The B. M. Bower Megapack

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The B. M. Bower Megapack Page 190

by B. M. Bower


  Pop beckoned, and Dave reined his horse that way and stopped at the shed door. The two talked for a minute and Dave rode on, passing Bud with a curt nod. Pop came over to where Bud stood leaning against the corral.

  “How are you feeling, dad?” Bud grinned absently.

  “Purty stiff an’ sore, boy—my rheumatics is bad today.” Pop winked solemnly. “I spoke to Dave about you wantin’ a job, and I guess likely Dave’ll put you on. They’s plenty to do—hayin’ comin’ on and all that.” He lowered his voice mysteriously, though there was no man save Bud within a hundred feet of him. “Don’t ye go ’n talk horses—not yet. Don’t let on like yore interested much. I’ll tell yuh when to take ’em up.”

  The men came riding in from the hayfield, some in wagons, two astride harnessed work-horses, and one long-legged fellow in chaps on a mower, driving a sweaty team that still had life enough to jump sidewise when they spied Bud’s pack by the corral. The stage driver sauntered up and spoke to the men. Bud went over and began to help unhitch the team from the mower, and the driver eyed him sharply while he grinned his greeting across the backs of the horses.

  “Pop says you’re looking for work,” Dave Truman observed, coming up. “Well, if you ain’t scared of it, I’ll stake yuh to a hayfork after dinner. Where yuh from?”

  “Just right now, I’m from the Muleshoe. Bud Birnie’s my name. I was telling dad why I quit.”

  “Tell me,” Dave directed briefly. “Pop ain’t as reliable as he used to be. He’d never get it out straight.”

  “I quit,” said Bud, “by special request.” He pulled off his gloves carefully and held up his puffed knuckles. “I got that on Dirk Tracy.”

  The driver of the mower shot a quick, meaning glance at Dave, and laughed shortly. Dave grinned a little, but he did not ask what had been the trouble, as Bud had half expected him to do. Apparently Dave felt that he had received all the information he needed, for his next remark had to do with the heat. The day was a “weather breeder”, he declared, and he was glad to have another man to put at the hauling.

  An iron triangle beside the kitchen door clamored then, and Bud, looking quickly, saw the slim little woman with the big, troubled eyes striking the iron bar vigorously. Dave glanced at his watch and led the way to the house, the hay crew hurrying after him.

  Fourteen men sat down to a long table with a great shuffling of feet and scraping of benches, and immediately began a voracious attack upon the heaped platters of chicken and dumplings and the bowls of vegetables. Bud found a place at the end where he could look into the kitchen, and his eyes went that way as often as they dared, following the swift motions of the little woman who poured coffee and filled empty dishes and said never a word to anyone.

  He was on the point of believing her a daughter of the house when a square-jawed man of thirty, or thereabout, who sat at Bud’s right hand, called her to him as he might have called his dog, by snapping his fingers.

  She came and stood beside Bud while the man spoke to her in an arrogant undertone.

  “Marian, I told yuh I wanted tea for dinner after this. D’you bring me coffee on purpose, just to be onery? I thought I told yuh to straighten up and quit that sulkin’. I ain’t going to have folks think——”

  “Oh, be quiet! Shame on you, before everyone!” she whispered fiercely while she lifted the cup and saucer.

  Bud went hot all over. He did not look up when she returned presently with a cup of tea, but he felt her presence poignantly, as he had never before sensed the presence of a woman. When he was able to swallow his wrath and meet calmly the glances of these strangers he turned his head casually and looked the man over.

  Her husband, he guessed the fellow to be. No other relationship could account for that tone of proprietorship, and there was no physical resemblance between the two. A mean devil, Bud called him mentally, with a narrow forehead, eyes set too far apart and the mouth of a brute. Someone spoke to the man, calling him Lew, and he answered with rough good humor, repeating a stale witticism and laughing at it just as though he had not heard others say it a hundred times.

  Bud looked at him again and hated him, but he did not glance again at the little woman named Marian; for his own peace of mind he did not dare. He thought that he knew now what it was he had seen in the depth of her eyes, but there seemed to be nothing that he could do to help.

