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The B. M. Bower Megapack

Page 302

by B. M. Bower


  His eyes went to her and steadied there with the intent expression in them. “Thanks. Cut out the wages, and I’ll take the offer just as it stands,” he told her and pulled his hat farther down on his head. “She’s going to be one stormy night, lay-dees,” he added in quite another tone, on his way to the door. “Five o’clock by the town clock, and al-ll’s well!” This last in still another tone, as he pushed out against the swooping wind and pulled the door shut with a slam. They heard him whistling a shrill, rollicking air on his way to the creek; at least, it sounded rollicking, the way he whistled it.

  “That’s The Old Chisholm Trail he’s whistling,” Billy Louise observed under her breath, smiling reminiscently. “The very song I used to pretend he always sang when he came down the canyon to rescue Minervy and me! But of course—I knew all the time he’s a cowboy; it said so—”

  The whistling broke and he began to sing at the top of a clear, strong-lunged voice, that old, old trail song beloved of punchers the West over:

  “Oh, it’s cloudy in the West and a-lookin’ like rain,

  And my damned old slicker’s in the wagon again,

  Coma ti yi youpy, youpy-a, youpy-a,

  Coma ti yi youpy, youpy-a!”

  “What did you say, Billy Louise? I’m sure it’s a comfort to have him here, and you see he was glad and willing—”

  But Billy Louise was holding the door open half an inch, listening and slipping back into the child-world wherein Ward Warren came singing down the canyon to rescue her and Minervy. The words came gustily from the creek down the slope:

  “No chaps, no slicker, and a-pourin’ down rain,

  And I swear by the Lord I’ll never night-herd again,

  Coma ti yi youpy, youpy-a, youpy-a,

  Coma ti yi youpy, youpy-a!

  “Feet in the stirrups and seat in the saddle,

  I hung and rattled with them long-horn cattle,

  Coma ti yi—”

  “Do shut the door, Billy Louise! What you want to stand there like that for? And the wind freezing everything inside! I can feel a terrible draught on my feet and ankles, and you know what that leads to.”

  So Billy Louise closed the door and laid another alder root on the coals in the fireplace, the while her mind was given over to dreamy speculations, and the words of that old trail song ran on in her memory though she could no longer hear him singing. Her mother talked on about Peter and the storm and this man who had ridden straight from the land of daydreams to her door, but the girl was not listening.

  “Now ain’t you relieved, yourself, that he’s going to stay?”

  Billy Louise, kneeling on the hearth and staring abstractedly into the fire, came back with a jerk to reality. The little smile that had been in her eyes and on her lips fled back with the dreams that had brought it. She gave her shoulders an impatient twitch and got up.

  “Oh—I guess he’ll be more agreeable to have around than Peter,” she admitted taciturnly; which was as close to her real opinion of the man as a mere mother might hope to come.

  CHAPTER IV

  “OLD DAME FORTUNE’S USED ME FOR A FOOTBALL”

  Ward Warren sat before the fireplace with a cigarette long gone cold in his fingers and stared into the blaze until the blaze died to bright-glowing coals, and the coals filmed and shrank down into the bed of ashes. Billy Louise had spoken to him twice, and he had not answered. She had swept all around him, and he had shifted his feet out of her way, and later his chair, like a man in his sleep who turns from an unaccustomed light or draws the covers over shoulders growing chilled, without any real consciousness of what he does. Billy Louise put away the broom, hung the dustpan on its nail behind the door, and stood looking at Ward curiously and with some resentment; this was not the first time he had gone into fits of abstraction as deep as his absorption in the books he read so hungrily. He had been at the Wolverine a month, and they were pretty well acquainted by now and inclined to friendliness when Ward threw off his moodiness and his air of holding himself ready for some affront which he seemed to expect. But for all that the distrust never quite left his eyes, and there were times like this when he was absolutely oblivious to her presence.

  Billy Louise suddenly lost patience. She stooped and picked up a bit of bark the size of her thumb and threw it at Ward, with a little, vexed twist of her lips. She had a fine accuracy of aim—she hit him on the nape of the neck, just where his hair came down in a queer little curly “cow-lick” in the middle.

