by Zane Grey
Pretty soon, also, there was likely to be an interview that would shake us all to our depths, and naturally, I was somber at heart. But though my outward mood of good humor may have been pretense, it certainly was a pleasure to be with the girls again way out in the open. Both girls were quiet, and this made my task harder, and perhaps in my anxiety to ward off questions and appear happy for their own sakes I made an ass of myself with my silly talk and familiarity. Had ever a Ranger such a job as mine?
“Diane, did Sally show you her engagement ring?” I went on, bound to talk.
Miss Sampson either did not notice my use of her first name or she did not object. She seemed so friendly, so helplessly wistful. “Yes. It’s very pretty. An antique. I’ve seen a few of them,” she replied.
“I hope you’ll let Sally marry me soon.”
“Let her? Sally Langdon? You haven’t become acquainted with your fiancee. But when—”
“Oh, next week, just as soon—”
“Russ!” cried Sally, blushing furiously.
“What’s the matter?” I queried innocently.
“You’re a little previous.”
“Well, Sally, I don’t presume to split hairs over dates. But, you see, you’ve become extremely more desirable—in the light of certain revelations. Diane, wasn’t Sally the deceitful thing? An heiress all the time! And I’m to be a planter and smoke fine cigars and drink mint juleps! No, there won’t be any juleps.”
“Russ, you’re talking nonsense,” reproved Sally. “Surely it’s no time to be funny.”
“All right,” I replied with resignation. It was no task to discard that hollow mask of humor. A silence ensued, and I waited for it to be broken.
“Is Steele badly hurt?” asked Miss Sampson presently.
“No. Not what he or I’d call hurt at all. He’s got a scalp wound, where a bullet bounced off his skull. It’s only a scratch. Then he’s got another in the shoulder; but it’s not bad, either.”
“Where is he now?”
“Look across on the other ridge. See the big white stone? There, down under the trees, is our camp. He’s there.”
“When may—I see him?” There was a catch in her low voice.
“He’s asleep now. After what happened yesterday he was exhausted, and the pain in his head kept him awake till late. Let him sleep a while yet. Then you can see him.”
“Did he know we were coming?”
“He hadn’t the slightest idea. He’ll be overjoyed to see you. He can’t help that. But he’ll about fall upon me with harmful intent.”
“Why?”
“Well, I know he’s afraid to see you.”
“Why?”
“Because it only makes his duty harder.”
“Ah!” she breathed.
It seemed to me that my intelligence confirmed a hope of hers and gave her relief. I felt something terrible in the balance for Steele. And I was glad to be able to throw them together. The catastrophe must fall, and now the sooner it fell the better. But I experienced a tightening of my lips and a tugging at my heart-strings.
“Sally, what do you and Diane know about the goings-on in town yesterday?” I asked.
“Not much. George was like an insane man. I was afraid to go near him. Uncle wore a sardonic smile. I heard him curse George—oh, terribly! I believe he hates George. Same as day before yesterday, there were men riding in and out. But Diane and I heard only a little, and conflicting statements at that. We knew there was fighting. Dick and the servants, the cowboys, all brought rumors. Steele was killed at least ten times and came to life just as many.
“I can’t recall, don’t want to recall, all we heard. But this morning when I saw the red scarf flying in the wind—well, Russ, I was so glad I could not see through the glass any more. We knew then Steele was all right or you wouldn’t have put up the signal.”
“Reckon few people in Linrock realize just what did come off,” I replied with a grim chuckle.
“Russ, I want you to tell me,” said Miss Sampson earnestly.
“What?” I queried sharply.
“About yesterday—what Steele did—what happened.”
“Miss Sampson, I could tell you in a few short statements of fact or I could take two hours in the telling. Which do you prefer?”
“I prefer the long telling. I want to know all about him.”
“But why, Miss Sampson? Consider. This is hardly a story for a sensitive woman’s ears.”
“I am no coward,” she replied, turning eyes to me that flashed like dark fire.
“But why?” I persisted. I wanted a good reason for calling up all the details of the most strenuous and terrible day in my border experience. She was silent a moment. I saw her gaze turn to the spot where Steele lay asleep, and it was a pity he could not see her eyes then. “Frankly, I don’t want to tell you,” I added, and I surely would have been glad to get out of the job.
