The Lone Star Ranger and the Mysterious Rider

Home > Literature > The Lone Star Ranger and the Mysterious Rider > Page 36
The Lone Star Ranger and the Mysterious Rider Page 36

by Zane Grey


  “Evenin’, friend,” replied Wade. “Might I throw my pack here?”

  “Sure. Get down,” answered the other. “I calkilate I never seen you in these diggin’s.”

  “No. I’m Bent Wade, an’ on my way to White Slides to work for Belllounds.”

  “Glad to meet you. I’m new hereabouts, myself, but I know Belllounds. My name’s Lewis. I was jest cookin’ grub. An’ it’ll burn, too, if I don’t rustle. Turn your hosses loose an’ come in.”

  Wade presented himself with something more than his usual methodical action. He smelled buffalo steak, and he was hungry. The cabin had been built years ago, and was a ramshackle shelter at best. The stone fireplace, however, appeared well preserved. A bed of red coals glowed and cracked upon the hearth.

  “Reckon I sure smelled buffalo meat,” observed Wade, with much satisfaction. “It’s long since I chewed a hunk of that.”

  “All ready. Now pitch in … Yes, thar’s some buffalo left in here. Not hunted much. Thar’s lots of elk an’ herds of deer. After a little snow you’d think a drove of sheep had been trackin’ around. An’ some bear.”

  Wade did not waste many words until he had enjoyed that meal. Later, while he helped his host, he recurred to the subject of game.

  “If there’s so many deer then there’s lions an’ wolves.”

  “You bet. I see tracks every day. Had a shot at a lofer not long ago. Missed him. But I reckon thar’s more varmints over in the Troublesome country back of White Slides.”

  “Troublesome! Do they call it that?” asked Wade, with a queer smile.

  “Sure. An’ it is troublesome. Belllounds has been tryin’ to hire a hunter. Offered me big wages to kill off the wolves an’ lions.”

  “That’s the job I’m goin’ to take.”

  “Good!” exclaimed Lewis. “I’m sure glad. Belllounds is a nice fellar. I felt sort of cheap till I told him I wasn’t really a hunter. You see, I’m prospectin’ up here, an’ pretendin’ to be a hunter.”

  “What do you make that bluff for?” queried Wade. “You couldn’t fool any one who’d ever prospected for gold. I saw your signs out here.”

  “Wal, you’ve sharp eyes, thet’s all. Wade, I’ve some ondesirable neighbors over here. I’d just as lief they didn’t see me diggin’ gold. Lately I’ve had a hunch they’re rustlin’ cattle. Anyways, they’ve sold cattle in Kremmlin’ thet came from over around Elgeria.”

  “Wherever there’s cattle there’s sure to be some stealin’,” observed Wade.

  “Wal, you needn’t say anythin’ to Belllounds, because mebbe I’m wrong. An’ if I found out I was right I’d go down to White Slides an’ tell it myself. Belllounds done me some favors.”

  “How far to White Slides?” asked Wade, with a puff on his pipe.

  “Roundabout trail, an’ rough, but you’ll make it in one day, easy. Beautiful country. Open, big peaks an’ ranges, with valleys an’ lakes. Never seen such grass!”

  “Did you ever see Belllounds’s son?”

  “No. Didn’t know he hed one. But I seen his gal the fust day I was thar. She was nice to me. I went thar to be fixed up a bit. Nearly chopped my hand off. The gal—Columbine, she’s called—doctored me up. Fact is, I owe considerable to thet White Slides Ranch. There’s a cowboy, Wils somethin’, who rode up here with some medicine fer me—some they didn’t have when I was thar. You’ll like thet boy. I seen he was sweet on the gal an’ I sure couldn’t blame him.”

  Bent Wade removed his pipe and let out a strange laugh, significant with its little note of grim confirmation.

  “What’s funny about thet?” demanded Lewis, rather surprised.

  “I was only laughin’,” replied Wade. “What you said about the cowboy bein’ sweet on the girl popped into my head before you told it. Well, boys will be boys. I was young once an’ had my day.”

  Lewis grunted as he bent over to lift a red coal to light his pipe, and as he raised his head he gave Wade a glance of sympathetic curiosity.

  “Wal, I hope I’ll see more of you,” he said, as his guest rose, evidently to go.

  “Reckon you will, as I’ll be chasin’ hounds all over. An’ I want a look at them neighbors you spoke of that might be rustlers.… I’ll turn in now. Good night.”

