by B. M. Bower
Bud saw that he had spoken unwisely. “I was thinking he’d maybe hate to miss another running match like today,” he explained guilelessly. “Everybody and his dog seemed to be there today, and everybody had money up. All,” he modified, “except the Muleshoe boys. I didn’t see any of them.”
“You won’t,” Honey told him with some emphasis. “Uncle Dave and the Muleshoe are on the outs. They never come around except for mail and things from the store. And most always they send Hen. Uncle Dave and Dirk Tracy had an awful row last winter. It was next thing to a killing. So of course the outfits ain’t on friendly terms.”
This was more than Pop had gossiped to Bud, and since the whole thing was of no concern to him, and Honey plainly objected to talking about Marian’s husband, he was quite ready to fix his interest once more upon the Sinks. He was surprised when they emerged from a cluster of small, sage-covered knolls, directly upon the edge of what at first sight seemed to be another dry river bed—sprawled wider, perhaps, with irregular arms thrust back into the less sterile land. They rode down a steep, rocky trail and came out into the Sinks.
It was an odd, forbidding place, and the farther up the gravelly bottom they rode, the more forbidding it became. Bud thought that in the time when Indians were dangerous as she-bears the Sinks would not be a place where a man would want to ride. There were too many jutting crags, too many unsuspected, black holes that led back—no one knew just where.
Honey led the way to an irregular circle of waterwashed cobbles and Bud peered down fifty feet to another dry, gravelly bottom seemingly a duplicate of the upper surface. She rode on past other caves, and let him look down into other holes. There were faint rumblings in some of these, but in none was there any water showing save in stagnant pools in the rock where the rain had fallen.
“There’s one cave I like to go into,” said Honey at last. “It’s a little farther on, but we have time enough. There’s a spring inside, and we can eat our sandwiches. It isn’t dark-there are openings to the top, and lots of funny, winding passages. That,” she finished thrillingly, “is the place the Indians claim is haunted.”
Bud did not shudder convincingly, and they rode slowly forward, picking their way among the rocks. The cave yawned wide open to the sun, which hung on the top of Catrock Peak. They dismounted, anchored the reins with rocks and went inside.
When Bud had been investigative Buddy, he had explored more caves than he could count. He had filched candles from his mother and had crept back and back until the candle flame flickered warning that he was nearing the “damps” Indians always did believe caves were haunted, probably because they did not understand the “damps”, and thought evil spirits had taken those who went in and never returned. Buddy had once been lost in a cave for four harrowing hours, and had found his way out by sheer luck, passing the skeleton of an Indian and taking the tomahawk as a souvenir.
Wherefore this particular cave, with a spring back fifty feet from the entrance where a shaft of sunlight struck the rock through some obscure slit in the rock, had no thrill for him. But the floor was of fine, white sand, and the ceiling was knobby and grotesque, and he was quite willing to sit there beside the spring and eat two sandwiches and talk foolishness with Honey, using that part of his mind which was not busy with the complexities of winning money on the speed of his horses when three horses represented his entire business capital, and with wondering what was wrong with Burroback Valley, that three persons of widely different viewpoints had felt it necessary to caution him,—and had couched their admonitions in such general terms that he could not feel the force of their warning.
He was thinking back along his life to where false alarms of Indian outbreaks had played a very large part in the Tomahawk’s affairs, and how little of the ranch work would ever have been done had they listened to every calamity howler that came along. Honey was talking, and he was answering partly at random, when she suddenly laughed and got up.
“You must be in love, Bud Birnie. You just said ‘yes’ when I asked you if you didn’t think water snakes would be coming out this fall with their stripes running round them instead of lengthwise! You didn’t hear a word—now, did you?”
“I heard music,” Bud lied gallantly, “and I knew it was your voice. I’d probably say yes if you asked me whether the moon wouldn’t look better with a ruffle around it.”
“I’ll say the moon will be wondering where we are, if we don’t start back. The sun’s down.”
