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The 8th Western Novel

Page 66

by Dean Owen


  “Reckon she’s right,” said Mormon. “Molly’s different. She had a mighty hard time of it along with her old man, compared to what them soft-skinned snips must have had. Stands to reason she c’udn’t be like ’em, any mo’ than Sam c’ud be easy in his spiketail suit, or me handin’ ice-cream at a swarry. Not that Molly ’ud make no breaks, but their ways w’udn’t be her’n, most of the time. How ’bout it, Sam?”

  “This Mrs. Keith must live high,” said Sam. “She w’udn’t be botherin’ about Molly if she didn’t see a heap of promise in her. I mind me it must be tough to be herded inter a corral where you got to learn all over ag’in how to handle yore feet an’ hands, not to mention forks. This Keith woman’s spotted Molly ain’t easy at school. The other gals like her, but they ain’t her style. She’s range bred an’ free. Those other fillies have been brought up in loose boxes. They probably don’t mean to hurt her feelin’s none, but I ’low they snicker once in a while if Molly forgets the right sasshay. An’ Molly’s proud as they make ’em. Sounds good to me. What you think, Sandy? It’s up to you as her guardeen.”

  “It sure sounds good,” said Sandy. “Seems like this Mrs. Keith must be a pritty fine woman to think of takin’ Molly into her own home. I reckon Molly must have changed a good deal. I’d be inclined to put it this way; if Molly cottons to the idea, let her hop to it.”

  “Mirandy ain’t brought over the butter yet,” put in Mormon, with a glance at his partners that was half shamefaced. “Why not git her opinion? Takes a woman to understand a woman. She’d sabe this letter a heap bettern’ we c’ud.”

  Sam winked covertly at Sandy and shoved his tongue in his cheek.

  “That’s a good idea, Mormon,” said Sandy.

  “Never did find out jest what happened to that last wife of your’n, did ye, Mormon?” asked Sam.

  “Never did.”

  “That’s too bad.”

  “Why?”

  “Gen’ral principles.” Sam said no more but took out his harmonica, ever in one hip pocket, and crooned into it. A jiggly-jazz edition of Mendelssohn’s Wedding March strained through the curtains of Sam’s drooping mustache.

  “Speakin’ wide, the weddin’ cake of matrimony has been mostly mildewed for me,” said Mormon reflectively, “but there was one thing about my last wife I sure admired. Uncommon thing in woman an’ missin’ in some men.”

  Sam, eager for chaffing, fell.

  “What was that, Mormon? I heerd she was a good cook.”

  “It warn’t her cookin’, though that was prime when she was in the humor. But she sure c’ud attend to her own business, an’ there’s damn few can do that. Sandy’s one of the few. I can’t call another to mind jest now.”

  Sam grinned.

  “You sure had me that time, ol’ hawss. An’ the mildew on the weddin’ cake warn’t none of yore fault. That sort of pastry’s too rich for me to tackle. I used to wonder why they allus put frostin’ on weddin’ cake. I reckon it’s a warnin’—or else sarcasm.”

  “Ef you ever git roped thataway, Sam, you’re goin’ to fall high an’ hard,” said Mormon. “You’ll come to consciousness hawg-tied an’ branded.”

  “That the way it was with you?”

  “Yep. I’ve allus had an affinity fo’ the sex. I ain’t like Sandy. Nature give him an instinct ag’in’ ’em, as pardners. He was bo’n lucky.”

  But Sandy had gone out. Sam and Mormon trailed him and saw him walking toward the cottonwood grove with Grit at his heels.

  “He thinks a heap of Molly,” opined Sam. “I reckon he sure hates to lose her, if he is woman-shy. ’Course Molly was jest a kid. But I don’t fancy she’ll take the back-trail once she gits mixed up with the Keith outfit.”

  “I ain’t so plumb sure of that,” returned Mormon. “Molly’s bo’n an’ bred with the West in her blood. She’ll allus hear the call of the range, like a colt that’s stepped wild. He’ll drink at the tank, but he ain’t forgettin’ the water-hole.”

  Sam glanced at Mormon curiously. It wasn’t often Mormon showed any touch of what Sam characterized as poetical.