  CHAPTER 5

  Bent Wade rode out of the forest to look down upon the White Slides country at the hour when it was most beautiful.

  “Never seen the beat of that!” he exclaimed, as he halted.

  The hour was sunset, with the golden rays and shadows streaking ahead of him down the rolling sage hills, all rosy and gray with rich, strange softness. Groves of aspens stood isolated from one another—here crowning a hill with blazing yellow, and there fringing the brow of another with gleaming gold, and lower down reflecting the sunlight with brilliant red and purple. The valley seemed filled with a delicate haze, almost like smoke. White Slides Ranch was hidden from sight, as it lay in the bottomland. The gray old peak towered proud and aloof, clear-cut and sunset-flushed against the blue. The eastern slope of the valley was a vast sweep of sage and hill and grassy bench and aspen bench, on fire with the colors of autumn made molten by the last flashing of the sun. Great black slopes of forest gave sharp contrast, and led up to the red-walled ramparts of the mountain range.

  Wade watched the scene until the fire faded, the golden shafts paled and died, the rosy glow on sage changed to cold steel gray. Then he rode out upon the foothills. The trail led up and down slopes of sage. Grass grew thicker as he descended. Once he startled a great flock of prairie-chickens, or sage-hens, large gray birds, lumbering, swift fliers, that whirred up, and soon plumped down again into the sage. Twilight found him on a last long slope of the foothills, facing the pasture-land of the valley, with the ranch still five miles distant, now showing misty and dim in the gathering shadows.

  Wade made camp where a brook ran near an aspen thicket. He had no desire to hurry to meet events at White Slides Ranch, although he longed to see this girl that belonged to Belllounds. Night settled down over the quiet foothills. A pack of roving coyotes visited Wade, and sat in a half-circle in the shadows back of the camp-fire. They howled and barked. Nevertheless sleep visited Wade’s tired eyelids the moment he lay down and closed them.

  * * *

  Next morning, rather late, Wade rode down to White Slides Ranch. It looked to him like the property of a rich rancher who held to the old and proven customs of his generation. The corrals were new, but their style was old. Wade reflected that it would be hard for rustlers or horse-thieves to steal out of those corrals. A long lane led from the pasture-land, following the brook that ran through the corrals and by the back door of the rambling, comfortable-looking cabin. A cowboy was leading horses across a wide square between the main ranch-house and a cluster of cabins and sheds. He saw the visitor and waited.

  “Mornin’,” said Wade, as he rode up.

  “Hod do,” replied the cowboy.

  Then these two eyed each other, not curiously nor suspiciously, but with that steady, measuring gaze common to Western men.

  “My name’s Wade,” said the traveler. “Come from Meeker way. I’m lookin’ for a job with Belllounds.”

  “I’m Lem Billings,” replied the other. “Ridin’ fer White Slides fer years. Reckon the boss’ll be glad to take you on.”

  “Is he around?”

  “Sure. I jest seen him,” replied Billings, as he haltered his horses to a post. “I reckon I ought to give you a hunch.”

  “I’d take that as a favor.”

  “Wal, we’re short of hands,” said the cowboy. “Jest got the round-up over. Hudson was hurt an’ Wils Moore got crippled. Then the boss’s son has been put on as foreman. Three of the boys quit. Couldn’t stand him. This hyar son of Belllounds is a son-of-a-gun! Me an’ pards of mine, Montana an’ Bludsoe, are stickin’ on—wal, fer reasons thet ain’t egzactly love fer the boss. But Old Bill’s the best of bosses.… Now the hunch is—thet if you git on hyar you’ll hev to do
two or three men’s work.”

  “Much obliged,” replied Wade. “I don’t shy at that.”

  “Wal, git down an’ come in,” added Billings, heartily.

  He led the way across the square, around the corner of the ranch-house, and up on a long porch, where the arrangement of chairs and blankets attested to the hand of a woman. The first door was open, and from it issued voices; first a shrill, petulant boy’s complaint, and then a man’s deep, slow, patient reply.

  Lem Billings knocked on the door-jamb.

  “Wal, what’s wanted?” called Belllounds.

  “Boss, thar’s a man wantin’ to see you,” replied Lem.

  Heavy steps approached the doorway and it was filled with the large figure of the rancher. Wade remembered Belllounds and saw only a gray difference in years.

  “Good mornin’, Lem, an’ good mornin’ to you, stranger,” was the rancher’s greeting, his bold, blue glance, honest and frank and keen, with all his long experience of men, taking Wade in with one flash.

