  If Quinnion
still carried his old six-shooter he had but two shots at most left to
him, for there had been no time which he would risk in reloading.

Lee swept off his hat and tossed it out before him to the spot where he
believed Quinnion was and dropped swiftly to his knee as he did so.
There was a snarl, Quinnion's evil snarl, and a shot that sped high
above his head.  His hat had struck Quinnion full in the face.  Then
Lee again sprang onward, again struck out with his clubbed revolver.
The blow missed Quinnion's head but caught him heavily on the shoulder
and sent him staggering back against the wall.  Lee could hear the bulk
of his body crashing against the boards.  And again leaping, he struck
the second time at Quinnion.  This time there was no snarl, but a
falling weight and stillness.

There was a sound of a chair violently thrown down, the scuffle of
hasty feet and in the door the faint blur of a flying figure seeking
refuge in the bar.  Lee flung the crippled door shut after the fugitive
and then with his left hand struck a match, his revolver ready in his
right.

Holding the tiny flame down toward the floor, he made out two prone
bodies.  One, that of the first man he had struck down, a man whom he
knew by name as Lefty Devine, a brawler and boon companion of Quinnion.
The other Quinnion himself.  Devine lay very still, clearly completely
stunned.  Quinnion moved a little.

Carson's weather-beaten face peered in at the window.

"Better do the hot foot, Bud," he grunted softly, "while the trail's
open.  Steve will be mixing in again."

But Lee seemed in no haste now.  When the match had burned out, he
dropped it and slipped fresh cartridges into his gun.  That done, he
stooped, gathered up Quinnion's feebly struggling body in his arms and
carried it to the window.

"Here," he said coolly to Carson.  "Take him through."

"What the hell do you want of him?" Carson wanted to be told.  "Ain't
going to scalp him, are you, Bud?"

"Take him out," commanded Lee with no explanation.  Carson obeyed,
jerking the now complaining Quinnion out hastily and unceremoniously.
Lee followed as Steve threw open the barroom door.

"It's a new one on me, just the same," said Carson dryly as he watched
Lee stoop and gather Quinnion up in his arms.  "After a little party
like this one, I'm generally travelling on an' not stopping to pick
flowers an' gather sooveneers!  You ain't got cannibal blood in you,
have you, Bud?"

While Carson was cudgelling his brains for the answer and Steve was
making cautious examination of the card-room, Lee with his burden in
his arms passed through the darkness lying at the rear of the saloon
and out into the street.  Carson followed to take care of a sortie
should Steve and the rest not have had all they wanted for one night.
He chuckled, remarking to himself that Bud Lee and Quinnion were the
very picture of a young mother and her babe in arms.

Not until they again reached the Golden Spur did Lee's burden
completely recover consciousness.  Many a man on the street looked
wonderingly after them, demanded to know "what was up," and, receiving
no answer, swung in behind Carson.

In the Golden Spur the arrivals were greeted by a heavy silence.  Sandy
Weaver forgot to set out the drinks which had just been ordered by
three men who, in their turn, forgot that they had ordered.  Men at the
tables playing cards put down their hands and rose or turned
expectantly in their seats.

Lee put Quinnion down on the floor.  The man lay there a moment
blinking at the lights above him and at the faces around him.  At
length his eyes came to Lee.

"Damn you," he muttered, trying to rise, and slowly getting to his feet
with the aid of a chair, "I'll get you----"

Then Bud Lee gave his brief explanation, cutting Quinnion's ugly snarl
in two.

"This is Quinnion's farewell party," he said bluntly.  "He is a liar
and a crook and an undesirable citizen.  I have told him all that
before.  He took it upon himself to say about town that I am all of
those things which he is himself.  I have damn near killed him for it;
I am going to give him ten minutes to get out of town.  If he doesn't
do it, I am going to kill him.  And in that ten minutes he is going to
find time to eat his words."

"I'll see you in--" began Quinnion, as something of the old bluster
came back to him.

"Shut up!" snapped Lee.  "Carson, let me have your gun."

Carson, wondering, gave it.  Lee dropped it on the floor at Quinnion's
foot.

"Pick that gun up and we'll finish what we've begun," he said coolly to
Quinnion.  "I won't shoot until you've got it in your hand and have
straightened up.  Then I'll kill you.  Unless first you admit that you
are the contemptible liar every one knows you are, and second, get out
of town and stay out.  It's up to you, Quinnion."

Knowing Quinnion, the men moved swiftly so that they did not stand
behind either him or Lee.  Sandy Weaver, shifting a few feet along his
bar, shook his head and sighed.

"It'll be both of them," he muttered.

Quinnion turned his head a little, his red-rimmed eyes going from face
to face, his tongue moving back and forth between his lips.  For an
instant his eyes dropped to the gun at his feet, and a little spasmodic
contraction of his body showed that he was tempted to take up the
weapon.  But he hesitated, and again turned to Lee.

"It's up to you," repeated Lee.  "If you're not a coward after all,
pick it up."  Lee's hands were at his sides, his own revolver in his
pocket.  Quinnion was tempted.  The evil lights in his eyes danced like
witch-fires.  Again he hesitated; but his hesitation was brief.  With
his whining, ugly laugh he lurched to the bar.

"Gimme a drink, Sandy," he commanded.

"Neither now nor after a while," Sandy told him briefly.  "I ain't
dirtyin' my glasses that-a-way."

"There you are," jeered Quinnion, with a sullen sort of defiance.  "You
swat me over the head while I ain't lookin' an' then bring me in here
where they're all your friends.  If I drop you I get all mussed up with
their bullets.  No, thanks."

"For the last time," said Lee, and his low voice was ominous, "I tell
you what to do.  If you don't do it, I'll kill you just the same.
You've got your chance.  Count ten seconds, Sandy."

"One," said Sandy, watching the clock on the wall, "two, three, four,
five, six, seven----"

"Curse you!" cried Quinnion then, a look of fear at last in his eyes.
"I'll get you for this some day, Bud Lee.  Now you've got me----"

"Keep on counting, Sandy," commanded Lee.

"Eight," said Sandy, "nine----"

"I lied!" snapped Quinnion.  "An' I'm leavin' town for a while."

And lurching as he walked, he made his way out of the room, his eyes on
the floor, his face a burning red.

"Carson and I are riding back to the ranch as soon as our horses rest
up and get some grain," said Lee, his fingers slowly rolling a brown
cigarette.  "We'll mosey out now, see Quinnion on his way and drop back
to make up a little game of draw for a couple of hours.  Strike you
about right, Billy?  And you, Watson?  And you, Parker?"

They listened to him, took the cue from him, and allowed what lay
between him and Chris Quinnion to lie in silence.  But there was not a
man there but in his own fashion was saying to himself:

"It's a good beginning.  But where's the end going to be?"




XXI

BURNING MEMORY

As June had slipped by, so did July and August.  On Blue Lake ranch
life flowed smoothly.  Men were too busy with each day's work to sit
into the nights prophesying trouble ahead.  And in truth it seemed that
if Bayne Trevors had ever actively opposed the success of the Sanford
venture he had by now accepted the role of inactivity forced upon him
by circumstance.  He was with the Western Lumber Company, as director
and district superintendent, seemingly giving all his dynamic force to
the legitimate affairs of the company.

But there were those who placed no faith in the obvious.  Bud Lee kept
in touch with Rocky Bend and learned that Quinnion had not come back;
that no one knew where he had gone.  Carson's man, Shorty, was sought
by Emmet Sawyer and his disappearance was like that of a pricked
bubble; it seemed that Shorty had no actual physical existence or that,
if he had, he had taken it into some other corner of the world.
Quinnion's friends had also gone from Rocky Bend, like Quinnion leaving
behind them no sign to show where they had gone.

Knowing Quinnion as he did, and having his own conception of the
character of Bayne Trevors, Bud Lee said to himself that too great a
quiet portended strife to come.  If Quinnion was the man to carry in
his breast the hate that drove him to the murder of Judith's father,
then he was the man to remember the humiliation he had suffered at
Lee's hands, to remember and to strike back when the time was ripe.

Judith had heard of the night in Rocky Bend, a lurid and wonderfully
distorted account from Mrs. Simpson, who had received it in a letter
from her daughter.

"So that was what Bud Lee did after he kissed me!" mused Judith.

She sent immediately for Carson and forced from him the full story.
Dismissing Carson, she remained for a long while alone.  Only one
remark had she made to the cattle foreman, and that a little aside from
the issue occupying his mind:

"Keep your weather eye open for what's in the wind," she told him
briefly.  "Behind Quinnion is Trevors, and the year isn't over yet."

The ranch was stocked to its utmost capacity.  Carson had bought
another herd of cattle; Lee had added to his string of horses.  The dry
season was on them, herds were moved higher up the slopes into the
fresh pastures.  Carson, converted now to the silos, was a man with one
idea and that idea ensilage.  Again the alfalfa acreage was extended,
so that each head of cattle might have its daily auxiliary fodder.
Carson now agreed with Judith in the matter of holding back sales for
the high prices which would come at the heels of the lean months.

The man Donley, who had brought to the ranch the pigeons carrying
cholera, was tried in Rocky Bend.  The evidence, though circumstantial,
was strong against him, and the prosecution was pushed hard.  But it
was little surprise to any one at the ranch when the trial resulted in
a hung jury.  The ablest lawyer in the county had defended Donley, and
finally, late in August, secured his acquittal.  The man himself did
not have ten dollars in the world; the attorney taking his case was a
high-priced lawyer.  Obviously, to Judith Sanford at least, Bayne
Trevors was standing back of every play his hirelings made.

Doc Tripp had the hog-cholera in hand.  And every day, out with the
live stock whose well-being was his responsibility, he worked as he had
never worked before, watchful, eager, suspicious.  "If they'll drop
cholera down on us out of the blue sky," he snapped, "I'd like to know
what they won't try."


For the first few days following the dance Bud Lee had within his soul
room but for one emotion: he had held Judith in his arms.  He had set
his lips on hers.  He went hot and cold with the remembrance.  Being a
man, he made his man-suppositions of the emotions that rankled in her
breast.  He imagined her contempt of a man who by his strength had
forced her lips to wed his; he pictured her scorn, her growing hatred.
He told himself that he should go, rid the ranch of his presence, take
his departure without a word with her.  For, already, he had fitted her
into his theory of the perfect woman, lifting her high above himself
and above the human world.  It was a continued insult for him to remain
here.

But, after careful thought, he remembered what Judith had already told
him; he was one of the men whom she could trust to do her work for her,
one of the men she most needed, a man whom she would need sorely if
Bayne Trevors were lying quiet now but to strike harder, expectedly,
later.

Judith did not dismiss him, as at first he had been sure she would.  So
he stayed on, remaining away from the ranch headquarters, sleeping when
he could in the cabin above the lake, spending his days with his
horses, avoiding her but keeping her personality in his soul, her
interests in his heart.  When the winter had passed, when she had made
her sales and had the money in hand for the payments upon the
mortgages, then he would go.  Whereat, no doubt, the high gods smiled.

As time passed, there came about a subtle change in the attitude of the
outfit toward Pollock Hampton, whom they had been at the beginning
prone to accept as a "city guy."  It began to appear that under his
lightness there was often a steady purpose; that if he didn't know
everything about a ranch, he was learning fast; that in his outspoken
admiration of things rough and manly and primal there were certain
lasting qualities.  Whereas formerly his being thrown from a spirited
mount was almost a daily occurrence, now he rode rather well.  With
tanned face and hard hands, he was, as Carson put it, "growing up."

He came to Judith one day serious-faced, thoughtful-eyed.

"Look here, Judith," he began abruptly, "I'm no outsider just looking
on at this game.  You're the chief owner and the boss and I'm not
kicking at that any longer.  Your dad raised you to this sort of thing
and you have a way of getting by with it.  But, on the other hand, I'm
part owner and you've got to consider me."

Judith smiled at him.

"What now, Pollock?" she asked.

"You're the boss," he repeated stoutly.  "But I've got a right to be
next in authority.  Under you, you know.  Why, by cripes, I go around
feeling as if I had to take orders from Carson or Tripp or any other of
the foremen!"

"'By cripes' is good!" laughed Judith.  "Go ahead."

"That's all," he insisted.  "You can tell them, when you get a chance,
that I am your little old right-hand man.  Suppose," he suggested
vaguely, "that you left the ranch a day or so.  Or even longer, some
time.  There's got to be some one here who is the head when there is
need for it."

Judith mirthfully acquiesced.  Hampton's interest was sufficiently
heavy for him to be entitled to some consideration.  Besides, she had
come to experience a liking for the boy and had seen in him the change
for the better which his new life was working in him.  Further, she
meant to make it her business that she did not leave the ranch for a
day or so, or an hour or so, when she should be there.  Consequently,
within a week Pollock Hampton was known humorously from one end to the
other of the big ranch as the Foreman-at-Large.


Marcia Langworthy, visiting in southern California, wrote brief, sunny
notes to Hampton, intricate letters to Judith.  The mystery of Bud Lee
of which she had had a glimpse when the artist, Dick Farris, and Lee
recognized each other as old friends had piqued her curiosity in a way
which allowed that young daughter of Eve no rest until she had made her
own investigations.  She wrote at length, telling Judith all that she
had learned of Lee.  How he had been quite the rage, my dear.  Oh,
tremendously rich, with great ranch in the South, a wonderful adobe
hacienda of the old Spanish days, where, like a young king, he had
entertained lavishly.  How, believing in his friends, he had lost
everything, then had dropped out of the world, content equally to allow
that world to believe him soldiering in France or dead in the trenches
and to take his wage as a common laborer.  Wasn't it too romantic for
anything?

In due course, following up her letters, Marcia herself came back to
the Blue Lake ranch, Judith's guest now.  The major and Mrs. Langworthy
were visiting in the East--it seemed that they always visited
somewhere--and Marcia would stay at the ranch indefinitely.  Hampton
drove into Rocky Bend for her and held the girl's breathless admiration
all the way home, handling the reins of his young team in a thoroughly
reckless, shivery manner.

"Isn't he splendid?" cried Marcia when she slipped away with Judith to
her room.

Under the bright approval of Marcia's eyes Hampton flushed with
pleasure.  Could Mrs. Langworthy have seen them together she would have
nudged the major and whispered in his ear.

During the two months after the dance, Bud Lee and Judith had seen
virtually nothing of each other.  When routine duties or a necessary
report brought them for a few minutes into each other's society there
was a marked constraint upon them.  Never had the man lost the stinging
sense of his offense against her; never had Judith condescended to be
anything but cool and brief with him.  While no open reference was made
to what was past, still the memory of it must lie in each heart, and
though Lee held his eyes level with hers and drank deep of the warm
loveliness of her, he told himself angrily that he was beneath her
contempt.  The chivalry within him, so great and essential a part of
the man's nature, was a wounded thing, hurt by his own act.  The old
feeling of camaraderie which had sprung up between them at times was
gone now; they could no longer be "pardners" as they had been that
night in the old cabin.

He told himself curtly that he did not regret that; that now it was
inevitable that they should be less than strangers since they could not
be more than friends.  That the girl was ready to forgive him, that she
had never been as harsh with him as he was himself, that there was a
golden, delicious possibility that she should feel as he did--so mad an
idea had not come to Bud Lee, horse foreman.

A few days after Marcia's arrival there came to the ranch a letter
which was addressed:

  Pollock Hampton, Esq.,
    General Manager,
      Blue Lake Ranch.


It was from Doan, Rockwell & Haight, big stock-buyers of Sacramento,
submitting an unsolicited order for a surprisingly large shipment of
cattle and horses.  The price offered was ridiculously low, even for
this season of low figures due to the fact that many overstocked
ranches were throwing their beef-cattle and range horses on the market.
So low, in fact, that Judith's first surmise when Hampton brought it to
her was that the typist taking the company's dictation had made an
error.

Judith tossed the note into the waste-basket.  Then she retrieved it to
frown at it wonderingly, and, finally, to file it.  It began by having
for her no significance worthy of speculation.  It soon began to puzzle
her.  Finally, it faintly disturbed her.

Here were two points of interest.  First: Doan, Rockwell & Haight was
the company to which Bayne Trevors, when general manager, had made many
a sacrifice sale.  Because the Blue Lake had knocked down to them
before, did they still count confidently upon continued mismanagement?
Surely they must know that the management of the ranch had changed.
And this brought her to the second point: How did it come about that
they had addressed, not her, but Pollock Hampton?  Was this just a
trifle?

