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The Zane Grey Megapack

Page 489

by Zane Grey


  “I reckon this ’s fur enough,” rejoined Jake, halting and looking back. “No one comin’. An’ there’ll be hell to pay out there. You go on to the house with Miss Lenore.… Will you?”

  “Yes,” replied Dorn.

  “Rustle along, then.… An’ you, Miss Lenore, don’t you worry none about us.”

  Lenore nodded and, holding Dorn’s arm closely, she walked as fast as she could down the lane.

  “I—I kept your coat,” she said, “though I never thought of it—till just now.”

  She was trembling all over, hot and cold by turns, afraid to look up at him, yet immensely proud of him, with a strange, sickening dread. He walked rather dejectedly now, or else bent somewhat from weakness. She stole a quick glance at his face. It was white as a sheet. Suddenly she felt something wet and warm trickle from his arm down into her hand. Blood! She shuddered, but did not lose her hold. After a faintish instant there came a change in her.

  “Are you—hurt?” she asked.

  “I guess—not. I don’t know,” he said.

  “But the—the blood,” she faltered.

  He held up his hands. His knuckles were bloody and it was impossible to tell whether from injury to them or not. But his left forearm was badly cut.

  “The gun cut me.… And he bit me, too,” said Dorn. “I’m sorry you were there.… What a beastly spectacle for you!”

  “Never mind me,” she murmured. “I’m all right now!… But, oh!—”

  She broke off eloquently.

  “Was it you who had the cowboys pull me off him? Jake said, as he broke me loose, ‘For Miss Lenore’s sake!’”

  “It was dad who sent them. But I begged him to.”

  “That was Glidden, the I.W.W. agitator and German agent.… He—just the same as murdered my father.… He burned my wheat—lost my all!”

  “Yes, I—I know, Kurt,” whispered Lenore.

  “I meant to kill him!”

  “That was easy to tell.… Oh, thank God, you did not!… Come, don’t let us stop.” She could not face the piercing, gloomy eyes that went through her.

  “Why should you care?.… Some one will have to kill Glidden.”

  “Oh, do not talk so,” she implored. “Surely, now you’re glad you did not?”

  “I don’t understand myself. But I’m certainly sorry you were there.… There’s a beast in men—in me!… I had a gun in my pocket. But do you think I’d have used it?… I wanted to feel his flesh tear, his bones break, his blood spurt—”

  “Kurt!”

  “Yes!… That was the Hun in me!” he declared, in sudden bitter passion.

  “Oh, my friend, do not talk so!” she cried. “You make me—Oh, there is no Hun in you!”

  “Yes, that’s what ails me!”

  “There is not!” she flashed back, roused to passion. “You had been made desperate. You acted as any wronged man! You fought. He tried to kill you. I saw the gun. No one could blame you.… I had my own reason for begging dad to keep you from killing him—a selfish woman’s reason!… But I tell you I was so furious—so wrought up—that if it had been any man but you—he should have killed him!”

  “Lenore, you’re beyond my understanding,” replied Dorn, with emotion. “But I thank you—for excusing me—for standing up for me.”

  “It was nothing.…Oh, how you bleed!.… Doesn’t that hurt?”

  “I’ve no pain—no feeling at all—except a sort of dying down in me of what must have been hell.”

  They reached the house and went in. No one was there, which fact relieved Lenore.

  “I’m glad mother and the girls won’t see you,” she said, hurriedly. “Go up to your room. I’ll bring bandages.”

  He complied without any comment. Lenore searched for what she needed to treat a wound and ran upstairs. Dorn was sitting on a chair in his room, holding his arm, from which blood dripped to the floor. He smiled at her.

  “You would be a pretty Red Cross nurse,” he said.

  Lenore placed a bowl of water on the floor and, kneeling beside Dorn, took his arm and began to bathe it. He winced. The blood covered her fingers.

  “My blood on your hands!” he exclaimed, morbidly. “German blood!”

  “Kurt, you’re out of your head,” retorted Lenore, hotly. “If you dare to say that again I’ll—” She broke off.

  “What will you do?”