“I want to hear—because I glory in his work,” she replied deliberately.
I gathered as much from the expression of her face as from the deep ring of her voice, the clear content of her statement. She loved the Ranger, but that was not all of her reason.
“His work?” I echoed. “Do you want him to succeed in it?”
“With all my heart,” she said, with a white glow on her face.
“My God!” I ejaculated. I just could not help it. I felt Sally’s small fingers clutching my arm like sharp pincers. I bit my lips to keep them shut. What if Steele had heard her say that? Poor, noble, justice-loving, blind girl! She knew even less than I hoped. I forced my thought to the question immediately at hand. She gloried in the Ranger’s work. She wanted with all her heart to see him succeed in it. She had a woman’s pride in his manliness. Perhaps, with a woman’s complex, incomprehensible motive, she wanted Steele to be shown to her in all the power that made him hated and feared by lawless men. She had finally accepted the wild life of this border as something terrible and inevitable, but passing. Steele was one of the strange and great and misunderstood men who were making that wild life pass.
For the first time I realized that Miss Sampson, through sharpened eyes of love, saw Steele as he really was—a wonderful and necessary violence. Her intelligence and sympathy had enabled her to see through defamation and the false records following a Ranger; she had had no choice but to love him; and then a woman’s glory in a work that freed men, saved women, and made children happy effaced forever the horror of a few dark deeds of blood.
“Miss Sampson, I must tell you first,” I began, and hesitated—“that I’m not a cowboy. My wild stunts, my drinking and gaming—these were all pretense.”
“Indeed! I am very glad to hear it. And was Sally in your confidence?”
“Only lately. I am a United States deputy marshal in the service of Steele.”
She gave a slight start, but did not raise her head.
“I have deceived you. But, all the same, I’ve been your friend. I ask you to respect my secret a little while. I’m telling you because otherwise my relation to Steele yesterday would not be plain. Now, if you and Sally will use this blanket, make yourselves more comfortable seats, I’ll begin my story.”
Miss Sampson allowed me to arrange a place for her where she could rest at ease, but Sally returned to my side and stayed there. She was an enigma today—pale, brooding, silent—and she never looked at me except when my face was half averted.
“Well,” I began, “night before last Steele and I lay hidden among the rocks near the edge of town, and we listened to and watched the destruction of Steele’s house. It had served his purpose to leave lights burning, to have shadows blow across the window-blinds, and to have a dummy in his bed. Also, he arranged guns to go off inside the house at the least jar. Steele wanted evidence against his enemies. It was not the pleasantest kind of thing to wait there listening to that drunken mob. There must have been a hundred men. The disturbance and the intent worked strangely upon Steele. It made him different. In the dark I c
ouldn’t tell how he looked, but I felt a mood coming in him that fairly made me dread the next day.
“About midnight we started for our camp here. Steele got in some sleep, but I couldn’t. I was cold and hot by turns, eager and backward, furious and thoughtful. You see, the deal was such a complicated one, and tomorrow certainly was nearing the climax. By morning I was sick, distraught, gloomy, and uncertain. I had breakfast ready when Steele awoke. I hated to look at him, but when I did it was like being revived.
“He said: ‘Russ, you’ll trail alongside me today and through the rest of this mess.’
“That gave me another shock. I want to explain to you girls that this was the first time in my life I was backward at the prospects of a fight. The shock was the jump of my pulse. My nerve came back. To line up with Steele against Blome and his gang—that would be great!
“‘All right, old man,’ I replied. ‘We’re going after them, then?’
“He only nodded.
“After breakfast I watched him clean and oil and reload his guns. I didn’t need to ask him if he expected to use them. I didn’t need to urge upon him Captain Neal’s command.
“‘Russ,’ said Steele, ‘we’ll go in together. But before we get to town I’ll leave you and circle and come in at the back of the Hope So. You hurry on ahead, post Morton and his men, get the lay of the gang, if possible, and then be at the Hope So when I come in.’
