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Delphi Collected Works of Max Brand US

Page 259

by Max Brand


  “If you come down to that,” said the boy coldly, “there ain’t much wasted this side of the Rockies. It’s about as scarce as rain.”

  He continued in an almost kindly tone: “What would you do with a wild man like Red Pierre? Run along; git out of here; grab your horse, and beat it back to civilization; there ain’t no place for you up here in the wilderness.”

  “What would I do with him?” cried the girl. “Love him!”

  It seemed as though her words, like whips, lashed the boy back to his murderous anger. He lay with blazing eyes, watching her for a moment, too moved to speak. At last he propped himself on one elbow, shook a small, white-knuckled fist under the nose of Mary, and cried: “Then what would he do with you?”

  He went on: “Would he wear you around his neck like a watch charm?”

  “I’d bring him back with me — back into the East, and he would be lost among the crowds and never suspected of his past.”

  “You’d bring Pierre anywhere? Say, lady, that’s like hearing the sheep talk about leading the wolf around by the nose. If all the men in the ranges can’t catch him, or make him budge an inch out of the way he’s picked, do you think you could stir him?”

  Jeering laughter shook him; it seemed that he would never be done with his laughter, yet there was a hint of the hysterically mirthless in it. It came to a jarring stop.

  He said: “D’you think he’s just bein’ driven around by chance? Lady, d’you think he even wants to get out of this life of his? No, he loves it! He loves the danger. D’you think a man that’s used to breathing in a whirlwind can get used to living in calm air? It can’t be done!”

  And the girl answered steadily: “For every man there is one woman, and for that woman the man will do strange things.”

  “You poor, white-faced, whimpering fool,” snarled the boy, gripping at his gun again, “d’you dream that you’re the one that’s picked out for Pierre? No, there’s another!”

  “Another? A woman who—”

  “Who loves Pierre — a woman that’s fit for him. She can ride like a man; she can shoot almost as straight and as fast as Pierre; she can handle a knife; and she’s been through hell for Pierre, and she’ll go through it again. She can ride the trail all day with him and finish it less fagged than he is. She can chop down a tree as well as he can, and build a fire better. She can hold up a train with him or rob a bank and slip through a town in the middle of the night and laugh with him about it afterward around a campfire. I ask you, is that the sort of a woman that’s meant for Pierre?”

  And Mary answered, with bowed head: “She is.”

  She cried instantly afterward, cutting short the look of wild triumph on the face of the boy: “But there’s no such woman; there’s no one who could do these things! I know it!”

  The boy sprang to his feet, flushing as red as the girl was white.

  “You fool, if you’re blind and got to have your eyes open to see, look at the woman!”

  And she tore the wide-brimmed sombrero from her head. Down past the shoulders flooded a mass of blue-black hair. The firelight flickered and danced across the silken shimmer of it. It swept wildly past the waist, a glorious, night-dark tide in which the heart of a strong man could be tangled and lost. With quivering lips Jacqueline cried: “Look at me! Am I worthy of him?”

  Short step by step Mary went back, staring with fascinated eyes as one who sees some devilish, midnight revelry, and shrinks away from it lest the sight should blast her. She covered her eyes with her hands but instantly strong grips fell on her wrists and her hands were jerked down from her face. She looked up into the eyes of a beautiful tigress.

  “Answer me — your yellow hair against mine — your child fingers against my grip — are you equal with me?”

  But the strength of Jacqueline faded and grew small; her arms fell to her side; she stepped back, with a rising pallor taking the place of the red. For Mary, brushing her hands, one gloved and one bare, before her eyes, returned the stare of the mountain girl with equal scorn. A mighty loathing filled up her veins in place of strength.

  “Tell me,” she said, “was — was this man living with you when he came to me and — and made speeches — about love?”

  “Bah! He was living with me. I tell you, he came back and laughed with me about it, and told me about your baby-blue eyes when they filled with tears; laughed and laughed and laughed, I tell you, as I could laugh now.”

