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THE TRAIL OF CONFLICT

by

EMILIE LORING







Publishers
Grosset & Dunlap
New York

Copyright 1922 by the Penn Publishing Company

By Arrangement with Little, Brown & Company

Made in the U. S. A.




CONTENTS

   CHAPTER I

   CHAPTER II

   CHAPTER III

   CHAPTER IV

   CHAPTER V

   CHAPTER VI

   CHAPTER VII

   CHAPTER VIII

   CHAPTER IX

   CHAPTER X

   CHAPTER XI

   CHAPTER XII

   CHAPTER XIII

   CHAPTER XIV

   CHAPTER XV

   CHAPTER XVI

   CHAPTER XVII

   CHAPTER XVIII

   CHAPTER XIX

   CHAPTER XX

   CHAPTER XXI

   CHAPTER XXII




CHAPTER I


"That is your ultimatum, Glamorgan? My boy for your girl or you scoop up
my possessions and transfuse them into yours?"

Peter Courtlandt tapped the arm of his chair nervously as he regarded
the man who sat opposite in front of the fire. The two men were in
striking contrast. Courtlandt seemed a component part of the room in
which they sat, a room which with its dull, velvety mahogany, its costly
Eastern rugs, its rare old portraits and book-lined walls, proclaimed
generations of ancestors who had been born to purple and fine linen. He
was spare and tall. His features might have served as the model for the
portrait of Nelson in the Metropolitan Museum. His eyes were darkly
luminous, the eyes of a dreamer; his white hair curled in soft rings
over his head; his hands were long and patrician. Glamorgan was built on
the Colossus plan, large head, heavy features into which the elements
had ground a dull color, a huge body without the least trace of fat.
Only his eyes were small. They looked as though they had been forgotten
until the last moment, as though the designer had then hastily poked
holes beneath the Websterian brows to insert two brilliant green beads.
He was a handsome man in a clean-souled, massive way; moreover he looked
to be a person who would crash through obstacles and win out by sheer
persistence.

He flung the remains of his cigar into the fire as he answered
Courtlandt. With the cushion-tipped fingers of his large hands spread
upon his knees he bent forward and fixed his interrogator with his
emerald gaze.

"That statement sounds raw but it's true. I've been playing my cards for
what you call a scoop for some time. Fifty years ago my mother brought
her family from Wales to this country. We had come from the coal region.
Coal was all the older children knew, so we drifted to Pennsylvania.
Until I was seventeen I picked coal. Occasionally I saw the stockholders
who came to inspect the mines. One day your father brought you. You
passed me as though I were a post, but right then and there I learned
the difference between mere money and money with family behind it. That
day I laid my plans for life. I'd make money, Lord, how I'd pile it up;
I'd cut out the dissipations of my kind, I'd marry the most refined girl
who'd have me, and I'd have one of my children, at least, marry into a
family like yours. My grandchildren should have ancestors who counted.
Well, I got the girl. She had good Virginia stock behind her. Geraldine
was born and after five years Margaret, and then my wife died. I began
to pile. I denied myself everything but books, that my girls could be
fitted to fill the position I was determined they should have. I----"

Peter Courtlandt's clear, high-bred voice interrupted. There was a trace
of amusement in his tone:

"Did you never think that your daughters might develop plans of their
own? That they might refuse to be disposed of so high-handedly?"

"Margaret may, but Jerry won't. Since she was a little thing she's been
brought up with the idea of marrying for social position; she knows that
my heart is set on it. Why, I used to visit her at school dressed in my
roughest clothes, that the difference between me and the other fathers
would soak in thoroughly. Oh well, smile. I acknowledge that the idea is
an obsession with me; every man has some weak joint; that's mine. I'll
say for Jerry that she never once flinched from owning up to me as hers.
I've seen the color steal to her eyes when I appeared in my rough
clothes, but she'd slip her hand into mine, for all the world as though
she were protecting me, cling tight to it, and introduce me to her
friends. The girls and teachers loved her, or she couldn't have got away
with it. Her friends were among the best at college. Oh, she'll marry to
please me. Even if she didn't want to, she'd do it to give Peg a chance;
she's crazy about her, but I know her, she won't go back on her old Dad.
Besides, Courtlandt, I have a firm conviction that a person can put
through any worthy thing on which he is determined. How else do you
account for the seeming miracles men got away with in the World War? The
test is, how much do you want it? I've gone on that principle all my
life, and it's worked, I tell you, it's worked!"

He waved away the box of cigars Courtlandt offered and pulled a
vicious-looking specimen of the weed from his pocket. He stuck it
between his teeth before he resumed:

"After I left the coal-mines I beat it to Texas, got an option on land
there and began to make my pile in the oil-fields. I worked like a slave
days and studied nights. I didn't mean to give Jerry cause to be ashamed
of her Dad when she did land. Then I set my lawyer to looking up the
affairs of the Courtlandt family. I found that you had a boy, handsome,
upstanding and decent. I had him well watched, I assure you. I wasn't
throwing Jerry away on a regular guy even if I was stuck on your
family. I found also that your money was getting scarcer than hen's
teeth. I took the mortgage on this house, on every piece of property in
your estate. I knew when the boy chucked his law course and went into
the army. I had him watched while he was overseas and I know that he
came through that seething furnace of temptation straight. On the day
your boy marries my girl and brings her to this house to live I'll turn
your property over to you free and clear. It is in fine condition and
will give you a handsome income. It won't be sufficient for you and the
young people to live as I want to see them, but I'll take care of that.
You've known me now for three months. You know that I'm absolutely on
the level in my business dealings. What say?"

Courtlandt rose impetuously and stood with his back to the fire, one arm
resting on the carved mantel.

"Good Lord, man, I'm not the one to say. It isn't my life that's being
tied up. This property can go to the----" he stopped, and looked about
the beautiful room. He stared for a moment at the portrait of a
seventeenth century Courtlandt which hung opposite, then up at the
beautiful face of the woman in the painting set like a jewel in the dark
paneling above the mantel. Her eyes looked back at him, gravely,
searchingly. His voice was husky as he added quickly, "I'll talk with
Steve to-night and if he----"

Glamorgan nodded approvingly.

"I'm glad you named him Stephen. It was Stephanus Courtlandt whose
estate was erected into the lordship and manor of Courtlandt by William
the third, wasn't it? You see I know your family history backward. I
never buy a pig in a poke," with rough frankness. He rose and stretched
to his great height. The man watching him thought of the Russian bear
which had roused and shaken himself with such tragic results. "Why don't
you and Steve run in town to-night and have supper with Jerry and me
after the theatre?"

"Thank you; if Steve has no engagement we will."

Glamorgan thrust his hands deep into his pockets and glowered at the man
by the mantel.

"I'll leave you now to deal with him. You might mention to Steve the
fact that if he refuses my offer I foreclose within forty-eight hours."

The blood rushed to Courtlandt's face as though it would burst through
the thin, ivory skin. He touched a bell, his voice was cold with
repression as he answered the threat:

"I'll talk with Stephen this evening. Judson, Mr. Glamorgan's coat," to
the smooth-haired, smooth-faced, smooth-footed butler who answered the
ring.

The big man paused a moment, his little green eyes flames of suspicion.

"You'll let me hear from you to-morrow? No shilly-shallying, mind. A
straight 'Yes' or 'No.'"

"A straight 'Yes' or 'No' to-morrow it is, Glamorgan. Good-night!
Judson, when Mr. Stephen comes in ask him to come to me here."

After his guest had departed Courtlandt snapped off the lights and
plunged the room in darkness save for the soft glow from the blazing
logs. He sank into a wing-chair before the fire and rested his head on
his thin hand. What a mess he had made of things. He had lost his
inheritance, not through extravagance, but because he had not been
enough of a business man to steer his financial ship clear of reefs
during the last years of swiftly shifting values. To have the Courtlandt
property swept away! It was impossible. He didn't care for himself but
for Steve and Steve's children. He was a liar! He did care for himself.
It would break his heart to have this old home, which had been the
manor, fall into the hands of an erstwhile coal-picker. The town house
was different. The location of that had followed the trail of fashion,
it had no traditions, but this----He rose and paced the floor then
returned to his old place before the mantel and listened. There was the
sound of whistling in the hall, virile, tuneful, the sort that brings a
smile to the lips of the most sophisticated. "The Whistling Lieut.!"
Courtlandt remembered Steve had been called in the army. He dropped his
head to his extended arm and stared unseeingly down at the flames. What
would he say----?

"Holloa, Sir Peter! Fire-worshiping?" a clear voice called buoyantly.
"You're as dark in here as though you expected an air-raid. Let's light
up and be cheerio, what say?" The speaker pressed a button and flooded
the room with soft light. "Judson said you wanted me. Shall I stay now
or come back when I've changed?"

Courtlandt senior straightened and looked at his son with the appraising
eyes of a stranger. He admitted to himself regretfully that the boy
looked older than his twenty-seven years. He was tall and lean and
lithe, not an ounce of superfluous flesh on him. He stood with his feet
slightly apart, a golf-bag dragging from one arm, his other hand in his
coat pocket. His black hair had a rebellious kink, his eyes were dark
blue, his nose clean-cut, his lips and chin hinted at a somewhat
formidable strength of purpose. Courtlandt's courage oozed as he
regarded those last features.

"I--I merely wanted to ask you to give me this evening, Steve.
I--I--well, there's business to be talked over."

The son looked back at his father. A slight frown wrinkled his broad
forehead. He started to speak, then lifted the golf-bag and went toward
the door.

"The evening is yours, Sir Peter."

His father listened till his whistle trailed off into silence in the
upper regions. His dark eyes clouded with regret. Steve had adapted his
selection to dirge tempo.

As father and son smoked and drank their coffee in front of the library
fire after dinner, Peter Courtlandt found it even more difficult to
approach the distasteful subject. He talked nervously of politics, labor
conditions and the latest play. His son watched him keenly through
narrowed lids. He emptied and filled his pipe thoughtfully as he waited
for a break in his father's flood of words. When it came he dashed in.

"What's the business you wanted to talk with me about, Sir Peter? Fire
away and let's get it over. Anything wrong?"

The elder man bent forward to knock the ashes from his cigar. The
gravity of Steve's "Sir Peter" had moved him curiously. It was the name
his wife had called him, which the boy had adopted when he was too
grown-up to say "Daddy." Silent seconds lengthened into minutes as he
sat there. The quiet of the room was subtly portentous. There was a hint
of unsteadiness in his voice when he finally spoke.

"It's all wrong, Steve. Everything we have is mortgaged to the
gunwales."

"But I thought----" The end of the sentence was submerged in stunned
amazement.

"That we couldn't go broke? Well, we have. We lose everything we have
to-morrow unless----" He dropped his head on his hand.

"Unless what?" prompted Steve.

Courtlandt leaned his white head against the back of his chair and
looked at his son with haggard eyes. His voice was strained, humiliated.

"Unless--unless you marry Glamorgan's daughter."

"What!"

The exclamation brought Steve Courtlandt to his feet. The color surged
to his dark hair then ebbed slowly back again. His lips whitened.

"Look here, Sir Peter, you don't know what you're saying! You've
forgotten that we are living in the twentieth century. Marry Glamorgan's
daughter! I've never seen her. I didn't know the old piker had a
daughter. What does he know about me? I've never spoken to him more
than twice and then when I couldn't help it. I don't like him,
he's----"

"Sit down, Steve. Stop raging up and down the room. I want to tell you
all about it."

The younger man flung the cigarette he had just lighted into the red
coals and dropped into a chair. He kept his eyes on the fading, flaring
lights of the fire as his father told of his interview with Glamorgan.
The muscles of his jaw tightened, his blue eyes smoldered as he
listened.

"What sort of a girl would let herself be traded like that?" he demanded
when his father paused.

"That is for you to find out, Steve. I started to have Judson turn the
Welshman out of the house after he made his astounding proposition, to
tell him to go to the devil--then I thought of you. That I had no right
to fling away your inheritance without giving you a voice in the matter.
The Courtlandts have held some of the property since the first of the
family came from Holland in the seven----"

"Oh, I know all about those old boys; it is what their descendant is up
against that's worrying me. Have you tried Uncle Nick?"

The slow color tinged Peter Courtlandt's face.

"Yes. I've appealed to Nicholas Fairfax twice. But you know as well as I
that he has never forgiven your mother and me for not letting him have
you six months out of every year. He contended that as you, the only son
of his sister, were to be his heir, he should have an equal share in
bringing you up. Your mother and I couldn't see it that way and so----"

"But I spent every summer there until I went overseas--and, oh boy, how
I worked. While my pals were vacationing I was ranching, and ranching
under Old Nick is no vacation. I'm as capable of running the Double O
now as Ranlett is. Lord, the nights I've come in so stiff that I'd fall
on the bed with my boots on. I'd got to shoot and rope, ride and
round-up, drive a tractor, know the difference in the quality of the
wheat-seed and the grades of cattle. Nick wasn't contented with my doing
things as well as his outfit, I'd got to go them one better. But I loved
the life and I'll confess that I love Old Nick in spite of his fool
ideas."

"I'll try him once more, Steve--but----"

"I'll be darned if you will. Isn't there some other way we can raise
money until I----"

"My boy, what can you do? What can you earn at present? You finished
your law course after you came out of the army, but it will be several
years, as times are now, before you can more than support yourself."

"You don't think I'd touch a penny of the old coal-picker's money even
if I married the daughter, do you?" interrupted Steve furiously. "I'd
break stones in the road first. Look here, be honest now, what would you
do if we lost this place?"

"Blow my brains out," with passionate impulsiveness; then as he saw his
son's face whiten and his jaw set, he realized the effect of his words.
"No, no, Steve, of course I didn't mean that. The Courtlandts have never
been quitters. I swear I wouldn't break the record. Forget that
sob-stuff. You and I would go somewhere together and I--perhaps I'll
keep younger if I have less leisure."

"When are you to give Glamorgan his answer?" Steve seemed the elder of
the two now, seemed to have taken the reins into his hands.

"To-morrow."

"To-morrow! Before the girl sees me? Before she has been given a chance
to decide whether the encumbrance which goes with the name and social
position is worth her thirty pieces of silver?"

"Try not to be bitter, Steve. Remember that when a big man has an
obsession it's in proportion to his bigness, and you'll have to admit
that Glamorgan's a giant in his world. You have a chance to see the girl
before to-morrow. Her father suggested that we run in for supper with
them to-night after the theatre. I have a feeling that the daughter is
willing to sacrifice herself to make the great dream of her father's
life come true, just as you are willing to sacrifice yourself for
me--no, don't deny it,"--as his son impetuously opened his lips. "I
haven't lived with you for twenty-seven years without knowing some of
your mental processes, my boy. If it were only myself I'd tell Glamorgan
to go to the devil, but the property will be yours after me and your
children----"

Steve interrupted with a short laugh.

"My children! It's going some to make a mess of my life for prospective
children. Take it from me, they'll keep on playing with the angels for
some time yet."

"Then don't make a mess of your life. Is--is there any other girl? Are
you in love, Steve?"

His son thrust his hands hard into the pockets of his dinner coat.

"I've never been swept off my feet at the sight of a girl's face, if you
mean that according-to-fiction stuff. Before I went across I thought
Felice Peyton----"

"Felice! But she married Phil Denbigh while you were away and now----"
He stopped in perturbed realization of what had happened.

"And now they've separated and Felice is cynical and hard. I know that.
I never really approved of her in my heart, her ideas, her ideals--oh
well, she hasn't any; she wouldn't recognize an ideal if it tapped her
on the shoulder. Her plan of life wasn't mine, but somehow I was
eternally tagging after her. Moth and candle stuff, I suppose."

Courtlandt stared into the fire for a moment before he raised his head
and looked at his son.

"We won't go on with this, Steve. It's taking too many chances. I'll
tell Glamorgan in the morning that he can foreclose and be----"

"No you won't, at least not until we have met the daughter. Have
you ever seen her?" then as his father shook his head, "I'll give
you a close-up of the lady. Amazon variety--look at the size of
Glamorgan--little eyes, prominent teeth, a laugh that would raise the
dead and, oh boy,--I'll bet she's kittenish." He glanced at the tall
clock in the corner. "I'll tell Judson to have the sedan brought round.
We'll have just time to array ourselves for the sacrifice, and motor to
town before the theatres are out."

As the older man's eyes, turbulent with affection and anxiety met his,
he exclaimed with a sporting attempt at a laugh:

"I'll bet a hat, sir, that when the lady sees you nothing short of being
the Mrs. Courtlandt will satisfy her soaring ambition. She won't stand
for being merely Mrs. Stephen. By the way, what's the prospect's name?"

"Geraldine. Her father calls her Jerry." Courtlandt senior laughed for
the first time that evening. "That's a great idea of yours, Steve. I
hadn't thought of offering myself. Perhaps as she only wants the name
and position she'd take me and let you off. Your mother would
understand," with a tender smile at the woman over the mantel. Her
lovely eyes seemed to answer his. For an instant a look of unutterable
yearning saddened the man's eyes--then he straightened and looked at his
son.

"But no, Glamorgan expressly stipulated that he'd have you for a
son-in-law or----"

The light died out of Stephen Courtlandt's face as he muttered furiously
under his breath:

"Glamorgan be hanged!"




CHAPTER II


The telephone in the luxurious living-room of their suite rang sharply
as Daniel Glamorgan and his daughter entered. The girl looked at the
instrument as though she suspected a concealed bomb in its mysterious
depths, then appealingly at her father. He took down the receiver.

"Yes. All right. Send them up." He replaced it with a click. His grim
mouth softened into a self-congratulatory smile. "Courtlandt and his son
are down-stairs," he announced. "Did you order supper, Jerry?"

"Yes, Dad. The table is laid in the breakfast-room. Leon will serve it
when you ring. I'll--I'll go to my room and leave my wrap."

His green eyes dilated with pride as he regarded her.

"You look like a princess to-night, my girl."

"I feel like a princess. They're usually disposed of to a title or some
little thing like that, aren't they?" she asked with a laugh which held
a sob of terror.

"Look here, Jerry. You're not losing your nerve? You're not going back
on me, are you?"

She met his eyes squarely.

"I am not, Dad. The fewer ancestors one has behind one the better
ancestor one must make of oneself. When I make a promise I make it to
keep. I promised you that if Stephen Courtlandt asked me to marry him
I'd say 'Yes.'"

Glamorgan's eyes glistened with satisfaction.

"You have the right idea, Jerry. Here they are now," as the bell rang.

"You meet them. I'll take off my wrap--I'll----" In sudden panic the
girl entered her room and closed the door behind her. She leaned against
it. Her heart beat like mad. In the process of making the dream of her
father's life come true was she wrecking her own life? But he had been
such a wonderful father--and--to be honest with herself, the romance and
tradition and social standing of the Courtlandt name made an alluring
appeal to her. She had envied friends at school and college for their
careless references to their grandfathers; her earliest recollection was
of a room full of hot, grimy miners in a little home near the
coal-fields. To marry into the Courtlandt family in America would be
commensurate with marrying into a dukedom in England. She breathed a
fervent prayer of thanksgiving that her father's ambition hadn't urged
him in that direction, also that character had counted with him before
social position when he selected his prospective son-in-law.

Her shimmering wrap dropped to the floor as she crossed to her
dressing-table and gravely appraised her reflection in the mirror. Was
the girl staring so intently back at her fitted to preside over the
Courtlandt Manor? She tested every detail of her appearance. Her orchid
evening gown set off her arms and the curves of her white shoulders to
perfection. Her hair was of glistening brown, brown shot through with
red and gold where its soft waves caught the light. Her eyes were brown,
large and dark and velvety, like deep pools reflecting a myriad tiny
gold stars now when she was deeply moved and excited. Her mouth seemed
fashioned for laughter. The lips were vivid and exquisitely curved, and
when they smiled a deep dimple dented one cheek. Her ringless hands were
slender and beautifully formed.

"Dad says that you have Mother to thank for your hands," she told the
looking-glass girl. She lingered before the mirror, aimlessly moving the
gold and enameled appointments on the dressing-table. She dreaded to
enter the next room. Her life might be changed for all time, doubtless
would be, for she would marry Stephen Courtlandt if he wanted to save
his estate enough to take her on her own conditions. She flushed then
whitened. Perhaps he wouldn't want her after all. Well, that would soon
be settled. Better to have the awkward meeting over as soon as possible.
She picked up a large feather fan that was a shade deeper than her gown.
As she touched it she felt armed for any contingency, and not without
reason, for a fan in the hands of a beautiful woman is as effective as a
machine-gun directed by an expert rifleman. Jerry swept her vis-à-vis a
profound courtesy.

"I'll say you'll do, Mrs. Stephen Courtlandt," she encouraged with gay
inelegance. The laugh still lingered on her lips and lurked in her eyes
as she entered the living-room.

The three men who had been looking into the fire turned. The girl's
heart went out to the elder Courtlandt in a rush of sympathy. His head
was so high, his face so white, his eyes so full of hurt pride. The
younger man's face was quite as white, his head quite as high, but there
was an aggressive set to lips and jaw, a mixture of amazement and
antagonism in his eyes, then something else flamed there which she
couldn't diagnose as easily.

"He looks stunned. What did he expect, the pig-faced lady?" the girl
thought contemptuously even as she advanced with extended hand and
smiled up at the elder Courtlandt.

"Mr. Courtlandt, you seem like an old friend, my father has spoken of
you so often," she welcomed in her charming, well-bred voice which had a
curiously stimulating lilt in it.

The color rushed back to Peter Courtlandt's face, the expression in his
eyes changed to one of relief and honest admiration as he bent over her
hand.

"I realize now how much I have lost in not accepting your father's
invitation to call before. Will you permit me to present my son,
Stephen?"

Jerry crushed down an hysterical desire to laugh. It was so ridiculous,
the casual, pleased-to-meet-you attitude of the three persons whom her
father was moving at his will about the checker-board of life. She
murmured something in which the words "a pleasure" were alone audible.
Steve acknowledged them stiffly. Her eyes met his with their faint
scornful smile which she felt masked so much. They held hers for a
second before she turned to her father.

"Shall we go out to supper?" With engaging camaraderie she slipped her
hand under Peter Courtlandt's arm. The expression of his eyes when they
had first met hers had won her tender heart. "We'll let the younger set
follow us," she laughed. He shook his head.

"I defy Steve to feel as young as I feel now," he asserted with a
gallant promptness which delighted her.

At supper she devoted herself to him. He laughed and jested with her and
but for his white hair looked almost as young as his son. Steve, angered
by her persistent avoidance of himself, broke into their conversation
with a banality which caused his father to look at him in amazed
incredulity.

"Are you enjoying New York, Miss Glamorgan?"

Jerry regarded him for a moment from under long lashes before, with a
smile which she was sure made him want to shake her, she answered:

"Immensely; but this is not my first winter in the city. Dad and I have
made our headquarters here since I grew up." She turned to his father,
but Steve refused to be ignored.

"Do you like it?"

"Like it? I love it! It's so big, so beautiful and--and--and so faulty,"
her pose of indifference had fallen from her like a discarded veil; she
was all eager enthusiasm. "I--I like to be where there are many people.
I would starve for companionship, not food, in the wilderness." Steve
raised his brows and smiled unsmilingly.

"Then you believe in love?"

The color burned over her face to her scornful eyes. "He is willing to
marry for money yet he dares sneer at me about love," she thought
angrily, even as she looked up and deliberately studied him. She
laughed a gay little, mocking laugh.

"Believe in love? Of course I believe in love; don't you? But what an
absurd question to ask. As though you would champion the tender
passion." She saw his eyes darken and his jaw set before she turned to
his father. She was contrite, a little frightened. What had possessed
her to antagonize him like that? A poor way to begin a partnership which
she had hoped would develop into a real friendship.

"Jerry, take Steve into the living-room and give us some music. Mr.
Courtlandt and I will smoke here," commanded Glamorgan, as his servant,
who fairly exuded efficiency, passed cigars and cigarettes.

"Perhaps--perhaps he would prefer to stay here and smoke," the girl
suggested hurriedly, for the first time losing her poise. She caught a
glint of challenge in Stephen's eyes and rose. Her color was high, her
breath a bit uneven as she smiled at him with bewildering charm. "After
all, why should I make suggestions? You are quite old enough to decide
what you want to do yourself, aren't you?"

"Yes. Quite old enough and quite ready to decide for myself," he
answered as he stood aside for her to precede him into the living-room.
"Do you play or sing?" he asked as he followed her to the piano. The
instrument looked as though it were loved and used. It was her turn to
be a trifle scornful.

"I play and sing. Does it seem incredible that I should?" She seated
herself and dropped her hands in her lap. "Shall I play for you?"

"Please." He leaned his arms on the piano and looked down at her, but
she realized that his thoughts were not following his eyes. "I am not in
the least musical, but we had a chap in our company overseas who could
make the most shell-shocked instrument give out what seemed to us in the
midst of that thundering inferno, heavenly music. Sometimes now a wave
of longing for the sound of a piano sweeps over me, played by someone
who loves music as that boy loved it. Do you know--Schumann's
'Papillions'? That was one of his favorites."

For answer she played the first bar of the exquisite thing. Once she
glanced up. The eyes of the man leaning on the piano, not blue now, but
dark with memories, were an ocean removed from her. It was a minute
after the last note was struck before they came back to her face. He
drew a long breath.

"Thank you," he said simply, but his tone was better than a paean of
praise. Then the softness left his eyes. There was aggressiveness and a
hint of irony in his voice as he said stiffly:

"My--my father has given me to understand that you will do me the honor
to marry me."

A passion of anger shook the girl. She valiantly forced back the tears
which threatened, rose and faced him defiantly. Her slender fingers
smoothed out the long plumes of her fan. There should be no subterfuge
now, she determined, no cause for recrimination later.

"Your father, doubtless, has told you also that my father is willing to
buy your name and social position for me with a portion of his fortune.
A sort of fifty-fifty arrangement, isn't it?" she added flippantly, with
the faintest flicker of her bronze-tipped lashes. Courtlandt shrugged.

"If you wish to put it so crudely."

She took a step back and clenched her hands behind her. Her beautiful
eyes were brilliant with scorn, her heart pounded. It seemed as though
it must visibly shake her slender body as she answered:

"Why not? If we speak the truth now it may save complications later. You
know that my father wants me to marry you and--and why. I frankly
confess that I sympathize with his ambitions. I want the best of life in
my associations. Your father is in difficulties of one sort--my father
is in difficulties of another sort--if a lack of family background can
be called a difficulty--and it appears that with our help they can
accommodate one another. I'd do anything for Dad--he has done so much
for me." She set her teeth sharply in her under lip to steady it.

"Then--then you are not afraid to marry without love?" His eyes were
inscrutable.

"Without love? For the man I marry? No, not as long as I have no love
for any other. I might love a man when I married him, and then--love
comes unbidden, oftentimes unwanted and pouf!--it goes the way it came,
and no one can stop it. You know that yourself."

"Not if it is real love, the love of a man for the one woman," he
defended.

"Is there such a thing? I wonder?" skeptically.

If he felt a temptation to retaliate he resisted it.

"Then I may conclude that you accept me?" he prompted with frigid
courtesy.

"Yes, that is----" a nervous sob caught at her voice. "If--if you will
agree to my conditions. Dad has promised me an income of a hundred
thousand a year. I will keep half of it in my possession, the other half
you are to have to use as you please."

Courtlandt's eyes were black with anger, his knuckles white. He was
rough, direct, relentless as he answered:

"You are indeed determined to make this a business affair. But
understand now that I won't touch one cent of your cursed money.
Whatever arrangement your father wants to make with you and my father is
his affair and yours, but you are to leave me out of it absolutely.
That's my condition. Do you get it?"

"Yes, I get it." She colored richly, angrily, then paled. Even her lips
went white. "There is one thing more. I--we--this marriage is really a
bargain--money for social position. Let it be only that. Need there be
anything else? You must understand me--you must," in passionate appeal.
She laid her hand on his arm. He looked down at her with disconcerting
steadiness. His face was stern.

"Yes, I understand. You mean a marriage stripped to its skeleton of
legal terms. No mutual responsibilities, no mutual sacrifices, no--no
love. That is for you to decide. The Courtlandt debt is far too great
for me not to accept any terms you may dictate. It shall be as you wish,
I--promise."

Her brown eyes were brilliant with unshed tears as she held out an
impulsive hand.

"Thank you. You make the arrangements seem bleak and sordid, but you
have given me back my self-respect. Now I feel that it is an honorable
bargain between us two. You are to be perfectly free to come and go as
you like, and I shall be free, too--but there is one thing I promise
you, I--I shall never harm the name I take."

He looked down at the hand he held for an instant then released it.

"I knew that when you came into the room to-night. Will you marry me
soon?"

"Whenever you like. Will you--say good-night to your father for me?
I----" With a valiant effort to steady her lips, she smiled faintly,
opened the door of her room and closed it quickly behind her.

Peter Courtlandt was the first to break the silence as father and son
motored home. He made an effort to speak lightly.

"Well, my boy, your close-up was wrong. Geraldine Glamorgan has neither
prominent teeth, nor little eyes, nor a kittenish manner; in fact, I
don't know when I have seen so beautiful a girl so singularly free from
the barnacles of vanity and self-consciousness."

"Kittenish!" his son repeated curtly. "She's far from kittenish. She's
an iceberg, and what's more she has the business instinct developed to
the nth degree. Believe me, she's a born trader."




CHAPTER III


Geraldine Courtlandt slowed down her car to enter the river road. The
sun was setting in a blaze of crimson glory, a few belated birds winged
swiftly into the west. Lights on the opposite shore flickered for a
moment as they flashed into being, then shone with steady brilliancy.
Lights appeared on the few boats swinging at anchor in the quiet water.
Lights in house windows beaconed a steady welcome to home-comers. What
individuality there was in lights the girl thought. Those across the
river seemed entirely municipal and commercial, those on the boats
carried a silent warning, those in the windows seemed warmly human.

The turmoil in Jerry's heart subsided. She had driven miles that
afternoon through the cold, exhilarating rush of December air, trying to
forget Steve's tone when he had refused her offer to drive him to town
that morning. Had she been married only a month? It seemed as though
centuries had passed since she and Steve had stood before the altar with
their few witnesses and exchanged marriage vows. She shivered. If she
had realized how irrevocable they were, their solemn admonition, would
she have had the courage to marry to please her father, she wondered.

"And forsaking all others keep thee only unto him as long as ye both
shall live?" The question had echoed in every sound at the wedding
breakfast in her father's apartment; she had read it deep in Peggy's
eyes as they had met hers from across the room; it had kept time to the
revolution of the wheels as she and Steve had motored out to the Manor
in the late afternoon. Her lips twisted in a bitter little smile as she
remembered Sir Peter's tactful suppression of surprise when they had
told him that there would be no wedding journey. She and Steve had
decided that under the circumstances such a function would be nothing
short of farcical, besides he would not ask for leave from the office.
Sir Peter had quite suddenly decided to go on a hunting trip.

The girl's brows wrinkled in a troubled frown. She knew now that she had
done a grave injustice to Steve, to herself, when she had consented to
her father's proposition. Well, the deed was done, her only course was
to turn her mistake into a stepping-stone toward ultimate good. That was
the one way to treat mistakes remedially, she had learned in her
twenty-three years. Repining proved nothing.

"Every engaged couple ought to have the marriage service read aloud to
them at least once a week. That would give them pause," she murmured
with fervent conviction. She ground on her brake just in time to avoid
running down a "ROAD CLOSED. DETOUR" sign. The black letters on the
white board danced weirdly before her eyes for a moment. She must cure
herself of the reprehensible habit of driving with her mind miles away.
She turned into the side road and drove slowly. Detours were notoriously
rough even if they sometimes offered adventure, she thought whimsically.

The upper windows of the Manor reflected the setting sun through
swaying, bare branches. They shone like molten mirrors as Jerry turned
into the tree-lined avenue which led to the house. At the foot of the
garden slope she caught the shimmer of the river. Already she loved the
place. The great house had "home" writ large all over it. It bulged, it
loomed, it rambled in unexpected places as though it had grown with the
family. And yet, in spite of the additions, it remained a choice example
of early architecture. It was as though a beneficent fairy, versed in
the arts, had presided over the alterations.

As the girl entered the great hall, where logs blazed in the mammoth
fireplace, she had the sense of being enfolded in warm, tender arms. If
Steve would not be so frigidly courteous she could be quite happy, she
thought resentfully. At breakfast each morning during these interminable
weeks he had politely asked her preference for the evening. Should they
motor to town for the theatre, dance, what should they do? And she,
dreading to bore him more than he was already bored, and hating to face
the curious eyes of his world which had been set agog at their marriage,
had replied to each suggestion:

"I prefer to remain in this lovely country, but please go yourself. I
really shouldn't be in the least lonely."

He had refused to take advantage of her suggestion. Every night they
dined together with great formality, she in the loveliest frocks of her
hastily assembled trousseau, he in correct and immaculate dinner
clothes. The only time there seemed the least sympathy between them was
when she was at the piano, in the library, and Steve smoked in the big
chair in front of the fire. He kept so absolutely still, usually with
his eyes on his mother's portrait. Was he dreaming dreams, she wondered.
Had there been a girl without money whom he loved? Did he know what "the
love of a man for the one woman" meant? She should never forget the tone
in which he had asked that question. She was standing in the hall, her
coat off, when she thought of that. She shook herself mentally and
dragged her thoughts back to the present. She spoke to her trim maid who
came to take her coat:

"Tell Judson to serve tea in the library, Hilda. I--I'm cold."

She was half-way to the fireplace in the long room before she discovered
that the wing-chair in front of it was occupied, occupied by a queer,
elfish type of man who regarded her with a poorly suppressed snort of
disdain as she paused in surprise. The skin stretched over his high
cheek-bones till it shone like mellowing, yellowing ivory. His colorless
eyes glittered as with fever, his forehead reared to where his coarse
white hair brandished a sort of kewpie-curl. A black cape, of wool so
soft that it looked like velvet, lay across his thin, stooped shoulders.
From under its folds his hands protruded, clasped on the top of a stout
ebony stick. They were gnarled and distorted with rheumatism. His voice,
true to type, was high and slightly cracked as he spoke to the girl
after an instant of peeved scrutiny.

"So--you're the new Mrs. Courtlandt, the lady of the Manor, are you?
You're the girl who has been traded in to save the family fortune?"

The angry color flamed to Jerry's hair but she stood her ground. She
even managed to bestow a patronizing frown upon him.

"Now I know who you are. No one but 'Old Nick' would be so rude. You
see your reputation has preceded you." She sank into the chair opposite
him and with elbow on its arm, chin on her hand, regarded him curiously.
She made a brilliant bit of color in the dark-toned room. The light from
the fire fell on her rose-color sports suit, brought out the sheen of
the velvet tam of the same shade, drooped picturesquely over one ear,
flickered fantastically on her white throat, set the diamonds in the pin
which fastened the dainty frills of her blouse agleam with rainbows and
played mad pranks with the circlet of jewels on the third finger of her
left hand.

How ill and fragile he looked, the girl thought, pathetically fragile.
She had a passion of sympathy for the old. She would ignore his
rudeness. She leaned forward and smiled at him with gay friendliness.

"Now that I have guessed who you are it's your turn. Tell me how you got
here. Did a magician wave his wand, and presto, an enchanted carpet, or
did you arrive via air-route? I am sorry that there was no one at the
Manor to welcome you. I was detained by one of those silly detours. Sir
Peter has been away but returns to-night, and Steve--did Steve know that
you were coming? Did--did he write you about--about me?" the last word
was added in an undignified whisper.

"Steve! Do they ever let Steve tell me anything?"

"Now I've done it, he's off!" Jerry thought with an hysterical desire to
laugh, he was so like an old war-horse scenting battle.

"No. The first I knew of you was when Peter Courtlandt wrote that a
marriage had been arranged between the daughter of Glamorgan, the
oil-king, and Steve. Arranged! Stuff and nonsense! What poor fool
arranged it, I'd like to know? Hasn't Peter Courtlandt seen enough of
life to know that when a man who has nothing marries a girl with a large
fortune he's ruined? If he has any strength of character it turns to
gall, if he's a weak party, he gets weaker--it's hell--for a proud man.
Why didn't they give me a chance to save the family fortune? I'd have
done it if Steve had asked me, but I turned his father down--I wouldn't
give a penny to save him. Why--why that boy ought to have married
someone who'd count, not a once-removed coal-picker."

Furious as she was at his insult, Jerry kept her temper. It was so
pathetically evident that he was old and disappointed and alarmingly
ill. However, there was a hint of Glamorgan's determination in her eyes
as she answered coolly:

"You may say what you like about me, but I can't let you disparage my
father. He is the biggest thing in my life. After all, why should you
roar at me? Steve and I are not the first victims sacrificed on the
altar of pride of family and possessions, are we? Sentiment is quite out
of fashion. What passes for it is but a wan survival of the age of
romance and chivalry. Marriage in that strata of society to which I have
been lately elevated is like the Paul Jones at a dance, when the whistle
blows change partners--in the same set, if one should happen to go out
of it, pandemonium, quickly followed by oblivion."

If he was conscious of the sting of sarcasm in her words he ignored it.
His voice was barbed with thorns of irritation as he affirmed:

"Then it is as I suspected; you're not in love with Steve. So love is
out of fashion, is it? To be scornful of love is the prerogative of
youth; when we get old we treasure it. Well, I warn you now, young
woman, that my nephew shan't live the loveless life I've lived. I was
born rich. Had I been poor and married, had my wife been my working
partner dependent upon me for money, helping me climb, I shouldn't be
the wreck of a man I am now."

"What a pre-nineteenth amendment sentiment," the girl dared
mischievously. He glowered at her from under his bushy brows.

"You can't switch me off my subject with your flippancy. I repeat,
Steve shall have love. I'll get it for him--I'll----" He rose and
brandished his stick at the girl. He fell back and leaned his head
weakly against the chair. Jerry leaned over him and smoothed back his
hair tenderly. He looked up at her with fever-bright eyes and gasped
breathlessly:

"I haven't gone--yet. I shan't go till--I've thought of some way to--to
yank Steve out of this--this damnable Sam Jones ring you talk about.
Give me some tea. Quick! Give it to me--strong. My fool doctor won't let
me have anything else. What's Steve doing? Living on your income?" he
asked as Judson, after fussing among the tea-things, at a low word from
the girl, left the room.

Jerry's cheeks flushed, tiny sparks lighted her eyes as she countered
crisply:

"Don't you know your nephew better than to ask that question? He is in a
lawyer's office working for the munificent sum of fifteen per." Fairfax
choked over his tea.

"D'you mean to tell me that a son-in-law of Glamorgan the oil-king is an
office boy? Between you all you've made a mess of it, haven't you? What
does your father say to that?"

"He's--he's furious," Jerry answered, as she studied the infinitesimal
grounds in her teacup. She gave the tea-cart a little push which removed
it from between them. She rose, hesitated, then slipped to her knees
before the old man. She looked up at him speculatively for a moment
before she commenced to trace an intricate pattern on his stout stick
with a pink-tipped finger. Her voice was low and a trifle unsteady as
she pleaded:

"Uncle Nick, be friends with me, will you?" A non-committal grunt was
her only answer. "Steve won't talk to me. He won't listen to reason.
Having made his big sacrifice for the family fortunes by marrying me he
is holding his head so high that he'll step into a horrible shell-hole
if he doesn't watch out. Dad is furious that he won't live and spend
money as befits a Courtlandt, that is, as he thinks a Courtlandt should
live and spend, and with that fine illogic, so characteristic of the
male of the species, takes it out on me. Steve is so--so maddening. He
won't use the automobiles unless he is taking me somewhere, although
they were all, with the exception of my town car and roadster, in the
garage when I came here. He just commutes and commutes in those
miserable trains. Commuting corrupts good manners; he's a--a bear. He
and I are beginning all wrong, Uncle Nick." She met the stern old eyes
above her before she dropped her head to the arm of his chair. "Steve
hates the sight of me and I----"

Fairfax laid his stick across her shoulders with a suddenness and
strength, which, made her jump.

"What did you expect? Didn't I tell you that when a poor man marries a
fortune his pride turns to gall? Can a red-blooded man really love a
girl who would marry for position? You're fast getting to hate him, I
suppose?" he demanded in a tone which brought her to her feet and iced
her voice and eyes.

"You wouldn't expect me to be crazy about him, would you? He is cold and
disagreeable and is evidently laboring under the delusion that the world
was created to revolve around Stephen Courtlandt." A contemptuous snort
fired her with the determination to hurt someone or something. "You may
take it from me that if I had the chance to choose again between
disappointing Dad or marrying your precious nephew I'd--I'd disappoint
Dad." She was breathless but triumphant as she flung the last words at
him. He glared at her.

"So-o, you're a quitter, are you?"

Jerry's face was white, her eyes smoldering coals of wrath. Her voice
was low with repressed fury as she flung back his taunt.

"I'm not a quitter. By why couldn't Dad have selected some other
aristocrat for a son-in-law? From what I have observed there are plenty
of them who need money. Believe me, I'm tired of living in this cold
storage atmosphere. I was willing to play fair, willing to keep my part
of the contract----" Her voice failed her as she met his grilling eyes.

"Are you fulfilling your----"

"What, Uncle Nick, tea-broken?" interrupted a voice from the door. The
old man struggled to his feet as his nephew came toward him. A smile of
tenderness dimmed the glitter of his eyes. Jerry's heart looped the
loop. How long had Steve been at the door? Had he heard that last
rebellious declaration of hers? How would he greet his uncle? She hoped
that he would be tender, for no matter how disagreeable Nicholas Fairfax
was, he was old and evidently dangerously ill. She was quite unconscious
of her breath of relief as the younger man laid an affectionate arm
about the elder's shoulders.