  Lenore faltered. What would she do? A revelation must come, sooner or later, and the strain had begun to wear upon her. She was stirred to her depths, and instincts there were leaping. No sweet, gentle, kindly sympathy would avail with this tragic youth. He must be carried by storm. Something of the violence he had shown with Glidden seemed necessary to make him forget himself. All his whole soul must be set in one direction. He could not see that she loved him, when she had looked it, acted it, almost spoken it. His blindness was not to be endured.

  “Kurt Dorn, don’t dare to—to say that again!”

  She ceased bathing his arm, and looked up at him suddenly quite pale.

  “I apologize. I am only bitter,” he said. “Don’t mind what I say.… It’s so good of you—to do this.”

  Then in silence Lenore dressed his wound, and if her heart did beat unwontedly, her fingers were steady and deft. He thanked her, with moody eyes seeing far beyond her.

  “When I lie—over there—with—”

  “If you go!” she interrupted. He was indeed hopeless. “I advise you to rest a little.”

  “I’d like to know what becomes of Glidden,” he said.

  “So should I. That worries me.”

  “Weren’t there a lot of cowboys with guns?”

  “So many that there’s no need for you to go out—and start another fight.”

  “I did start it, didn’t I?”

  “You surely did,” She left him then, turning in the doorway to ask him please to be quiet and let the day go by without seeking those excited men again. He smiled, but he did not promise.

  For Lenore the time dragged between dread and suspense. From her window she saw a motley crowd pass down the lane to the main road. No harvesters were working. At the noon meal only her mother and the girls were present. Word had come that the I.W.W. men were being driven from “Many Waters.” Mrs. Anderson worried, and Lenore’s sisters for once were quiet. All afternoon the house was lifeless. No one came or left. Lenore listened to every little sound. It relieved her that Dorn had remained in his room. Her hope was that the threatened trouble had been averted, but something told her that the worst was yet to come.

  It was nearly supper-time when she heard the men returning. They came in a body, noisy and loitering, as if reluctant to break away from one another. She heard the horses tramp into the barns and the loud voices of drivers.

  When she went downstairs she encountered her father. He looked impressive, triumphant! His effort at evasion did not deceive Lenore. But she realized at once that in this instance she could not get any news from him. He said everything was all right and that I.W.W. men were to be deported from Washington. But he did not want any supper, and he had a low-voiced, significant interview with Dorn. Lenore longed to know what was pending. Dorn’s voice, when he said at his door, “Anderson, I’ll go!” was ringing, hard, and deadly. It frightened Lenore. Go where? What were they going to do? Lenore thought of the vigilantes her father had organized.

  Supper-time was an ordeal. Dorn ate a little; then excusing himself, he went back to his room. Lenore got through the meal somehow, and, going outside, she encountered Jake. The moment she questioned him she knew something extraordinary had taken place or was about to take place. She coaxed and entreated. For once Jake was hard to manage. But the more excuses he made, the more he evaded her, the greater became Lenore’s need to know. And at last she wore the cowboy out. He could not resist her tears, which began to flow in spite of her.

  “See hyar, Miss Lenore, I reckon you care a heap fer young Dorn—beggin’ your pardon?” queried Jake.

  “Car
e for him!… Jake, I love him.”

  “Then take a hunch from me an’ keep him home—with you—tonight.”

  “Does father want Kurt Dorn to go—wherever he’s going?”

  “Wal, I should smile! Your dad likes the way Dorn handles I.W.W.’s,” replied Jake, significantly.

  “Vigilantes!” whispered Lenore.

  CHAPTER XX

  Lenore waited for Kurt, and stood half concealed behind the curtains. It had dawned upon her that she had an ordeal at hand. Her heart palpitated. She heard his quick step on the stairs. She called before she showed herself.

  “Hello!… Oh, but you startled me!” he exclaimed. He had been surprised, too, at the abrupt meeting. Certainly he had not been thinking of her. His pale, determined face attested to stern and excitable thought.

  He halted before her.

  “Where are you going?” asked Lenore.

  “To see your father.”

  “What about?”

  “It’s rather important,” he replied, with hesitation.

  “Will it take long?”

