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"That will be fine!"
"Will I be missed?"
He shrank from this personal talk. He remembered painfully their last meeting. He was acutely conscious of how it had ended, and knew that the incident of his abrupt departure must have set her wondering.
"Yes," he answered, meeting her answer truthfully, "I shall miss you. I like you."
Such a thing from him was indeed a jolt, and Gail stooped to pick up a wisp of hay to cover her confusion.
"But I'm sorry," he said, "I must be going."
She looked up in surprise. The horse buyer still talked and the discussion bade fair to go on for a long time.
"You're not starting?" she asked.
"Oh, no. Not for half an hour, anyhow. But you see, the Captain found a pup-hole yesterday and wrenched his leg a little. Not much, but I don't want him to work when anything's wrong. So I'm leaving him behind and I must look after him. Will you excuse me? Good-by!"
She was so slow in extending her hand that he was forced to reach down for it. It was limp within his, and she merely mumbled a response to his hasty farewell.
Gail watched him swing off toward the corral, saw him enter through the gate and put his face against the stallion's neck. She strolled toward the car, feet heavy.
"He wouldn't even ask me to go--go with him. He cares more about--that horse--than--"
She clenched her fists and whispered: "I hate you! I hate you!" Then mounting to the seat and tucking the robe about her ankles, she blew her nose, wiped her eyes, and in a voice strained high said: "No, I don't, either."
VB and Kelly took their bunch down the gulch at a spanking trot. Most of the stock was fairly gentle and they had little difficulty. They planned to stop at a deserted cabin a few miles north of Ranger where a pa.s.sable remnant of fenced pasture still remained. They reached the place at dark and made a hasty meal, after which VB rolled in, but his companion roped a fresh horse and made on to Ranger for a few hours'
diversion.
It was nearly dawn when Kelly returned with a droll account of the night's poker, and although VB was for going on early, wanting to be rid of the task, the other insisted on sleeping.
"I don't want to get too far, anyhow," he said. "Those waddies like to rimmed me last night. Got all I had except what's in old Betsy, the belt. I'm goin' back to-night and get their scalp!"
It was noon before they reached Ranger and swung to the east.
"Oh, I'll be back to-night and get you fellows!" Kelly called to a man who waved to him from the saloon.
VB held his gaze in the opposite direction. He knew that even the sight of the place might raise the devil in him again.
A man emerged from one of the three isolated shacks down on the river bank. It was Rhues. The two rode slowly, for the buyer was in no mood for fast travel, and for a long time Rhues stood there following them with his eyes.
At dusk the hors.e.m.e.n turned the bunch into a corral and prepared to spend the night with beds spread in the ruin of a cabin near the inclosure. Before the bed-horses had been relieved of their burdens a cowboy rode along who was known to Kelly, and arrangements were made for him to take VB's place on the morrow.
"Well, then, all you want me to do is to stay here to-night to see that things don't go wrong. Is that it?" VB asked.
"Yep-- Oh, I don't know," with a yawn. "I guess I won't sit in that game to-night. I'll get some sleep. Mebby if I did go back I'd only have to dig up part of my bank here." He patted his waist. "You can go on home if you want to."
VB was glad to be released, for he could easily reach the ranch that night. He left Kelly talking with the cowboy, making their plans for the next day, and struck across the country for Jed's ranch.
Left alone, the horse buyer munched a cold meal. Then, shivering, he crept into his thick bed and slept. An hour pa.s.sed--two--three.
A horse dropped slowly off a point near the corral. A moment later two more followed. One rider dismounted and walked away after a low, hoa.r.s.e whisper; another pushed his horse into the highway and stood still, listening; the third held the pony that had been left riderless.
A figure, worming its way close to the ground, crawled up on the sleeping horse buyer. It moved silently, a yard at a time; then stopped, raised its head as though to listen; on again, ominously, so much a part of the earth it covered that it might have been just the ridge raised by a giant mole burrowing along under the surface. It approached to within three yards of the sleeping man; to within six feet; three; two.
Then it rose to its knees slowly, cautiously, silently, and put out a hand gently, lightly feeling the outlines of the blankets. A shoot of orange scorched the darkness--and another, so close together that the flame was almost continuous. The blankets heaved, trembled, settled.
The man on his knees hovered a long moment, revolver ready, listening intently. Not a sound--even the horses seemed to be straining their ears for another break in the night.
The man reached out a hand and drew the blankets away from the figure beneath, thrusting his face close. The starlight filtered in and he drew a long, quivering breath--not in hate or horror, but in surprise.
He got to his feet and listened again. Then he moved into the open, over the way he had come. After a dozen quick, stealthy paces he stopped and turned back. He unb.u.t.toned the jumper about the figure under the blankets, unb.u.t.toned the shirt, felt quickly about the waist, fumbled a moment, and jerked out a long, limp object. Again he strode catlike into the open, and as he went he tucked the money belt into his shirt-front.
VB rode straight to the ranch. He made a quick ride and arrived before ten.
"Mighty glad Kelly got that man," he told Jed. "I'm like a fish out of water away from the Captain."
At dusk the next day a horseman rode up the gulch to Jed's outfit. The old man stood in the doorway, watching him approach.
"h.e.l.lo, d.i.c.k!" he called, recognizing the deputy from Sand Creek.
"How's things, Jed?"
"Better'n fine."
Worth left his horse and entered the cabin.
"VB around?" he asked.
"Uh-huh; out in th' corral foolin' with th' Captain."
d.i.c.k dropped to a chair and pushed his hat back. He looked on the other a moment, then asked: "What time did VB get home last night?"
Jed showed evident surprise, but answered: "Between half-past nine an'
ten."
"Notice his horse?"
"Saw him this mornin'. Why?"
"Was it a hard ride th' boy made?"
"No--sure not. I rode th' pony down to th' lower pasture myself this afternoon."
Worth drew a deep breath and smiled as though relieved.
"Bein' 'n officer is mighty onpleasant sometimes," he confessed. "I knew it wasn't no use to ask them questions, but I had to do it--'cause I'm a deputy." With mouth set, Jed waited for the explanation he knew must come.
"Kelly was killed while he slept last night."