Bud got up from sitting cross-legged like a Turk, helped Honey to her feet—and felt her fingers clinging warmly to his own. He led the way to the cave’s mouth, not looking at her. “Great sunset,” he observed carelessly, glancing up at the ridge while he held her horse for her to mount.
Honey showed that she was perfectly at home in the saddle. She rode on ahead, leaving Bud to mount and follow. He was just swinging leisurely into the saddle when Stopper threw his head around, glancing back toward the level just beyond the cave. At the same instant Bud heard the familiar, unmistakable swish of a rope headed his way.
He flattened himself along Stopper’s left shoulder as the loop settled and tightened on the saddle horn, and dropped on to the ground as Stopper whirled automatically to the right and braced himself against the strain. Bud turned half kneeling, his gun in his hand ready for the shot he expected would follow the rope. But Stopper was in action-the best ropehorse the Tomahawk had ever owned. For a few seconds he stood braced, his neck arched, his eyes bright and watchful. Then he leaped forward, straight at the horse and the rider who was in the act of leveling his gun. The horse hesitated, taken unaware by the onslaught. When he started to run Stopper was already passing him, turning sharply to the right again so that the rope raked the horse’s front legs. Two jumps and Stopper had stopped, faced the horse and stood braced again, his ears perked knowingly while he waited for the flop.
It came—just as it always did come when Stopper got action on the end of a rope. Horse and rider came down together. They would not get up until Bud wished it—he could trust Stopper for that—so Bud walked over to the heap, his gun ready for action—and that, too, could be trusted to perform with what speed and precision was necessary. There would be no hasty shooting, however; Buddy had learned to save his bullets for real need when ammunition was not to be had for the asking, and grown-up Bud had never outgrown the habit.
He picked up the fellow’s six-shooter which he had dropped when he fell, and stood sizing up the situation.
By the neckerchief drawn across his face it was a straight case of holdup. Bud stooped and yanked off the mask and looked into the glaring eyes of one whom he had never before seen.
“Well, how d’yuh like it, far as you’ve got?” Bud asked curiously. “Think you were holding up a pilgrim, or what?”
Just then, bing-gg sang a rifle bullet from the ridge above the cave. Bud looked that way and spied a man standing half revealed against the rosy clouds that were already dulling as dusk crept up from the low ground. It was a long shot for a six-shooter, but Buddy used to shoot antelope almost that far, so Bud lifted his arm and straightened it, just as if he were pointing a finger at the man, and fired. He had the satisfaction of seeing the figure jerk backward and go off over the ridge in a stooping kind of run.
“He’d better hurry back if he wants another shot at me,” Bud grinned. “It’ll be so dark down here in a minute he couldn’t pick me up with his front sight if I was—as big a fool as you are. How about it? I’ll just lead you into camp, I think—but you sure as hell couldn’t get a job roping gateposts, on the strength of this little exhibition.”
He went over to Stopper and untied his own rope, giving an approving pat to that business-like animal. “Hope your leg isn’t broken or anything,” he said to the man when he returned and passed the loop over the fellow’s head and shoulders, drawing it rather snugly around his body and pinning his arms at the elbows. “It would be kind of unpleasant if they happen to take a notion to make you walk
all the way to jail.”
He beckoned Stopper, who immediately moved up, slackening the rope. The thrown horse drew up his knees, gave a preliminary heave and scrambled to his feet, Bud taking care that the man was pulled free and safe. The fellow stood up sulkily defiant, unable to rest much of his weight on his left leg.
Bud had ten busy minutes, and it was not until they were both mounted and headed for Little Lost, the captive with his arms tied behind him, his feet tied together under the horse, which Bud led, that Bud had time to wonder what it was all about. Then he began to look for Honey, who had disappeared. But in the softened light of the rising moon mingling with the afterglow of sunset, he saw the deep imprints of her horse’s hoofs where he had galloped homeward. Bud did not think she ran away because she was frightened; she had seemed too sure of herself for that. She had probably gone for help.