  He showed embarrassment. “I—He—We’ll be occupied ’most all evening.”

  “Indeed!… Very well. If you’d rather be—occupied—than spend the evening with me!” Lenore turned away, affecting a disdainful and hurt manner.

  “Lenore, it’s not that,” he burst out. “I—I’d rather spend an evening with you than anybody else—or do anything.”

  “That’s very easy to say, Mr. Dorn,” she returned, lightly.

  “But it’s true,” he protested.

  “Come out of the hall. Father will hear us,” she said, and led him into the room. It was not so light in there, but what light there was fell upon his face and left hers in shadow.

  “I’ve made an—an appointment for tonight,” he declared, with difficulty.

  “Can’t you break it?” she asked.

  “No. That would lay me open to—to cowardice—perhaps your father’s displeasure.”

  “Kurt Dorn, it’s brave to give up some things!… And if you go you’ll incur my displeasure.”

  “Go!” he ejaculated, staring at her.

  “Oh, I know!… And I’m—well, not flattered to see you’d rather go hang I.W.W.’s than stay here with me.” Lenore did not feel the assurance and composure with which she spoke. She was struggling with her own feelings. She believed that just as soon as she and Kurt understood each other—faced each other without any dissimulation—then she would feel free and strong. If only she could put the situation on a sincere footing! She must work for that. Her difficulty was with a sense of falsity. There was no time to plan. She must change his mind.

  Her words had made him start.

  “Then you know?” he asked.

  “Of course.”

  “I’m sorry for that,” he replied, soberly, as he brushed a hand up through his wet hair.

  “But you will stay home?”

  “No,” he returned, shortly, and he looked hard.

  “Kurt, I don’t want you mixed up with any lynching-bees,” she said, earnestly.

  “I’m a citizen of Washington. I’ll join the vigilantes. I’m American. I’ve been ruined by these I.W.W.’s. No man in the West has lost so much! Father—home—land—my great harvest of wheat!… Why shouldn’t I go?”

  “There’s no reason except—me,” she replied, rather unsteadily.

  He drew himself up, with a deep breath, as if fortifying himself. “That’s a mighty good reason.… But you will be kinder if you withdraw your objections.”

  “Can’t you conceive of any reason why I—I beg you not to go?”

  “I can’t,” he replied, staring at her. It seemed that every moment he spent in her presence increased her effect upon him. Lenore felt this, and that buoyed up her failing courage.

  “Kurt, you’ve made a very distressing—a terrible and horrible blunder,” she said, with a desperation that must have seemed something else to him.

  “My heavens! What have I done?” he gasped, his face growing paler. How ready he was to see more catastrophe! It warmed her heart and strengthened her nerve.

  The moment had come. Even if she did lose her power of speech she still could show him what his blunder was. Nothing in all her life had ever been a hundredth part as hard as this. Yet, as the words formed, her whole heart seemed to be behind them, forcing them out. If only he did not misunderstand!

  Then she looked directly at him and tried to speak. Her first attempt was inarticulate, her second was a whisper, “Didn’t you ever—think I—I might care for you?”

  It was as if a shock went over him, leaving him trembling. But he did not look as amazed as incredulous. “No, I certainly never did,” he said.

  “Well—that’s your blunder—for I—I do. You—you never—never—asked me.”

  “You do what—care for me?… What on earth do you mean by that?”

  Lenore was fighting many emotions now, the one most poignant being a wild desire to escape, which battled with an equally maddening one to hide her face on his breast.

  Yet she could see how white he had grown—how different. His hands worked convulsively and his eyes pierced her very soul.

  “What should a girl mean—telling she cared?”

  “I don’t know. Girls are beyond me,” he replied, stubbornly.

  “Indeed that’s true. I’ve felt so far beyond you—I had to come to this.”

  “Lenore,” he burst out, hoarsely, “you talk in riddles! You’ve been so strange, yet so fine, so sweet! And now you say you care for me!… Care?… What does that mean? A word can drive me mad. But I never dared to hope. I love you—love you—love you—my God! you’re all I’ve left to love. I—”

  “Do you think you’ve a monopoly on all the love in the world?” interrupted Lenore, coming to her real self. His impassioned declaration was all she needed. Her ordeal was over.

