Collected Works of Zane Grey

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Collected Works of Zane Grey Page 212

by Zane Grey


  “Hello, there’s the young fellow,” spoke up the burly man. “Mr. Gale, I’m glad to meet you. My name’s Belding.”

  His greeting was as warm as his handclasp was long and hard. Gale saw a heavy man of medium height. His head was large and covered with grizzled locks. He wore a short-cropped mustache and chin beard. His skin was brown, and his dark eyes beamed with a genial light.

  The cowboys were as cordial as if Dick had been their friend for years.

  “Young man, did you run into anything as you came out?” asked Belding, with twinkling eyes.

  “Why, yes, I met something white and swift flying by,” replied Dick.

  “Did she see you?” asked Laddy.

  “I think so; but she didn’t wait for me to introduce myself.”

  “That was Nell Burton, my girl — step-daughter, I should say,” said Belding. “She’s sure some whirlwind, as Laddy calls her. Come, let’s go in and meet the wife.”

  The house was long, like a barracks, with porch extending all the way, and doors every dozen paces. When Dick was ushered into a sitting-room, he was amazed at the light and comfort. This room had two big windows and a door opening into a patio, where there were luxuriant grass, roses in bloom, and flowering trees. He heard a slow splashing of water.

  In Mrs. Belding, Gale found a woman of noble proportions and striking appearance. Her hair was white. She had a strong, serious, well-lined face that bore haunting evidences of past beauty. The gaze she bent upon him was almost piercing in its intensity. Her greeting, which seemed to Dick rather slow in coming, was kind though not cordial. Gale’s first thought, after he had thanked these good people for their hospitality, was to inquire about Mercedes. He was informed that the Spanish girl had awakened with a considerable fever and nervousness. When, however, her anxiety had been allayed and her thirst relieved, she had fallen asleep again. Mrs. Belding said the girl had suffered no great hardship, other than mental, and would very soon be rested and well.

  “Now, Gale,” said Belding, when his wife had excused herself to get supper, “the boys, Jim and Laddy, told me about you and the mix-up at Casita. I’ll be glad to take care of the girl till it’s safe for your soldier friend to get her out of the country. That won’t be very soon, don’t mistake me.... I don’t want to seem over-curious about you — Laddy has interested me in you — and straight out I’d like to know what you propose to do now.”

  “I haven’t any plans,” replied Dick; and, taking the moment as propitious, he decided to speak frankly concerning himself. “I just drifted down here. My home is in Chicago. When I left school some years ago — I’m twenty-five now — I went to work for my father. He’s — he has business interests there. I tried all kinds of inside jobs. I couldn’t please my father. I guess I put no real heart in my work. The fact was I didn’t know how to work. The governor and I didn’t exactly quarrel; but he hurt my feelings, and I quit. Six months or more ago I came West, and have knocked about from Wyoming southwest to the border. I tried to find congenial work, but nothing came my way. To tell you frankly, Mr. Belding, I suppose I didn’t much care. I believe, though, that all the time I didn’t know what I wanted. I’ve learned — well, just lately—”

  “What do you want to do?” interposed Belding.

  “I want a man’s job. I want to do things with my hands. I want action. I want to be outdoors.”

  Belding nodded his head as if he understood that, and he began to speak again, cut something short, then went on, hesitatingly:

  “Gale — you could go home again — to the old man — it’d be all right?”

  “Mr. Belding, there’s nothing shady in my past. The governor would be glad to have me home. That’s the only consolation I’ve got. But I’m not going. I’m broke. I won’t be a tramp. And it’s up to me to do something.”

  “How’d you like to be a border ranger?” asked Belding, laying a hand on Dick’s knee. “Part of my job here is United States Inspector of Immigration. I’ve got that boundary line to patrol — to keep out Chinks and Japs. This revolution has added complications, and I’m looking for smugglers and raiders here any day. You’ll not be hired by the U. S. You’ll simply be my ranger, same as Laddy and Jim, who have promised to work for me. I’ll pay you well, give you a room here, furnish everything down to guns, and the finest horse you ever saw in your life. Your job won’t be safe and healthy, sometimes, but it’ll be a man’s job — don’t mistake me! You can gamble on having things to do outdoors. Now, what do you say?”

