Part 14 (1/2)

”All the time she was promised to another man--and that man my enemy.”

Here his frenzy flared forth in a torrent of words.

”Then--then I went mad. My brain was scarred and numb. I lost all sense of pity--all fear of law--all respect for woman. I only knew my wrongs--my despair--my hate. I watched, I waited, I found them together--”

”And then? What did you do then?” demanded the stranger, rising from his seat with sudden energy, his voice deep, insistent, masterful. ”Tell me what you did?”

The miner's wild voice died to a hesitant whisper. ”I--I fled.”

”But before that--before you fled?”

”What is it to you?” asked the hermit, gazing with scared eyes at the man who towered above him like the demon of retribution. ”Who are you?”

”I am the avenger!” answered the other. ”The man you hated was my brother. The woman you killed was his wife.”

The fugitive fell upon his knees with a cry like that of one being strangled.

Out of the darkness a red flame darted, and the crouching man fell to the floor, a crumpled, b.l.o.o.d.y heap.

For a long time the executioner stood above the body, waiting, listening from the shadow to the faint receding breath-strokes of his victim. When all was still he restored his weapon to its sheath and stepped over the threshold into the keen and pleasant night.

As he closed the door behind him the stranger raised his eyes to Solidor, whose sovereign, cloud-like crest swayed among the stars.

”Now I shall rest,” he said, with solemn satisfaction.

THE TRAIL TRAMP

_--mounted wanderer, horseman of the restless heart, still rides from place to place, contemptuous of gold, carrying in his parfleche all the vanis.h.i.+ng traditions of the West._

V

THE TRAIL TRAMP

KELLEY AFOOT

I

Kelley was in off the range and in profound disgust with himself, for after serving honorably as line-rider and later as cow-boss for ten years or more, he had ridden over to Keno to meet an old comrade. Just how it happened he couldn't tell, but he woke one morning without a dollar and, what was worse, incredibly worse, without horse or saddle!

Even his revolver was gone.

In brief, Tall Ed, for the first time in his life, was set afoot, and this, you must understand, is a most direful disaster in cowboy life. It means that you must begin again from the ground up, as if you were a perfectly new tenderfoot from Nebraska.

Fort Keno was, of course, not a real fort; but it was a real barracks.

The town was an imitation town. The fort, spick, span, in rows, with nicely planted trees and green gra.s.s-plats (kept in condition at vast expense to the War Department), stood on the bank of the sluggish river, while just below it and across the stream sprawled the town, drab, flea-bitten, unkempt, littered with tin cans and old bottles, a collection of saloons, gambling-houses and nameless dives, with a few people--a very few--making an honest living by selling groceries, saddles, and coal-oil.

Among the industries of Keno City was a livery-and-sales stable, and Kelley, with intent to punish himself, at once applied for the position of hostler. ”You durned fool,” he said, addressing himself, ”as you've played the drunken Injun, suppose you play valet to a lot of mustangs for a while.”