  That evening after supper Honey Krause called to him when he was starting down to the bunk-house with the other men. What she said was that she still had his guitar and mandolin, and that they needed exercise. What she looked was the challenge of a born coquette. In the kitchen dishes were rattling, but after they were washed there would be a little leisure, perhaps, for the kitchen drudge. Bud’s impulse to make his sore hands an excuse for refusing evaporated. It might not be wise to place himself deliberately in the way of getting a hurt—but youth never did stop to consult a sage before following the lure of a woman’s eyes.

  He called back to Honey that those instruments ought to have been put in the hayfield, where there was more exercise than the men could use. “You boys ought to come and see me safe through with it,” he added to the loitering group around him. “I’m afraid of women.”

  They laughed and two or three went with him. Lew went on to the corral and presently appeared on horseback, riding up to the kitchen and leaving his horse standing at the corner while he went inside and talked to the woman he had called Marian.

  Bud was carrying his guitar outside, where it was cooler, when he heard the fellow’s arrogant voice. The dishes ceased rattling for a minute, and there was a sharp exclamation, stifled but unmistakable. Involuntarily Bud made a movement in that direction, when Honey’s voice stopped him with a subdued laugh.

  “That’s only Lew and Mary Ann,” she explained carelessly. “They have a spat every time they come within gunshot of each other.”

  The lean fellow who had driven the mower, and whose name was Jerry Myers, edged carelessly close to Bud and gave him a nudge with his elbow, and a glance from under his eyebrows by way of emphasis. He turned his head slightly, saw that Honey had gone into the house, and muttered just above a whisper, “Don’t see or hear anything. It’s all the help you can give her. And for Lord’s sake don’t let on to Honey like you—give a cuss whether it rains or not, so long’s it don’t pour too hard the night of the dance.”

  Bud looked up at the darkening sky speculatively, and tried not to hear the voices in the kitchen, one of which was brutally harsh while the other told of hate and fear suppressed under gentle forbearance. The harsh voice was almost continuous, the other infrequent, reluctant to speak at all. Bud wanted to go in and smash his guitar over the fellow’s head, but Jerry’s warning held him. There were other ways, however, to help; if he must not drive off the tormentor, then he would call him away. He ignored his bruised knuckles and plucked the guitar strings as if he held a grudge against them, and then began to sing the first song that came into his mind—one that started in a rollicky fashion.

  Men came straggling up from the bunk-house before he had finished the first chorus, and squatted on their heels to listen, their cigarettes glowing like red fingertips in the dusk. But the voice in the kitchen talked on. Bud tried another—one of those old-time favorites, a “laughing coon” song, though he felt little enough in the mood for it. In the middle of the first laugh he heard the kitchen door slam, and Lew’s footsteps coming around the corner. He listened until the song was done, then mounted and rode away, Bud’s laugh following him triumphantly—though Lew could not have guessed its meaning.

  Bud sang for two hours expectantly, but Marian did not appear, and Bud went off to the bunk-house feeling that his attempt to hearten her had been a failure. Of Honey he did not think at all, except to wonder if the two women were related in any way, and to feel that if they were Marian was to be pitied. At that point Jerry overtook him and asked for a match, which gave him an excuse to hold Bud behind the others.

  “Honey lik
e to have caught me, tonight,” Jerry observed guardedly. “I had to think quick. I’ll tell you the lay of the land, Bud, seeing you’re a stranger here. Marian’s man, Lew, he’s a damned bully and somebody is going to draw a fine bead on him some day when he ain’t looking. But he stands in, so the less yuh take notice the better. Marian, she’s a fine little woman that minds her own business, but she’s getting a cold deck slipped into the game right along. Honey’s jealous of her and afraid somebody’ll give her a pleasant look. Lew’s jealous, and he watches her like a cat watches a mouse it’s caught and wants to play with. Between the two of ’em Marian has a real nice time of it. I’m wising you up so you won’t hand her any more misery by trying to take her part. Us boys have learned to keep our mouths shut.”

  “Glad you told me,” Bud muttered. “Otherwise——”

  “Exactly,” Jerry agreed understandingly. “Otherwise any of us would.”