  The other twisted her hands together, moaning: “And I have followed him, even to the place where he keeps his — woman? Ah, how I hate myself: how I despise myself. I’m unclean — unclean in my own eyes!”

  “Wait!” called Jacqueline. “You are leaving too soon. The night is cold.”

  “I am going. There is no need to gibe at me.”

  “But wait — he will want to see you! I will tell him that you have been here — that you came clear up the valley of the Old Crow to see him and beg him on your knees to love you — he’ll be angry to have missed the scene!”

  But the door closed on Mary as she fled with her hands pressed against her ears.

  CHAPTER 31

  JACQUELINE RAN TO the door and threw it open.

  “Ride down the valley!” she cried. “That’s right. He’s coming up, and he’ll meet you on the way. He’ll be glad — to see you!”

  She saw the rider swing sharply about, and the clatter of the galloping hoofs died out up the valley; then she closed the door, dropped the latch, and, running to the middle of the room, threw up her arms and cried out, a wild, shrill yell of triumph like the call of the old Indian brave when he rises with the scalp of his murdered enemy dripping in his hand.

  The extended arms she caught back to her breast, and stood there with head tilted back, crushing her delight closer to her heart.

  And she whispered: “Pierre! Mine, mine! Pierre!”

  Next she went to the steel mirror on the wall and looked long at the flushed, triumphant image. At length she started, like one awakening from a happy dream, and hurriedly coiled the thick, soft tresses about her head. Never before had she lingered so over a toilet, patting each lock into place, twisting her head from side to side like a peacock admiring its image.

  Now she looked about hungrily for a touch of color and uttered a little moan of vexation when she saw nothing, till her eyes, piercing through the gloom of a dim corner, saw a spray of autumn leaves, long left there and still stained with beauty. She fastened them at the breast of her shirt, and so arrayed began to cook. Never was there a merrier cook, not even some jolly French chef with a heart made warm with good red wine, for she sang as she worked, and whenever she had to cross the room it was with a dancing step. Spring was in her blood, warm spring that sets men smiling for no cause except that they are living, and rejoicing with the whole awakening world.

  So it was with Jacqueline. Ever and anon as she leaned over the pans and stirred the fire she raised her head and remained a moment motionless, waiting for a sound, yearning to hear, and each time she had to look down again with a sigh.

  As it was, he took her by surprise, for he entered with the soft foot of the hunted and remained an instant searching the room with a careful glance. Not that he suspected, not that he had not relaxed his guard and his vigilance the moment he caught sight of the flicker of light through the mass of great boulders, but the lifelong habit of watchfulness remained with him.

  Even when he spoke face to face with a man, he never seemed to be giving more than half his attention, for might not someone else approach if he lost himself in order to listen to any one voice? He had covered half the length of the room with that soundless step before she heard, and rose with a glad cry: “Pierre!”

  Meeting that calm blue eye, she checked herself mightily.

  “A hard ride?” she asked.

  “Nothing much.”

  He took the rock nearest the fire and then raised a glance of inquiry.

  “I got cold,” she said, “and rolled it over
.”

  He considered her and then the rock, not with suspicion, but as if he held the matter in abeyance for further consideration; a hunted man and a hunter must keep an eye for little things, must carry an armed hand and an armed heart even among friends. As for Jacqueline, her color had risen, and she leaned hurriedly over a pan in which meat was frying.

  “Any results?” she asked.

  “Some.”

  She waited, knowing that the story would come at length.

  He added after a moment: “Strange how careless some people get to be.”

  “Yes?” she queried.

  “Yes.”

  Another pause, during which he casually drummed his fingers on his knee. She saw that he must receive more encouragement before he would tell, and she gave it, smiling to herself. Women are old in certain ways of understanding in which men remain children forever.

  “I suppose we’re still broke, Pierre?”

  “Broke? Well, not entirely. I got some results.”

