Part 10 (1/2)

She glanced down again, blus.h.i.+ng, and felt the silence embarra.s.sing, but all the things she would ordinarily have said suddenly seemed trivial and out of place, so she turned to the child with a gentle, ”Be a good boy, Paul.” Mead looked at her in silence, smiling gravely.

Many things were whirling about in his mind to say, but he hesitated before each one, doubting if that were the best. Paul kicked vigorously and shouted, ”Come on! Come on! Aren't you ready to go, Mr.

Mead?” Emerson's grave smile relaxed into a foolish grin, he lifted his hat to Marguerite, and he and the boy cantered off.

Marguerite hurried back to her room and as she stood before her mirror, trembling, she resumed her hair dressing to the accompaniment of thoughts that ran contrariwise:

”I would think the man was dumb if I didn't know better. Why doesn't he ever say anything? He is certainly the rudest creature I ever saw!

He stares at me until I am so confused that I can not even be courteous. He isn't nearly so nice as Mr. Wellesly--I don't care, he isn't! I like Mr. Wellesly, and he seems to like me, but--he does not look at me out of his eyes as Mr. Mead does. I wonder--if he--looks at any one else that way?”

After Mead had returned the child he rode at once to his room, and while he bathed and shaved and dressed himself in the garments of civilization he gave himself up to gloomy thoughts about Marguerite.

”Of course, she thinks I am a criminal of the worst sort,--a thief and a murderer,--and maybe she does not like to have me stop at her gate.

She was nervous about it to-day, and she wouldn't come out until the kid made her. It is plain enough that she doesn't want to see me any more, and I suppose I ought not to stop there again. Still, the boy is always so pleased to ride with me that it would be a shame to take that pleasure away from him. But she doesn't like it--how sweet she looked in that sunbonnet!--and she's too kind-hearted to ask me not to. Well, she would rather I would not--yes, it is plain that she does not want me to do it--so--well--all right--I'll not stop there again.”

His revolver lay on the table, hidden by some of the clothing he had just taken off. Under the stress of his thoughts it escaped both eye and mind. As he put on vest and coat he struggled to his final resolution. Then he quickly jammed his hat on his head, thinking, ”I suppose I can't see her any more at all,” and hurried into the street.

Presently he heard a loud whoop from the direction of the jail.

”That's Nick's yell, sure,” he thought, ”and it sounds as if he was drunk. Now what's to pay, I wonder!”

He hurried in the direction from which the sound had come, and was just in time to see Ellhorn, yelling and waving his hat, led by Jim Halliday into the jail, while a half-dozen excited Chinese, who had been following close behind, stood chattering at the door.

When the train which carried Thomson Tuttle northward left the station, Nick Ellhorn watched it disappear in the hot, white, quivering distance, and then wandered forlornly up town. He went first to Emerson Mead's room, but Mead had not yet returned. He went to Judge Harlin's office, and found that he was out of town. He next tried the Palmleaf saloon, where he solaced and cooled himself with some gla.s.ses of beer. Several men were already there, and others came in, whom he knew, and all wanted to hear about Emerson Mead's round-up and to congratulate him on its success. He drank mint juleps with two, straight whisky with two others, a c.o.c.ktail with another, and ended with more beer. He walked up the street to the hotel, and as he talked with the landlord he could feel the liquors he had so recklessly mixed beginning to bite into his blood and raise little commotions in remote corners of his brain. A pleasant-faced young Mexican came into the office, and the landlord asked him how his patient was. The young man replied in broken English that the man was a little better but very sad, and that he wished to find some one to stay with him a few minutes while he went out on an errand.

Nick Ellhorn's heart was warmed and expansive and he promptly volunteered to sit with the invalid and entertain him for an hour, and with effusive thanks the Mexican nurse conducted the tall Texan to the sick-room. White, gaunt and weak, the invalid lay in his bed and looked with eyes of envy and admiration at the tall, firm, well-knit frame, the big muscles and the tanned face of his companion. By that time Nick began to be conscious of a high, swift tide in his veins, and through his dancing brain came the conviction that he must hold a steady hand on himself and be very serious. He sat up stiff and straight in his chair by the bedside, and his demeanor was grave and solemn. When the sick man spoke of his health and strength, Nick replied with admonis.h.i.+ng seriousness:

”I'd be just such a lookin' thing as you are if I stayed indoors like you do. You can't expect to be worth a whoop in h.e.l.l if you stay in the house and in bed all the time. I'll steal you away from here so that coyote of a Mexican can't get hold of you again, and I'll take you out to Emerson Mead's ranch and put you on a horse and make you ride after the cattle, and sure and you'll be a well man before you know it.”

