The Western Romance MEGAPACK ®: 20 Classic Tales

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The Western Romance MEGAPACK ®: 20 Classic Tales Page 403

by Zane Grey


  Slowly, in sighs and whimpers, in agonies of reluctance, his story came; his words were rendered almost incomprehensible by his abysmal fright. When he had purged himself of his secret Dave promptly unbound him; then leaving him more than half dead, he went to the telephone which connected the pumping station with Las Palmas and called up the ranch.

  He was surprised when Blaze Jones answered. Blaze, it seemed, had just arrived, summoned by news of the tragedy. The countryside had been alarmed and a search for Ed Austin’s slayer was being organized.

  “Call it off,” Dave told him. “I’ve got your man.” Blaze stuttered his surprise and incredulity. “I mean it. It’s José Sanchez, and he has confessed. I want you to come here, quick; and come alone, if you don’t mind. I need your help.”

  Inside of ten minutes Jones piloted his automobile into the clearing beside the river, and, leaving his motor running, leaped from the car.

  Dave met him at the door of the Morales house and briefly told him the story of José’s capture.

  “Say! That’s quick work,” the rancher cried, admiringly. “Why, Ed ain’t cold yet! You gave him the ‘water-cure,’ eh? Now I reckoned it would take more than water to make a Mexican talk.”

  “José was hired for the work; he laid for Ed Austin in the pecan grove and shot him as he passed.”

  “Hired! Why this hombre needs quick hangin’, don’t he? I told ’em at Las Palmas that you’d rounded up the guilty party, so I reckon they’ll be here in a few minutes. We’ll just stretch this horse-wrangler, and save the county some expense.” Law shrugged. “Do what you like with him, but—it isn’t necessary. He’ll confess in regulation form, I’m sure. I had to work fast to learn what became of Mrs. Austin.”

  “Miz Austin? What’s happened to her?”

  Dave’s voice changed; there was a sudden quickening of his words. “They’ve got her, Blaze. They waited until they had her safe before they killed Ed.”

  “‘They?’ Who the hell are you talkin’ about?”

  “I mean Longorio and his outfit. He’s got her over yonder.” Dave flung out a trembling hand toward the river. Seeing that his hearer failed to comprehend, he explained, swiftly: “He’s crazy about her—got one of those Mexican infatuations—and you know what that means. He couldn’t steal her from Las Palmas—she wouldn’t have anything to do with him—so he used that old cattle deal as an excuse to get her across the border. Then he put Ed out of the way. She went of her own accord, and she didn’t tell Austin, because they were having trouble. She’s gone to La Feria, Blaze.”

  “La Feria! Then she’s in for it.”

  Dave nodded his agreement; for the first time Blaze noted how white and set was his friend’s face.

  “Longorio must have foreseen what was coming,” Dave went on. “That country’s aflame; Americans aren’t safe over there. If war is declared, a good many of them will never be heard from. He knows that. He’s got her safe. She can’t get out.”

  Blaze was very grave when next he spoke. “Dave, this is bad—bad. I can’t understand what made her go. Why, she must have been out of her head. But we’ve got to do something. We’ve got to burn the wires to Washington—yes, and to Mexico City. We must get the government to send soldiers after her. God! What have we got ’em for, anyhow?”

  “Washington won’t do anything. What can be done when there are thousands of American women in the same danger? What steps can the government take, with the fleet on its way to Vera Cruz, with the army mobilizing, and with diplomatic relations suspended? Those Greasers are filling their jails with our people—rounding ’em up for the day of the big break—and the State Department knows it. No, Longorio saw it all coming—he’s no fool. He’s got her; she’s in there—trapped.”

  Blaze took the speaker by the shoulder and faced him about. “Look here,” said he, “I’m beginnin’ to get wise to you. I believe you’re—the man in the case.” When Dave nodded, he vented his amazement in a long whistle. After a moment he asked, “Well, why did you want me to come here alone, ahead of the others?”