"This sure is a surprise and then some, Uncle Nick. Why didn't you let
us know you were coming?"

"I knew if I wrote, your father'd invent an excuse to put me off, so I
roped Doc Rand and came along. I have no time to waste. I wanted to see
the kind of girl they'd sold you to----"

"Then you have seen a fine one who did me the honor to marry me, haven't
you?" There was a set to young Courtlandt's jaw which boded ill for the
person who differed with him. "Why not come up to your room and rest
before dinner? Sir Peter returns to-night and you'll want--here he is
now," as the hum of voices in the hall drifted to the library.

Jerry sprang forward with a radiant smile of welcome as Peter Courtlandt
entered the room. He seized her two hands in his and kissed her
tenderly.

"It's a good many years since I had a welcome home like this," he
admitted with a break in his voice. "How are you, Steve? Nick, I just
ran into Doc Rand in the hall. He told me that you were here." He held
out his hand to his brother-in-law who responded grudgingly.

"I suppose he told you a lot of other stuff, too. Well, I'll fool him."

Jerry gave the hand that still held one of hers a surreptitious squeeze.

"It's good to have you back, Sir Peter. The house has seemed terribly
big and empty without you."

"Empty!" echoed Fairfax with his sardonic chuckle. "Fancy a bride of a
month complaining of emptiness in a house without her father-in-law."

"How does it happen that you have torn yourself away from the ranch,
Nick?" interrupted Peter Courtlandt before Steve, who had grown white
about the nostrils, could speak. "The last time you came on you said
you would never leave it again."

Fairfax swallowed the bait which never failed to lure him. His western
possessions were his pride, and he welcomed an opportunity to talk of
them much as a fond parent does of his child.

"Didn't want to leave. Felt it my duty to come and see what you had done
to Steve," he growled. "Greyson, of the X Y Z, is looking after things
for me."

"Greyson of the X Y Z! Is your ranch near his?" Jerry demanded. A faint
color stole to her face, her eyes were alight with interest.

"It is. What do you know about it?" Fairfax's eyes were interrogation
points of suspicion.

"Not much. I met Mr. Greyson last winter, and I----"

"Met Greyson, did you? Humph! So that's what's the matter with him. I
suppose the daughter of an oil-king looked down upon----"

"Have you had a profitable year?" interrupted Peter Courtlandt, adroitly
getting between his son and the old man. "They tell me that this has
been a banner season for wheat."

"They told you right. If the cattle winter safe I shall achieve the
ambition of my life, to own the biggest and finest herd of Shorthorns in
the country. I'll show 'em a thing or two about that breed of cattle. I
tell you, Peter----"

"Mrs. Denbigh," announced Judson at the door.

Jerry caught the look of consternation which Peter Courtlandt threw at
his son. She saw also the sudden tightening of Steve's lips. What did it
mean? She had met Felice Denbigh once and had been repulsed by her
super-golden hair and super-perfect complexion. Was she an old
sweetheart of Steve's? She took a step toward the smartly gowned woman
who spoke as she crossed the threshold.

"Mrs. Courtlandt, you will forgive me for this intrusion on your
honeymoon, won't you? But--but Steve left his gloves in my sedan this
morning when we drove to town, and I came to return them."

Jerry's mind took a dizzy turn or two then settled down to clear
thinking. She had a curious sense that with the explanation Felice
Denbigh had fired the opening gun of a campaign. So there had been a
reason why Steve had refused to allow her to drive him to town. She
flashed a glance at him even while she murmured welcoming platitudes to
her guest. He had his hand on his uncle's arm.

"You remember Felice Peyton, don't you, Uncle Nick?"

"What's that? Felice Peyton, the girl you were forever running after
when you were in college? Well, Miss Peyton, you lost him, didn't you?"
asked the terrible old man.

"But--but dear Mr. Fairfax, I'm not Miss Peyton now--I married Phil
Denbigh when Steve deserted me and went to war. I----"

"Philip Denbigh!" The old man rose, straightened himself like an
avenging Nemesis. "Poor devil! So he drew another blank besides that
good-for-nothing philandering mother of his. A mother who wept and
begged until she kept the boy from enlisting, and by some hokuspokus got
him into Class C.--No, I won't stop," as Courtlandt senior laid a
peremptory hand on his arm. "There are a lot of men who are cringing
through life to-day because their women did not love them enough to
cheer them on to fight in the Great Fight."

Felice Denbigh was white with anger, her eyes tiny green flames. Jerry
flung herself into the breach:

"Won't you stay and dine with us informally, Mrs. Denbigh? Poor S-Steve
must have been bored to death, surfeited with my society this last
month."

"Thank you, no." Felice's self-possession was superb. "I shall pay my
respects to the new Mrs. Courtlandt later when she is formally at home.
Good-night, Mr. Fairfax. What a pleasure it must be for the family to
have your genial presence at the Manor. You don't know how happy it
makes me to find that someone remembers Steve's devotion to me. He seems
to have forgotten it. Good-night, Sir Peter. Stevie, will you come and
start that cranky car of mine?" Then, as he reached her side, Jerry
heard her ask softly, "Shall we meet at the same place to-morrow
morning?"

Nicholas Fairfax must have heard it also, for the girl heard him mutter:

"Snake!"




CHAPTER IV


As she served coffee in the library after dinner Jerry pondered over
those low-spoken words. The firelight set the sequins on her pale blue
gown glittering like jewels; it accentuated the satiny sheen of her
hair, betrayed the troubled expression in her lovely eyes. Nicholas
Fairfax was in his room. He had collapsed when he went up to dress for
dinner. Doctor Rand, whom he had brought with him, stood back to the
fire stirring his coffee. There was a suggestion of fat and wheeze about
the little man. His weather-stained face had the wrinkled effect of a
quite elderly, quite plump russet apple. His white hair bushed à la
Golliwog. His frock coat was of finest, pre-war broadcloth. The
flamboyant effect of his black necktie made the girl think of the bow on
the neck of a pet kitten. He tested his coffee before he observed dryly:

"If a man with an under-developed heart-beat and an over-developed
blood-pressure will go chasing half-way across the continent to see a
pretty girl," he bowed with somewhat ponderous gallantry in Jerry's
direction, "what can you expect but collapse? He's crazy about you,
Steve, and somewhere he got the fool notion that you were unhappy.
That's what started him East. I tried to hold him back. I knew the price
he'd pay."

Stephen Courtlandt came suddenly from the window where he had been
looking out upon the snow-dusted world. He approached the fire. His eyes
looked strained.

"Then you think he won't rally from this attack, Doc?" he asked
anxiously.

"It's better for you to know the truth, Steve. He knows. He's wired for
Greyson of the X Y Z and----"

"Oh-h!"

The startled exclamation had escaped Jerry's lips before she realized
that she had made a sound. A delicate pink stole to her hair as she met
Steve's steady eyes. Doctor Rand was apparently quite unconscious of the
interruption.

"And sent for your family lawyer. Your father is with him now. I'll go
and relieve him. Your cookie sure makes good coffee, Mrs. Jerry. Bring
her out to the Double O and invite us old bachelors for eats once in a
while. You'd be doing a charity bigger than some you spend your time on
here, I can tell you."

"Mrs. Courtlandt would starve for people in that wilderness, Doc,"
announced Stephen with parrot-like glibness.

"Would she now? Sure, she doesn't look like a child who'd be so
dependent on chatter. Well, the Double O isn't in the Dude ranch region,
neither is it exactly a wilderness. It's a seething cauldron of society
in comparison to some of the places. You knew that Old Nick and Greyson
had given the Bear Creek ranch to a returned service man, didn't you,
Steve?" then as Courtlandt nodded, "He brought a wife out last spring.
She doesn't have a woman to speak to but she reminds me of a
meadow-lark, little and quiet but with a voice that sings."

"Do she and her husband live there all alone?" Jerry asked in wonder.

"Yes--that is--there's a range-rider but--but that's another story." Had
she not thought it quite out of character Jerry would have sworn that
Doc Rand was embarrassed. "We--here I am talking when my patient needs
me. It's all your fault, Mrs. Jerry. You shouldn't have vamped me so
outrageously. Steve, I want a prescription filled."

"I'll send Carter for it, Doc. Give it to me." He left the room with the
slip of paper in his hand. Rand looked after him, then thoughtfully at
the girl where she sat in the flickering light of the fire. He set his
cup on the tray and patted her hand gently.

"Don't mind Old Nick, child. He's sick and jealous and--and mad about
Steve--it will all come right. Things have a marvelous unbelievable way
of coming right. That's what I kept telling Fairfax but he wouldn't
listen."

"Why--why should he hate me so?"

"He doesn't hate you, he's--he's just afraid for Steve, that's all. He
adored his sister--he used to say that when he found a woman like her,
he'd marry----" he looked up at the portrait over the mantel. Jerry's
glance followed his. The eyes, so like Steve's, were thoughtful, there
was a suspicion of laughter in the curve of the lips, the flesh tints
were marvelously lovely, a string of rare pearls gleamed softly on the
creamy neck. The artist had worked lovingly and had produced a portrait
that was humanly, warmly alive, a spirit that dominated the quiet room.

"Steve,--Steve and Sir Peter love her like that too, do they not?"

Rand thrust his hands under his coat tails and flapped them in time with
his heel and toe teeter.

"Love her! It is more than love. Betty Fairfax, the name clung even
after marriage, makes me believe in immortality. The best of her is
living in Steve and it will be handed on to his children. Her spirit is
just as much alive for her husband and son as it was the day she left
them. That's why Steve has kept straight through temptations which would
have lured most chaps of his age. No one can ever tell me, and get
across with it, that a mother's influence doesn't live forever. That boy
is one of a thousand, isn't he, Mrs. Jerry?"

"Oh--perhaps, as thousands go." She looked up from under her long lashes
at his discomfited face. Laughter gleamed through the tears which his
tribute to the mother had brought. "You shouldn't pry into the secrets
of a maiden's heart," she teased with exaggerated demureness. Rand
responded to her mood.

"That's better. A child like you should laugh, not be as serious as
you've been ever since I've seen you. Don't let Nick's condition depress
you. He may live for weeks and when he does go, it will be a release. He
wants it--if--if he can go knowing that Steve's happiness is assured."

"Is anyone's happiness assured?" asked the girl gravely.

"No"--he regarded her with his twinkling gray eyes--"but I'll bet my
broncho if anyone's is--it's Steve's. Good-night."

He was gone before Jerry could reply. Her heart felt curiously warmed by
his words. He--he evidently liked her if Steve didn't. She went to the
piano. Her fingers touched the keys experimentally for a moment, then
she quite unconsciously struck the opening bar of "Papillions." The
music danced and rose with dainty spontaneity. She drifted into Bach's
"Praeludium." Separated chords or flowing melody, she played with a
sympathy and sureness which showed the touch of an artist. She knew when
Steve came into the room and crossed to the window. As the last note
died away she turned. He stood with his hands clenched behind his back.
What was interesting him outside, she wondered. She wanted to speak to
him but she never yet had addressed him by his first name. It seemed
absurd, it was absurd, but she had avoided using it to his face. To
continue the avoidance presented difficulties now that his back was
turned. She usually waited until he looked at her, which she had to
acknowledge was seldom. She ran through the opening bars of "Papillions"
again but his back remained obdurately turned to the room.

"I--you----" she halted awkwardly, "I would like to talk to you," she
admitted hesitatingly. Courtlandt wheeled and approached the piano.

"Good Lord, don't you know my name that you have to juggle 'I--you----'
when you want to attract my attention?" he demanded belligerently. There
was a defiant gleam in the eyes which met his.

"It does sound silly, doesn't it--Stevie?" with exaggerated demureness
and an exact imitation of Felice Denbigh's voice. "But--but I know yours
better than you know mine--I think----" then as he opened his lips to
speak she hurried on, "I wanted to ask if you were in love with Felice
Denbigh? No--no--don't mistake me," as his blue eyes darkened to
purple-black, and his lips tightened, "I'm not jealous--really I'm
not--I only wanted you to know that if you are, I'm sorry, terribly
sorry. It's a tragedy to love one person and have to marry another."

"How do you know? Are you in love with Greyson?" with rough directness.

His sudden turn of the tables took the girl's breath. She colored
betrayingly. She knew that she must be the picture of guilt as she stood
there, her color coming and going, her heart beating like a silly
tom-tom. There was even a slight unsteadiness in her voice as she
evaded:

"I haven't seen Bruce Greyson since last winter," then maddened at her
own lack of poise she looked up with frank defiance. "It's a pity that
he doesn't live here. He could motor me to town."

He flushed darkly.

"My motoring to town with Mrs. Denbigh this morning was purely
accidental."

"But--but--you will never go with me."

"Trolley incomes should avoid limousine ladies."

"Limousine ladies!" Jerry gripped her temper and controlled her voice.
"Pardon! My mistake," she drawled maddeningly. "Is--is Mrs. Denbigh
divorced?"

"Not yet. What Old Nick said about Phil's mother was true. She did ruin
his life. It would have been better for him and for her had he been shot
to pieces, than to have him as he is now with this gnawing shame at his
heart."

"She--she was not much like your mother, was she?"

"Like Mother?" Jerry thought she had never heard anything so beautiful
as that word "Mother" as Courtlandt uttered it. He smiled up at the
portrait--"Mother was--well----" he cleared the huskiness from his voice
and went on, "As I was saying about Denbigh, remorse got too much for
him and a year ago he disappeared, dropped completely out of sight."

"Why didn't Felice go with him?"

"Do you know, I fancy that Phil didn't want her."

"Nevertheless she had married him. One doesn't take the vow 'and
forsaking all others' to break it, does one?" gravely.

"I deduce from that that you do not believe in divorce?"

"Divorce! While I acknowledge that there may be situations where it is
unavoidable, I hate the word. Always to me it takes on the semblance of
Medusa's head in my school mythology, its snaky, hissing locks striking,
stabbing, stinging, scarring indelibly. I believe in keeping covenants."

"It's hard sometimes."

"It is, but life isn't intended to be all joy-ride. I've found that
out."

"You mean----"

"Nothing which need make you glower at me like that," defiantly. "Do you
know, I fancy," with an exact imitation of his earlier voice and manner,
"that the future first families of America's 'Who's Who' will be those
who can count back at least four generations of ancestors who have, in
spite of disappointment and disillusion, poverty or riches, sickness or
health, kept their marriage covenants. A curious idea, isn't it? It just
came to me. 'A little thing but mine own,'" her tone changed from
earnestness to flippancy on the last words. She syncopated a few bars of
"Papillions" as though to emphasize her indifference.

Courtlandt thrust his hands hard into the pockets of his dinner coat.
The atmosphere tingled with electricity. The girl wondered if he were
throttling a desire to shake her. She hoped so. He met her eyes steadily
for a moment before he turned to leave the room. Jerry took a hasty
step after him.

"Wait, please--if--if----" as he kept on she added desperately, "Steve,
please." He stopped and turned. "If--if you should see Dad--do not
mention the fact that Bruce--that Mr. Greyson's ranch is near your
uncle's."

"Why not?" relentlessly.

"Because in an attack of homesickness last winter I became engaged to
him."




CHAPTER V


In the music-room of the Manor the rugs had been rolled back, the voice
of the phonograph released from captivity and the Courtlandts' guests
were dancing, at least some of them were. Sir Peter had beguiled
Glamorgan to the library for a smoke. The oil-king had cast a gloom over
the dinner. Was it because he was disturbed about Nicholas Fairfax,
Jerry wondered. To the amazement of all, he and the ranchman had become
great friends. It would be like her father to be irritable if he were
moved. Perhaps it had been the arrival of Greyson which had infuriated
him. Last winter he had quickly made her see the folly of her engagement
to the owner of the X Y Z, and now she was grateful to him. She had
known at the time that she did not love Bruce Greyson, but that she was
in love with love. In a way her life had been a lonely one, and when he
had pleaded with her to marry him, she had agreed to a tentative
engagement. Now she was glad that she had kept him at a distance, even
in those two weeks.

She looked up at Greyson as he sat beside her in one of the deep
embrasures of a window. A distinguished looking man, he gave the
impression of having lived in great spaces, of having achieved
worth-while things, of being absolutely poised and self-assured. His
dark hair was tending toward neutral at the temples, his keen blue eyes
had fine lines radiating from them, which denoted long-distance gazing.
The weather-beaten texture of his skin was emphasized by the immaculate
white of the shirt and collar of his up-to-the-minute dinner clothes.

Peggy Glamorgan, as she danced with her brother-in-law, was doing
direful things to the heart of young Don Curtis, whose family estate
adjoined the Manor. She was a charming, younger model of her sister,
except that where Jerry's eyes were brown, Peggy's were a somewhat
elfish hazel. She was making the most of a week-end freedom from school
discipline. Steve Courtlandt's glance wandered to the two in the deep
window. Peggy looked up at him with tormenting concern.

"That's the second time you've lost step, Steve. I protest. I hate being
trodden on." Her laughing eyes and mischievously curved lips robbed the
words of their sting.

"I'm sorry! Give me one more trial, Peg-o'-my-heart, and I'll do
better," promised Steve. He had taken an immense liking to the girl, she
was so genuine, so unaffected, so brimming over with the zest of
living.

"Nothing doing, brother. Go get Jerry. It's a part of her job to put up
with your poor dancing, isn't it? A part of the love, honor and obey
stuff? Catch me saying 'I will' to that. Jerry's different. She'd walk
over the proverbial ploughshares if she thought duty called." She looked
across the room to where her sister sat and added softly, "It's a queer
trick of fortune that Bruce Greyson should be your uncle's confidential
man and should come to this house."

"Why accent this?" demanded Steve Courtlandt bluntly.

Peggy flushed guiltily beneath his stern eyes.

"That's only my exclamatory style. I meant that it was strange that
Jerry should meet him here after--after--I--I wonder if that was what
made her cry last night?"

"Did Jerry cry last night?"

"She cross-my-throat-and-hope-to-die swore she didn't, this morning, but
her lids were suspiciously pink. Didn't you notice it? Thank you, I
should love it," she responded to young Curtis who had been impatiently
hovering in the offing. "There really isn't much fun dancing with old
married men," she confided in a tone intended to reach Steve. She made
an impudent little face at her brother-in-law over her partner's
shoulder. He smiled and blew her a kiss as she danced away but her
words hurt, hurt because he knew that she was right. He felt years older
than he had that epoch-making October night when his father had revealed
to him the state of the family finances, and had presented the means
whereby it could be remedied. Had he chosen wisely, he wondered;
wouldn't it have been better to let the property go than to have married
a girl who had so quickly acquired an aversion for him?

He looked across at the two engrossed faces in the window. He'd break
that up. Jerry should remember where she was and not give occasion for
silly gossip. Already Felice Denbigh, who had motored out from town for
dinner, had called his attention to Greyson's apparent devotion. With
eyes combative, Steve strolled to where Jerry sat.

"Will you dance with me, Mrs. Courtlandt?" he asked with aggressive
formality. In the midst of a sentence, she looked up in startled
surprise. Greyson rose.

"I have committed the unpardonable blunder of monopolizing my hostess,
Steve," he apologized, "but the temptation to live over a perfect
friendship was too great to be resisted. I will beg a dance from your
sister, Mrs. Courtlandt."

Jerry's eyes followed him as he crossed the room. They made Steve think
of deep, troubled pools when she looked up at him. Was it because Peg
had put the idea into his head or did they look as though they had known
recent tears? Was she finding her marriage a bar to happiness already?
His face was a trifle white, a trifle grim as he reminded:

"Do we dance?"

Without answering she rose, and he put his arm about her. Except for
taking her hand it was the first time he had touched her. How slender
she was, how soft, how graceful. He could feel her heart pound heavily
against his breast. One might think that she was frightened, but with
him--that was absurd. Her dancing like her walk was perfection of
motion. He was careful of his steps as they danced down the long room.
Jerry should have no occasion to echo Peg's reprimand. She stopped.

"Tired?" he asked solicitously, his senses still throbbing from the
appeal of music and dance. She shook her head.

"Tired! I don't know what it is to be tired. Some of our guests are not
dancing. Mrs. Denbigh is quite alone and looking horribly bored. Peg
seems to have appropriated more than her share of men; she is
surrounded. Don't you think that as host you should dance with Felice?"

"Presently. I have something to say to you first." He changed his
position so that he stood between her and the others in the room.

"Why did you cry?"

She crimsoned even under the tiny curls at the nape of her white neck.

"I! Crying! How absurd. You really should go and dance with your
guest----"

"Not until you tell me why you cried."

"But I haven't been crying."

"Oh, yes you have. I----"

"Supper is served in the library, Mrs. Courtlandt," interrupted Judson
of the velvet tread. As they left the room in the wake of their guests
the butler detained Stephen Courtlandt and said something in a low tone.

"Has Mr. Greyson gone up?" he asked hurriedly and when Judson answered
in the affirmative he turned to Jerry:

"I must go to Uncle Nick. I may not be down again."

"Is he----" but he was mounting the stairs two steps at a time before
Jerry had finished the sentence. With a feeling of foreboding she
entered the library. The guests were grouped around the fire with Judson
and a maid serving supper. She stopped in the shadow of the doorway.
Up-stairs the spirit of an old, weary man was passing, here--the room
and its furnishings made a rich background for the shimmering satin of
dainty gowns; the firelight played mad pranks with jewels at white
throats and on pink fingers, with the glittering buckles on silver
slippers; bright eyes were laughing into eyes that pleaded or compelled,
young voices were teasing, challenging.

Jerry's breath came unevenly. She had cried last night. It was a rare
indulgence for her. She could not tell now why. How could Steve have
known? She hoped that none of these chattering boys and girls suspected
it. She looked about the room. How she loved it! It stood for all the
background she had acquired by her marriage. She loved the old
seventeenth century Courtlandt, she held long, one-sided conversations
with him when she was sure that she was quite alone. He had given her to
understand that a _marriage de convenance_ quite met with his approval,
that in his day girls married to please their parents. She wasn't so
sure of the judgment of Steve's mother. Her eyes, so like her son's,
looked down with a grave question in their depths when she appealed to
her.

The group around the fire made room as they welcomed her with gay
reproof for tardiness. Felice Denbigh inquired impatiently for Steve.
Jerry made his apologies and explained his absence. The voices of the
guests became hushed. One by one they left, almost tiptoeing through the
hall. Peggy snuggled up to her sister when the two were alone.

"Has--has Uncle N-Nick--gone?" she whispered. Then as Jerry shook her
head, "If--if he does will you come and sleep with me?"

"I will, dear, but there is nothing to frighten you. Why should there be
in the passing of an old man's spirit?"

"But--but he was such a cross old man. What has made you so brave,
Jerry? Once you would have dreaded it as much as I--being here at a time
like this, I mean."

"Perhaps it is the hours I have spent in the hospital with the sick and
wounded soldiers. I have seen so much and felt so much, that death has
seemed beautiful, not terrible. Go to bed, child. I'll come in later and
stay with you."

She went down the hall. "But he was such a cross old man!" Peggy's
obituary of Nicholas Fairfax echoed persistently in her mind. What a
tragic thing to have said about one. She couldn't blame her sister. Old
Nick had been consistently disagreeable to her and Peg was too young to
take into consideration his age and illness. She lingered for a moment
before the door of the room in which Nicholas Fairfax lay. Could she
help? The nurse came out suddenly and almost collided with her.

"Goodness, Mrs. Courtlandt, you gave me a start! I was just coming for
you. Mr. Stephen sent me. His uncle wants you."

With her breath coming hurriedly, her heart pounding, Jerry followed
the woman. What could Old Nick want? To continue his insults? She passed
into the inner room. The window was open to let in the clear winter air.
The old man was raised high on his pillows. Steve held one of the
gnarled hands. Courtlandt was behind him. Greyson, as rigid and
immovable as one of the mountains of his own country, stood at the foot
of the bed. Doctor Rand, his face grave and deeply lined, motioned the
girl to take her place opposite Steve, then he and the nurse and Greyson
moved back to the outer room. As Jerry bent over him, Nicholas Fairfax
looked up into her eyes. They met his tenderly. The tenseness of his
expression relaxed, he fumbled for something under his pillow. Jerry
reached for him and drew out an open prayer-book. His shaking finger
pointed to the page; it was the marriage service.

"Read that--read that--aloud," he commanded in a voice which still held
a ring of power.

Slipping to her knees beside the bed the girl read. Haltingly, huskily
at first, but as she lost thought of self in the beauty and meaning of
the words her voice cleared.

"'Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husband, to live together
after God's ordinance in the holy estate of matrimony and forsaking all
others keep thee only to him as long as ye both shall live?'"

The gnarled, claw-like hand fell on the book. The Old man leaned
forward. His voice, weaker now, interrupted:

"'And forsaking all others keep thee only to him as long as ye
both--shall live,' did you mean it, girl, when you made that vow?"

Jerry's face was colorless. There was a broken exclamation from Steve.
She laid her hand gently over the icy hand on the book. Her young ardent
eyes met his dim ones steadily.

"I did, Uncle Nick."

He dropped back with a faint sigh.

"Then it will be all right--Steve. I was afraid--that I might have--but
I meant it for the best--it will come right Doc Rand says--things will
come right--marvelously--unbelievably--right!"

His voice trailed off into silence. The lines of pain and weakness in
his face disappeared as though a soothing hand had been laid upon them.
The curtains at the open window stirred for a moment and then were
still.




CHAPTER VI


Caleb Lawson paused in the reading of the will of Nicholas Fairfax to
peer over his half-moon spectacles. His pursed lips made a red, bulbous
blot on his pale face as he regarded the three persons in the library at
the Manor. Outside an ice-tipped vine struck with a ghostly tap! tap!
tap! against the diamond-paned window. Geraldine sat beside Peter
Courtlandt. Stephen stood with his back to the fireplace. The sunlight
which streamed in at the window touched the girl's hair and transformed
it into a crown of bronze with curious red and gold lights. The lawyer's
gaze lingered on her for a moment before he cleared his throat with a
force which sent a premonitory thrill down the spines of his hearers and
resumed the reading of the bulky document he held.

"'Lastly, all the rest, residue and remainder of the property both real
and personal of which I may be possessed or to which I may be entitled
at my decease, I give and devise to my nephew Stephen Courtlandt, to him
and his heirs forever, on condition, however, that he take possession
and management of my ranch in the State of Wyoming not later than three
months after my decease and live there one year with his wife Geraldine
Glamorgan Courtlandt. And on the further condition that his said wife,
during said year, shall refuse to receive income from the fund her
father has provided for her, and shall dispose of all securities and
money she may have. If my nephew Stephen Courtlandt or his wife,
Geraldine Glamorgan Courtlandt, fail to fulfil any one of these
conditions said property shall be divided as follows:'"

The lawyer laid down his papers and looked over the edge of his
spectacles at Stephen Courtlandt.

"There is no need of my reading that long list of beneficiaries until I
know your decision, Stephen. If your father will take me to his study
we'll leave you and Mrs. Courtlandt to talk it over."

"You may proceed with the reading. I refuse to accede to the
conditions," Steve announced with grim lips.

"Steve," his father protested, "think it over before you say that." He
looked imploringly at the girl beside him but her eyes were fixed on the
interlacing fingers which lay passively on the lap of her black gown.
"Talk with him, Jerry. Don't let him fling this away recklessly," he
pleaded. "Come, Lawson, we'll leave the young people to thresh this
thing out."

He followed the lawyer from the room and closed the door. Stephen poked
viciously at the coals in the fireplace till a fountain of sparks
sputtered up the chimney. Then he backed up against the mantel and with
a face from which every drop of color had drained, looked down at the
bent head of the girl he had married. He laughed shortly.

"Old Nick had a genius for messing things up, hadn't he? When I heard
the first clause of that will, which related to me, even when the
condition followed that I was to live on the ranch for a year--nothing
but a mad sense of freedom thrilled me. I would be my own man once more,
rich enough to pay back to your father every cursed cent he had loaned
on the Courtlandt property and then have a living income. I could----"

His eyes burned, the veins stood out on his forehead. Jerry realized for
the first time the sacrifice of pride and happiness he had made for his
family name. She finished the sentence for him:

"You could have your marriage annulled."

He looked at her steadily.

"That did not enter into my plan. Why, oh why, did Uncle Nick have to
wreck the whole thing by involving you? I wouldn't take you if you would
go. You married me for what I could give you socially. A lot I could
give you out there in the wilderness."

"Nevertheless, I shall go with you."

"What! Why, by your own confession you would starve for people in a
wilderness."

"Do you want this fortune?"

"More than I ever wanted anything--except one--in my life."

Jerry whitened at his amendment.

"I suppose that one thing was Felice. In spite of that I shall go with
you. I shall fulfil my part of the conditions and after you have
fulfilled yours then--then we'll consider."

He strode over to her, seized her hands and pulled her to her feet
beside him. His face was white, his eyes searching.

"Peg said that you would walk over burning ploughshares if you thought
duty called; she's right. But--but I shan't let you make the sacrifice."

"You can't help yourself if I am determined to go. You don't want to
start a scandal in high society, do you, by refusing to take me? I don't
care to go any more than you care to have me," bitterly, "but--but I
promised. Uncle Nick knew what he was doing when he made me read that
marriage service, 'and forsaking all others'--I shall be doing that all
right. But it was not a fair-weather vow. If your interests take you to
the ranch I shall go with you."

"What will your father say?"

She shrank away from him but he still had her hands in his and drew her
back. Her lips curved in a disdainful smile.

"I think--I think we shall have what the miners used to call a
'helofarow.'"

"He will never consent to your going."

"What difference will that make? How can he prevent it? He cannot take
back what he has given your father. That is all that need concern you,"
with exasperated frankness. He flushed darkly at her tone, dropped her
hands, and touched a bell. When the butler opened the door he commanded
curtly, "Judson, ask Mr. Lawson and my father to come here."

When the two men appeared in answer to the summons Glamorgan was with
them. His face was deeply flushed, his little green eyes snapped with
anger.

"Look here, Jerry, what's this I hear about your going off on a ranch?
It can't be done, I tell you. Steve doesn't need that--that old
mischief-maker's money," his voice broke queerly, but he steadied it and
went on, "Why doesn't he stay here and spend mine?"

"You are quite right, Mr. Glamorgan. I have been trying to impress your
daughter with the fact that she need not take her marriage vows
literally. I am content to eat the crumbs which fall from my rich
father-in-law's table."

"Steve!" Peter Courtlandt protested brokenly.

Jerry faced her father. Her black gown brought out the pallor of her
face and throat. The only color about her was the vivid curves of her
lips; even her usually brown eyes were black.

"I'm sorry if it hurts you, Dad, but I shall go with Steve. He is
entitled to his uncle's fortune. What is a year out of our lives?
Nothing. I--married to please you. Now I shall interpret my marriage
vows to please myself." She was most lovely as she defied him. His green
eyes contracted to emerald sparks. The veins stood out on his forehead
like cords. Jerry remembered that it was the first time one of his
children had gone contrary to his command.

"What will you do for money? That infernal will strips you of
everything. Ask Steve for it? I can see you. Come, Jerry, give this
thing up. Settle down here at the Manor and be happy."

For the first time since she had come into the lives of the Courtlandts
Jerry looked like her father. There was the same determination about her
eyes, about her lips.

"Be happy! Does smooth going necessarily mean happiness? Does jogging
along on the path beaten by our social set mean happiness? Do you know
how I feel, Dad? It is as though Steve and I had come up against an
enormous sign-post bearing the startling information, ROAD CLOSED:
DETOUR. The detour may be hard going, detours usually are, but they also
offer more thrills and adventures than the broad highway. I'm willing to
take a sporting chance if--if Steve wants me----"

Young Courtlandt laid his hands lightly on her shoulders and looked down
at her with inscrutable eyes.

"I do want you, but remember, if I win out, half of what I have will be
settled unreservedly on you. You will have earned it." She looked up at
him for a moment.

"Then when you have rewarded me for being a good girl and have paid back
Father, you will consider yourself in a position to snap your fingers at
the Glamorgans?" He looked down at her with disconcerting steadiness as
he answered cryptically:

"I shall consider myself in a position to dictate terms to one member of
the family. Mr. Lawson, I accept the conditions of my uncle's will."




CHAPTER VII


With each stop of the cross-continent train rain-coated men, with
occasionally a woman, entered the car and passed down the corridor to
disappear into the compartments. Porters wearing that air of authority
and responsibility for which one might justly look in a premier or
secretary of state, came and went; conductors punched tickets and
answered questions more or less amiably; the wheels rattled and roared
and ground ceaselessly; outside the rain descended with a persistence
worthy a better cause.

From the window of her compartment Geraldine Courtlandt looked out upon
a drenched world. There was nothing to see save a dense white sheet ten
feet beyond the window. In an hour she and Steve would reach their
destination, the first stop on the detour, she thought with a sudden
mist before her eyes. She hoped that the storm was not an omen of what
lay before them. She shook herself mentally. "Don't be silly and
superstitious," she admonished that Jerry Courtlandt who persisted in
having a queer lumpy feeling in the region of her throat whenever she
thought of the curious twist the apparently broad, straight road of her
marriage had taken.

Her father had maintained his attitude of angry aloofness. He had not
come to the station to see her off, she had waited on the platform until
the train started, hoping that he would relent at the last moment. He
had sent a curt typewritten note to the effect that if she and Steve
regained their common sense and returned to the Manor before the end of
the year he would double the income he had allowed them. There were a
dozen glorious American beauties in her compartment when she entered it.
The roses had set the atmosphere tingling with life and color and love.
Jerry laughed happily and kissed each one of them. How like her father
it was to write the note with one hand and send flowers with the other.

What difference would it make if her income were doubled if she were
disloyal to the promise she made when she married Steve, the girl
thought, as chin on her hand she gazed unseeingly out at the rain. "An
easy conscience is more to be desired than great riches," she
paraphrased to herself as she thought of the weeks when she had been
engaged to Greyson. Her heart still smarted with contrition as she
remembered how ashamed she had been that she could make so little
response to the love he lavished upon her. "Never again!" she said
aloud. "I've made two mistakes, Bruce and Steve. From now on I'll do
what I know to be right even if I hurt someone else and--and hate doing
it. But--but just what shall I do for money?" she questioned with
puckered brows.

She opened her beaded bag and poured the contents into her lap. "How are
the mighty fallen!" she quoted with a laugh as she looked down upon the
collection displayed. A handkerchief, one gold pencil, the key to her
safe-deposit box, the membership card of her club, a book of postage
stamps. Nothing else. She had carried out the terms of the will in
letter and spirit. After her bills had been paid she had transferred her
bank balance to her father and had dropped her remaining cash into the
box of a Salvation Army lassie as she entered the station to take the
west-bound train. The woman in the red-banded pokebonnet, standing on a
board to keep her stout boots from the dampness, had looked at the bills
crushed into her box, then after the donor incredulously. Such lavish
generosity was rare in her experience.

Jerry frowningly regarded the objects in her lap. Not one cent of money.
"Being marooned on a desert island has nothing on being marooned on a
ranch without a penny," she mused under her breath. She hastily stuffed
her belongings back into her bag as she heard an approaching whistle.
It was Steve. The queer merry-go-round of fortune had accomplished one
thing, it had restored Steve's spirits. Since leaving New York he had
been a different person from the morose, touchy individual she had known
since her engagement to him. He had been companionable, sympathetic in a
fraternal sort of way which had made her wish fervently that Fate had
given her a brother instead of a husband.

"Won't you come in?" she asked as Courtlandt stopped at the open door,
then as he entered, "Is it time to get on my coat?"

"Not for half an hour." He seated himself opposite her. There was a new
expression in his eyes which set the girl's heart to beating
uncomfortably. She couldn't define it, she couldn't meet it long enough
to define it.

"Jerry," there was an "'tention company" note in his voice which brought
her chin up defiantly, "I suppose--if you complied with the terms of
Uncle Nick's will you must be rather down and out financially--yes?" She
succumbed to the lure of his smile and the laughter in his eyes.

"Thought telepathy," she responded gayly. "I was taking account of stock
when you appeared. I have in this bag, one pencil, one handkerchief, one
perfectly good club-membership card--good, that is, until January
first--and a book of two-cent stamps. Those stamps won't imperil our
hopes of the inheritance, will they?" she asked with exaggerated
anxiety. "Caleb Lawson held me up before I boarded the train. I had to
sign a paper and show him my empty purse to prove that I was really the
Beggar-maid, bare-pursed instead of barefooted, following my King
Cophetua out into the cold, cold world."

"Your simile is faulty. As I remember it the Beggar-maid loved the
King."

"Also the King loved the Beggar-maid. You're right, the similarity
ceases with my lack of funds."

"I shall open an account for you in the bank at Slippy Bend. Until
then----" his hand went to his pocket. The girl's face whitened.

"Don't offer me money, Steve," she commanded tensely.

"I'm not offering money. I am giving you what belongs to you. Aren't you
earning what Uncle Nick left as well as I?"

"Weren't you earning your share of Father's money when you married me?"

"That's different."

"Why? You refused to take my money. I refuse to take yours."

"You will take it."

Jerry leaned forward, her face as colorless as his.

"Take that 'Hands up!' expression out of your eyes, Steve. I shall not
take a cent of your money. You will find that a Glamorgan has as much
pride as a Courtlandt if she hasn't several generations of aristocrats
behind her." Her angry eyes blazed as he retorted laughingly:

"You forget. You're not a Glamorgan now."

She shrugged lightly.

"More's the pity."

"Do you mean that?" Consternation banished the smile from his lips. He
caught her hands in his. "The day Uncle Nick arrived I heard you
say----"

"Nex' stop Slippy Bend, Miss. Porter for your bags," interrupted a
Jamaican voice with a Chicago accent. Jerry's face flushed with relief
as the black head with its gleaming eyes and teeth bobbed in at the
door. She pointed to the bags. As the man went out with them she turned
to Courtlandt with an embarrassed laugh.

"You've won this time, Steve. I had forgotten the porter. You'll have to
tip him and the maid for me. However, as this is really a deferred
wedding-trip the expenses naturally fall to the groom, don't they?" with
reckless daring.

He looked at her until her laughing eyes fell before the glow of his.

"You've said it--if this can be called a wedding-trip--but take it from
me, sometime, Mrs. Courtlandt, I'll show you what a real honeymoon can
be. Porter, here's another bag."

He followed the black man into the corridor. Jerry settled her smart
toque and pinned on her veil before the mirror, but she couldn't see her
own face, only Steve's with that curious I'm-biding-my-time look in his
eyes. What had he meant about a honeymoon? Did he mean that he and
Felice--no, _no_, Steve was not that kind. She looked about the
compartment to make sure that she had left nothing. Three roses still
glowing with beauty remained of the dozen. She pinned them to the front
of her coat. She would take so much of her father into her new life with
her.

The wooden shanty which served as a shelter for telegraph, freight and
passengers at Slippy Bend was as depressing as rain, flapping shingles
and a skewed roof could make it. The road which struggled up a slope to
hide between two shabby buildings was a river of mud. A knock-kneed man
with a string of slat-ribbed calico horses and cayuses following him,
waded downward through the middle of it. Every few steps he would stop
to yank a howling, red-eyed bulldog from a hole which had betrayed him.
Jerry valiantly blinked back the tears as she watched him. She had never
seen anything quite as sordid and depressing as her surroundings. The
only note of civilization in the dreary scene was the large, curtained
touring car by the platform. As she looked at it, two legs, which had
acquired Queen Anne curves from many hours spent in the saddle, wriggled
from under the curtains followed by a large body. A Belgian police dog,
tawny, noble, aloof, followed the man. Courtlandt who had been busy with
the luggage turned with a boyish laugh and held out his hand.

"It sure is great to be back, Pete. Down, Goober, down, boy!" to the dog
who, after an uncertain second, had leaped to lick his face. He kept one
hand on the animal's head as he turned to the girl beside him. "Jerry,
this is Pete Gerrish, who taught me all I know about ranching. He is
Uncle Nick's right-hand man. Pete, this is Mrs. Courtlandt."

"He's got me wrong, ma'am. I _was_ the old gentleman's right-hand man,
but Ranlett's in the saddle now. I'm sure pleased to meet you an' I hope
you'll be downright happy with us."

"Thank you, Mr. Gerrish." Jerry felt the tears absurdly near as she
looked up at him. He was regarding her with unqualified approval. His
large face was cross-currented with fine lines and smiles; his Stetson
came close to ears which looked as though the Almighty had designed them
as hat-rests and had made a surprisingly good job of it. He carried the
marks of his calling in the devil-may-care poise of his body, in his
clothing, in his rollicking Irish eyes.

"I'll give Baldy Jennings a hand with the trunks to get 'em out of the
rain till the boys get here for them. They're teamin' in. How the devil
did yer expect to get all them things out to the ranch over these spring
roads, Steve--I would say Chief? The boys has decided that even if they
did teach the new owner most of what he knows about ranchin', it won't
do to be familiar-like no more. So we've decided to call him chief,
ma'am," Gerrish inserted the bit of information to Jerry in the midst of
his dissertation on the condition of the roads. "I went up to the hubs
gettin' here with no load. By cripes, I don't know what'll happen goin'
back."