  Lem discreetly walked to the end of the porch as another figure, that of the son who resembled the father, filled the doorway, with eyes less kind, bent upon the visitor.

  “My name’s Wade. I’m over from Meeker way, hopin’ to find a job with you,” said Wade.

  “Glad to meet you,” replied Belllounds, extending his huge hand to shake Wade’s. “I need you, sure bad. What’s your special brand of work?”

  “I reckon any kind.”

  “Set down, stranger,” replied Belllounds, pulling up a chair. He seated himself on a bench and leaned against the log wall. “Now, when a boy comes an’ says he can do anythin’, why I jest haw! haw! at him. But you’re a man, Wade, an’ one as has been there. Now I’m hard put fer hands. Jest speak out now fer yourself. No one else can speak fer you, thet’s sure. An’ this is bizness.”

  “Any work with stock, from punchin’ steers to doctorin’ horses,” replied Wade, quietly. “Am fair carpenter an’ mason. Good packer. Know farmin’. Can milk cows an’ make butter. I’ve been cook in many outfits. Read an’ write an’ not bad at figures. Can do work on saddles an’ harness, an—”

  “Hold on!” yelled Belllounds, with a hearty laugh. “I ain’t imposin’ on no man, no matter how I need help. You’re sure a jack of all range trades. An’ I wish you was a hunter.”

  “I was comin’ to that. You didn’t give me time.”

  “Say, do you know hounds?” queried Belllounds, eagerly.

  “Yes. Was raised where everybody had packs. I’m from Kentucky. An’ I’ve run hounds off an’ on for years. I’ll tell you—”

  Belllounds interrupted Wade.

  “By all that’s lucky! An’ last, can you handle guns? We ain’t had a good shot on this range fer Lord knows how long. I used to hit plumb center with a rifle. My eyes are pore now. An’ my son can’t hit a flock of haystacks. An’ the cowpunchers are ’most as bad. Sometimes right hyar where you could hit elk with a club we’re out of fresh meat.”

  “Yes, I can handle guns,” replied Wade, with a quiet smile and a lowering of his head. “Reckon you didn’t catch my name.”

  “Wal—no, I didn’t,” slowly replied Belllounds, and his pause, with the keener look he bestowed upon Wade, told how the latter’s query had struck home.

  “Wade—Bent Wade,” said Wade, with quiet distinctness.

  “Not Hell-Bent Wade!” ejaculated Belllounds.

  “The same.… I ain’t proud of the handle, but I never sail under false colors.”

  “Wal, I’ll be damned!” went on the rancher. “Wade, I’ve heerd of you fer years. Some bad, but most good, an’ I reckon I’m jest as glad to meet you as if you’d been somebody else.”

  “You’ll give me the job?”

  “I should smile.”

  “I’m thankin’ you. Reckon I was some worried. Jobs are hard for me to get an’ harder to keep.”

  “Thet’s not onnatural, considerin’ the hell which’s said to camp on your trail,” replied Belllounds, dryly. “Wade, I can’t say I take a hell of a lot of stock in such talk. Fifty years I’ve been west of the Missouri. I know the West an’ I know men. Talk flies from camp to ranch, from diggin’s to town, an’ always some one adds a little more. Now I trust my judgment an’ I trust men. No one ever betrayed me yet.”

  “I’m that way, too,” replied Wade. “But it doesn’t pay, an’ yet I still kept on bein’ that way.… Belllounds, my name’s as bad as good all over western Colorado. But as man to man I tell you—I never did a low-down trick in my life.… Never but once.”

  “An’ what was thet?” queried the rancher, gruffly.

  “I killed a man who was innocent,” replied Wade, with quivering lips, “an’—an’ drove the woman I loved to her death.”

  “Aw! we all make mistakes some time in our lives,” said Belllounds, hurriedly. “I made ’most as big a one as yours—so help me God!…”

  “I’ll tell you—” interrupted Wade.

  “You needn’t tell me anythin’,” said Belllounds, interrupting in his turn. “But at thet some time I’d like to hear about the Lascelles outfit over on the Gunnison. I knowed Lascelles. An’ a pardner of mine down in Middle Park came back from the Gunnison with the dog-gondest story I ever heerd. Thet was five years ago this summer. Of course I knowed your name long before, but this time I heerd it powerful strong. You got in thet mix-up to your neck.… Wal, what consarns me now is this. Is there any sense in the talk thet wherever you land there’s hell to pay?”