  It seemed as if he could not believe his ears or eyes.

  “Monopoly! World!” he echoed. “Of course I don’t. But—”

  “Kurt, I love you just as much as—as you love me.… So there!”

  Lenore had time for one look at his face before he enveloped her. What a relief to hide her own! It was pressed to his breast very closely. Her eyes shut, and she felt hot tears under the lids. All before her darkened sight seemed confusion, whirling chaos. It seemed that she could not breathe and, strangely, did not need to. How unutterably happy she felt! That was an age-long moment—wonderful for her own relief and gladness—full of changing emotions. Presently Kurt appeared to be coming to some semblance of rationality. He released her from that crushing embrace, but still kept an arm around her while he held her off and looked at her.

  “Lenore, will you kiss me?” he whispered.

  She could have cried out in sheer delight at the wonder of that whisper in her ear. It had been she who had changed the world for Kurt Dorn.

  “Yes—presently,” she replied, with a tremulous little laugh. “Wait till—I get my breath—”

  “I was beside myself—am so yet,” he replied, low voiced as if in awe. “I’ve been lifted to heaven.… It cannot be true. I believe, yet I’ll not be sure till you kiss me.… You—Lenore Anderson, this girl of my dreams! Do you love me—is it true?”

  “Yes, Kurt, indeed I do—very dearly,” she replied, and turned to look up into his face. It was transfigured. Lenore’s heart swelled as a deep and profound emotion waved over her.

  “Please kiss me—then.”

  She lifted her face, flushing scarlet. Their lips met. Then with her head upon his shoulder and her hands closely held she answered the thousand and one questions of a bewildered and exalted lover who could not realize the truth. Lenore laughed at him and eloquently furnished proof of her own obsession, and told him how and why and when it all came about.

  Not for hours did Kurt come back to actualities. “I forgot about the vigilantes,” he exclaimed, suddenly. “It’s too late now.… How the time has flown
!… Oh, Lenore, thought of other things breaks in, alas!”

  He kissed her hand and got up. Another change was coming over him. Lenore had long expected the moment when realization would claim his attention. She was prepared.

  “Yes, you forgot your appointment with dad and the vigilantes. You’ve missed some excitement and violence.”

  His face had grown white again—grave now and troubled. “May I speak to your father?” he asked.

  “Yes,” she replied.

  “If I come back from the war—well—not crippled—will you promise to marry me?”

  “Kurt, I promise now.”

  That seemed to shake him. “But, Lenore, it is not fair to you. I don’t believe a soldier should bind a girl by marriage or engagement before he goes to war. She should be free.… I want you to be free.”

  “That’s for you to say,” she replied, softly. “But for my part, I don’t want to be free—if you go away to war.”

  “If!… I’m going,” he said, with a start. “You don’t want to be free? Lenore, would you be engaged to me?”

  “My dear boy, of course I would.… It seems I am, doesn’t it?” she replied, with one of her deep, low laughs.

  He gazed at her, fascinated, worked upon by overwhelming emotions. “Would you marry me—before I go?”

  “Yes,” she flashed.

  He bent and bowed then under the storm. Stumbling to her, almost on his knees, he brokenly expressed his gratitude, his wonder, his passion, and the terrible temptation that he must resist, which she must help him to resist.

  “Kurt, I love you. I will see things through your eyes, if I must. I want to be a comfort to you, not a source of sorrow.”

  “But, Lenore, what comfort can I find?… To leave you now is going to be horrible!… To part from you now—I don’t see how I can.”

  Then Lenore dared to broach the subject so delicate, so momentous.

  “You need not part from me. My father has asked me to try to keep you home. He secured exemption for you. You are more needed here than at the front. You can feed many soldiers. You would be doing your duty—with honor!… You would be a soldier. The government is going to draft young men for farm duty. Why not you? There are many good reasons why you would be better than most young men. Because you know wheat. And wheat is to become the most important thing in the world. No one misjudges your loyalty.… And surely you see that the best service to your country is what you can do best.”

 

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