Part 26 (2/2)
”Well, I'll be darned if you didn't have a close shave, and--”
Just then Jane Hunter rode up on her sorrel and when she saw her foreman she smiled in relief.
”You're back, and safely!” she said as she dismounted.
”With the bacon, ma'am.”
”An' they almost got his bacon, Miss Hunter,” Oliver said. ”Look here!”
He indicated the damaged saddle and explained.
”They came that close to shooting you?” she asked Dad. Her voice was even enough but she could not conceal her dismay at his narrow escape.
”Why, Miss Hunter, that ain't nothin'! I was just tellin' the boys that a miss is as good as a long ride. I'm your foreman, they was your horses--”
”Such things have to be,” she broke in, making an effort to be decisive and convincing, but her voice was not just steady and Beck, at least, knew how desperately she tried to play up to her part, to smother her impulse to show that she held life dearer than she did her property, to shrink from the hard facts of the hard life she faced.
”So long as I'm your foreman n.o.body's goin' to get away with your stock without a fight,” Hepburn went on pompously, well satisfied with the impression he had made. ”If necessary they'll come a lot closer to lettin' blessed suns.h.i.+ne in to my carca.s.s than this! There ain't a man of us who wouldn't do it for you an' gladly. If they're goin' to try to fleece you they've got us to reckon with first.
”Ain't that the truth, Tom?”
Beck did not reply but watched Jane Hunter as she stood looking down at the saddle with its tell tale scar.
The Reverend remained when the group broke up. He leaned low over the saddle and examined the leather binding about the horn. He fingered it, then lowered his face close against it. For a moment he held so and then straightened slowly. He walked toward the bunk house so absorbed that he talked to himself and as he pa.s.sed Beck he was muttering:
”... wolf in sheep's clothing ...”
”What's that?” asked Beck.
The Reverend stopped, surprised that he had been overheard. He looked at Tom and blinked and rattled the pens in his coat pocket; then looked about to see whether they were observed.
”Brother, when a man is honest does he go to great pains to make that honesty evident? Does he lie to make people believe he does not act a lie?”
”Not usually. What are you drivin' at, Reverend?”
The other stepped closer.
”If you'll examine that saddle horn, you'll discover that the shot which tore it was fired from a gun held so close that the powder burned the leather. More: that it was fired so recently that the smell of powder is still there.
”There is something rotten, brother, in a locality nearer than Denmark!”
Beck whistled softly to himself.
CHAPTER XII
A NEIGHBORLY CALL
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