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by William MacLeod Raine


  CHAPTER XIII

  OLD ACQUAINTANCES

  "You wanted to see me?"

  The voice had the soft, slow intonation of the South, and it held somequality that haunted the memory. Or so Melissy thought afterward, but thatmay have been because of its owner's appeal to sympathy.

  "If you are Miss Yarnell."

  "Ferne Yarnell is my name."

  "Mr. Bellamy asked me to call on you. He sent this letter ofintroduction."

  A faint wave of color beat into the cheek of the stranger. "You know Mr.Bellamy then?"

  "Yes. He would have been here to meet you, but he met with an accidentyesterday."

  "An accident!" There was a quick flash of alarm in the lifted face.

  "He told me to tell you that it was not serious. He was shot in the arm."

  "Shot. By whom?" She was ashen to the lips.

  "By a man called Duncan Boone."

  "I know him. He is a dangerous man."

  "Yes," Melissy nodded. "I don't think we know how very dangerous he is. Wehave all been deceived in him till recently."

  "Does he live here?"

  "Yes. The strange thing is that he and Mr. Bellamy had never met in thiscountry until a few days ago. There used to be some kind of a feud betweenthe families. But you must know more about that than I do."

  "Yes. My family is involved in the feud. Mr. Bellamy is a distant cousinof mine."

  "So he told me."

  "Have you known him long?"

  Melissy thought that there was a little more than curiosity in the quicklook the young woman flung at her.

  "I met him when he first came here. He was lost on the desert and I foundhim. After that we became very unfriendly. He jumped a mining claimbelonging to my father. But we've made it up and agreed to be friends."

  "He wrote about the young lady who saved his life."

  Melissy smiled. "Did he say that I was a cattle and a stage rustler?"

  "He said nothing that was not good."

  "I'm much obliged to him," the Western girl answered breezily. "And now dotell me, Miss Yarnell, that you and your people have made up your mind tostay permanently."

  "Father is still looking the ground over. He has almost decided to buy astore here. Yet he has been in the town only a day. So you see he mustlike it."

  Outside the open second story window of the hotel Melissy heard a voicethat sounded familiar. She moved toward the window alcove, and at the sametime a quick step was heard in the hall. Someone opened the door of theparlor and stood on the threshold. It was the man called Boone.

  Melissy, from the window, glanced round. Her first impulse was to speak;her second to remain silent. For the Arkansan was not looking at her. Hismocking ribald gaze was upon Ferne Yarnell.

  That young woman looked up from the letter of introduction she was readingand a startled expression swept into her face.

  "Dunc Boone," she cried.

  The man doffed his hat with elaborate politeness. "Right glad to meet upwith you again, Miss Ferne. You was in short dresses when I saw you last.My, but you've grown pretty. Was it because you heard I was in Arizonathat you came here?"

  She rose, rejecting in every line of her erect figure his impudentgeniality, his insolent pretense of friendliness.

  "My brother is in the hotel. If he learns you are here there will betrouble."

  A wicked malice lay in his smiling eyes. "Trouble for him or for me?" heinquired silkily.

  His lash flicked her on the raw. Hal Yarnell was a boy of nineteen. Thisman had a long record as a gunfighter to prove him a desperate man.Moreover, he knew how hopelessly heart sick she was of the feud that formany years had taken its toll of blood.

  "Haven't you done us enough harm, you and yours? Go away. Leave us alone.That's all I ask of you."

  He came in and closed the door. "But you see it ain't all I ask of you,Ferne Yarnell. I always did ask all I could get of a girl as pretty asyou."

  "Will you leave me, sir?"

  "When I'm through."

  "Now."

  "No, I reckon not," he drawled between half shuttered eyes.

  She moved toward the door, but he was there before her. With a turn of hiswrist he had locked it.

  "This interview quits at my say-so, honey. Think after so many years ofabsence-makes-the-heart-grow-fonder you're going to trample over me like Iwas a kid? Guess again."

  "Unlock that door," she ordered.

  "When I get good and ready. We'll have our talk out first."

  Her eyes blazed. She was white as paper though she faced him steadily. Buther heart wavered. She dared not call out for fear her brother might hearand come to her assistance. This she must forestall at all costs.

  A heel clicked in the alcove. For the first time Norris, or Boone as theSouthern girl had called him, became aware of a third party in the room.Melissy was leaning out of the window. She called down to a man standingon the street.

  "Jack, come up here quick. I want you."

  Boone took a step forward. "You here, 'Lissie Lee?"

  She laughed scornfully. "Yes, I'm here. An unexpected pleasure, isn'tit?"

  "Do you know Ferne Yarnell?" he asked, for once taken aback.

  "It looks as if I do."

  His quick furtive eye fell upon an envelope on the floor. He picked it up.Upon it was written, "Miss Ferne Yarnell," and in the corner, "IntroducingMiss Lee."