“I didn’t ask him if I had a free hand with my gun. I intended to have that. We left camp and hurried toward town. It was near noon when we separated.
“I came down the road, apparently from Sampson’s ranch. There was a crowd around the ruins of Steele’s house. It was one heap of crumbled ’dobe bricks and burned logs, still hot and smoking. No attempt had been made to dig into the ruins. The curious crowd was certain that Steele lay buried under all that stuff. One feature of that night assault made me ponder. Daylight discovered the bodies of three dead men, rustlers, who had been killed, the report went out, by random shots. Other participants in the affair had been wounded. I believed Morton and his men, under cover of the darkness and in the melee, had sent in some shots not calculated upon the program.
“From there I hurried to town. Just as I had expected, Morton and Zimmer were lounging in front of the Hope So. They had company, disreputable and otherwise. As yet Morton’s crowd had not come under suspicion. He was wild for news of Steele, and when I gave it, and outlined the plan, he became as cool and dark and grim as any man of my kind could have wished. He sent Zimmer to get the others of their clique. Then he acquainted me with a few facts, although he was noncommittal in regard to my suspicion as to the strange killing of the three rustlers.
“Blome, Bo Snecker, Hilliard, and Pickens, the ringleaders, had painted the town in celebration of Steele’s death. They all got gloriously drunk except old man Snecker. He had cold feet, they said. They were too happy to do any more shooting or mind what the old rustler cautioned. It was two o’clock before they went to bed.
“This morning, after eleven, one by one they appeared with their followers. The excitement had died down. Ranger Steele was out of the way and Linrock was once more wide open, free and easy. Blome alone seemed sullen and spiritless, unresponsive to his comrades and their admirers. And now, at the time of my arrival, the whole gang, with the exception of old Snecker, were assembled in the Hope So.
“‘Zimmer will be clever enough to drift his outfit along one or two at a time?’ I asked Morton, and he reassured me. Then we went into the saloon.
“There were perhaps sixty or seventy men in the place, more than half of whom were in open accord with Blome’s gang. Of the rest there were many of doubtful repute, and a few that might have been neutral, yet all the time were secretly burning to help any cause against these rustlers. At all events, I gathered that impression from the shadowed faces, the tense bodies, the too-evident indication of anything but careless presence there. The windows were open. The light was clear. Few men smoked, but all had a drink before them. There was the ordinary subdued hum of conversation. I surveyed the scene, picked out my position so as to be close to Steele when he entered, and sauntered round to it. Morton aimlessly leaned against a post.
“Presently Zimmer came in with a man and they advanced to the bar. Other men entered as others went out. Blome, Bo Snecker, Hilliard, and Pickens had a table full in the light of the open windows. I recognized the faces of the two last-named, but I had not, until Morton informed me, known who they were. Pickens was little, scrubby, dusty, sandy, mottled, and he resembled a rattlesnake. Hilliard was big, gaunt, bronzed, with huge mustache and hollow, fierce eyes. I never had seen a grave-robber, but I imagined one would be like Hilliard. Bo Snecker was a sleek, slim, slender, hard-looking boy, marked dangerous, because he was too young and too wild to have caution or fear. Blome, the last of the bunch, showed the effects of a bad night.
“You girls remember how handsome he was, but he didn’t look it now. His face was swollen, dark, red, and as it had been bright, now it was dull. Indeed, he looked sullen, shamed, sore. He was sober now. Thought was written on his clouded brow. He was awakening now to the truth that the day before had branded him a coward and sent him out to bolster up courage with drink. His vanity had begun to bleed. He knew, if his faithful comrades had not awakened to it yet, that his prestige had been ruined. For a gunman, he had suffered the last degradation. He had been bidden to draw and he had failed of the nerve.
“He breathed heavily; his eyes were not clear; his hands were shaky. Almost I pitied this rustler who very soon must face an incredibly swift and mercilessly fatal Ranger. Face him, too, suddenly, as if the grave had opened to give up its dead.
“Friends and comrades of this center group passed to and fro, and there was much lazy, merry, though not loud, talk. The whole crowd was still half-asleep. It certainly was an auspicious hour for Steele to confront them, since that duty was imperative. No man knew the stunning paralyzing effect of surprise better than Steele. I, of course, must take my cue from him, or the sudden development of events.
