Part 55 (1/2)

”I am,” confessed the girl, ”very tired and very dusty. I hope you always put your prisoners under the hose.”

”I'll give you my spare chamber,” replied the matron, with abstracted glance. ”It's next the bath-room. I'm sorry, but I guess your father'll have to go down below.”

”What do you mean by that?”

The sheriff explained, ”The cells are below.”

Helen was instantly alarmed. ”Oh no!” she protested. ”My father is not at all well. Please give him my room. I'll go down below.”

”It won't be necessary for either of you to go below,” interposed the sheriff. ”Hanscom, I'll put Kauffman in your charge. You can take him to your boarding-house if you want to.”

”You're very kind,” said Helen, with such feeling that the sheriff reacted to it. ”I hope it won't get you into trouble.”

”Oh, I don't think it will,” he said, cheerily. ”So long as I know he's safe, it don't matter where he sleeps.”

”Well, you'd better all stay to supper, anyhow,” said Mrs. Throop. ”It's ready and waiting.”

No one but Helen perceived anything unusual in this hearty offhand invitation. To Hanscom it was just another instance of Western hospitality, and to the sheriff a common service, and so a few minutes later they all sat down at the generous table, in such genial mood (with Mrs. Throop doing her best to make them feel at home) that all their troubles became less than shadows.

Although disinclined to go into a detailed story of his return to the hills, Hanscom described the capture of the housebreakers and, in spite of a careful avoidance of anything which might sound like boasting, disclosed the fact that at the moment when he threw open the door of the cabin he had exposed himself to the weapons of a couple of reckless young outlaws and might have been killed.

”You shouldn't have risked that,” Helen protested. ”Our poor possessions are not worth such cost.”

”I couldn't endure the notion of those hoodlums looting the place,” he explained.

At the thought of Rita (who was occupying a cell in the women's ward) Helen grew a little sad, for, according to the ranger's own account, she was hardly more than a child, and had been led away by her first pa.s.sion.

At the close of the meal, upon Mrs. Throop's housewifely invitation, they all took seats in the ”front room” and Helen quite forgot that she was a prisoner, and the ranger almost returned to boyhood as he faced the marble-topped table, the cabinet organ, and the enlarged family portraits on the walls, for of such quality were his mother's adornments in the old home at Circle Bend. Something vaguely intimate and a little confusing filled his mind as he listened to the voice of the woman before him. Only by an effort could he connect her with the cabin in the high valley. She was becoming each moment more alien, more aloof, but at the same time more desirable, like the girls he used to wors.h.i.+p in the church choir.

Speech was difficult with him, and he could only repeat: ”It makes me feel like a rabbit to think I could not keep you from coming here, and the worst of it is I had nothing to offer as security. All I have in the world is a couple of horses, a saddle, and a typewriter.”

”It really doesn't matter,” she replied in hope of easing his mind. ”See how they treat us! They know we're unjustly held and that we shall be set free to-morrow.”

Strange to say, this did not lighten his gloom. ”And then--you will go away,” he said, soberly.

”Yes; we cannot remain here.”

”And I shall never see you again,” he pursued.

Her face betrayed a trace of sympathetic pain. ”Don't say that! _Never_ is such a long time.”

”And you'll forget us all out here--”

”I shall never forget what you have done, be sure of that,” she replied.

Nevertheless, despite the tenderness of her tone and her grat.i.tude openly expressed, something disconcerting had come into her eyes and voice. She was more and more the lady and less and less the recluse, and as she receded and rose to this higher plane, the ranger lost heart, almost without knowing the cause of it.

At last he turned to Kauffman. ”I suppose we'd better go,” he said. ”You look tired.”

”I am tired,” the old man admitted. ”Is it far to your hotel?”