  A muscle twitched in his face. When he looked up there was an expressionof devilish malignity on it.

  "Mr. Bellamy's handwriting, looks like." He turned to the Arizona girl."Then I didn't put the fellow out of business."

  "No, you coward."

  The angry color crept to the roots of his hair. "Better luck next time."

  The door knob rattled. Someone outside was trying to get in. Those insidethe room paid no obvious attention to him. The venomous face of thecattle detective held the women fascinated.

  "When Dick Bellamy ambushed Shep he made a hell of a bad play of it. Myold mammy used to say that the Boones were born wolves. I can see whereshe was right. The man that killed my brother gets his one of these daysand don't you forget it. You just stick around. We're due to shoot thisthing out, him and me," the man continued, his deep-socketed eyes burningfrom the grim handsome face.

  "Open the door," ordered a voice from the hall, shaking the knobviolently.

  "You don't know he killed your brother. Someone else may have done it. Andit may have been done in self defence," the Arkansas girl said to Boone ina voice so low and reluctant that it appeared the words were wrung fromher by torture.

  "Think I'm a buzzard head? Why for did he run away? Why did he jump forthe sandhills soon as the word came to arrest him?" He snapped togetherhis straight, thin-lipped mouth, much as a trap closes on its prey.

  A heavy weight hurtled against the door and shook it to the hinges.Melissy had been edging to the right. Now with a twist of her lissom bodyshe had slipped past the furious man and turned the key.

  Jack Flatray came into the room. His glance swept the young women andfastened on the man. In the crossed eyes of the two was the thrust ofrapiers, the grinding of steel on steel, that deadly searching forweakness in the other that duelists employ.

  The deputy spoke in a low soft drawl. "Mornin', Boone. Holding anexecutive session, are you?"

  The lids of the detective narrowed to slits. From the first there had beenno pretense of friendship between these two. There are men who have onlyto look once at each other to know they will be foes. It had been that waywith them. Causes of antagonism had arisen quickly enough. Both dominantpersonalities, they had waged silent unspoken warfare for the leadershipof the range. Later over the favor of Melissy Lee this had grown moreintense, still without having ever been put into words. Now they were faceto face, masks off.

  "Why yes, until you butted in, Mr. Sheriff."

  "This isn't my busy day. I thought I'd just drop in to the meeting."

  "You've made a mistake. We're not holding a cattl
e rustlers' convention."

  "There are so many ladies present I can't hear you, but maybe if you saidit outside I could," the deputy suggested gently, a gleam of steely angerin his eyes.

  "Say it anywhere to oblige a friend," sneered Boone.

  From the moment of meeting neither man had lowered his gaze by thefraction of an inch. Red tragedy was in the air. Melissy knew it. Thegirl from Arkansas guessed as much. Yet neither of them knew how to avertthe calamity that appeared impending. One factor alone saved the situationfor the moment. Flatray had not yet heard of the shooting of Bellamy. Hadhe known he would have arrested Boone on the spot and the latter wouldhave drawn and fought it out.

  Into the room sauntered Lee. "Hello, 'Lissie. Been looking for you anhour, honey. Mornin', Norris. Howdy, Jack! Dad burn yore ornery hide, Iain't see you long enough for a good talk in a coon's age."

  Melissy seized on her father joyfully as an interposition of Providence."Father, this is Miss Yarnell, the young lady I told you about."

  The ranchman buried her little hand in his big paw. "Right glad to meet upwith you, Miss Yarnell. How do you like Arizona by this time? I reckonMelissy has introduced you to her friends. No? Make you acquainted withMr. Flatray. Shake hands with Mr. Norris, Miss Yarnell. Where are you,Norris?"

  The owner of the Bar Double G swung round, to discover for the first timethat harmony was not present. Boone stood back with a sullen vindictiveexpression on his face.

  "Why, what's up, boys?" the rancher asked, his glance passing from one toanother.

  "You ain't in this, Lee," Boone informed him. Then, to Flatray: "See youlater."

  The deputy nodded carelessly. "Any time you like."

  The lank old Confederate took a step forward to call Boone back, butMelissy caught him by the sleeve.

  "Let him go," she whispered emphatically.

  "I know my boss," returned Lee with a laugh.

  "If you're quite through with me, Miss Lee, I'll not intrude longer,"Flatray said.

  "But I'm not," spoke Melissy quickly.

  She did not intend to let him get away to settle his quarrel with Boone.

  "I'm rather busy," he suggested.

  "Your business will have to wait," she came back decisively.

  Lee laughed and clapped Jack on the shoulder. "Might as well know yourboss too, boy."

  Melissy flushed with a flash of temper. "I'm nothing of the kind, dad."

  "Sho! A joke's a joke, girl. That's twice hand-runnin' I get a call-down.You're mighty high-heeled to-day, 'pears like."

  Jack smiled grimly. He understood some things that were hidden from Lee.

 

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