  “Because I want you to know the whole inside of this thing so that you can get busy when I’m gone; because I want to borrow what money you have—”

  “What you aimin’ to pull off?” Blaze inquired, suspiciously.

  “I’m going to find her and bring her out.”

  “You? Why, Dave, you can’t get through. This is a job for the soldiers.”

  But Dave hardly seemed to hear him. “You must start things moving at once,” he said, urgently. “Spread the news, get the story into the papers, notify the authorities. Get every influence at work, from here to headquarters; get your Senator and the Governor of the state at work. Ellsworth will help you. And now give me your last dollar.”

  Blaze emptied his pockets, shaking his shaggy head the while. “La Feria is a hundred and fifty miles in,” he remonstrated.

  “By rail from Pueblo, yes. But it’s barely a hundred, straight from here.”

  “You ain’t got a chance, single-handed. You’re crazy to try it.”

  The effect of these words was startling, for Dave laughed harshly. “‘Crazy’ is the word,” he agreed. “It’s a job for a lunatic, and that’s me. Yes, I’ve got bad blood in me, Blaze—bad blood—and I’m taking it back where I got it. But listen!” He turned a sick, colorless face to his friend. “They’ll whittle a cross for Longorio if I do get through.” He called to Montrosa, and the mare came to him, holding her head to one side so as not to tread upon her dragging reins.

  “I’m ’most tempted to go with you,” Blaze stammered, uncertainly.

  “No. Somebody has to stay here and stir things up, If we had twenty men like you we might cut our way in and out, but there’s no time to organize, and, anyhow, the government would probably stop us. I’ve got a hunch that I’ll make it. If I don’t—why, it’s all right.”

  The two men shook hands lingeringly, awkwardly; then Blaze managed to wish his friend luck. “If you don’t come back,” he said, with a peculiar catch in his voice, “I reckon there’s enough good Texans left to follow your trail. I’ll sure look forward to it.”

  Dave took the river-bank to Sangre de Cristo, where, by means of the dilapidated ferry, he gained the Mexican side. Once across, he rode straight up toward the village of Romero. When challenged by an under-sized soldier he merely spurred Montrosa forward, eyeing the sentry so grimly that the man did no more than finger his rifle uncertainly, cursing under his breath the overbearing airs of all Gringos. Nor did the rider trouble to make the slightest detour, but cantered the full length of Romero’s dusty street, the target of more than one pair of hostile eyes. To those who saw him, soldiers and civilians alike, it was evident that this stranger had business, and no one felt called upon to question its nature. There are men who carry an air more potent than a bodyguard, and Dave Law was one of these. Before the village had thoroughly awakened to his coming he was gone, without a glance to the right or left, without a word to anyone.

  When Romero was at his back he rode for a mile or two through a region of tiny scattered farms and neglected garden patches, after which he came out into the mesquite. For all the signs he saw, he might then have been in the heart of a foreign country. Mexico had swallowed him.

  As the afternoon heat subsided, Montrosa let herself out into a freer gait and began to cover the distance rapidly, heading due west through a land of cactus and dagger, of thorn and barb and bramble.

  The roads were unfenced, the meadows desolate; the huts were frequently untenanted. Ahead the sky burned splendidly, and the sunset grew more brilliant, more dazzling, until it glorified the whole mean, thirsty, cruel countryside.

  Dave’s eyes were set upon that riot of blazing colors, but for the time it failed to thrill him. In that welter of changing hues and tints he saw only red. Red! That was the c
olor of blood; it stood for passion, lust, violence; and it was a fitting badge of color for this land of revolutions and alarms. At first he saw little else—except the hint of black despair to follow. But there was gold in the sunset, too—the yellow gold of ransom! That was Mexico—red and yellow, blood and gold, lust and license. Once the rider’s fancy began to work in this fashion, it would not rest, and as the sunset grew in splendor he found in it richer meanings. Red was the color of a woman’s lips—yes, and a woman’s hair. The deepening blue of the high sky overhead was the hue of a certain woman’s eyes. A warm, soft breeze out of the west beat into his face, and he remembered how warm and soft Alaire’s breath had been upon his cheek.