  “I accept, and I thank you — I can’t say how much,” replied Gale, earnestly.

  “Good! That’s settled. Let’s go out and tell Laddy and Jim.”

  Both boys expressed satisfaction at the turn of affairs, and then with Belding they set out to take Gale around the ranch. The house and several outbuildings were constructed of adobe, which, according to Belding, retained the summer heat on into winter, and the winter cold on into summer. These gray-red mud habitations were hideous to look at, and this fact, perhaps, made their really comfortable interiors more vividly a contrast. The wide grounds were covered with luxuriant grass and flowers and different kinds of trees. Gale’s interest led him to ask about fig trees and pomegranates, and especially about a beautiful specimen that Belding called palo verde.

  Belding explained that the luxuriance of this desert place was owing to a few springs and the dammed-up waters of the Rio Forlorn. Before he had come to the oasis it had been inhabited by a Papago Indian tribe and a few peon families. The oasis lay in an arroyo a mile wide, and sloped southwest for some ten miles or more. The river went dry most of the year; but enough water was stored in flood season to irrigate the gardens and alfalfa fields.

  “I’ve got one never-failing spring on my place,” said Belding. “Fine, sweet water! You know what that means in the desert. I like this oasis. The longer I live here the better I like it. There’s not a spot in southern Arizona that’ll compare with this valley for water or grass or wood. It’s beautiful and healthy. Forlorn and lonely, yes, especially for women like my wife and Nell; but I like it.... And between you and me, boys, I’ve got something up my sleeve. There’s gold dust in the arroyos, and there’s mineral up in the mountains. If we only had water! This hamlet has steadily grown since I took up a station here. Why, Casita is no place beside Forlorn River. Pretty soon the Southern Pacific will shoot a railroad branch out here. There are possibilities, and I want you boys to stay with me and get in on the ground floor. I wish this rebel war was over.... Well, here are the corrals and the fields. Gale, take a look at that bunch of horses!”

  Belding’s last remark was made as he led his companions out of shady gardens into the open. Gale saw an adobe shed and a huge pen fenced by strangely twisted and contorted branches or trunks of mesquite, and, beyond these, wide, flat fields, green — a dark, rich green — and dotted with beautiful horses. There were whites and blacks, and bays and grays. In his admiration Gale searched his memory to see if he could remember the like of these magnificent animals, and had to admit that the only ones he could compare with them were the Arabian steeds.

  “Every ranch loves his horses,” said Belding. “When I was in the Panhandle I had some fine stock. But these are Mexican. They came from Durango, where they were bred. Mexican horses are the finest in the world, bar none.”

  “Shore I reckon I savvy why you don’t sleep nights,” drawled Laddy. “I see a Greaser out there — no, it’s an Indian.”

  “That’s my Papago herdsman. I keep watch over the horses now day and night. Lord, how I’d hate to have Rojas or Salazar — any of those bandit rebels — find my horses!... Gale, can you ride?”

  Dick modestly replied that he could, according to the Eastern idea of horsemanship.

  “You don’t need to be half horse to ride one of that bunch. But over there in the other field I’ve iron-jawed broncos I wouldn’t want you to tackle — except to see the fun. I’ve an outlaw I’ll gamble even Laddy can’t ride.”

&nb
sp; “So. How much’ll you gamble?” asked Laddy, instantly.

  The ringing of a bell, which Belding said was a call to supper, turned the men back toward the house. Facing that way, Gale saw dark, beetling ridges rising from the oasis and leading up to bare, black mountains. He had heard Belding call them No Name Mountains, and somehow the appellation suited those lofty, mysterious, frowning peaks.

  It was not until they reached the house and were about to go in that Belding chanced to discover Gale’s crippled hand.

  “What an awful hand!” he exclaimed. “Where the devil did you get that?”

  “I stove in my knuckles on Rojas,” replied Dick.

  “You did that in one punch? Say, I’m glad it wasn’t me you hit! Why didn’t you tell me? That’s a bad hand. Those cuts are full of dirt and sand. Inflammation’s setting in. It’s got to be dressed. Nell!” he called.

  There was no answer. He called again, louder.