“But Jack Blome did not enter into my calculations. I gave him, at most, about a minute to live after Steele entered the place. I meant to keep sharp eyes all around. I knew, once with a gun out, Steele could kill Blome’s comrades at the table as quick as lightning, if he chose. I rather thought my game was to watch his outside partners. This was right, and as it turned out, enabled me to save Steele’s life.
“Moments passed and still the Ranger did not come. I began to get nervous. Had he been stopped? I scouted the idea. Who could have stopped him, then? Probably the time seemed longer than it really was. Morton showed the strain, also. Other men looked drawn, haggard, waiting as if expecting a thunderbolt. Once in my roving gaze I caught Blandy’s glinty eye on me. I didn’t like the gleam. I said to myself I’d watch him if I had to do it out of the back of my head. Blandy, by the way, is—was—I should say, the Hope So bartender.” I stopped to clear my throat and get my breath.
“Was,” whispered Sally. She quivered with excitement. Miss Sampson bent eyes upon me that would have stirred a stone man.
“Yes, he was once,” I replied ambiguously, but mayhap my grimness betrayed the truth. “Don’t hurry me, Sally. I guarantee you’ll be sick enough presently.
“Well, I kept my eyes shifty. And I reckon I’ll never forget that room. Likely I saw what wasn’t really there. In the excitement, the suspense, I must have made shadows into real substance. Anyway, there was the half-circle of bearded, swarthy men around Blome’s table. There were the four rustlers—Blome brooding, perhaps vaguely, spiritually, listening to a knock; there was Bo Snecker, reckless youth, fondling a flower he had, putting the stem in his glass, then to his lips, and lastly into the buttonhole of Blome’s vest; there was Hilliard, big, gloomy, maybe with his cavernous eyes seeing the hell where I expected he’d soon be; and last, the little dusty, scaly Pickens, who looked about to leap and sting someone.
“In the
lull of the general conversation I heard Pickens say: ‘Jack, drink up an’ come out of it. Every man has an off day. You’ve gambled long enough to know every feller gits called. An’ as Steele has cashed, what the hell do you care?
“Hilliard nodded his ghoul’s head and blinked his dead eyes. Bo Snecker laughed. It wasn’t any different laugh from any other boy’s. I remembered then that he killed Hoden. I began to sweat fire. Would Steele ever come?
“‘Jim, the ole man hed cold feet an’ he’s give ’em to Jack,’ said Bo. ‘It ain’t nothin’ to lose your nerve once. Didn’t I run like a scared jack-rabbit from Steele? Watch me if he comes to life, as the ole man hinted!’
“‘About mebbe Steele wasn’t in the ’dobe at all. Aw, thet’s a joke! I seen him in bed. I seen his shadder. I heard his shots comin’ from the room. Jack, you seen an’ heerd same as me.’
“‘Sure. I know the Ranger’s cashed,’ replied Blome. ‘It’s not that. I’m sore, boys.’
“‘Deader ’n a door-nail in hell!’ replied Pickens, louder, as he lifted his glass. ‘Here’s to Lone Star Steele’s ghost! An’ if I seen it this minnit I’d ask it to waltz with me!’
“The back door swung violently, and Steele, huge as a giant, plunged through and leaped square in front of that table.
“Some one of them let out a strange, harsh cry. It wasn’t Blome or Snecker—probably Pickens. He dropped the glass he had lifted. The cry had stilled the room, so the breaking of the glass was plainly heard. For a space that must have been short, yet seemed long, everybody stood tight. Steele with both hands out and down, leaned a little, in a way I had never seen him do. It was the position of a greyhound, but that was merely the body of him. Steele’s nerve, his spirit, his meaning was there, like lightning about to strike. Blome maintained a ghastly, stricken silence.
“Then the instant was plain when he realized this was no ghost of Steele, but the Ranger in the flesh. Blome’s whole frame rippled as thought jerked him out of his trance. His comrades sat stone-still. Then Hilliard and Pickens dived without rising from the table. Their haste broke the spell.