Long ago Judith had told herself that she must keep her two eyes wide
open for seeming trifles.  In spite of her, though she scoffed at her
"nerves," the girl had the uneasy conviction that this offer had been
prompted by Trevors; that Trevors, for purposes of his own, had given
instructions that the letter be addressed to Hampton; that this was the
first sign of a fresh campaign directed against her from the dark; that
trouble was again beginning.

Thoughtfully she smoothed out the letter, impaling it on her file.




XXII

PLAYING THE GAME

Pollock Hampton, Foreman-at-Large, came and went on the ranch, carrying
orders, taking always a keen interest in whatever work fell to hand, an
interest of a fresh kind, in that it was born of a growing
understanding.  The men grew to like him; Bud Lee tactfully sought to
acquaint him with many ranch matters which would prove of value to him.
Carson, however, grown nervous over the new method in stock-raising
still in its experimental stage, was given to take any suggestion from
Hampton in the light of a personal affront.

"Damn him," he growled deep in his throat when Hampton had ridden out
with word to shift one of the herds into a fresh pasture, an act on
which Carson had already decided, "some day I'll just take him between
my thum' an' finger an' anni-hilate him."

The greater bulk of the stock had been steadily shifted higher in the
hills.  The hogs grazed on the slopes at the north of the Lower End;
cattle and horses had been pushed eastward to the little valleys in the
mountains about the lake.  Even the plateau, where the old cabin stood,
was now stocked with Lee's prize string of horses.  Then, one day
Hampton came galloping through the herds of shorthorns, seeking Carson.

"Crowd them down to the Lower End again," he shouted above the din.
"Cut out the scrawny ones and haze the rest into the pens."

Carson's steel-blue eyes snapped, his teeth showed like a dog's.

"Drunk?" he sneered.  "What's eating you?"

"Do as you're told," retorted Hampton hotly.  "Those are orders from
headquarters and it's up to you to obey them.  Get me?"

"If ever I do get you, sonny," grunted Carson, "there won't be enough
of you left for the dawgs to quarrel over.  Orders or no orders, I
ain't going to do no such fool thing."

Hampton reined his horse in closer, staring frowningly at the old
cattleman.  The purplish color of rage mounted in Carson's tanned
cheeks.

"You'll do what you're told or go get your time," he announced tersely.
"We've got an order for five hundred beef cows and we're selling
immediately."

Carson's jaw dropped.

"What?" he demanded, not quite believing his ears.  "Say that again,
will you?"

"I said it once," retorted Hampton.  "Now get busy."

"Who are we selling to?  I ain't heard about it."

"An oversight, my dear Mr. Carson," laughed Hampton, his own anger
risen.  "Quite an oversight that you were not consulted.  We are
selling to Doan, Rockwell & Haight.  Ever heard of them?"

"Who says we're selling?"

"I say so.  And, if you've got to have all the news, Miss Sanford says
so."

"She does, does she?  Hm-m.  First I knew of it.  What figger?"

"Really, does that concern you?  If the price suits me and Miss
Sanford, who own the stock, does it in any way affect you?  I don't
want to quarrel with you, Carson, and I do appreciate that you are a
good man in your way.  But just because you have worked here a long
time, don't make the mistake of thinking that you own the ranch."

With that he whirled his horse, and was gone.  Carson, with puckered
brows, stared after him.

But orders were orders, and Carson though the heart was sore, barked
out his commands to his herders to turn the cattle back toward the
lower fields.  He had been converted to the new way, he had grown to
dream of the fat prices his cow brutes would fetch in the winter
market, he knew that prices now were rock-bottom low, that Doan,
Rockwell & Haight were close buyers who before now had cut the throat
of the Blue Lake ranch in sacrifice sales when Bayne Trevors ran the
outfit.

"We're standing to lose thousan's an' thousan's of dollars," he told
himself in disgust.  "All we've spent on irrigation an' fences an'
silos an' ditches, all gone to heck in a han'-basket.  Not counting
thousan's of more dollars lost in selling at what we can get this time
of year.  It makes me sick, damn throwin'-up sick."

Riding down a long, winding trail, out through a patch of chaparral
into a rocky gorge, Hampton turned east again toward the higher
plateau.  Taking the roundabout way which led from the far side of the
lake and along the flank of the mountain to the table-land, he came to
a scattering band of horses and Tommy Burkitt.

"Where's Lee?" called Hampton.

Burkitt grinned at him by way of greeting, and then pointed across the
plateau to a ravine leading to a still higher, smaller, shut-in valley.
Hampton galloped on and a quarter of an hour later came up with Lee.
The horse foreman was sitting still in his saddle, his eyes taking
stock of a fresh bit of pasture into which he planned turning his
horses a little later.  It was one of a dozen small meadows on the
mountain creeks where the cañon walls widened out into an oval-shaped
valley, less than a half-mile long, where there was much rich grass.

"Hello, Hampton," called Lee pleasantly.  "What's the word?"

The perspiration streaming down Hampton's face had in no way dampened
his ardor.

"Big doings," he cried warmly.  "We're cutting loose, Bud, at last and
piling up the shining ducats!  You're to gather up a hundred of the
most likely cayuses you've got and shove them down to the Lower End.
We're selling pretty heavily to Doan, Rockwell & Haight."

A new flicker came into Lee's eyes.  Then they went hard as polished
agate.

"I didn't quite get you, Hampton," he said softly.  "You say we're
selling a hundred horses?  Now?"

Hampton nodded, understanding nothing of what lay in Lee's heart.

"On the jump, just as fast as we can get them on the run," he said
triumphantly.  "Judith wanted me to tell you."

"I see," answered Lee slowly.

His eyes left Hampton's flushed face and went to the distant cliffs.
It was no way of Bud's to hide his eyes from a man, and yet now he did
hide them.  He did not want Hampton to see what they showed so plainly,
in spite of his attempt to master his emotion.  He was hurt.  Long ago
he had offended Judith, and she had waited until now to repay his rude
insult with this cool little slap in the face.  She had not consulted
him, she had not mentioned a sale to him, and now she sent Hampton and
did not even come to him with a word of explanation.  It was quite as
if she had said:

"You are just a servant of mine, like the rest, Bud Lee, and I treat
you accordingly."

Until Judith had come, there had been nothing that this man loved as he
did his work among his horses.  He watched them as day after day they
grew into clean-blooded perfection; he appraised their values; he saw
personally to their education, helping each one of them individually to
become the true representative of the proudest species of animal life.
Had he turned his eye now to the herd down yonder he could have seen
the animal he had selected for a brood-mare next year, the
three-year-old destined to draw all eyes as he stepped daintily among
the best of the single-footers in Golden Gate Park, the rich red bay
gelding that he would mate for a splendid carriage team. . . .  Oh, he
knew them all like human friends, planned the future for each, the sale
of each would be no sorrow but rather a triumph of success.  And now,
to see them lumped and sold to Doan, Rockwell & Haight--even that hurt.
But most of all did Judith's treatment of him cut, cut deep.

"You're a fool, Bud Lee," he told himself softly.  "Oh, God, what a
fool!"

"The buyers will be here the first thing to-morrow," said Hampton.
"Judith says we're to have everything ready for them."

"I'll not keep her waiting," answered Lee quietly.  And with a quick
touch of the spur he whirled his horse and left Hampton abruptly, going
straight to the plateau.

"Round 'em up, Tommy," he said sharply.  "Every damned hoof of them:
They go back to the corrals."

Though quick questions surged up in Tommy's brain, none of them was
asked just yet, for he had seen the look on Lee's face.

It was early in the afternoon when Hampton carried his messages to
Carson and Lee.  It was after dark when Lee, his work done, his heart
still sore and heavy, came into the men's bunk-house.  It was very
still, though close to a dozen men were in the room.  Lee's eyes found
Carson and he guessed the reason for the silence.  Carson was in a
towering rage that flamed red-hot in his eyes; under the spell of his
dominating emotion, the men sat and stared at him.

"Well, what's wrong?" asked Lee coolly from the door.

"Good goddlemighty!" growled Carson snappishly.  "You stan' there an'
ask what's the matter.  If they's anything that ain't the matter an'
you'll spell its name to me I'll put in with you.  The whole outfit's
going to pot, an' I, for one, don't care how soon it goes."

"Rather a nice way for a cattle foreman to talk about his ranch, isn't
it?" asked Lee colorlessly.

"Cattle foreman?" sniffed Carson with further expletives.  "Now will
you stan' on your two feet an' explain to me how in blue blazes a man
can be a cattle foreman when there ain't no cattle!"

"So that's it, is it?  I didn't know how close you were selling off----"

"Don't say _me_ selling!  Why, I got silage to run my cow brutes all
winter, what with the dry feed in them cañons----"

Lee didn't hear the rest.  It had been his intention to come in and
smoke with the boys, and perhaps play a game of whist.  Anything to
keep from thinking.  But now, moving on impulse, he turned and left the
shack, going swiftly up the knoll to the ranch-house.

Just stepping into the courtyard soft under the moon, tinkling with the
play of the fountains, stirred his heart to quicker beating.  He had
not set foot here for over two months, not since that night which he
knew he should forget and yet to whose memory he clung desperately.
This was the first time in many a long week that he had gone out of his
way to seek Judith.  And now words which Judith herself had spoken to
him one day were now at least a part of the cause sending him to speak
with her.  She had said that he was loyal, that she needed loyal men.
He still took her wage, he was still a Blue Lake ranch-hand, he still
owed her his loyalty, though it came from a sore heart.

If she were hard driven in some way which she had not seen fit to
confide to him, if she were forced to make this tremendous sale, if she
were mad or had at last lost her nerve, frightened at the thought of
the heavy sums of money to be raised at the end of the winter, well,
then it still could do no harm for him to speak his mind to her.
Hampton had told him the price which the horses were to bring; it was
pitifully small and Lee meant to tell her so, to tell her further that
he would guarantee an enormous gain over it if she gave him time.  He
would be doing his part though she called him meddler for his pains.
Marcia Langworthy, hidden in a big chair on the veranda, watched him
approach with interest, though Lee was unconscious of her presence.  He
had lifted a hand to rap at the door when she called to him, saying:

"Good evening, Mr. Mysterious Lee.  Have you forgotten me?"

Though he had pretty well forgotten her, it was not necessary to tell
her that he had.  He came toward her, putting out his hand.

"Good evening, Miss Langworthy," he said cordially.  "I haven't seen
much of you this time, have I?  Two reasons, you know: busy all day and
half the night, for one thing, and for another, Hampton has monopolized
you, hasn't he?"

Marcia laughed softly.

"To a man your size the second reason is absurd. . . .  Will you sit
down?  You see, I am taking it for granted that you come here to see
me.  Unless," and her eyes twinkled brightly up at him, "you were
surreptitiously calling on Mrs. Simpson?"

"I'd love to talk with you," he assured her.  "But, as I've just
hinted, my work here has got into the habit of running away with me
into the night.  I really came up for a word with Miss Sanford."

"Oh, didn't you know?" asked Marcia.  "Judith isn't here."

"Isn't here?" He frowned.  "No, I didn't know.  I haven't seen much of
her lately and didn't know her plans.  Where is she?"

"In San Francisco.  Her lawyers sent for her, you know.  Something
about a tangle in her father's business.  Funny you hadn't heard; she
left Saturday night."

Saturday?  This was Tuesday evening.  Judith had been away three full
days.  Lee, thinking hurriedly, thought that he saw now the explanation
of Judith's ordering a sale like this.  Her lawyers had found what
Marcia called a "tangle" in Luke Sanford's affairs; there had been an
insistent call for a large sum of money to straighten it out, and
Judith had accepted the only solution.

Still, it didn't seem like Judith to sell like this at a figure so
ridiculously low.  Doan, Rockwell & Haight were not the only buyers on
the coast.  Lee himself could get more for the horses if he had two
days' time to look around; the cattle were worth a great deal more than
they were being sold for, even with the market down.

"Did she have an idea what the trouble was before she left?" he asked
finally.

"Why," said Marcia, "I don't know.  You see, she slipped out late
Saturday night after we'd all gone to bed.  There was a message for her
over the telephone; she got up, dressed, saddled her own horse and rode
into Rocky Bend alone, just leaving a note for me that she might be
gone a week or two."

Just why he experienced a sense of uneasiness even then, Lee did not
know.  It was like Judith to act swiftly when need be; to go alone and
on the spur of the minute to catch her train; to slip out quietly
without disturbing her guest.

"You have heard from her since?" he demanded abruptly.

"Not a word," said Marcia.  "She doesn't like letter-writing and so I
haven't expected to hear from her."

Lee chatted with her for a moment, then claiming work still to be done,
turned to go back down the knoll.  A new thought upon him, he once more
came to Marcia's side.

"I expect I'd better see Hampton," he said.  "Do you know where he is?"

"Where he has been every night since Judith left," laughed Marcia.
"He's old Mr. Business Man these days.  In the office."

There Lee found him.   Hampton, his hair ruffled, Judith's table
littered with market reports, and many sheets of paper covered with
untidy figures, looked up at Lee's entrance.

"Hello, Bud," he said, reaching for cigarette and match.  "Got
everything ready for to-morrow?"

"Why didn't you tell me Miss Sanford had gone away?" was Lee's sharp
rejoinder.  Hampton flushed.

"Devil take those two eyes of yours, Bud," he said testily.  "They've
got a way of boring through a man until he feels like they were
scorching the furniture behind him.  Well, I'll tell you.  While Judith
is away I am running this outfit.  And if the men think I'm coming
straight from her with an order they obey it.  If they get the notion
she isn't here, they're apt to ask questions.  That's why."

"This sale to Doan, Rockwell & Haight," said Lee quickly.  "You didn't
cook that up, did you, Hampton?"

"Lord, no!" cried Hampton.  From its place on a file he took a yellow
slip of paper, tossing it to Lee.  "She sent me that this morning."

It was a Western Union telegram, saying briefly:

POLLOCK HAMPTON,
  Blue Lake Ranch.

Am forced to sell heavily.  Sending Doan, Rockwell & Haight Wednesday
morning, one hundred horses; as many beef cattle as Carson can round
up.  Accept terms made in their letter to you last week.

JUDITH SANFORD.


The date-line upon the message gave the sending point as San Francisco.

"They wrote _you_ a letter offering to buy?" said Lee thoughtfully, his
eyes rising slowly from the paper in his fingers.  "How'd it happen
they didn't write to _her_?"

"Well, it's a natural enough mistake, isn't it?  Knowing that she and I
were both part-owners, knowing that we were both here, isn't it quite
to be expected that they would write to the man instead of to the
woman?  Of course I gave her the letter as soon as I had opened it."

"Of course," answered Lee.

But his thoughts were not with his answer.  They were with Bayne
Trevors.  He knew that Trevors had long ago sold to these people; he
knew, too, that at least two of the heavy shareholders in the Western
Lumber Company were interested in Doan, Rockwell & Haight.  Tom
Rockwell himself was second vice-president of the lumber company.

"Have you had any other word from Miss Sanford?" he asked.

"No."

"Know who her lawyers are?"

"No.  I don't."

"Anything in her papers here that would tell us?"

"No.  Her papers are in the safe yonder and it's locked and I don't
know the combination."

"Know what hotel she is stopping at in the city?"

"No.  Look here, Bud; what are you driving at?  I don't get you."

"No?" answered Lee absently.

What Bud Lee was thinking was: "Here are too many coincidences!"
Little things, each one in itself safe from suspicion.  But when he
meditated that the offer had come from this particular firm, that it
had come just a few days before Judith's first departure from the
ranch, that it had been addressed not to her but to Hampton, so that he
must have the opportunity to read it, that she had been called suddenly
to the city, that that call had come after the house was quiet, its
occupants in bed, that no letter had come since she had left, that no
one knew where to reach her--when he passed all of these things in
review the bitterness in his heart died under them and the first
anxiety sprang up anew, grown almost into fear for her.

"There's just one thing, Hampton," he said, his eyes hard on the boy's
face.  "We don't sell a single hoof in the morning.  Not a cow nor a
horse until Judith is here herself."

Hampton, new in his role of general manager, flushed hotly, his own
eyes showing fight.

"I like you, Lee," he said sharply, his tone that of master to man.
"And I don't want us to quarrel.  But Judith wired me to sell, I've
wired the buyers an acceptance and we do sell in the morning!"

For a full minute Bud Lee stood stone still, staring into Hampton's
face.  Then, tossing the telegram to the table, he turned and went out.
His face had gone suddenly white.

"They've got you somehow, Judith girl," he whispered through tense
lips.  "But the fight is still to be made.  And, by God, there's a day
of squaring accounts coming for a man named Bayne Trevors!"