A swift suspicion that the attack might have been made from jealousy died when Bud looked again at his prisoner. The man was swarthy, low of brow—part Indian, by the look of him. Honey would never give the fellow a second thought. So that brought him to the supposition that robbery had been intended, and the inference was made more logical when Bud remembered that Marian had warned him against something of the sort. Probably he and Honey had been followed into the Sinks, and even though Bud had not seen this man at the races, his partner up on the ridge might have been there. It was all very simple, and Bud, having arrived at the obvious conclusion, touched Stopper into a lope and arrived at Little Lost just as Dave Truman and three of his men were riding down into Sunk Creek ford on their way to the Sinks. They pulled up, staring hard at Dave and his captive. Dave spoke first.
“Honey said you was waylaid and robbed or killed—both, we took it, from her account. How’d yuh come to get the best of it so quick?”
“Why, his horse got tangled up in the rope and fell down, and fell on top of him,” Bud explained cheerfully. “I was bringing him in. He’s a bad citizen, I should judge, but he didn’t do me any damage, as it turned out, so I don’t know what to do with him. I’ll just turn him over to you, I think.”
“Hell! I don’t want him,” Dave protested. “I’ll pass him along to the sheriff—he may know something about him. Nelse and Charlie, you take and run him in to Crater and turn him over to Kline. You tell Kline what he done—or tried to do. Was he alone, Bud?”
“He had a partner up on the ridge, so far off I couldn’t swear to him if I saw him face to face. I took a shot at him, and I think I nicked him. He ducked, and there weren’t any more rifle bullets coming my way.”
“You nicked him with your six-shooter? And him so far off you couldn’t recognize him again?” Dave looked at Bud sharply. “That’s purty good shootin’, strikes me.”
“Well, he stood up against the sky-line, and he wasn’t more than seventy-five yards,” Bud explained. “I’ve dropped antelope that far, plenty of times. The light was bad, this evening.”
“Antelope,” Dave repeated meditatively, and winked at his men. “All right, Bud—we’ll let it stand at antelope. Boys, you hit for Crater with this fellow. You ought to make it there and back by tomorrow noon, all right.”
Nelse took the lead rope from Bud and the two started off up the creek, meaning to strike the road from Little Lost to Crater, the county seat beyond Gold Gap mountains. Bud rode on to the ranch with his boss, and tried to answer Dave’s questions satisfactorily without relating his own prowess or divulging too much of Stopper’s skill; which was something of a problem for his wits.
Honey ran out to meet him and had to be assured over and over that he was not hurt, and that he had lost nothing but his temper and the ride home with her in the moonlight. She was plainly upset and anxious that he should not think her cowardly, to leave him that way.
“I looked back and saw a man throwing his rope, and you—it looked as if he had dragged you off the horse. I was sure I saw you falling. So I ran my horse all the way home, to get Uncle Dave and the boys,” she told him tremulously. And then she added, with her tantalizing half smile, “I believe that horse of mine could beat Smoky or Skeeter, if I was scared that bad at the beginning of a race.”
Bud, in sheer gratitude for her anxiety over him, patted Honey’s hand and told her she must have broken the record, all right, and that she had done exactly the right thing. And Honey went to bed happy that night.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
EVEN MUSHROOMS HELP
Bud wanted to have a little confidential talk with Marian. He hoped that she would be willing to tell him a great deal more than could be written on one side of a cigarette paper, and he was curious to hear what it was. On the other hand, he wanted somehow to let her know that he was anxious to help her in any way possible. She needed help, of that he was sure.
Lew returned on Tuesday, with a vile temper and rheumatism in his left shoulder so that he could not work, but stayed around the house and too evidently made his wife miserable by his presence. On Wednesday morning Marian had her hair dressed so low over her ears that she resembled a lady of old Colonial days—but she did not quite conceal from Bud’s keen eyes the ugly bruise on her temple. She was pale and her lips were compressed as if she were afraid to relax lest she burst out in tears or in a violent denunciation of some kind. Bud dared not look at her, nor at Lew, who sat glowering at Bud’s right hand. He tried to eat, tried to swallow his coffee, and finally gave up the attempt and left the table.
