Part 43 (2/2)

”Because I know Knight would wish to save you,” she answered. ”I want to do what he would do.... G.o.d help us, they're coming nearer! Take your bag, and I'll hide you in the cellar. There's a corner there, behind some barrels. If they break in, I'll say----”

”Brave girl! But they won't break in.”

”How do you know?”

”Your husband won't let them. Trust him, as I do.”

”He's not here. Do you think I told you a lie? Thank Heaven he _isn't_ here, or they'd kill him, and I could never beg him to forgive----” She covered her face with her hands.

The old man looked at her gravely.

”You don't understand what's happening,” he said, with a new gentleness.

”Don's out there now, defending you and his home. That's what the shooting means. Do you think those brutes would advertise themselves with their guns if they hadn't been attacked?”

With a cry the girl rushed to the long window, and began to unfasten it, but Van Vreck caught her hands.

”Stop!” he commanded. ”Don't play the robbers' own game for them! _How do you know which is nearer the house, Don and his men, or the others?_”

She stared at him, panting, ”Don and his men?” she echoed.

”Yes. Even if he were alone to begin with, I'll bet all I've got he roused every cowpuncher on the ranch with his first shot; and they'd be out with their guns like a streak of greased lightning. If you open that window with a light in the room, the wrong lot may get in and barricade themselves against Don and his bunch--to say nothing of what would happen to us. But----”

Annesley waited for no more. She ran to the table and blew out the flame of the green-shaded lamp. Black darkness shut down like the lid of a box.

But she knew the room as she knew her own features. Straight and unerring, she found her way back to the window.

This time Van Vreck stood still while she opened it and began noiselessly to undo the outside wooden shutters. As she pushed them apart, against the wind, a spray of sand dashed into her face and Van Vreck's, stinging their eyelids. But disregarding the pain, the two pa.s.sed out into the night.

Clouds of blowing sand hid the stars, yet there was a faint glimmer of light which showed moving figures on horseback. Men were shouting, and with the bark of their guns fire spouted.

Annesley rushed on to the veranda, but Van Vreck caught her dress.

”Stay where you are!” he ordered. ”Our side is winning. Don't you see--don't you hear--the fight's going farther away? That means the raid's failed--the skunks have got the worst of it. They're trying to get back to the river and across to their own country. There'll be some, I bet, who'll never see Mexico again!”

”But Knight----” the girl faltered. ”He may be shot----”

”He may. We've got to take the chances and hope for the best. He wouldn't leave the chase now if every door and window were open and lit for him.

Wait. Watch. That's the only thing to do.”

She yielded to the detaining hand. All strength had gone out of her. She staggered a little, and fell back against Van Vreck's shoulder. He held her up strongly, as though he had been a young man.

”How can I live through it?” she moaned.

”You care for him after all, then?” she heard the calm voice asking in her ear. And she heard her own voice answer: ”I love him more than ever.”

She knew that it was true, true in spite of everything, and that she had never ceased to love him. It would be joy to give her life to save Knight's, with just one moment of breath to tell him that his atonement had not been vain.

Away out of sight the chase went, but the watching eyes had time to see that not all the figures were on horseback. Some ran on foot; and some horses were riderless. As Van Vreck had said, there was nothing for him and for Annesley to do except to wait. They stood silent in the rain of sand, listening when there was nothing more to see. The shots were scattered and blurred by distance. Annesley realized how a heart may stop beating in the anguish of suspense.

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