Part 32 (1/2)

”It will only make matters worse if he sees you.”

She understood, turned and vanished obediently.

Then Peter went to the house, got a basin and, fetching some water from the creek, played the Samaritan. In a while Shad gasped painfully and sat up, looking at the victor.

”Sorry,” said Peter, ”but you _would_ have it.”

Shad blinked his uninjured eye and rose, feeling at his hip.

”I took your revolver,” said Peter calmly.

”Give it here.”

”A chap with a bad temper has no business carrying one,” said Peter sternly.

”Oh----.” The man managed to get to his feet.

”I'm sorry, Shad,” said Peter again, and held out his hand. ”Let's be friends.”

Shad looked at the hand sullenly for a moment. ”I'll fix _you_, Mister.

I'll fix you yet,” he muttered, then turned and walked away.

If Peter had made one friend he had also made an enemy.

The incident with Shad Wells was unfortunate, but Peter didn't see how it could have been avoided. He was thankful nevertheless for his English schooling, which had saved him from a defeat at the hands of a ”roughneck” which could have been, under the circ.u.mstances, nothing less than ignominious. For if Shad Wells had succeeded in vanquis.h.i.+ng him, all Peter's authority, all his influence with the rest of the men in McGuire's employ would have gone forever, for Shad Wells was not the kind of man upon whom such a victory would have lightly sat. If he had thrashed Peter, Shad and not Peter would have been the boss of Black Rock and Peter's position would have been intolerable.

As Peter laved his broken knuckles and bruised cheek, he wondered if, after all, the affair hadn't been for the best. True, he had made an enemy of Shad, but then according to the girl, Shad had already been his enemy. Peter abhorred fighting, as he had told Beth, but, whatever the consequences, he was sure that the air had cleared amazingly. He was aware too that the fact that he had been the champion of Beth's independence definitely stood forth. Whatever the wisdom or the propriety, according to the standards of Black Rock society, of Beth's visits to the Cabin, for the purpose of a musical education or for any other purposes, Peter was aware that he had set the seal of his approval upon them, marked, that any who read might run, upon the visage of Mr.

Wells. Peter was still sorry for Shad, but still more sorry for Beth, whose name might be lightly used for her share in the adventure.

He made up his mind to say nothing of what had happened, and he felt reasonably certain that Shad Wells would reach a similar decision. He was not at all certain that Beth wouldn't tell everybody what had happened for he was aware by this time that Beth was the custodian of her own destinies and that she would not need the oracles of Black Rock village as censors of her behavior.

But when he went up to the house for supper he made his way over the log-jam below the pool and so to the village, stopping for a moment at the Bergen house, where Beth was sitting on the porch reading _The Lives of the Great Composers_. She was so absorbed that she did not see him until he stood at the little swing gate, hat in hand.

She greeted him quietly, glancing up at his bruised cheek.

”I'm so sorry,” she said, ”that it was on my account.”

”I'm not--now that I've done the 'gobbling,'” he said with a grin. And then, ”Where's Shad?”

”I haven't seen him. I guess he's gone in his hole and pulled it in after him.”

Peter smiled. ”I just stopped by to say that perhaps you'd better say nothing. It would only humiliate him.”

”I wasn't goin' to--but it served him right----”

”And if you think people will talk about your coming to the Cabin, I thought perhaps I ought to give you your lessons here.”

”Here!” she said, and he didn't miss the note of disappointment in her tone.