  Sandy, under the cottonwoods where the spring bubbled, so near the old prospector’s grave that perhaps the old-miner lying there could, in his new affinities with Nature, hear its flow, was thinking much the same thing Mormon had expressed, hoping it might be true, chiding himself lest the thought be selfish.

  A granite block stood now as marker for Patrick Casey’s resting-place, carved with the words that Mormon had chalked on the wooden headstone. A railing outlined the grave, and the turf within it was kept short and green. Sandy squatted down and rolled a cigarette, smoking it as he sat cross-legged. Grit, as was his custom, leaped the railing lightly and lay down above the dust of his dead master, head couched on paws, turned a little sidewise, his grave eyes surveying Sandy.

  “Miss her, ol’ son? So do I. Mebbe she’ll come back to see us-all. She sure did seem to belong.”

  Memories of Molly flickered across the screen of his mind: Molly beside her father by the broken wagon, climbing to get the cactus blossom for his cairn; Molly at the grave; Molly giving him the gold piece; the wild ride across the pass and the race for the train and a recollection that was freshest of all, one he had not mentioned to his partners; the touch of Molly’s lips on his as he had bade her good-by. The kiss had not been that of a child, there had been a magic in it that had thrilled some chord in Sandy that still responded to that remembrance. He never dwelt on it long, it brought a vague reaction always, stirred that strange instinct of his that had branded him as woman-shy, kept him clean. Part of it was intuitive desire for freedom of will and action, as the wild horse shies at even the shadow of a halter that may mean bondage, however pleasant. Part of it was reverence for woman, deep-seated, a hazy, never analyzed feeling that this belief might be disappointed.

  Miranda, alone in the flivver, a new car of her own, bought with money paid by Keith for her claim, was at the ranch-house when Sandy returned. Miranda and young Ed Bailey, accepting Westlake’s advice, had sold for cash, getting fifteen thousand dollars to divide between them, refusing more glittering offers of stock. It was a windfall well worth their endeavor and they were amply satisfied. Young Ed had promptly gone to Agricultural College, putting in part of his money to buy new stock and implements for his father’s ranch, in which he now held a half partnership. Miranda, Mormon and Sam were talking about this when Sandy came up.

  “It sure made a man of young Ed overnight,” said the spinster. “He thought it out all by himse’f an’ nigh surprised us off our feet. He was sort of ganglin’, more ways than one, an’ we feared the money ’ud go to his head. Which it did, as a matter of fact, but it was a tonic, ’stead of actin’ like an intoxicant. We’re plumb proud of him.

  “Mr. Westlake was over day before yesterday,” she went on. “Goin’ on through to the East fo’ a consultation with Mr. Keith an’ his crowd. Said to say he was mighty sorry he c’udn’t git out to the Three Star, but he only had a couple of hours before his train. He says things is boomin’ up to Casey Town. There’s been some good strikes, one in the claim nex’ but one to ours. Keith’s goin’ to start things whirlin’, I reckon.”

  “Mebbe he’ll see Molly,” suggested Sam. “Though of course she ain’t to Keith’s house yet.”

  “How’s that?” asked the spinster eagerly.

  “We are waitin’ fo’ Sandy to show you the letter,” said Sam.

  Miranda read the letter through twice, folded it and held it in her lap for a few moments.

  “Want my opinion on it?” she asked finally.

  “Yes,” said Sandy. “If the mines are goin’ to produce big she’ll likely be rich. She went east to git culchured up. Seems like the school idea might not have been the best, after all.”

  “I don’t know. I don’t rightly git the motive back of this writin’. It ain’t been sent wi
thout one. Mebbe she’s just taken a fancy to Molly, mebbe she’s a woman that likes to do kind things and thinks Molly’ll pay well for bein’ taken up. I don’t mean in money but, if Molly didn’t have a show of bein’ rich, an’ warn’t pritty, which she is, I ain’t certain Mrs. Keith ’ud be so eager. I guess it’s all right but, somehow, it don’t hit me as plumb sincere. Still…I reckon my opinion is like that gilt hawss top of Ed’s barn,” she ended with a smile. “It was set up too light, I reckon, an’ it was allus shiftin’, north, south, east an’ west, when you c’udn’t feel a breath of wind on the level. I ain’t got a thing to pin it to, but I feel there’s something back of it, like a person’s rheumatic spot’ll ache when rain’s comin’.”