He went to the bunk-house, neither seeing Marcia nor hearing her when
she called after him, and with a word to Carson brought the irate
cattle foreman hurriedly outside.




XXIII

THE WRATH OF POLLOCK HAMPTON

Bayne Trevors's way had ever been to play safe, the way of a coward or
a wise man.  Even now, no doubt he was giving an account of himself in
legitimate endeavor at the lumber camp, putting in his appearance at
his regular hour, safe miles lying between him and that which might
occur upon the Blue Lake ranch, establishing alibis, conducting himself
like the man he wished the world to think him.  But in the mind of Bud
Lee there was no question, no doubt.  Bayne Trevors, or one of Bayne
Trevors's gang, was even at this instant holding Judith somewhere until
this colossal deal could be put over.  Trevors or one of his gang--and
Lee's face went whiter, his hands shut tighter into hard fists, as
there came to his mind the picture of Quinnion's twisted face and evil,
red-rimmed eyes.

"Well?" snapped Carson.  "What now?"

"There's going to be no sale in the morning," said Lee, and at the new
strange tone in Lee's voice Carson jerked up his head, thrusting it
forward, peering at the other through the moon-lit night.

"Say it again," muttered Carson.  "Who said so?  Miss Judith?"

"She isn't here," replied Lee briefly.  "Hasn't been here since
Saturday night."

Now, with more cause than ever, did Carson stare at him.

"Then what did Pollock Hampton say sell for?  By cripes, if this is one
of that young hop-o'-my-thumb's jokes, I'm going up to the house an'
murder him.  That's all.  An' right now."

Lee laid a hand on Carson's arm.

"Hold on, old-timer," he said shortly.  "We'll have a talk with him
after a while.  Now I want to talk with you."

Contenting himself with the coldest of brief outlines, Bud Lee told
Carson of Judith's absence and of his own suspicions.  Carson, who had
listened to him gravely, at the end shook his head.

"That's a pretty bald play, Bud," he said slowly.  "I don't believe
Trevors would get that coarse in his work.  It doesn't look like him a
little bit."

"Does this sale look the least little bit like Judith?" demanded Lee
sharply.  "Is it her style to go over our heads this way, Carson?  If
she's got to sell heavily, why pick out this particular set of buyers?
Why is the deal rushed through while she's away?  I tell you there's a
nigger in the wood-pile and it's up to you and me to smoke him out.
Come up to the house with me."

Marcia did not see them as they drew near in the moonlight.  For, with
a plan shaping in his brain, Lee judged best that they should not be
seen.  He and Carson passed in a wide arc about the left end of the
courtyard, around the end of the house and so to a door opening front
the office to the back of the house.  This door he found unlocked and
pushed quietly open.

Hampton lifted swift eyes, sensing something stern and ominous in this
silent approach.

"We want to talk things over with you," began Lee.

"If you've come to bulldoze me out of that deal in the morning,"
retorted Hampton, "you might as well keep still.  I'm going to sell."

"I don't know that you'd exactly call it bull-dozing," smiled Lee,
determined to be pleasant with the young fellow as long as possible.
"But you've got sense enough to listen to reason, Hampton."

"Have I?" jeered Pollock.  "Thanks."

"If Miss Sanford wants the deal to go through," continued Lee, "why,
then, of course, through it goes.  If she doesn't, there's going to be
no sale."

"I tell you she wired me to sell; I showed you the telegram----"

"But you didn't prove to me that she sent it.  You didn't know yourself
whether it had been sent by her or Doan, Rockwell & Haight, or by Bayne
Trevors or the devil himself."  He took up the telephone and said into
it, "Western Union, Rocky Bend. . . .  That you, Benton?  This is Lee
of the Blue Lake.  We want to get in communication with Miss Judith
Sanford, somewhere in San Francisco.  Send this message to every hotel
there, will you?  And rush it: '_Must have word with you immediately.
Important.  Telephone_.'  Got it?  Oh, sign it, Carson and--and Tripp.
Rush it, I tell you, Benton.  And if you get in touch with Miss Sanford
in any way, tip us off here, will you?  Thanks."

"She might be visiting with friends," muttered Hampton, little pleased
at the thought that Lee and Carson were seeking to rob him of his newly
acquired importance.

"Where's Mrs. Simpson?" asked Lee.

"Gone to bed," answered Hampton.

"And Miss Langworthy is still on the veranda.  Now Hampton, Carson and
I want a look at Miss Sanford's room.  Come with us, will you?"

"I'm damned if I will!" cried the boy hotly.  "I don't know what you
are up to, but I'm boss here and I'm giving orders, not taking them.
If there's any reason in all this, I've got the right to know what it
is."

"Yes," answered Lee thoughtfully.  "You've got the right.  I just don't
like the looks of affairs, Hampton.  I don't believe all that I hear.
I don't believe Miss Sanford sent that wire.  I don't believe she is in
San Francisco.  I do believe that your friend Trevors has got hold of
her somehow, and that he is playing you for a sucker.  That's our
reason in this.  Now will you come with us to her room?"

"Trevors?" said Hampton.  Then he laughed.  "You are like the rest,
Bud.  Trevors is a gentleman, and you try to make him a crook.  Such a
scheme as you imagine is absurd and ridiculous.  And I won't go prying
with you into Judith's room."

"Come on, Carson," said Lee.  "If Hampton wants to stay here, let him."

But the young fellow was on his feet, his face flushed, his eyes
excited.

"You'll get out of this house and do it quick!" he cried sharply.  "If
you think for one little minute that I'll stand for your high-handed
actions, you're mistaken."

At a look from Lee, Carson stepped quickly forward, so that Hampton
stood between them.

"You come with us," and now Lee no longer sought to be pleasant.  "And
keep still or we'll stop your mouth with a yard of cloth.  This way,
Carson."

With right and left arms gripped, with lagging feet and furious eyes,
Hampton went between them to the door.  For an instant only did he
struggle; then, with a snort of disgust, seeing the futility of making
a fool of himself, he went quietly.

Just what he expected as a result of a visit to the girl's room, Lee
did not know.  He hoped for some sign to tell him something, anything.

Quietly the three went through the house until they came to Judith's
dainty blue-and-white bedroom.  Here all had been set in order by Mrs.
Simpson.  A great vase of rosebuds, brought by José this morning,
accepted by Mrs. Simpson with suspicion and searched carefully for a
lurking scorpion or a coiled rattlesnake, stood on a table by the
window.  On entering the room a sort of awkward shyness fell over both
Lee and Carson.  Hampton, freed now and standing alone, though under
Carson's hard eye, stared at them angrily.

"When you get through with this foolishness," he told them stiffly,
"you can either apologize or call for your time."

Neither answered.  Carson little by little had come to share Lee's
uncertainty and anxiety; and now, like Lee, sought eagerly to find a
sign--something to tell that Judith had been lured away by Trevors or
Quinnion; or that she had been overpowered here and taken out, perhaps
through a window.

But Judith had gone Saturday night, and Mrs. Simpson had done her work
thoroughly.  It might be well to call the housekeeper and question her.
Had she found a chair overturned, a rug rumpled, a table shoved a
little from its accustomed place?  But, again, it would be as well not
to start suspicion and surmise in other minds; if, after all, there
were no true cause for it.  Judith _might_ be in San Francisco; she
_might_ have sent the order to sell.

"Chances is we're smelling powder where there wasn't no shot," said
Carson hesitatingly.

"Bright boy!" mocked Hampton.  "You'll make a great little gumshoe
artist one of these days."

Had Bud Lee not loved Judith as he did, with his whole heart and soul,
it well might have been that he and Carson and Hampton would have gone
out of the room knowing no more than when they had come in.  But it
seemed to Lee that the room which knew Judith so intimately, was
seeking to open its dumb lips to whisper to him of danger to her.  He
had come here troubled for her; he stood, looking about him frowningly,
his heart heavy, fear mounting within him.  And at length he found a
sign.

At the far end of the room, in a corner, was Judith's writing-table, on
which were several opened letters, pen and ink, a pad of paper.  Lee
stepped to it.  If she had been lured away after nightfall, then some
message had come to her.  If that message had come by word of mouth,
there was no need seeking it; if it had been a note, fate might have
kept it here.

Impaled on a sharp file was a sheet of note-paper.  The note was brief,
typewritten, even to the signature--that of Doc Tripp.  It ran:

DEAR JUDITH:

I am afraid of a new trouble.  Have spotted another one of T's gang
working for us.  Also have got a bullet-hole in my right hand.  Nothing
serious so far.  Come down right away.  Don't let any one see you as I
want to spring a surprise on them.  Am not even using the telephone, as
I've a notion they are watching me.  Hurry.

TRIPP.


"Come back to the office," said Lee bluntly.  And well in front of
Carson and Hampton, who stared wonderingly at the paper in his hand, he
went to the office telephone and called for Tripp.

"How's your hand?" he asked when Tripp answered.

"All right," replied Tripp.  "Why?"

"Get it hurt?"

"No."

"Did you write Miss Sanford a hurry-up note within the last few days?"

"No."

"Sure of that, Doc?  Typewritten note?"

"Of course I'm sure," snapped Tripp.  "What's wrong?"

"God knows," answered Lee shortly.  "But you'd better come up here and
come on the jump.  Also, keep your mouth shut until you can get a
chance to talk with me or Carson."

He clicked up the receiver and turned terrible eyes on the two men
watching him.

"They've got her," he said slowly.  "They've got her, Carson.  They've
had her since Saturday night!"

Carson read the note.  Only then did it pass into Hampton's hands.  The
boy, angered at the way in which he had been ignored, insulted in his
sense of dignity by those words of Lee's to Tripp, "Talk with me or
Carson," seeing the reins of power being snatched from his hands, was
speechless with wrath.

"You fellows have butted in all I'll stand for!" he cried at them, his
shut fists shaking.  "I tell you I'm running this outfit and what I say
goes.  I don't believe that Trevors or any man living would do a trick
like that.  I tell you it's ridiculous.  And, no matter where Judith
is, when she is not here I run the ranch.  I need money; she needs
money; we've got a fair chance to sell; I've passed my word we are
going to sell; and by God, we are going to sell."

In another mood, Hampton would not have spoken this way.  In another
mood and with time for argument, Bud Lee would have expostulated with
him.  Now, however, Lee said tersely:

"Carson, it's up to you and me.  Get the boys out, to the last man of
them.  Turn every hoof of cattle and horses back into the Upper End.
We've got to do it to-night.  Get them into the little valley above the
plateau.  We can hold them there, even if they try to force our hands,
which will be like them.  I take this to be Trevors's last big play.
And, by thunder, he has mighty near gotten away with it!"

"Don't you dare do it!" blazed out young Hampton.  "Carson, you take
orders from me.  Get out of this house and leave the stock where they
are.  In the morning----"

"Go ahead, Carson," cut in Lee's hard voice.  "I'll take care of
Hampton here."

"You will, will you?" cried Hampton.

With one bound he was at the table, jerking open a drawer.  As his hand
sought the weapon lying there, Bud Lee was on him, throwing him back.
Carson looked at them a moment, then went to the door.

"You're right, Bud," he said calmly as he went out.

Lee, forcing himself to show a calmness like Carson's, said gently to
Hampton:

"Can't you see the play?  It's up to you to kick in and stop it.
There's a telephone; call up the buyers in Rocky Bend.  They're there
now, or at least their drivers are, if they're coming out here in the
morning.  Tell them the deal is off."

"Can't I see?" said Hampton, writhing out of Lee's hands, on his way to
the door.  "You bet I can see!  If you and Carson think that you can
run me----"

Then, for good and all, Lee gave over trying to reason with Hampton.
There was too much to be done to waste time.  He drew Hampton back,
forcing him against the wall.  As he tried to call out, Lee's hand over
his mouth smothered his words.

"You're coming with me," he said sharply.  "Right now."

Though he struggled, Hampton was little more than a baby in the horse
foreman's muscular grip.  Tripped, with a heel behind his calf, he fell
heavily, Lee upon him.  Both arms were pinioned behind him, and Lee's
neckerchief thrust into his mouth.  He writhed in impotent rage.  His
outcries died in his throat, the loudest of them not reaching Marcia's
ears above the creaking of her rocking-chair.  Lee still held Hampton's
tied hands gripped in his own.  So the two men went out the back door,
down toward the corrals.

Seeing men hurrying from the bunk-house to the stables under Carson's
snapping orders.  Lee called out for Tommy Burkitt.  And in a moment,
with bulging eyes, Burkitt came running.

"Bring out three horses, Tommy," Lee commanded, giving no explanation.
"Hurry, and keep your mouth shut."

Burkitt obeyed Lee as he always did, silently and unquestioningly.
Very soon he returned, riding, leading two saddled horses.

"Get into the saddle, Hampton," said Lee sternly.  "There's no time for
nonsense.  Get up or I'll put you up."

"Curse you," Hampton said in smothered anger, his tone making clear the
meaning of the indistinct mutter.  But he climbed into the saddle.

"Come on, Tommy."  Lee, too, was up, his hand on Hampton's reins.
"We're going up to the old cabin.  You're going to ride herd on Hampton
while I do something else.  I'll tell you everything when we get there."

So they rode into the night, headed toward the narrow passes of the
Upper End, Hampton and Lee side by side, Tommy Burkitt staring after
them as he followed.  No longer were Bud Lee's thoughts with his
captive, nor with the herds Carson's men were driving back to the
higher pastures.  They were entirely for Judith, and they were filled
with fear.  She had been gone for three full days; she was somewhere in
the clutch of Trevors or of one of his cutthroats.  He thought of her,
of Quinnion's red-rimmed, evil eyes, and as he had not prayed in all
the years of his life Bud Lee prayed that night.




XXIV

A SIGNAL-FIRE?

Lee left Hampton securely bound and under Tommy Burkitt's watchful eyes
in the old cabin, and rode straight back to the ranch-house.  Marcia
was not yet in bed and he made his first call upon her.  Marcia was
delighted, then vaguely perturbed, as he made known his errand without
giving any reason.  He wanted to see the note from Judith.  Marcia
brought it, wondering.  He carried it with him to Judith's office and
compared it carefully with scraps of her handwriting which he found
there.  The result of his study was what he had expected: the writing
of the note to Marcia was sufficiently like Judith's to pass muster to
an uncritical eye, looking, in fact, what it purported to be, a very
hasty scrawl.  But Lee decided that Judith had not written it.  He
slipped it into his pocket.

Tripp was waiting for him, impatient and worried, when he came back
from the Upper End.  From Tripp he learned that one of the men, a
fellow the boys called Yellow-jacket, had unexpectedly asked for his
time Saturday afternoon and had left the ranch, saying that he was sick.

"He's the chap who brought the fake note from you," said Lee.  "It's
open and shut, Doc.  Another one of Trevors's men that we ought to have
fired long ago.  The one thing I can't get, is why he didn't do a
finished job of it and hang around until Miss Sanford left, then get
away with the note.  It would have left no evidence behind him."

"She must have locked her door and windows when she went out," was
Tripp's solution.  "And probably he didn't hang around wasting time and
taking chances."

Tripp's boyish face had lost its youthful look.  His eyes, meeting
Lee's steadily, had in them an expression like Lee's.

"If it's Quinnion--" Tripp began.  Then he stopped abruptly.

Lee and Tripp were together in the office not above fifteen minutes.
Then Tripp left to return to the Lower End, to get the rest of the men
out, to help in the big drive of cattle and horses which must be
returned to the shut-in valleys of the Upper End.  Lee went to the
bunk-house, slipped revolver and cartridges into his pockets, took a
rifle and rode again to the old cabin.

"It's Trevors's big, last play," he told himself gravely, over and
over.  "He'll be backing it up strong, playing his hand for all that
there's in it, and he'll have taken time and care to fill in his hand
so that we're bucking a royal flush.  And there's only one way to beat
a royal flush, and that's with a gun.  But I can't quite see the whole
play, Trevors; I can't quite see it."

There were enough men to do the night's work without him and Tommy
Burkitt, and Lee gave no thought now to Carson, swearing in the
darkness of some shadow-filled gorge.  He did not know what the
morrow's work would be for him, but he made his preparations none the
less, eager for the coming dawn.  He fried many slices of bacon while
Hampton glared at him and Tommy watched him interestedly; he made a
light, compact lunch, such as best "sticks to a man's ribs," wrapped it
in heavy paper and slipped the package into the bosom of his shirt.  He
completed his equipment with a fresh bag of tobacco and many matches.
He loaded his rifle, added a plentiful supply of ammunition to his
outfit from the box on the shelf.  Then he went outside to be alone, to
frown at the black wall of the night, to think, to await the dawn.