  He stopped and then spoke in a different tone. “If Lew stays off the ranch long enough, maybe you’ll get to hear her sing. Wow-ee, but that lady has sure got the meadow-larks whipped! But look out for Honey, old-timer.”

  Bud laughed unmirthfully. “Looks to me as if you aren’t crazy over Honey,” he ventured. “What has she done to you?”

  “Her?” Jerry inspected his cigarette, listened to the whisper of prudence in his ear, and turned away. “Forget it. I never said a word.” He swept the whole subject from him with a comprehensive gesture, and snorted. “I’m gettin’ as bad as Pop,” he grinned. “But lemme tell yuh something. Honey Krause runs more ’n the post-office.”

  COW-COUNTRY (Part 2)

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  GUILE AGAINST THE WILY

  Bud liked to have his life run along accustomed lines with a more or less perfect balance of work and play, friendships and enmities. He had grown up with the belief that any mystery is merely a synonym for menace. He had learned to be wary of known enemies such as Indians and outlaws, and to trust implicitly his friends. To feel now, without apparent cause, that his friends might be enemies in disguise, was a new experience that harried him.

  He had come to Little Lost on Tuesday, straight from the Muleshoe where his presence was no longer desired for some reason not yet satisfactorily explained to him. You know what happened on Tuesday. That night the land crouched under a terrific electric storm, with crackling swords of white death dazzling from inky black clouds, and ear-splitting thunder close on the heels of it. Bud had known such storms all his life, yet on this night he was uneasy, vaguely disturbed. He caught himself wondering if Lew Morris’s wife was frightened, and the realization that he was worrying about her fear worried him more than ever and held him awake long after the fury of the storm had passed.

  Next day, when he came in at noon, there was Hen, from the Muleshoe, waiting for dinner before he rode back with the mail. Hen’s jaw dropped when he saw Bud riding on a Little Lost hay-wagon, and his eyes bulged with what Bud believed was consternation. All through the meal Bud had caught Hen eyeing him miserably, and looking stealthily from him to the others. No one paid any attention, and for that Bud was rather thankful; he did not want the Little Lost fellows to think that perhaps he had done something which he knew would hang him if it were discovered, which, he decided, was the mildest interpretation a keen observer would be apt to make of Hen’s behavior.

  When he went out, Hen was at his heels, trying to say something in his futile, tongue-tied gobble. Bud stopped and looked at him tolerantly. “Hen, It’s no use—you might as well be talking Chinese, for all I know. If it’s important, write it down or I’ll never know what’s on your mind.”

  He pulled a note-book and a pencil from his vest-pocket and gave them to Hen, who looked at him dumbly, worked his Adam’s apple violently and retreated to his horse, fumbled the mail which was tied in the bottom of a flour sack for safe keeping, sought a sheltered place where he could sit down, remained there a few minutes, and then returned to his horse He beckoned to Bud, who was watching him curiously; and when Bud went over to him said something unintelligible and handed back the note-book, motioning for caution when Bud would have opened the book at once.

  So Bud thanked him gravely, but with a twinkle in his eyes, and waited until Hen had gone and he was alone before he read the message. It was mysterious enough, certainly. Hen had written in a fine, cramped, uneven hand:

  “You bee carful. bern this up and dent let on like you no anything but i warn you be shure bern this up.”

  Bud tore out the page and burned it as requested, and since he was not enlightened by the warning he obeyed Hen’s instructions and did not “let on.” But he could not help wondering, and was unconsciously prepared to observe little things which ordinarily would have passed unnoticed.

  At the dance on Friday night, for instance, there was a good deal of drinking and mighty little hilarity. Bud had been accustomed to loud talk and much horseplay outside among the men on such occasions, and even a fight or two would be accepted as a matter of course. But though several quart bottles were passed around during the night and thrown away empty into the bushes, the men went in and danced and came out again immediately to converse confidentially in small groups, or to smoke without much speech. The men of Burroback Valley were not running true to form.

  The women were much like all the women of cow-country: mothers with small children who early became cross and sleepy and were hushed under shawls on the most convenient bed, a piece of cake in their hands; mothers whose faces were lined too soon with work and ill-health, and with untidy hair that became untidier as the dance progressed. There were daughters—shy and giggling to hide their shyness—Bud knew their type very well and made friends with them easily, and immediately became the centre of a clamoring audience after he had sung a song or two.