Jerry was tempted to echo that "By cripes!" later, when the big car
laboring through what seemed rivers of mud, foundered in a hole. She
unfastened the curtain and looked out. Goober on the running-board,
plastered with mud, looked like nothing so much as a model sketchily
done in clay as he peered down inquiringly. Gerrish expressed himself in
language which the girl was sure was being painfully expurgated because
of her. The wheels groaned and choked as they churned up fountains of
mud. As she watched the wheel under her Jerry could think of nothing
but a gigantic egg-beater gone mad from the futility of its efforts. The
back of Gerrish's neck had taken on a dangerous, apoplectic color
generated, doubtless, by restraint from the fullest self-expression.

"Would it help if I got out?" she ventured in the lull while the engine
rested.

"Haw! I guess if yer did we'd have to haul you out in a hurry or send a
rescue-party through to China," Gerrish discouraged while Courtlandt
commanded:

"Stay where you are! I'll take the wheel, Pete. We have nothing to put
under the back wheels; it would do no good if we had. The engine will
have to do the trick."

He threw on the switch. The engine started. The spinning wheels hitched
forward, he reversed, hitched forward, reversed, hitched forward till
Jerry experienced all of the discomforts, and none of the stimulation,
of being aboard ship on a high and choppy sea. Courtlandt grimly pursued
his tactics till with a roar from the motor and a lurch which sent
Jerry's teeth into her lower lip, the car, looking like an uncanny
prehistoric animal which had been wallowing in a mud bath, dragged
itself from its hole, skidded with hair-raising irresponsibility, came
back to the road and struggled on. The rain stopped. The sky showed
shapeless spots of light where the clouds were thinning. Vapors floated
lightly above the fields.

It was twilight, a crimson and gold twilight, when Courtlandt turned
into the avenue of cottonwoods which led to the ranch-house of the
Double O. The air was fragrant with fresh washed earth and the spicy
breath which the storm had beaten from the pines. From somewhere a
meadow-lark trilled an ecstatic greeting and as though frightened at its
temerity as suddenly subsided. The naming color in the west might have
been the glow from a blazing forest, but it was only the sun flinging
its good-night over sky and fields and mountains in the whole-hearted
Western way. Against the red light squatted the shadowy shape of the
ranch-house.

When the car stopped Goober sprang to the porch and stood as if awaiting
orders. In the background hovered two Chinese servants, a man and a
woman. Their slant-eyes in their moon faces were ludicrously alike. The
woman in her gay silks and embroideries looked like a painting on
rice-paper.

Pete and Hopi Soy carried in the bags. At a nod from Courtlandt the
woman followed. Steve held the door wide. With a curious choked feeling
Jerry entered the house. Then her emotion found vent in a little cry of
delight. After the grayness and mud of the ride out the great
living-room glowed like a jewel. The color stole through her senses like
an elixir and rested and refreshed her. Her eyes shone, her lips curved
in a faint smile as she looked about her. The servants had disappeared.
She and Steve were alone.

Logs blazed in the great stone fireplace. Safely out of scorching
distance a white cat dozed in front of it, her fluffy coat rosy in the
firelight, her wide eyes like blinking topaz as she regarded the
newcomers. Gorgeous serapes from old Mexico, Hopi saddle-blankets,
heavily beaded garments of the Blackfeet, Apache bows and quivers full
of arrows, Navaho blankets, skins of mountain lions and lynx there were,
each one placed in artistic relation to its neighbor. A profusion of
books and magazines, a baby-grand piano, a phonograph _de luxe_, softly
shaded lamps, added their note of civilization to the array of savage
trophies and over the mantel----

"Why, Steve! There's Mother!" whispered Jerry softly.

For a silent moment the man and girl standing side by side looked up at
the tender, laughing face of the woman in riding costume. She didn't
seem like a thing of paint and canvass, she was real, vital, alive and
welcoming. Jerry was the first to stir. She colored with confusion.

"Steve, I--I beg your pardon! I--I shouldn't have called her--mother.
But I was so--so surprised. It seemed for a moment as if she held out
welcoming arms to me." She turned away. Courtlandt gripped her shoulders
with a force which hurt.

"She is your mother--I----" he released her abruptly and threw open a
door. "These are your rooms. Mine are opposite. You see we have but one
story in the ranch-house. Your bags are in your room. Ming Soy will come
to help you when you ring." He put his two hands on her shoulders again.
"I'm glad that you wore my roses."

"Your roses! Why I thought--I thought----" Her voice was drenched with
disappointment. Steve's face was a mask, only his eyes seemed alive as
he removed his hands and asked crisply:

"That they came from Greyson?"

"No, Steve, no! How could you think such a thing? I thought that Dad had
relented and--and had sent the roses to----" she winked her lashes
furiously but not before Steve had seen the diamond-like drops that
beaded them. His voice was tender as he comforted:

"Your father will come round, Jerry. Just believe with old Doc Rand that
things have a way of coming marvelously, unbelievably right. You are not
sorry that you came, are you?"

"I'll say I'm not!" She had essayed an imitation of his voice and words
but the emotion which had threatened her all day surged in her heart and
betrayed her. Steve caught her hands in his.

"Don't look like that, little girl. You're going to love the life here
and the ranch and--and--and Goober," he added with a short laugh as the
dog bounded into the room.




CHAPTER VIII


Jerry Courtlandt sent her horse up the slope and came out on a bluff
above the Double O. As the girl sat motionless looking off over the
plain, an artist would have labeled the picture she made, "A Study in
Browns," before he slipped it into his mental portfolio. Her mount,
Patches, was a deep mahogany in color, her riding boots were but a shade
lighter than his satin skin, her breeches and long coat were of khaki,
her blouse was fawn color, her eyes were deeply, darkly bronze.
Rebellious tendrils of lustrous brown hair escaped from under the broad
brim of the campaign hat she wore, one of Steve's army hats with its
gold and black cord. He had insisted upon her using it. The hats she had
brought to the ranch had been urban affairs, not designed to shade her
eyes from the glare of white roads. As she had had no money with which
to buy another she had taken it.

Jerry pulled it off as she took a deep breath of the glorious air
asparkle with bubbles of life. She loved the spot. Every day that she
rode she stopped to look down upon the valley. Far away among the
foot-hills a silver stream cleft rocky bluffs, then coiled and foamed
its way until it broadened and flashed in gleaming waterfalls. In places
where it boiled and frothed rustic bridges had been thrown across.
Toward the east lay the sturdily built stock corrals, storehouses spick
and span with whitewash, towering silos. Toward the west were fenced-off
alfalfa fields and beyond them a mosaic of varicolored pasture-lands,
dotted with grazing herds, stretched out to the foot-hills.

Beyond the foot-hills loomed mountains darkly green with pine and spruce
to the timberline, above which reared sombre, forbidding rock until
against the ragged edge of gold-lined clouds, white peaks flamed crimson
in the slanting sun. Toward the north she could see the gap in the
mountains through which the railroad cut. The gap was known as the
Devil's Hold-up because of the natural facilities it had offered--and
still offered for that matter,--to the class whose pleasing pastime it
had been to maintain their divine right in the other man's property at
the point of a gun.

Almost beneath her, approached by a broad, well-graded road, lay the
ranch-house. Telephone wires from all directions rounded up the
activities of the Double O at the office near by. The house was a
rambling structure of rudely squared timbers set in fieldstone and
cement. Its one story was built around a court on which many doors
opened and which was gayly brocaded with shrubs and plants in blossom
this late June day.

Where was Steve, Jerry wondered, as her eyes lingered on the office
building. She saw him less and less as the days passed, as more and more
he assumed the responsibilities of the Double O. He was off before she
was up in the morning riding the range or in the dairies or barns until
night. She had hardly believed her eyes when on the evening after her
arrival, she had seen Steve and Tommy Benson, his secretary, come into
the living-room in dinner coats. Courtlandt had answered her unspoken
question with the explanation that it had been Nicholas Fairfax's
unvarying rule to shed ranch problems at night, and he had found that
getting into the dress of the city helped. A man just naturally would
curb an impulse to toddle down to the corral if he were in dinner
clothes. The two didn't seem to go together.

Steve had appointed Tommy Benson her squire, he himself had so little
time to give her. A laugh curved Jerry's lips as she thought of Tommy.
He was a slight youth with a face of one of Raphael's cherubs grown up
and a book for his inseparable companion. His almost yellow hair was
short and wavy, his eyes were a brilliant blue, his skin was as nearly
pink and white as human skin can be after it has been ranch-seasoned,
his lips seemed made for laughter. He and Steve had been officers in
the same company and when they returned from overseas the two had gone
to the ranch to recuperate. Tommy had remained there to please his
mother. He was in the throes of a virulent attack of stage fever and
Mrs. Benson had begged him to wait a few years before he decided upon
acting as his career. She had assured him that if after reflection he
still felt that it was the profession for him she would attend his
première without a qualm. So he had stayed at the Double O. There was
plenty of money back of him and he had grown to love the ranch life,
apparently.

Tommy was taking the responsibility of training the lady of the ranch
seriously, that is as seriously as a boy could who was forever
expressing his emotions and convictions in the words of the immortals,
Jerry thought with a smile. She had ridden since she was a little girl
but Tommy was making her proficient in some hair-raising stunts. Steve
didn't know of those but he had ordained that she was to learn to saddle
Patches, that she must be able to fasten and unfasten gates securely
while mounted, that she was to rope and shoot from her horse's back.

Her days were full but filled with her own pleasures. She did nothing
for others, she thought ruefully as she gazed down upon the smoke rising
from the cook-house chimney. Her only link with the outside world was
Sandy, the carrier, whose appearance sent her imagination winging into
the past whenever she saw him. The queer little postman wore a tall gray
hat which, Tommy Benson insisted, was a left-over from the wardrobe of
Gentleman Rick whose zeal as a promoter of pleasure in Slippy Bend in
the nineties had lured men through miles of wilderness. Jerry often sat
on the wall beside the mail-box to await his coming. He always had news
and a quaint bit of philosophy if he hadn't letters. Letters! There
weren't many for her. She had had hosts of friends in school and college
but she heard from them seldom now. Her conscience administered a
vicious pinch. Yes, it was quite all her fault, she answered it. The
girls apparently had adored her, but she had been unable to accept their
devotion with single-minded pleasure. Always in the back of her mind had
skulked the ghost of that first home near the coal-fields. Would they
have cared for her could they have seen that? After her marriage events
had moved too rapidly for her to pick up the scattered lines of her
correspondence. However, she no longer had that excuse, her days now
were long and uneventful. She would write to every friend she had. It
would be like sending out a fleet of ships. How eagerly she would await
the return cargoes.

She broke into her own good resolutions with a laugh. To send out
letters one must have stamps. She had used the last one she possessed
yesterday and to get more she must have money. "Money!" Jerry laughed
again as she repeated the word aloud. Conditions were reversed now as to
money, she thought as she stared unseeingly off at the mountain tops
which pricked the crimsoning sky. Steve had the income from his uncle's
large property as long as he remained on the ranch. It would not be his
unreservedly until a year from the day they had arrived at the Double O.
She had persistently refused to accept money from him. If she wrote to
the girls she would need a regiment of postage stamps. If she could
earn----

Her eyes flashed earthward from the mountains as she heard the click of
a hoof against rock and the creak of saddle leather. A horse and rider
topped the slope. It was Courtlandt on his favorite mount, Blue Devil, a
horse all spirit, shining blue-black satin. He was a regal creature from
his flowing mane to his silken fetlock. He nosed Patches who showed an
undignified haste to snuggle up to him in return.

"Did you think you had lost me, Steve?" Jerry asked gayly as she noted
the seriousness of his blue eyes and the crease in his forehead which
his broad-brimmed Stetson was not drawn low enough to hide. How
unnecessarily good looking he was in his riding clothes, she thought. He
wore a black tie with his khaki shirt, his heavy riding breeches were
tucked into the tops of high boots which laced up the front and had
curious sloping heels. He had removed one of his riding gloves and the
dark stone of his ring, which bore the seal of the Courtlandts, made the
browned hand seem white in contrast. He gave the impression of being
absolute master of his horse and of any situation which might arise.
Jerry's heart unaccountably skipped a beat as he answered her question.

"No, I saw you from the road. You looked like one of Dallin's bronzes.
Where is Tommy?" with quick displeasure.

"Don't glower. I sent him back. I don't want him always at my heels. I
love to come up here alone and, figuratively speaking, look down upon my
blessings."

"Was that what you were doing when I came up? Your expression belied
you. Instead of looking beatific, you looked worried."

She laughed up at him with warm friendliness as she bent forward and
confided in a theatrical whisper:

"You are right. I was figuring finances. I have just----" The color
flew to her face as she thought of what he might infer. She stumbled on
quite conscious that she was making matters worse. "I'm about at the end
of my stamp book and--and--I've developed a sudden fervor for letter
writing and--and----" she broke off her breathless explanation as he
laid his finely-shaped hand on her saddle-bow. Even back in the Manor
days his hands had fascinated her.

"I'm glad that you've brought up the subject of finances, Jerry. The
money question between you and me has got to be cleared up, and cleared
up now. You've had your way long enough. Don't be foolish any longer,
little girl, I----"

"I shall not take your money, Steve. Would you take mine?" then as his
eyes darkened stormily, "Oh, truly, I didn't mean to rouse sleeping
dogs--but--but I won't take it. I do nothing for you--if I even had
anything to do about the house but Ming and Hopi Soy run the household
motor noiselessly, perfectly, with every cylinder hitting. If there was
anything I could do----"

"There is something you can do."

Jerry's heart flew to her throat. What did he mean? He looked grim and
determined.

"W-what is it?" she asked faintly. She put on her hat, tightened her
reins unconsciously.

Courtlandt laughed. The sternness left his face. There was an
expression in his eyes which she couldn't translate as he teased:

"Don't run, Jerry. You don't trust me over much, do you? To return to
finances, if you want to help you can do so tremendously by taking over
the accounts and my correspondence. Tommy's had that job but I need him
outside. Ranlett's leaving. You'll soon get the hang of the accounting
and it won't take much of your time."

"But if it took all I'd love to do it, Steve. Shall I have a desk in the
office?" she asked eagerly.

"If you agree to accept a salary."

"But I don't want to be paid for helping."

He turned his horse's head toward the slope.

"That settles it. I shall send to the agency to-morrow for a private
secretary." As she did not answer he looked at her with a smile which
lighted eyes and lips. "Now will you be good?"

She regarded him with oblique scrutiny. With an adorable imitation of
Pete Gerrish she drawled:

"You're sure puttin' it straight, Chief. You win. Now shall we mosey
'long home?" With a touch of spurs she wheeled Patches and headed him
down the slope.

"Why is Ranlett leaving?" she asked as their horses trotted side by side
along the hard white ranch road. Courtlandt's face reddened darkly.

"Because I thought it time to determine the status of the alien on
Double O ranch. Ranlett had a couple of men in the outfit who have not
taken out first naturalization papers, even, who had been pointing out
to my boys deficiencies of the government. They're flares set here to
ignite any chaff of discontent which may be blowing about."

"But you're not against freedom of speech, Steve?"

"You bet I am against the inflammatory brand on the tongue of an alien.
What is he in this country but a guest? If a man came to stay in my home
and began a systematic undermining of the ideas and ideals on which that
home was built, what do you think I'd do to him?"

"I'll say you'd sure put him out, Chief," with Gerrish's drawl and a
little rush of laughter.

"I'll say I would. So quick he'd wonder what struck him. Why should the
government put up with their vicious patter? It's bad enough when an
honest-to-God citizen breaks loose and turns red, but for a man who is
here by courtesy--well, as I remarked before, there is no place for him
on the Double O ranch. Aliens will keep their jobs here only so long as
they conform to my ideas of fitness."

"You're right, Steve. I have never thought of agitators in that light
but they are a sort of human slow-match timed to fire a mine of
discontent, aren't they? And half the time the mine doesn't know what
it is blowing-up about. How do the men feel about Ranlett's defection?"

"I haven't asked them. What's the infernal row?" he demanded as they
drew rein at the gate of the court. Jerry looked at him in surprise. His
tone was that of a man whose nerves were taut to snapping point. She
slid from her horse and dropped the reins. Patches loped quietly but
determinedly in the direction of the corral and supper. Blue Devil, with
a reproachful glance at the deserter, followed daintily in the steps of
his master as Courtlandt and the girl entered the garden. The court was
a riot of plants and shrubs. The air was sweet with the fragrance of
roses just coming into bloom and rent by agitated yelps and a hoarse,
croaking voice.

When Jerry and Steve reached storm centre they saw a combination of
scarlet, blue and green, swaying precariously on the top of a shutter.
It was José's parrot, Benito, flinging to the breeze the most
vituperative epithets a rich and racy vocabulary could suggest. Below
him Goober sat on his haunches. Between barks his tongue dripped, his
mouth hung open as though in riotous laughter. His tawny eyes flashed
ruby light. Tommy Benson, his finger between the pages of a book, his
hair rampant, his blue eyes sparkling with mirth, egged on the two as
he quoted from his favorite "Ancient Mariner":

    "'The wedding guest sat on a stone,
      He could not choose but hear;
    And thus spake on that ancient man,
      The bright-eyed mariner.'"

His eloquence incited the bird to renewed effort to express his
sentiments. Jerry clapped her hands over her ears and dashed into the
house. Steve whistled. The dog bounded in his direction, his quarry
forgotten in the joy of seeing his master. Courtlandt seized him by the
collar.

"What do you mean, you sinner?" he demanded sternly. Goober looked as
though he were about to offer an explanation when the gaudy parrot, who
had been rocking back and forth on the shutter, croaked:

"Lick him, Bo! Lick him!"

Tommy dropped to the ground and rolled with laughter. José came hurrying
out of the house. He swept off his hat with a wide bow. His face had the
look of a much-shriveled mummy, his solitary tooth waggled precariously
as he talked.

"_Que hay! Señor!_ One teeng I tell you. It ees that wild devil of a dog
that makes my leetle Benito to curse. _Madre de Dios_, but he ees
one--one----"

"You've said it, José," encouraged Benson as he sat up and wiped his
eyes. He took his knees in an affectionate embrace. "He sure is one
little curser, that Benito of yours. Want me to help get him down?"

"No--no, Señor Tommee. He come to me." He reached up and after a few
protesting squawks the parti-colored bird settled on the Mexican's
shoulder. As José left the court with him, the parrot shivered, flapped
his wings, winked at Tommy and croaked hoarsely:

"What's all the shootin'?"

Tommy gave vent to a whoop of appreciation before he turned to
Courtlandt, who was regarding the ranch-house door unseeingly. He gave
him a resounding whack on the shoulder as he ranted:

    "'How is't with you
    That you do bend your eye on vacancy?'"

"Quit your histrionics, Tommy. Has Pete Gerrish been here for me?"

"Nope. Nothing doing." Benson stroked Blue Devil's satiny nose and
rested his face against it as he asked in a low tone, "Any news of those
stray calves?"

Courtlandt's brows met in a quick frown.

"No, but of course we'll find them. It's absurd to think a man can get
away with rustling in this enlightened twentieth century, that we've
got to revert to shooting and----"

"That's what the majority of the world claimed in 1914," interrupted
Benson dryly.

"Don't be a blamed pessimist, Tommy. I'm going to take you off the books
and use you outside."

"Oh boy!" he voiced the twentieth century equivalent to the nineteenth
century "Great Scott!" in delighted approval. "If you do that and
Ranlett has been crooked, he hasn't a prayer. I'm the original Sherlock
Holmes. Watch me get him! Pete's boys have all they can do now without
turning detectives. You'd think that Gerrish had just been put in charge
of a new outfit. He's on location every minute, reëstimating the number
of head each pasture should carry, weighing up the stock, sifting out
the undesirables. Take it from me, old dear, he knows every calf by
name, what it's worth now and what it will bring one year from now. He
claims that Ranlett has been underselling. I'll ride the fences
to-morrow. If you say the word I'll take Jerry along and we'll have a
corking time."

"You and Jerry usually have a corking time together, don't you?" Benson
showed his teeth in a flashing smile.

"I'll say we do. I don't like to talk about myself, but----"

Courtlandt laughed.

"You don't care for yourself one little bit, do you, Tommy? By all means
take Jerry if she cares to go. Beat it down to the corral with Blue
Devil, will you? That is if you dare ride him," Steve amended with a
laugh.

Tommy mounted with the agility of a monkey, wheeled his horse and
declaimed theatrically:

    "I dare do all that may become a man
    Who dares do more is none!"




CHAPTER IX

     "Work is the grandest cure for all the maladies and miseries
     that ever beset mankind.--CARLYLE."


Jerry nodded approvingly at the quotation above her desk in the office.
It had been hung there in Old Nick's day and was quite as pertinent in
her case as it might have been in his. To be sure, their maladies
differed. His couldn't by the remotest possibility have been lack of
money, she thought with a laugh.

Steve had installed her at her desk two weeks ago and had then forgotten
her, presumably. Tommy Benson was giving her instructions as to her
duties, but even his attentions were episodic. Ranlett had departed
swearing vengeance in the good old nineteenth century style and Steve
and Gerrish were out from morning till night taking account of stock and
checking up. Tommy was riding range and being general utility man.
Neither he nor Steve knew how closely she had remained at her desk. She
must make good and she must accomplish it without taking too much of
Tommy's time. As Steve had insisted upon paying her a month's salary in
advance she had surreptitiously sent for a correspondence course on
bookkeeping. She was making Sandy's life miserable because the material,
which she expected would make her efficient in twenty-four hours, had
not arrived.

Arms on the back of her swivel-chair, one knee in the seat she twisted
slowly about. The room inspired the same sense of breathless interest it
had the first time she entered it. Two walls were encased in glass.
Behind the glass hung a collection of riding equipment and firearms.
Some of the pieces dated back to the epoch-making journey of the
pathfinders, Lewis and Clark, some to the first white settlers in the
region west of the Mississippi. There were saddles rich in silver
filigree which had come from the southwest of the cattle country; there
were saddles with short round skirts, open stirrups, narrow and rimmed
with iron; some had borders and emblems stamped on the leather, some had
dark stains. There were chaps, fringed and unfringed, in infinite
variety. There were coiled ropes of rawhide and of well worn grass;
there were guns and knives and tomahawks, there was a stained and
tattered Stars and Stripes.

"You fairly ooze atmosphere." Jerry mused aloud, her dreamy brown eyes
on the saddles. "If you could speak what couldn't you tell of romance
and comedy and tragedy. Herds, bad men, _voyageurs_, rustlers, settlers,
prairie-schooners and Indians, you must have seen them all." Her voice
had dropped to a whisper. Its tenseness roused her from what was fast
becoming a vermilion orgy of imagination. She swung her chair round and
dropped into it with a laugh and the reflection, "Pete Gerrish says that
when a person talks to himself he's sure in for adventure."

She picked up a typewritten letter and regarded it with vainglorious
elation. Not so bad! There was a spiral effect at the end of one
sentence but on the whole it was a creditable affair for a person who
had never used a typewriter till the week before and who was relying on
the hunt-and-punch method for progress. Her already flushed cheeks took
on a deeper tinge as she looked at the filing cases. Would she ever
acquire a feeling of even bowing acquaintance with them, she wondered;
they were most awe-inspiring.

The sun lay warmly on the fields outside, a gay little breeze spiced
with pine danced in at the open window, stirred the curls at the nape of
the girl's neck and whisked out again. Jerry looked out longingly, shook
her head. "Remember, you're a daughter of toil now," she adjured the
vagabond impulse which urged her to be up and away on her horse. She
resolutely turned her back on the tempting out-of-doors and picked up
her letter.

"'Gentlemen,'" she read aloud, "'We are shipping'--now why should I have
typed that slipping--'thirty head of Guernseys on the----'" A shadow
from the open door fell on her paper. Absorbed in her corrections, she
spoke without looking up from her desk:

"You are wanted at the Lower Field, Pete. The Chief just 'phoned that
more calves are missing. That----" as no colorful ejaculation followed
her announcement, Gerrish swore with fascinating facility when he was
deeply moved, she looked up in surprise. The smile which the thought of
Pete had brought stiffened on her lips. She sprang to her feet and
pushed back her chair. A man leaned against the door, a giant of a man
fully six feet two. In a flash she sized him up. He was of different
caliber from the "boys" of the outfit. No one of them would have stood
with his hat on in her presence. The stranger's Mexican sombrero, pushed
far back on his head, revealed rough red hair; his eyes were a hard
blue; his nose suggested the beak of a hawk; his mouth was his best
feature, it looked as though it might have been tender before the
insidious processes of discouragement and recklessness got in their
work. One temple gave the impression of having been knocked in and from
the dent to the corner of his lips ran an angry, wrinkled scar. It
contributed a curiously saturnine expression to what in youth might have
been a pleasing face. From feet to waist his clothing was reminiscent of
the army; from the belt up it might have belonged to a rider, even to
the gay purple and crimson bandana at his neck. The stranger smiled
boldly as his eyes met the girl's. Jerry's heart did a handspring and
righted. A fleeting cloud of apprehension dimmed the brilliance of her
eyes.

"If you are looking for a job you'll have to come back after five," she
volunteered with her best in-charge-of-the-office manner. "The manager
is off on the range." She could have cheerfully bitten out her tongue as
she noted the smile with which the man received the information.

"I'm no cow-puncher," he answered disdainfully. "I'm not hunting a job
here. I'm looking for the railroad. I took the ranch road by mistake,
but, now that I am here----" He straightened his great shoulders, pulled
his soft hat jauntily over one ear with his big hairy hand, and took a
step into the room. "Well, you're too pretty a girl to be left alone,
_sabe_? I always had a taste for stenogs."

Jerry's heart did another turn. She hated the man's eyes. Hers flashed
to the desk. There was no use trying to telephone, he might stop her;
besides, the ranch was an affair of magnificent distances; it would take
time for anyone she called to reach the office. Ming and Hopi would be
of as much assistance as two Chinese dolls. She must depend upon herself
to get rid of the creature. She swiftly computed the relative splashing
values of the ink-well and the pot of paste. The ink had it. Her hand
crept along the desk.

"Don't come any nearer. If you're wise you'll go at once."

"I get you. Here's-your-hat-what's-your-hurry stuff, yes? But I think
I'll stay. I've just come up from the border. You're the handsomest
white girl I've seen in months. Come on, be friends. I like that
gilt-edged effect in your hair and eyes. Take it from me----"

Jerry was white to the lips. She lifted the ink-well.

"You'd better go or I----"

"What's your business here?" a crisp voice interrupted from the door.

"Steve!"

With the startled whisper the stiffening departed from Jerry's knees.
She sank back in her chair. The stranger wheeled with military precision
then, in a startled voice laden with pride and affection, cried:

"_Comment ça va, mon Lieutenant!_"

"Carl! Oh boy, Carl, where did you come from?"

The undertone in Courtlandt's voice brought the tears stinging to
Jerry's eyes. Steve gripped the stranger's hand as though he would never
let it go. The two patted one another's shoulders with their free hands
and beamed with suspiciously bright eyes.

"What good wind blew you here, Beechy?" Steve demanded. "Jerry, this is
Carl Beechy, who was my top sergeant in France. That scar he wears was
intended for me, and--and--he took it. Carl, this is my--this is Mrs.
Courtlandt."

"Mrs. Courtlandt! Your wife, Lieutenant? _C'est drôle, ça!_
I--I--thought----" The girl had never seen such contrition as clouded
Beechy's eyes as they met hers. There was not a trace of recklessness in
them now; they were frankly pleading. She hesitated for a moment, then
smiled.

"I'm glad that you came to the Double O, Sergeant Beechy. It was
fortunate that you arrived when you did, Steve. Mr. Beechy was just
going. You--you might not have recognized him had you met him on the
road." Her lips twitched traitorously as her glance flashed to the
ink-well on the desk.

Beechy's eyes sent her a wireless of passionate gratitude and
admiration. Then he turned to Courtlandt.

"You are the last person I expected to see here, Lieutenant."

"Weren't you looking for me, Carl? I told you----"

"I know, you told me to look you up, but--two years is a long time and
I've found men forget. I went to Mexico after I left hospital. I've been
drifting till now----" He broke off the sentence sharply. His face had
the curious look which tanned skin has when the blood has been drawn
away from it. Jerry could have sworn that there was fright in his eyes.
Did Steve see what she saw? Evidently not, for he exclaimed:

"When you didn't turn up I thought you'd re-enlisted."

"Me! Nothing doing, Lieutenant. The next time my country calls it'll
have to call so loud that I'll hear it at the other end of the world.
No, me and the U.S.A. is through."

"That's fool talk, Beechy. I've heard it before. If you were needed you
and every man who talks like you would be the first to answer the call
to the colors. I know you. You jumped in at the first sign of trouble.
You'd do it again. Well, there's a job for you right here."

The man's lips stiffened. A look of dog-like devotion flooded his eyes.

"That's just like you, but--but I can't take it, Lieutenant. I've signed
up for--for something else, and you know--there's--there's honor among
thieves," with a strained attempt at levity which was belied by his
eyes. He looked at Jerry. "I never knew what a man could be till I met
the Lieutenant, Mrs. Courtlandt. I'd always thought that a rich guy was
bound to be soft, but he's tested steel. I've got to beat it this
minute. I--I was telling your wife when I came in, Lieutenant, that I
was looking for the railroad and took the ranch road by mistake."

"But you can't go, Beechy. Good Lord, man, you've got to eat somewhere,
at least stop for chow. Come along to the bunk-house. I want the boys to
know you." He turned to Jerry. "Did you get hold of Pete?"

"No, I couldn't reach him. I--I thought that it was he when Mr. Beechy
appeared."

"Let it go then." He looked at her keenly. "Have you been out of the
office this week? I thought not," as she colored faintly. "Don't do any
more work to-day--please. Let's go, Carl."

Beechy turned to Jerry. He twisted his hat awkwardly in his big hands.

"Good-bye, Mrs. Courtlandt. I hope that you'll--you'll----"

Jerry held out her hand with a smile.

"I shall always remember what you did for your lieutenant, Sergeant
Beechy. Good luck; if you don't like the railroad come back to us." He
gripped the hand she extended. Jerry gave his a warning pressure as she
looked up and saw Steve regarding them intently. With a squeeze which
made her see fifty-seven varieties of stars and their collateral
branches, Beechy released her hand.

"Let's go, Lieutenant."

Jerry looked after the two as they strode away broad shoulder almost
touching broad shoulder. Had they been girls they would have their arms
around each other's waists, she was sure. What strange friendships the
war had welded. Braggadocio had slipped from Beechy like a garment the
instant he recognized Courtlandt's voice. He had assumed an entirely
different personality. Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde. The soldier was a much
safer citizen than the man of peace, she told herself with a reminiscent
shiver.

She picked up the papers on her desk, then dropped them. Steve had been
emphatic about her going out. Suddenly she felt that she couldn't endure
four walls a moment longer. She must be in the open. She pulled down the
top of her desk and dashed through the flowering court to the house.
She called Ming Soy to bring lunch to her room. She telephoned the
corral to send up Patches.

In her cool, silvery gray linen riding clothes Jerry drew an ecstatic
breath as she gave Patches his head. He pirouetted for a moment then
settled to a steady canter. On all sides spread fields and pastures in
luxuriant greenness. Beyond them mountains swept to hazy, purple
heights. In one of the fields a rider turned and looked at her as she
passed. She leaned forward in her saddle, opened a gate and closed it;
she hoped the man had noticed with what ease it had been accomplished.
Great blooded Shorthorns turned ruminative eyes upon her; she had seen
women with that same expression when at a society function another
entered as to whose social status they were in doubt. Off in a pen a
perfect specimen of pure-blooded Ayreshire bull pawed the ground and
sent showers of earth spraying on his satiny back. Where the trail left
the flower-dotted meadow a spring bubbled from under a mushroom-shaped
rock. Jerry dismounted and knelt for a drink, more for the feel of the
sparkling water against her lips than because of thirst.

Where should she go, she wondered as she mounted Patches. She had an
inspiration. She would make a neighborly call on the wife of the
ex-service man at Bear Creek ranch. Jerry had never seen her, but Sandy
the Carrier, who was the artery for news in the county, had told her
that she was lonely.

The water was high in the stream. The banks were pink with wild roses
and among their denseness the meadow-larks kept up an invisible chorus.
Jerry forced Patches to a coquettish prance across the rustic bridge. It
was there that the apex of the B C triangle of land forced its way
between the Double O and the X Y Z. She knew the place; Tommy had shown
her the dividing fences. From where the rushing water narrowed and
whitened over a rocky bed an aged pack-trail staggered into a cuplike
ravine. Rejuvenated by the sunshine in the hollow it straightened and
sprinted straight as an arrow for the foot-hills. The sun shone warmly
on lustrous fields. The air was spicy with the breath of pines. A rabbit
hopped from cover and skurried back again.

As Patches, with ears pricked, silky neck preened, stepped daintily
along the trail the girl sang happily:

    "'My road calls me, lures me
    West, east, south and north;

    "'Most roads lead me homeward,
    But my road leads men forth--
    To add more miles to the tal----'"

The last word was broken in the middle as they rounded a clump of
cottonwoods and came suddenly upon a horseman with a small bunch of
sheep. He jerked his hat low over his eyes as the girl hailed him.

"Good-afternoon! I am looking for Bear Creek ranch. Will you direct me?"

Without answering in words the man pointed toward a clutter of buildings
in a slight depression. Back of them a scantily timbered hill, in places
rich with grass dotted with grazing sheep, gave the impression of an
animated Corot. Before Jerry could speak the stranger had galloped off.

"A responsive party," she soliloquized. "Was he afraid of me, I wonder?
He registered guilt, all right. If he is the owner of B C ranch Uncle
Nick and Bruce Greyson were buncoed. That man is hiding something."

A woman flung open the cabin door as Jerry rode up. She was young and
pretty. Her clear, full eyes reminded the girl of Ox-eyed Juno. She was
dressed in a bungalow apron of hectic design but scrupulous neatness. A
wistful smile trembled on her lips as she asked:

"Have--have you lost your way?"

Jerry Courtlandt shook her head and slipped from the saddle. The gold in
her brown eyes predominated as she fastened Patches to a post and
approached the door.

"Lost? No, I came to call. I am Geraldine Courtlandt, your neighbor at
the Double O."

The woman's face colored a delicate shell pink. Her expression was
radiance tempered by incredulity.

"How--how nice of you, Mrs. Courtlandt, how human. I--I am Mrs. Jim
Carey. Nell Carey. Won't you come in?"

Jerry liked her dignity. She showed no consciousness of the difference
between her three-room shack and the luxurious ranch-house from which
the visitor had come. "Thoroughbred," thought the girl as she preceded
her hostess into a small but immaculately clean room. With a happy laugh
tinged with excitement, Nell Carey waved her to a seat.

"Do make yourself comfortable. If you'll excuse me for a moment I'll
bring some tea. The kettle has just boiled. You won't vanish while I'm
gone, will you? Promise. I have a horrible fear that your being here may
be nothing but an iridescent dream."

Jerry's heart smarted with self-reproach. What heathen people can be and
yet be neighbors, she thought. Here was this girl, and she was a girl in
spite of that betraying heap of white sewing on the machine in the
corner, craving companionship, and she spent hours and hours riding
about the country with never a thought of being neighborly. She looked
about the room. What part of it wasn't taken up by a roll-top desk was
filled by a table fairly groaning under its load of magazines. Three
chairs and the machine completed the furnishings; that is, unless a worn
violin case in a corner came under that head. She hastily cleared an end
of the table as Nell Carey entered with a tea-tray.

"Thank you. You are the first woman who has been inside my house since I
came here a year ago," she announced breathlessly. Her eyes glowed, her
cheeks were flushed. "Of course Jim has flivvered me to town, but--but I
haven't met anyone whom I cared to have here. Cream?"

The loneliness of it, Jerry thought, as she watched her hostess pour
thick cream into the fragrant tea with hands that trembled. Then she
remembered that she had been at the Double O three months, and that
except for Ming Soy and Mrs. Simms, the foreman's wife at Upper Farm,
she had not seen a woman. Curious that she had not missed them. Doc Rand
had been as neighborly as his busy life permitted; Bruce Greyson had
been away from the X Y Z since her arrival. With Steve and Tommy she had
been absolutely content. Why? Her thoughts bolted on a tour of
investigation; she dragged them back to answer a question from her
hostess:

"Not another cookie, thank you. I've been a gourmand, but they are
delicious."

"Jim likes them."

"I wonder if I saw your husband by the stream?"

"No. Jim left yesterday on a hunt for help. He'll only be away four days
but it seems years to look forward to. You must have met our
range-rider, Bill Small. He dropped from the sky, figuratively speaking,
ten months ago. I call him the Man of Mystery. He never talks about
himself, never mentions his people, never has letters, but he's a shark
for work and he plays beautifully. That is his." She nodded toward the
violin case in the corner. "The boys from the Double O and the X Y Z hit
the trail for the Bear Creek every chance they can get to hear him
play."

The sun topped the cap of a mountain like a mammoth red button as Jerry
leaned from the saddle and held out her hand.

"You will come and see me, won't you?"

Nell Carey's lips quivered betrayingly.

"Of course, if you really want me. But it will be after----" Jerry gave
the hand she held an impulsive squeeze.

"I'll come here again before that. Aren't you madly happy? I must hurry
or they'll have the entire outfit hunting for me. Good-bye!"

As she reached the pack-trail she turned and waved and the woman
standing alone by her door waved back. What an atom she seemed in the
wide spaces about her. As she rode Jerry's mind was full of the home she
had left behind. What courage Nell Carey had had to follow her man into
a wilderness like that. And now a little child was coming. She thought
of her father, of his anger because his daughter had insisted upon
accompanying the man she had married to the Double O ranch with all its
luxury. Men were curious creatures.

The sun had disappeared, fluffy islands of cloud, pink, lemon and
violet, floated above the tops of the mountains, the sky was fast
purpling, there was a suspicion of razor-edge in the crystal-clear air
as Jerry unlatched the gate by the road and closed it after her. She
gave Patches his head and raced toward the ranch-house. In the distance
she saw two horsemen galloping toward her. Steve and Pete Gerrish! She
glanced guiltily at her wrist watch. She was late. Did Steve care enough
to be anxious? The thought gave a tingling sense of excitement. As she
came near the two riders she touched Patches with her spurs, then pulled
him up suddenly. He stop-slid on his haunches, a bit of circus-variety
of horsemanship which Tommy had taught her. She pulled off her
broad-brimmed hat with a sweep reminiscent of José at his best and
called gayly:

"_Que hay, señors! Buenos dias!_ La señora has been on a wild devil of a
ride, yes?"

She laughed up into Steve's white face. He moistened his lips as though
they were stiff. She had worried him then. Pete Gerrish's eyes regarded
her with frank admiration.

"Can she ride, Chief? I want to know! Can she ride! Steve is scared,
ma'am. There's a lot of strangers snooping round and he----"

"Where have you been, Jerry?" Courtlandt had recovered his voice.

"Don't beat me, Steve!" Patches was loping along between Blue Devil and
Gerrish's big sorrel. Encouraged by the foreman's quickly suppressed
"Haw-haw" at her pleasantry, she went on, "I've been to Bear Creek ranch
for tea."

"To the B C alone?"

"Do I look as though I carried concealed escorts?" with tormenting
charm. "I had an acute attack of conscience. It occurred to me that I
had been something of a heathen to ignore little Mrs. Carey, though I
didn't know that she was little when I went. I only knew what Sandy had
told me, that there was a woman at Bear Creek hungering for someone of
her own sex to talk to."

"You are to be commended more for your conscience than your common
sense," retorted Courtlandt dryly. "Don't do it again." They reached the
ranch-house steps as he spoke. He slipped to the ground and before Jerry
could protest had lifted her from the saddle. She felt the muscles of
his arms twitch in the second he held her. Before she could speak he had
gathered up the bridles of the horses and started for the corral. The
brown depths of the girl's eyes were troubled as she looked after him.
What menaced the good-comradeship which their arrival at the Double O
had established between herself and Steve? Now he reminded her of a wary
foe thrusting and retreating on the slightest pretext. What could she
have done to change him so? She looked up at Gerrish, a puzzled question
in her eyes. He shook his head as his met them.

"We mustn't mind if the Chief does act a little locoed, ma'am. He's
walkin' right into trouble. It's Ranlett the Skunk, saving your
presence. Somebody's cayuse got rid of some hobbles when the fence was
cut where the Double O and the X Y Z join, and a bunch of calves has
disappeared. There ain't hide nor hair of 'em to be seen. But, shucks,
don't tell the Chief I told you. I'll mosey 'long now."

Jerry looked after him with narrowed eyes. "Where the Double O and the X
Y Z join," Pete had said. That was where Bear Creek ranch came in! Like
a movie close-up came a vision of the solitary horseman she had hailed,
the man who had dropped from the air, who never talked about himself or
his people, who never received letters, the Man of Mystery.




CHAPTER X


Courtlandt backed his horse suddenly into the shadow of the quaking
aspens which were fluttering their gold in the sunshine. He adjusted the
field-glasses which he carried slung from his saddle-fork and looked
intently at the bluff which reared from the western bank of the stream.
He was right. There were two men there. The day being Sunday, ordinarily
he would have thought nothing of it, but disturbing things were
happening every day now and Instinct and Caution were riding close to
his saddle-bow. He had the sense of living on the thin crust of a
simmering volcano. He couldn't distinguish their faces, but he would be
willing to swear that the men belonged to the Double O outfit.

Above the roar of the stream as it made its way through the cañon formed
by the bluff he heard another sound. There was no mistaking it. Steve
had heard the curious whirr of a plane too often not to recognize it
now. It was not uncommon to have one pass over the Double O, but for
some unaccountable reason Courtlandt linked this one to those two
skulking figures at the foot of the bluff. He heard its approach for
some minutes before it came in sight above the hill which he knew was
back of the B C ranch.