  Ward jumped up and whirled, and when he faced Billy Louise he had a gun gripped in the fingers that had held the cigarette so loosely. In his eyes was the glare which a man turns upon his deadliest enemy, perhaps, but seldom indeed upon a girl. So they faced each other, while Billy Louise backed against the wall and took two sharp breaths.

  Ward relaxed; a shamed flush reddened his whole face. He shoved the gun back inside the belt of his trousers—Billy Louise had never dreamed that he carried any weapon save his haughty aloofness of manner—and with a little snort of self-disgust dropped back into the chair. He did not stare again into the fire, however; he folded his arms upon the high chairback and laid his face down upon them, like a woman who is hurt to the point of tears and yet will not weep. His booted feet were thrust toward the dying coals, his whole attitude spoke of utter desolation—of a loneliness beyond words.

  Billy Louise set her teeth hard together to keep back the tears of sympathy. Suffering of any sort always wrung the tender heart of her. But suffering like this—never in her life had she seen anything like it. She had seen her father angry, discouraged, morose. She had seen men fight. She had soothed her mother’s grief, which expressed itself in tears and lamentations. But this hidden hurt, this stoical suffering that she had seen often and often in Ward’s eyes and that sent his head down now upon his arms— She went to him and laid her two hands on his shoulders without even thinking that this was the first time she had ever touched him.

  “Don’t!” she said, half whispering so that she would not waken her mother, in bed with an attack of lumbago. “I—I didn’t know. Ward, listen to me! Whatever it is, can’t you tell me? You—I’m your friend. Don’t look as if you—you hadn’t a friend on earth!”

  Still he did not move or give any sign that he heard. Billy Louise had no thought of coquetry. Her heart ached with pity and a longing to help him. She slid one hand up and pinched his ear, just as she would playfully tweak the ear of a child.

  “Ward, you mustn’t. I’ve seen you think and think and look as if you hadn’t a friend on earth. You mustn’t. I suppose you’ve got lots of friends who’d stand by you through anything. Anyway, you’ve got me, and—I understand all about it.” She whispered those last words, and her heart thumped heavily with trepidation after she had spoken.

  Ward raised his head, caught one of her hands and held it fast while he looked deep into her eyes. He was searching, questioning, measuring, and he was doing it without uttering a word. The plummet dropped straight into the clear, sweet depths of her soul. If it did not reach the bottom, he was satisfied with the soundings he took. He drew a deep breath and gave her hand a little squeeze and let it go.

  “Did I scare you? I’m sorry,” he said, speaking in a hushed tone because of the woman in the next room. “I was thinking about a man I may meet some day; and if I do meet him, the chances are I’ll kill him. I—didn’t—I forgot where I was—” He threw out a hand in a gesture that amply completed explanation and apology and fumbled in his pocket for tobacco and papers. Abstractedly he began the making of a cigarette.

  Billy Louise put wood on the fire, pulled up a square, calico-padded stool, and sat down. She waited, and she had the wisdom to wait in complete silence.

  Ward leaned forward with a twig in his hand, got it ablaze, and lighted his cigarette. He did not look at Billy Louise until he had taken a whiff or two. Then he stared at her for a full minute, and ended by flipping the charred twig playfully into her lap, and laughing a little because she ju
mped.

  “What made you catch your breath when I told my name that night I came?” he asked quizzically, but with a tensity behind the lightness of his tone and behind the little smile in his eyes as well. “Where had you ever heard of me before?”

  Billy Louise gasped again, sent a lightning-thought into the future, and answered more casually than she had hoped she could.

  “When I was a kid I ran across the name—somewhere—and I used it to play with—”

  “Yes?”

  “You know—I was always making believe different things. I never had anyone to play with in my life, so I had a pretend-girl, named Minervy. And I had you. I used to have you rescue us from Indians and things, but mostly you were a road-agent or a robber, and when you weren’t holding me or Minervy for ransom, I was generally leading you over some most ungodly trails, saving you from posses and things. I used,” said Billy Louise, forcing a laugh, “to have some wild old times with you, believe me! So when you told your name, why—it was just like—you know; it was exactly like having a doll come to life!”