  “Belllounds, there’s no sense in it, but a lot of truth,” confessed Wade, gloomily.

  “Ahuh!… Wal, Hell-Bent Wade, I’ll take a chance on you,” boomed the rancher’s deep voice, rich with the intent of his big heart. “I’ve gambled all my life. An’ the best friends I ever made were men I’d helped.… What wages do you ask?”

  “I’ll take what you offer.”

  “I’m payin’ the boys forty a month, but thet’s not enough fer you.”

  “Yes, that’ll do.”

  “Good, it’s settled,” concluded Belllounds, rising. Then he saw his son standing inside the door. “Say, Jack, shake hands with Bent Wade, hunter an’ all-around man. Wade, this’s my boy. I’ve jest put him on as foreman of the outfit, an’ while I’m at it I’ll say thet you’ll take orders from me an’ not from him.”

  Wade looked up into the face of Jack Belllounds, returned his brief greeting, and shook his limp hand. The contact sent a strange chill over Wade. Young Belllounds’s face was marred by a bruise and shaded by a sullen light.

  “Get Billin’s to take you out to thet new cabin an’ sheds I jest had put up,” said the rancher. “You’ll bunk in the cabin.… Aw, I know. Men like you sleep in the open. But you can’t do thet under Old White Slides in winter. Not much! Make yourself to home, an’ I’ll walk out after a bit an’ we’ll look over the dog outfit. When you see thet outfit you’ll holler fer help.”

  Wade bowed his thanks, and, putting on his sombrero, he turned away. As he did so he caught a sound of light, quick footsteps on the far end of the porch.

  “Hello, you-all!” cried a girl’s voice, with melody in it that vibrated piercingly upon Wade’s sensitive ears.

  “Mornin’, Columbine,” replied the rancher.

  Bent Wade’s heart leaped up. This girlish voice rang upon the chord of memory. Wade had not the strength to look at her then. It was not that he could not bear to look, but that he could not bear the disillusion sure to follow his first glimpse of this adopted daughter of Belllounds. Sweet to delude himself! Ah! the years were bearing sterner upon his head! The old dreams persisted, sadder now for the fact that from long use they had become half-realities! Wade shuffled slowly across the green square to where the cowboy waited for him. His eyes were dim, and a sickness attended the sinking of his heart.

  “Wade, I ain’t a bettin’ fellar, but I’ll bet Old Bill took you up,” vouchsafed Billings, with interest.

  “Glad to say he did,” repl
ied Wade. “You’re to show me the new cabin where I’m to bunk.”

  “Come along,” said Lem, leading off. “Air you agoin’ to handle stock or chase coyotes?”

  “My job’s huntin’.”

  “Wal, it may be thet from sunup to sundown, but betweentimes you’ll be sure busy otherwise, I opine,” went on Lem. “Did you meet the boss’s son?”

  “Yes, he was there. An’ Belllounds made it plain I was to take orders from him an’ not from his son.”

  “Thet’ll make your job a million times easier,” declared Lem, as if to make up for former hasty pessimism. He led the way past some log cabins, and sheds with dirt roofs, and low, flat-topped barns, out across another brook where willow-trees were turning yellow. Then the new cabin came into view. It was small, with one door and one window, and a porch across the front. It stood on a small elevation, near the swift brook, and overlooking the ranch-house perhaps a quarter of a mile below. Above it, and across the brook, had been built a high fence constructed of aspen poles laced closely together. The sounds therefrom proclaimed this stockade to be the dog-pen.

  Lem helped Wade unpack and carry his outfit into the cabin. It contained one room, the corner of which was filled with blocks and slabs of pine, evidently left there after the construction of the cabin, and meant for firewood. The ample size of the stone fireplace attested to the severity of the winters.

  “Real sawed boards on the floor!” exclaimed Lem, meaning to impress the newcomer. “I call this a plumb good bunk.”

  “Much too good for me,” replied Wade.

  “Wal, I’ll look after your hosses,” said Lem. “I reckon you’ll fix up your bunk. Take my hunch an’ ask Miss Collie to find you some furniture an’ sich like. She’s Ole Bill’s daughter, an’ she makes up fer—fer—wal, fer a lot we hev to stand. I’ll fetch the boys over later.”

  “Do you smoke?” asked Wade. “I’ve somethin’ fine I fetched up from Leadville.”

  “Smoke! Me? I’ll give you a hoss right now for a cigar. I git one onct a year, mebbe.”

 

‹ Prev