"That's queer! Looks as though it came out of Buzzard's Hollow," he
muttered as he watched the approaching aeroplane. He focussed his
glasses on the men again. They were waving something. Something white.
As though in answer to the signal the huge mechanical bird went
wing-over-wings and slid gracefully into a barrel-roll, then sailed off
into the distance. When Courtlandt's eyes returned from their journey
with the plane the two men had disappeared.

Motionless, deep in thought, Steve sat his horse. What baneful force was
at work on the ranch? Calves had vanished as completely as though
conjured into thin air, curiously enough, though they were the least
valuable in the herd. The man who had taken them couldn't know much
about cattle. Some of the boys appeared surly and disgruntled. The stand
he had taken on the alien question couldn't account for it all. The
trouble had started a few weeks after his arrival at the ranch. He had
expected that Ranlett would resent having a much younger man than
himself in possession, but he had looked for no such series of
complications as had presented themselves.

The situation had one compensating side. He had been too occupied with
Double O affairs to have much time for Jerry. He said something under
his breath. Blue Devil nosed round at him inquiringly. Courtlandt looked
at the sun and touched the horse lightly with his heels. It was time to
meet her now. To-day they were resuming a custom that Nicholas Fairfax
had inaugurated, which was to have luncheon beside the stream on Sunday.
Old Nick, young Nick he was then, had announced that the ceremony would
stand for church, that he would worship God through nature. He and Doc
Rand had provided the fish which were cooked on forked sticks over a
fire on the bank of the stream. The work-logged physician's weekly
holiday came to be respected in Slippy Bend. Men, women and children
endured to the limit before they would disturb the doctor's fishing
trip.

Opposite the rendezvous Courtlandt drew rein and looked across the
stream. Benson, on his knees on the pebbly beach, was struggling with a
fire. He was in khaki riding clothes. A small book protruded from his
hip pocket. Steve smiled. To think of Tommy without a book would be like
thinking of an elephant without his trunk. Beyond the firemaker a spring
bubbled out of the bank in a clear, pure stream, above him the land
sloped smoothly, greenly up to a clump of cottonwoods. In the middle of
the clearing knelt Jerry. A lovely Jerry in riding coat and breeches,
hatless, with millions of golden motes glinting in her hair where the
sunlight rested. Her cheeks were flushed, her eyes glowed with
friendliness as she talked eagerly with the man who knelt on the other
side of the cloth spread between them.

Bruce Greyson! Steve's jaws set ominously. The owner of the X Y Z was
passing something to the girl and it seemed to the prejudiced eyes of
the looker-on that their fingers touched and lingered. The two had
evidently been preparing the feast, for with a satisfied nod Jerry sank
back on her heels. She made a megaphone of her hands and called:

"Coo-e-e! Coo-e-e-e!"

From around a bend of the river came an answering shout. In spite of the
unaccountable fury which the sight of Greyson in just that spot had
roused in Courtlandt, he laughed as his eyes rested on the figure which
came splashing down the middle of the stream. It was Doc Rand attired in
his usual ministerial black frock coat, with the unusual addition of hip
boots of rubber. The effect of the combination would have tickled the
risibilities of a stoic, if a stoic has the luck to be blessed with
risibilities. A fish basket was slung from one shoulder, his white hair
bushed beneath the brim of his Stetson; the sun on his glasses added an
uncanny touch. His broad black tie, which he usually wore in a Byronic
bow, streamed back over his shoulders. He waved and shouted as
Courtlandt rode his horse down the bank and forded the stream. When
Steve reached the improvised table Greyson and Jerry sat at discreet
distances from it.

"When did you get back, Bruce?" he asked as with cordial friendliness
the owner of the X Y Z sprang to his feet and gripped his extended hand.
In that instant Courtlandt saw that the whiteness of the hair about the
older man's temples was more noticeable, that it added to his fine,
upright air of distinction.

"Yesterday. Brought my sister Paula, Vance, her husband, and a friend of
hers along. I want you all to dine with us to-morrow night. We'll show
these blown-in-the-glass New Yorkers that we are not entirely devoid of
the social graces even if we are not in the Dude-ranch neighborhood. Got
half-way to the Double O before I remembered that it was the old custom
to lunch here Sundays. You'll come, won't you?"

"Come!" Jerry's eyes were starry with excitement. "Yes, thank--oh, what
beauties!" as Doc Rand puffed up the bank dangling a string of trout for
her inspection.

"Take 'em, Steve. You and the Benson boy can cook 'em. Isn't that an
equitable division of labor, Mrs. Jerry? I caught them." He dropped to
the ground beside her and pulled off his hat. "These--these fishing
trips aren't what they were. I miss Nick," he confided as he mopped his
hot brow. Jerry's eyes were tender with sympathy. They wandered dreamily
to the illimitable spaces above the purple mountains as she asked
softly:

"Where is he, Doctor Rand? Death is such a strange thing. I--I try to
keep a brave front to Peggy but--but I don't care to think about it."

"Why should you at your age? All your thought should be on making your
life count for something. It is different with me. I find it profoundly
interesting to wonder and imagine what follows this world. For instance,
look at the question in this way. At this moment I can send my mind to
the Manor; in spirit I'm pacing the terrace with Sir Peter. I can see
the boats chugging up and down the river, can smell the queer fragrance
which the sun is baking out of the box hedge in the garden, can hear the
birds twittering among the vines. If I can do all that now, what will it
be when the spirit is not hampered by the body? It will be like flying,
won't it? That reminds me! Oh, Steve!"

Courtlandt poked his head above the bank beneath which he and Benson
were cooking the fish. A tiny spiral of smoke rose and with it the aroma
of sizzling bacon and frying trout.

"Did you see the plane that went over?"

"Yes, Doc."

"I wonder where it came from. It wasn't one of the government flyers. I
know their marks. Did you see the pilot do those stunts above the bluff?
Curious that he should pull off that cut-up stuff there, infernally
risky I call it. He couldn't have been doing it for my benefit. What do
you make of it, Steve?"

"Probably some crazy, reckless flier getting ready for a contest,"
Courtlandt observed, and disappeared below the bank.

Doc Hand and Greyson left directly after luncheon. Benson packed the
basket which some of the boys would take back to the ranch before he
rode off to Upper Farm on an errand for Courtlandt. Steve helped Jerry
mount and swung into the saddle. The girl tightened her rein then held
up an arresting finger.

"Listen! The Kreutzer Sonata," she whispered.

From somewhere up-stream came the notes of a violin. There was a rare
brightness, an aerial quality to the music that most artists take too
gravely. The variations of the slow movements gave the sense of a
glorified voice. Jerry drew a long, tremulous breath as the last note
died away.

"That must have been the Man of Mystery," she confided in a low voice,
as though fearful even at that distance of disturbing the musician. "I
don't care if he did drop from the sky, if he never receives letters, he
plays like--like an angel--if angels can play," with a laugh. Courtlandt
looked up-stream as though mystified.

"I knew a man who played that sonata, just like that, but--but it can't
possibly be he. Who did you say you thought it was?"

"Bill Small, the range-rider at the B C. Mrs. Carey told me about him
when I called there yesterday. She said that the boys of the Double O
and X Y Z outfits trailed over there every chance they could get to hear
him play. That reminds me," her beautiful face glowed with enthusiasm,
"I--I wonder if--if the boys of our outfit would care to have me play
and sing for them? I should so love to do it."

"Care! I know they would. Pete says that they line up outside the court
wall after dinner on the chance of hearing you sing."

"Really--really, Steve? I'd rather have that tribute than--than my name
in electric lights on the Great White Way. Ask them up this afternoon.
We'll have an honest-to-goodness musicale with Signora Geraldina
Courtlandta as head-liner. Hurry!" She touched her horse with her heels.
"It's a pity that Bruce Greyson didn't wait. He----"

"Your proposition was to sing for the Double O outfit. Greyson doesn't
come in on that."

"Ogre! I can hear my bones scrunch between those strong white teeth of
yours when you look at me like that."

"Then remember that you're married."

"Are you sure that the ceremony wasn't a dream?" with a provocative
ripple of laughter. "Do you know, Steve, somehow I never can think of
you as Benedick the married man. You--you are such a good-looking boy."
She was the incarnation of girlish diablerie indulging an irresistible
desire to torment. The color burned to Courtlandt's temples. He caught
the bridle and drew Patches close. His eyes compelled Jerry's.

"Do you know what happens to a person who rocks a boat, Mrs.
Courtlandt?" he demanded autocratically.

"Do you know what happens when a person gets unbearably dictatorial, Mr.
Courtlandt? This!" She slapped her horse smartly on the hip. Patches
threw up his head and broke from Steve's hold. The girl looked over her
shoulder. Lips and eyes challenged in unison as she sang mischievously:

    "'My road calls me, lures me
    West, east, south and north;
    Most roads lead me homewards,
    But my road leads----'"

Patches stepped in a gopher hole, which, feat brought the song to an
abrupt termination.

When she met him in the late afternoon on the terrace which overlooked
the court Jerry was as coolly friendly as though the little
passage-at-arms, which had left Steve's pulses hammering, had never
taken place. The piano had been moved out and the outfit, in its Sunday
best, occupied the rustic seats and benches and overflowed to the turf
paths. The girl felt choky as the men rose to greet her. They looked so
big and fine, so like eager, wistful boys. She smiled at them through a
mist.

"I'll sing what I think you'll like, then you must ask for anything you
want. Please smoke," she added, as she realized what it was that had
made them seem so unfamiliar. They looked from her to Steve. He nodded.
With delighted grins they dropped back to their places and proceeded
with the business of rolling cigarettes.

Courtlandt and Benson took their places on the edge of the terrace.
Overhead the sky spread like a flawless turquoise; cameoed against the
blue were snow-tipped mountains. The court was gay and fragrant with
blossoms. In the dark shadow of the open doorway Ming and Hopi Soy made
a patch of Oriental brilliance. Jerry in her filmy pink frock looked not
unlike a flower herself, against the rosewood background of the raised
piano top, Courtlandt thought. He looked from her to the rapt,
weather-browned faces of his men. His gaze came back and rested in
fascinated interest on her foot in its pink slipper on the pedal of the
instrument.

Jerry sang as she had never sung before, ballads, rollicking melodies.
The men drew nearer. When she stopped a swarthy Italian stepped as near
the piano as the terrace would permit. His black eyes seemed too big for
his thin face, his plastered-down hair suggested infinite labor with
brush and pomade.

"What is it, Tony?" Jerry asked with a smile.

"Hava you the one grand opera song?" he asked shyly. Jerry was
nonplussed. She had not thought of opera for these men. As she turned
over her music she asked:

"You like opera, Tony?"

"Vera much, Signora. At home we taka the leetle seester to grand opera
even if we have not mucha to eat. We feel that eef the leetle seester
hear great music, she be fine lady, not common, not bad--never." His
earnest voice broke as he realized that he was being stared at in
amazement by the outfit. He mumbled an apology and hurried back to his
seat. With a smile at Tony, Jerry placed Tales of Hoffmann on the rack.
She sang the Barcarole. As the exquisite, langorous notes floated out
over the court the shadows lengthened, the sun dropped behind the
mountains. There was no applause when she finished, no one was smoking,
the men sat motionless. Where were their thoughts, the girl wondered.
With a glance at the crimsoning foot-hills she struck a few chords and
sang softly:

    "'Day is dying in the west;
    Heaven is touching earth with rest;
    Wait and worship while the night
    Sets her evening lamps alight
    Thro' all the sky.'"

With the second verse the men took up the song. To most of them it
brought a vivid picture of mother and home and the village church at
sunset. They sang until with the last line mountains and foot-hills took
up the words and sent them pealing into space.

That closed the musicale. One by one the men came forward and thanked
Jerry as she stood between Courtlandt and Benson. As the last one left
the court Tommy turned to the girl.

"I'll say that was a wonderful thing to do, Mrs. Steve." With a quick
change of tone he spoke to Courtlandt. "Marks and Schoeffleur weren't
here; did you miss them?"

"Would you expect them to be here?"

"I should have expected it until to-day. Ever since Marks blew in here
from nowhere two months ago I've been wondering where the dickens I'd
seen him. When that airplane passed over to-day memory flipped into
place the missing piece of the puzzle. He was a mechanician at the
hangar where I tried to develop wings in 1917."

"You are sure of that, Tommy?"

"Sure as shootin'. What's up? Why that 'Fee, fi, fo, fum, I smell the
blood of an Englishman' scowl, old dear?"

"Nothing, except that your information confirms me in my suspicion that
Marks and Schoeffleur signaled to that pilot when he went over."

    "'And still they gazed, and still the wonder grew
    That one small head could carry all he knew,'"

contributed Benson in mock amazement.

Up from the corral floated a chorus of men's voices singing:

    "'Wait and worship while the night
    Sets her evening lamps alight
    Thro' all the sky.'"




CHAPTER XI


Courtlandt's fine brow puckered in a thoughtful crease as he waited in
the living-room of the Double O for Jerry the next evening. Benson, on
the arm of a chair, bent forward to get the light from the lamp on the
book he had picked up. Through the open windows came the scent of pine
and dewy fields, the murmur of the distant stream as it thundered and
rippled its never-ending triumphal march to the sea, the occasional soft
lowing of cattle.

Jerry had been tremendously pleased and excited over Greyson's
invitation to dine, Steve thought as he lighted a cigarette and blew the
smoke toward Goober. The dog was regarding him with an air of watchful
waiting. Was he to be invited to jump on the running-board of the
automobile which stood in the drive outside the front door? Courtlandt
remembered as clearly as though it had been yesterday what she had
answered the first night they met when he had asked her if she liked the
city. He could see her eyes now with their golden lights, hear her
musical voice:

"I love it. It is so big, so beautiful, so faulty. I--I like people; I
should starve for companionship, not food, in a wilderness."

And this was the girl who had been on the Double O ranch for over three
months and not a person outside it, except Doc Rand and some neighboring
ranchmen, had she seen before she made the trip to the B C. He had been
too busy to think of it before and--and he had intentionally kept out of
her way. He had thought that he had his course set to avoid danger, but
he had come mighty near going to pieces on an uncharted rock yesterday.
He tossed away his cigarette as Jerry's door opened. He took an
involuntary step forward, then thrust his hands into his pockets. Lord,
how impellingly beautiful she was! Her gold-color gown, all film where
it wasn't glistening paillettes, was as simple as the most expensive
modiste in New York could make it. Her lovely arms were bare. The ranch
life had deepened the coloring of her face and throat till her shoulders
looked startlingly white in contrast. Steve noted, with a surge of
primitive triumph, that the only jewels she wore were a string of softly
gleaming pearls and her wedding ring. Sir Peter had given her the pearls
when she was married. They had been worn by his wife and before that by
his mother. Steve heard Tommy give vent to a sound that was a cross
between a swallow and a gasp before he struck an attitude and
paraphrased theatrically:

    "But soft! What light through yonder doorway breaks?
    It is the east and Juliet is the sun."

Jerry laughed and blew him a kiss. Her teeth rivaled in beauty the
pearls below them. Ming Soy, more rice-papery than ever in the
resplendent embroideries she wore in the evening, followed the girl from
her room with a shimmering wrap over her arm.

"Were you casting aspersions on the brilliancy of my costume, Mr. Tommy
Benson? This is the first invitation I have received to dine since I
left the metropolis and I acknowledge I have splurged. Do--do you like
me, Steve?" Her attitude was demure but her smile was adorably
mischievous. Courtlandt's eyes flamed, then smoldered.

"You'll do," with an edge of sarcasm. He hated himself as he saw her
smile fade. Oh, why the dickens couldn't they have met--Tommy swept into
the breach:

"Oh boy, hear the lady, Steve. 'Will I do?' just as though she didn't
know that

    "'Alack there lies more peril in thine eyes
    Than twenty of their swords.'"

"_Gracias, señor!_ Alas, if it weren't for you, Tommy, I should go down
to my grave unwept, unhonored and unsung. Now that you have fully
absorbed the glory of my raiment hold my cloak for me, that's a dear.
Now this maline over my hair. I don't wish to appear before the guests
from the effete East like a Meg Merriles."

"You couldn't," encouraged Benson fervently. "You'd----"

"Let's go!" cut in Courtlandt sharply, and led the way to the
automobile. He sent the leaping, barking dog back with a curt command
which caused Goober to regard him in drooping, tawny-eyed reproach. He
took the wheel of the roadster. He kept his eyes resolutely on the road
as he drove though he felt as though a magnet of the nth power was
drawing his eyes to the girl who snuggled down between him and Benson.
At the door of the X Y Z ranch-house Greyson met them.

"It's mighty good of you all to come." His voice was nervous, hurried.

"Good of us! Bruce, you're a public benefactor. You're a candidate for a
specially designed, specially gilded halo. Do you realize what a risk
you have taken introducing me to your city friends? It is so long since
I have dined in state that I am quite capable of committing some
horrible social blunder."

Steve's anger flared. Why did she have to admit to Greyson that she had
been bored? It was still flickering as he entered the big living-room, a
room lined with books from floor to ceiling, with color only in the
crimson rug and heavy hangings.

"You see I've come to help you bear your exile, Steve!" greeted a
laughing voice. Jerry and Tommy, who had preceded Courtlandt, turned
involuntarily. He met the girl's startled eyes. He reddened furiously
before he turned to answer the golden-haired woman who had stepped from
behind a screen.

"Felice! Where did you come from?" His tone was dazed and strugglingly
cordial.

"Have you lost both manners and memory, Stevie? You haven't offered to
shake hands; you have apparently forgotten that I wrote you that while
he was at the Manor Mr. Greyson discovered that I had been at school
with his sister. Paula has come out for the summer and brought me with
her. I adore the ranch. Steve, we'll have some rides that will make
those we used to have take on a pale anemic blue." She linked her arm
within his and smiled up at him beguilingly.

"Hmp, vamp-stuff!" Courtlandt heard Tommy confide to Jerry before he
disengaged his arm from Mrs. Denbigh's clasp and reminded:

"Have you seen Mrs. Courtlandt, Felice? Jerry, you remember Mrs.
Denbigh?"

"Perfectly. She is one of those persons one never forgets. Mrs. Denbigh,
may I present Mr. Benson? Mr. Greyson, back up your statement, show me
that Hopi saddle-blanket which you claimed yesterday had Uncle Nick's
licked to a finish. That phrase is your bit of choice Americana, not
mine, remember."

Steve's eyes followed Jerry as she moved away with her host. There was a
slightly scornful tilt to her lips. Greyson looked as though he had been
caught stealing sheep, he decided. Was there a sinister undercurrent at
the X Y Z as well as a Double O? If there were he'd get to the bottom of
that, too. Regardless of Benson's proximity he burst out:

"Why did you intimate that I had been corresponding with you, Felice?"

The woman's super decollété frock was no greener than her eyes, her
elaborately coiffured yellow hair glittered; it hadn't the satiny sheen
of Jerry's; her hands were frosty with diamonds. Even her laugh had a
metallic ring as she answered:

"What a literal person you are, Stevie. Have you been bitten with the
nothing-but-the-truth mania? Can't I interest you in a saddle-blanket?
It makes an excellent smoke-screen for a tête-à-tête." Her laugh tinkled
maliciously as she nodded toward the corner where her host stood with
Jerry Courtlandt. Steve deliberately turned his back and inquired
irrelevantly:

"How was little ol' New York when you left, Felice?"

It wasn't to be wondered at that Jerry liked people, people so evidently
adored her, Courtlandt thought as coffee was being served in the
living-room after dinner. Paula Vance, who though no older than Felice
Denbigh, already showed symptoms of middle-age curves, was officiating
behind the massive silver tray with its rare, antique appointments. Her
husband, with those three unmistakable L's, liquor, lobster and leisure
writ large on his portly person from his terraced chin to his shining
patent leathers, Greyson and Benson were listening to Jerry as, with
eyes like stars, cheeks flushed, she sat at the piano. She played a low,
rippling accompaniment as, in answer to a question from her host, she
gave an account of her visit to Bear Creek ranch. Felice Denbigh also
had her eyes on the group. She divided her attention between it and her
coffee. Her light lashes swept her cheeks as she tapped her cigarette
against her thumb-nail and drawled:

"Better give young Benson his time, Steve. Isn't that ranch parlance for
discharge? He's in love with Mrs. Courtlandt." The man beside her
reddened angrily.

"Don't bring your tainted ideas out into this clean, glorious country,
Felice. Benson is----" he broke off to watch Greyson's Jap, a little man
with a face like the mask of tragedy who was speaking to Jerry.

"Are you sure that he said Mrs. Courtlandt?" Steve heard her ask in
surprise. Then as the man reiterated his message she excused herself to
the men about her and left the room. Tommy looked after her anxiously
before his eyes flashed to Steve. The latter gave an imperceptible nod
and with a murmured excuse to Felice followed Jerry. As he stepped to
the porch he saw the golden gleam of the girl's gown at the farther end.
She was talking earnestly with a man, a man who was holding a saddled
horse. The moon shone down upon the animal's wet sides; he had evidently
been ridden hard. What did it mean? Had Glamorgan, by any chance, sent
for his daughter? As he strode toward them he heard the girl say
breathlessly:

"No! No! Don't wait! Ride as fast as you can. I'll get there some way."

"Jerry!" in his anxiety Steve sent his voice ahead of him. At the sound
the man leaped to the horse's back and galloped away into the dusk of
the road. The girl strained her eyes after him before she turned.

"There is something queer about that man, Steve; he is a man of
mystery," she confided as though Courtlandt's materialization out of the
dark was quite what she expected.

"What did he want?"

"He wanted me. Don't look so incredulous. I may be an acquired taste
like olives but--some people like me." She abandoned her teasing tone
and hurried on, "That man is the range-rider at Bear Creek ranch. Mrs.
Carey has been taken suddenly ill, there,--there is a baby coming, you
know, Steve. He wanted me to go to her. Her husband is away. They
haven't had a telephone put in and it may take hours to get the doctor
and nurse from town, he may not be able to get them at all and so--and
so he asked me to go and stay with her until he could get help."

"But you can't go, girl, at this time of night."

"Oh, yes, I can, Steve. I'm going. Please ask Tommy to drive me. We'll
make better time going in the machine even by the roundabout wagon road.
If I rode I'd have to go home first and change my clothes. He can come
back for you. Hurry!"

"Back for me! Do you think you go off this ranch to-night with anyone
but me? It's rank folly for you to go----"

She caught the lapel of his coat and looked up at him with dewy eyes.

"Suppose,--suppose that it were I, Steve----"

Even in the dim light he could see the soft color steal to her hair. He
turned away with a sharp:

"Get your wrap while I go for the car, and give Benson his orders. He'll
have to keep a date for me."

The star-spangled night was clear and still as Courtlandt slowed down in
front of the Bear Creek ranch-house. The girl beside him shivered as she
looked at the lighted windows. He laid one hand on hers.

"Steady, little girl, steady. You won't be able to help if you lose your
nerve."

"I know, Steve, I'll be all right as soon as I get busy. I have never
seen----" She sprang from the car and ran up the path, her golden gown
gleaming in the dim light. As she opened the door Courtlandt heard a
sound which sent him from the car. He couldn't sit still. Lips set he
paced back and forth, back and forth while a voice inside his head,
which didn't seem his voice at all, kept repeating, "Suppose--just
suppose it were I, Steve?"

Other thoughts crowded in upon him as he paced like a sentinel, a
sentinel in dinner clothes, before the little house. The dawn crept
slowly up in the east spraying the dark sky overhead with gorgeousness.
It transformed the world into the fairyland of the pantomimes of his
boyhood, a world full of magic passwords and talismans. He almost
expected to see a shimmering, masked Harlequin tap on the cabin door
with his supple wand and a dainty Columbine pirouette out in response.

Whatever it might be outside, there was no illusion behind that closed
door. It was raw reality. What wonders women were, some of them, Steve
amended. He thought of the girls with whom he had dined and danced in
the last two years. Many of them sensation-seeking privateers. Was it
after-war reaction which made them so recklessly, flagrantly determined
in their attempts to lure? They had succeeded only in repelling him but
they had plenty of victims. How they crackled the glaze of their
reputations. How they married and unmarried, those people whom he knew,
and with what tragic consequences to their children. Felice was a
product of the atmosphere in which she lived. He realized now that she
would have no scruples in coming between him and the girl he had married
if she could. A fragment from Kant which had been the text for a college
theme teased at the tip Of his tongue. He had it! "No one of us can do
that, which if done by all, will destroy society." If this divorce
business kept up it would destroy society. Did luxurious social life
breed inconstancy of purpose, contempt of covenants?

As though in answer to his question came a vision of Jerry as she had
knelt beside Old Nick's bed. He could see her face, the hint of tears
under the steadiness of her gaze, hear her voice as she repeated
reverently the marriage service.

She would keep her marriage vow at any cost to herself, Courtlandt
thought, no matter how she might care for someone else. She was the sort
of woman who would stand the wear and tear of daily companionship,
making allowance for a man's moods but never knuckling to them. She'd
bring him up with a round turn, but she'd laugh while she did it. He
couldn't imagine her irritable or fretty or snappy. She had the saving
grace of humor. If women could only learn the persuasive value of a
laugh as against tears or sulks how many marriages would be saved from
the scrap-heap. After all, any poor dumb-bell could get married; it was
staying married which proved one's metal.

The color overhead spread with increasing beauty. The last friendly star
high up above a mountain twinkled out. Somewhere toward the barns a
shrill-voiced, enterprising cock "hailed the smiling morn." A curl of
smoke rose lazily from the cabin chimney. The sun shot up through a
fleece of clouds; it painted the fields and sloping hillside with
radiance. A horse whinnied in the corral, a light breeze sprang up and
brought with it the odor of barns, the strong scent of wool. From the
road came the labored breathing of a flivver.

"Thank God, someone's coming!" Courtlandt thought. He looked toward the
cabin, transformed in the morning light into a habitation of gold. As he
looked the lights in the windows went out. What was Jerry doing? Could
he have helped? A flivver rattled up and stopped. In the exuberance of
his relief Steve opened the door of the car before either of the
occupants had a chance. "Mother" Egan, a portly woman whose clothing
suggested a starch and soap advertisement, it was so immaculate and
standoutish, nodded as she stepped heavily out. Her face beamed with
kindliness and sympathetic understanding as she lumbered up to the door.
Doc Rand regarded Courtlandt with an incredulous grin:

"For the love of Mike, Steve, what you doing here? This isn't your
party----" with a hardened chuckle.

"Cut out the comedy, Doc. I brought Mrs. Courtlandt over to stay until
you came. For God's sake get in there and stop those sounds. Send Jerry
out."

"What you say goes, Steve. Out she comes. Run the flivver round to the
barn, will you? I'm likely to stay here most of the day."

Worn black bag in hand he disappeared inside the house. As Steve started
the car a horseman galloped into sight on the road. He stopped his horse
with a suddenness that threw the animal back on his haunches, then,
after an instant's hesitation he went on toward the huddle of buildings.
Steve looked after him curiously. Was he Jerry's Man of Mystery? He
deliberately followed the horseman. When he dismounted Steve shut off
his engine and jumped to the ground. The rider turned. Steve stared.

"Phil Denbigh!" he exclaimed incredulously.




CHAPTER XII


The two men faced each other silently. The morning light accentuated the
lines on Denbigh's thin, ascetic face, revealed the brooding sorrow in
his eyes. After his involuntary halt of surprise Courtlandt sprang
forward with outstretched hand.

"Phil, old scout, it's good to see you! But--but what the dickens are
you doing here? I know Jim Carey but you're--not----"

"The same. I'm Bill Small, range-rider of the Bear Creek outfit, which
extensive outfit consists at present of the owner and yours truly. It
has taken some dexterity to keep out of your way, Steve. Your Uncle Nick
got me the job. Curious that I should have turned to him in my despair,
but--but he was the first person I thought of. I had heard Mother rail
about his caustic tongue. I concluded if she thought that, he must have
a keen sense of justice and fair-dealing. Mrs. Carey thinks that I
dropped from the air or any old place. Jim went away three days ago and
left me in charge. We didn't think that this--this--was coming so soon.
My first thought when Mrs. Carey called me last evening was to get hold
of the nearest woman and--and Mrs. Courtlandt seemed to be it. I went
to your ranch, first and they sent me on to the X Y Z."

"I can't make you seem real yet, Phil. I'm dazed with the succession of
surprises. Saturday, Beechy, my late sergeant walked in and----"

"Beechy!"

"Say, 'The Devil!' and be done with it, that's what your tone implied.
What do you know about Carl Beechy?"

"I've run across him in Slippy Bend. A regular fella with the ladies,
isn't he?"

"So that's it! I'll have to admit that Carl is an easy mark with the
fair sex, but he's all there when it comes to fighting. I wanted to keep
him at the Double O, but he insisted that he must keep his contract with
the railroad."

"Oh, he did. You're fond of Beechy, Steve?"

"He saved my life, Phil. I was as sure of the man's loyalty as I was
that the sun would rise in the morning."

"Have patience, Steve, you'll get him back. Sadder and wiser, perhaps a
bit damaged, but you'll get him back."

"Damaged! What do you mean?"

"Nothing specific. I'm judging from what I've seen the railroads do. I
hear Ranlett has left you. Take it from me, you're in luck."

"I'll say you're right. I haven't had a chance to talk it over with
Greyson yet; he came back from the East only a few days ago. Uncle Nick
relied on his judgment. Good Lord!"--as remembrance of the evening
before flashed clear in his mind, "do you know who came with him?
Your--your wife."

Denbigh leisurely lighted a cigarette and as leisurely drew a long whiff
of it.

"My wife! I haven't a wife. Felice will have her divorce in a few
months. Desertion. Mamma Peyton's master-mind directed the campaign.
Trust an old-timer like her to know the ropes. Felice didn't love me
when she married me; she merely contracted a virulent attack of the
war-marriage epidemic. I found that out when you came home. I'm through
with women, Steve, that is until I've proved myself a man whose sense of
right and justice can't be twisted by them. If I hadn't been weak Mother
couldn't have--oh, why go into it? It wasn't her fault; life had been
too easy for her; she couldn't bear to be hurt. Well, she has lost me as
effectually as though I had been shot to pieces in the Argonne where so
many of my friends lie. The effects of gas and shot and shell aren't in
it with the intolerable sense of shame which a man, who didn't do his
best to get into the war, will carry through the years. God knows, I'm
paying for my weakness. Don't mind this outburst, Steve. Forget it!
You're the first person I've seen from home. It--it just surged out."

He leaned his head upon his horse's neck. The animal which had been
pawing impatiently settled into bronze immobility at his touch. Only his
sensitive nostrils quivered. Courtlandt laid a sympathetic hand on
Denbigh's shoulder. His voice was unsteady as he protested:

"You're torturing yourself unnecessarily, Phil. The world has almost
forgotten----"

"I haven't, Steve, but we'll let it go at that. Don't let Felice know
that I am here. When she gets her divorce----"

"But, Phil, can't you and she patch things up? Divorce is a hard thing
for a woman to live down."

"Not in our set. Good Lord, man, Felice thinks no more of it than she
would of discarding an unbecoming gown. It's in her blood. It's in mine.
Her mother had changed husbands once before Felice was born. Mine
changed hers when he was young and unsuccessful. She had the money. When
the Fates want to hand it to a man good and plenty they marry him to a
girl who has slathers more money than he has." Steve's face whitened.
"Was that a door closing? Go quick, Steve. If it is Mrs. Courtlandt I
don't want her to see me. Don't tell her who I am." He seized his horse
by the bridle and vanished into the barn.

Steve met Jerry beside his car. His jaw set in the manner dreaded by his
father as he looked at the girl's face. It was white with violet shadows
under the wide, strained eyes. Her exquisite frock was torn where she
had caught it on a hook. A long angry burn was visible on the wrist
which the sleeve of her wrap didn't cover. Her lips quivered
traitorously as she saw Steve's eyes on it. She hastily concealed it
behind her back with a valiant attempt at a laugh.

"It's nothing. I hoped that it would escape your ruthless managerial
eye. I tried to heat water and I'm not used to a kitchen range. In fact,
I don't know what I can do that's vitally useful. When--when I go back
to civilization I shall take a course in nursing, then I won't be so
absolutely useless at a time like this." Her voice was pitched in a key
of nervous excitement, and she shivered as she spoke.

"Come here!" Courtlandt's face was as white as the girl's as he picked
her up in his arms and put her into the car. He drew her wrap closer
about her shoulders and tucked a light robe about her knees. She sat
there tense, unresponsive, but as he started the car she suddenly
relaxed with a stifled sob and covered her face with her hands. Steve
stopped the car. With quiet determination he put his arm about her.

"Cry it out, child," he encouraged tenderly. When the storm broke he
wondered if he had been wise in the recommendation. He was frightened at
the tempest of sobs which shook the slender body. He tightened his arm.
Then after a few moments, "Was it as bad as that, girl?"

She sat up with a start and drew as far away from him as the limited
space would permit. He laid his arm across the back of the seat. She
pushed the hair from her forehead and looked up at him through drenched
eyes.

"Bad!" she controlled a shudder. "Bad only because I was so powerless to
help. An angel from heaven wouldn't have looked as good to me as Doc
Rand." There was an hysterical note of laughter in her voice as she
continued, "He must have thought I had gone suddenly mad for when he
opened the door I flew at him and kissed him." She made furtive dabs at
her eyes. "Don't think that I'm constitutionally a cry-baby," she
laughed up at Courtlandt shamefacedly. He turned away from her quickly,
removed his arm from the back of the seat and started the car.

"Now that you've got your grip again we'll go on. I'm famished," he
announced prosaically.

"Now that I think of it, so am I," she agreed with gay camaraderie, but
her breath came in a little sob as a child's might after crying,
"and--and so are they! Look, Steve! Over on that hillside--look!"

She gripped his arm with one hand as she pointed with the other. On the
top of a low hill, outlined like shadow pictures against the morning
sky, so near that their hanging tongues were plainly visible, were three
dark, sinister shapes.

"Coyotes?" the girl whispered as though even at that distance they might
hear.

"Timber wolves. See those sheep grazing in the coulée below? They are
after them."

"Oh, Steve, can't we do something?"

For answer Courtlandt reached into the pocket of the car and drew his
automatic. The shots rang through the morning quiet, the echoes
ricochetted back from the hills. The sheep kicked up their heels and
scampered off. The wolves stood like creatures of stone for an instant,
then slowly, quite without panic, turned and disappeared over the brow
of the hill. Jerry shivered.

"Wolves! I thought you were rid of them in this country."

"We are almost. Occasionally the boys bring in reports of the trail of a
wolf or a mountain lion. We have a pest of coyotes though, this year. If
you want to insult a ranchman or cowboy to fighting mad, call him a
coyote; it means the most despicable creature in the animal world.
They're cowards. If that bunch of sheep turned and faced a coyote they
would terrify him."

"Ranch life is just one problem after another, isn't it?"

"No more than any life which is packed with interest."

"My mistake! Didn't the little boy want his little ranch found fault
with? Then he shan't be teased."

As he turned and looked at her she caught her breath, colored richly and
apologized. "Don't mind me, Steve. The sudden release from
responsibility and the elixir of the morning air have gone to my head.
I'll be good, really I will. Did you see the Man of Mystery? I--I
somehow have a feeling that he may know something of the missing
calves."

"You're wrong. He's all right, he's doing a man's job--_he_ isn't
troubling me but--but I wish I knew what Beechy had up his sleeve. What
had he said to you before I came in that day in the office?" with quick
suspicion. His tone sent the color flying to the girl's hair.

"Why--why--nothing--but----"

"Don't perjure yourself," dryly. "Much as I think of Carl I'm not blind
to his ways with women. He couldn't have been unbearably raw or you
wouldn't have shaken hands with him, would you? I--didn't like his eyes
when he said he had work on the railroad."

"Steve, you are developing nerves; your imagination is running wild. One
would think that we were back in the days of armed bandits, when masked
men held up trains at the point of a gun. That isn't done now, you
know," with gay patronage.

"Perhaps--look up on the hill! The boys are bringing down the horses."

The girl's eyes followed his pointing finger. Nose to tail, close herded
by riders, the animals trailed toward the corral after their night of
feeding in the hillside pastures. They tossed their manes, they made
sportive attempts to escape their keepers.

"How well our boys ride." Steve's pulses responded to that possessive
"our."

"They ought to. They are as near old-timers as can be found now. The
Double O was Uncle Nick's master-passion. He took up the land when it
was the ranchman's paradise, in the years before fence-posts and barbed
wire, when cowboys packed guns and drank and gambled away their pay. He
adapted himself with amazing success to changing conditions though, and
hung on to all the real boys whom he could tempt with pay and the pride
of raising thoroughbreds."

As Courtlandt stopped the car in front of the ranch-house, the door was
flung open and a girl ran down the steps. Jerry stared incredulously.
"Peggy! Peggy!" she was out of the car in a flash and had her sister in
her arms. Steve heard one more muffled "Peggy!" before the two entered
the house. The surprise following so close upon her night's vigil might
be too much for Jerry, he feared. When Peg had written him and begged
him to keep her coming a surprise he had weakly consented. He had
intended to meet her train but had had to delegate Tommy to take his
place.

Jerry had quite recovered her poise when she appeared for breakfast in
the court. If there was a trace of _vibrato_ in her voice only
Courtlandt noticed it. She and Peg had stopped talking long enough to
get two hours' sleep. Overhead the sky spread like a Della Robbia glaze,
the atmosphere was so clear that the snow-tipped mountains seemed
reachable. A tractor in a distant field sounded but a few feet away. The
air was sweet with the fragrance of roses, the fountain tinkled
musically. Benito, yellow eyes blinking, his gay plumage ruffled till he
looked like an animated feather-duster, sidled round and round the rim
of the basin.

Peggy regarded her sister with elfish, hazel eyes as she took her seat
at the table.

"Ye gods, Jerry, but I'm glad to see you clothed and in your right mind.
That green skirt and sweater is a little bit of all right and I'm crazy
about your frills; they make me think of the soap-suds you see in the
demonstration electric washers, they're so--so fleecy. When you drove up
in that vampish gold gown this morning I thought it must be the custom
of the country to breakfast in evening clothes and I could have wept.
I'd been disillusioned enough. I thought that every honest-to-goodness
he-man on a ranch wore chaps and tore about with his six-shooter
'spittin' death and damnation,' but the man who brought out my trunks
evidently has a passion for overalls, and Mr. Benson met me at the train
looking like a model of the Well-Dressed Man."

Her sister laughed.

"You've been reading Zane Gray et als. Please understand that we are
ultra civilized on this ranch after six o'clock."

"Then you'll eat up my news. That smitten salesman of yours at Tiffany's
told me before I left New York that he was on the trail of the
Alexandrite ring you'd been wanting. It belonged to one of the late
royalties. He says that it is a wonder, beautifully set and only two
thousand dollars! You'd better write him about it. Of course he can't
hold it indefinitely."

"Two thousand dollars!" Jerry regretted the shocked exclamation as soon
as it left her lips. She glanced furtively at Steve. His eyes, clear and
clean and shining from his out-of-door life, disconcertingly direct, met
hers. She looked away hastily. "I'm--I'm not buying jewels now, Peg."

"You're not! Growing miserly in your old age, Geraldine?" with
patronizing surprise. "You've been talking of that Alexandrite for----"

"Will you ride the range with your ancient brother-in-law this morning,
Peg-o'-my-heart?" broke in Courtlandt. "We'll have lunch at Upper Farm."

"I'll say I'd love it. Will you come, Jerry?"

"No, I have work to do. Behold your erstwhile humble sister the private
secretary of the owner of Double O ranch," with laughing empressement.

"Don't work. Sleep, or ride with Peg," cut in Steve sharply. "Remember
you were out all night."

"O King Live Forever!" mocked Geraldine gayly. "Just as though I hadn't
danced all night many a time and ridden in the park all morning. I
shall----"

"Pete Glellish tlell you dat Ranlett make bad pidgin in Lower Flield,"
interrupted Ming Soy's soft voice at Courtlandt's elbow. "He say,
'Hully--hully--hully!'"

Steve sprang from his chair and caromed into Tommy Benson who had just
entered the court and stood beaming upon Peggy Glamorgan.

"What, down already, Miss Peg? Methinks

    "'This morning, like the spirit of a youth
    That means to be of note, begins betimes.'

Why the glassy-eye and furrowed-brow effect, Steve? I hope that you've
left me a taste of the honey, Miss Glamorgan?" he reproached as he took
his place at the table beside the girl.

"As soon as you've had a bite, Tommy, join me at Lower Field. Bring Peg
along. Jerry," Steve Courtlandt's voice was peremptory, "remember, no
work in the office and if you don't go with Peg and Tommy stay in sight
of the ranch-house if you ride. Don't expect me until you see me. I may
not be at home to-night."

He didn't wait for her answer. In his own room he picked up a Colt 45,
spun the cylinder, slipped a box of cartridges into his pocket and
hurried to the side door. Gerrish, mounted on the big sorrel, held Blue
Devil by the bridle. Both horses were prancing nervously, for the
parrot, who had climbed to the gutter under the roof, was clucking and
calling:

"Gid-dap! Go-long!"

"That bird ought to be shot," Steve growled as with some difficulty he
mounted. "What's to pay now, Pete, Ranlett?"

"You've got your rope on the right pair of horns this time, Chief. The
fences of Lower Field have been cut."

"Toward the railroad?"