  He eyed her fixedly until she tingled with nervousness.

  “Yes—and what about—understanding all about it? Do you?” He drew in his under lip, let it go, and drew it again between his teeth, while he frowned at her thoughtfully. “Do you understand all about it?” he insisted, leaning toward her and never once taking that boring gaze from her face.

  “I—well, I—do—some of it anyway.” Billy Louise lifted a hand spasmodically to her throat. This was digging deeper into the agonies of life than she had ever gone before. “What was in the paper,” she whispered later, as if his eyes were drawing it from her by force.

  “What was that? What did it say?”

  “I—I—what difference does it make, what it said?” Billy Louise turned imploring eyes upon him. Her breath was coming fast and uneven. “It doesn’t matter—to me—in the least. It—didn’t say much. I—can’t tell exactly—” She was growing white around the mouth. The horror of being compelled to say, out loud—and to him!

  “I didn’t know there was a woman in the world like you,” Ward said irrelevantly and looked into the fire. “I thought women were just soft things a man had to take care of and carry along through life, a dead weight when they weren’t worse. I never knew a woman could be a friend—the kind of friend a man can be.” He threw his cigarette into the fire and watched the paper shrivel swiftly and the tobacco turn into a thin, blue smoke-spiral.

  “Life’s a queer thing,” he said, taking a different angle. “I started out with big notions about the things I’d do. Maybe I started wrong, but for a kid with nobody to point the trail for him, I don’t think I did so worse—till old Dame Fortune spotted me in the crowd and proceeded to use me for a football.” He leaned an elbow on one knee and stared hard at a burning brand that was getting ready to fall and send up a stream of sparks. Then he turned his head quite unexpectedly and looked at Billy Louise. “What was it you read?” he asked abruptly.

  “I—don’t like to—say it,” she whispered unsteadily.

  “Well, you needn’t. I’ll say it for you, when I come to it. There’s a lot before that.”

  Ward Warren had never before opened his soul to any human; not completely. Perhaps, sitting that evening in the deepening dusk, with the firelight lighting swiftly the brooding face of the girl and afterward veiling it softly with shadows, perhaps even then there were desolate places in his life which his words did not touch. But so much as a man may put into words, Ward told her; more, a great deal more, than he would ever tell to any other woman as long as he lived. More perhaps than he would ever tell to any man. And in it all there was no word of love. It was of what lay behind him that he talked. The low, even murmur of his voice was broken by long, brooding silences, when the two stared into the shifting flames and saw there the things his words had conjured. Sometimes the eyes of Billy Louise were soft with sympathy. Sometimes they were wide and held the light of horror. Once, with a small sob that had no tears, she reached out and clutched his arm. “Oh, don’t!” she gasped. “Don’t go on telling—I—I can’t bear to listen to that!”

  “It isn’t nice for a woman to listen to, I guess,” Ward gritted. “I know it was hell to stand, but—” He was silent so long after that, and his eyes grew so intent and so somber while he stared, that Billy Louise pulled at his sleeve to recall him.

  “Skip that part and tell me—”

  Ward took up the story and told her much; more than she had ever dreamed could be. I can’t repeat any of it; what he said was for Billy Louise to know and none other.

  It was late when she finally rose from the stool and lighted the lamp because her mother woke and called to her. Ward went out to turn the horses into the stable and fasten the door. He should have sheltered them two hours before. Billy Louise should long ago have made tea and toast for her mother, for that matter. But when life’s big, bitter problems confront one, little things are usually forgotten.

  They came back to everyday realities, though the spell which Ward’s impulsive unburdening had woven still wrapped them in that close companionship of complete understanding. They played checkers for an hour or so and then went to bed. Billy Louise lay in a waking nightmare because of all the hard things she had heard about life. Ward stared up into the dark and could not lose himself in sleep, because he had opened the door upon the evil places in his memory and let out all the trooping devils that lived there.