  “You’d vote ag’in’ it?” asked Sandy.

  “No-o. I w’udn’t.”

  “I figgered on puttin’ it up to Molly.”

  “That’s a good idee. An’, as her guardeen, I’d suggest that Mrs. Keith lives up to that half-promise of hers an’ make it a condition she brings Molly out here inside of six months. That’ll give time for a fair trial an’ you can see right then fo’ yoreself how it’s workin’. Long’s she goin’ to have teachers she can’t lose much.”

  “That’s a plumb fine idee,” said Mormon, looking triumphantly at his partners.

  It ran with Sandy’s own wishes and he subscribed to it. Sam endorsed it as well, and a letter was sent east that night, containing the proviso of Molly’s return and another that Molly should bear all her own expenses of tuition and living. All this to hang upon Molly’s own desire to make the change.

  When Molly’s letter came there appeared no doubt as to her willingness. She admitted that she had been sometimes “lonesome” at the school. One page was devoted to her anticipations of coming back to visit Three Star:

  I may stay; there are lots of new and lovely things here, but I miss the mountains and the range terribly. Also Grit. Please tell him I have not forgotten him. You might draw cards to see who will kiss him on the end of the nose—for me. It is a very nice nose. High man out.

  Lovingly, Molly.

  P. S. There are three other people I miss just as much as I do Grit, but, being quite grown up, I can not send them the same message, though it would be awfully funny to see you delivering it to each other. Maybe, when I come, I’ll be so glad to see you, I’ll do it myself. M.

  “I’ll kiss no dawg,” declared Sam. “I like a dawg first-rate, like I do a hawss, on’y not so much, but I’m a hell-singed son of a horned-toad if I’d ever kiss one.”

  “It’s two to one you don’t have to,” said Mormon. “If you’re a sport you’ll do as Molly asks an’ draw cards fo’ the privilege. It’s a sure-fire cinch she’ll never give you one of them salutes she hints at when she comes home ef she knows you backed out. Wait till I git the cards.”

  It was plain to Sandy that Sam and Mormon, despite Sam’s protest, took Molly’s pleasantry in earnest and he made no comment as Mormon deftly shuffled the deck and riffled it out over the table. He picked a jack, Mormon a three of clubs and Sam an eight of hearts. Sam whooped at sight of Mormon’s card.

  “Hold on, Molly said ‘High man out.’ That’s Sandy. You an’ me got to draw again. Ain’t that so, Sandy?”

  “Sure is,” said Sandy gravely. “You hollered too soon, Sam. Prob’ly crabbed yore luck.”

  Both chose their cards and drew them to the edge of the table, face down, taking a peep at the index corners.

  “Bet you ten dollars I got you beat,” said Mormon cheerfully.

  Sam turned up his card disgustedly. It was the deuce of spades.

  “Oh, hell!” he exclaimed. “Now I got to kiss a dawg!”

  At his voice and face Mormon and Sandy bent double with laughter that brought water to their eyes and nearly sent Mormon into convulsions. Sam surveyed them with gloomy contempt.

  “Laf, you couple of ring-tailed snakes in the sage!” he said bitterly. “I’m stuck an’ I’m game, but if either of you ever whisper a word of it to a livin’ soul, outside of Molly, I’ll plumb scalp, skin an’ silence both of you. Kiss a dawg! Hell’s delight!”

  They started to follow him, still weak with laughter, but he threatened them with his gun and they fell back in mock alarm while Sam went round back of the corral and they heard him whistling for Grit. When he reappeared, straddling along on his bowed legs, his good humor had returned.

  “How’s he like it?” asked Mormon.

  Sam grinned at him.

  “You bald-headed ol’ badger, you, he acted plumb like yore wives must have, when I salutes him on the snoot. Licks my nose first an’ then curls up his tongue an’ licks off his own. Wipes out all trace of the oskylation pronto an’ thorough. Most unappreciative animile I ever see.”

  “I’ll tell you straight out that none of my wives ever acted thataway,” started Mormon, and the laugh swung at his expense.

  “I didn’t mind the operation so much,” Sam confided to them, “when I figger out that I was just handin’ it on fo’ Molly, an’ that she owes me one, whether she decides to salute you two galoots or not.”