  The woman of his desires was yonder, where those colors warred, and she was mantled in red and gold and purple for his coming. The thought aroused him; the sense of his unworthiness vanished, the blight fell from him; he felt only a throbbing eagerness to see her and to take her in his arms once more before the end.

  With his head high and his face agleam, he rode into the west, into the heart of the sunset.

  XXVII

  LA FERIA

  “What’s this I hear about war?” Dolores inquired of her mistress, a few days after their arrival at La Feria. “They tell me that Mexico is invaded and that the American soldiers have already killed more than a thousand women and children.”

  “Who tells you this?” Alaire asked.

  “The men—everybody,” Dolores waved a hand in the direction of the other ranch buildings. “Our people are buzzing like bees with the news, and, of course, no one cares to work when the Americans are coming.”

  “I shall have to put an end to such talk.”

  “This morning the word came that the revolution is ended and that the soldiers of both parties are uniting to fight for their liberties. They say the Gringos are killing all the old people—every one, in fact, except the girls, whom they take with them. Already they have begun the most horrible practices. Why, at Espinal”—Dolores’s eyes were round—“would you believe it?—those Yankee soldiers ate a baby! They roasted the little dear like a cabrito and ate it! I tell you, it makes wild talk among the peladors.”

  “Do you believe such stories?” Alaire inquired, with some amusement.

  “Um-m—not altogether. But, all the same, I think it is time we were going home.”

  “This is home, for me, Dolores.”

  “Yes, but now that war—”

  “There isn’t any war, and there won’t be any. However, if you are nervous I’ll send you back to Las Palmas at once.”

  “Glory of God! It would be the end of me. These Mexicans would recognize me instantly as an American, for I have the appearance and the culture. You can imagine what would happen to me. They would tear me from the train. It was nothing except General Longorio’s soldiers that brought us safely through from Nuevo Pueblo.”

  “Then I’m glad that he insisted upon sending them with us. Now tell the ranch-hands to put no faith in these ridiculous stories. If they wish the truth let them ask General Longorio; he will be here today and quiet their fears.”

  “You think he intends to pay us for our cattle?”

  “Yes.”

  Dolores pondered a moment. “Well, perhaps he does—it is not his money. For that matter, he would give all Mexico if you asked it. Tse! His love consumes him like a fever.”

  Alaire stirred uneasily; then she rose and went to an open window, which looked out into the tiny patio with its trickling fountain and its rank, untended plants. “Why do you insist that he loves me?” she asked. “All Mexicans are gallant and pay absurd compliments. It’s just a way they have. He has never spoken a word that could give offense.” As Dolores said nothing, she went on, hesitatingly, “I can’t very well refuse to see him, for I don’t possess even a receipt to show that he took those cattle.”

  “Oh, you must not offend him,” Dolores agreed, hastily, “or we’d never leave Mexico alive.” With which cheering announcement the housekeeper heaved a deep sigh and went about her duties with a gloomy face.

  Longorio arrived that afternoon, and Alaire received him in the great naked living room of the hacienda, with her best attempt at formality. But her coolness served not in the least to chill his fervor.

  “Señora,” he cried, eagerly, “I have a thousand things to tell you, things of the greatest importance. They have been upon my tongue for hours, but now that I behold you I grow drunk with delight and my lips frame nothing but words of admiration for your beauty. So! I feast my eyes.” He retained his warm clasp of her fingers, seeming to envelop her uncomfortably with his ardor.

  “What is it you have to tell me?” she asked him, withdrawing her hand.

  “Well, I hardly know where to begin—events have moved so swiftly, and such incredible things have happened. Even now I am in a daze, for history is being made every hour—history for Mexico, for you, and for me. I bring you good news and bad news; something to startle you and set your brain in a whirl. I planned to send a messenger ahead of me, and then I said: ‘No, this is a crisis; therefore no tongue but mine shall apprise her, no hand but mine shall comfort her. Only a coward shrinks from the unpleasant; I shall lighten her distress and awaken in her breast new hope, new happiness’—”

  “What do you mean?” Alaire inquired, sharply. “You say you bring bad news?”