  After that, though there was never any word of love between them, Billy Louise, with the sure instinct of a woman innately pure, watched unobtrusively for signs of those fits of bitter brooding; watched and drove them off with various weapons of her own. Sometimes she cheerfully declared that she was bored to death, and wasn’t Ward just dying for a game of “rob casino”? Sometimes she simply teased him into retaliation. Frequently she insisted that he repeat the things he had learned by heart, of poetry or humorous prose, for his memory was almost uncanny in its tenacity. She discovered quite early, and by accident, that she had only to shake her head in a certain way and declaim: “Ah, Tam, noo, Tam, thou’lt get thy faring—In hell they’ll roast thee like a herring,”—she had only to say that to make him laugh and repeat the whole of Tam O’Shanter’s Ride with a perfectly devilish zest for poor Tam’s misfortunes, and an accent which made her suspect who were his ancestors.

  Billy Louise meant only to wean him from his bitterness against Life, and to convince him, by a somewhat roundabout method since at heart she was scared to death of his aloofness, that he was not “old lady Fortune’s football” as he sometimes pessimistically declared. At thirteen she had mixed him with her dreams and led him by difficult trails to safety from the imaginary enemies that pursued him. At nineteen she unconsciously mixed him with her life and led him—more surely than in her dreams, and by a far more difficult trail, had she only known it—safe away from the devils of memory and a distrust of life that pursued him more relentlessly than any human foe.

  She only meant to wean him from pessimism and rebuild within him a healthy appetite for life. If she did more than that, she did not know it then; for Ward Warren had learned, along with other hard lessons, the art of keeping his thoughts locked safely away, and of using his face as a mask to hide even the doorway to his real self. Only his eyes turned traitors sometimes when he looked at Billy Louise; though she, being a somewhat self-centered young person, never quite read what they tried to betray.

  She took him up the canyon and showed him her cave and Minervy’s. And she had the doubtful satisfaction of seeing him doubled over the saddle-horn in a paroxysm of laughter when she led him to the historical washout and recounted the feat of the dead Indians with which he had made a safe passing for her.

  “Well, they did it in history,” she defended at last, her cheeks redder than was perfectly normal. “I read about it—at Waterloo when the Duke of Wellington—wasn’t it? You needn’t laugh as if it couldn’t be done. It was that sunken-road b
usiness put it into my head in the first place; and I think you ought to feel flattered.”

  “I do,” gasped Ward, wiping his eyes. “Say, I was some bandit, wasn’t I, William Louisa?”

  Billy Louise looked at him sidewise. “No, you weren’t any bandit at all—then. You were a kind scout, that time. I was here, all surrounded by Indians and saying the Lord’s prayer with my hair all down my back like mommie’s Rock of Ages picture—will you shut up laughing?—and you came riding up that draw over there on a big, black horse named Sultan (You needn’t snort; I still think Sultan’s a dandy name for a horse!). And you hollered to me to get behind that rock, over there. And I quit at ‘Forgive us our debts’—daddy always had so many!—and hiked for the rock. And you commenced shooting— Oh, I’m not going to tell you a single other pretend!” She sulked then, which was quite as diverting as the most hair-raising “pretend” she had ever told him and held Ward’s attention unflaggingly until they were half way home.

  “Sing the Chisholm Trail,” she commanded, when her temper was sunshiny again. This had been a particularly moody day for Ward, and Billy Louise felt that extra effort was required to rout the memory-devils. “Daddy knew a little of it, and old Jake Summers used to sing more, but I never did hear it all.”

  “Ladies don’t, as a general thing,” Ward replied, biting his lips.

  “Why? I know there’s about forty verses, and some of them are kind of sweary ones; but go ahead and sing it. I don’t mind damn now and then.”

  This sublime innocence was also diverting, even to a man haunted by the devils of memory. Ward’s lips twitched, and a flush warmed his cheek-bones at the mere thought of singing it all in her presence. “I’ll sing all of Sam Bass, if you like,” he temporized, with a grin.

  “Oh, I hate Sam Bass! We had a Dutchman working for us when I was just a kid, and he was forever bawling out: ‘Sa-am Pass was porn in Injiany, it was-s hiss natiff ho-o-ome!’”

 

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