"I'm coming to you, Judith girl," he whispered over and over to
himself.  "Somehow."


Dawn trembled over the mountain-tops, grew pale rose and warm pink and
glorious red in the eastern sky, and Bud Lee, throwing down his coiled
rope which had been put into service a dozen times during the night,
said shortly:

"Here we camp, boys.  I'll leave you my fried bacon, Tommy, and take
the raw with me.  You're not even to light a fire.  And you're to stick
here until I come for you."

They had travelled deeper and deeper into the fastnesses of the
mountains, mounting higher and higher until now, in a nest of crags and
cliffs, on a flank of Devil's Mountain, they could look far to the
westward and catch brief glimpses of the river from Blue Lake slipping
out of the shadows.  They had gone a way which Lee knew intimately,
travelling a trail which brought them again and again under broken
cliffs, where they must use hands and feet manfully, and now and then
make service of a loop of rope cast up over an outjutting crag.

"They'll never follow us here, Tommy," he said confidently.  "If they
do, you've got the drop on them and you've got a rifle.  You know what
to do, Tommy, old man."

"I know, Bud," said Tommy, his eyes shining.  For never before had Bud
Lee called him that--"old man."

Long ago the gag had been removed from Hampton's mouth.   Long ago,
consequently, Hampton had said his say, had made his promises.  When he
got out of this--glory to be! wouldn't he square the deal, though!  Did
Lee know what kidnapping was?  That there were such things as laws,
such places as prisons?

"Here," said Lee not unkindly, "I'll loosen the rope about your wrists.
That's all the chances we're going to take with you.  Come, be a sport,
my boy.  You're the right sort inside; just as soon as this fracas is
over, when you know that we were right and that all this is a put-up
job on you, your friend Trevors playing you for a sucker and getting
Miss Sanford out of the way, you'll say we were right and I know it."

"That so?" snapped Hampton.  "You just start now and keep going, Bud
Lee, if you don't want to do time in the jug."

Tommy Burkitt, staring back across the broken miles of mountain, cañon,
and forest, his eyes frowning, was muttering:

"Look at that, Bud.  What do you make of it?"

For a little Lee did not answer.  He and Tommy and Hampton, standing
among the rocks, turned their eyes together toward the hills rimming in
the northern side of Blue Lake ranch.

"I make out," said Lee slowly, "that Trevors means business and that
Carson has got his work cut out for him this morning, Tommy."

For the thing which had caught the boy's eyes was a blaze on the ridge,
its flames leaping and ricking at the thinning darkness, its smoke a
black smudge on the horizon, staining the glow of the dawn.  And
farther along the same ridge was a second blaze, smaller with distance,
but growing as it licked at the dry brush.  Still farther a third.

"If that fire ever gets a good start," muttered Lee heavily, "it's
going to sweep the ranch.  God knows where it will stop.  And just how
Carson is going to fight fire with one hand and hold his stock with the
other, I don't know."

But even then he turned his eyes away from the ranch, sweeping the
ragged jumble of mountains about him.  Judith was gone.  Judith needed
him and he did not dare try to estimate the soreness of her need.  What
did it matter that Carson and Tripp and the rest had their problems to
face back there?  There was only one thing all of the wide world that
mattered.  And did not even know where she was, north, south, east, or
west!  Somewhere in these mountains, no doubt.  But where, when a man
might ride a hundred miles this way or that and have no sign if he
passed within calling distance of her?

In his heart Bud Lee prayed, as he had prayed last night, asking God
that he might come to Judith.  And it seemed to him, standing close to
God on the rocky heights, that his prayer had been heard and answered.
For, far off to the east, still farther in the solitude of the
mountains, rising from a rugged peak, a thin line of smoke rose into
the paling sky.

It might be that Judith was there.  It might be that she was scores of
miles from the beckoning smoke.  But Lee had asked a sign and there,
like a slender finger pointing to the brightening sky, was a sign.

He stooped swiftly for rifle and rope and packet of bacon.

"Where you goin', Bud?" asked Tommy.

"To Judith," answered Bud Lee gently.

For in his heart was that faith which is born of love.




XXV

THE TOOLS WHICH TREVORS USED

To Judith life had changed from a pleasant game in the sunshine to a
hideous nightmare.  In a few dragging hours she had come to know
incredulity, anxiety, misery, dejection, black hopelessness, and icy
terror.  She had come to look through a man's eyes at that which lay in
his heart, to feel for the first time in her fearless life that the
fortitude was slipping out of her bosom, that the strength was melting
in her.

She lay on a rude bed of fir-boughs, an utter, impenetrable blackness
like a palpable weight on her eyeballs.  When it was silent about her,
and for the most part silence reigned with the oppressive gloom, she
yearned so for a little sound that she moved her foot along the rock
floor under her or snapped a dry twig between her fingers or even
listened eagerly for the coming of the terrible woman who was her
jailer.

Gropingly, again and again she went over in her thoughts the long
journey here, seeking fruitlessly to know whether she had come north,
south, or east from the ranch-house.  It was one of these three
directions, for there were no such mountains as these to the west, no
such monster cliffs, no deep cavern reaching into the bowels of the
earth The sense that, even were she freed, she had no slightest idea
where she was, which way she must go, stunned her.

"Will I go mad after a while?" she wondered miserably.  "Am I already
going mad?  Oh, God, have mercy on me----"

From the instant when, Saturday night, she had been gripped suddenly in
a man's strong arms, when another man had smothered her outcry, she had
known in her heart that Bayne Trevors was taking his desperate chance
in the game.  But in the darkness she had had only the two vague blurs
of their bodies to guess at.  They had been masked; her own eyes were
covered, a bandage brought tightly over them, her mouth gagged, her
hands tied behind her, her body lifted into the saddle--all in a
moment.  Neither man had spoken.  Then, tied in the saddle, she only
knew that she was riding, that one man rode in front of her, leading
her horse, the other following close behind.  The sense of direction
which she had lost in those first five minutes she had never been given
opportunity to regain.  She might, even now, be a gunshot from her own
ranch; she might be twenty miles from it.

For the greater part of that Saturday night they had ridden; and when
trails died under them and rocks rose steeply, they walked, she and one
man.  The other stayed with the horses.  Not once did she hear a man's
voice; she did not know whether it was Trevors himself, or Quinnion, or
some utter stranger who forced her into this hiding.

They had climbed cliffs, now going down into chasms, now following
roaring creeks or making their way along the spine of some rocky ridge.
The one man with her was masked, his eyes rather guessed at than seen
through the slits of his bandanna handkerchief.  He had jerked the
bandage from her eyes, since blindfolded she would make such poor
progress.  But still he guarded his tongue.

"He would speak," she thought, "but that I would recognize his voice.
Trevors or Quinnion?  Which?"

Feeling the first quick spurt of hope when she saw that there was but
one man to deal with, she was aquiver to seize the first opportunity
for flight.  But that hope died swiftly as she recognized that no such
opportunity was to be granted her.  Once she paused, looking to a
possible leap over a low ledge and escape in a thick bit of timber.
But the two eyes through the slits in the improvised mask had been keen
and quick, a heavy hand was laid on her arm, she felt the fingers bite
into her flesh as he sought to drive into her a full comprehension of
his grim determination that she should not escape.

It was when they had clambered high upon a mass of tumbled boulders,
topping a ridge, that Judith had seen the man's face.  Docilely she had
obeyed his gestures for an hour; now, suddenly maddened at the silence
and the mask over his face, she sprang unexpectedly upon him, shoving
him from the rock on which he had stepped, snatching off his mask as
she did so.  For the first time she heard his voice, cursing her coolly
as he gripped and held her.

It was Bayne Trevors, at last come out the open, his eyes hard on hers.

"It's just as well that you know whom you are up against," he said as
he held her with his hand heavy on her shrinking shoulder.

Summoning all of the reckless fearlessness which was her birthright,
she laughed at him coolly, laughed as the two stood against the
sky-line, upon the barren breast of a lonesome land.

"So you are a fool, after all, Bayne Trevors!" she jeered at him.
"Fool enough to mix first-hand in a dangerous undertaking."

Trevors shrugged.

"Yes?"  He slipped the handkerchief into his pocket and stared at her
with a glint of anger in the blue-gray of his eyes.  He lifted his
broad shoulders.  "Or wise man enough to do my own work when needs be,
and when I'd have no bungling?  I'm going to square with you, girl.
Square with you for meddling, for a bullet-hole in each shoulder.  If
there's a fool in our little junketing party, it's a girl who thought
she could handle a man's-size job."

They went on, over the ridge and down.  Judith made no second attempt
to surprise him, for always his eyes watched her.  Nor did she seek to
hold back or in any way to hamper him now.  For, swiftly adjusting
herself to the new conditions, she made her first decision: Trevors did
think her a "fool of a girl," Trevors did sneer at her helplessness in
that man's way of his.  Let him think her a little fool; let him hold
her in his contempt; let him grow to think her cowed and afraid and
helpless.  Then, when the time came----

Again she had been blindfolded; seeing the look in Trevors's eyes, she
had offered no objection.  Again she had followed him in a darkness
made at sunrise by a bandage across her eyes.  Again, the bandage
removed, she winked at the sunlight.  Again they climbed ridges,
dropped down into tiny valleys, fought their way along thunderous
ravines where the water was lashed into white foam.  Again blindfolded,
again trudging on, her whole body beginning to tremble with fatigue,
the weakness of hunger upon her.  And at length, out of a cañon, making
a perilous way up the steep walls of rock, they came to the mouth of
the black cavern in which she lay now, waiting for the sound of a
stirring foot.

Only an instant had Judith stood upon the ledge outside the cave before
she was thrust into the black interior.  But in that instant her eager
eyes had made out, upon a tiny bit of table-land across the chasm of
the gorge, a cabin, sending aloft a plume of smoke.

Then, after an hour, the terrible woman had come to whom Trevors had
intrusted her, bringing food and water in her hard, blackened hands,
carrying the flickering fires of madness in her unfathomable eyes.  A
lantern set on the floor made rude shadows, and out of them crept this
woman, leering at Trevors, peering at Judith, licking her thin lips,
and chuckling to herself.

"I have brought her back to you, Ruth," he said, speaking softly, more
softly than Judith had thought the man could speak.  "You will know
what to do with her.  And you will not let her escape you again."

The mad woman, for only too plainly was her reason strangely misshapen,
stood in silence, her great muscular body looming high above Judith's,
a giant of a woman, bigger than Trevors even, broad and heavy, her
forearms thick and corded, her bare throat like the bull neck of a
prize-fighter.

"I will know, I will know," she said, her eyes filled with cunning, her
voice a strange singsong oddly at variance with the coarse bigness of
her body.  "Oh, no, she will never escape from me again."

"I will have a man on the ledge outside night and day," went on
Trevors.  "But we cannot be so sure of others as we are of ourselves,
Ruth.  You know that, don't you?"

"Oh, yes, I know," she answered quickly.  As she spoke she suddenly
shot out her long arm so that her great, bony hand fastened like a big
claw on the girl's shoulder.  "I have got her again!  She is mine, all
mine.  Oh, I will keep her well."

In a little while Trevors left.  He had not returned.  Mad Ruth, still
gripping Judith's shoulder, half led her, half thrust her farther back
in the cavern.  Judith made no resistance.  Always, even when terror
was uppermost she held one thought in mind: "If I can make them think
me a little fool and a weakling, my chance may come after a while."

As the two women passed around a bend in the sinuous tunnel-like cave,
the faint rays of the lantern they had left behind them died out, and
heavy darkness shut them in.  Judith could barely make out the huge
form towering over her.  But Ruth, whether her eyes were like a cat's
and accustomed to this sombre place, or whether a hand on a rock wall
or a foot on the uneven floor under her told her which way to go, moved
on without hesitation.  Judith estimated roughly that they had come
fifty yards from the outside ledge in front of the cave when she was
pushed down and felt the rude bed of fir-boughs under her.

"So," grunted the woman, for the first time removing her hard hand from
the girl's shoulder, "I've got you again, my pretty.  And this time you
don't play any more little tricks on your old mother."

She was gone swiftly, all but silently, through the gloom, her form
vaguely outlined against the lantern's glimmer, to bring the food and
water which she had set down when she came in.  Judith drank and ate.

It was only little by little, in fragments which she obtained during
the slow days which followed, that she came to understand Trevors's
scheme.  And the scheme was in keeping with the man; so far as it was
possible, Bayne Trevors was still playing safe.

Mad Ruth was an odd mixture of crazed suspicion, shrewd cunning,
cruelty, and madness.  Perhaps very long ago--Judith came to believe
that it had occurred at the time when she had gone mad, for God knows
what reason--Mad Ruth had had a little daughter.  The girl had been
lost to her, whether through death when an infant, or some tragic
accident when a young girl, Judith never knew.  But Ruth's heart had
been bound up in that baby of hers; when madness came, it centred and
turned upon the return of her child, "Who had run away from her, but
who would come back some time."  Trevors, having learned of her mad
passion, had shaped it to his purpose.

But that was not all.  Judith had been brought to the cave early Sunday
morning.  Sunday afternoon there came to the cave a well-dressed man
carrying a little black bag in his hand.  He talked with Ruth; he took
up the lantern and came to look at Judith.

"So I'll know you again," he laughed.  Then he went away.  In fragments
which through long, empty hours her busy mind pieced together, bridging
the gaps, she grasped the rest of Trevors's plan.  This man was a
physician, sent here from some one of the many mining towns in the
mountains, probably from a camp twenty or thirty miles away.  He, too,
was a Trevors hireling.  Should Judith ever accuse Trevors of having
brought her here, there was another story to be told.  And this man
would tell it: How he had been summoned here to attend a girl who had
had a fall, who had wandered delirious through the mountains until Ruth
had found her; whom he had treated here, not daring at first to move
her for fear of permanent shock to her reason; who could give them no
help to establish her identity; who had a thousand absurd fears and
fancies and accusations to make; who in her babbling had at one time
accused Bayne Trevors of having forcibly abducted her; who at another
had cried that it was a man named Carson, a man named Lee, who had
brought her here.

Judith spent many a long hour exploring her prison, hoping to find a
way out.  So far as she knew she had but one person to reckon with, Mad
Ruth.  True, Trevors had said that he'd have a man on the ledge outside
day and night; Judith had never seen such a person, had never heard his
voice, and began to believe that it was a bit of bluff on Trevors's
part.  But she had never again been where she could look out of the
cave's mouth, since Mad Ruth had her own pallet on the floor at the
narrowest part of the cave where it was like the neck of a monster
bottle, and always at the first sound of the girl's approach, was on
her feet to thrust her back.  Clearly there was no way out of this
place of shadows except that through which she had come.

Judith sought an explanation of her imprisonment, and after long
groping she came very near the truth: Trevors would work his will with
Hampton through Hampton's faith in him and admiration for him.  And, in
her absence, Hampton was the head of Blue Lake ranch.


Sunday night, hearing Mad Ruth moving cautiously, Judith raised herself
on her elbow, listening.  She was confident that the woman was moving
toward the cave's mouth; she hoped wildly that Mad Ruth was tricked
into believing her asleep and was going out.  Her shoes in her hands,
her stockinged feet falling lightly, Judith moved toward the mad
woman's couch.

Ruth was going out; was in fact even now slipping out of the narrow
throat of the cave and to the ledge.  But Judith could not see her.
For a new, unexpected obstacle was in her way.  Her outthrust hands
touched not rock walls but heavy wooden panels; she knew then that the
narrow neck of the cave was fitted with a heavy door and that it had
been drawn shut, fastened from without.  In a sudden access of fury and
despair she beat at it with her two hands, crying out bitterly.

It was so dark, so inky black, and as still, save for her own outcry,
as a tomb sealed and forgotten.  Such darkness, smothering hope,
suddenly was filled with vague terrors; for one worn-out and nervous as
Judith was, the darkness seemed to harbor a thousand ugly things which
watched her and mocked at her despair and reached out vile hands toward
her.  She called loudly, and for answer had the crazed laugh of Mad
Ruth which floated in to her from without, but which seemed to drop
down from the void above.

"Judith, Judith," the girl whispered after the first outburst, when she
found that she was shaking pitifully.  "You've got to do better than
this; I'm ashamed of you."

She went back to her couch, where she sat down seeking to hold her
jangling nerves in check.  But, despite her intention, she sat shaking,
listening, listening--praying for even the footfall of her jailer.