"By cripes, no. Toward the mountains. If 't been the railroad side we
might have stood a chance of corralling the Shorthorns, but if they once
get into the mountains--Lord-ee, I believe yer uncle'll rise out of his
grave an' go after 'em. Them critters was the pride of his life. Ranlett
was a low-down dawg to turn a trick like this. Say, do you know anything
about thet range-rider at Bear Creek?"

"Why--why--I've spoken to him. You don't suspect him of being in this
deal, do you?"

"I ain't suspectin' nothin', but after I'd saw him twice talkin' to
Ranlett I sort of got his number."

"You've got it wrong, then, Pete. I happen to know that the man is white
clear through."

"Well, I ain't shootin' off my mouth careless when I say that the
range-rider's got somethin' up his sleeve. It's my best bet there's
going to be fifty-seven varieties of hell blowin' up round this ranch
before we get through. If you ask me, I'll say that the crime-wave
that's been lappin' the coast has swashed out here in a flood."

"But, Pete, it's impossible for rustlers to get away with their old
stuff now."

"You're shoutin', Chief, it sure is, but--they'll find some new ways. I
got it doped out your way too, but if it ain't rustlin', what fool thing
is that coyote Ranlett up to?"

"Giving us a run for our cattle, I guess. Spite. How many boys can we
spare to round up the Shorthorns?"

"I've sent fer the bunch. There's somethin' else phoney that I haven't
told yer. It's been open and shut in my mind whether I'd better."

"Shoot, old-timer!" commanded Courtlandt curtly.

"Well, since you fed Ranlett his time he's been moseyin' round Slippy
Bend. The other day when I rode over there to see Baldy Jennings, 'bout
shippin' them steer, I just naturally dropped into the Lazy Wolf. Our
late manager was settin' at a table with two girls and a man. It wasn't
my butt-in and I wouldn't have specially noticed the stranger if he
hadn't been makin' goo-goo eyes at one of the females out of all
proportion to her good looks. She hed----"

"Let's pass up what she looked like. Who was the man?"

"I didn't know then, but Saturday you brought the ol' son-of-a-gun of a
lady-killer to the bunk-house yourself. Savvy?"

"You don't mean Beechy?"

"Sorry, Chief, but he's the same. An' unless I'm locoed Ranlett's got
the feller's hide nailed to his stable door; he's got him an' he's got
him tight."




CHAPTER XIII


Bubbles the roan, own brother to Patches, and Peggy Glamorgan on his
back were radiant youth incarnate. The horse arched his graceful head as
though proudly conscious of the loveliness of his burden; the corded
muscles of shoulder, flank and leg flexed sensitively under his satin
skin with every move of his pliant body. The girl's sombrero had the
true ranchero tilt. Her khaki riding costume was as perfect a thing as
the cinema-fed imagination of a fashionable habit-maker could conceive;
it was only by exercising superhuman restraint that he had refrained
from adding buckskin fringe and a six-shooter. Tommy Benson regarded her
as though hypnotized. He caught a quizzical expression in Jerry's eyes
as she stood on the porch, and colored hotly. He swallowed hard and
sprang to the saddle. With obvious effort to regain his poise, he
touched his horse with his heels and with a theatrical sweep of his
right arm declaimed:

"Let's go! 'Once more into the breach dear friends, once more.'"

Peggy lingered.

"You are sure that you won't come with us, Jerry?" Her sister smilingly
shook her head.

"No, I must finish some work. Come back, Goober!" to the dog who had
been jumping up to lick the noses of the horses, and who with short
joyous barks was preparing to follow them. He threw her a glance replete
with injured dignity and flopped down on the porch with head on his
outstretched paws. Peggy threw a hasty "I'm sorry!" over her shoulder
and urged Bubbles to a gallop. Tommy bore down upon her as she reached
the ranch road. He seized the bridle of her horse and pulled him down.

"Where's the fire?" he demanded. "What's the big idea in burning up the
road? I want to make this ride last."

"I thought you wanted to get to Lower Field to help Steve,"
reproachfully.

"Sure thing, but if I break my neck getting there it won't prove much,
will it? I wonder why your sister didn't come."

The horses stepped daintily side by side, their glossy coats shining in
the sunlight. Peggy's brows met in a suspicion of a frown.

"Tommy--you don't mind if I call you Tommy, do you?" with just the right
suggestion of hesitation and a glance from under curling lashes which
fanned a spark in the man's eyes to fire.

"I'll say that I don't," fervently. "Formality is silly in a great,
God's-own-country like this. What's on your mind?"

"Jerry. I was wondering. There is something queer about Steve and Jerry,
Tommy. They don't seem a bit like married lovers; have you noticed it?"

Benson bent far forward to examine the bit in his horse's mouth. When he
settled back in the saddle his face was flushed.

"'I never knew so young a lady with so old a head,'" he quoted gayly.
"What does a child like you, just out of the nursery, know about
lovers?" he teased.

She regarded him with lofty condescension.

"I shall be nineteen my next birthday and I'll have you understand that
boys have been plentiful in my career, Mr. Benson. Of course if you
don't care to talk with me----"

"I do--I do, Peg-o'-my-heart!" Courtlandt's name for her slipped
unconsciously from Tommy's lips. He looked at her apologetically but the
girl was too engrossed in her troubled thoughts to notice what he called
her. Reassured he answered her question. "I think that Steve and Jerry
are bully pals."

"Pals! Ye gods, and that's all. Honest now, Tommy, have you ever seen
Steve catch Jerry's hand as though he just couldn't help it?" Benson
met her triumphant glance with a sternly accusing eye.

"Oh, the precocity and sophistication of twentieth century youth! Look
here, young woman, what have you been reading?"

"Reading! Tommy, you're overdoing it. You're too innocent to be true,"
with a little rush of laughter. "Now I ask you, would you want a wife
who was as distantly friendly to you as Jerry is to Steve?"

"I should not," with convincing emphasis. "But why should your sister
have married Courtlandt if she didn't love him? I can't conceive of his
not being mad about her."

"Dad was the why. I didn't know until I asked him if I might come here.
I went to San Francisco with my roommate when school closed, but I
intended to come to Jerry as quickly as I politely could. When he gave
me permission to come Dad told me that he expected me to marry family as
Jerry had--that he had brought her up with the idea and that she had not
disappointed him. That's that!"

"In the vernacular of the backwoods, 'She seen her duty an' she done
it,'" interpolated Benson. "Might--might an humble admirer ask if you
are planning to please your father or--or yourself, when you marry?" He
succeeded in keeping eyes and tone gayly impersonal.

"I don't intend to marry at all, that is, not for years and years and
years."

"You'll be quite a nice old lady by that time, won't you?"

"You're not nearly as good-looking when you scowl, Tommy. As I was
saying, when so rudely interrupted, when I do marry it will be to please
myself. I told Dad a thing or two," and Tommy, observing the tiny flames
which memory had set in her hazel eyes, allowed that she had.

"I'm puzzled about Jerry's money," Peggy went on thoughtfully. "Dad
gives us an allowance fit for princesses of blood royal; that's an
out-of-date simile now, isn't it? When I asked her this morning for five
dollars with which to tip the man who brought up my trunk, first she was
shocked at the idea of tipping one of the outfit, and then she grew as
red as fire and stammered that she had no small bills. Ye gods, what do
you know about that?" with slangy amazement.

"Sweet cookie, that's nothing. Many a time I haven't been able to pry a
dollar bill loose."

"That is different. You're--you're working and it takes time to make a
living," with sweet earnestness. Tommy shot a quick look at her. Was she
laughing at him? No, she was taking his lack of funds seriously. "About
that Alexandrite ring. Once Jerry would have ordered it by wire before
you could say 'Jack Robinson'--but all she said was, 'I--I'm not buying
jewels now, Peg.' Has she turned miser or has Dad----" her eyes flew to
Benson's in startled questioning. "Dad was furious because Jerry and
Steve left New York. Could he have stopped her allowance? But--but if he
did--surely Steve would give----" she stopped in troubled uncertainty.

"Why don't you ask your sister?" suggested Benson gravely.

"I will. I can't believe that Dad would--well he'd better never try to
drive me. And that's that," with a defiant tilt of her chin.

"Would you stick to--to a man, a poor man, you loved even if you knew
that your father would cut you off with the proverbial shilling?" Her
hazel eyes met his turbulent blue ones frankly.

"Indeed I would, Mr. Tommy Benson. I shouldn't be afraid to marry a poor
man, that is, a poor man with a future. I should want to be sure that he
was that kind. I love to cook and sew and I should adore taking care of
a ducky little house and brushing my husband's coat collar when he
started off for work in the morning and going to market. There is only
one thing I should hate to economize about----" her expression and tone
were introspective. Benson was conscious that his heart was in his eyes
but he didn't care. She was adorable with that thoughtful pucker of her
vivid lips. He had to steady his voice before he asked lightly:

"And what may that one thing be, Peg-o'-my-heart?"

"Children," she answered promptly and with utter absence of
self-consciousness. "I want eight and--and I suppose that's rather
extravagant for a poor man to start with, don't you, Tommy?"

Benson held his emotions in a grip of steel. At that moment the
boy-he-had-been waved good-bye and slipped away forever. The man's eyes
were gravely tender as he answered the girl's question with judicial
deliberation.

"Perhaps--not. That is, not for a poor man with a future." He tightened
on the bridle. "Steve will think we're quitters. Let's go!"

The white road stretched ahead of them. Their horses' feet raised a haze
of dust. On either side billowed fields of tall, untrodden grass and
beyond the fields lumped the foot-hills. In a pasture a roan mare lay
with her head up over her shoulder asleep, while beside her, flat on its
side in the sun, dozed a young colt. Insects droned and buzzed
unceasingly. The air sparkled with that brand of ozone to be found only
among the foot-hills.

Benson and Peggy came upon Courtlandt in Lower Field. He nodded to them
absent-mindedly. He was the centre of a group of mounted men, all eager,
all armed. Most of them rolled and smoked cigarettes incessantly as they
sat their horses. A few of them wore chaps with vests over their colored
shirts, some were in khaki riding clothes, all wore bandanas of violent
pattern in place of collars, broad-brimmed Stetsons and laced riding
boots. They were a clean-cut, self-respecting looking lot, as lean,
lithe and brown as a life spent in the saddle could make them. Pete
Gerrish on his massive sorrel loomed above them all.

"Understand me, there is to be no shooting," Steve was reiterating as
Peg and Benson rode up. "Gerrish, I'll fire the man who shoots unless in
self-defense. Do you get me, boys?"

"Sure, we get you," drawled Marcelle O'Neil, so nicknamed because of the
unrepressible kink in his straw-colored hair. "No objection, be ther',
to ropin' one of Ranlett's gang an' reinin' him up short if he starts to
lope?" he wheedled.

"No. Bring every one of them back if you can. Without injury, though.
We'll let the law mete out punishment."

"Sure, it's none of my butt-in how you handle the durn polecat, but if I
had my way I'd swing Ranlett up to a cottonwood if I got my mazuma fer
doin' it. Them were the finest Shorthorns in the world and if
Nick-the-time-feeder was back----"

Nicholas Fairfax had been notoriously prompt to discharge a man who
slacked on the job, but O'Neil had not intended to let the bunk-house
name for the late owner of the Double O slip out. He looked furtively at
Courtlandt but he, consciously or unconsciously, ignored the lapse.

"We'll find them, O'Neil. We must. Get a move on, boys. Ride in pairs
and ride like----"

Their whoop of enthusiasm drowned his last words. Steve remained
motionless until the last one had taken the fence at a jump. His face
was white, his eyes strained and tired. He rode toward Peg and Benson
who had with difficulty restrained their horses from following the
riders.

"That was the nearest approach to the wild-west cowboy of the eighties
that you will ever see, Peg-o'-my-heart. Did you notice that Marks and
Schoeffleur were missing, Tommy? Why didn't Jerry come with you, Peg?"

"She said that she had work to do, that she would ride after luncheon."

"She understood that she was not to go out of sight of the ranch-house?"

The girl's salaam was as profound as the neck of her horse would
permit.

"Your slave heard and obeys, oh Abdul the Great."

A laugh erased the tired lines about Courtlandt's mouth.

"Do I seem such a tyrannous old Turk to you? Well, it is only because I
am afraid that Jerry----" He left his sentence unfinished and turned to
Benson. "Take a message to Upper Farm for me. Tell--the Devil!"

"Your mistake, Steve; it's only Mrs. Denbigh," Peggy corrected
mischievously as she followed Courtlandt's eyes to where Felice Denbigh
and Greyson were entering the field. The three rode to meet the
newcomers.

"Good morning. I didn't know that you left your downy before noon,
Felice."

The woman put her horse through a few paces that were as coquettish as
her eyes and voice.

"On with the vamps!" muttered Tommy in a tone intended only for Peg's
ear. With difficulty she choked back a delighted giggle as Felice
answered in a spoiled-child voice:

"Steve, you're getting to be a barbarian out here. Have you forgotten
that last night you invited me to ride with you this morning?"

"Last night--I what?" demanded Courtlandt, a slow color darkening his
face.

"I waited for you at the X Y Z and when you didn't come fairly browbeat
my host into escorting me to Double O ranch. I thought I should find you
there. No such luck. We saw only Mrs. Courtlandt and she thought that
you would be too busy----"

"I am too busy," curtly. "Tommy, take Mrs. Denbigh with you and Peg to
Upper Farm. You'll find the most up-to-date dairy in the country there,
Felice. Its equipment cost----"

"Don't talk like a mail-order catalogue, Steve," the woman interrupted
petulantly. "If you can't show me the Upper Farm I will wait until you
can, I'm a patient waiter. I always get what I want," with narrowed eyes
and an iced smile which sent a queer shiver down Benson's spine. He
looked at Greyson to see how he was bearing his equivocal position. The
man's fine, thoroughbred face was red and set about the lips. Benson
couldn't understand his allowing himself to be placed in such an awkward
situation. Why the dickens had he invited the Denbigh woman to the X Y
Z? He must have been at the Manor long enough during Old Nick's illness
to have found her out. He brought his thoughts back to the present in
time to hear Felice say:

"Shall we go on to Slippy Bend, Mr. Greyson? Your sister gave us some
commissions to execute there. So long, Stevie! You'll come over for a
game of auction to-night, of course. You and I against mine host and
Paula." She didn't wait for his answer. Without a glance in the
direction of Peg and Benson she wheeled her horse and rode away. Greyson
waved his hat to Peg, called something to her companions and cantered
after his guest. For one long, silent moment Courtlandt followed the two
with his eyes, then he resumed his directions to Benson where he had
dropped them.

"Tell Mrs. Simms to have Simms report to me to-morrow noon at the ranch.
Show Peg over Upper Farm. She won't insist upon being personally
conducted by me, I'll wager. Get your lunch there. Mrs. Simms' jelly
cookies will make you purr with repletion, Peggy. I told Ming Soy that
we wouldn't be back till late afternoon. Take your time. Don't let Peg
ride too hard. Jerry won't be anxious. She knows what distances are
here."

"But, Steve, don't you need me? I can take Miss Glamorgan back and join
you."

"No, I'm riding alone. I have a few fairly fresh trails to follow up. Be
a good child, Peg-o'-my-heart, and do exactly what the best range-rider
on the Double O tells you to do." He laughed at her indignant eyes,
touched Blue Devil with his heel and loped off. Peggy looked after him
and then at Benson.

"I wonder--I don't like that Denbigh woman. Did you see her eyes when
Steve turned her down? Careful Cosmetics is the name for her. She must
think it's the open season for vamps round here." She looked at Tommy
with laughter and a glint of mischief in her hazel eyes. "Now I wonder
who Steve could have meant by the best range-rider of the Double O?" she
mused in a low voice as though communing with herself.

Benson swept off his Stetson with swash-buckling impressiveness.

"I don't like to talk about myself--but," he murmured with exaggerated
humility, "I'll say that I--now who the dickens is that? The Simms kid.
Johnny Simms. What does he want? I----" His voice trailed off into
silence as he watched a boy who came galloping up on a pony to speak to
Courtlandt. Tommy unconsciously caught the bridle of the girl's horse.
Bubbles and Soapy, who had been paddock mates, nuzzled noses. The girl
and man watching saw the boy hand Steve a paper, then whirl and gallop
away as though pursued by a thousand furies.

"That's queer," Benson observed under his breath.

"What's queer?" asked Peggy in the same hushed whisper.

"That the boy should break away like that. He adores Steve. So do the
other Simms kids. Now what is Courtlandt doing? Burning something?" as
a wisp of smoke fell to the ground.

"Why don't you go and find out?" in a tone which was own cousin to his.

"Nothing doing. You don't know Steve. I'm here; he knows it. He never
misses a trick. If he wants me he'll shout. There, you see? He doesn't,"
as Courtlandt, after a glance at the ground where the smoke had fallen,
galloped across the field toward the ranch road.

"You're fond of Steve, aren't you?" Peggy probed as they headed their
horses toward Upper Farm.

"Fond of him! That's a deleted, diluted expression of my sentiments for
the Whistling Lieut. We literally went through fire and water overseas;
since then I've been on the ranch. You see, the German Inn where Steve
and I sojourned for a couple of months didn't have a particularly
beneficial effect on my health, so when I got back to the good old U. S.
A. I came here to recuperate and I have stayed."

"Haven't you any family?"

"I have. One devoted, in-perfect-condition mother, 1921 model, ditto
father. She is coming out next week. Hasn't your sister written you
about me?" curiously.

"What conceit! She hasn't written pages about you," with a laugh which
sent the color to his face in a flood. "She wrote that you were here,
that Steve said that you had a future if you'd stick to ranching and
leave celluloid alone--now what did he mean by that?"

"So Steve said that I was a man with a future, did he? Make a mental
note of that, Miss Glamorgan," his tone and look brought a startled
flash to eyes which had been so boyishly friendly. He steadied his voice
before he went on: "I've had a fool idea that I wanted to be a
movie-actor--but----"

"But don't you want to any more?"

"No."

"When did you experience a change of heart?"

"This morning at exactly two o'clock, I decided that there was nothing
in it, that I wanted to be a solid citizen with a settled abiding
place."

"Two o'clock! Why, that was when I reached Slippy----" With heightened
color she tightened her rein and touched Bubbles with her heels. "I'll
race you to the farmhouse," she called over her shoulder, a curious
breathlessness in her voice. She kept the lead till they reached the
gate of the farm, then Benson caught her horse by the bridle.

"The back of your head is attractive but I like your face better. Don't
you want to hear the romantic story of Mrs. Simms before we get there?
She's a Heart and Ringer."

"A--a what?"

It was no longer necessary to hold the bridle of the girl's horse. She
forced him to a walk.

"Heart and Ringer. That is what they call the women who marry men who
advertise in the matrimonial sheet, Heart and Ring."

"Really, Tommy! Did Mrs. Simms do that?"

"She did, and she got just what she paid for. Simms is a bounder but
he's thrifty as the dickens and an A 1 workman. That's what caught Old
Nick in the beginning. He'd have employed the devil himself had he those
characteristics. But the man is ugly and insolent. How Steve puts up
with him beats me. It is because of Mrs. Simms, I suppose. She is a fine
woman and a corker in the dairy. She lived in Montana. She was the
daughter of a miner who had made his pile and gone to farming. Montana
got on her nerves, so when she saw Simms' 'ad' in Heart and Ring she
corresponded with him and married him. I'll bet a hat Montana has looked
like heaven to her ever since. That was one of their children who met
Steve. I'd give my Kipling de luxe to know why."

He drew rein before the white farmhouse which hugged the ground like a
mammoth brooding hen. In the field beyond was a spatter effect of snowy
dairies and cow-barns. Black and white Holsteins, creamy Jerseys,
Guernseys and a few Ayreshires grazed epicureanly in the lush pastures
that climbed the foot-hills.

A slender, wiry woman, who gave a fresh-from-the-laundry impression, so
immaculate, so clear of skin, so smooth of hair was she, greeted Peg and
Benson as they dismounted. Her smile was obliterated as Tommy's eyes
lingered on her arm. She hastily pulled down her sleeves and buttoned
them snugly at the wrists.

"It sure is fine to see you, Mr. Benson. You ain't taken my advice so
soon and got a wife, have you?" she asked with a laugh and twinkle in
the eyes which nature had intended for a merry blue, but which Life,
aided and abetted by Heart and Ring and--Simms, had threshed to an
apprehensive gray.

"No such luck, Mrs. Simms. This is Mrs. Courtlandt's sister, Miss
Margaret Glamorgan. We came with a message from the Chief for Simms.
Where is he? At the dairy?"

"I'm sure pleased to know you, Miss. Simms has gone to--to Slippy Bend,
Mr. Tommy."

"She's lying," Benson decided, even as he directed: "When he gets back
tell him to report at the office to-morrow noon, sharp, with his
accounts. Has he been up to his old tricks again?" His eyes fell as
though by accident to her arms.

The woman's eyes, her lips, changed in expression. It was as though her
features, red-hot with life and interest, had been run into a mold and
hardened.

"He has that, Mr. Tommy."

"Is there any use in repeating what I have said before, that you ought
to leave him?"

"An' I say as I said before, you're wrong, Mr. Tommy. I promised in the
sight of God and man to stick to him as long as we both lived. I wasn't
forced to marry Simms. I did it of my own free Will--my own fool will,"
contemptuously. "I'd be a fine example to my children, wouldn't I, if I
tried to get out of marriage just because it wasn't the romantic
joy-ride I'd expected. It would be different if Simms abused the
children; he never lays a hand on 'em. He wouldn't dare," with a glitter
in her eyes. "You and Mr. Tommy'll stay and have a bite of lunch with
us, won't you, Miss? Mr. Courtlandt always has his when he comes."

Her change of voice and subject was so sudden that it caught Peggy's
hazel eyes, glistening with tears, fixed upon her face. The girl blinked
the mist away, slipped her hand under the woman's firm arm and inquired
with irresistible charm:

"Will there be jelly cookies, Mrs. Simms?"

The blue came back to the eyes for a moment.

"Surely. Aha, Mr. Tommy, now I know what you came for."

"I didn't tell her about them. It was the Big Chief."

"Mr. Steve!" The blue suffered a total eclipse. "Did he come with you?"

"As far as Lower Field. By the way, what's wrong with Johnny? He
galloped up to Courtlandt, stuck out his hand, then beat it."

"But he stuck out his hand?"

"Surest thing you know."

Mrs. Simms exhaled to the limit of her flat chest.

"That's all right, then. Johnny--Johnny found a sparkling stone--and he
said as how he thought 'twas gold--and he's--he's pestered me to death
till I told him he could ask Mr. Steve if he could stake off a claim.
Minin's in his blood. My father was a miner, Miss. I guess I'd better
get busy about dinner, not stand talking here," she explained as she
hurried away.

Benson's eyes followed her as he perched on a corner of the porch
railing and lighted his pipe. Peg had gone into the house to help. He
could hear the two voices, the woman's a high strident tone, the girl's
like music with a joyous note running through it. The delectable odor of
bacon and frying chicken drifted out to him and set his already rampant
appetite clamoring for satisfaction. Mrs. Simms had cut that boy and
pebble story from whole cloth, if he was a judge of human nature, and
he'd bet his last dollar that he was, Benson thought, as he changed his
seat to one from which he could look inside the room which served as
living-room and dining-room at Upper Farm.

It was for all the world like the pictures one saw in mail-order
catalogues, he thought with a smile. There was an old-time melodion in
one corner and an up-to-date phonograph in another. There was golden oak
furniture in profusion. The walls were covered with a paper on which
impossible roses fought for supremacy with more impossible alleged birds
of paradise. How could a person think between such walls, Tommy
wondered. He had the feeling as he looked that birds and roses were
being stuffed down his throat. In the midst of his reflections Mrs.
Simms called him.

The three children slipped shyly into their chairs after the strangers
were seated. They were boys, ranging in age from four to ten. Johnny had
not come home, apparently. They had almost white hair and eyes shaped
like the eyes of sculpins, which they kept fixed on Peggy Glamorgan,
after the hypnotic effect of the company blue and white checked
table-cloth, the pressed glass spoon-holder, and the best gold-banded
plates with a big S in a funereal-like wreath on the border, had worn
off.

Benson smiled to himself as he watched them. They were doing frankly and
unreproved what he longed to do. Extreme youth had some compensations.
He lost himself in a radiant dream of possibilities and became as
absorbed with his inward vision as the scions of the house of Simms were
with the material and fascinating Peg herself. He was quite unconscious
that the girl was observing him in amused wonder.

"What did Johnny mean by staking a claim, Mrs. Simms?" she inquired as
with the air of a dainty gourmand she set her teeth in a second cookie.
"I would have asked Mr. Benson, but who am I to rouse him from his dream
of--of fair women, perhaps--yes?" with a ripple of laughter.

Tommy roused with a start and colored generously.

"I beg pardon, I was----"

"That's what miners do when they think they've found gold," interrupted
Mrs. Simms, quite unconscious of the byplay. "They stake off a lot of
land and post it. Sometimes they don't work it for a year or more."

"Then why take possession? Isn't that dog-in-the-manger stuff?"

"No, because they really want it. They stake their claim so that no
other man can get it," broke in Benson. "And if you ask me, I'll say
that it's a whale of an idea," he added with a curious light in his
eyes. "Young woman, if you have finished your cookie gorge we will
depart."

"Cookie gorge! Slanderer! Mrs. Simms, did I eat as many as he?"

"Don't perjure yourself, Mrs. Simms. Come, Peg-o'-my-heart!" He realized
that his eyes were acting as town-criers for his emotions and shifted
his gaze from the girl to the woman. She sensed their message and
exclaimed impulsively:

"My stars, ain't it great to be young and--and free!"

"You've said it, Mrs. Simms," agreed Peg with her woman-of-the-world air
as she drew on her riding gloves. "Catch me settling down. Never! And
that's that!"

The woman's troubled eyes sought Benson's. He laughed and held out his
hand. "Good-bye, Mrs. Simms. Don't you worry. Having attained the
titanic and imposing age of eighteen the lady would naturally have
caustic views on matrimony. It will come out right and--and that's
that!" he observed cryptically. "Be sure that Simms reports to-morrow.
The Big Chief has about all he can handle now; we don't want him
worried."

It was not until Benson and Peg neared the Double O ranch that they
came back to the subject of their late hostess. They had spent a lazy,
happy afternoon, making Tommy's daily round of inspection which he
usually covered in two hours.

"Do you think Simms hurts her?" the girl broke out suddenly, apropos of
nothing. "Did you see those marks on her arm? Why, oh why, does she stay
with him?" with a shudder.

"You heard why."

"Yes, and do you know what I saw when she said that about God and man? I
didn't see her at all; it was a close-up of Jerry's eyes at her wedding,
and the clergyman saying, 'And forsaking all others.' Those words echoed
in my brain for days. Jerry is like Mrs. Simms. She'd keep a vow like
that if it killed her."

"Wouldn't you?"

"You never can tell," flippantly. "At least I don't intend to get into a
position where I'll have to for years--and--years--and years----" The
last words floated back to him with laughter as she galloped off. She
kept the breakneck pace till she pulled up at the court entrance. Benson
was off his horse before she could dismount. He lifted her from the
saddle and with his arms about her drew her into the garden.

"I won't take possession till you give me leave,--but--but I--I'll stake
my claim now, and that's that!" he whispered huskily as he kissed her
once upon her white throat.

"Mr. Tommee! Mr. Tommee Benson!" called a voice from the path as Ming
Soy in her gay silks came running toward them. Her slant eyes were
almost wide. "Misses Stevie went off on horse after lunch. Tlell Ming
Soy just going to flield; Ming Soy bleat glong when you and little
Missis come, but she didn't go to flield, and she never come back--not
all this time."




CHAPTER XIV


Jerry Courtlandt lingered on the porch to watch her sister and Benson as
they raced down the drive. Her eyebrows met in a thoughtful frown. What
would her father say if Peg fell in love with Benson, with his
poor-but-honest background? There was no "if" about Tommy. Cupid had set
signal fires to burning in his eyes already. Benson pere had begun his
business career as an errand boy; now he twinkled a large and somewhat
dazzling planet in the select heaven of the multies. Well, Glamorgan the
oil-king couldn't expect both his daughters to marry the man of his
choice. She had done it and what had been her reward? Because she had
views as to right and wrong and justice he refused to write to her.
Evidently Peg didn't know the terms of Nicholas Fairfax's will or she
wouldn't have been surprised at her lack of enthusiasm about the
Alexandrite. Two thousand dollars! It seemed a more stupendous sum than
twenty thousand would have seemed to her a year ago. Values were curious
things. What had Steve thought? She was beginning to dread his
eyes--they were so searching, so compelling.

If she wanted and needed money, she would earn it; other women had been
doing it for years; she wouldn't accept it from Steve any other way. In
spite of his prohibition she would work on the books for a while. She
paused before she entered the house to draw a long breath and take a
look at the glorious world about her. The sky spread like a cerulean
canopy flecked with motionless white clouds. It seemed near. She felt
more as though she were looking up at a vast, decorated dome than at the
heavens. Almost she expected to see Dawn or any one of the symbolic
head-liners in the mural world, come trailing her scanty draperies
across the blue. The far-off mountains reared a patchwork of purple and
blue and gold. The noisy stream was fringed with color. The fields
rustled their content in the sunshine. On the road to the X Y Z rose a
cloud of dust.

"Somebody coming!" she thought with a thrill of excitement. Then she
laughed and looked down at the dog who stood in stately, aloof dignity
beside her. "Goober, I'm getting to be like a prairie-dog who parks
outside his hole to see the pass," she confided. She still watched the
approaching riders. When she recognized in them Felice Denbigh and Bruce
Greyson she regretted that she had lingered. It was too late to
disappear now. The owner of the X Y Z had seen her and waved his hand.
With a feeling of repugnance, which shocked her even as it swept her,
Jerry went to the steps to greet the riders. Felice in her smart silvery
linen looked as though she had been removed recently from tissue
wrappings. Greyson's eyes met Jerry's. Was she mistaken that they were
full of a wordless apology, she wondered, even as she greeted the two
cordially.

"Doesn't this morning look as though it had just been returned from the
dry-cleanser's?" she asked gayly. "Did you ever feel anything more spick
and span than the air? Won't you come in?"

"Thanks, no." Felice Denbigh's answer was hurried. "Where is Steve? He
invited me to inspect the Double O with him this morning. He was to come
for me but I tired of the rôle of patient Griselda and made Mr. Greyson
bring me over. Not that I had to work hard to persuade him." Her light
tone was tinged with malice as she administered one of those subtle
female digs commonly imperceptible to the male intelligence. Jerry
caught the obvious reply between her teeth and substituted:

"Steve was called to Lower Field. I--I doubt if he can ride with you
this morning, Mrs. Denbigh."

If a glance could have accomplished it, Jerry would have been neatly and
expeditiously skinned, then and there. Felice's voice had the edge of a
hari-kari sword as she answered:

"Steve is the person to decide that. Which way to Lower Field, Mr.
Greyson?" Her host's eyes flamed.

"If Mrs. Courtlandt thinks----"

"Oh, but Mrs. Courtlandt doesn't think," protested Jerry laughingly. "Do
show Mrs. Denbigh the way to Lower Field, Bruce. I should be delighted
to go myself but for a letter which must be ready for Sandy this
morning. You will find----"

Felice Denbigh was off before she had finished her sentence. Greyson
followed without a word. Jerry looked after the two with troubled eyes.
Her thoughts were in a turmoil.

"What has happened to Bruce Greyson?" she thought anxiously. "His
conversational output has shrunk till what he says seems a waste of
breath, it amounts to so little. One would think he was under a spell. I
wonder--I wonder if Steve did make a date with her?" she mused aloud as
she crossed the court on her way to the office. José, busy among his
flowers, swept off his hat with his single-tooth smile.

"_Buenos dias, Señora._ My roses bloom brighter as you pass, yes?"
Benito, balancing on one claw on the rim of the fountain, shivered,
blinked his yellow eyes and croaked hoarsely:

"Piffle!"

With a shocked exclamation José flung a chunk of loam at the parrot. It
hit him squarely and knocked him backward into the shallow basin. With
frightened squawks and much ruffling of feathers the bird regained his
place on the basin's rim. For an instant he indulged in a what-hit-me
blink, then with his gaudy plumage looking as though it had been
electrified croaked angrily:

"I'll be d----!"

José swooped and muffled the final word beneath his coat. "You weel
pardon, Señora? It is Señor Tommee that teaches Benito seence he come to
the rancho. I teach heem when he ees so leetle to speak only good. Not
till one year ago does he begin to talk like wild devil. Señora weel
pardon? He ees all I have, he ees like my child."

Jerry accepted the brown man's apology as seriously as it was offered.

"Children are a great responsibility. You never can tell what they will
do, can you, José?"

The office seemed a dull, uninteresting drab in contrast to the light
and color of the world outside. Even the silent witnesses to the drama
and lawlessness of the country, now guarded jealously by glass doors,
failed to spur the girl's imagination. She streamed the curtain up at
the window. A light haze of dust lingered above the road Greyson and
Felice had taken. The music of the stream stole into the quiet room;
down in the corral a horse whinnied intriguingly; the whole gleaming
out-of-doors lured, the mountains beckoned.

Jerry resolutely barred heart and mind against temptation and attacked
her letters. She worked with single-track intentness until Ming Soy
announced luncheon. She looked up in surprise. Her work had burned up
the hours. She interned the typewriter and closed her desk with a bang.
She flexed her muscles in luxurious enjoyment of the sensation. What a
relief to move, but it wasn't even a sliver of the relief she felt when
she looked down at the sheaf of letters awaiting Steve's signature. How
it would have pleased her father to know that she had resisted the
temptation to be up and away on Patches, she thought wistfully. She
could see him now, hear his gruff voice saying:

"Jerry, the more you dread the thing you have to do, the more you should
hustle to get it behind you. Make that a rule of your life and you'll
find you will have all the time you want and some left with which to
speculate." He was a resplendent example of the working out of his own
precept, his daughter thought. He was the busiest man she knew yet he
always had an abundance of time for pleasure.

What should she do with her afternoon, she wondered, as she enjoyed the
dainty luncheon Ming Soy served in a shady corner of the court. The air
had lost the keenness of the morning. Birds flew to the rim of the
basin, observed the girl at the table critically for an instant, then
proceeded with the day's ablutions. They chattered, they splashed, they
scolded, they preened and dressed their feathers in the sun. Butterflies
darted in and out among the blossoms. There were none of the usual ranch
sounds to break the stillness. Where were the men? Had Steve taken them
all with him, she wondered. What were Peg and Tommy doing? Peg might see
some real riding if she caught up with the outfit before they started
off in pursuit of the missing cattle, but alas for buckskin fringes
and----

Suddenly a plan sprang full panoplied, complete, from her brain. It was
born of her what-shall-I-do-now mood. If necessity is the mother of
invention, idleness is the father of adventure. She would array herself
in one of the cowboy suits behind the glass doors, mount Patches and
ride to the field behind the ranch-house, practise with a six-shooter
until Peg came, then she'd dash toward her with her gun "spittin' death
and damnation" into the air.

Her idea developed with magic-beanstalk rapidity, as all ideas will if
they are dropped in fertile and well-cultivated soil. She laughed until
she was breathless as she confronted herself in the mirror in her own
room an hour later. Over her linen riding breeches she had drawn a pair
of flapping black and white Angora chaps. Great Mexican rowels adorned
her riding boots. A hectic yellow bandana, with red spots which gave the
cheery effect of a geometrical nosebleed, almost covered her delicate
blouse. Her sleeves were rolled to the elbows, at her hip swung a
six-shooter of sinister portent. A heavy belt filled with cartridges
sagged from her waist. She had slipped a silver filigree band above the
black and gold cord of Steve's campaign hat.

In a little whirlwind of laughter she blew a kiss to the gleaming eyes
of her vis-à-vis and lifted the saddle which she had purloined from the
glass case. It was gay with silver. The tapideros were choice examples
of Mexican craftsmanship. The head-stall of the bridle was fantastically
trimmed with the metal. As Jerry passed through the living-room the huge
rowels on her boots caught in the rug. She dropped the saddle with a
crash and caught at the table to save herself from falling. Her eyes
were bright, her cheeks pink when she had Patches saddled. She had
brought him up from the corral herself before she dressed. He rolled
his great eyes at her as she came out of the house. He pranced
skittishly until she spoke. Then he quieted but he kept an appraising,
suspicious eye on her. As the crowning touch of realism Jerry fastened a
coil of rawhide rope beside the saddle fork.

It was with difficulty, punctuated by _sotto voce_ exclamations, that
the girl mounted. The chaps were heavy and perversely unadaptable. As
she gathered up the reins Ming Soy appeared at the door. The little
Oriental's eyes were globules of wonder. Jerry anticipated her.

"I am off to practise shooting in the field behind the house, Ming Soy.
Don't be frightened if you hear shots. Watch the road for Miss Glamorgan
and Mr. Benson. They ought to be here within an hour. The moment they
appear in sight sound the gong at the back of the ranch-house. Do you
understand?"

"All light. Ming Soy understan'. Slandy tlell Hopi Soy he see Clarey
range-rider ketch Double O steers, other day. Said first he thought he
doin' it for Hopi Soy's chief, so he doan't say nodin'. Now he wonder."

"Ming Soy! Are you sure?"

"Slandy tlell Hopi Soy he see um ketch um. Clarey range-rider drove
steers over hill black of Blear Cleek ranch, Slandy tlell Hopi Soy."

"Ming Soy, don't let anyone know you told me that."

"All light, Ming Soy no tlell."

Jerry didn't know why she put that embargo on the Chinese woman's
tongue. Perhaps a vague fear that a warning would get to the thief
prompted it. The girl's mind was in a tumult as she raced Patches along
the road. She didn't stop to unfasten the gate, she jumped it. As she
entered the field which led to the stream she had quite forgotten the
exhibition she had staged for Peg. She had suspected that range-rider of
crookedness. Absorbed in thought she allowed Patches to race across the
rustic bridge. The thud of his hoofs on the wood brought her back to the
present. She pulled the horse down to a walk. Where was she going? To
see what was on the other side of that ridge beyond which the
range-rider had disappeared!

She followed the pack-trail cautiously. Bear Creek ranch-house in the
glare of sunshine was outlined distinctly against the dark cliff behind
it. Was it only this morning that she had come out of that door to find
Steve waiting for her? She had the curious feeling of being in another
decade. How were things going with the little mother, she wondered
and--and where was the Man of Mystery?

She touched Patches lightly with the great spurs and raced along the
trail toward the hill. It didn't seem possible that the man who had
seemed so concerned when he came for her last night could be a
rustler--but Sandy had seen him and the calves were missing. Her
thoughts urged her on. She was the one person of authority within reach.
She didn't know just what she intended to do, but she must do something.
She only knew that a frenzied voice somewhere inside her head kept
reiterating:

"He shan't get away with it! He shan't get away with it!"

Once as she climbed the hill she thought she saw a horse's head behind a
tree. Her heart choked her with its pounding. The object proved to be
nothing more intimidating than a black stump. When she reached the top
of the slope she came upon a clump of dead trees standing spectral and
white. She rode through them till she emerged in a clearing from which
she could look down into the valley.

Below lay a trough of the hills. Heat waves pulsed above it. Over its
surface, pockmarked with gopher holes, tumbleweed rolled and billowed
and stacked against rocks and fallen timber in uncanny, shifting masses.
Purple-gray and green sage-brush dotted it. Alkali whitened it in
streaks. Beyond the hollow stretched a belt of upheaved ridges of
brick-red sandstone. Between each ridge lay emerald green valleys with
little streams cutting through at nearly right angles. Higher and higher
rose the hills beyond till they loomed to mountains whose sides were
clothed with forests that had never paid toll to the lumber-jack, whose
snowy peaks, gold now in the sunshine, bared their jagged fangs to the
soft blue of the sky. They lured and beckoned with their mysterious
silences.

At the base of the slope on which Jerry stood was a circular hole
perhaps three hundred feet in diameter and ten feet deep. At one side of
it, near a pool, were the unmistakable traces of a camp. There were the
ashes of a fire and beside them the mutilated body of a calf. The place
gave an intangible sense of tragedy and terror.

Stepping as though the ground under her feet were a network of mines,
any one of which might be jarred into disastrous activity by an
inadvertent pressure of her foot, Jerry led Patches among the trees and
fastened him. She stole back over the carpet of pine needles, her chaps
flapping awkwardly at every step. She threw herself flat on the ground
from which she could see the hollow and waited. From somewhere came the
howl of a coyote; there seemed a million of them when the hills sent
back the echo. High and motionless in the sky a great bird poised to
reconnoiter then sailed and wheeled and dove. A gopher in front of his
hole beat Jack-in-the-box at his disappearing trick.

Jerry shivered. Now she knew where she was, "Buzzard's Hollow." She
hated the wailing coyote and she cared less, even less, for that
horrible winged thing by the pool. Had the Bear Creek range-rider joined
the campers? If she could only see the brand on that calf. But she
couldn't; it would be madness to go down into the hollow. She must hurry
back to the Double O and report. Slowman, the corral boss, would be
there if no one else was. Someone should see that calf before the
buzzards had obliterated all trace of the owner.

The girl sprang to her feet and ran to unloose Patches. Now that she had
decided to go her courage was disappearing as rapidly as vapor in the
sunshine. How terrifyingly empty of anything human the great spaces
seemed. She saw a menace behind every bush, a lurking danger behind
every tree. Apparently Patches' imagination was working overtime too. It
was a nervous horse she mounted but, as she turned toward the trail
which led to the Double O and safety, something drew her round. Perhaps
it was a sound, perhaps the lazy blue sweep of the mountains hypnotized
her. She guided Patches to the clearing from which she looked down into
the hollow. She couldn't have explained why she did it; it might have
been a morbid curiosity to see if the great bird was feasting on the
carrion. Her horse showed increased nervousness with every step. He
began to shake. Jerry slipped to the ground and laid her face against
his soft nose.