  “Mother, where’s the girl?”

  “She’s there in the dining-room,” replied Mrs. Belding.

  “Did she hear me?” he inquired, impatiently.

  “Of course.”

  “Nell!” roared Belding.

  This brought results. Dick saw a glimpse of golden hair and a white dress in the door. But they were not visible longer than a second.

  “Dad, what’s the matter?” asked a voice that was still as sweet as formerly, but now rather small and constrained.

  “Bring the antiseptics, cotton, bandages — and things out here. Hurry now.”

  Belding fetched a pail of water and a basin from the kitchen. His wife followed him out, and, upon seeing Dick’s hand, was all solicitude. Then Dick heard light, quick footsteps, but he did not look up.

  “Nell, this is Mr. Gale — Dick Gale, who came with the boys last last night,” said Belding. “He’s got an awful hand. Got it punching that greaser Rojas. I want you to dress it.... Gale, this is my step-daughter, Nell Burton, of whom I spoke. She’s some good when there’s somebody sick or hurt. Shove out your fist, my boy, and let her get at it. Supper’s nearly ready.”

  Dick felt that same strange, quickening heart throb, yet he had never been cooler in his life. More than anything else in the world he wanted to look at Nell Burton; however, divining that the situation might be embarrassing to her, he refrained from looking up. She began to bathe his injured knuckles. He noted the softness, the deftness of her touch, and then it seemed her fingers were not quite as steady as they might have been. Still, in a moment they appeared to become surer in their work. She had beautiful hands, not too large, though certainly not small, and they were strong, brown, supple. He observed next, with stealthy, upward-stealing glance, that she had rolled up her sleeves, exposing fine, round arms graceful in line. Her skin was brown — no, it was more gold than brown. It had a wonderful clear tint. Dick stoically lowered his eyes then, putting off as long as possible the alluring moment when he was to look into her face. That would be a fateful moment. He played with a certain strange joy of anticipation. When, however, she sat down beside him and rested his injured hand in her lap as she cut bandages, she was so thrillingly near that he yielded to an irrepressible desire to look up. She had a sweet, fair face warmly tinted with that same healthy golden-brown sunburn. Her hair was light gold and abundant, a waving mass. Her eyes were shaded by long, downcast lashes, yet through them he caught a gleam of blue.

  Despite the stir within him, Gale, seeing she was now absorbed in her task, critically studied her with a second closer gaze. She was a sweet, wholesome, joyous, pretty girl.

  “Shore it musta hurt?” replied Laddy, who sat an interested spectator.

  “Yes, I confess it did,” replied Dick, slowly, with his eyes on Nell’s face. “But I didn’t mind.”

  The girl’s lashes swept up swiftly in surprise. She had taken his words literally. But the dark-blue eyes met his for only a fleeting second. Then the warm tint in her cheeks turned as red as her lips. Hurriedly she finished tying the bandage and rose to her feet.

  “I thank you,” said Gale, also rising.

  With that Belding appeared in the doorway, and finding the operation concluded, called them in to supper. Dick had the use of only one arm, and he certainly was keenly aware of the shy, silent girl across the table; but in spite of these considerable handicaps he eclipsed both hungry cowboys in the assault upon Mrs. Belding’s bounteous supper. Belding talked, the cowboys talked more or less. Mrs. Belding put in a word now and then, and Dick managed to find brief intervals when it was possible for him to say yes or no. He observed gratefully that no one round the table seemed to be aware of his enormous appetite.

  After supper, having a favorable opportunity when for a moment no one was at hand, Dick went out through the yard, past the gardens and fields, and climbed the first knoll. From that vantage point he looked out over the little hamlet, somewhat to his right, and was surprised at its extent, its considerable number of adobe houses. The overhanging mountains, ragged and darkening, a great heave of splintered rock, rather chilled and affronted him.

  Westward the setting sun gilded a spiked, frost-colored, limitless expanse of desert. It awed Gale. Everywhere rose blunt, broken ranges or isolated groups of mountains. Yet the desert stretched away down between and beyond them. When the sun set and Gale could not see so far, he felt a relief.