When Ruth was with her she attempted in a hundred ways to gauge the
woman's warped brain, to seek some way to get the better of her, to
gain her trust and so to slip away.  But she found that here was the
usual cunning born of madness, and that Ruth's one idea was to keep the
girl who had escaped her once but who must never escape again.  There
were times when suspicion awakened in Ruth's mind, and she broke into
violent rage, so that her big body shook and her eyes in the
lantern-light were cruel and murderous, when Judith shrank back, and
tried to change the woman's thoughts.  For more than once had Mad Ruth
cried out:

"I'll kill you!  Kill you with my own hands to keep you here.  To keep
you mine, mine, mine!"

The woman carried no weapon, but after her two hands had once gripped
the girl's shoulders, shaking her, Judith knew that Ruth needed no
weapon.  Hers was a strength greater than Trevors's, greater than two
men's.  If Mad Ruth saw fit to kill Judith with her two hands, she
could do it.


Sunday passed and Sunday night; Monday and Monday night.  Judith knew
that she had accomplished nothing, except perhaps to make Ruth believe
that she was very much of a coward.  In Ruth's mad brain that was
little enough, since this did not allay her cunning watchfulness.  Then
Judith began to do something else, something actively.  Just to be
occupied, was something.  Her fingers selected the largest, thickest
branch from her bed of fir-boughs.  It was perhaps a couple of inches
in diameter and heavy, because it was green.  Silently, cautious of a
twig snapped, she began with her fingers to strip the branch, tough and
pliable.  Then the limb must be cut into a length which would make it a
club to be used in a cramped space.  She found a bit of stone, hard
granite, which had scaled from the walls and which had a rough edge.
With this, working many a quiet hour, she at last cut in two the
fir-bough.  She lifted it in her hands, to feel the weight of it,
before she thrust it under her bed to lie hidden there against possible
need.  Poor thing as it was, she felt no longer utterly defenseless.

Once Mad Ruth, lighting the lantern, had dropped a good match.  When
she had gone, Judith secured it hastily, hiding it as if it were gold.
She knew that now and then Mad Ruth went down the cliffs and to the
cabin across the chasm.  Always at night and at the darkest hour.  When
she heard her go, Judith rose swiftly and went to the heavy door.
Always she found it locked; her shaking at it hardly budged the heavy
timbers.  But though she could not see it, she studied it with her
fingers until she had a picture of it in her mind.  A picture that only
increased her hopelessness.  Barehanded she could never hope to break
it down or push it aside.  And above it and below, and on each side,
were the solid walls of stone.

She no longer knew what day it was.  She scarcely knew if it were day
or night.  But, setting herself something to do so that she would not
go mad, mad as Mad Ruth, she secured for herself another weapon.
Another bit of stone which her groping fingers had found and hidden
with her club; a jagged, ugly rock half the size of a man's head.  Some
little scraps of bread and meat, hoarded from her scanty meals, she hid
in her blouse.

"If I could stun her, just stun her," she got into the way of
whispering to herself.  "Not kill her outright--just stun her----"

At last, seeing that she must work her own salvation with the crude
weapons given her, Judith told herself that she could wait no longer.
Another day and another and she would be weak from the confinement and
poor food and nervous, wakeful hours.  She must act while the strength
was in her.  And, if Trevors had spoken the truth, if there were a man
to deal with outside--well, she must shut her mind to that until she
came to it.

Mad Ruth was gone again, and Judith stood by the thick door, her heart
beating furiously while she waited.  It seemed to her eager impatience
that Ruth would never come back.  Then after a long, long time she
heard a little scraping sound upon the rock ledge outside, the sound of
a quick step.  And then, before she heard the snarling, ugly voice
which she had heard once and had never forgotten, she knew that this
time she had waited too long, that it was not Ruth coming.

One man--and there might be others.  She stepped back to her bed, hid
the two weapons and waited.  She must make no mistakes now.

The door was flung open.  Outside it was dark, pitch-dark.  But
evidently the man entering had no fear of being seen.  He threw down a
bundle of dry fagots, and set fire to them.  The blaze, leaping up,
casting wavering gleams to where Judith stood, showed her plainly the
twisted, ugly face of Quinnion, his red-rimmed eyes peering at her,
filled with evil light.




XXVI

JUDITH'S PERIL

"The better to see you by, my dear!" was Quinnion's word of greeting.
Judith made no answer.  She drew a little farther back into the
shadows, a little closer to the things she had hidden among the
fir-branches.

"Ho," sneered Quinnion, his mood from the first plain enough to read in
the glimpses of his face and in the added harshness of his voice.
"Timid little fawn, huh?  By God, a man would say from the bluff you
put up that it was all a dream about findin' you an' the han'some Lee
in the cabin together!  Stan' off all you damn please; I've come to
tame you, you little beauty of the big innocent eyes!"

Not drunk; no, Quinnion was never drunk.  But, as he came a step
closer, the heavy air of the cave grew heavier with the whiskey he
carried, whiskey enough to stimulate the evil within him, not to quench
it.

"Stand back!" cried Judith, with a sharp intake of breath.  "I want to
talk with you, Chris Quinnion."

"So you know who I am, do you?  Well, much good it'll do you."

"I know who you are and what you are," she told him defiantly, suddenly
sick of her long hours of playing baby, knowing at the moment less fear
than hatred and loathing.  "Listen to me: Bayne Trevors has come out in
the open at last; he has made his big play and is going to lose out on
it.  Your one chance now is to let me go and to go yourself.  Go fast
and far, Chris Quinnion.  For when the law knows the sort Bayne Trevors
is and how you have worked hand and glove with him, it will know just
how much his word was worth when he swore you were with him when father
was killed!  Coward and cur and murderer!"

Quinnion laughed at her.

"Little pussy-cat," he jeered.  "You've got claws, have you?  And you
spit and growl, do you?  Want me to let you go back to that swaggering
lover of yours, do you?  Back to Lee----"

"That's enough, Quinnion," she said sharply.

"Is it?"  He laughed at her again, and again came on toward her, the
red-rimmed evil of his eyes driving quick fear at last into her.
"Enough?  Why, curse you and curse him, I haven't begun yet!  When I'm
through with you I'll go fast enough.  And he can have you then an'
damn welcome to him!"

"Stop!" cried Judith.

His laughter did not reach her ears now, but as he kicked the fire at
his foot and the flames leaped up and showed his face, she read the
laughter in his soul; read it through the gleaming eyes, the twisted
mouth which showed the teeth at one side in a horrible leer.  His long
arms thrust out before him, he came on.

"Oh, my God!" cried Judith.  "My God!"

Then suddenly she was silent.  She thought that she had known the
uttermost of fear and now for the first time did she fully know what
terror was.  His strength was many times her strength, his brutality
was unbounded, she was alone with him.  There was no one to call to,
not even Ruth, the mad woman.

She was shaking now, shaking so that she could barely stand.  Quinnion
came on, his long arms out. . . .

She felt the strength die out of her body, grew for a moment blind and
dizzy and sick.  She tried again to call out to him, to plead with him.
But her voice stuck in her throat.

He was gloating over her, a look strangely like Mad Ruth's in his eyes.
Good God!  He was like Mad Ruth; the same eyes, the same long, powerful
arms, the same look of cunning!  In a flash there came to her a
suspicion which was near certainty: this man was blood of Mad Ruth's
blood, bone of her bone; her son, and, like her, tainted with madness.

He shot out a long arm, his hand barely brushing her shoulder.  She
shrank back.  He stood, content to pause a moment, to gloat further
over her.

"You little beauty," he said, panting.  "You little white and pink and
brown beauty!"

Judith had shuddered when he touched her.  But a strange thing had
happened to her.  His touch had angered her so that she almost forgot
to be afraid, angered her so that the loathing was gone in white hot
hatred, giving her back her old strength.

Now, though he had the brutal force of a strong man, Quinnion did not
have the swiftness of movement of an alert, desperate girl.  Before he
could grasp her motive she leaped toward him and toward the bed of
boughs, found the ragged stone, and lifting it high above her head
flung it full into his face.  The man staggered back, crying out in
throaty harshness, a cry of blind rage.  But he did not fall, did not
pause more than a brief instant.

A little dazed, with blood in his eyes, he lunged toward her.  She had
found the club now and struck with all her might, again beating into
his face and again and again.  He sought to grapple with her and she
beat him back.  She saw his hand go to his hip and heard him curse her,
and she leaped in on him and, panting with the blow, struck again.  He
flung up his arm.  She struck once more.  Taking the blow full across
the face, Quinnion reeled back, stumbled at an uneven spot in the rock
floor, balanced, almost falling. . . .

Only a moment he held thus.  But there was a chance to pass him in the
narrow way, and she took her chance, her heart beating wildly.  And as
she shot by she struck again.

She heard him after her, shouting curses, stumbling a little, coming
on.  The door was open, thank God, the door was open!  She shot
through.  If she could but take time to close it!  But there was no
time for that; he was almost at her heels.  And outside was the ledge
and the dizzy climb down.

If she slipped, if she fell, well, it would just be a clean death and
nothing more.  Quinnion was but a few steps behind her.  He had not
fired.  Had he perhaps dropped his gun back there in the darkness?  Or
was he so sure of taking her, alive and struggling, into his arms in
another moment?

She was on the ledge.  It was dark, pitch-dark.

But she found a handhold, threw herself flat down and thrust her feet
out over the edge, less afraid of what lay below than what came on
behind her.  She was gripping the ledge now with her hands, already
torn and bleeding, her feet swinging, touching sheer rock wall,
slipping, seeking a foothold.  Quinnion was just there, above her.  She
must move her hands so that he could not reach her.  It seemed an
eternity that she hung there, seeking a place somewhere to set her feet.

She found it, another, lesser ledge which she had almost missed, and
knew that this way she had clambered upward with Bayne Trevors.  If she
could only find another step and another before Quinnion came upon her!
She held her club in her teeth; she must not let that go.

Quinnion was over the ledge, following her.  She heard his heavy
breathing, heard him cursing her again.  She was going so slowly, so
slowly, and Quinnion would know the way better than she.  Quinnion
would make better time in the dark.

She moved along this lower ledge.  At each instant she wondered if it
were to be her last, if she were going to fall, if a swift drop through
the darkness would be the end of life.

Suddenly there was scarce room in the girl's breast for hatred of Chris
Quinnion, so filled was it with the love of life.  She wanted to see
the sun come up again, she wanted the sweet breath of the dawn in her
nostrils, the beauty of a sun-lit world in her eyes.  She thought of
Bud Lee.

Clinging to the rocks, hanging on desperately, taking a score of
desperate chances momentarily, she made her way on and down.  She found
scant handhold and, almost falling, dropped her club, heard it strike,
strike again.  Black as the night was, its gloom was less than that of
the cavern to which Judith had grown accustomed; little by little she
began to make out the broken surface of the cliffs.  The chasm below
was a pool of ink; above were the little stars; in the eastern sky, low
down, was a promise of the rising moon.

The surge of quickening hope came into her heart.  Had she hurt
Quinnion more than she had guessed?  For, slowly as she made her
hazardous way down, it seemed to her that Quinnion came even more
slowly.  Could she but once get down into the gorge below, could she
slip along the course of the racing stream, she might run and the sound
of her steps would be lost even to her own ears in the sound of the
water; the sight of her flying body would be lost to Quinnion's eyes.

Then she heard him laughing above her.  Laughing, with a snarl and a
curse in his laugh, and something of malicious triumph.  Was he so
certain of her then?

"Ruth!" called Quinnion.  "Oh, Ruth!  The girl's gettin' away.  Goin'
down the rocks.  Head her off at the bottom."

Judith had found, because her fate was good to her, the long slanting
crack in the wall of rock up which she had come that day with Bayne
Trevors.  There was still danger of a fall, but the danger was less now
than it had been ten seconds ago.  She could move more swiftly now and
confidence had begun to com to her that she could elude Quinnion.  But
now, suddenly, she heard Mad Ruth's voice screaming a shrill answer to
Quinnion's shout; knew that Ruth had been in her cabin across the gorge
and was running to intercept her at the foot of the cliffs.

Well, still there was a race to be run and the odds not entirely
uneven.  Ruth must descend the other side of the cañon, get down into
the gorge, make the crossing, which, so far as Judith knew, might be
farther up or farther down stream, come to the cliffs below Judith
before Judith herself made her way down.

Again Judith took what risks the night and the rocks offered her and
thanked God in her soul that it was given her to take a chance in the
open, to use her own muscles in her own fight, not to lie longer,
playing the part of a do-nothing.  Now and then, across the void, there
floated to her a little moaning cry from the mad woman's lips.  Now and
then she heard a curse from Quinnion above; often from above her, from
below her own feet, from across the chasm, dropping stones, falling
almost sheer, told of haste and death which might come from an unlucky
step.

Fast as Judith went now, having a fair sort of cliff trail under her,
Mad Ruth went faster.  The gorge measured a scant fifty feet between
them and the girl's alert senses told her that already Ruth was on a
level with her.  Ruth was winning in the desperate race.  She knew her
way down so perfectly, her heart was so filled with madness, that
danger was nothing to her.

Down and down climbed Judith, caution wedded to haste, as she told
herself that she had a chance yet, that that chance must not be tossed
away in a fall, though it were but a few feet.  She must have no
sprained ankle if she meant to see the sun rise to-morrow.

The flush had brightened in the sky where the moon was so near the
ridge.  The moon, too, had joined in the race; with one quick glance
toward it, Judith again discarded caution for haste.  She must get down
into the floor of the cañon before the moonlight did; she must be
running before its radiance showed her out to Quinnion and Ruth.

Her hands were cut and bleeding, her heart was beating wildly, already
her body was sore and bruised.  But these things she did not know.  She
only knew that Quinnion was still coming on above her, and coming more
swiftly now, quite as swiftly as she herself moved, since his feet,
too, were in the better trail; that Mad Ruth had completed the descent
across the chasm and by now must be crossing the stream upon some
fallen log or rude bridge; that one minute more, or perhaps two, would
decide her fate.

She could see the stream, glinting palely in the starlight.  It seemed
very near; its thunder filled her ears.  Down she went and down, down
until at last she was not ten feet above its surface, with a strip of
gently sloping bank just under her.  She stooped, took firm hold upon a
knob of boulder, prepared to swing down and drop to the bottom.  And,
as she stooped, she heard a little whining moan just under her and
straightened up, tense and terrified.  Mad Ruth was there before her.
Mad Ruth was waiting.




XXVII

ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS

And Quinnion was coming on.  She was trapped, caught between the two of
them.  She heard Quinnion laugh again; he, too, had heard Ruth.

"Oh, God help me!" whispered Judith.  "God help me now!"

There was no time to hesitate.  If she stood here, Quinnion would in a
moment wrap his arms about her; if she dropped down, she would be in
the frenzied clutch of Mad Ruth.

A second she crouched, peering down into the gloom below her, seeking
to make out the form of the mad woman.  Then she did not merely drop,
but jumped, landing fair upon the waiting figure, striking with her
boots on Mad Ruth's ample shoulders.  A scream of rage from Ruth, a
little, strangling cry from Judith, and the two fell together.  Ruth
clutched as she went down and a hand closed over the girl's ankle.
Judith rolled, struck again with the free boot, twisted sharply and
felt the grip torn loose from her ankle.  She was free.

She jumped up and ran and knew that Ruth was running just behind her,
screaming terribly.  Judith fell, and her heart grew sick within her.
But again she was up just as Ruth's hand clutched at her skirt,
clutched and was torn away as Judith ran on.  Quinnion cursed from
above as she had not yet heard him curse.  Ruth reviled both her and
Quinnion for having let her go.

Judith was running swiftly and felt that she could get the better of
the heavier, older woman in a race of this sort.  She stumbled and
fell, and fear again gripped her; it seemed so long before she could
rise and clamber over a fallen log and race on.  But the darkness which
tricked her protected her at the same time, playing no favorites now.
Ruth, too, had fallen; Ruth, too, was frenzied at the brief delay.

Stumbling, falling, rising, staggering back from a tree into which she
had run full tilt, bruised and torn, the girl ran on.  At every free
step hope shot upward in her heart; at every fall she grew sick with
dread.

The cañon broadened rapidly, the ground underfoot grew less broken and
littered with boulders and logs.  Through tangles of brush she went
blindly, throwing herself forward, falling, rising, falling, rising
again.  It was a nightmare of a race, with Ruth always just there,
almost at her heels.  She turned as far away from the stream as she
could, keeping under the cliffs where there was less brush; where the
way was more open; where the shadows were thickest.

She was outdistancing Mad Ruth.  Ruth's weird voice came from a greater
distance; the woman was ten, maybe twenty, feet behind her.

