Part 44 (2/2)

”You had better go on down to camp and feed your horse--it's over the ridge there; make a fire and put on the tea kettle. I'll be down in half an hour or three-quarters.”

Disston lingered to watch her as she pulled the bedroll from her horse; and, clearing a s.p.a.ce with her foot, freeing it of sticks and pebbles, spread out the canvas, pulling the ”tarp” over a pillow beneath which he noticed a box of cartridges and a six-shooter.

”For close work,” she said, with a short laugh, observing his interest.

He did not join her; instead his brows contracted.

”I can't bear to think of you going through such hards.h.i.+ps.”

”This isn't hards.h.i.+p--I'm used to it--I like it. I like to get awake in the night and look at the stars and to feel the wind in my face. When it rains, I pull the tarp over my head, and I love to listen to the patter on it. The sheep 'bed' all around me, and some of them lie on the corners, so it's not lonely.” She said it with a touch of defiance, as though she resented his pity and wished him to believe there was no room for it.

”You see,” she added, ”I'm a typical sheepherder, even to mumbling to myself occasionally.”

The sheep in the meantime had grazed to the top of the ridge and had spread out over the flat backbone for a few final mouthfuls before pawing their little hollows. Soon they would sink down singly and in pairs, by the dozen and half dozen, with a crackling of joints, their jaws waggling, sniffing, coughing, grunting from overladen stomachs, raising in their restless stirrings a little cloud of dust above the bed-ground.

As he stood to go, Disston pictured her night after night waiting in patient silence for the sheep to grow quiet and then creeping between her blankets to sleep among them.

He left her reluctantly at length, for he had a feeling that, since his time with her was short, each minute that he was away from her was wasted; but as it was her wish, he could do nothing less than comply and, obviously, she did not share his regret. So he followed her directions and was soon at the summer camp, established near a spring one lower ridge over.

A half hour pa.s.sed--three-quarters. He smoked and looked at his watch frequently. The stars came out and the moon rose full. The fire burned down and the water cooled in the kettle. Whatever was detaining her?

Impatient at first, Disston finally grew worried. He ate a little cold food that he found, and started to walk back to her.

He was well up the first ridge when a sharp report broke the night-stillness and brought him to an abrupt standstill. It was followed by another, then three, four--a number of shots in succession. It was not loud enough for a 30-30. It was the six-shooter! ”For close work!”

she had told him tersely.

If he had been in doubt before as to the exact word to apply to his feelings for Kate, there was no need to hesitate longer. What did it matter that she did not know how to pour tea gracefully and preside at a dinner table? By G.o.d--he wanted her, and that was all there was to it!

He was breathless when he reached the top of the ridge and his heart was pounding with the exertion in the high alt.i.tude, but he gave a gasp of relief when he saw her standing in the moonlight with dead and dying sheep around her.

”What's the matter?” he called, when his breath came back to him sufficiently.

”Poison. Somebody has scattered little piles of saltpeter all over the summit. There's no cure for it, so I shot some of them to put them out of their agony.”

In his relief at finding her unharmed, the loss of the sheep seemed of no moment and he did not realize what it meant to her until she said with a choke in her voice:

”They knew just where to hit me. I've scrimped and saved and sacrificed to buy those sheep--”

Her grief sent a flood of tenderness over him. He went to her swiftly, and taking the six-shooter gently from her hand laid it upon the ground.

”Come here,” he said authoritatively, and drew her to him.

She did not resist, and her head dropped to his shoulder in a movement of disheartened weariness.

”Oh, Hughie--I'm so tired of fighting--so tired--of everything.”

He smoothed her hair as he would have soothed a child, and said decisively--yet with a big tenderness:

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