The invalid appeared apprehensive, and, feeling himself weakened by the fear lest something untoward might happen, he asked Ellhorn to give him a drink of brandy from a flask which stood on the mantel.

Nick poured the measured dose into a gla.s.s, smelt of it, and looked frowningly at the sick man.

”Do you-all mean to say that you drink this stuff, as sick as you are?

You can have it if you insist, but I tell you you'll be dead by sundown if you drink it! Sure and you ought to be ashamed of yourself, lyin' in bed and soakin' with brandy, right on the ragged edge of the tomb! That Mexican coyote ought to be shot as full of holes as a pepper box for keepin' this stuff in the room, and I'll do it when he comes back! I've taken a notion to you-all, and I'm goin' to carry you off on my horse to Emerson's ranch and make a well man of you. But you must sure let brandy and whisky alone, I'll tell you that right now!

And I'll put this out of your sight, so it won't be a temptation to you. I'll drink it myself, just to save your life!”

He poured the gla.s.s full and drank it off without a breath. Then he began to lecture the thoroughly frightened invalid on the evil results of too much indulgence in strong drink. ”Look at me!” he solemnly exclaimed. ”I used to drink just as bad as you do, and where did it bring me! Yes, sir! I've had feathers enough in my time to make me a good bed, but I scattered and wasted 'em all with whisky and brandy, just as you're doin' now, and here I am a-layin' on the hard ground!

But I've quit! No, sirree! I don't drink another drop, unless it's to save a friend, same as I'm drinkin' this.”

When the Mexican nurse returned he found his patient fainting from fright, and a very drunken man solemnly marching up and down the room, flouris.h.i.+ng an empty flask and uttering incoherent remarks about the evils of strong drink and the certainty of death.

”I've saved him!” Nick proudly exclaimed to the Mexican. ”I've saved his life! He'd 'a' been drunk as I am, and dead, too, if I hadn't drunk all the brandy myself! I didn't let him touch a drop!”

The nurse pitched him out of the room and locked the door behind him, and he, after a dazed stare, stalked off indignantly to the front entrance. A Chinaman was pa.s.sing by, with placid face, folded arms and long queue flopping in the wind. Ellhorn grabbed the queue with a drunken shout. The man yelled from sudden fright, and started off on the run with Ellhorn hanging on to the braid, shouting, his spurs clicking and his revolver flapping at his side. Nick's yells and the Chinaman's frightened screams filled the street with noise and brought people running to see what was happening. Ellhorn whipped out his knife and cut off the queue at the Chinaman's neck, and the man, feeling the sudden release from the grip of the ”white devil” behind him, ran with flying leaps down the street and at the end of the block banged against Jim Halliday, himself running to learn the cause of the uproar. The Chinaman knew Halliday's office, and with wild gestures and screaming chatter demanded that he should go back and arrest the man who had despoiled him of his dearest possession. Halliday, guessing that his enemy was too drunk to offer much resistance, hastened at once to the task, and in five minutes Nick Ellhorn was locked in the jail.

Emerson Mead at once went to work to get his friend out on bail. He saw the sheriff, John Daniels, go into the White Horse saloon and hurried after him. As they stood facing each other, leaning against the bar and talking earnestly, Mead saw Daniels flash a look of intelligence and nod his head slightly to some one who had entered from a back room toward which Emerson's back was turned. Instinctively he reached for his gun, and Jim Halliday grabbed his right wrist with both hands while John Daniels seized his left. With the first touch of their fingers, the remembrance flashed through his brain that he had left his revolver on the table in his room. He would have thought it as impossible to forget that as to forget his trousers, but the thing was done, and here was the result. He shrugged his shoulders and said quietly:

”You've caught me unarmed, boys. I'm at your service--this time.”