The moon at last rose pale gold above the eastern ridge.  And now
Judith could thank God for it.  For the cañon had widened more and
more, the banks of the river were studded with big trees, there were
wide open spaces between them through which she shot like a frightened
deer, turning this way and that, darting about a clump of little firs,
plunging into the shadows under great sky-seeking cedars, running as
she had never run before and as she knew Mad Ruth could not run.

Free!  She was free.  The triumph of it danced in her blood.  On she
ran and now Quinnion's voice and Ruth's were confused with the roar of
the river.  On she ran and on and on, and but faintly there came to her
the sound of breaking brush somewhere behind her.  Never had her blood
sung within her as it sang now; never had the dim, moonlit solitudes of
the mountains opened their sheltering arms to one more grateful to slip
into them, like a wounded child into the soothing embrace of its mother.

Now again she turned so that her flying steps brought her close to the
water's edge.  Louder and louder grew its shouting voice in her ears,
little by little drowning out the sounds of Ruth and Quinnion behind
her.  Now, in all the glorious night, there was no sound to reach her
but the sound of running water and her own beating feet.  She was free.

But still she ran, summoning all of the reserve of strength and
will-power which was hers to command.  The sky was brightening to the
climbing moon.  She must round many a sweeping curve of the river, pass
under many a sheltering, shadowing tree before she dared slow her steps.

When she felt that she was overtaxing herself, she dropped from the
wild pace she had set herself into a little jogging trot.  When her
whole body cried out at the effort demanded of it, she slowed down to a
brisk walk.  She was shot through with pain, her throat ached, she was
growing dizzy.  But on she went stubbornly.  It was a full hour after
the last sound of pursuit had died out after her that she flung herself
down at the water's edge to drink and bathe her arms and face in the
cold stream.  And, even then, she chose a spot where the shadow of a
great pine lay like ink over the bank.


The moon was high in the sky, the world bright with it, when Judith
left the valley into which the cañon had widened and made her way
slowly upward along a timbered ridge to the west.  Of Quinnion and Mad
Ruth she now had no fear.  Their chance of coming upon her was less
than negligible.  She could creep into a clump of thick-standing young
trees and, even if they should come, could watch them go past.  But as
they had dropped out of her world, another matter had entered it.  The
mountains had befriended her; they had opened their arms to her and
that was all that she had asked of them.  They had mothered her,
drawing her into hiding against their bosom.  But it was a barren,
barren breast.  And already she was hungry, daring to eat but sparingly
of her handful of bread and meat.

From this ridge, finding an open crest, she stood looking out over the
world.  Mile after mile of mountain and cañon and cliff fell away on
every side.  She sought eagerly for a landmark: to see yonder in the
distance Old Baldy or Copper Mountain or Three Fools' Peak, any one of
the mountains or ridges known to her.  And in the end she could only
shake her head and sigh wearily and slip down where she was to fall
asleep, thanking God that she was free, asking God to lead her aright
in the morning.

The stars watched over her, a pale, worn-out girl sleeping alone in the
heart of the wilderness; the night breezes sang through the century-old
tree-tops; and Judith, having striven to the utter-most, slept in heavy
dreamlessness.

With the cool dawn she awoke shivering and hungry.  Her hair had
tumbled about her face, and sitting up she braided it with numb, sore
fingers.  She looked at her hands; they well stained with blood from
many cuts.  Her skirt was torn and soiled; her stockings were in
strips; her knees were bruised.  But as she rose to her feet and once
more searched the riddle of a crag-broken world, her heart was light
with thankfulness.

Last night the one friend she had with her was the north star.  To-day
she would seek to push on toward the west.  In that direction she
believed the Blue Lake ranch lay, though at best it was a guess.  But
going westward she could follow the course of the bigger streams, and
soon or late, if her strength held, she would come to some open valley
where men ran stock.  Now, she would go down into the little meadow
lying a mile away yonder and seek to find something to eat.  If she
could but dig a few wild onions, wild potatoes, they would keep her
alive.  West she would go, if for no other reason than because thus she
would be setting her back squarely upon the cavern where Quinnion and
Ruth were.

The sun rolled into a clear blue sky and warmed her.  She made her way
down the long flank of the mountain and into the tiny meadow.  For
upward of two hours she remained there, nibbling at roots which she dug
up with a broken stick, seeking edible growths which she knew, finding
little, but enough to keep the life in her, the heart warm in her
breast.  Then she went on, over a ridge again, down into a cañon and
along the stream which rose here and flowed westward.

By noon she was faint and sick and had to stop often to rest, her legs
shaking under her.  Again she made a scant meal.  She had stumbled on a
tiny field of wild potatoes and ate what she could of them, thinking
longingly of a match for a fire.  The match which Ruth had dropped she
still had, but she carefully reserved it now, thinking how perhaps a
trout, caught in a pool, might save her life.

In her already half-starved condition and with the demands constantly
put on her strength, she would grow weaker and weaker if help did not
soon come.  But she was still filled with the glory of freedom.

It was a heart-weary, trembling Judith who late that afternoon made her
way upward along another ridge, seeking anxiously to find from this
lookout some landmark which she had sought in vain last night.  In her
blouse were the few roots she had brought with her from the field
discovered at noon.  Lying in a little patch of dry grass, resting, she
watched the day go down and the night drift into the mountains, filling
the ravines, creeping up the slopes, rising slowly to the peak to which
she had climbed, seeping into her soul.  Never had the passing of the
day seemed to her so majestic a thing, truly filled with awe.  Never
until now had the solitudes seemed so vast, so utterly, stupendously
big.  Never until now, as she lay staring up into the limitless sky,
having given up the world about her as unknown, had she drunk to the
lees of the cup of loneliness.

So great was the weariness of her tired body that as she lay still,
watching the stars come out one by one, she was half-resigned to lie so
and let death come to find her.  It seemed to her that there in the
rude arms of Mother Earth a human life was a matter of no greater
consequence than the down upon a moth's wing.  But she rested a little
and this mood, foreign to her intrepid heart, passed, and she sat up,
again resolute, again ready to make her fight as long as life beat
through her blood.  At last she took the one match from her pocket.
She scarcely dared breathe when, with dry grass and twigs piled against
a rock, her dress shielding them from the wind, she rubbed the match
softly against her boot.  A sputtering flame, making the blue light of
burning sulphur, died down, creating panic in her breast, then flared,
crackled, licked at the grass.  She had a fire and she knew how to use
it!

When a log was blazing, assuring her that her fire was safe, she rose
swiftly and went in search of the tree she meant to burn.  She found a
giant pine, pitch-oozing, standing in a rocky open space where there
was little danger of the fire spreading.  Fagged out and eager as she
was, she had not come to the point of forgetting what a great
forest-fire meant.

She went back to her burning log, for a blazing dry branch which she
carried swiftly to the tree.  Then she piled dry grass and dead twigs,
logs as heavy as she could carry, bits of brush.  The flames licked at
the tree, ran up it, seemed to fall away, sprang at it again,
hungering.  Now and then a long tongue of fire went crackling high up
along the side of the tree.  Judith went back to a spot where, in a
ring of boulders, there was another grassy plot, threw herself down an
lay staring at the tongues of fire which were climbing higher and
higher.

Some one would see her beacon.  A forest ranger, perhaps, whose duty it
was to ride fast and far to battle with the first spark threatening the
wooded solitudes; perhaps some crew in a logging-camp, than whom none
knew better the danger of spreading fires; perhaps some cow-boy, even
one of her own men--perhaps Quinnion and Ruth?  She then would hide
among the rocks until they had come and gone.  Even now, against the
sleep falling upon her, she drew farther back through the tumbled
boulders.  Perhaps, Bud Lee. . . .

She went to sleep beyond the circle of bright light, tired and hungry
and striving against a returning hopelessness, her young body curled up
in the nest she had found, a cheek cuddled against her arm, wondering
vaguely if some one would see her fire and come--if that some one might
be Bud Lee.




XXVIII

BACON, KISSES, AND A CONFESSION

Throughout the night the tree blazed unseen.  Judith's eyes were closed
in the heavy sleep of exhaustion.  The flames roared and leaped high
skyward, burning branches felt crashingly, to lie smouldering on the
rocky soil, the upstanding trunk glowed, vivid against the sky-line.

In the early morning at least two pairs of eyes found the plume of
smoke above the still burning giant pine.  A man named Greene, one of
the government forest rangers, blazing a new trail over Devil's Ridge,
came out upon a height, saw it and watched it frowningly across the
miles.  It called him to a hard ride, perhaps to a difficult journey on
foot after he must leave his horse.  He turned promptly from the work
in hand, ran to his horse, swung up and sped back to his cabin, to
telephone to the nearest station, passing the word.  Then with axe and
shovel, he began his slow way toward the beacon.

Bud Lee, from the mountain-top where he and Burkitt had taken Hampton,
saw it.  Lee judged roughly that it was separated from him by four or
five miles of broken country, impassable to a man on horseback, to be
covered laboriously foot in a matter of weary hours.

Lee and Greene approached the signal smoke from different quarters.
Lee from the west, Greene from the northeast.  They fought their way on
toward it with far different emotions in their breasts.  Greene with
the desire to do a day's work and kill a forest-fire in its beginning.
Lee with the passionate hope of finding Judith.  Lee reached his
journey's end first.

As he came pantingly up the last climb he discharged his rifle again
and again, to tell her that he was coming, to put hope into her.  And,
because he was a lover and a lover must be filled with dread when she
is out of his sight, he felt a growing anxiety.  She had lighted the
fire last night; what might have happened to her since then?  Had she
been wandering, lost all these days?  If nothing else, then had she
waited here half the night and in the end had she gone on plunging deep
into some cañon hidden to him?  Would he find her well?  Would he find
her at all?

Suddenly he called out, shouting mightily, and began running, though
the way was steep.  He had seen Judith, he had found her.  She was
standing among the scattered boulders, her back to a great rock.  She
was waving to him.  Her lips were moving, though he could not see that
yet, could not hear her tremulous:

"Oh, thank God, thank God!"

"Judith," he called, "Judith!"

Now, near enough to see her distinctly, he saw that her face was white,
that the hand she held out was shaking, that her clothes were torn,
that she looked pitifully in need of him.  But at last, when he stood
at her side, one of the old rare smiles came into Judith's tired eyes,
her lips curved, and she said quietly:

"Good morning, Bud Lee.  You were very good--to come to me."

"Oh, Judith," he cried sharply.  But no other word came to his lips
then.  The brave little smile had gone, the whiteness of her face smote
him to the heart.  And now she was shaking from head to foot, and he
knew why she had not stepped out to meet him, why she had kept her back
to the rock.  He thought that she was going to fall, he saw two big
tears start from the suddenly closed eyelids, and with a little
inarticulate cry he took her into his arms.

"If you had not come, Bud Lee," she whispered faintly, "I should have
died, I think."

Very tenderly he gathered her up so that her little boots were swung
clear of the flinty ground and she lay quiet in his arms.  He stood a
moment holding her thus, looking with eyes alternately hard and tender
into her face.  He wanted to hold her thus always, to watch the glad
color come back into her cheeks, to carry her, like a baby, back across
the weary miles and home.  And, oddly, perhaps, the thought came back
to him and hurt him as it had never hurt him before, that he had once
been brutal with her, that he had crushed her in his arms and forced
upon her lips his kiss.  He had been brutal with Judith, when now he
could kill a man for laying a little finger on her.

"I have been a brute with you, a brute," he muttered to himself.  But
Judith heard him, her eyes fluttered open and into them came again her
glorious smile.

"Because you kissed me that night, Bud Lee?" she asked him.

"Don't!" he cried sharply.  "Don't even remember it, Judith."

"Do you know so little of a girl, Bud Lee," she went on slowly, "to
think that a man can so easily--find her lips with his unless--unless
she wants to be kissed?"

He almost doubted his ears; he could hardly believe that he had seen
what he had seen in Judith's eyes.  They were closed now, she lay quiet
in his arms, it seemed that she had fainted, or, was asleep, so very
white and still was she.  He had forgotten that he must carry her to
where he could lay her down and bring water to her, give her something
to eat.  He just stood motionless, holding her to him, staring hungrily
down at her.

"Are you going to play--I'm your baby--all day, Bud Lee?" she asked
softly.

He carried her swiftly away from the ring of boulders and to a little
grassy, level spot where he put her down with lingering tenderness.
Judith had not been angry with him all these months!  Judith had let
him kiss her because she wanted to be kissed--by him!

He raked some coals out of the ashes, hastily set some slices of bacon
to fry, cursed himself for not having brought coffee and milk and sugar
and a steak and a flask of whiskey and enough other articles to load a
mule.  He ran down into the cañon and brought water in his hat,
swearing at himself all the way up that he had not brought a cup.  He
put his arm about her while she drank; kept his arm about her, kneeling
at her side, while he gave her a little, crisp slice of bacon, held his
arm there when she had finished, watching her solicitously.

"The two nicest things in the world, Mr. Man," she said, with a second
attempt at the old Judith brightness, "are half-burnt bacon and Bud
Lee!"

Then, because, though he had been slow to believe, he was not a fool,
and now did believe, he kissed her.  And Judith's lips met his
lingeringly.  Judith's two arms rose, slipped about his neck, holding
him tight to her.

The faintest of flushes had come at last into a her cheeks.  He saw it
and grew glad as he held her so that he could look into her face.  But
now she laid a hand against his breast, holding him back from her.

"That's all now," she told him, her eyes soft upon him.  "Just one kiss
for each slice of bacon, Mr. Lee.  But--I'm so hungry!"

For a little there was nothing to do but for Judith to rest and get
some of her strength back.  Lee made of his coat and vest a seat for
her against a rock, sat at her side, his arm about her, made her lean
against him and just be happy.  Not yet would he let her tell him of
the horrors through which she had gone.  And he saw no need of telling
her anything immediately of conditions as he had left them at the
ranch.  Time enough for that when she was stronger, when they were near
Blue Lake.

Greene, the forester, came at last up the mountain.  He noted the
isolated tree, nodded at it approvingly, made a brief tour around the
charred circle, extinguishing a burning brand here and there.

"What sort of a fool would want to climb way up here to start a fire,
anyway?" he grumbled.

Then, unexpectedly, he came upon the happiest-looking man he had ever
seen, with his arms about an amazingly pretty girl.  Not just the sort
of thing a lone forest ranger counts upon stumbling upon on the top of
a mountain.  Greene stared in bewilderment.  Bud Lee turning a flaming
red.  Judith smiled.

"Good morning, stranger," said Lee.  "Fine day, isn't it?"

Judith laughed.  Greene continued to stare.  Lee went a trifle redder.

"If you two folks just started that fire for fun," grunted Greene
finally, "why, then, all I've got to say is you've got a blamed queer
idea of fun.  Here I've been busting myself wide open to get to it."

"Haven't got a flask of brandy on you, have you?" asked Lee.

"Yes, I have.  And what's more I'm going to take a shot at it right
now.  If nobody asks you, I need it!"

Now, Lee heard for the first time something of Judith's adventure.
For, recognizing the ranger in Greene, she told him swiftly why she had
started the fire, of her trouble with Quinnion, of the cave where
Quinnion had attacked her and of Mad Ruth.  Greene's eyes lighted with
interest.  He swept off his hat and came forward, suddenly apologetic
and very human, proffering his brandy, insisting with Lee upon her
taking a sip of it.

Yes, he knew Mad Ruth, he knew where her cabin was.  He could find the
cave from Judith's description.  Also, he knew of Quinnion and would be
delighted to break a record getting back to his station and to White
Rock.  White Rock was in the next county, but so, for that matter, was
the cave.  He'd get the sheriff and would lose no time cornering
Quinnion if the man had not already slipped away.

"I don't know you two real well," said Greene, with a quick smile at
the end, "but if you don't mind, pardner," and he put out his hand to
Lee, "I'd like to congratulate you!  I don't know a man that's quite as
lucky this morning as you are!"

"Thank you," laughed Judith.  She rose and shook hands too.  "We're at
Blue Lake ranch for the present.  Come and see us."

"Then you're Miss Sanford?" said Greene.  He laughed.  "I've heard of
you more than once.  Greene's my name."

"Lee's mine," offered Lee.

"Bud Lee, eh?  Oh, you two will do!  So long, friends.  I'm off to look
up Quinnion."

And, swinging his axe blithely, Greene took his departure.

"There are other things in the world besides just cliffs to stare at,"
said Judith.  "And I would like a bath and a change of clothes and a
chance to brush my hair.  And the bacon doesn't taste so good as it did
and I want an apple and a glass of milk."

So at last they left the mountain-top and made their slow way down.