"What is it, boy? We're going back----"

A howl, a hair-raising mixture of banshee-wail and wildcat scream,
callioped behind them. Patches stood not upon the order of his going but
went at once. Snorting with terror he jerked the bridle from the girl's
hand and racketed down the hillside toward the hollow. For a moment
Jerry was rigid with terror, then she gripped her stampeding senses.

She must think. She was alone with that yelling demon--she couldn't get
home without her horse--her next move was to follow Patches--he would
get over his fright and answer her call. The dangling six-shooter at her
side gave her courage. If her silly masquerading as a cowboy had done
nothing else, it had given her that.

She slipped and slid down the slope. She caught at shrubs and stumps to
retard her too impetuous progress; they sampled the fringes of her black
and white chaps as she went by. She stubbed her toe upon a piece of
rock. The next instant it seemed to her excited fancy as though the
hillside gave way and took her with it.

"Detour!" she chuckled hysterically as down, down, down she went with a
mass of dirt and gravel. She shielded her face with one hand as with the
other she made futile grabs at the ground. It seemed as though eons of
time passed as she rolled down the hill. Steve's hat went bounding down
ahead of her. "I wonder how many miles I've gone now?" she thought with
a frightened laugh. Then, as suddenly as she had started she stopped
against something big and weather-stained and unyielding.

She lay passive for a moment looking up in dazed surprise. She was lying
beside a wooden shack. Strange that she had not seen it when she looked
down into the hollow. It must have been directly under the bank from
which she made her reconnaisance. She shut her eyes and stilled a cry as
she felt a hot breath on her cheek. Had the wildcat--she set her teeth
and looked up between cautiously parted lids--looked up into the brown
eyes of Patches. The horse was reeking wet, but he had stopped
trembling. His lips twitched against her cheek with a clumsy, quivering
caress. With a sob of thanksgiving Jerry threw her arms about his neck
and tried to rise. She fell back with a frightened laugh. From her waist
down she was buried in earth.

She controlled a frantic desire to attack the gravel furiously and
scooped it away with slow and telling precision. Patches waited
patiently. Possibly he realized that having landed his mistress in the
dilemma it was only a square deal that he stand by. Jerry's heart
pounded as she scooped. What was on the other side of that wooden wall?
The headquarters of Ranlett and his gang? Was the calf lying in the
hollow one of those the range-rider had appropriated from the Double O?

The gravel half removed the girl flung her arms about the horse's neck
and drew herself free. The black and white chaps remained partially
covered in earth and sand. Jerry took account of the damages. There was
a stinging, smarting scratch along one cheek, the sleeve of her blouse
was torn from the shoulder, her hair was a mass on her shoulders.
Nothing serious, she congratulated herself, as she tidied her hair,
removed a jeweled bar-pin from under the flamboyant bandana, and
fastened her sleeve in place with it. The scratch was the only real
casualty. Now that she was here she wondered if she couldn't find the
brand on that calf herself.

Cautiously she tied Patches to a stump. The click of his hoof against a
rock sent her heart fluttering to her throat. She shrank against the
house and held her breath. No sound came from within or from the hollow.
She must have frightened off everything alive when she came crashing
down the hill.

Reassured she picked up her hat which had landed near her and put it on.
It was curious what courage the touch of it gave her. It was as though
Steve had spoken. She could almost hear his "Steady, little girl,
steady!" She tiptoed round to the front of the shack. The slanting sun
shone on two dirty windows in sagging frames from which some of the
panes had been broken. In one of the survivors a round hole radiating
tiny cracks told a story without words. Desertion had laid its spell on
the place. The cabin was roofed with dirt and hay. Its board sides were
warped and weather-stained. The door in the middle sagged and swung
uncannily in the light breeze. What lay behind it? Evidence that would
convict Ranlett?

Her heart pounding out the measure of her racing blood Jerry laid her
hand on the rusty iron handle of the door. Its hinges creaked dolorously
as she swung it wide. The sound echoed curiously within the empty
shack--but--was it an echo? The doubt sent a million little icy shivers
pricking through Jerry's veins. Her heart winged to her throat. She
swallowed it valiantly and put a hesitating foot across the threshold.

It took an instant for her eyes to adjust themselves to the dimness
after the glare outside. Then the furnishings begun to take shape. A
cracked stove, red with rust, stood against the wall opposite; there was
a table with shreds of oilcloth hanging from it; a chair which had been
fashioned from a packing-box leaned against the table in three-legged
dejection; the door of a cupboard hung on one hinge displaying an array
of crockery and tin, in all stages of dilapidation and rust. Across one
end of the room was a built-in bunk. A ragged saddle-blanket trailed
from the side of it.

What--what--was that! Had her imagination tricked her or had that dirty
blanket stirred? Jerry clutched the door. Even as she stood there, too
frightened to move, there came the muffled sound which she had thought
was an echo. Her vague sense of tragedy merged into something tangible
and threatening. Someone was under that blanket! Was it an injured
man--or--or--was it a decoy?




CHAPTER XV


Jerry never knew how long she stood with her eyes fixed in fascinated
terror on that heap in the bunk. Should she mount Patches as soon as her
frenzied feet would take her to him, or should she stay and help the man
if he were wounded? Head urged flight, heart urged help. She remembered
the parable of the Good Samaritan only to remind herself that the
rescuer had been a man.

Another moan from the bunk decided her. Setting the door wide she drew
the six-shooter from its holster; unloaded even, it gave her a feeling
of strategic advantage, and with the gun gripped tight in her hand
tiptoed across the room. Every vestige of color had fled from her face
as with icy, shaking fingers she lifted a corner of the dingy blanket.
Under it a man lay on his face his hands and feet securely tied.

"Beechy!"

The four walls flung back the girl's hoarse whisper.

"Beechy!" "Beechy!" "Beechy!" they chorused.

Jerry looked down in dumb incredulity. She recognized the rampant
reddish, hair, the dent at the corner of one exposed eye. As though her
voice had penetrated to his consciousness the man rolled toward her. The
six-shooter clattered to the floor. The stunning effect of her discovery
was quickly tempered by the man's condition. Beechy, the man who had
saved Steve's life, was hurt, helpless. Her fingers attacked the knots
in the rope which bound him. She tugged, she pulled without making the
least impression. Was there not something in the room which would cut?
The minutes were flying! Someone might come. She ran to the cupboard and
seized a tin can. The cover was jagged. She tried to saw the rope with
that but it made no impression on the twisted hemp. She threw it from
her and looked about the room again--then--she rubbed her eyes; was that
a knife sticking in the wall above the bunk--or was she just seeing it?

She stepped up on the edge of the bunk and touched it. It was real! With
an inarticulate cry of triumph the girl seized it. With teeth set hard
in her under lip she attacked the rope again. She stopped every few
moments to listen. Once she caught the far off call of a coyote--then
Patches whinnied. She dropped in a little heap on the floor, her hand
pressed hard against her heart to still its thumping--but nothing
stirred outside. She went on with her work. It seemed ages before she
had freed Beechy's arms and another century of time before the cords
were cut which bound his feet.

She touched his head gently. There was no trace of blood. He must have
been stunned and tied, his captors relying upon the remoteness and
abandoned appearance of the shack to cover their work. Why had they done
it, Jerry wondered. Beechy had said that he had contracted to work on
the railroad. She remembered his answer to Steve's protest, "You know,
there is honor among thieves." Had he been linked up with Ranlett? But
Ranlett had nothing to do with the railroad.

If she could only get him up. When she tried to lift him the clumsy
cartridge belt with the dangling holster kept getting in her way. With
an impatient exclamation she unfastened it and dropped it to the floor.
Then she slid the man's feet from the bunk, put her arms under him and
lifted him. His head rolled to her shoulder. How hot it was. If only she
had water! Her eyes roved about the cabin. No hope there. Through the
doorway, not twenty yards away, she could see the pool with the carcass
of the calf lying beyond it. With the possibility of lurking enemies,
had she the courage to go out to that?

Beechy stirred and lifted heavy lids. The eyes beneath them were glazed
with pain. He looked about the room, then up at the face bending over
him. His gaze lingered a moment dreamily, then incredulously, then it
seemed as though his brain made a superhuman effort to break the spell
which bound it.

"Mrs. Lieut.!" he tried to get to his feet but his head rolled weakly
back to the girl's shoulder. "Go! Go!" he whispered hoarsely. He made
another effort to sit up. He gripped the edge of the bunk till the flesh
under his finger nails showed white. "If I could get water to--to cool
this--this devilish fire in my head--go--Ranlett----" his clearing gaze
fastened on the long scratch on her cheek--"For the love of--did they
get you too?"

Jerry gently forced him back.

"No--no, I fell. Lie still, Beechy, while I go for water. Every moment
that you keep quiet counts. Your head is not cut, there is nothing the
matter that I can discover except that you were stunned. Don't move
while I am gone. When I come back we will get away from here--we--we
must. Remember that my safety depends upon you now and keep perfectly
still until I come back."

It was quite the reverse, his safety depended upon her, Jerry thought,
but she knew his type. Her need of his help would do more than anything
else to clear his mind. She picked up the tin can she had used as a saw
and went to the door. She looked back. Beechy was lying with closed
eyes, the lines about his mouth relaxed.

The sun had dropped behind a high mountain. The air was sultry. A tinge
of rose had replaced the gold of the afternoon coloring. In the
southwest an unobtrusive bank of cloud had appeared. The tumbleweed
still stirred with every breath of air but everything else was still.
Jerry could see now, what she had not noticed from above, parallel
grooves in the ground through the middle of the hollow.

"That's strange! Those ruts look like the marks of wagon wheels, but how
could a wagon get down here?" she thought. She hesitated an instant on
the threshold. Fortunately the pool was on a level with the cabin. Had
the shack been on the opposite side of the hollow she would have had a
ten-foot drop before she reached the level. The small body of water
looked a thousand miles away and the room behind her, which had seemed
sinister and forbidding a while before, seemed a haven of refuge now. So
quickly do values shift in the crises of life.

"The more you dread the thing you have to do the more you should hustle
to get it behind you," Jerry admonished herself and made a dash for the
pool. For an instant the air seemed full of flapping, dark wings, then
it cleared. She kept her eyes resolutely away from the body of the calf.
The water was low. She had to lie flat to reach it. She wasted time in
trying to dip deep enough to get clear of the tumbleweed which floated
on top. When she had it to her satisfaction she sat back on her heels
and inspected the contents of the dripping can.

"This will have to do," she announced to the world at large. "I----"

"That depends on what you're getting it for, don't it?" inquired a voice
behind her.

The insolence of it, the portent of it, brought Jerry to her feet. The
precious water slopped wastefully. She had the sense of suspended
animation as she looked up at the man sardonically observing her, then a
sense of sudden, ungovernable panic. It was the late manager of the
Double O with the bridle of his horse, The Piker, a big, lanky chestnut,
in his left hand.

"Ranlett!"

Her own frightened whisper infuriated her. She had spoken to the man
looming over her as seldom as she conveniently could; always she had
distrusted him. She looked at him now as though seeing him for the first
time. His black hair had a white streak from the middle of his forehead
to his neck, which had earned him the soubriquet of "The Skunk," from
the outfit; his eyes were steel gray, his thin-lipped mouth was nothing
more than a crooked slit in his face, his chin was stubborn. Jerry's
gaze returned to that feature and lingered. Apparently he was as amazed
to see her as she had been startled at his appearance. She felt as
though he had her wriggling under a microscope, pinned by the needle
points in his eyes as he observed caustically:

"Well, now that you have sized me up it's my turn. What are you doing so
far from the Double O alone? Perhaps you're not alone, what?" His
attitude, the lines of his shoulders, his voice, bristled with
suspicion.

The girl's mind indulged in one frenzied merry go-round before it
settled down to constructive thinking. For the first time in her life
she was squarely and uncompromisingly up against danger. Ranlett must
not suspect that she had been in the shack, that Beechy was unbound. He
might be in no way responsible for the condition in which she had found
the ex-sergeant, but she couldn't take a chance with Carl's,
"Ranlett--for the love of--did they get you too?" still echoing in her
ears. If she could only get him away from the place. The throbbing pulse
in her throat, which gave the impression of delicate wings beating
futilely against bars, was the only sign of her agitation as she
answered the man's question gayly.

"I don't wonder you ask, Mr. Ranlett, I'm a sight." She laid a finger
cautiously against her scratched cheek and laughed. That laugh was a
masterpiece of its kind. "I started for Bear Creek to inquire for Mrs.
Carey, but yielded to the temptation to ride to the top of the hill.
Pandora with her box has nothing on me for curiosity. I was born with an
irresistible desire to look on the other side of things and places." The
sudden narrowing of his eyes set her to wondering what false note she
had struck, even as she went on:

"When I dismounted the better to peer down into this hollow, something
gave a scream as of a thousand furies rampant." Her shudder was genuine.
"The sound did direful things to Patches' nerves. He bolted down the
hill. I bolted after him. I stumbled over something which must have been
the keystone of the slope, or its twin, for the hillside gave way and
landed me in an ignominious heap of dirt and gravel back of that shack.
A rolling body gathers some scratches," she paraphrased flippantly as
she felt again of her bruised face.

"I'll say you're some little talker, Mrs. Courtlandt, when--when you're
frightened. You've never favored me with a word before," observed
Ranlett insolently.

Two red spots burned like able-bodied beacons in Jerry's cheeks. She
knew that she had been garrulous, that she had been talking against
time, but it was maddening to be told so; the sound of her own voice had
sustained her courage. Every moment that she held the attention of the
late manager of the Double O counted for Beechy. It took all her
strength of purpose to keep her eyes from wandering to the door of the
shack. It acted like a malevolent magnet.

"Where is your horse?"

"Back of the cabin. I came here to get water for him."

"Have you been in the shack?"

"In the shack!" the shudder with which the girl turned her back upon it
would have made Nazimova pale with envy. "That--that gruesome place?
Rather not----"

"Then you are not curious when it comes to empty houses? You're not
consistent, Pandora. Where did you get that can?"

Jerry felt as though she were under a machine gun fire of words. The
man's insolence infuriated her. She didn't dare resent it for fear he
would leave her and investigate the cabin. She looked down at the can
she still held between finger and thumb, then at the bed of ashes
beside the pool.

"Did I find it there or behind the shack?" She mused as though
interrogating herself, then quickly, "Is it yours? Take it if you want
it."

"You know d--ed well that you didn't pick it up outside," Ranlett
exploded as he caught the girl by the shoulder; she felt his hot flesh
through her thin blouse. "You've been in that shack and you've----"

"Take your hand away! Quick!" Jerry commanded, her voice hoarse, her
face white, her eyes blazing.

"I'll let you go when I get good and ready." The man sunk his fingers
deeper into her shoulder to emphasize his words. "What's that yellow
coyote in there been telling you----"

"Nothin' to your advantage, Ranlett. Put up your hands an' put 'em up
quick," interrupted a voice. It was Beechy, Beechy leveling Jerry's
villainous six-shooter at Ranlett's head. His face was white, one eye
was almost closed but he had an air of cocky unconcern.

"Mrs. Lieut., grab his horse. No you don't!" as the late manager of the
Double O, arms held high above his head, tried to trip the girl. A
bullet whizzed so close to his ear that Ranlett turned a sickly green.
"Yer see, I'm a little nervous. I'm used to this old-time six-shooter;
I've been using a Colt 45. I'll get the range better next time and it'll
come closer. I didn't get my expert rifleman badge in the army for
shootin' crap. Frisk his pockets, Mrs. Lieut." For the fraction of a
second Jerry hesitated.

"Quick! Get busy, unless you want more of his pack down on us. That's
the stuff! Now you're talkin'," as the girl produced a corpulent
revolver from a hip pocket. Ranlett's voice was hoarse with fury as he
dared:

"You'll need that gun, Beechy, when Courtlandt finds that you and the
missus have been meeting--you sure have a way with the ladies."

Jerry's cry was submerged in Beechy's oath. The man's face was like
granite, as gray, as immovable. Only his eyes blazed. His tone was as
cold and passionless as his face.

"Meanin'? You'll pay for that, Ranlett, but not now. Just for fear your
gang will butt in we'll make our getaway, but remember--I'm comin' back.
I want you and I want the feller that cracked my head. Hand me his gun,
Mrs. Lieut. Lead his horse and yours to the top of the hill and
wait--don't look around--get me?"

"Yes, I get you, sergeant--but you won't----" Jerry hesitated with the
bridle of Ranlett's big chestnut in her hand.

"Obey orders and obey 'em quick!"

And Jerry obeyed. With the unflurried agility Tommy had taught her she
mounted Ranlett's horse and turned him in the direction of the shack.
The animal side-stepped and tried to look in the direction of his master
but the girl touched him with her spurs, and urged him on. She unhitched
Patches. She looked like a slender boy as she led him by a backward
stretched left hand up the slope. The moments that she spent ascending
were one long prayer that the hillside would not encore its disappearing
trick. She felt an irresistible desire to look back but she remembered
the salty fate of Lot's wife and kept doggedly on.

As she gained the shelter of the pines at the top of the hill she heard
a shot. Her face went white. Who had fired it? Ranlett or Beechy? Beechy
was weak from the blow on his head; he could easily be overcome. She
listened. A flock of magpies lighted in the tree above her, observed the
strange figure below them for a moment then flew away in noisy haste. As
the sound of their raucous voices died in the distance Jerry heard
another sound, the sound of gravel slipping. Who was coming? She hastily
changed mounts and twisted her hand in the bridle of the big horse. If
it were Ranlett she would race at breakneck speed toward Greyson's, the
X Y Z was nearer than the Double O, taking The Piker with her. Her
breath came so hard it hurt her throat. Eyes dilated with excitement she
watched the brow of the hill. The sound of the slipping gravel came
nearer and nearer. Then she heard labored breathing. The suspense was
unendurable; she felt as though she must scream. A man staggered into
sight. It was Beechy. She slipped from her horse and called him softly.

"This way! Quick!" As he stumbled toward her she noted the pallor of his
face. She didn't dare leave the horses to go to his assistance. With a
bridle in each hand she went forward to meet him.

"I'm about all--in, Mrs. Lieut.," he panted. "The blow and this climb
have about finished a job the--war--started."

She slipped her arm under his. Her eyes were tender with concern.

"Lean on me a moment. You mustn't give way now, Beechy. Get on Ranlett's
horse. We must get away from here. He may follow." He laughed weakly.

"Follow! Nothing doing. Just to make sure he wouldn't I put a bullet
through his leg. I couldn't have him interferin' with the job you an' I
have to put across. He'll go as far as the shack while the goin's good."

"But he may starve!"

"You should worry. There are provisions to withstand a siege cached
under that cabin. Forget him. If you're the good little sport I you are
you've got a job----"

"Listen!"

Jerry laid her hand over her heart. Beechy raised his heavy head from
the side of the horse where he had rested it. His eyes narrowed into
mere slits. From the hillside came the sound of slipping gravel.

"Well, I'll be----"

"It's Ranlett! He's creeping up!" the girl whispered tensely. "You must
mount. He may have found a gun." Then as he shook his head weakly, "If
you don't I shall stay with you and you may never get a chance to tell
me what I am to do."

"Help me up!" The white beneath Beechy's skin had changed to crimson.
His teeth clenched as he pulled himself into the saddle. He held tight
to the horn with his two hands.

"Mount! Quick!" he panted. "Now ride close beside me while I tell
you----" for an instant his eyes lost their purpose. He slipped over to
one side. Jerry caught him and steadied him.

"'Tention company!" he drawled foolishly as he tried to straighten in
the saddle.

"You must keep on, Beechy! Grip your mind tight till we reach the
Lieutenant," pleaded the girl, always with one ear turned to the
sinister, slipping sound that drew nearer and nearer up the hillside. It
seemed as though the reference to Courtlandt had power to conjure
strength. With a stifled groan the man eased himself in the saddle.

"I can ride this way. Don't lose your sand, Mrs. Lieut. I've pulled
through worse scrapes than this. We'll beat 'em yet."

They left the pines and began the descent of the hill. The innocent
cloud bank in the southwest had spread in great jagged peaks until it
darkened the heavens and the fields beneath them. The stream looked like
a drab ribbon splashed with white. They rode silently. Beechy conserved
his strength. "When we get to the level I'll talk," he vouchsafed once
through blue lips. Jerry kept close beside him. Across the valley lights
were beginning to appear in the X Y Z. She felt as though she were in a
horrid nightmare from which she must waken to find herself safe in her
own charming rooms at the Double O. Beechy's voice dispelled her
illusion. In obedience to a gesture of his she pulled up her horse as
they reached the level.

"We've got to work quick, Mrs. Lieut. This rustling dope of Ranlett's is
a bluff. When he cut the fences in Lower Field he figured that the
Double O outfit to a man would hunt for the cattle in that
direction--away from the railroad."

"The railroad!"

"Yes. Listen. No,--I'm not going to fall.--Not till I've put you wise."
The knuckles of his hand showed white as he gripped the saddle-horn.
"To-night a car, carrying silver bricks from the mint in Philadelphia
goes through on its way to the coast. It's attached to the regular
evening train--it's under armed guard--but--Ranlett----" It was
characteristic of the girl that instead of demanding how he knew she
announced breathlessly:

"We must reach that train before Ranlett's gang----"

"You've said it! Ranlett's staged the party at Devil's Hold-up. It's
only fifteen miles from the X Y Z but ten of that fifteen is wilderness.
We've got to stop that train before it reaches Greyson's crossing."

"I'll ride for the X Y Z and get Bruce Greyson. I don't know where Steve
is," interrupted the girl breathlessly. "You go on to the Double O. The
Piker will know his way there in the dark. About ten o'clock, did you
say?"

"Yes." Beechy's voice was weaker. "Don't let _anyone_ know but Greyson.
Ranlett has the place honeycombed with spies. I'll stay here for a
while. If he comes--moseying over--the hill----" He slipped suddenly
from the saddle to the ground. He stretched flat on his back. "A-ah!
That's better," he groaned. He tried to smile up into the concerned face
bent over him. "_C'est drôle, ça?_ I bragged that I was through with the
good old U. S. A. and the minute I find that I'm caught in a plot
against her I throw up my hands. I knew that Ranlett would kill me if I
backed out but I'd--I'd rather--die."

"But you're not going to die, Beechy, and we'll win out," the girl
comforted eagerly. "Oh, how can I leave you like this----"

"Mount that pony again, quick!" He gathered his strength by a superhuman
effort. "Don't think of me. I'll rest here and then I'll move on, I
promise. I want to--get out--of--this scrape as much as--you want me to.
That's right--up you--go." The last word was a whisper. He struggled to
one elbow. "Tell Greyson if he gets a chance--to put a bullet through
the man--Ranlett took on in--my place--that range-rider at Bear-Creek
ranch."




CHAPTER XVI


Benson regarded Ming Soy in stunned amazement. Her words, "She never
come back--not all this time," revolved stupidly round and round in his
brain. They had been catapulted into the midst of his passionate
declaration to Peggy; what she would have answered he never would know,
now. The color which the touch of his lips had brought to the girl's
face had faded; she was regarding the Chinese woman with terrified eyes.
She laid a trembling hand on Benson's arm. "Thank God, I haven't made
you hate me," he thought fervently as he gripped her cold fingers in a
comforting clasp. His faith in the wisdom of a surprise attack had been
built upon a rock, after all.

"Tell me again, Ming Soy, just when Mrs. Courtlandt started and what she
said to you."

In her excitement Ming Soy's English kept tripping her up, but Benson
was able to get a fairly clear idea of what had happened.

"I watched her rode--not to the flield she tole me--no--down the road. I
listened for shoots. No shoots. No noding. No noding in flield. When
Ming Soy see you way down road, Ming Soy bleat glong."

Benson's mind had been working with machine-like speed while he
listened. The girl beside him drew a long, ragged breath. He laid his
lips upon her hand for a moment.

"Don't worry! I'll find her, Peg-o'-my-heart. She has probably dropped
in at Bear Creek ranch to see that new arrival and has forgotten the
time. Women are like that when there's a baby." He advanced the theory
with a light-hearted laugh which he flattered himself was a marvel of
its kind, but it merely drew a long, quivering sob from the girl. "Just
for company, I'll ride down to meet her."

"I'll go with you," announced Peggy eagerly.

"Nothing doing! You'll go back to the house with Ming Soy. Don't let
Hopi Soy work off any of his thrift ideas on the dinner. If Jerry has
been riding all afternoon she'll be famished, and I--I feel as if I
could eat a raw mountain lion this minute. I'll take the horses back to
the corral and get a fresh mount."

"Please--Tommy--take me?"

Benson closed his ears heroically against the wiles of his own
particular Circe. He shook his head; his grave eyes met the girl's
squarely.

"Be a good little sport, Peg. I can go faster without you. Besides,
Jerry may be back before me and she would be anxious if you were not
here."

"All right, Tommy. Come, Ming Soy."

Benson could get no satisfaction from the man in charge of the corral.
He questioned him as he watched him shift the saddle from Soapy to a
powerful black. Slowman only knew that Mrs. Courtlandt came for Patches
at about two o'clock. She was humming and laughing softly to herself as
she led him off, quite as though she had heard some good news--or--or
was up to some mischief; women were like that, when they had something
up their sleeves, he'd noticed. None of the boys who had gone after the
Shorthorns had returned. Mr. Courtlandt had 'phoned the corral from
Slippy Bend that he should not be back to the ranch until morning, and
to keep a sharp watch over the horses.

"By cripes, when he said that," Slowman added as he looked at Benson
with eyes so curiously crossed that they appeared to regard an object
from the north and south extremes of the pole of vision, "it sent the
creeps all over me. It was almost as good as though I'd gone back to the
days of honest-to-God hold-ups an' rustlin's. I'm sorry about Mrs.
Courtlandt, Mr. Tommy, but don't you worry. You'll like as not find her
over takin' care of Jim Carey's baby. I hear the kid's a boy," with a
sheepish grin.

As Benson rode out from the corral he looked at the bank of clouds in
the southwest and put spurs to his horse. Ming Soy, under
cross-examination, had held stoutly to her statement that Jerry had not
gone to the field back of the ranch-house. He would ride to the B C
first. On the rustic bridge that spanned the stream he stopped to
reconnoiter then went on and rounded the clump of cottonwoods that
screened the Bear Creek buildings from his view. They were beginning to
lose their outline in the deepening gloom. The fast spreading clouds
were letting down a curtain of darkness.

Benson had ridden but a few hundred yards when he pulled the black up
short. What was that! He listened. The air was still with that curious
sinister calm which precedes a storm. The sound came again. It was the
whinny of a horse but--but--it was not from the direction of the B C
ranch; it came from the level at the foot of the hills beyond.

Tommy's imaginings as he raced across the field would have provided
material for a five-reel thriller of the most lurid variety. They blew
up like a balloon which has been pricked when he was near enough to the
whinnying horse to discover that it not Patches but Ranlett's favorite
mount, The Piker. He gave voice to a mild but expressive swear-word.

"Now what's to pay?" he muttered as he flung himself from the saddle and
bent over the outstretched figure half buried in the long grass. He
knelt. "Beechy!" he exclaimed incredulously. "How the dickens did
you----" The recumbent man lifted heavy lids.

"_Comment ça_----" Returning consciousness cleared the haze from the
blue eyes. "Mr. Benson--you--did she find you--instead of----" his eyes
closed.

"Beechy! Beechy! Rouse yourself. You must help me," Tommy pleaded. "Have
you seen Mrs. Courtlandt? She's--she's lost! Your Lieutenant can't find
his wife, Beechy!"

"_Mon Lieutenant_," the blue eyes looked up at Benson dazedly. "What's
that you said, Mr. Benson? Lost his wife? You're wrong, you've got
another guess coming." With cautious effort he raised himself on his
elbow. "Prop me up, that's better. Don't worry about Mrs. Lieut. She's a
good little--sport. She must be getting near the X Y Z by now." His
voice was clearer, the color was coming back to his lips.

"She's safe--unhurt?"

"Sure, man--nothin' could happen to a woman like her--don't you know
that? She's ridin' like the devil to cut off----" in his excitement he
jerked himself erect; in the next moment he was a crumpled heap on the
ground.

Tommy emptied the canteen he had tied to his saddle-horn, for the Lord
only knew what emergency, over the white face. His tense nerves relaxed.
Jerry had been all right when Beechy saw her last and that couldn't have
been so long ago. If she was at Greyson's she was safe--but--what the
dickens had she been doing all the afternoon, he wondered. Now that he
had her accounted for he must get Beechy under cover. With an anxious
glance at the threatening sky overhead he spoke to the man on the
ground. He was quite conscious again. He listened intelligently as Tommy
outlined his plan for getting him to Bear Creek ranch. He wasted no
strength on words but with Benson's help finally mounted The Piker. He
put his arms around the horse's neck and fell forward on his mane.
Benson steadied him with one hand. Side by side the two horses made
their way to the buildings now nothing but a blotch of darkness.

Jim Carey dashed out of the corral as the two rode up. He was a tall,
good-looking man with black eyes which twitched nervously as he talked.

"Is that you, Small? Where the devil----" he broke off in astonishment
as he saw the figure flung forward on The Piker's neck.

"It's not Small, Carey. I'm Benson from the Double O," Tommy called from
out the gloom. "I picked up a man at the foot of the hill who was about
all in. He was Courtlandt's sergeant overseas. Help me get him down,
will you?"

"We'll take him into Small's cabin. This way."

The two men carried Beechy into the shack and laid him on a bed. Carey
lighted a lamp. He came back and looked down at the unconscious man as
he lay with his red hair roughly tousled and the bruise under his eye a
purplish red.

"I'll get Mother Eagan. I--I suppose you know what's come?" Carey asked
with awkward pride.

"I heard that the stork was playing a one-night stand in this county. Is
Mrs. Carey getting on all right?" Tommy asked as he busied himself
unfastening Beechy's clothes. "What is it, Carl?" he soothed as the
injured man struggled to one elbow, his eyes blazing with excitement.

"Grab his horse--Mrs. Lieut., I'll get the range better next
time--Ranlett----" he dropped back on the pillow; the fever died down in
his eyes. He looked up into Benson's anxious face. "Don't mind what I
said," he pleaded weakly. "I was dreamin' but--but--I guess you'd better
ride after Mrs. Lieut., and be sure she's all right. Ranlett's
gang----"

"Ranlett's gang!" both men bent over him. "What do you mean, Beechy?"
Benson asked tensely.

"Bolster me up! That's right. That infernal pounding inside me's
quieting down." He drew a cautious breath and smiled wanly into the face
above him. "Did you see that? It came as easy as spendin' money. Who's
that? Where am I?" he demanded as he caught sight of Jim Carey and
looked around the room.

"You are at Bear Creek ranch and this is Carey the owner."

"Send him out, Mr. Benson. I've got something to say to you."

"But Carey is----"

"Send him out," Beechy reiterated weakly and closed his eyes as though
he were again slipping into a coma.

"You'd better go, Jim. There's some deviltry afoot and Beechy knows what
it is. Send Mother Eagan down in ten minutes if she can be spared."

Carey looked down at the motionless figure on the bed.

"I wonder if he knows anything about Small," he whispered. "He left
early this morning and----"

"You mean?"

"The same," answered Carey enigmatically and left the cabin. The wind
banged the door after him. Benson could see Beechy wince. Then he was
conscious of what was going on about him.

"He's gone, Carl," he whispered.

Beechy's lips twisted in a smile as he opened his eyes, and eased
himself on his elbow.

"I reckoned we'd shake him if I played 'possum. I'm feelin' better every
minute. Get a paper and pencil, Mr. Benson. I want you to take something
down for me. This bogus heart of mine is likely to pound on for years,
then again it may shut up shop any minute."

"I'll do it, Beechy, but first, tell me about Mrs. Courtlandt. I must
know that she is safe."

"She's safe, all right. She started for the X Y Z and Greyson. I kept my
brain steady till she got out of sight. She was ridin' her own horse.
I'm not deceiving you. I wouldn't have any harm come to her for her own
sake, let alone the Lieutenant's. Now you listen and put down what I
tell you, _sabe_?"

Beechy told the story of his acquaintance with Ranlett, with frequent
pauses for rest and to get his breath. Someone on the border, he
wouldn't tell who, had sent him to the manager of the Double O. Outside
the wind rose steadily. It flung itself against the corners of the small
building, it shook the window frames as a terrier does a rat; the flame
in the lamp flickered and steadied.

"Get me straight, Mr. Benson," Beechy concluded. "I ain't excusing
myself. I was dead wrong--but Ranlett caught me when I was bitter and
discouraged. He set out as how we were to pull off this hold-up on a
carful of gold belonging to some 1917-18 millionaires that had made
their money in munitions. Then this morning I got a hint 'twas
government money. I up an' had it out with Ranlett. I allowed I'd touch
nothin' belonging to the government. His eyes got like red-hot coals.
'You don't think for a minute you'll get away with turning goody-goody
after hearin' my plans, do you?' says he, his hand twitching. 'No, I
don't, Ranlett,' says I, 'but you want to remember that thievin's one
thing an' murder's another.' Then crack! It was like a shell burstin'
and I didn't know anythin' more till I looked up into what seemed two
shimmery gold stars--the Lieutenant's wife was holdin' me."

"Who hit you? Ranlett?"

"Not on your life! He ain't takin' no chances. He wasn't even figurin'
in the hold-up to-night; he is to direct operations from a dugout in the
rear. It was Carey's range-rider."

"What!"

"Somewhere he'd found out I was linked up with the Lieutenant. Now you
know why I wouldn't tell before----Who's coming?"

The knock preceded the entrance of Mother Eagan. She fairly blew into
the room. Her round, shining face was red; she was panting from
exertion. The man on the bed straightened up, smoothed his hair,
adjusted the collar of his shirt and turned reckless, smiling blue eyes
upon his visitor. She was a woman, therefore to be impressed,
irrespective of age or size or charm. That was Beechy, Benson thought as
he watched him. He was a curious combination of characteristics. The
woman looked from one to the other.

"Where's the man I was sent down to drag back to life?" she asked with a
good-natured chuckle. Her eyes lingered on Beechy. "Sure you don't look
sick to me."

Benson slipped the paper he held into his pocket.

"Make him lie down and keep quiet, Mother Eagan, and put something on
that bruise. I'll go on to the X Y Z now that you're being taken care
of, Beechy."

"Righto. Mr. Greyson may need help in that little matter I was tellin'
you about. Mother Eagan, it sure is good to see you. You're the
handsomest white woman I've seen since I left the border--you----"

Benson closed the cabin door behind him. Beechy was incorrigible, but
Mother Eagan was fool-proof. She'd laugh and volley back at him while
she made his poor, racked body comfortable.

When Tommy reached the pack-trail which led toward the X Y Z he pulled
up his horse. He looked back at the buildings of the B C ranch, then
speculatively at the hill behind them. On the other side of that Beechy
had left Ranlett. Suppose, just suppose, that the late manager of the
Double O was not incapacitated to the extent his assailant thought?
Suppose that he should be able to make his getaway? To put the bandits
on their guard? Mrs. Steve was doubtless with Greyson by this time
planning to checkmate the bad men. Wasn't it up to him to make sure of
The Skunk?

Without giving his bump of caution time to rouse from its habitual state
of coma, Tommy made for the hill. Lightning crackled the sky, the rain
came.

    "'It ain't no use to grumble and complain,
    It's every bit as easy to rejoice
    When the Lord sorts out the weather and sends rain,
    Rain's my choice,'"

he quoted with cheery philosophy as he pulled the broad brim of his hat
down and the collar of his shirt up.

The spectral grove was a protection from wind and rain when he entered
it. He dismounted when he reached the pines on the crest of the hill
from which he could look down into Buzzard's Hollow. Fortunately he knew
every foot of the surrounding country. In the years he had been at the
Double O he had explored foot-hills and valleys, had fished in the
streams that crossed them.

With flash-light in one hand and his forty-five in the other Benson
waited for the lightning. He must get his bearings. The storm rattled
and crashed among the mountains. It was deafening--but--what was that?
In the interval between crashes he had caught another sound. It was the
spasmodic roar and hum of a plane. It was a sinister sound in that place
at that hour. In a flash Tommy's mind reverted to the plane which had
passed over the stream on Sunday. Again he heard Courtlandt's curt
answer to his question, "Nothing, except that your information confirms
me in my suspicion that Marks and Schoeffleur signaled that pilot when
he went over." Was that the reason the two men had been missing this
morning when Gerrish rounded up the outfit to send them in search of the
runaway Shorthorns?

Benson's hands were like ice as standing behind the bole of a giant
spruce he watched the progress of the aeroplane. The lightning flashed
steadily. Against the glare of the sky the great shape was silhouetted.
Almost instantly as though assured of his bearings, the pilot shut off
his motor and spiraled down toward the hollow. The machine lighted as
softly on the carpet of tumbleweed as might a fluff of thistle-down. It
made a smooth three-point landing.

"That pilot's a veteran, none of the amateur's bump in his," Benson
muttered, at the same time subconsciously thanking the great god Thor
for his coöperation as he took advantage of a reverberating roll of
thunder to slide down the hillside. He went so amazingly fast that he
would have come up against the wall of the shack with a crash had he not
seized a shrub and stopped himself in time. Through the cracks between
the imperfectly matched boards that made the wall he could see light. On
hands and knees, his heart thumping as only that well-regulated organ
can thump in the breast of a brave man who realizes the risk he is
running, Tommy put his ear to a crack. He heard the sound of voices, his
nostrils were filled with the odor of cigarette smoke. He recognized
Ranlett's high pitched nasal tones. Evidently the pilot had brought a
passenger, for Benson could distinguish two other voices. The late
manager's was weak, as though with pain, but it held an ugly note.

"That's better, Marks. That'll stop the bleeding. I was a fool to try to
follow that fellow Beechy. But--but I was mad to get at him. Bill Small
swore that he'd fixed him so that he wouldn't move again--I don't know
now whether he believed it or whether he was trying to double-cross me."

"Nice fella, Beechy. We'd better be getting out of this; he may give the
alarm." Benson had never heard the voice before. It was thick and
guttural and evidently belonged to the pilot. Marks must have been the
passenger.

"He can't. He's all in. He could hardly get up that hill. Bad heart.
Even if he told the girl----"

"A girl in it! Good day! I'm through!"

"Hold on, young feller! Don't get cold feet so easily. I--I don't know
where he met up with her--but--she can't get far. There is no telephone
at the B C and the lines connecting the X Y Z and the Double O with each
other and Slippy Bend are 'Out of order.'" There was a sardonic note in
his voice as he mimicked the stereotyped words. "We're safe, I tell you.
The boys will pull off that stunt and come winging back here laden with
silver bricks before any of that bunch can get anywhere. No one will
think of looking here for the loot; it's too near the centre of
sheriffville. We'll take what silver we can in the plane and the boys
can cache the rest till the excitement has died down. Simms will be
sound asleep in his bed at Upper Farm by the time the authorities get
round to him. He can ship us a silver brick in a tub of butter at his
discretion. I tell you, it's a cinch," he exulted a sound midway between
a chuckle and a groan.

With a crash, as though the resident giant in a passion of rage had
knocked the rocky crowns of the mountains together, the storm spent
itself. In an incredibly short time the moon began to peer from between
scudding clouds. Benson crept slowly round the shack, his mind seething
with anger and resentment. Both ranches cut off! Where was Mrs. Steve?

Moving when the moon was obscured, burrowing in the soaked tumbleweed
when it emerged from hiding, Benson made his way slowly and with
infinite caution to the aircraft. He crept round it till the plane,
which looked like nothing so much as a Brobdingnagian bird of prey, was
between him and the shack. He looked up at it. Suppose there were
someone in it! For an instant his heart obstructed his breathing. He
must know. He scratched one wing with his flash-light. To his taut
nerves it seemed as though the sound reverberated among the foot-hills.
Surely a person on guard would respond to that.

Reassured by the silence within the machine, Benson groped along the
side of the plane until he located the pilot's seat. He climbed in.
Silently expeditiously, he did a few things to the steering gear and
wrecked the throttle. "You won't transport many silver bricks in this,
young feller," he muttered grimly. Knowledge of any kind was a valuable
commodity to have packed in one's kit-bag, he thought, as he cautiously
climbed down from the machine. Thanks to the few months spent in the
hangar of an aviation field in the spring of '17, he had known where and
how to administer body blows.

By a circuitous route he reached the shack. With jaws set hard to keep
his lips from twitching with nervousness he peered through one of the
dirty windows. The light inside came from a candle stuck in a bottle
which stood on the range opposite the door. Its weird, wavering light
threw ghostly shadows on the walls. Someone was stretched out on the
bunk. A man with an aviator's helmet pushed back on his head sat on the
range, another sprawled on the floor. It was Ranlett on the bunk; Benson
recognized his voice as he replied to a question.

"Ten o'clock. Better begin to watch out for the rockets soon. Remember,
two green lights if they have pulled it off and want us to wait; two red
lights if we are to beat it. Help me up. I'll get into the plane and
then we won't waste time making our getaway when they come."

Benson stood rigid. Should he let them get out Of the shack or should he
cover them where they were? If they reached the aeroplane they would
immediately discover the damage and be on their guard. He must keep them
in the shack. Before the two airmen could help Ranlett to his feet he
fired a bullet through the window. It lodged in the wood over the bunk.

