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"Whatell's it to you?"
"All you have to do is say in Farewell that you saw Marie here at Dale's and you'll find out. I'll even go farther than that. I'm tellin' you, Rack, that if anybody finds out in Farewell that Marie was here, or if any accident happens to her--any accident, y'understand--I'll have to take it as evidence that you had to blat.
Fair enough, huh?"
"But supposing somebody else sees her and tells about it?" protested Rack Slimson.
"In that case yo're out of luck," was the unfeeling reply.
"But--" began again Rack Slimson.
"You might try prayer," Racey interrupted. "It would maybe help. You can't tell."
The unhappy Rack Slimson looked toward Mr. Saltoun and Tom Loudon. But there was no aid for him in that quarter. In fact, both men eyed him with frank hostility.
"So you see Marie is kept out of it." Racey laid his final injunction on Rack as the girl in question joined them. "You don't guess this girl is her, do you?"
"Nun-no," declared Rack, hastily. "I don't. She's somebody else for all I care."
"That's the way to talk," Racey said, nodding approvingly. "You keep right on holding to those sentiments and I wouldn't be surprised if you lived quite a long while."
Marie showed her teeth in a laugh. "I ain't a-scared of any such breed of chunker as Rack Slimson," said she, calmly. "I can manage him my own self. You goin' back to Farewell, Racey?"
"Right now."
"Then I'll be going with you."
"You'll do no such a thing. There's no sense in yore running into trouble thataway. You'll come in to Farewell after me and from another direction."
"Sh.o.r.e, I was going to. I was only gonna ride along with you part way."
Racey shook his head. "Wouldn't be sensible, that wouldn't. Somebody might see you. You come along later like I told you. Me and Rack will travel together."
"I was goin' to the 88," protested Rack.
"Yo're mistaken," Racey told him, firmly. "Yo're going to Farewell--with me. Ain't you?"
"I s'pose so," Rack Slimson capitulated.
"Then c'mon. Get a-goin'."
Marie watched the two men ride away together. "Ain't he the h.e.l.lion?"
she said, admiringly, to Tom and Old Salt. "Bound to have his own way if it kills him."
At this there was a slight sound from the direction of the garden.
Marie and the two men turned to look. Trowel in hand Molly Dale was kneeling on one knee between the brook and a row of blue cama.s.s. But she was not doing any weeding. She was staring fixedly at Marie. While a man could breathe twice Molly stared at Marie, then she dropped her head and became very busy with the trowel.
Marie's sniff was audible at thirty feet. She picked up her reins and nodded to Tom Loudon and Mr. Saltoun.
"See you later," said she, and started her horse in the direction of Farewell. But she whirled him back before he had taken three steps.
"I clean forgot he was yore hoss," she said, apologetically, to Mr.
Saltoun. "I'll have to go back to the Bar S first."
"Tha.s.sall right," Mr. Saltoun made haste to a.s.sure her. "You take him right along. One of the boys can ride yore hoss to town on the next trip an' ride this one back."
"That _will_ save me a lot of trouble," said Marie, turning her bewildered mount a second time.
"She ain't ridin' straight toward Farewell," said Tom Loudon, rolling a slow cigarette.
"Aw, she's sensible," yawned Mr. Saltoun. "She'll do like Racey says all right. She must like him a lot. I--Whatsa matter with _you_?"
For Tom Loudon had contrived to make a long leg and give Mr. Saltoun a vigorous kick on the ankle.
"I guess we'll be goin'," dodged Tom Loudon, and then took off his hat to Miss Dale. "So long, miss. If you--uh--You know where the Bar S is in case--just in case, y' understand."
He touched his horse with the spur and moved off with as much dignity as a colonel of cavalry. Not so Mr. Saltoun. He had been kicked, and the kick hurt, and he was very red and ruffled in consequence.
Swearing under his breath he followed his son-in-law.
"Here," he demanded, crowding his horse alongside, "what did yuh kick me for?"
Tom Loudon looked over his shoulder before replying. The ranch-house was a hundred yards in the rear and Molly Dale was not in sight. He deliberately turned his head and looked his father-in-law straight in the eye. "What did I kick you for?" he repeated. "I kicked you because you didn't have any sense."
This was too much. "Huh? Because I--Lookit here, you--"
"'Tsall right, 'tsall right. You didn't have any sense. Here's Molly Dale thinks Racey is the only fellah ever rode a cayuse, and you have to blat out so she can hear you, 'Marie must sh.o.r.e like him a lot'."
"Well, what of it? I don't see--"
"You don't? Wait till I tell Kate."
"It ain't necessary to tell my daughter," Mr. Saltoun remonstrated, hurriedly. "I suppose my saying that about Marie might give Molly a wrong idea maybe about Racey. But how do you know she likes Racey? You been talking to her? Did she tell you so?"
"I ain't, and she didn't. I been talking to Kate. She told me. Don't ask me how she knows. She says she knows, and that's enough for me.
You can't fool a woman in things like that."
"You can't fool 'em in anything," Mr. Saltoun corroborated, bitterly.
"I sh.o.r.e oughtn't to said that about Racey and Marie. I'll go right back and tell Molly it ain't so."
Mr. Saltoun started to wheel his horse, but Tom Loudon halted that manoeuvre.
"You gotta let it go now," said he. "If you tell her you didn't mean what you said she sh.o.r.e _will_ think it's true."
"We-ell, if you think I'd better not, I won't," Mr. Saltoun a.s.sented, doubtfully. "But I wouldn't say anything to Kate if I was you."
"Then I won't," said Tom Loudon, his tongue in his cheek.
"Where you think yo're going?" Mr. Saltoun queried presently. "This ain't the way to the ranch."
"I know it ain't. It's the way to Farewell."