  “Good.”

  “As a matter of fact, it was a pretty fair haul. Watch that meat,

  Jack; I think it’s burning.”

  It was hardly beginning to cook, but she turned it obediently and hid another slow smile. Rising, she passed behind his chair, and pretended to busy herself with something near the wall. This was the environment and attitude which would make him talk most freely, she knew.

  “Speaking of careless men,” said Pierre, “I could tell you a yarn,

  Jack.”

  She stood close behind him and made about his unconscious head a gesture of caress, the overflow of an infinite tenderness.

  “I’d sure like to hear it, Pierre.”

  “Well, it was like this: I knew a fellow who started on the range with a small stock of cattle. He wasn’t a very good worker, and he didn’t understand cattle any too well, so he didn’t prosper for quite a while. Then his affairs took a sudden turn for the better; his herd began to increase. Nobody understood the reason, though a good many suspected, but one man fell onto the reason: our friend was simply running in a few doggies on the side, and he’d arranged a very ingenious way of changing the brands.”

  “Pierre—”

  “Well?”

  “What does ‘ingenious’ mean?”

  “Why, I should say it means ‘skillful, clever,’ and it carries with it the connotation of ‘novel.’”

  “It carries the con-conno — what’s that word, Pierre?”

  “I’m going to get some books for you, Jack, and we’ll do a bit of reading on the side, shall we?”

  “I’d love that!”

  He turned and looked up to her sharply.

  He said: “Sometimes, Jack, you talk just like a girl.”

  “Do I? That’s queer, isn’t it? But go on with the story.”

  “He changed the brands very skillfully, and no one got the dope on him except this one man I mentioned; and that man kept his face shut. He waited.

  “So it went on for a good many years. The herd of our friend grew very rapidly. He sold just enough cattle to keep himself and his wife alive; he was bent on making one big haul, you see. So when his doggies got to the right age and condition for the market, he’d trade them off, one fat doggie for two or three skinny yearlings. But finally he had a really big herd together, and shipped it off to the market on a year when the price was sky-high.”

  “Like this year?”

  “Don’t interrupt me, Jack!”

  From the shadow behind him she smiled again.

  “They went at a corking price, and our friend cleared up a good many thousand — I won’t say just how much. He sank part of it in a ruby brooch for his wife, and shoved the rest into a satchel.

  “You see how careful he’d been all those years while he was piling up his fortune? Well, he began to get careless the moment he cashed in, which was rather odd. He depended on his fighting power to keep that money safe, but he forgot that while he’d been making a business of rustling doggies and watching cattle markets, other men had been making a business of shooting fast and straight.

  “Among others there was the silent man who’d watched and waited for so long. But this silent man hove alongside while our rich friend was bound home in a buckboard.

  “‘Good evening!’ he called.

  “The rich chap turned and heard; it all seemed all right, but he’d done a good deal of shady business in his day, and that made him suspicious of the silent man now. So he reached for his gun and got it out just in time to be shot cleanly through the hand.

  “The silent man tied up that hand and sympathized with the rich chap; then he took that satchel and divided the paper money into two bundles. One was twice the size of the other, and the silent man took the smaller one. There was only twelve thousand dollars in it. Also, he took the ruby brooch for a friend — and as a sort of keepsake, you know. And he delivered a short lecture to the rich man on the subject of carelessness and rode away. The rich man picked up his gun with his left hand and opened fire, but he’d never learned to shoot very well with that hand, so the silent man came through safe.”

  “That’s a bully story,” said Jack. “Who was the silent man?”

  “I think you’ve seen him a few times, at that.”

  She concealed another smile, and said in the most businesslike manner: “Chow-time, Pierre,” and set out the pans on the table. “By the way,” he said easily, “I’ve got a little present for you, Jack.”

  And he took out a gold pin flaming with three great rubies.

  CHAPTER 32

  SHE MERELY STARED, like a child which may either burst into tears or laughter, no one can prophesy which.

