Part 49 (2/2)
It was looking back on those pregnant hours that their various enormities were made plain to her, chiefly through the expounding of _ex-post-facto_ wisdom operating cold-bloodedly and without the urge of a peril to be met.
With much the same acceptance of the bizarre as that which marks the fantasy of dreams, she endured the discomforts of that night's journey and found herself at daybreak looking into gravely welcoming eyes on the station at Marlin Town.
Her own eyes felt sunken and hot with fatigue, but to Joe Gregory, who had also spent a sleepless night, she seemed a picture of the fresh and dauntless.
They went first to her father's bungalow, and there a new difficulty presented itself. Larry Masters had gone away to some adjacent town and had left his house tight locked.
”Boone's on the move today,” Joe Gregory informed her, ”but matters'll come to a head ternight. Twell then things won't hardly bust, but when ther time comes, whatever ye kin do hes need ter be done swiftly. When I talked with ye last night I mis...o...b..ed we'd hev even this much time ter go on.”
Then as they sat on the doorstep of the closed house, which no longer afforded her the conventional sanction of paternal presence, the deputy sheriff outlined for her with admirable directness and vigour the situation which had driven him to her for help. To clear away all mystification he sketched baldly the little episode of the down-turned photograph and the bitterness of the three words, ”I'm ruined now.”
”Thet's how come me ter know,” he enlightened simply, ”thet Boone war sort of crazed-like--an' thet _you_ mout cure him, ef so be ye _would_.”
Then with a sterner note he added: ”Whatever took place betwixt ther two of ye air yore own business, but thar's some of us thet would go down inter h.e.l.l ter save Boone Wellver. I needed ye, an', despite yer bein' a woman, ef ye're a man in any sense at all, ye'll stand by me right now.”
Anne rose from the doorstep where she had been dejectedly sitting and held out a hand.
”You see, I came,” she said briefly; ”and I aim to be man enough to do my best.”
From the door of the wretched hotel as the morning grew to noon, she watched the streets, and it seemed to her that, quite aside from the usual gloom of the winter's day and the scowl of the heavy sky, there was a new and intangible spirit of foreboding upon the town. That, she argued, could be only the creative force of imagination.
She wished for Joe Gregory, but among many busy people that day he was the busiest, and it was not until near sunset that he came for her, leading a saddled horse. Riding along the steep and twisting ways, a sense of sinister forces oppressed her.
It seemed to her that the dirge through the brown-gray forests and the shriek of blasts along the gorges were blended into an untamable litany.
”We are the ancient hills that stand unaltered! We and our sons refuse to pa.s.s under the rod. Wild is our breath and fierce our heritage. Let the plains be tamed and the valleys serve! Here we uphold the law of the lawless, the nihilism of ragged freedom!”
Once Joe halted her with a raised band. ”Stay hyar,” he ordered, ”twell I ride on ahead. Folks hain't licensed ter pa.s.s hyar terday ontil they gives ther right signal.”
He went forward a few rods, and had Anne not been watching his lips she would have sworn that it was only the caw of a crow she heard; but soon from a cliff overhead and then from a thicket at the left came the response of other cawing. Then with a nod to her to follow, her guide flapped his reins on the neck of his mule, and again they moved forward.
It was dark when they came to the road that pa.s.sed in front of Victor McCalloway's house, and there Joe drew rein.
”I've still got some sev'ral things ter see to,” he informed the girl, ”so I won't stop hyar now. Boone's inside thar, an' like as not hit'll be better fer ther two of ye ter talk by yoreselves. I'll give ther call afore I rides on, so thet ther door'll open for ye. Hit hain't openin'
ter everybody ternight.”
Then for the first time Anne faltered.
”Must I go in there--alone?” she demanded, and Gregory looked swiftly up.
”Ye hain't affrighted of him, be ye? Thar hain't no need ter be.”
Anne stiffened, then laughed nervously. ”No,” she said, ”I'll go in.”
The deputy sitting sidewise in his saddle, watched her dismount, and when she reached the doorstep he sung out: ”Boone, hit's Joe Gregory talkin'. Open up!”
Anne's knees were none too steady, nor was her breath quite even as the door swung outward and Boone stood against its rectangle of light peering out with eyes unaccommodated to the dark. He was flannel s.h.i.+rted and corduroy breeched, and since yesterday he had not shaved. But his face, drawn and strained as he looked out, not seeing her because he was studying the stile from which the voice had come, was the face of one who has been in purgatory and who has not yet seen the light of release.
<script>