  Molly’s letters were prime events at the Three Star. She wrote every week telling of life at the Keiths’. Miranda made up the quartet to read them. Molly wrote:

  It is full of excitement, this life at the Keiths’, and they are just lovely to me. There is a lot of company always at the house and every one seems to be enjoying himself, but somehow it strikes me as not quite real. I want to be back where nobody pretends.

  I go automobiling a good deal, with Mrs. Keith and once in a while with Donald, but I’d give anything, sometimes, for a good gallop through the redtop and sage and rabbit-brush on my pony. I can go riding here, but it is in the Park and you should see the saddle! Imagine a real saddle with the cantle taken away, the horn gone, the pommel trimmed down to almost nothing, no skirts to it, just pared to the core. And the poor horse bob-tailed and roach-maned, taught to go along with its knees high, like a trained horse in a circus. High-school gaited, they call it.

  There was more talk of dinners and dances, of receptions and theaters, with mention of Donald Keith here and there, chat of new clothes, kind words for the elder Keiths. “Don’t think I’ve changed,” she said. “I’m the same Molly underneath even if I have been revamped and decorated.”

  The famous White Gold prospectuses and advertisements duly followed the news stories. Three Star saw no copies of the last, nor, it seemed, did Molly. Neither did prospectuses or advertisements come their way, for that matter. Casey Town boomed with some bona-fide strikes that sent Keith’s stocks soaring high. The porphyry dyke at the Molly Mine began to yield rich results almost from the first and dividends were paid in such quantities as to stagger the Three Star outfit who saw themselves in a fair way to become rich. All over the barren hills, where the first futile shafts had been driven and abandoned, buildings sprang up like mushrooms, housing machinery, sending up plumes of white smoke that tokened the underground energies. The Keith properties were being developed with much show of outlay, prices jumping at every report from the Molly Mine or other successful developments. None of the investors in these Keith undertakings knew that he owned forty-nine percent of the shares of the Molly and of none other, save for the space between issuing them and selling them.

  The three partners held consultation as to their disposal of the checks that were sent them.

  “Molly, she’s gettin’ the same amount we’re splittin’ both ways,” said Sam, “but somehow it don’t seem right to me the way we come in. It was her dad’s mine. He found it. All we did was to find her—an’ Grit done that. The dawg ought to have a gold collar an’ we might accept a gold plated collar-button, apiece, that’s the way it sizes up to me.”

  “The gal w’udn’t promise to go to school ’less we shared even-Steven,” said Mormon.

  “She didn’t know how much money
she c’ud use then,” demurred Sam. “Now she’s bein’ shown how to spend it. It ain’t that she’d kick, but some might think we’d taken advantage of her. Darn me if I don’t feel thataway myse’f.”

  “I see it this way,” said Sandy. “I’ve done a heap of thinkin’ over the matter. I don’t believe that Molly has changed—still she might be influenced by folks who w’ud look at it that she made the deal when she was a minor an’ we c’udn’t enfo’ce it. Bein’ her guardeen, I’m responsible fo’ what she makes an’ what she loses. Jim Redding fixed up things in that line. He an’ Ba’bara Redding understand it all but others mightn’t. I’m plumb sure that if we-all didn’t take the money Molly ’ud pull out her picket-pin an’ say we wasn’t playin’ fair an’ square with her. It was a deal an’, at the time, I had no mo’ idee the mines w’ud pan out than I have that Sam’s laigs’ll grow straight. I figger we can do this. We can use the money, keepin’ account of it, puttin’ it into stock an’ improvements that’ll pay fo’ themselves long befo’ Molly comes of age an’ my guardeen papers play out. That way we’ll have the benefit of the capital an’ keep it ready to turn over to her if she ever needs it. I don’t believe she’ll ever take one red cent of it. It was a gamble with her an’ she’s a thoroughbred sport. To my mind, she’d sooner be slapped in the face by us than have us try an’ wiggle out of the deal. But, in case anything ever turns up, or she gits married, we’ll have it handy.”

  “Figger she’s goin’ to marry that young Keith? She writes a heap of Donald’s this an’ Donald doin’ that. I’d like to take a slant at him. I sure hate to think of Molly hitchin’ up with a tenderfoot.”

 

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