Part 29 (1/2)
”On Purdy's trail!” Cinnabar fairly shouted the words. ”Who's on who's trail? What's all this mixup about? Purdy ain't no horse-thief! He's a wet nurse in a orphan asylum! He's clean lookin' an' wholesome. He wouldn't lie!”
”Purdy!” exclaimed Janet, ”have you been talking about Purdy all this time?”
A sudden gleam of comprehension shot from Cinnabar's eyes: ”Who did you think I was talkin' about,” he grinned, ”the Gazookus of Timbucktoo?”
The girl broke into a peal of silvery laughter. A weight seemed suddenly to have been lifted from her heart--a weight that had borne heavier and heavier with the words of Cinnabar Joe. There was a chance that her Texan would prove to be the man she wanted him to be--the man she had pictured him during the long hours of the previous afternoon when alone in the cabin her thoughts had reverted again and again to the parting at the edge of the bad lands--the touch of his hand on her arm, the strong, firm grip of his fingers, and the strange rapturous something that had leaped from his eyes straight into her heart. But, all that was before she had known of--the other woman. The laughter died from her lips, and her eyes narrowed slightly. Cinnabar Joe was speaking:
”An' I suppose you've be'n talkin' about Tex Benton. She told Jennie he was on Purdy's trail.”
”How did she know?”
”Search me. Jest naturally know'd that if he wasn't dead, that's what he'd be doin', I guess. How'd Purdy git holt of her, anyway?”
”This woman and Tex were washed ash.o.r.e when the ferry broke its cable, and while Tex was trying to get some horses, Purdy came along and found her.”
”Where's the pilgrim?”
Janet shrugged: ”Oh, he don't count. He's merely the wronged husband.”
Cinnabar looked straight into her eyes: ”Know Tex?” he asked, drily.
”I've seen him. He borrowed Blue, and he spent last night at the ranch.”
”Well, then, believe me, you've seen some man! An' don't you go makin'
no more mistakes like you jest made. If them two was together they had a right to be. An' they'll come clean with a good reason. They's some things a _man_ won't do--an' runnin' off with another man's wife is one of 'em.”
”Do you know him?” There was more than a trace of eagerness in the girl's voice.
”I'll say I know him! An' I'm tellin' it to you, sister, if he's on Purdy's trail, I'd rather be in h.e.l.l with my back broke than be in Purdy's shoes right now.”
The girl turned abruptly and walked toward the house, and as Cinnabar followed her with his eyes, he smiled: ”If them two could only hit it out--she'd make a fine woman fer him. By Gos.h.!.+ With a woman like that to kind of steady him down, Tex could be a big man in these parts--he's got the guts, an' he's got the aggucation, an' so's she. I mis...o...b.. he'd marry into no sheep outfit though, at that.”
CHAPTER XXVI
THE OTHER WOMAN
At the door of the cabin Jennie greeted her caller effusively. Alice Endicott, who had insisted upon dressing, had finished her breakfast and was sitting propped up among the pillows on the bed.
”This is Janet McWhorter, our neighbour,” introduced Jennie, taking the girl by the hand and leading her to the side of the bed, ”an' this is Mrs.--Mrs.--why, do you know I can't call your married name to save me.
I never seen yer husban'--an' he's always spoke of in these parts as 'the pilgrim.'”
”Endicott,” smiled Alice, as her glance noted with swift approval the girl's riding boots, her corduroy skirt, her grey flannel s.h.i.+rt, the scarf of burnt orange, and the roll-brim Stetson--noted, too, the six-gun and the belt of yellow cartridges. Each well-appointed detail bespoke the girl of the open range. But the Eastern woman perceived instantly that the gliding grace of her walk was never acquired in the saddle, nor were the well modulated tones of the full, throaty voice with which she acknowledged the introduction, a product of the cattle range.
”I am very glad to meet you--Mrs. Endicott.” Their hands met, and as Alice looked into the girl's eyes, she wondered at the peculiar glance that flashed from their blue-black depths. It was not exactly a glance of hate, but rather of veiled antagonism, of distrust--almost of contempt. Alice's own eyes had been frankly friendly, but as they encountered the look, they fell before the blue-black eyes, and she turned appealingly toward Jennie. But the woman did not notice. She chattered on:
”Ontil yesterday, I ain't seen Mrs. Endicott sence that night, it's a year back, when Tex Benton brung you to the hotel in Wolf River an'
wanted the room--” Janet McWhorter sat down abruptly in a chair beside the table and became suddenly interested in fingering the rims of the cartridges in her belt. Jennie continued: ”An' I jest give him a good blessin', 'cause I don't trust no cowpuncher--or didn't then--ontil he explained how it was. An' then he went away, an' Old Bat come an' tuck you off, an' we heard afterwards how you an' Bat, an' the pilgrim an'
Tex hit down through the bad lands an' crossed the river, an' you an'