"Stay where you are! Hands up!" he shouted in a gruff voice which
excitement hoarsened. "We have you covered from each window. The man who
moves gets his good and plenty. Gerrish, you cover the chap with the
helmet; O'Neil, make a target of Marks and I'll devote my entire
attention to the Skunk."

Would his bluff work; would it? Tommy wondered frantically. It did. With
muttered imprecations the two men ranged themselves against the wall,
their hands above their heads. Ranlett sank back on the bunk. They
weren't taking chances. What should he do next, Benson wondered, with a
nervous desire to shout with laughter. He had placed himself so that
without moving he could see any signal which might come from the
direction of Devil's Hold-up. At imminent danger of becoming cross-eyed
for life, he kept one eye on the men and one on the sky above the
region where he knew the railroad to lie. At signs of restlessness in
his prisoners he stole to the other window. He fired a shot which had a
miraculous effect upon their sagging muscles. They stiffened. Benson
with difficulty repressed a chuckle. He had them dancing to the tune he
piped, all right. But what the dickens should he do if the bandits
successfully pulled off their raid on the treasure car? If he stayed
where he was he would be one against a dozen or more desperate men. If
he made a break for safety Ranlett and his choice aggregation of bad men
would escape with their plunder. If--what was that? A green light! Then
Mrs. Steve had not reached Greyson. Another emerald star shot into the
sky.

"Two green lights if they have pulled it off and want us to wait!" That
was what Ranlett had said. Some fugitive lines flicked tantalizingly on
the screen of Tommy's memory, then steadied:

    "But to every man there openeth
    A high way and a low,
    And every man decideth
    The way his soul shall go."

That settled it. He'd hold his prisoners and take his chance.




CHAPTER XVII


She had been right in her suspicions of the Man of Mystery, Jerry
thought, as she put spurs to her horse. The words Beechy had called
after her echoed in her mind. "Tell Greyson if he gets a chance--to put
a bullet through the man--Ranlett took on in--my place--that range-rider
at Bear-Creek ranch." It was growing dark. Heavy clouds had rolled up.
She had some difficulty in forcing Patches from the old pack-trail which
eventually led to home and supper. She cut across fields, splashed
through the stream, then headed for the X Y Z ranch-house whose lights
seemed like will-o'-the-wisps. The longer she rode the more they
receded.

She determined not to worry about Beechy. He had promised that he would
try to get to the Double O and she knew that he would win out. The
unexpected would happen to help him, as nine out of ten times it did
when one was in dire straights. With the thought came a vision of her
father; she could see his massive head, his shrewd eyes, hear his deep
voice saying:

"I have a firm conviction, that a person can through any worthy thing on
which he is determined; how else do you account for the seeming miracles
of heroism men got away with in the World War? The test is, how much do
you want it? I've gone on that principle all my life and it's worked, I
tell you, it's worked."

It was curious how that memory of her father vitalized her. Jerry
straightened in the saddle. She felt as though she had been warmed, fed,
had had the elixir of courage poured through her veins. Beechy would
come through. All she need think of was her part.

It was quite dark when she reached the X Y Z. The air stirred in hot
gusts; from far off came the rumble of thunder. Patches was matted with
sweat and dust. Ito, the Jap, opened the door in response to her knock.
From behind him came the sound of voices, the tinkle of silver, the
ripple of a woman's laugh. Felice Denbigh! Jerry had forgotten her. For
an instant she visualized the gold hair, the gold eyes with their
tigerish spots, the alluring chiffoned daintiness of the woman. With a
shrug she looked down at her own torn, dusty riding clothes. She would
hate to meet the ultra fashionable Mrs. Denbigh now. Felice must not
know that she had come; she might ruin everything. Jerry had an
intuition that she would stop at nothing to humiliate the girl Steve had
married. She caught the astonished Ito by the lapels of his coat and
drew him into the shadow.

"It is Mrs. Courtlandt, Ito. I must see Mr. Greyson. Don't tell him who
it is, though. Say--say that--that the ranch boss wants to see him."

The Jap's yellow mask of a face did not for a moment lose its
imperturbability.

"All lie will I tell him, honorable lady. Keep in dark when I door make
open."

Jerry sank to a bench among the vines; weary Patches sagged in the
shadows. For an instant it seemed as though life drained out of her, as
though she were being swept along the tide of indifference to
unconsciousness. For the first time she realized that she had had but
two hours' sleep in almost forty-eight hours. She forced herself erect.
She pulled off her hat which she had crushed down over her forehead when
she started on her wild ride to the X Y Z. It was a relief to get it
off. She could think better. She dropped it to the bench beside her. A
ray of light from somewhere set the gold in the cord glinting. Where was
the owner of that hat, she wondered. Had Steve gone into the mountains?
Would Tommy and Peg be anxious when she did not appear for dinner? She
did not dare 'phone them for fear that in some way Ranlett might get a
clue to her errand. She started forward as the door opened and closed
and Greyson's voice demanded sharply:

"What's to pay, McGregor?"

"It isn't McGregor, it's Jerry Courtlandt," the girl whispered. "Shs-s!
Take me somewhere we can talk and not be overheard."

He led her to a clump of trees near the entrance to the drive; her horse
followed with his head close to the girl's shoulder. The branches swayed
in the wind. Even in the dusk she could see the eddies of dust in the
road. The atmosphere seemed electrically alive. Jerry shivered and
seized a fold of Greyson's sleeve.

"I--I just want to make sure you're really here--it's so--so dark I can
hardly see you," she apologized shakily. His hand closed over hers. His
voice was tense as he demanded:

"What has happened, Jerry? What has brought you to me like this?" For
the first time she was conscious of the absurdity of her costume, of her
delicate, torn blouse with its bandana addition, her linen breeches and
riding boots. She flung the thought of her appearance from her mind and
plunged into explanation. Greyson questioned when she had finished:

"Are you sure? How did Beechy know?"

Jerry's eyes widened.

"I never thought to ask," she confessed. "I just believed what he told
me and I know, I know that he was telling the truth. What shall we do?
We must hurry--hurry----" For what seemed an eternity of time to her
Bruce Greyson was silent. The wind rose and whistled and whined. Jerry
was quivering with impatience when he spoke.

"The train must be flagged before it reaches the X Y Z. I'll run the
flivver to the crossing and try to get down the track. It's a mad scheme
but it's the only chance. We couldn't get to the station at Slippy Bend
in time if we tried. I'll take one of the men to wave a lantern----"

"You'll take me," interrupted Jerry breathlessly. The amazing audacity
of the plan thrilled her with its possibilities. "We mustn't take a
chance with a third party. Beechy warned me that Ranlett had
sympathizers everywhere. We can't trust one of the men."

"But there is a tremendous storm rising. What if Steve----"

"Steve may not be at home to-night; what he doesn't know won't trouble
him. Tommy and Peg will have to worry. Individuals must be sacrificed to
the good of the government, or words to that effect." Her spirits were
mounting now that she had secured an ally. "Felice must not know that I
am here."

"I'll have Ito make my apologies to Mrs. Denbigh. He can tell her that I
have been called away suddenly. He can also tel--slip down to the front
gate and wait for me. I'll take your horse to the corral. If the men
notice him at all, they win think merely that you have taken refuge from
the storm."

Crouched against the shrubs near the gate the girl waited. A lurid flash
in the heavens gave an instant's glimpse of the ranch-house, the white
fences of the corral. Then came the crash of thunder and utter darkness.
There was a sound as of a fusillade of bullets on the hard road. "Here
comes the rain!" Jerry murmured. The words were drowned in a sudden
hissing downpour. She peered at the illuminated dial of her watch. Nine
o'clock! In just one hour the train was due at Devil's Hold-up. Could
they stop it? She listened. Was that the sound of wheels? Yes. Greyson
was coasting the machine down the slight incline toward her; there was
no sound of the engine. While it was still in motion she sprang to the
running-board, took her seat and closed the door softly. Not a moment
had been lost. For the first time she felt the rain beating on her bare
head; it stung her shoulders through her thin blouse. The top of the car
had been thrown back. She put her hand up. Her hat! Where was it? Then
she remembered that she had flung it on the bench beside Greyson's
front door. "Being hatless is the least of my troubles," she thought
buoyantly as she peered forward into the darkness. At the foot of the
incline Greyson bent to the lever.

"Now we're off," he whispered. "There is a lantern at your feet. Light
that."

On her knees in the bottom of the car Jerry struggled with the lantern.
The flivver bounced and swerved as the driver tried to force the engine
belonging to the hundreds class to speed achieved only by the thousands.
After using a profusion of matches, and--anathemas when she burned her
fingers, Jerry lighted the lantern. She gave a long sigh of relief as
she slipped back into her seat.

"It's done! The bottom of the car looks as though there had been a
massacre of matches, just as the floor round Steve's chair looks when he
is smoking his pipe, but what are a few matches at a time like this?
What can I do next?"

"Jerry, you amazing girl! Nothing--nothing seems hard or impossible when
you have a share in it," Greyson burst out impetuously. He steadied his
voice and directed, "When we come to the gate get out and open it. I'll
run through to the crossing. Be sure that you fasten the gate securely
behind you. No sane person will think of our getting down the track this
way. No sane person would think of attempting it," he added under his
breath.

Once through the gate Greyson cautiously steered the car off the
crossing on to the track which paralleled that on which the west-bound
train would come. He manipulated the motor until the left-hand wheels of
the car hugged the inside of one rail and the right-hand wheels were in
the road-bed. He waited for flashes of lightning to show him the way.
They came almost incessantly. The thunder crashed and rumbled as though
the gods of the mountains were playfully pitching TNT shells for
exercise.

"This is going to be one little stunt," the man confided to the girl as
she took her seat beside him. "Keep the lantern in your hand. When I say
'Ready' stand up on the seat and wave like mad. Now we're off, and may
the gods be good to us!"

It wasn't a heathen god whom Jerry Courtlandt importuned. She never
looked back upon that wild ride without a renewed thanksgiving that the
prayer in her heart had been answered, without a reminiscent ache in
every bone of her body, without seeing a close-up of Greyson,
tense-jawed and wrinkle-browed bent over the wheel. He drove with his
eyes intent on the tracks which seemed glistening streaks of fire when
the lightning flashed. The swift transitions from dazzling light to inky
darkness blinded her. It would always remain one of the inexplicable
miracles to the girl that the flivver did not capsize. She felt no fear
at the time. Only when from behind them came the sound as of a hundred
furies let loose did she shudder.

"Is--is that a pack of wolves?" she whispered hoarsely.

"Coyotes. Two can make as much noise as a dozen of anything else. Hear
that? Begin to wave! Ready!"

Jerry scrambled to the seat. She lost her balance as the car careened
tipsily. She clutched Greyson's hair with a violence which wrung a
stifled "Ouch!" from the victim.

"I'm sorry. My mistake! I wasn't trained as a bareback rider," the girl
apologized with an hysterical ripple of laughter.

"Wave! Wave!" Greyson shouted above the din of the storm.

The girl waved her lantern in curving sweeps. At first she could hear
nothing, see nothing, then above the noise of their own wheels she heard
a rumble which quickly increased to a roar. Then came a light and behind
it a creature which might have belonged to the ancient order of
Compsognatha, so long was it, so sinuous, so sinister. It was the train.
Jerry waved frantically. Surely, surely the engineer must see her light.
She caught her breath and held it as the roar grew deafening and the
monster came leaping, writhing, pounding on.

"They see us! They see us!" she shouted, and laughed exultantly all the
while waving the lantern madly. The whistle of the oncoming engine blew
a frenzied warning. Greyson turned his wheel way over. The flivver
literally jumped the rails and ran along a siding which joined the main
track. The girl slid into her seat limp with exhaustion. With groaning
and grinding of brakes and clanking of wheels the long train trembled to
a stop. Which one of the cars carried the treasure, Jerry wondered, just
as a rough Irish voice thundered in her ear:

"For the love of Mike! What we got here? Escaped lunatics, or I miss my
guess." The light of a lantern was flashed in the faces of the occupants
of the car. The man who held it swore with an ease and facility which
took Jerry's breath. "It's a man and a woman, crazy as coots," he called
to someone behind him. Then in a magisterial tone, "It's a hunch we got
the new division superintendent aboard this trip. He can see for himself
what held us up; he'd never believe it if I told him. Now what'd you
flag this train for?" demanded the violator of the second Commandment,
truculently. A group of men had gathered round him.

Greyson stepped from the flivver and drew Jerry after him. What would
he say, she wondered anxiously. Their errand must not be suspected. They
must get aboard the train and interview the division superintendent. A
sudden mad thought suggested itself. Without an instant's hesitation
Jerry slipped her arm under Greyson's, rested her head against his
sleeve and smiled audaciously into the broad, weather-beaten face
glowering at her.

"Don't scold, Mr. Brakeman. It was reckless, but--but--you see, we just
had to flag this train. We--we want to get to the coast.
We're--we're--eloping."

"Good God!"

Greyson's inarticulate protest was submerged in the hoarse ejaculation.
Jerry wheeled. Behind her stood Stephen Courtlandt.




CHAPTER XVIII


It seemed to Steve as he looked at the girl, with her hair, which wind
and rain had lashed into clinging tendrils of glinting bronze, pressed
close against Greyson's arm, that his universe tore itself from its
orbit and hurtled into fathomless space. For thirty throbbing seconds
the blue eyes challenged the brown, then he turned away.

"Courtlandt!" called Greyson dominantly, but Steve was speaking to the
division superintendent who, white with anxiety, had hurried up.

"Sure they'll have to go along with us, Steve," reassured the autocrat
of the train. He turned to Greyson. "We'll take you to the coast, all
right, but you won't get off the train till you've paid a good fat fine
for stopping it. You and the lady get aboard, pronto. Steve, lock her up
in one of the compartments. I'll look after the man. Mac, if anything
else tries to hold us up you shoot and shoot quick, no matter if there
are skirts mixed up in it." He rushed off in company with the burly
brakeman. Greyson caught Courtlandt's arm.

"Look here, Steve, you must listen. Jerry----"

"You needn't apologize for my--my wife, Greyson. She's coming with me."
He put his hands none too gently on the girl's shoulder.

"But, Steve, you don't understand," Jerry protested. "I----"

"All aboard there!" yelled the brakeman angrily. Steve fairly lifted the
girl to the platform of the Pullman. He hurried her along the corridor
to a compartment.

"Come in here, Jerry, and no matter what you hear don't come out. I'll
send the maid to help you get your clothing dry." He turned to go, but
she laid her hand on his arm.

"Steve, you must listen to me. I want to tell you----"

"What can you tell me except that you love Greyson and ran away with
him? I can't hear that now--I won't. You're mine and I keep what is my
own. And remember this, if you try to communicate with him while you are
on this train--I'll shoot him." His eyes were black; there was a white
line about his nostrils.

"Steve, you're all wrong,--but if you won't trust me----" she shrugged
the remainder of the sentence. Then her voice was pleading. "Did
Bruce--Mr. Greyson,--get a chance to speak to the division
superintendent?"

"Did he? I'll say he did. What Nelson isn't saying to your--your gallant
friend at this minute, isn't worth saying." He looked at her
suspiciously as she laughed. He took a step nearer.

"No, I shan't have hysterics, Stevie. Now that I know that my gallant
friend, as you call him, is explaining our late plan to the division
superintendent, I haven't a care in the world,--in fact," with a dainty,
politely repressed yawn, "if I could have this place and the maid to
myself, I might take a nap. I shall have plenty of time. It is a long
way to the coast," with another irrepressible ripple of laughter. Then
as he lingered, "You needn't stand guard. I shan't run away again. An
encore lacks the snap of a first performance," audaciously.

Courtlandt opened his lips to reply, thought better of it, closed the
door smartly behind him and went in search of the maid. Back in the
compartment which the division superintendent used as an office he
lighted his pipe, and paced the floor back and forth, back and forth as
he tried to marshall order from the chaos of his thoughts. Why didn't
the fool train start, he wondered, as he listened to what seemed an
endless amount of backing and starting and grinding of brakes.

His mind went back to the moment in Lower Field when Johnny Simms had
handed him a letter and bolted. He could see every word on the
tear-blotted page now:

     "Ranlett doesn't want the cattle. He cut the fences so that the
     Double O outfit would follow the Shorthorns into the mountains.
     He and his bunch are figurin' to rob the west-bound to-night at
     Devil's Hold-up. Government silver. Watch out! Ranlett has
     spies everywhere."

There had been no signature, no mention of Simms, but Courtlandt felt
sure that he was in on the deal and that the wife was trying to keep her
husband from being caught in what might easily prove to be more than
robbery. His first reaction from the message had been amused
incredulity. It was absurd to believe that in these enlightened days a
man of Ranlett's intelligence, and he was infernally intelligent, would
try to get away with such a mid-eighties stunt. The sense of amusement
was succeeded by startled conviction. The fact was that Ranlett did
think he could put it across and was to make the attempt that night. He
must hustle through his work and make Slippy Bend in time to board the
train. He could neither wire nor 'phone if it were true that Ranlett had
spies everywhere. He must keep his own counsel until he could talk with
the official in charge of the west-bound.

After that he had followed trails and conferred with ranch section
heads. As clouds began to spread out from the southwest he galloped
into Slippy Bend. He had supper in a leisurely fashion at the one
hotel, dropped into the post-office for a chat with Sandy, who was
sorting his mail for the morrow's trip, and discussed crops and stock
and tractors with the group of men gathered there. He had reached the
railroad station about ten minutes before the treasure train was due. He
hailed the railroad man-of-all-work whose slouch relegated him
unquestionably to the preëfficiency era.

"West-bound on time? I'm going up the line to follow some steers that
have mysteriously wandered off. I'm not looking for trouble, but----" He
tapped the holster which hung from his belt. Baldy Jennings, whose head
resembled a shiny white island entirely surrounded by a fringe of red
hair, chewed and spat with intriguing accuracy as he listened. Steve's
explanation had precipitated a flow of observation.

"Shucks! The world's sick. Most of it don't want to work and them that
does won't be let by them that don't. The majority seem to figur' that
it's a darned sight easier to pick the other man's pocket than to fill
their own by honest sweatin' labor. Sure, it never wa'n't none of my
butt-in, but I used to tell old man Fairfax that Ranlett was narrer
between the horns. Oh, you don't hev to mention no names, I know who
took them steers,--but cripes, it didn't do no good, he wouldn't listen
to Baldy Jennings. And now the coyote's knifed you! An' your old man
givin' him every chanct. Human natur'! Human natur'! Well, I gotta get
busy. The railroad don't pay me sixty bucks per fer swappin' talk even
with the owner of the Double O. Here comes the west-bound." A shrill
whistle echoed back and forth among the hills like a shuttlecock. The
vibration of the rails announced the coming train.

Courtlandt's pipe went out, he stopped his restless pacing of the narrow
compartment as he visualized the first person who had stepped from the
train. It had been Nelson who had been a captain in the battalion in
which Steve had served overseas. His face, which had been white and
tense when he reached the platform, had suffused with color as he
recognized Courtlandt.

"Well, you can knock me for a gool, if it isn't the Whistling Lieut.!"
he cried eagerly. "What are you doing in this teeming mart of trade?" he
added, as he glanced at Baldy Jennings staring open-mouthed at the
meeting and beyond him to the few coatless, vested, bearded favorite
sons who leaned against the sagging building.

Courtlandt had laughed. When the fog of surprise had lifted he had seen
that the years had not changed Nelson. His black eyes were as keen as
ever, his little mustache had the same moth-eaten effect, the network
of veins on his slightly bulbous nose were redder perhaps, and he was in
civilian clothes. That realization wrinkled Steve's brow in perplexity.

"What are you doing here? Last I heard you had joined the regular army
and were stationed somewhere around Phila----" Perception of the
situation came in a blinding flash. Nelson's eyes met his steadily.

"There are some occasions when a soldier appears in mufti. Especially
when he is passing as the newly appointed division superintendent of a
railroad." Steve drew a breath. So that was it. His eyes traveled over
the train. Which was the treasure car? Obviously the one in the middle
which looked like an ordinary baggage-car. The rest were brilliantly
lighted coaches, from the windows of which eyes peered out curiously,
indifferently or interestedly as the temperaments and minds behind them
dictated. His glance came back to Nelson.

"You're the man I'm looking for. I've lost some cattle, and I'm going up
the line a way to look for them. I must give you all particulars. I'm
counting on you to help me, if there should happen to be any rough stuff
pulled off, see?"

The two men had stood apart from the confusion of the station. The rain
beat down. Over among the mountains thunder and lightning held high
carnival. Courtlandt drew Nelson into the lee of the building. He struck
a match and held it above his pipe till the wood burned down to his
fingers. In the flickering light he and the superintendent, pro tem.,
had regarded one another steadily. Nelson moistened his lips:

"Sure, I see, Steve. Glad to have you along." He raised his voice as one
of the train hands approached. "Make yourself comfortable in my
quarters. Perhaps I can find a couple to make up a little game."

Courtlandt was quite unconscious of the rumble of the train as in
imagination he relived the time he had spent waiting for Nelson to join
him in the double compartment which had been fitted up as an office for
the superintendent. Minutes seemed hours. When he did come the smile had
left his lips. His eyes were stern. He closed the door with a bang.

"Deal out what's coming, quick!" he had commanded and Steve had told him
almost word for word what Mrs. Simms had written. "You're sure of this?"

"I've given the message as it came to me. The person who sent the
warning had every reason to keep mum."

"I get you." Nelson pulled down a map which was rolled against the side
of the car. He studied the maze of lines and dots and dashes. "Going
along with us?" he had asked casually.

"The surest thing you know." Steve remembered how absurdly light-hearted
he had felt. Nelson looked so thoroughly equal to his job.

"Then you'd better--now what the devil is _that_?" he growled as the
engine blew a furious warning and the brakes ground on with a suddenness
which threw both men against the desk. "We can't have reached Devil's
Hold-up yet."

And then--Courtlandt's crowding thoughts had reached the moment when he
had heard a girl's voice say:

"Don't scold, Mr. Brakeman. It was reckless--but--but, you see, we had
to flag this train--we--we want to go to the coast. We're--we're
eloping!"

Jerry and Greyson! And he would have staked his life that she was true
blue, that even if she felt that she could never love the man she had
married she would have trampled temptation. The intolerable ache in
Steve's heart maddened him. She should not carry out this mad plan. He
wouldn't let her go if she hated him eternally. He'd make her love him,
love him as he had loved her from the moment he had looked up to see her
enter the living-room of Glamorgan's apartment. He had been so
infernally proud that he had tortured himself by pretending indifference
and now he had been brutal. He should have let her explain--he'd go now
and listen to what she had to say. God help him to act the man no matter
what it was. He would be tender, he would be sympathetic--but--he'd
never give her up.

Nelson entered and closed the door softly behind him. His face was
white, there were tiny flecks of foam on his lips, his eyes blazed.

"In five minutes we'll slow down to a crawl before entering Devil's
Hold-up. The bandits counted on that. I'll go forward to the cab. Trail
along after me. Leave your holster here. The passengers mustn't get the
idea that we're packing guns; get me?"

"I get you. Where is Gr--where is the man who flagged the train?"

Nelson turned with his hand on the door-knob.

"In the car back locked into a compartment with an armed guard before
it. He wanted to talk but I wasn't taking chances with any middle-aged
Lochinvar until after we'd passed the Hold-up. Got the woman in the case
locked up, haven't you?"

"Yes, she----" Courtlandt cut off the explanation he was about to offer.
Why enlighten Nelson? If he could keep Jerry's name out of the mix-up,
so much the better. Greyson wouldn't be likely to talk.

"All right, see that she doesn't break loose. A girl who would flivver
along a railroad track would have to be roped and tied to keep her out
of a wild party like this or I miss my guess."

Steve looked unseeingly at the door as it closed behind Nelson. He was
right; it would be like Jerry to get into the mix-up. He would stop at
her compartment as he went forward and make sure that she was there. He
unfastened the holster from his belt and flung it to the desk. With a
slight bulge in the region of the hip pocket of his riding breeches he
left the office. At the door of the compartment in which he had left
Jerry he knocked.

There was no answer. He tapped again and listened. There was no sound
inside save the creaking of woodwork and springs as the car swayed with
the grinding of wheels. Courtlandt whitened. Could she have left her
room? With quick impatience he opened the door and stepped inside. In
his surprise he slammed it behind him. Jerry, rolled in a blanket, lay
in the bunk asleep.

Even the noise he had made did not rouse her. Evidently the maid had
taken her clothing to dry it, for she was blanketed like a mummy from
her feet to her dimpled chin. Courtlandt crossed the narrow space
between them and looked down upon her. Her hair was spread over the
pillow to dry, her dark lashes lay like fringes, the one cheek visible
had a long red scratch, a bare foot hung over the edge of the bunk. Her
sleep was so profound that she barely breathed.

Why was she so exhausted, Steve wondered anxiously. In a flash he
remembered. She had been up all the night before with Mrs. Carey. Was it
only last night that he had taken her to the B C ranch? It seemed weeks
ago. No wonder that she was tired; she couldn't have had much sleep in
the last forty-eight hours. What did the bruise mean? He leaned over her
and touched it lightly. It was not a recent scratch. Very gently he
raised the pink foot which swayed with every motion of the car and
covered it with the blanket. He looked down upon the girl for a moment.
With jaw set and the veins in his temples standing out like cords he
went out and closed the door behind him.

The train barely crawled as Courtlandt swung from the step of the coach
to the ground. His eyes were strained; there was a white line about his
lips as he pulled himself up into the gangway between tender and engine.
The storm had rolled east-ward. Above the distant mountains a broad and
yellow moon played at hide-and-seek with fleecy remnants of cloud. Stars
appeared dimly, reconnoitered for a moment, then shone with steady
brilliancy. Nelson, seated on a tool-box in the cab, rolled a cigarette
with slightly unsteady fingers. The engineer had his head out of the
window; his assistant was tinkering a bit of balky machinery. Nelson
looked up as Courtlandt appeared.

"Did you come out to see the wheels go round Steve? I'd rather ride here
than anywhere else myself. What the devil! What's to pay now, Hawks?" as
the engineer ground on the brakes.

"Boulder on the track," rumbled the sooty man. He turned white under the
soot as his eyes crossed in a futile endeavor to look along the shiny
blue nose of an automatic in the hand of his grimy assistant.

"Hands up, all of you! Come over here, Hawks. You gentlemen can talk to
me while my friends give the train the once-over."

"Well, I'll be----"

"You sure will if you talk," growled the grimy one, looking like a
popular conception of his satanic majesty sans horns. Courtlandt and
Nelson who had been caught completely off guard by this attack from
within, stood with upraised arms. "Now, what t'ell!" The gun swayed for
the fraction of a second as a figure slid down over the coal in the
tender and landed in a crumpled heap in the gangway. Courtlandt seized
the opportunity. By the aboriginal expedient of kicking his victim
smartly in the shin he surprised the grimy one into a howl of pain.
Instinctively one hand reached for the aching member. Steve seized the
revolver.

"You're some gunman," he jeered. "Go back into that corner and sit
down!" And Satan's understudy, shorn of all of his gun and two-thirds of
his bravado--went. "Hawks, tie his feet and hands. Here's his gun.
Nelson, I can manage if you want to give orders elsewhere. What have we
here?"

The man who had fallen from the tender had struggled to his feet. He
braced himself against the side of the cab. His hair was matted down
over his eyes, his khaki shirt was in strips, his breeches and riding
boots were caked with mud; evidently he had been a rider before he
turned bandit, Courtlandt thought as he covered him with his forty-five.
Hawks was standing guard with his prisoner's own automatic. Fate has a
keen sense of comedy.

"What's your business?" Steve demanded. The man made an evident effort
to rally his senses. His voice was low and broken as he answered:

"There are twenty men in the gap--waiting for this train--the
silver--bricks. Here--here are the names----" He fumbled in his shirt.
Steve watched him with wary eyes, his finger on the trigger of his gun.
The trussed man in the corner swore volubly. The engineer silenced him
with the toe of his boot. Courtlandt took a step nearer the gasping,
groping man. The light was dim, if he were tricking him--but he wasn't.
With painful effort he produced a paper. His right arm hung helpless. A
red spot the size of a nickel appeared on the breast of his shirt. "Here
it is. I--I played into Ranlett's hands with the steers--Steve." He
collapsed in a heap on the floor.

"Steve!"

Courtlandt was on his knees beside him echoing his name. He slipped his
arm under the bent head. The man looked up with a laugh that died in a
painful rattle in his throat.

"You didn't know me, Steve?"

"Denbigh!"

"Don't take it so hard, this--this scratch isn't anything. I--I swore
I'd square myself with the world and--and my conscience. I've been
playing my cards for this grand slam for weeks. Somehow Ranlett got wind
that the silver--was to--be shipped sometime this month. When I found
that Beechy was your man I dropped him a hint as to the ownership of the
treasure he was after--then--then--I took care of him for Ranlett--see?
You'll find him stunned but unhurt in the shack in Buzzard's Hollow.
No--don't interrupt--let me talk while I can--they'll be here in a
minute. To-night they must have been watching me. When I tried to slip
away Simms fired. I--I rolled over the cliff--they must have thought
that finished me--it did--almost--but I was determined to get here. Keep
those names--I--hope--I've saved the government's money."

His head fell back on Courtlandt's shoulder, his eyes closed for a
moment. Then with, almost superhuman effort he rallied:

"I can't drift off yet. Two green rockets--in my shirt. As--soon as
you've caught the gang--send those up. They'll keep Ranlett and--and the
others in the Hollow till--you get there. They mean that--that----"
Courtlandt had to put his ear close to Denbigh's lips to hear the last
words. He laid him down and reached into his shirt for the rockets.
Nelson appeared.

"Leave him, Steve, I need you. I've sent a gang out to move the boulder.
We'll let the bad men think they've fooled us. Half the passengers on
this train are regulars in mufti. Little ol' Uncle Sam isn't taking
chances when he ships silver bricks to the coast. Here they come! Look!"
in a hoarse, excited whisper.

Out from between crevices and behind cottonwoods stole sinister shadows.
The men trying to remove the boulder from the track worked steadily.
The night was so still after the storm that Steve could hear their hard
breathing, their gruff commands and the clink of metal against rock as
they attacked the granite. The man in the corner opened his lips to
shout a warning but Hawks stuffed his mouth full of oily waste before he
could utter a sound. Nelson oozed delighted anticipation.

"Good Lord, man!" Steve exploded, "you haven't crossed the bridge yet.
Those men are after the government's money and they're going to put up a
stiff fight for it."

"So they are, so they are, little ol' Steve, but they won't get it. We
dropped the treasure car, the last lighted Pullman with the silver
bricks in it, off on the siding where those crazy elopers flagged us.
Your Uncle Dudley wasn't taking any chances."




CHAPTER XIX


"After all, it has been absurdly like the fake attack and repulse of
bandits in a musical comedy, except--except for Phil," Courtlandt
thought two hours later. "And here's where the female portion of the
audience would adjust hats and grope under the seats for missing
articles," he added, as from the platform of the train he watched a
splotch of darkness move slowly up the main street of Slippy Bend, en
route for the jail. The act had lacked none of the usual colorful stage
setting. There had been a starry heaven overhead, the dim outlines of
the rocky gap for a back-drop, clumps of cottonwoods and aspens for side
wings and for the crowning touch, two green rockets had sped skyward.

The attacking party had boarded the train with just the right amount of
theatrical bravado, but something went wrong. Someone must have
hopelessly mixed the cues, for instead of towering over their shrinking
victims the bandits had found themselves staring dumbly along the
snub-noses of Colts in the trigger-quick hands of veterans. Denbigh's
list had been checked off and, save for Ranlett and Marks, every man
named on it was now being personally conducted up the silent street.

Phil had made good, gloriously good, Courtlandt exulted as he made his
way to the baggage-car where Denbigh lay on the floor, his eyes closed,
his face flushed with fever. Steve knelt beside him, and laid a cool
hand on his forehead, but the wounded man did not move. Nelson climbed
into the car.

"They've brought the stretcher, Steve. I'll attend to moving him while
you get the girl off the train. I've sent for a doctor."

With his pulses hammering Courtlandt knocked at the door of the
compartment in which he had left Jerry asleep. There was no answer. Had
she gone? He knocked again, this time with a peremptoriness augmented by
the fear in his heart.

"Come in!" a cool voice answered.

Steve entered the compartment. From across the small room Jerry, dressed
as she had been when she flagged the train, contemplated him with
unfriendly eyes. Her blouse and linen breeches showed stains of mud and
weather but they had been mended and pressed. Her boots, with the big
rowels still attached, had been cleaned. Her hair, brushed till it shone
like satin, had been coiled in place; even the scratch on her cheek had
been reduced in color if not in length. Her lips were disdainful, her
face curiously colorless as she challenged:

"Well!"

"We are back at Slippy Bend. We must leave the train at once. There has
been----"

"I know. The maid told me of the hold-up and that--that someone was
hurt. I feared--I feared"--even her lips whitened--"I--I've been so
anxious----" She caught her breath in a strangled sob. "She said that it
wasn't one of the train-hands or--or--a soldier, and I--I thought----"

"Don't worry, it wasn't Greyson," Courtlandt cut in brusquely; his eyes
flamed a warning. "It--it was Phil Denbigh."

"Phil Denbigh! You don't mean the man Felice married?"

"Yes--alias Bill Small, the range-rider at the B C."

"And he--a man like that--was one of the gang?"

"No, no! Phil was in it to get information, to give warning. He is
entitled to an honorable discharge from his conscience now. His
testimony will rid this part of the country of about twenty
undesirables, the missing Marks and Schoeffleur among them."

She looked up in dumb incredulity for a moment, then she laughed.

"So--o, the treasure would have been saved anyway without--without----"
There was another irrepressible ripple of mirth before she asked, "Has
Bruce--has--Mr. Greyson been told?"

Her laughter, her reference to Greyson snapped Courtlandt's
self-control, which was already strained to the limit of endurance. Even
his lips were white as he caught her by the shoulders.

"I don't know what Greyson has been told, but he'll get it straight from
me that you are mine--mine----" With sudden savage ruthlessness he
caught her in his arms and kissed her shining hair, her throat, her
eyes. He let her go. "Now perhaps _you_ understand it too," he announced
huskily.

Jerry shrank as far away from him as the narrow space would allow. The
color burned in her cheeks, her eyes blazed.

"You--you have no right to--to do that!" she reminded breathlessly.

"Haven't I?"

"Don't stand there looking like a lion ready to spring. I--I won't have
it! You promised----"

"That is humorous. When you ran away with Greyson were you keeping your
promise? At least, you'll acquit me of making love to--another woman.
I----" The door was thrown open violently and Nelson shouted:

"Get that girl off quick, Steve! We leave in five minutes." The last
words died in the distance as he hurried along the corridor.

"Come!" Courtlandt commanded, and with a curious look up into his eyes
Jerry preceded him from the compartment. As she stepped from the train
she fell almost into her sister's arms.

"Peggy!" she gasped in astonishment.

"Where the dickens did you drop from, Peg-o'-my-heart? Why are you at
Slippy Bend at this unholy hour?" Steve demanded peremptorily.

"Ye gods! Don't ask me why! For information apply to Ito. I only know
that while I was walking the floor at the Double O, wild with anxiety,
that Jap tragedian appeared and announced that he must see the excellent
Mr. Benson. When I succeeded in convincing him that I couldn't produce
the excellent Mr. Benson, he explained that he must take me to Slippy
Bend to meet Mrs. Courtlandt, by order of his honorable master."

"His master!" Jerry and Courtlandt echoed in unison.

"That was what he said. He did deign to explain that he had been told to
telephone, but that as all lines were out of order he came himself to
give the message to Mr. Benson. When he found that Tommy wasn't there he
insisted upon bringing me to Slippy Bend himself."

"Where is Tommy?"

"Don't snap, Steve. I don't know. I'm one little walking encyclopedia of
ignorance to-night," with a sob which she valiantly tried to strangle at
its birth. "Jerry, where have you been? That Chinese woman of yours met
Tommy and me when we returned from our ride with some incoherent stuff
about your having gone off with a gun. That sent Tommy in a mad rush
after you. All I could get out of the Oriental while I was waiting was,
'Missee tlell Ming Soy when she see little Missee and Mr. Tommee Blenson
she bleat glong.' If I hadn't locked her into the pantry she'd be
beating it yet." She snuggled her arm under her sister's as she asked
again, "Where have you been, Jerry?"

"I'll tell you all about it, honey, while we are riding home; that is,
if we are going home." With tantalizing daring she looked up at Steve
and asked with exaggerated humility, "Am I to be permitted to return to
the Double O in the care of Bruce--of Mr. Greyson's man, Mr.
Courtlandt?"

He flushed darkly, but without answering led the way to the big touring
car. The Jap sat behind the wheel in bronze immobility. When Courtlandt
had laid the rug over the knees of the two girls in the back seat he
closed the door and gave Ito his order.

"Drive Mrs. Courtlandt and Miss Glamorgan to the Double O as quickly as
you can with safety. Jerry, in some way get word to Gerrish that I need
him at Slippy Bend as soon as he can get here. I'll try 'phoning from
the hotel as well; the lines may be in order now."

"Aren't you coming with us, Steve?" Peggy's tone was aggrieved.

"No. I have Blue Devil here; I'll ride out. Good-night!"

He watched the red light on the departing automobile until it became a
mere spark in the distance. Then he returned to the train. He was still
puzzling over the message Greyson had tried to get to Benson when Nelson
hailed him. He was near the step of the last car.

"Oh, Steve, get a hustle on! I've been waiting for you." Then as
Courtlandt stood beside him he added in a grave voice, "It's about
Denbigh. When we lifted him he--he went out like a candle. Never saw
anything like it. They've taken the--him to the hotel. You'll have to
notify the authorities, Steve. Simms shot him, and I hope they make that
surly brute pay the piper. I'll give my testimony when they want it. Now
I must get on with this train." He sprang to the step of the car and
seized the rail. Brakeman and conductors stood rigidly awaiting his
signal. Courtlandt stepped back.

"Just a minute, Steve! Lord, I almost forgot to tell you. There is just
one glint of humor in this infernally tragic night. It seems that
Lochinvar is Greyson of the X Y Z ranch. Don't know where that is;
perhaps you do. His lady friend got the dope about this hold-up, too.
She rode to his place for help and the two flivvered down the track to
stop the train, she standing on the seat grabbing his hair with one hand
while with the other she waved that fool lantern. Can't you see the
picture? I'll say she's some little sport."

"But--but the elopement?"

"Lord-ee, Steve, don't take this whole rotten business so to heart.
You're livid. That elopement stuff is the glint. The girl had been told
that there were traitors on the train. She knew Greyson's reason for
flagging it mustn't be suspected; just there the elopement excuse
flashed into her mind. Said she reckoned that elopers were the only
people who would do such a fool stunt. She told the maid about it after
things had quieted down. I'll say she's a peacherino. If I hadn't a
perfectly good wife at home she could have me. Happen to know who she
is?"

"Yes. I happen to know. She is--she is Mrs. Stephen Courtlandt." Nelson
almost fell off the step.

"For the love of Mike! I don't wonder you're white. She--she was so
darned convincing." With a chuckle he swung forward and gave the signal
to the waiting crew. In a fairly successful imitation of Jerry's voice
he called softly:

"Go on, Mr. Brakeman. We--we want to get to the coast."

As he made his way along the street in the starlight Courtlandt felt as
though he were traveling with his double. It was as if his shadow had
suddenly developed a mind which occupied itself exclusively with
thoughts of Jerry, leaving his own brain free to concentrate on the
business ahead. In a spirit of detachment he turned over and over her
reason for the elopement announcement, pictured her ride, her furious
indignation when the flesh and blood Steve had held her in his arms.
There was nothing shadowy in Courtlandt's reaction to that memory.

The foyer of the small, ramshackle hotel was filled with men, tobacco
smoke, and the hum and buzz of excited voices, all but the space near
one closed door. When they looked in that direction men spoke in
whispers, many of them dragged off their hats. It was as if the
insensate wood had an aura of mystery and tragedy into which no person
in the room cared or dared penetrate. Greyson was the first person to
whom Courtlandt spoke.

"Bruce--I know now----" With a smile the elder laid his hand on the
younger man's shoulder.

"Forget it, Steve. Had I been in your place I couldn't have carried off
the situation as well, I am glad that I stand exonerated of that
unspeakable treachery. I--I only hope that later when you learn----" he
cleared his throat and went on irrelevantly, "Who's to tell Mrs. Denbigh
about her husband? After all, he was her husband. You were his friend.
She'll take it better from you, Steve."

A furious protest rose to Courtlandt's lips but he looked at the closed
door and answered instead:

"Somebody's got to do it. I'll ride over to the X Y Z in the morning.
There is no use in consulting her about any of the arrangements here.
Has anyone wired Denbigh's mother for instructions?"

"No, we waited for you. You'd better get her on long distance. A train
goes East at two A. M."

"I understand. While I'm doing that try to get the Double O on the
'phone, will you? Tell them to get Gerrish here as soon as possible."

"I will. The sheriff wants to see you at the jail when you can manage
it. He's sent a posse after Ranlett. He's in or near that shack in
Buzzard's Hollow, that is, he was."

"He's there, all right. I signaled with the rockets as Phil directed. He
may be getting a little uneasy at the non-arrival of his bad men by
this time though. How the dickens did you know about it?"

"Beechy put a bullet into his leg. Jerry will tell you----"

"Beechy and Jerry!"