As they went Lee told her something of what had happened at the ranch,
how Carson would hold off the buyers, how Tommy Burkitt was assuming
charge of Pollock Hampton.  And when they came near enough to Burkitt's
and Hampton's hiding-place, Lee fired a rifle several times to get
Burkitt's attention.  Finally they saw the boy, standing against the
sky upon a big rock, waving to them.  From Lee's shouts, from his
gestures, chiefly from the fact that Judith was there, Burkitt
understood and freed Hampton, the two of them coming swiftly down a to
Judith and Lee.

Hampton's face was hot with the anger which had grown overnight.  He
came on stiffly, chafing his wrists.

"These two fools," he snapped to Judith, "have made an awful mess of
things.  They've queered the deal with Doan, Rockwell & Haight, they've
made themselves liable to prosecution for holding me against my will,
they've----"

"Wait a minute, Pollock," said Judith quietly.  "It's you who have made
a mistake."

Briefly, she told him what had happened.  As word after word of her
account fell upon Hampton's ears, his eyes widened, the stiffness of
his bearing fell away, the glint of anger went out of his eyes, a look
of wonder came into them.  And when she had finished, Hampton did not
hesitate.  He turned quickly and put out two hands, one to Lee, one to
Burkitt.

"I was a chump, same as usual," he grunted.  "Forget it if you can.  I
can't."

They went on more swiftly now, the four of them together, Judith
insisting that that last sip of brandy had put new life into her.  In a
little, seeing that Judith did in fact have herself in hand, Bud Lee,
with a hidden pressure of her hand, left them, hurrying on ahead,
trying to reach Carson or some of the men in Pocket Valley and to get
horses.

As he drew nearer the ranch Lee saw smoke rising from the north ridge.
Again he could turn his thoughts a little to what lay in front of him,
wondering what luck Carson had had in his double task of fighting fire
and holding off the buyers.

At any rate, the Blue Lake stock had not been driven off.  The bawling
of the big herds told him that before he saw the countless tossing
horns.  Then, dropping down into Pocket Valley from above, he found his
own string of horses feeding quietly.  Beyond, the cattle.  At first he
thought that the animals had been left to their own devices.  He saw no
rider anywhere.  Hurrying on, he shouted loudly.  After he had called
repeatedly, there floated to him from somewhere down on the lower flat
an answering yell.  And presently Carson himself came riding to meet
him.

Carson's face was smeared with blood; one bruised, battered, discolored
eye was swelling shut, but in his uninjured eye there was triumphant
gladness.

"We got the sons-o'-guns on the run, Bud," he announced from afar.
"Killed their pesky fires out before they got a good start, crippled a
couple of 'em, counting Benny, the cook, in on the deal, chased their
deputy sheriff off with a flea in his ear, an' set tight, holding our
own."

"Where'd you get the eye, Carson?" demanded Lee.

Carson grinned broadly, an evil grin of a distorted, battered face.

"You want to take a good look at ol' Poker Face," he chuckled.  "He
won't cheat no more games of crib for a coon's age.  I jus' nacherally
beat him all to hell, Bud."

"Where are the rest of the men?" Lee asked.

"Watching the fires an' seeing no more don't get started."

Then Lee told him of Judith.  Carson's good eye opened wide with
interest.  Carson's bruised lips sought to form for a whistle which
managed to give them the air of a maidenly pout.

"He had the nerve!" he muttered.  "Trevors had the nerve!  Bud, we
ought to make a little call on that gent."

Then, seeing Lee's face, Carson realized that anything he might have to
remark on this score was superfluous.  Lee had already thought of that.

They roped a couple of the wandering horses, improvised hackamores from
the rope cut in two, and went to meet Judith.  Carson snatched eagerly
at her hand and squeezed it and looked inexpressible things from his
one useful eye.  He gave his saddled horse to her, watched her and Lee
ride on to the ranch, and sent Tommy to the old cabin for another rope,
while he rounded up some more horses in a narrow cañon for Burkitt and
Hampton.

"You damn' fool," he said growlingly to Hampton, "look what you've
done."

"Of course I'm a damn fool," replied Hampton, by now his old cheerful
self.  "I've apologized to Judith and Lee and Burkitt.  I apologize to
you.  I'll tell you confidentially that I'm a sucker and a
Come-on-Charlie.  I haven't got the brains of a jack-rabbit."

Carson went away grumbling.  But for the first time he felt a vague
respect for Pollock Hampton.

"He'll be a real man some day," thought Carson, "if the fool-killer
don't pick him off first."


"You may come and see me this evening," Judith told Bud Lee as he left
her to Marcia's arms.  "I'll be eating and sleeping and taking baths
until then.  Thank you for the bacon--and the water--and----"

She smiled at him from Marcia's excited embrace.  Bud Lee, the blood
tingling through him, left her.

"Before I come to you, Judith girl," he whispered to himself as he
went, "I'll have to have little talk with Bayne Trevors."




XXIX

LEE AND OLD MAN CARSON RIDE TOGETHER

Bud Lee, riding alone toward the Western Lumber Camp, turned in his
saddle to glance back as he heard hoof-beats behind him.  It was
Carson, and the old cattleman was riding hard.  Lee frowned.  Then for
an instant a smile softened his stern eyes.

"Good little old Carson," he muttered.

Carson came to his side, saying merely in his dry voice:

"Mind if I come along, Bud?  You an' me have rid into one thing an'
another more'n just once."

"This is my fight," said Lee coolly.

"Who said it wasn't?" demanded the other querulously.  "Only you ain't
got any call to be a hawg, Bud.  Besides, I got a right to see if
there's a fair break, ain't I?  Say, look at them cow brutes back
yonder!  Don't it beat all how silage, when you use it right, shapes
'em up?"

Few enough words were said as the miles were flung behind them; few
were needed.  A swift glance showed Carson that Lee carried a revolver
in his shirt; his own gun rode plainly in evidence in front of his hip.
What little conversation rose between them was of ranch matters.  They
spoke of success now with confidence.  These two foremen alone could
see the money in late winter and early spring from their cattle and
horses to carry the Blue Lake venture over the rapids.  Then there were
the other resources of the diversified undertaking, the hogs, the prize
stock, the olives, poultry, dairy products.  And soon or late Western
Lumber would pay the price for the timber tract, soon, if they saw that
they had to pay it or lose the forests which they had so long counted
upon.  Lumber values were mounting every day.

Neither man, when it chanced that Bayne Trevors's name was casually
mentioned, suggested: "Why not go to the law?"  For to them it was very
clear that, once in the courts, the man who had played safe would laugh
at them.  Against Judith's oath that he had kidnapped her would stand
Trevors's word that he had done nothing of the kind, coupled with his
carefully established perjured alibi and the lying testimony of the
physician who had visited Judith in the cave.  This man and that might
be rounded up, Shorty and Benny and Poker Face, and if any of them
talked--which perhaps none of them would--at most they would say that
they had no orders from anybody but Quinnion.  And where was Quinnion,
who stood as a buckler between Trevors and prosecution?  And what
buckler in all the world can ever stand between one man and another?

Now and then Carson sent a quick questioning glance toward Lee's
inscrutable face; now and then he sighed, his thoughts his own.  Bud
Lee, knowing his companion as he did, shrewdly guessed that Carson was
hoping that events might so befall that there would be an open,
free-for-all fight and that he might not be forced to play the restless
part of a mere onlooker.  Bud Lee hoped otherwise.

"There's two ways to get a man," said Carson meditatively, out of a
long silence.  "An' both is good ways: with a gun or with your hands."

"Yes," agreed Bud quietly.

"If it works out gun way," continued Carson, still with that
thoughtful, half-abstracted look in his eyes, "it don't hurt to
remember, Bud, that he shoots left-handed an' from the hip."

Lee merely nodded.  Carson did not look up from the bobbing ears of his
horse as he continued:

"If it works out the other way an' it's just fists, it don't hurt to
remember how Trevors put out Scotty Webb last year in Rocky Bend.
Four-footed style, striking with his boot square in Scotty's belly."

Trevors's name was not again referred to even in the vaguest terms.
The road in front of them, at last dropping down into the valley in
which the lumber-camp was, straightened out into a lane that ran
between stumps to the clutter of frame buildings.

"Something doing at the office," offered Carson, as they drew near.
"Directors' meeting, likely."

Two automobiles stood in the road ten steps from the closed door of the
unpretentious shack which bore the printed legend, "Office, Western
Lumber Company."  The big red touring-car certainly belonged to Melvin,
the company's president.  Carson looked curiously at Lee.

Bud dismounted, dropped his horse's reins, shifted the revolver from
his shirt to his belt where it was at once unhidden and loosely held,
ready for a quick draw.  Then he went up the three steps, Carson at his
heels, his gun also unhidden and ready.  From within came voices, one
in protest, Bayne Trevors's ringing out, filled with mastery followed
by a laugh.  Lee set his hand to the door.  Then, only because it was
locked from within, did he knock sharply.

"Who is it?" came the sharp inquiry.  But the man who made it and who
was standing by the door, threw it open.

"What do you want?" he demanded again.  "We're busy."

"I want to see Trevors," said Lee coolly.

"You can't.  He----"

Lee shoved the man aside and strode on.  Carson, close at Lee's heels,
his eyes glittering, stepped a little aside when once he was within the
room and took his place with his back against the wall close to the
door.

It was a big, bare, barn-like room, furnished simply with one long
table and half a dozen chairs.  Here were five men besides Bayne
Trevors.  All except Trevors and the man who had opened the door were
seated; Trevors, at the far end of the room, was standing, an
oratorical arm slowly dropping to his side.

His eyes met Lee's, ran quickly to Carson's, came back to Lee's and
rested there steadily.  Beyond the slow falling of his extended arm, he
did not move.  The muscles of his face hardened, the look of triumph
which just now had stood in his eyes changed slowly and in its place
came an expression that was twin to that in Bud Lee's eyes, just a look
of inscrutability with a hint of watchfulness under it, and the
hardness of agate.  While a man might have drawn a deep breath into his
lungs and expelled it, neither Lee nor Trevor stirred.

"What the devil is this?" demanded Melvin from across the table.
"Hold-up or what?"  He rapped the table resoundingly.

"Shut up!" snapped Carson.  "It's just a two-man play, Melvin: Lee an'
Trevors."

"Oh," said Melvin, and sank back, making no further protest.  He was no
stranger to Carson or to Bud Lee, and he sensed what might be between
Lee and a man like Trevors.  Then shrugging his shoulders, he said
carelessly: "I'm not the man to get in other men's way, and you know
it, Carson.  But you might tell your friend Bud Lee that Bayne Trevors
is rather a big man influentially to mix things with.  I've just
resigned this morning and Trevors is our new president."

"Thanks," returned Carson dryly.  "I don't think that'll make much
difference though, Melvin.  Most likely you'll have two presidents
resigning the same day."

At last Lee spoke.

"Trevors," he said quietly, "maybe the law can't get you.  But I can.
For reasons which both you and I understand you are going to clear out
of this part of the country."

"Am I?" asked Trevors.  The look of his eyes did not alter, the poise
of his big body did not shift, his hands, both at his sides again,
might have been carved in bronze.

Then suddenly he laughed and threw out his arms in a wide gesture and
again dropped them, saying shortly:

"You're playing the game the way I thought you would.  You've got a
gun.  I am unarmed--begin your shooting and be damned to you!"

He even stepped forward, his eyes fearlessly upon Lee's, and settled
his big frame comfortably in a chair by the table.

"Go ahead," he concluded.  "I'm ready."

"That's as it should be!"  Lee's voice was vibrant.  His hard eyes
brightened.  With a quick jerk he drew the revolver from his belt and
dropped it to the floor at Carson's feet.

Carson, though he stooped for it quickly, did not shift his watchful
eyes from Trevors.  For Carson had known more fights in his life than
he had years; he knew men, and looked to Trevor for just the sort of
thing Trevors did.

As Lee stepped forward, Trevors snatched open the drawer of the table
at his side, quick as light, and whipped out the weapon which lay there.

"Go slow, Trevors!" came old Carson's dry voice.  "I've got you covered
already, two-gun style."

Trevors, even with his finger crooking to the trigger, paused and saw
the two guns in Carson's brown hands trained unwaveringly upon him.
There was much deadly determination in Carson's eyes.  Again Trevors
laughed, drawing back his empty hand.

"You yellow dog!" grunted Bud Lee, his tone one of supreme disgust.
"You damned yellow dog!"

Trevors shrugged.

"You see, gentlemen--two to one, with the odds all theirs."

"You lie!" spat out Carson.  "It's one to one an' I see the game goes
square."  He stepped forward, removed the weapon from the table under
Trevors's now suddenly changeful eyes, and went back to his place with
his back to the wall.

"For God's sake!" cried the one nervous man in the room, he who had
opened the door.  "This is murder!"

Melvin smiled, a smile as cheerless as the gleam of wintry starlight on
a bit of glass.

"Will you fight him, Trevors?" he asked.  "With your hands?"

"Yes," answered Trevors.  "Yes."

"Move back the table," commanded Melvin, on his feet in an instant.
"And the chairs.  Get them back."

The table was dragged to the far end of the room; the chairs were piled
upon it.

"Now," and Melvin's watch was in his hand, his voice coming with
metallic coldness, "it's to a finish, is it?  Three-minute rounds, fair
fighting, no----"

But now at last Bayne Trevors's blood was up, his slow anger had
kindled, he was moving his feet restlessly.

"Damn it," he shouted, "whose fight is this but mine and Lee's?  If he
wants a fight, let him come and get it; a man's fight and rules and
rounds and time be damned!  Am I to dance around here and sidestep and
fence just for you to look on? . . . Carson!"

"Well?" said Carson.

"Lee challenges me, doesn't he?  Then I'm the man to name the sort of
fight, am I not?  Is that fair?"

"Meaning just what?" asked Carson.

"Meaning that I am going to get him, get him any way I can!  You let us
fight this out our way, any way, and no interference!"

"Talk to Bud there," rejoined the old cattleman calmly.  "It ain't my
scrap."

"Then, Lee," snapped Trevors, "come on if you want such a fight as
you'd get if you and I were alone in the mountains, with no man to
watch, a fight where a man can use what weapons God gave him, any
weapon he can lay his mind to, his eye to, his hand to!  Or," and at
last the sneer came, "do you want a pair of padded gloves and somebody
to fan you?"

Carson shifted his glance to Bud Lee's face.  Lee merely nodded.

"Then," cried Carson sternly, "go to it!  No man steps in, an' you two
can fight it out like coyotes or mountain-lions for all of me."

"Your word there will be no interference?" asked Trevors.  "For you're
just a fool and not a liar, Carson."

"My word," was the answer.




XXX

THE FIGHT

Bayne Trevors slipped out of his coat and vest, tossing them to the
pile of chairs on the table.  He loosened his soft shirt-collar and was
ready.  All of Bud Lee's simple preparations had been made when he
threw his broad hat aside.

Then came the little pause which is forerunner to the first blow, when
two men measure each other, seeking each to read the other's purpose.

"It ought to be a pretty even break," muttered Melvin, his interest
obviously that of a sporting man who would travel a thousand miles to
see a fight for a champion's belt.  "Trevors has the weight by forty
pounds; Lee has the reach by a hair; both quick-footed; both hard; Lee,
maybe a little harder.  Don't know.  Even break.  The sand will do
it--sand or luck."

The two men drew slowly together.  Their hands came up, their fists
showed glistening knuckles, their jaws were set, their feet moved
cautiously.  Then suddenly Bud Lee sprang in and struck.

Struck tentatively with his left hand that grazed Trevors's cheek and
did no harm; struck terribly with his right hand that drove through the
other man's guard and landed with the little sound of flesh on flesh on
Trevors's chest.  Trevors's grunt and his return blow came together;
both men reeled back a half-pace from the impact, both hung an instant
upon an unsteady balance, both sprang forward.  And as they met the
second time, they battled furiously, clinging together, striking
mercilessly, giving and taking with only the sound of scuffing
boot-heels and soft thuds and little coughing grunts breaking the
silence.  Bayne Trevors gave back a stubborn step, striking right and
left as he did so; caught himself, hurled himself forward so that now
it was Bud Lee who was borne backward by the sheer weight of his
opponent.  There was a gash on Lee's temple from which a thin stream of
blood trickled; Trevors's mouth was bleeding.

"Under his guard, Trevors!" shouted Melvin, on the table now, his face
red, his eyes shining.  "Under, under!"

"Remember, Bud!  Remember!" cried Carson.

"That's it, that's it!"  Melvin clapped his two big hands and came
perilously near falling from his point of vantage as Trevors's fists
drove into Lee's body and Lee went reeling back.  "Give him hell!  A
hundred dollars on Trevors!"