  There was Honey, with her inscrutable half smile and her veiled eyes, condescending to graciousness and quite plainly assuming a proprietary air toward Bud, whom she put through whatever musical paces pleased her fancy. Bud, I may say, was extremely tractable. When Honey said sing, Bud sang; when she said play, Bud sat down to the piano and played until she asked him to do something else. It was all very pleasant for Honey—and Bud ultimately won his point—Honey decided to extend her graciousness a little.

  Why hadn’t Bud danced with Marian? He must go right away and ask her to dance. Just because Lew was gone, Marian need not be slighted—and besides, there were other fellows who might want a little of Honey’s time.

  So Bud went away and found Marian in the pantry, cutting cakes while the coffee boiled, and asked her to dance. Marian was too tired, and’ she had not the time to spare; wherefore Bud helped himself to a knife and proceeded to cut cakes with geometrical precision, and ate all the crumbs. With his hands busy, he found the courage to talk to her a little. He made Marian laugh out loud and it was the first time he had ever heard her do that.

  Marian disclosed a sense of humor, and even teased Bud a little about Honey. But her teasing lacked that edge of bitterness which Bud had half expected in retaliation for Honey’s little air of superiority.

  “Your precision in cutting cakes is very much like your accurate fingering of the piano,” she observed irrelevantly, surveying his work with her lips pursed. “A pair of calipers would prove every piece exactly, the same width; and even when you play a Meditation? I’m sure the metronome would waggle in perfect unison with your tempo. I wonder—” She glanced up at him speculatively. “—I wonder if you think with such mathematical precision. Do you always find that two and two make four?”

  “You mean, have I any imagination whatever?” Bud looked away from her eyes—toward the uncurtained, high little window. A face appeared there, as if a tall man had glanced in as he was passing by and halted for a second to look. Bud’s eyes met full the eyes of the man outside, who tilted his head backward in a significant movement and passed on. Marian turned her head and caught the signal, looked at Bud quickly, a little flush creeping into her cheeks.
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  “I hope you have a little imagination,” she said, lowering her voice instinctively. “It doesn’t require much to see that Jerry is right. The conventions are strictly observed at Little Lost—in the kitchen, at least,” she added, under her breath, with a flash of resentment. “Run along—and the next time Honey asks you to play the piano, will you please play Lotusblume? And when you have thrown open the prison windows with that, will you play Schubert’s Ave Maria—the way you play it—to send a breath of cool night air in?”

  She put out the tips of her fingers and pressed them lightly against Bud’s shoulder, turning toward the door. Bud started, stepped into the kitchen, wheeled about and stood regarding her with a stubborn look in his eyes.

  “I might kick the door down, too,” he said. “I don’t like prisons nohow.”

  “No-just a window, thank you,” she laughed.

  Bud thought the laugh did not go very deep. “Jerry wants to talk to you. He’s the whitest of the lot, if you can call that—” she stopped abruptly, put out a hand to the door, gave him a moment to look into her deep, troubled eyes, and closed the door gently but inexorably in his face.

  Jerry was standing at the corner of the house smoking negligently. He waited until Bud had come close alongside him, then led the way slowly down the path to the corrals.

  “I thought I heard the horses fighting,” he remarked. “There was a noise down this way.”

  “Is that why you called me outside?” asked Bud, who scorned subterfuge.

  “Yeah. I saw you wasn’t dancing or singing or playing the piano—and I knew Honey’d likely be looking you up to do one or the other, in a minute. She sure likes you, Bud. She don’t, everybody that comes along.”

  Bud did not want to discuss Honey, wherefore he made no reply, and they walked along in silence, the cool, heavy darkness grateful after the oil lamps and the heat of crowded rooms. As they neared the corrals a stable door creaked open and shut, yet there was no wind. Jerry halted, one hand going to Bud’s arm. They stood for a minute, and heard the swish of the bushes behind the corral, as if a horse were passing through. Jerry turned back, leading Bud by the arm. They were fifty feet away and the bushes were still again before Jerry spoke guardedly.

 

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