"Don't look like that, Steve. Jerry is safe and Beechy has made good,
gloriously good. Get the little girl to tell you about it. She--she's a
wonder! Meantime the sheriff waits. He wants to talk to you about Simms.
There can be no doubt that he shot Denbigh. He wants your deposition.
Perhaps it is a cold-blooded way to look at it, but I can't help
thinking that with Simms out of the way his wife and kids will have a
chance at real living. That's an awful indictment of a man, isn't it?"

It was morning when Courtlandt dismounted in the corral of the Double O.
Slowman hurried up to take Blue Devil. The two men talked in low tones
while dawn streaked the sky in rosy peaks and the stars paled. The grass
glittered with diamond-like dew, the fairies had spread their squares of
gossamer everywhere. The boys had come in with the shorthorns, the
corral boss reported, not one missing. The outfit had got news of the
affair at Devil's Hold-up and were fit to tie that they hadn't had a
chance to clean up Ranlett and his gang.

After the turmoil of the last few hours the ranch-house seemed weirdly
quiet as Courtlandt entered the living-room. The night air had been keen
and a few coals, like observant red eyes, glowed at him from the hearth.
Scherherazade, the white Persian cat, occupied the wing-chair. She
opened her topaz eyes wide as Steve approached the mantel; she watched
unblinkingly as he laid his arms upon it and looked up at the portrait
above him. He spoke softly as though he and the smiling woman were
comrades and confidants.

"They said that Phil went out like a candle, Mother. Where did he go?
Where are you? It can't be the end. If it were I shouldn't feel as
though you were with me wherever I am. Was I a brute to Jerry? Will she
ever forgive me? Would you if you were in her place?" The tender eyes
must have reassured him for with a husky, "Good-night, Betty Fairfax!"
he straightened his shoulders and turned away. For an instant he stood
looking across the room. As he went toward his own door he whistled
softly his favorite "Papillions." Scherherazade craned her ruffed white
neck to follow the sound, her eyes narrowed to ruby slits. The coals on
the hearth crumbled and fell. She sprang to the back of the chair and
listened. Across the room a door had latched softly.

Out in Buzzard's Hollow a white-faced, haggard-eyed man was turning over
his three prisoners to the deputy sheriff. Overhead a great bird hung
motionless for an instant as it glared down at the curious creature with
mammoth outspread wings that lay below.




CHAPTER XX


Breakfast in the court was a late affair the morning after the hold-up.
Steve did not appear. Tommy had given Jerry a sketchy account of his
adventure of the night before, minimizing his part in it. Ming Soy
hovered about the table with what, in an Occidental, would be tearful
devotion. The world was as clean and fresh and sweet as wind and rain
and sunshine could make it. Faintly from the corral came the voices of
riders coming and going; the skip and cough and stutter of tractors
drifted in on the breeze. Benito, with much fluttering and shivering and
croaking, was taking his matutinal plunge in the basin of the fountain.
Goober lay beside Jerry's chair, his tawny eyes fixed unblinkingly on
the parrot, his tongue hanging, his white teeth gleaming.

The girl, in a pink and white frock that suggested the daintiness of
morning-glories, had been absorbed in the thoughts induced by Tommy's
story. It was some time before she became conscious of the obstinate
silence maintained by the usually talkative Peg, who was a bit more
bewilderingly lovely than ever in a frock just a trifle less blue than
the sky above her. Benson was tenderly solicitous of her comfort. Would
she have more honey? Hopi Soy had broken his own record with the
waffles; sure she wouldn't have one? Peg answered his questions with an
indifferent shake of her head. Jerry observed the two in silence for a
few moments before she protested:

"Don't grovel, Tommy. I don't know what you've done to displease her
royal highness, but knowing you as I do I am sure that it was nothing to
warrant such rudeness. 'Fess up, children, what has happened? 'Who first
bred strife between the chiefs that they should thus contend?'" she
quoted gayly. "That is worthy even of you, Tommy."

"You may think it's funny, Jerry," flared Peg indignantly. "But if you
had been--been----"

"Say it! Tell the gentlemen of the jury just what happened, Miss
Glamorgan," prompted Benson in a judicial tone and with a glint in his
blue eyes. "You won't?" as the girl responded only with a glance of
superb scorn. "Then I will." He disregarded her startled, "Don't dare!"
and announced, "I--I kissed her yesterday, Mrs. Steve."

"I won't stay to hear!"

"Yes, you will!" He caught Peggy gently but firmly by the shoulders. He
stood behind her as he explained. "You see--I want--I intend to marry
your sister, Mrs. Steve. Yesterday I staked my claim. I kissed her
once."

"Hmp! Squatter rights!" interpolated Peggy angrily.

"Only once! Are you--sure, Tommy?" Jerry's voice was grave but there was
a traitorous quiver of her vivid lips as she asked the question.

"Only once, on honor. I told her that I should never do it again until
she gave me permission. I meant it. I know that she is young. I expect
to wait until----"

Peggy twisted herself free from the restraining hands on her shoulders.
Half-way across the court she turned. Her hazel eyes were brilliant with
laughter, her lips curved tormentingly as she flouted the two at the
table.

"I--I hate--quitters!" she flung at Benson before she disappeared in the
path which led to the office. Tommy followed her with his eyes, then
turned to Jerry.

"I always watch where my ball falls so that I can find it quickly," he
explained. The assurance had drained from his voice when he asked,
"What--what do you think of my pronunciamento? Will your father stand
for it, Mrs. Steve?"

"If you and Peg decide that you really care for one another he will have
to," encouraged Jerry gravely.

"Peg has told me how he feels about family. Mine is the finest ever--but
we don't date back to Colonial days on this continent. I suppose that we
must have existed somewhere before we came to this country, we couldn't
have been prestidigitated out of the everywhere into the here, could we?
There is plenty of money behind us but--but that angel girl thinks I'm
poor."

"Don't enlighten her. Let her think so--it may--make her kinder. When
the time comes I'll talk with Dad. I'm with you heart and soul, Tommy,
but I am afraid you have a long road to travel before Peg says 'Yes.'"

"You are wasting your sympathy. 'I scorn to change my state with
kings!'" he declaimed dramatically before he disappeared into the path
which had swallowed up Peggy.

Jerry rested her elbows on the table, her chin on her clasped hands, and
gazed thoughtfully after him. Subconsciously she noted the sound of
horses' hoofs on the hard road in front of the house. Who was arriving
at ten o'clock in the morning, she wondered idly before she returned to
thoughts of Peg and Tommy. She sat motionless for so long that Goober
rose, stretched and poked his cold nose under her hands. She stroked his
head gently.

"Where is your master?" she whispered into one of his big ears. The dog
shook his head, sneezed violently and looked up, his eyes eloquent with
reproach. "Did it tickle? I'm sorry." She reached for a lump of sugar in
the squatty Dutch silver bowl. "If you could say please----" Goober rose
on his hind feet, dangled his crossed forepaws and with head on one side
avidly regarded the enticing white morsel in the girl's fingers. He gave
a short, sharp bark. She tossed him the sugar which he crunched between
his strong teeth. She patted his head. "Do you know, Goober, I think
that any dog is more interesting than the average human. Wait for me.
I'll get my hat and we'll take Patches a lump of sugar."

Obediently the dog took up his position beside her chair. Humming
lightly Jerry went toward the house. What a glorious morning. The
nightmare of yesterday already seemed like an impossible dream. Some day
she would explain that elopement business to Steve and they would laugh
about it together. She caught her breath as a vision of his face as he
had held her in his arms crowded itself into her mind. She raced up the
court steps to elude her clamorous thoughts. At the door of the
living-room she stopped as though galvanized. She brushed her hand
impatiently across her eyes. Coming into the shadowy room from the
gleaming world outside certainly did queer things to one's vision.
That--that couldn't be Steve with a woman's arm about his neck! There
was an inarticulate sound in her throat as she took a step forward.
Courtlandt heard it. With a muttered imprecation he loosened the
clinging arm. His face was white, his eyes inscrutable as they met
Jerry's.

"Felice, here is Mrs. Courtlandt. I have been telling Mrs. Denbigh of
her husband's----" the woman beside him interrupted.

"Steve forgets that I haven't had a husband for several years. I confess
the news was a shock. I had no idea that he was in this part of the
country. I suppose that detestable Fairfax man knew it when he suggested
to Bruce Greyson that he invite me here for the summer. Does that
surprise you, Steve?" as Courtlandt stifled an exclamation.

"If--if I can do anything to help you----" Jerry had produced an apology
for a voice at last.

"Thank you, no. Steve is all I need. He is such a comfort. Would anyone
but he have had the sympathetic understanding to wait until he thought I
would be awake before coming with such news to the X Y Z? But I came
here to help him. I have had his happiness on my mind since I found this
on the bench outside the door just after Mr. Greyson had received a
mysterious summons." She held out Steve's campaign hat with its black
and gold cord and the band of silver filigree which Jerry had added the
day before. There was malice thinly disguised with solicitude in the
tone in which she added, "Then--then I understood that--that you and he
had gone----"

"Felice, cut that out! When I want your intervention in my affairs I'll
ask for it," Courtlandt's tone lashed. "Now that you have returned the
hat you may go. Greyson has made arrangements for you to leave on the
east-bound train in the early afternoon. Your maid is packing for you."

"But why should I go East, Steve? Phil Denbigh is nothing to me, while
you----" her tone was drenched with significance. She looked defiantly
at Jerry who was conscious that she was giving an excellent imitation of
an automaton. Only her eyes felt alive, they burned, and the pulses in
her throat throbbed. She knew that if she opened her lips it would be to
hurl words at Felice of which she would be utterly ashamed later, that
if she unclenched her hands it would be to strike the mocking woman. She
was terrified at the tumult which shook her. Without a glance toward the
two near the window she crossed the room, entered her boudoir and closed
the door behind her. She leaned against it and listened. She heard the
front door close, footsteps on the porch, voices, then the sound of
horse's hoofs. They had gone!

With the realization, something inside her seemed to crash. The barrier
of ice which she had erected between her heart and Steve was swept away
in a surge of passionate emotion. She knew now why she had been so
terrified last night when she had heard that a man had been wounded, she
had feared it might be Steve; why she had been so furiously angry at
Felice; why it had hurt so intolerably to see her in Steve's arms. It
wasn't because she thought him false and untrue--it was because she
loved him.

With confused consciousness that she must escape from her own thoughts
she ran into the living-room. She and Goober would take that sugar to
Patches and then----The smiling, tender eyes of the portrait over the
fireplace drew her like a magnet. She crossed her arms on the mantel and
smiled back at them, valiantly.

"Mother dear----" she implored breathlessly. "Mother!"

Comforted in some inexplicable way she dropped her head on her arms. In
retrospect she went back to that evening in her father's apartment when
she and Steve had entered into their matrimonial engagement. He had
staked his future for money, she for social advancement. Old Nick had
been right. How could a man love or respect a girl who would marry for
position? Now that Felice was really free, not merely legally free,
would Steve----Absorbed in her thoughts she was conscious of nothing in
the room till Courtlandt's voice behind her announced authoritatively:

"I have something to say to you, Jerry."

To the girl's taut nerves it was the voice of the conqueror laying down
terms of surrender and clemency. In a flash she was back in the library
of the Manor, hearing Steve's cool, determined voice announce, "I shall
consider myself in a position to dictate terms to one member of the
family." If he had meant separation then, what would he mean now with
her silly elopement declaration of the night before to infuriate him?
Was he about to reproach her again for that? Felice had supplied the
last shred of evidence he needed when she produced the hat, if he needed
more than her own statement to the brakeman to convict her. Her anger
flamed. He shouldn't get a chance to indict her. To put one's opponent
on the defense meant strategic advantage. Before he could speak she
fended:

"You can't reproach me for last night, Steve, after--after what I saw
when I came into this room. Honors are even," flippantly.

He caught her by the shoulders and looked steadily into her angry eyes.
They met his defiantly. His voice was grave as he probed:

"After last night and--and this morning, Jerry, do you still--still want
to go on with it?"

"Go on with it? Do you--you mean our comedy of marriage? Why not?
'Rather bear those ills we have than fly to others that we know not of.'
You see I have contracted Tommy's pernicious habit of borrowing from the
classics when I wish to express myself with force and distinction. Let
me go!"

Courtlandt's grip on her shoulders tightened. His face was white. There
was a rigidity about his jaws which should have warned her.

"Flippancy won't save you. You are to listen to me now, girl."

"While you boast to me again as you did last night that you had not made
love to another woman? Not a chance!" she twisted away from him and
gained the threshold of her own room. "Don't--don't let me keep you from
your alluring--friend," she flung back at him before she closed and
locked her door on the inside with grating emphasis.

Then she listened with hands clasped tight over her heart. The anger
which was so foreign to her character had been a mere flash in the pan.
Already she was sorry and humiliated and ashamed. She had maintained
always that a girl who could not keep her temper, who wrangled, belonged
in the quarter where shrewish women, with shawls over their heads and
forlorn little babies forever under their feet, fought and brawled.
Hadn't she seen them in her childhood? And she--she who thought herself
superior hadn't been much better under the skin. She could have
scratched Felice's eyes out and as for Steve----

Where was he now? The living-room was portentously still. Had he gone?
Why couldn't she have listened to his explanation, have assumed a
friendliness which this new, disturbing riot in her veins made
impossible as a reality? Her eyes which still smarted with unshed tears
traveled round the dainty, chintz-hung boudoir. In a detached way she
noted that the one picture on the wall, which served as the key-note to
the color scheme of the room, needed straightening. She must speak to
Ming Soy----Her heart hopped to her throat, then did a tail-spin to her
toes as a low, stern voice outside her room commanded:

"Open the door, Jerry."

She stood rigid, motionless.

"Open the door!" there was an undercurrent in Courtlandt's words which
seemed to paralyze her muscles. In a voice the more compelling because
of its repression he threatened, "If you don't open it at once--I'll
break it in!" The shake he gave the barrier between them broke the spell
which held the girl. She turned the key and flung open the door.

With a sudden fierce movement he caught her hands. She had a confused
sense of flinging herself against an inflexible, determined will as she
struggled to free them. She met his steady, dominant eyes.

"Steve! What--what rank melodrama! Are you qualifying for the movies?"
she essayed a nonchalant tone which to her hypercritical senses seemed
horribly frightened. "What--what do you want?"

"That door open. Nothing else--now," Courtlandt answered as he dropped
her hands and turned away.




CHAPTER XXI


"What shall we do this afternoon, Jerry?" Peggy Glamorgan asked as she,
her sister and Benson sat at luncheon three hours later. The table was
spread on the broad, shadowy veranda on the north side of the
ranch-house. The sun beat down upon fields and white roads; insects
droned lazily to the accompaniment of the faint roar of the stream
swollen by the heavy rain of the night before. "Ye gods! If here isn't
Abdul the Great," she mocked saucily as Courtlandt appeared at the door.
"Are his humble slaves to be honored with his presence at the noonday
meal? Allah, oh Allah! Jerry, aren't you overwhelmed at this tribute to
our charms?"

"Can't a man lunch beneath his own vine and fig tree without creating a
panic? From now on I shall make it a daily rite that you may get used to
it," Steve laughed. He laid his hand on Benson's shoulder. "Tommy,
you're a hero. Slippy Bend is agog with admiration. What the populace
can't think of to say in praise of you the deputy sheriff supplies in
the most colorful vernacular the locality produces. Don't run; I won't
say any more," as Benson, fiery red, half rose from his chair. Steve
seated himself opposite Jerry.

She observed him resentfully from behind a screen of lashes. He looked
more care-free and debonair than she had ever seen him while her heart
still contracted suffocatingly at any thought of the morning. It was
just like a man, nothing went deep, she thought. Ming Soy fluttered
about in devoted anticipation of his needs; Peggy poured cream into his
tea with a lavish hand. Benson laughed.

"You're a master tactician, old dear. You let your light shine upon us
but seldom and behold the devotion when you do appear. Alas, 'Maidens,
like moths, are ever caught by glare.' I'll say your beatific expression
would put the twinkle-twinkle-little-star effect out of business. Got a
load off your mind, haven't you? Slowman tells me that the Shorthorns
are back to a hoof, that our temperamental late manager is being
securely, if not luxuriously accommodated with quarters in the jail and
that--that Mrs. Denbigh is en route to the effete East via Slippy Bend.
Is my information correct?" He stole a surreptitious glance at Jerry
who, with the aid of a pink-tipped finger, was nonchalantly sailing rose
petal boats on the sea of her crystal finger-bowl.

"It is. The tangle of the last few months is straightening out. From
now on I'll subscribe to that bit of philosophy of Doc Rand's, 'Things
have a marvelous, unbelievable way of coming right.' The late
unpleasantness has resulted in one thing: we have an all-American outfit
on the Double O ranch on whose honor I'd stake my last dollar. They may
come of varied and contending races but when it comes to ideals of
service and loyalty to the nation, they're united. Next week I'm going
to Uncle Nick's camp in the mountains to inspect the silver mine, and
incidentally to fish. There is a lake there where the trout are so thick
they form bread-lines to get a chance at the bait."

"You tell 'em!" jeered Benson.

"It's a fact. I want to shake the memory of the last two months, to get
away so that I can come back and make a fresh start. I'll leave you in
charge of the ranch, Tommy."

"'When Caesar says, "Do this," it is performed.'"

"What's on for this afternoon? Let's do something. I want to get
yesterday out of my mind."

"Miss Glamorgan and I thought--I thought--that if you didn't need me,
we'd ride over to Buzzard's Hollow; that spot seems to be occupying
stage center now. I'll personally conduct you and Mrs. Steve over the
abandoned aeroplane if you'll mosey along with us."

Jerry tried to control a shudder. She wondered if she could ever again
hear the name of the hollow without seeing a close-up of Beechy and
Ranlett and that mutilated calf. She sensed Courtlandt's quick look at
her and answered hurriedly:

"Don't count me in. I shan't ride again until--until I have forgotten
the hours I spent in the saddle yesterday. Buzzard's Hollow as an
objective leaves me cold. If no one else wants the roadster I shall
drive over to the B C to inquire for Mrs. Carey. Mother Eagan may allow
me to see the baby."

Jerry could have cheerfully bitten out her too confiding tongue when an
hour later she found Steve waiting beside the roadster at the front
door. He had changed from his usual riding togs to sport clothes. He
reddened under her surprised eyes.

"Have you gone saddle shy too?" she asked flippantly to conceal her
frightened suspicion that he was going with her.

"No, but I must see Beechy and as you were going to Bear Creek I thought
we'd go along together."

"But--I--would rather----"

"Get in, please. It will take time to get to the B C by the road in this
car, which is far from being the last word in speed-limit violators."

With teeth set in her lips to steady them Jerry stepped into the
roadster. What motive was back of Steve's decision to accompany her, she
wondered, as the car shot smoothly ahead under his skilful driving. She
regarded him covertly from under the brim of her rose-colored hat. He
was gazing straight ahead, his brows knit in a slight frown. The silence
between them seemed heavy with portent. She must say something. From far
off came a faint whistle.

"Is that the east-bound train?" she asked and then wished fervently that
she hadn't.

"Yes. Just pulling out of Slippy Bend. Felice is on it. Jerry, I want
you to understand that the situation you stumbled on this morning was
merely some of her theatrical clap-trap. When I told her about Phil she
flung herself into my arms and pretended to be overcome."

"Don't apologize," the girl mocked, then as she caught a dangerous gleam
in his eyes she abandoned thin ice. "Has Mr. Denbigh----"

"I got Phil's mother on long distance soon after midnight. Gerrish took
him--went East in the early morning."

"Was he a dear friend of yours?"

"No. He was in my class at college but he was always aloof, unfriendly.
While the rest of us were in athletics he was devoting himself to his
violin. We thought him indifferent but I understand now that his
position had corroded his sensitive heart."

"Position? Wasn't he of the elect?"

"Sarcasm doesn't suit you, Jerry. Phil's father and mother were among
the great army of incompatibles. His heritage of misery as the child of
divorced parents, tossed back and forth between their habitations,
ruined his life but--but he made royally good at the last, poor chap."

Jerry blinked furiously to rid her eyes of the tears which had flooded
them at his tone. They rode on in silence. The road ran through the
fragrant, chill quiet of dense pines, which creaked and swayed a
mournful note in the slight breeze. When they emerged into the
willow-fringed, sun dappled road again Courtlandt spoke.

"I want you to tell me everything that happened yesterday, Jerry. I--I
know now that that elopement stuff was all a bluff but--but it was an
infernally dangerous one. It was lucky for Greyson that an interest
bigger than any individual was concerned in last night's work
or--forgive me for my lack of faith and tell me what happened, won't
you, girl?"

Jerry snatched at her stampeding composure and dragged it back. Her
answer was tantalizingly slow.

"That 'won't you' was a master stroke of diplomacy. Machiavellian, I
call it. Had you demanded an explanation I wouldn't have given it. Where
shall I commence?" She saw him stiffen at her levity but he had his
voice well in hand as he answered:

"At the beginning."

"Only on condition that there are no interruptions."

"Then be merciful and tell your story quickly."

Jerry began the recital of her adventures with her determination to
amuse Peggy. She forgot herself, she was quite unconscious of the
unevenness of Courtlandt's driving as the story unrolled of its own
momentum. He did not interrupt with words but at times the car shot
forward as though propelled by a furious impulse. They passed Jim Carey
herding some lank-bodied, big-kneed calves before him. He waved and
shouted a greeting. As they entered the cottonwoods by the Bear Creek
corral Jerry described the culmination of the wild ride on the track,
her stunned amazement when she had heard Steve's furious exclamation
behind her. Her voice was traitorously unsteady as she added:

"'O ye of little faith!' Even when I saw you there, knew that you had
heard my explanation, I--I thought that--that somehow you would
understand."

"Why would I? You had told me that you had been engaged to Greyson. You
never can tell what a man will do when he is mad about a woman, when he
loves her crown of shining hair, her eyes, her smile, the--the tip of
her bare pink foot." Memory sent a surge of red to his face. He brought
the car to a stop in front of the shack. Beechy, his face white, his
hair redder and more rampant than ever, called eagerly from the open
window at which he sat bolstered up in a chair.

"Wait for me at the house. I shan't be long."

Jerry nodded dumbly, and drove on. Courtlandt's words had set her heart
beating a furious call to arms. What had he meant? Who was mad about a
woman? He or Greyson? Whose bare pink foot? Involuntarily she tucked one
suede shoe under her, her cheeks flushed warmly. He--he couldn't have
meant her.

In the living-room of the cabin Jerry held the cocoon of soft flannel,
which in turn held the Carey baby, in her arms. She laid her soft cheek
against his.

"Isn't--isn't he the dearest!" she crooned as she felt the sweet warm
thrill of his satin-soft skin against her face. Doc Rand, before the
fireplace, flapping his long black coat-tails in time to his
heel-and-toe teeter, blinked at her through lenses which had become
unaccountably misty. His russet-apple face showed a new set of lines.

"I--I am so glad that he arrived safely," Jerry observed innocently,
punctuating the words with cooing sounds directed at the crease in the
baby's neck. Indignation at the possible slur on his professional skill
served as a safety valve for Rand's emotion which had been so
unaccountably stirred by the sight of the lovely girl with the child in
her arms. He had seen the same thing unmoved hundreds of times before, a
woman with her face snuggled against a baby's.

"Arrived safely! Why shouldn't he arrive safely in a home like this?
Take it from me, the Almighty's going to pick his mothers carefully from
now on. He's just had a demonstration of what ought not to happen in
poor Denbigh's case. He'll find a way to make women realize what a great
and glorious privilege it is to be the mother of an American citizen."

"Of either sex?" probed the girl mischievously.

"You've said it. The female of the species has got to take her share in
the responsibility of the government. If we have another war, God grant
we don't, the young women will be drafted to work, just as the men will
to fight. There'll be no feminine slackers infesting the neighborhoods
of the camps next time."

"Hear! Hear!" applauded a low voice from the door. Doc Rand beamed at
the newcomer paternally.

"Steve, you scoffer, come in! Take a look at what your wife has in that
bundle."

Jerry wished passionately that she were a thousand miles away when Steve
loomed over her but she didn't intend to let him suspect it. She pulled
away the soft blanket that he could see better and challenged
breathlessly:

"Isn't he a sweetie peach?"

"Isn't he--it--very red?" Courtlandt stammered in honest embarrassment
that he could not conscientiously voice a paean of praise of the beauty
of the Carey heir. Doc Rand indulged in a denatured guffaw.

"Lord-ee, Steve, your mental propeller showered sparks of originality
that time, didn't it? The baby isn't appreciated here; you'd better take
him back to his mother, Mrs. Eagan," as the nurse, beaming with
full-moon effulgence, entered the room. Jerry smiled up at the portly
woman as she laid the little bundle in her arms.

"Give my love to Mrs. Carey and tell her that he is the loveliest baby I
ever saw," she whispered eagerly.

"What do you think about Beechy, Doc?" Courtlandt asked as Mrs. Eagan
left the room.

"He'll pull through now that he has eased his conscience by confession.
I had to let him talk and unburden his mind before I could heal his
body."

"I've just come from the shack. Carl told me that if--it hadn't been for
Denbigh he would have been in on that deal last night."

"Yes, Steve, but Beechy was out of the hold-up for good when he found
that it was government money they were after. He was prepared to take
what was coming to him for quitting; he knew mighty well that a man
couldn't double-cross Ranlett and--and live, that is, not if the Skunk
knew it. He knows now that Denbigh saved him. Beechy isn't bad at
heart. He and a lot of others like him are suffering from an acute
attack of disillusionment, that's all. They'd been fed up on
'Hail-to-the-conquering-hero' stuff and when the shouting was over and
they spent weary months in hospital forgotten by the world at large, and
in particular by that female portion of it that had fed them, written to
them, married them during the war, do you wonder that they were ready
for any deviltry that was afoot? I don't. But you see, in spite of his
loud talk, when Beechy came slam up against the proposition of
defrauding his government, ungrateful government that he thought it,
there was nothing doing. He couldn't get away with it. He'll never be
able to do much hard work, but there must be a place for him."

"A place for him! If he ever escapes my clutches again he's more
slippery than I think him."

"Go to it, Steve! Even you and I salaam when he speaks in that tone,
don't we, Mrs. Jerry?"

The sun had dropped behind the mountains; fields and foot-hills lay
luminous and still as Courtlandt drove the roadster past the corral at
the Double O. A bunch of horses was being turned into the pastures for
the night feed. They nipped, they kicked, they rolled. The riders who
were driving them out tolerated their antics patiently, with an
occasional admonitory "Hi-yew!" Jerry turned to look after them.

"I wish Peg could have seen that. In this light, in their broad-brimmed
hats, their colored neckerchiefs, their gloves, their costumes are
picturesque. They would have satisfied even her craving for local
color."

Courtlandt drove on to the ranch-house without answering. It had been a
silent ride home. Jerry had been tensely apprehensive of what might be
coming when they started, but as the man beside her drove steadily with
only an occasional inquiry as to her comfort, she had relaxed and
allowed her thoughts to drift.

Steve followed her into the living-room. As she opened the door of her
boudoir he spoke from where he stood under his mother's portrait.

"Come here, Jerry! Please----" he added with a smile as she hesitated.

"I must dress for dinner. I----"

"There is plenty of time. I want to talk to you. Come here!" As a safe
and sane compromise she took refuge behind the back of the wing-chair.

"Well?" she queried defensively.

With startling suddenness he caught her hands and drew her to the hearth
beside him.

"That's better! I can't talk to you when you are so far away." His grip
on her hands tightened. "Jerry, do you remember that day at the Manor
when Uncle Nick's will was read? You----"

"The--the day we decided to make the detour? It--it has proved an
adventure, hasn't it?" she interrupted in a breathless attempt to gain
time. Courtlandt ignored the question.

"You asked me if I wanted his fortune. Do you also remember my answer?"
Then as with downcast cast eyes she nodded assent, he repeated, "'More I
ever wanted anything, except one, in my life.' You thought that that one
thing was Felice and I--I let you think so. I meant you, Jerry. No, you
can't go, you've got to listen now. We've been playing at cross purposes
long enough. I wanted Uncle Nick's money because I wanted to be rid of
the humiliating load of obligation we Courtlandts had shouldered. I
wanted to meet you on equal terms. I loved you the first time I saw you
in your shimmering orchid gown with the great fan which you wielded with
the air of an empress. Who was I to tell you so? You wouldn't have
believed me, you would have despised me as a hypocrite. I had no money,
nothing but debts to offer you. But if I hadn't loved you nothing could
have forced me, nothing could have tempted me to ask you to marry me. On
the way in to meet you that first night, I promised Sir Peter that if in
any way you were repellent to me, I would let your father take
possession of our property. I--I--well, I had to bluff some to my father
going home to cover my bowled-over condition. I don't ask for anything
now, I only want a promise that you won't close your heart against
me--that you will--oh, what's the use--you must love me!"

The girl looked down upon the head pressed against her hands then up at
the tender eyes of the woman above the mantel. Were they misted or were
there tears in her own eyes? She choked back a sound that was half
laugh, half sob as she observed with tantalizing charm:

"Of course when you say 'must,' O Abdul the Great----" Before she could
finish the sentence Steve had her crushed in his arms.

"It's your own fault, Mr. Tommy Benson. I told you that I shouldn't----"

It was Peggy's voice at the door. In breathless haste Jerry freed
herself from Courtlandt's arms. He caught her hands and drew her back.
His voice was tenderly exultant, his eyes disconcertingly possessive as
he reminded huskily:

"About that honeymoon I promised to show you, Mrs. Courtlandt----Can I
interest you in a silver mine?"




CHAPTER XXII


The two men were in striking contrast. Glamorgan, massive, shrewd-eyed,
of big affairs and world interests and Peter Courtlandt patrician,
dreamy-eyed, who dwelt largely in the realm of books and art, were
smoking on the terrace of the Manor. They could look down the
box-bordered paths of the garden to where stone steps led to a small
landing on the shore of the river. A tender swung at its moorings.
Motor-boats and steam-boats plied busily back and forth on the water
which rippled into scales of gold. From a man-o'-war anchored
down-stream came the sound of a ship's band. The sun was setting with
lavish prodigality of color, spreading great swaths of crimson and gold
and violet above the hills. One steady brilliant star shone in the west.
From the garden drifted the scent of heliotrope. The light breeze
stirred the awning over the terrace, gently lifted the soft rings of
white hair on Peter Courtlandt's head, impertinently flicked the sheets
of the letter Glamorgan held.

Courtlandt withdrew his eyes from the river and looked at his guest.
The large man was smiling broadly, at his thoughts, doubtless, as his
eyes were fixed unseeingly on the star. His host suddenly remembered
that he had not seen the oil-king smile like that since Jerry and Steve
had left the Manor; he had appeared like a man spiritually burdened.
Could his furious indignation because his daughter had gone West with
her husband have accounted for his gravity? Courtlandt tossed the
remains of his cigar over the terrace wall and addressed his companion.

"You said that you had a letter to read to me," he suggested.
Glamorgan's eyes flashed to his--was there a hint of tears in them?--the
smile on his lips spread and spread until his host was reminded of the
moon in all the glory of its fullness. He laughed in sympathy. "It must
be amusing, if one judges by your expression." The oil-king indulged in
a throaty chuckle; it sounded like the delight of a boy in some
satisfactorily accomplished bit of mischief.

"It isn't the letter which is so amusing, though I'll hand it to Peg
when it comes to expression that has punch, it is what I can read
between the lines. Listen to what she writes and you'll understand." He
settled huge horn-rimmed eye-glasses in place and began to read from the
letter in his hand.

     "DEAR DAD:

     "By this time you must have received my letter about the near
     hold-up, _poor_ Mr. Denbigh, Beechy, Tommy (Benson the Bluffer
     the outfit call him now) and your she's-a-hero daughter. I
     penned that throbbing epistle on the morning after our return
     from Slippy Bend when my mind was a red hot molten mass of
     _thrills_. Well, to quote Scripture (don't give me the credit
     of this, Tommy Benson reeled it off when I expressed amazement
     at what was happening and I copied it from the Bible), 'There
     be three things which are too wonderful for me, yea, four which
     I know not: The way of an eagle in the air; the way of a
     serpent upon a rock; the way of a ship in the midst of the sea;
     and the way of a man with a maid.' It is that last phrase which
     has to do with the situation here. When I first came Steve had
     _about_ as much expression in his face when he looked at Jerry
     as has that granite civil war veteran in the park at Oil City.
     Jerry was as bad. They were the nearest to cold-storage
     newly-weds that I had ever seen. Now--ye gods!--when I look up
     and see Steve's eyes on Jerry my heart _stampedes_. I feel as
     though I had made the unpardonable break of opening a closed
     door without knocking. Jerry behaves a little better. She keeps
     her eyes to heel but her _voice_----

     "'The devil hath not in all his quiver's choice an arrow for
     the heart like a sweet voice.' Tommy Benson again. He is a more
     liberal education than English 27 at College. I asked him if the
     lines were Shakespeare or the Bible and he said that a gentleman
     named Byron wrote them but that I was _not_ to cultivate his
     acquaintance indiscriminately. I have sent east for _all_ of Mr.
     Byron's poems. But I digress.

     "To return to Steve and Jerry. They start on a camping trip
     to-morrow, up into the wilderness to inspect some silly old
     silver mine. Steve has sent Marcelle O'Neil ahead with
     packhorses, guns, provisions, and rods. Thank heaven they
     didn't ask _me_ to go. I'm to stay at the Double O with Tommy
     Benson's mother, who arrived yesterday. She's a stylish-stout
     of about fifty with wonderful skin and teeth, eyes that make
     you feel you'd like to _drown_ in them they are so like
     clear-blue pools; hair like dull gold and a smile--well, I
     walked _straight_ into her arms when she turned it on me.

     "I wrote you that Jerry seemed terribly short of money. You
     _must_ do something about it. Her Tiffany flame has found an
     Alexandrite that she wants. When I told her the price, a
     _miserable_ little two thousand dollars, you would have thought
     I'd mentioned the amount of the Allied war debt. Why don't you
     send her the ring?

     "From my limited observation (there's been something doing
     every minute since I set foot on the Double O), I should say
     that ranching was a great life when the coyotes didn't steal
     your chickens, when the Shorthorns didn't break away, or when a
     disgruntled fragment of your outfit didn't shoot up the
     neighborhood. Jerry says that she and Steve will spend their
     winters at the Manor after they have been here a year,
     something to do with Uncle Nick's will, _you_ probably know
     about it. Steve will take Tommy Benson into partnership and he
     will be manager-in-chief. It's a _great_ chance for Tommy. He
     is the poor-man-with-a-future type. He's _super_-sensitive
     about his lack of money, though. Bruce Greyson brought a
     perfectly _stunning_ man to call the other day, heir to a
     fortune. Of course I had to be nice to him. Ye gods! You should
     have seen Tommy while he was here. After the plutocrat had
     departed I asked him why he had looked as though he could have
     crunched mountain lion in the raw. He just _glowered_ and
     quoted:

     "'O what a world of vile, ill favoured faults
     Looks handsome in three thousand pounds a year.'

     "From my window I can see Sandy's flivver in the distance; that
     means that I must wind up this letter--pronto. That carrier is
     the _funniest_ sight. He wears a tall white hat and a linen
     duster and looks for all the world like the Mad Hatter in
     'Alice.' I almost expect to hear him snap when he sees me
     coming, 'Your hair needs cutting,' the way the Hatter does in
     the story. _Heaps_ of love,

     "PEG.

     "P.S. Praise be! Careful Cosmetics has departed. That's what I
     call the Denbigh woman."

Glamorgan removed his glasses and threw back his head with a chuckling
laugh. Courtlandt laughed with him.

"Peggy certainly wields a facile pen. I--I am glad of what she writes
about Steve and Jerry. I confess that I feared----"

"I want to talk to you about that, Courtlandt," interrupted Glamorgan
eagerly. "It has taken all my strength of will and then some, not to
take you into my confidence but--but I promised your brother-in-law
that----"

"Nicholas Fairfax!"

"I don't wonder you are astonished. You see, from the moment I saw him I
fell for him. I'd known a lot of men like him. Chestnut burrs outside
but sound and sweet in their hearts. He must have felt that I understood
him for he hadn't been at the Manor long before he confided his doubts
and hopes to me. Old Nick was keener than you or I. He hadn't been here
twenty-four hours before he had sized up the situation between Jerry and
Steve. He realized that they were heading straight for the matrimonial
reefs where so many of their friends had come to grief. I guess he
realized also that I was a little more anxious for that marriage to turn
out a success than even he was. The Lord only knows the burden of guilt
I would have carried the rest of my life if it hadn't."

"You wouldn't have been the only one."

"I know that, Courtlandt. Nick realized that he hadn't long to live. He
felt sure of Jerry's loyalty, that all that was needed to right matters
between the two was to give Steve money and make the girl dependent on
him. He knew the boy well enough to know that his pride would stand
between them as long as Jerry was spending my money. That was where I
came in. He had me cast for the stern parent act. I was to oppose
Jerry's going to the ranch. Opposition, he figured, would steel her
determination to go with her husband, if she was tempted to waver. I
knew my girl better. I knew that she would keep the covenant but I
consented to please Old Nick. I almost caved in the day she went away,
when I saw her watch the gate wistfully until the train started, but I
kept out of sight."

"Who would have believed to have seen Nick in those last days that he
was planning so shrewdly."

"That wasn't all he planned. He had the dickens of a time with Greyson.
He wanted him to invite Mrs. Denbigh to the X Y Z for the summer as a
sort of acid test for Steve."

"What a diabolical idea."

"I'm not so sure of that. His argument was that if the woman had the
slightest lure for Steve----"

"But she hadn't," Courtlandt denied sharply.

"I couldn't see how she could have, but then vamps aren't in my line.
Nick was possessed by the idea. Greyson kicked like a steer against it
but finally gave in. You can't tell. Fairfax may have had other reasons
up his sleeve. Denbigh was at the Bear Creek ranch. He might have
thought, have hoped, that he and Felice would come together again. In
spite of his ill-health and absorption in his ranch, your brother-in-law
was a profound thinker on social and economic questions. I spent hours
arguing with him. He contended that the great weakness of the American
people lay in their lack of stability, that they could be swept along on
a wave of enthusiasm but that when it came to the steady tide of
determination they wouldn't even tread water; that lack of stability was
at the root of the divorce habit, which if it wasn't checked would
insidiously undermine the character of the nation."

"He was right, but," with a profound sigh of relief, "it looks as though
Jerry and Steve had escaped the reefs, doesn't it?"

"I'll say it does," with a reminiscent chuckle. "Now you know why I
gloated over that letter of Peg's. The child didn't realize how she was
easing my mind. Do you know, I like what she writes about that Benson
boy. Next to a man with family background I have a deep and abiding
respect for a man who has the best in literature at his tongue's end.
He's a rare bird these days."

"Then you wouldn't object if Peg and Tommy--he hasn't the kind of family
you want behind him."

"I don't care who Peggy marries if he is clean and upstanding, with
self-respect and love for my girl. I'm through meddling, though I'm not
sorry for what I did with Jerry. She stood nine chances out of ten of
marrying a fortune-hunter; Steve wasn't that; he had to be forcibly fed
with money. In spite of that fact I haven't drawn an easy breath since
Nick told me his suspicions, until now." He glanced at the letter. "I
think I'll send that Alexandrite as a sort of peace offering."

"You're too late. Steve wired to me to have it sent."

"He did! Then you knew all I have been telling you?"

"No. I only put two and two together when I got Steve's message."

Glamorgan rose, shook himself like a bear and extended one hand to his
host. His voice was curiously rough as he laid the other on his shoulder
and confided awkwardly:

"Good-night! I--I hope they'll name the first son Peter, Courtlandt."

Courtlandt put his free hand on the big man's shoulder. His laugh was
unsteady but his voice was vibrant with feeling as he countered:

"And I--I hope they'll name the second one--Dan. Good-night." They stood
shaking hands furiously, laughing boyishly, and patting one another's
shoulders as the lights flashed up on the river and night rang down the
curtain of dusk.




BOOKS BY EMILIE LORING


    THE TRAIL OF CONFLICT
    HERE COMES THE SUN!
    A CERTAIN CROSSROAD
    THE SOLITARY HORSEMAN
    GAY COURAGE
    SWIFT WATCH
    LIGHTED WINDOWS
    FAIR TOMORROW
    UNCHARTED SEAS
    HILLTOPS CLEAR
    WE RIDE THE GALE!
    WITH BANNERS
    IT'S A GREAT WORLD
    GIVE ME ONE SUMMER
    AS LONG AS I LIVE
    TODAY IS YOURS
    HIGH OF HEART
    ACROSS THE YEARS
    THERE IS ALWAYS LOVE
    WHERE BEAUTY DWELLS
    STARS IN YOUR EYES
    RAINBOW AT DUSK
    WHEN HEARTS ARE LIGHT AGAIN
    KEEPERS OF THE FAITH
    BEYOND THE SOUND OF GUNS
    BRIGHT SKIES
    BECKONING TRAILS
    I HEAR ADVENTURE CALLING
    LOVE CAME LAUGHING BY
    TO LOVE AND TO HONOR
    FOR ALL YOUR LIFE
    MY DEAREST LOVE
    I TAKE THIS MAN
    THE SHADOW OF SUSPICION
    WHAT THEN IS LOVE
    LOOK TO THE STARS
    BEHIND THE CLOUD
    WITH THIS RING
    HOW CAN THE HEART FORGET
    THROW WIDE THE DOOR
    FOLLOW YOUR HEART