  The general nodded. “In a way, terrible, shocking! And yet I look beyond the immediate and see in it a blessing. So must you. To me it spells the promise of my unspoken longings, my whispered prayers.” Noting his hearer’s growing bewilderment, he laid a hand familiarly upon her arm. “No matter how I tell you, it will be a blow, for death is always sudden; it always finds us unprepared.”

  “Death? Who—is dead?”

  “Restrain yourself. Allow for my clumsiness.”

  “Who? Please tell me?”

  “Some one very close to you and very dear to you at one time. My knowledge of your long unhappiness alone gives me courage to speak.”

  Alaire raised her fluttering fingers to her throat; her eyes were wide as she said: “You don’t mean—Mr. Austin?”

  “Yes.” Longorio scrutinized her closely, as if to measure the effect of his disclosure. “Señora, you are free!”

  Alaire uttered a breathless exclamation; then, feeling his gaze burning into her, turned away, but not before he had noted her sudden pallor, the blanching of her lips.

  This unexpected announcement dazed her; it scattered her thoughts and robbed her of words, but just what her dominant emotion was at the moment she could not tell. Once her first giddiness had passed, however, once the truth had borne in upon her, she found that she felt no keen anguish, and certainly no impulse to weep. Rather she experienced a vague horror, such as the death of an acquaintance or of a familiar relative might evoke. Ed had been anything but a true husband, and her feeling now was more for the memory of the man he had been, for the boy she had known and loved, than for the man whose name she bore. So he was gone and, as Longorio said, she was free. It meant much. She realized dimly that in this one moment her whole life had changed. She had never thought of this way out of her embarrassments; she had been prepared, in fact, for anything except this. Dead! It was deplorable, for Ed was young. Once the first shock had passed away, she became conscious of a deep pity for the man, and a complete forgiveness for the misery he had caused her. After a time she faced the newsbearer, and in a strained voice inquired:

  “How did it happen? Was it—because of me?”

  “No, no! Rest your mind on that score. See! I understand your concern and I share your intimate thoughts. No, it was an accident, ordained by God. His end was the result of his own folly, a gunshot wound while he was drunk, I believe. Now you will understand why I said that I bore tidings both good and evil and why I, of all people, should be the
one to impart them.”

  Alaire turned questioning eyes upon him, as if to fathom his meaning, and he answered her with his brilliant smile. Failing to evoke a response, he went on:

  “Ever since I heard of it I have repeated over and over again, ‘It is a miracle; it is the will of God.’ Come, then, we know each other so well that we may speak frankly. Let us be honest and pretend to no counterfeit emotions. Let us recognize in this only your deliverance and the certainty of that blessed happiness which Divine Providence offers us both.”

  “Both?” she repeated, dully.

  “Need I be plainer? You know my heart. You have read me. You understand how I have throttled my longings and remained mute while all my being called to you.”

  Alaire withdrew a step, and her cheeks colored with anger. “General!” she exclaimed, with some difficulty, “I am amazed. This is no time—” Her indignation rose with the sound of her own voice, causing her to stammer.

  Taking advantage of her loss of words, he hurried on: “You must pardon my impetuosity, but I am a man of tremendous force, and my life moves swiftly. I am not shackled by conventions—they are less than nothing to me. If it seems to you that my eagerness carries me away, remember that war is upon us and that affairs of moment press me so that I am compelled to move like the lightning. With me, señora, a day is a year. The past is gone, the present is here, the future rushes forward to meet us.”

  “Indeed, you forget yourself,” she said, warmly. Then, changing her tone: “I too must act quickly. I must go back at once.”

  “Oh, but I have told you only a part of what I came to say.”

  “Surely the rest can wait.” Her voice was vibrant with contempt. “I’m in no condition to listen to anything else.”

  But Longorio insisted. “Wait! It is impossible for you to leave here.”

  Alaire stared at him incredulously.

 

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