"Take you!" called Carson without withdrawing his eyes from the two
forms reeling up and down, back and forth across the room.

"Done!" cried Melvin.  "Trevors, a hundred dollars----"

He broke off, forgetful of his own words.  The two men met again, clung
to each other in a ludicrous embrace, broke asunder, and Lee struck so
that his fist, landing fair upon Trevors's chin, hurled the bigger man
back, stumbling, falling----

But not fallen.  For his back found the wall and saved him.  As Lee
came on, rushing at him like a man gone mad, Trevors slipped aside and
struck back, for the critical moment gaining time to breathe.  He spat,
wiped his bloody mouth with the back of his hand and again eluded a
rushing attack by ducking and stepping to one side.  And ever, when he
sought to save his own body, he struck back, grunting audibly with the
effort.

They fought everywhere, up and down, back and forth, until every foot
of the floor felt their heavy boots, until each of them was fighting
with all of the force that lay in him, fighting with that swelling
anger which grows at leaps and bounds when two men strive body to body,
when the hot breath of one mingles with the hot breath of the other,
when red rage looking out of one pair of eyes sees its reflection in
the other.  Again and again Melvin muttered: "An even break!  By God,
an even break!"  And over and over did Carson's heart rise in his
breast as he saw Bud Lee drive Trevors, and over and over did his heart
sink when he saw Lee sway and reel under the sledge-hammer blows
beating at face and body.

In the beginning there had been in Bud Lee's mind but the one thought:
This man had laid his hands upon Judith; this man must be punished and
punished by none other in God's wide world than Bud Lee.  Now all cool
thought had fled, leaving just the hot desire to beat at that which
beat at him, to strike down that which strove to strike him down, to
master his enemy, to see the great, powerful body prone at his feet.
Now he was fighting for that simplest, most potent reason in the world,
just because he was fighting.  And, though he knew that he had found a
man as quick and hard and strong as himself, still he told himself,
that he must fight a winning fight--there was some good reason why he
must fight a winning fight.

His whole body was bruised and battered and sore.  A glancing blow now
shot him through with pain.  Trevors knew how to put his weight behind
his blows, and his weight was well over two hundred pounds.  It was
like being hammered with a two-hundred-pound sledge.

Give and take it was from the first blow, with none of the finesse of a
boxers' match, with less thought of escaping punishment than of
inflicting it.  More than once had Bud Lee felt that he was falling
only to catch his balance and come back at Trevors; more than once had
Trevors gone reeling backward, smashing into the wall.  Many a time did
Melvin count his money won and lost.  And Carson, crouching now, tense,
eager, a little fearful, muttered constantly to himself.

"They've both got the sand!" grunted Melvin.  "Which one draws the
luck?"

But luck stood by and did not enter into the battle that grew ever
hotter as Bud Lee's and Trevors's gorge rose higher at every blow.  It
was to be simply the best man wins, and none of the six men who watched
knew from the beginning until the end who the best man was.  What
tricks Trevors knew, he used, and they were met by what cunning lay in
Bud Lee; what strength, what resistance, what power to endure was each
panting body was called upon to the reserve.

Already the spring had gone out of their steps.  They came at each
other for the most part more slowly, more cautiously, but more
determined not to give over.  Faces glistening with sweat, grimy with
the dust their pounding feet beat up from the floor, the roots of Lee's
hair red where with a bloody hand he had pushed it back, Trevors's lips
swollen and ugly, they fought on until the men who looked at them
wondered just where lay the limits upon which each depended.

"Lee's tough," Carson whispered to himself.  "Riding every day an'
working . . .  Trevors has been setting in a chair. . . .  Bud'll wear
him out. . . .  My God!  Bud, look out!  Foot work. . . ."

Yes, foot work, but not as Carson expected it, not the thing Bud Lee
looked for when he sensed rather than read in Trevors's eyes that a
fresh trick was coming.  He was ready for a lifted boot, and, instead,
Trevors, rushing down upon him, threw grappling arms about him,
heedless of the fist smashing again into his cut lips.  Trevors doubled
and twisted and got a grip about Lee's middle, at him, seeking to throw
him.

Down they went together with no particular advantage to either man.
But as they rolled apart and Lee threw out an arm to lift himself
Trevors saw the chance he sought and mightily, brutally, cursing as he
jumped up for it, he drove the heel of his boot down upon Lee's hand on
the floor.

From Lee's white lips burst an involuntary groan as it seemed to him
that every bone in his hand had been crushed, from Carson a choking cry
of rage, from Trevors a short laugh as he called out sharply:

"Hands off, Carson!  Our fight--any way----"

Again on their feet, Trevors a second first and with the advantage
clearly his now rushed Lee, seeking to finish what he had begun.  And
Bud Lee, his face white and drawn, looking ghastly with the blood
smears across it, moving swiftly but not swiftly enough, went down,
Trevors's weight against him, Trevors's fist beating into his side just
below the arm-pit.

"Five hundred on Trevors!" shouted Melvin.  Carson did not hear him.

"At him, Bud, go at him!" he was crying over and over.  "That's the
last dirty trick he's got.  Get him, Buddie.  Oh, for Gawd's sake,
Buddie, go get him!"

Trevors was upon him again, but Lee slipped aside, even rolled over,
managed to get to his feet.  Again Trevors bore down upon him, a new
leaping fire in his eyes.  Again, though barely in time, Bud Lee
slipped away from him.  He drew Trevors's harsh laugh after him and
Trevors's questing, eager fists.  Lee put up his arm, his right arm,
guarding his face, and drew away, back and back.  Carson was almost
whimpering, calling whiningly:

"Stand up to him, Bud!  Oh, go get him, Buddie!"

Still up and down the room they went, Trevors rushing at Lee, Lee
taking what blows he must, striking out but little, seeking now only to
pull himself together, to get his head clear of daze and dizziness.
Stepping backward, he again got the wall at his shoulders, slipped to
one side, strove only to get the empty room behind him, succeeded and
let Trevors drive him, drive until again his back was to a wall.

"Run away, will you?" panted Trevors.  "I've got you, damn you.  Got
you right."

Lee didn't answer.  He was thinking dully that Bayne Trevors was near
telling the truth, that Bud Lee was almost beaten--almost.  That was as
far as a gentleman ever went--just to that desperate "almost beaten."
Not quite.  No! not quite.  Never that.

Both men were nearly spent; Carson saw that while he cursed softly in
his corner; Melvin saw it and watched for the end, wondering just how
it would come.  Trevors should swing for the point of the jaw, put all
that was in him into a final, smashing blow, beat through an
insufficient guard, do it now, quickly.  For both Carson and Melvin saw
another thing, a thing which both had sensed at the outset: Bud Lee was
harder than Bayne Trevors.  Lee, slipping away at every step was
getting something back which had nearly gone from him; Trevors was
breathing in noisy jerks; save for the vital fact that he now had two
hands to Bud Lee's one, Trevors was showing more signs of weariness
than Lee.

"Bud'll get him--somehow," whispered Carson.  "Good old Bud.  Somehow."

What Carson and Melvin sensed Trevors knew.  He saw that Lee was having
less trouble in eluding him now, that Lee's feet were quicker, lighter
than his, that Lee was beginning to strike back viciously at him, and
when the blow landed, Trevors's big body rocked, shot through with
pain.  There came to him the thought which was Melvin's, but it came in
Trevors's way: Now, quickly, before Lee was ready for it, must come the
end.  So, for the third time that day Bayne Trevors, with much at
stake, resorted to "what weapons God gave him, what weapons he could
lay his mind to, his eyes to, his hands to"--his feet to.  Resorting to
the old trick which came up from South American ports in disreputable
windjammers, which is known to the San Francisco waterfront, he raised
a heavy boot, striking for Lee's stomach, seeking with one low,
horrible blow to double up his already handicapped antagonist in
writhing pain on the floor.

"An' I gave my word!" bellowed Carson, the sweat on his own tortured
brow.  "Oh, my Gawd."

But just that one brief instant too late did Bayne Trevors lift his
foot.  For Bud Lee had expected this, never had forgotten it, had
prayed within his soul that the man he fought would use it.  Just by
that fraction of time which has no name was he quicker than Trevors,
and he knew it.  Now, as he read the sinister purpose in Trevors's
glaring eyes, as he glimpsed the raised boot as it left the floor, he
lowered his own head, averted it ever so little, stooped--and his hand
closed like locked iron about the calf of Trevors's leg.  A stifled cry
from the bulkier man, a little grunt of effort from Lee, Lee straining,
heaving mightily, and Trevors went back, toppled, fought for his
slipping balance, and fell.  As he went down Lee was upon him, Lee's
arm about his neck, Lee's weight flung upon him, Lee holding his body
between a powerful pair of knees which rode him as they rode daily some
struggling Blue Lake colt.

Now Bud's left arm, defying the agony of a broken hand, was around him,
Lee's legs were about the frantically fighting body, and at last Lee's
right hand went its sure way to the thick, bared, pulsing throat.
Trevors's right arm was caught at his side, held there by the body upon
his.  His left hand beat at Lee's face, struck and battered again only
to come back like a steam-driven piston to hammer again.  But Bud Lee's
pain-racked body clung on, his thumb and fingers sank and sank deeper
into the corded muscles of the heaving throat, crooked like talons,
white and hard and relentless.

Trevors's eyes were terrible, filled with hatred, red-flecked with
rage.  He sought, with a great sudden heave, to roll over.  But he
could not shake off the legs which were like stubborn tentacles about
him, could not free his throat of the tensing clutch.  He tore at the
wrist, smote again at Lee's head, set his own hand to Lee's throat.  In
an instant his hand was back at the hand worrying him, but he was
unable to drag it away.

His face went white, flamed red, grew purplish.  His eyes bulged up at
Lee's, his deep chest contracted spasmodically.  Lee, summoning the
force within him, drove thumb and fingers deeper.

"Got enough?" he panted.

For the last time Trevors strained with him and they rolled like
death-locked mountain-lions.  But still Lee's left arm was about
Trevors's neck, his legs about the tossing body, his hand at Trevors's
throat.  Trevors's breath caught, failed him. . . .

Then and then only did a new look come into the bulging eyes.  A look
of more than fear, of utter, desperate terror.  Trevors threw up his
hand weakly, then let it fall so that it struck the floor heavily, a
dead weight.

Lee's grip at the strangling throat relaxed.  But he did not move his
hand.

"Got enough?" he panted again.

The answer came brokenly, weakly, almost inarticulate.  But it did come
and the men drawn close heard it:

"Yes."

"You'll get out of the country?"

"Yes."

Bud Lee drew back and rose, going to the door swiftly.  He stooped for
his hat and passed out.  And as Bayne Trevors got unsteadily to his
feet and sank slumping into the chair offered him, two big tears formed
in his eyes and rolled down his cheeks.  The first tears in many a
year, the tears of a strong man broken for the first time in his life.

"Sand did it!"  grunted Melvin.  "Just sand, Carson."

"I'll stick aroun' an' see he moves on, Bud," Carson followed Lee to
say.  "Oh, he'll go.  But I'll just tell him how the boys is headed
this way by now an' it's tar an' feathers for him if he don't mosey
right along.  That's something he couldn't stand right now.  An',
Bud----"

He put out his hand and locked Lee's in a grip that made the sore
fingers wince.  Then, swinging upon the heel of his boot, he went back
to collect a hundred dollars from Melvin and help Bayne Trevors shape
his plans.

But Bud Lee did not wait.  He was on his horse, swaying a little, an
arm caught in a rude sling, glad to be out in the late sunlight.

"Fog along, little horse," he was saying dully.  "Fog right along.
She's waiting, little horse.  Judith is waiting!  Think of that.
That's right--fog right along."




CHAPTER XXXI

YES, JUDITH WAS WAITING . . .

At the old cabin above the lake Bud Lee dismounted.  His hand in its
rude sling was paining him terribly, demanding some sort of first-aid
treatment.  To-morrow he could take it to a doctor; perhaps in an hour
or so he could get Tripp to look to it; just now he must do what he
could for it himself with hot water and strips torn from an old shirt.

The hand treated first, it was slow, tedious business seeking to remove
the traces of his recent encounter with Trevors; and, though he could
wash his face and manage a change of clothes, there was nothing dapper
about the result.  But at length, shaking his head at the bruised face
looking at him from his bit of mirror, he went out to his horse and
rode down the trail that led to the ranch headquarters.  Judith was
waiting for him--that was vastly more important than the fact that he
had a crippled hand and a cut or so upon his face.

Night had descended, serene with stars.  He wondered if the boys were
back yet from the lumber-camp.  He had met them, as Carson had
predicted he would, riding in a close-packed, silent, ominous body.  He
felt assured that they would find no work for them to do at the
company's office, that Carson was right and Trevors would "be on his
way."  But he stopped at the bunk-house.

No, the boys hadn't come in yet.  But there was a message for Lee, just
received by the cook.  It was from Greene, the forester, brief and to
the point:

Greene had lost no time in finding the sheriff of the adjoining county
at White Rock and in going with him to the cave.  They had found
Quinnion.  He was dead, the manner of his death clearly indicated.  For
he lay at the foot of the cliffs straight below the cave's mouth, his
face terribly torn and scratched by a mad woman's nails, the mad woman
herself lying huddled and still close beside him.  He had allowed the
escape of her captive; she had accused him after the two of them had
gone back to the cavern, had thrown herself upon him, tearing at his
face, and the two had fallen.  Mother and son?  Lee shuddered, hoping
within his heart that Judith had been mistaken.  It was too horrible.

But, such is youth, such is love.  Bud Lee promptly forgot both Chris
Quinnion and Mad Ruth as he went through the lilacs to the house.  He
remembered how Marcia had flown once to Pollock Hampton when he had
made a hero of himself, how again just to-day she had gone swiftly to
him because he had made a fool of himself and because it seemed she
loved him.  In due time there was going to be a wedding at Blue Lake
ranch.  A wedding!  Just one?  Lee hurried on.


Yes, Judith was waiting for him.  She was there in the living-room,
curled up on a great couch, lifting her eyes expectantly as his step
sounded on the veranda.  A wonderfully gowned, transcendently lovely
Judith; a Judith of bare white arms, round and warm and rich in their
tender curves; a Judith softly, alluringly feminine even in the eyes of
Bud Lee, no longer theorist; a Judith whose filmy gown clung
lingeringly to her like a sun-shot mist, a Judith whose tender mouth
was a red flower, whose eyes were Aphrodite's own, glorious, dawn-gray,
soft with the light shining in them, the unhidden light of love for the
man who came toward her swiftly; the Judith he had first held in his
arms and kissed.

He came in quickly, his heart singing.  The color suddenly ran up hot
and vivid in the girl's cheeks.  Standing over her he put out his hand.
But she slipped her own hands behind her.

"Good evening, Mr. Lee," said Judith brightly.  "Really, you have taken
your time in making your first call.  Won't you sit down?"

"No," said Bud Lee gravely.  "I'll take mine standing, please!"

"Like a man to be shot at dawn?" cried Judith.  "Dear me, Mr. Lee, that
sounds so tragic.  What, pray, are you taking?"

"A new job," said Lee.  "I've come to tell you that just being horse
foreman doesn't suit me any longer.  What you need and need right away
is a general manager.  That's what I want to be, your general manager,
Judith.  For life!"

Judith laughed softly, happily.  Her hands flew out to him like two
little homing birds, and she followed them--home.

"You'll find your work cut out for you, Mr. Lee," she told him.

[Illustration: "You'll find your work cut out for you."]

"It's the kind of work I want," answered Bud Lee.

Then suddenly her arms went about his neck and tears sprang into her
eyes and she set her lips to the cut he had sought to cover with his
hair, and took his sore, swathed hand tenderly into her own two hands,
laying it against her cheek.

"Carson telephoned me," she whispered, her lips trembling all of a
sudden.  "He told me how Trevors fought . . . and how you fought!  And
he was half crying over the telephone, he was so proud of you.  And I
am proud of you!  And--oh, Bud Lee, Bud Lee, I love you so!"


From without came the sound of the Blue Lake boys returning, Carson at
their head.  Riding close together they were singing, their voices
floating through the night in an old cowboy song.  Mrs. Simpson heard
and ran out into the courtyard to listen.  Marcia and Pollock Hampton,
lost to all save each other in the shadows far down the veranda,
listened, and Marcia clapped her hands.  The voices were to be heard
from afar, the strong voices of a score of men.  The strange thing is
that neither Judith nor Bud Lee heard; that neither had the vaguest
consciousness just then that there were in all the world any other,
mortals than--Judith and Bud Lee.