In getting up he touched Lew’s shoulder with his elbow, and Lew let out a bellow of pain and an oath, and leaned away from him, his right hand up to ward off another hurt.
“Pardon me. I forgot your rheumatism,” Bud apologized perfunctorily, his face going red at the epithet. Marian, coming toward him with a plate of biscuits, looked him full in the eyes and turned her glance to her husband’s back while her lips curled in the bitterest, the most scornful smile Bud had ever seen on a woman’s face. She did not speak—speech was impossible before that tableful of men—but Bud went out feeling as though she had told him that her contempt for Lew was beyond words, and that his rheumatism brought no pity whatever.
Wednesday passed, Thursday came, and still there was no chance to speak a word in private. The kitchen drudge was hedged about by open ears and curious eyes, and save at meal-time she was invisible to the men unless they glimpsed her for a moment in the kitchen door.
Thursday brought a thunder storm with plenty of rain, and in the drizzle that held over until Friday noon Bud went out to an old calf shed which he had discovered in the edge of the pasture, and gathered his neckerchief full of mushrooms. Bud hated mushrooms, but he carried them to the machine shed and waited until he was sure that Honey was in the sitting room playing the piano—and hitting what Bud called a blue note now and then—and that Lew was in the bunk-house with the other men, and Dave and old Pop were in Pop’s shack. Then, and then only, Bud took long steps to the kitchen door, carrying his mushrooms as tenderly as though they were eggs for hatching.
Marian was up to her dimpled elbows in bread dough when he went in. Honey was still groping her way lumpily through the Blue Danube Waltz, and Bud stood so that he could look out through the white-curtained window over the kitchen table and make sure that no one approached the house unseen.
“Here are some mushrooms,” he said guardedly, lest his voice should carry to Honey. “They’re just an excuse. Far as I’m concerned you can feed them to the hogs. I like things clean and natural and wholesome, myself. I came to find out what’s the matter, Mrs. Morris. Is there anything I can do? I took the hint you gave me in the note, Sunday, and I discovered right away you knew what you were talking about. That was a holdup down in the Sinks. It couldn’t have been anything else. But they wouldn’t have got anything. I didn’t have more than a dollar in my pocket.”
Marian turned her head, and listened to the piano, and glanced up at him.
“I also like things clean and natural and wholesome,” she said quietly. “That’s why I tried to put yo
u on your guard. You don’t seem to fit in, somehow, with—the surroundings. I happen to know that the races held here every Sunday are just thinly veiled attempts to cheat the unwary out of every cent they have. I should advise you, Mr. Birnie, to be very careful how you bet on any horses.”
“I shall,” Bud smiled. “Pop gave me some good advice, too, about running horses. He says, ‘It’s every fellow for himself, and mercy toward none.’ I’m playing by their rule, and Pop expects to make a few dollars, too. He said he’d stand by me.”
“Oh! He did?” Marian’s voice puzzled Bud. She kneaded the bread vigorously for a minute. “Don’t depend too much on Pop. He’s—variable. And don’t go around with a dollar in your pocket—unless you don’t mind losing that dollar. There are men in this country who would willingly dispense with the formality of racing a horse in order to get your money.”
“Yes—I’ve discovered one informal method already. I wish I knew how I could help you.”
“Help me—in what way?” Marian glanced out of the window again as if that were a habit she had formed.
“I don’t know. I wish I did. I thought perhaps you had some trouble that—My mother had the same look in her eyes when we came back to the ranch after some Indian trouble, and found the house burned and everything destroyed but the ground itself. She didn’t say anything much. She just began helping father plan how we’d manage until we could get material and build another cabin, and make our supplies hold out. She didn’t complain. But her eyes had the same look I’ve seen in yours, Mrs. Morris. So I feel as if I ought to help you, just as I’d help mother.” Bud’s face had been red and embarrassed when he began, but his earnestness served to erase his selfconsciousness.
“You’re different—just like mother,” he went on when Marian did not answer. “You don’t belong here drudging in this kitchen. I never saw a woman doing a man’s work before. They ought to have a man cooking for all these hulking men.”