  He explained, rather worried: “You see, you are a girl, Jack, and I remembered that you were pleased about those clothes that you wore to the dance in the Crittenden schoolhouse, and so when I saw that pin I — well—”

  “Oh, Pierre!” said a stifled voice. “Oh, Pierre!”

  “Jack, you aren’t angry, are you? See, when you put it at the throat it doesn’t look half bad!”

  And to try it, he pinned it on her shirt. She caught both his hands, kissed them again and again, and then buried her face against them as she sobbed. If the heavens had opened and a cloudburst crashed on the roof of the house, he would have been less astounded.

  “What is it?” he cried. “Damn it all — Jack — you see — I meant—”

  But she tore herself away and flung herself face down on the bunk, sobbing more bitterly than ever. He followed, awe-stricken — terrified.

  He touched her shoulder, but she shrank away and seemed more distressed than ever. It was not the crying of a weak woman: these were heartrending sounds, like the sobbing of a man who has never before known tears.

  “Jack — perhaps I’ve done something wrong—”

  He stammered again: “I didn’t dream I was hurting you—”

  Then light broke upon him.

  He said: “It’s because you don’t want to be treated like a silly girl; eh, Jack?”

  But to complete his astonishment she moaned: “N-n-no! It’s b-b-because you — you n-n-never do t-treat me like a g-g-girl, P-P-Pierre!”

  He groaned heartily: “Well, I’ll be damned!”

  And because he was thoughtful he strode away, staring at the floor. It was then that he saw it, small and crumpled on the floor. He picked it up — a glove of the softest leather. He carried it back to Jacqueline.

  “What’s this?”

  “Wh-wh-what?”

  “This glove I found on the floor?”

  The sobs decreased at once — broke out more violently — and then she sprang up from the bunk.

  “Pierre, I’ve acted a regular chump. Are you out with me?”

  “Not a bit, old-timer. But about this glove?”

  “Oh, that’s one of mine.”

  She took it and slipped it into the bosom of her shirt — the calm blue eye of Pierre noted.

  He said: “We’ll eat
and forget the rest of this, if you want, Jack.”

  “And you ain’t mad at me, Pierre?”

  “Not a bit.”

  There was just a trace of coldness in his tone, and she knew perfectly why it was there, but she chose to ascribe it to another cause.

  She explained: “You see, a woman is just about nine tenths fool,

  Pierre, and has to bust out like that once in a while.”

  “Oh!” said Pierre, and his eyes wandered past her as though he found food for thought on the wall.

  She ventured cautiously, after seeing that he was eating with appetite: “How does the pin look?”

  “Why, fine.”

  And the silence began again.

  She dared not question him in that mood, so she ventured again: “The old boy shooting left-handed — didn’t he even fan the wind near you?”

  “That was another bit of carelessness,” said Pierre, but his smile held little of life. “He might have known that if he had shot close — by accident — I might have turned around and shot him dead — on purpose. But when a man stops thinking for a minute, he’s apt to go on for a long time making a fool of himself.”

  “Right,” she said, brightening as she felt the crisis pass away, “and that reminds me of a story about—”

  “By the way, Jack, I’ll wager there’s a more interesting story than that you could tell me.”

  “What?”

  “About how that glove happened to be on the floor.”

  “Why, partner, it’s just a glove of my own.”

  “Didn’t know you wore gloves with a leather as soft as that.”

  “No? Well, that story I was speaking about runs something like this—”

  And she told him a gay narrative, throwing all her spirit into it, for she was an admirable mimic. He met her spirit more than half-way, laughing gaily; and so they reached the end of the story and the end of the meal at the same time. She cleared away the pans with a few motions and tossed them clattering into a corner. Neat housekeeping was not numbered among the many virtues of Jacqueline. “Now,” said Pierre, leaning back against the wall, “we’ll hear about that glove.”

 

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