Part 43 (1/2)
”Sure. They all got away. Wasn't that about the maddest crowd you ever saw?”
”No wonder. In a second every man there feared the man next to him would shoot. That showed the power of Kells's Border Legion. If his men had been faithful and obedient he never would have fallen.”
”Joan! You speak as if you regret it!”
”Oh, I am ashamed,” replied Joan. ”I don't mean that. I don't know what I do mean. But still I'm sorry for Kells. I suffered so much.... Those long, long hours of suspense.... And his fortunes seemed my fortunes--my very life--and yours, too, Jim.”
”I think I understand, dear,” said Jim, soberly.
”Jim, what'll we do now? Isn't it strange to feel free?”
”I feel as queer as you. Let me think,” replied Jim.
They huddled there in comparative seclusion for a long time after that.
Joan tried to think of plans, but her mind seemed, unproductive. She felt half dazed. Jim, too, appeared to be laboring under the same kind of burden. Moreover, responsibility had been added to his.
The afternoon waned till the sun tipped the high range in the west. The excitement of the mining populace gradually wore away, and toward sunset strings of men filed up the road and across the open. The masked vigilantes disappeared, and presently only a quiet and curious crowd was left round the grim scaffold and its dark swinging forms. Joan's one glance showed that the vigilantes had swung Frenchy's dead body in the noose he would have escaped by treachery. They had hanged him dead. What a horrible proof of the temper of these newborn vigilantes! They had left the bandits swinging. What sight was so appalling as these limp, dark, swaying forms? Dead men on the ground had a dignity--at least the dignity of death. And death sometimes had a majesty. But here both life and death had been robbed and there was only horror. Joan felt that all her life she would be haunted.
”Joan, we've got to leave Alder Creek,” declared Cleve, finally. He rose to his feet. The words seemed to have given him decision. ”At first I thought every bandit in the gang would run as far as he could from here.
But--you can't tell what these wild men will do. Gulden, for instance!
Common sense ought to make them hide for a spell. Still, no matter what's what, we must leave.... Now, how to go?”
”Let's walk. If we buy horses or wait for the stage we'll have to see men here--and I'm afraid--”
”But, Joan, there'll be bandits along the road sure. And the trails, wherever they are, would be less safe.”
”Let's travel by night and rest by day.”
”That won't do, with so far to go and no pack.”
”Then part of the way.”
”No. We'd better take the stage for Bannack. If it starts at all it'll be under armed guard. The only thing is--will it leave soon?... Come, Joan, we'll go down into camp.”
Dusk had fallen and lights had begun to accentuate the shadows. Joan kept close beside Jim, down the slope, and into the road. She felt like a guilty thing and every pa.s.sing man or low-conversing group frightened her. Still she could not help but see that no one noticed her or Jim, and she began to gather courage. Jim also acquired confidence. The growing darkness seemed a protection. The farther up the street they pa.s.sed, the more men they met. Again the saloons were in full blast.
Alder Creek had returned to the free, careless tenor of its way. A few doors this side of the Last Nugget was the office of the stage and express company. It was a wide tent with the front canvas cut out and a shelf-counter across the opening. There was a dim, yellow lamplight.
Half a dozen men lounged in front, and inside were several more, two of whom appeared to be armed guards. Jim addressed no one in particular.
”When does the next stage leave for Bannack?”
A man looked up sharply from the papers that littered a table before him. ”It leaves when we start it,” he replied, curtly.
”Well, when will that be?”
”What's that to you?” he replied, with a question still more curt.
”I want to buy seats for two.”
”That's different. Come in and let's look you over.... h.e.l.lo! it's young Cleve. I didn't recognize you. Excuse me. We're a little particular these days.”