  That grand and austere attraction of distance gone, he saw the desert nearer at hand — the valley at his feet. What a strange gray, somber place! There was a lighter strip of gray winding down between darker hues. This he realized presently was the river bed, and he saw how the pools of water narrowed and diminished in size till they lost themselves in gray sand. This was the rainy season, near its end, and here a little river struggled hopelessly, forlornly to live in the desert. He received a potent impression of the nature of that blasted age-worn waste which he had divined was to give him strength and work and love.

  CHAPTER V

  A DESERT ROSE

  BELDING ASSIGNED DICK to a little room which had no windows but two doors, one opening into the patio, the other into the yard on the west side of the house. It contained only the barest necessities for comfort. Dick mentioned the baggage he had left in the hotel at Casita, and it was Belding’s opinion that to try to recover his property would be rather risky; on the moment Richard Gale was probably not popular with the Mexicans at Casita. So Dick bade good-by to fine suits of clothes and linen with a feeling that, as he had said farewell to an idle and useless past, it was just as well not to have any old luxuries as reminders. As he possessed, however, not a thing save the clothes on his back, and not even a handkerchief, he expressed regret that he had come to Forlorn River a beggar.

  “Beggar hell!” exploded Belding, with his eyes snapping in the lamplight. “Money’s the last thing we think of out here. All the same, Gale, if you stick you’ll be rich.”

  “It wouldn’t surprise me,” replied Dick, thoughtfully. But he was not thinking of material wealth. Then, as he viewed his stained and torn shirt, he laughed and said “Belding, while I’m getting rich I’d like to have some respectable clothes.”

  “We’ve a little Mex store in town, and what you can’t get there the women folks will make for you.”

  When Dick lay down he was dully conscious of pain and headache, that he did not feel well. Despite this, and a mind thronging with memories and anticipations, he succumbed to weariness and soon fell asleep.

  It was light when he awoke, but a strange brightness seen through what seemed blurred eyes. A moment passed before his mind worked clearly, and then he had to make an effort to think. He was dizzy. When he essayed to lift his right arm, an excruciating pain made him desist. Then he discovered that his arm was badly swollen, and the hand had burst its bandages. The injured member was red, angry, inflamed, and twice its normal size. He felt hot all over, and a raging headache consumed him.

  Belding came stamping into the room.

  “Hello, Dick. Do you know it’s l
ate? How’s the busted fist this morning?”

  Dick tried to sit up, but his effort was a failure. He got about half up, then felt himself weakly sliding back.

  “I guess — I’m pretty sick,” he said.

  He saw Belding lean over him, feel his face, and speak, and then everything seemed to drift, not into darkness, but into some region where he had dim perceptions of gray moving things, and of voices that were remote. Then there came an interval when all was blank. He knew not whether it was one of minutes or hours, but after it he had a clearer mind. He slept, awakened during night-time, and slept again. When he again unclosed his eyes the room was sunny, and cool with a fragrant breeze that blew through the open door. Dick felt better; but he had no particular desire to move or talk or eat. He had, however, a burning thirst. Mrs. Belding visited him often; her husband came in several times, and once Nell slipped in noiselessly. Even this last event aroused no interest in Dick.

  On the next day he was very much improved.

  “We’ve been afraid of blood poisoning,” said Belding. “But my wife thinks the danger’s past. You’ll have to rest that arm for a while.”

  Ladd and Jim came peeping in at the door.

  “Come in, boys. He can have company — the more the better — if it’ll keep him content. He mustn’t move, that’s all.”

  The cowboys entered, slow, easy, cool, kind-voiced.

  “Shore it’s tough,” said Ladd, after he had greeted Dick. “You look used up.”

  Jim Lash wagged his half-bald, sunburned head, “Musta been more’n tough for Rojas.”

  “Gale, Laddy tells me one of our neighbors, fellow named Carter, is going to Casita,” put in Belding. “Here’s a chance to get word to your friend the soldier.”

  “Oh, that will be fine!” exclaimed Dick. “I declare I’d forgotten Thorne.... How is Miss Castaneda? I hope—”

  “She’s all right, Gale. Been up and around the patio for two days. Like all the Spanish — the real thing — she’s made of Damascus steel. We’ve been getting acquainted. She and Nell made friends at once. I’ll call them in.”

 

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