<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2><h3>FOR DAKOTA</h3>
<p>Though in a state of anxiety and excitement
over the incident of Duncan’s
attack on Doubler and the subsequent
shooting, together with a realization
of Dakota’s danger, Sheila did not lose her
composure. She ran to the river and secured
the water, aware that it might be
needed now more than ever. Then, hurrying
as best she could with the weight of the
pail, she returned to the cabin.</p>
<p>She was relieved to find that Doubler had
received no injury, and she paused long
enough to allow him to tell her that Duncan
had entered the cabin shortly after she had
left it. He had attacked Doubler, but had
been interrupted by Allen, who had suddenly
ridden up. Duncan had heard him
coming, and had concealed himself behind
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_337' name='page_337'></SPAN>337</span>
the door, and when Allen had entered Duncan
had struck him on the head with the butt
of his six-shooter, knocking him down. The
blow had been a glancing one, however,
and Allen had recovered quickly, seizing
Doubler’s rifle and trying to bring down the
would be murderer as he fled.</p>
<p>While attending to Doubler’s bandages,
Sheila repeated the conversation she had
had with Allen concerning the situation in
which he had left Dakota, and instantly the
nester’s anxiety for his friend took precedence
over any thoughts for his own immediate
welfare.</p>
<p>“There’ll be trouble sure, now that Allen’s
left there,” he said. “Dakota won’t
be a heap easy with them deputies.”</p>
<p>He told Sheila to let the bandaging go
until later, but she refused.</p>
<p>“Dakota’ll be needin’ you a heap more
than I need you,” he insisted, refusing to allow
her to touch the bandages. “There’ll
be the devil to pay if any of them deputies
try to rush Dakota’s shack. I want you to
go down there right now. If you wait, it’ll
mebbe be too late.”
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_338' name='page_338'></SPAN>338</span></p>
<p>Sheila hesitated for a moment, and then,
yielding to the entreaty in Doubler’s eyes,
she was at his side, pressing his hand.</p>
<p>“Ride ma’am!” he told her, when she was
ready to go, his cheeks flushed with excitement,
his eyes bright.</p>
<p>Her pony snorted with surprise when she
brought her riding whip down against its
flanks when turning from the corral gates,
but it needed no second urging, and its pace
when it splashed through the shallow water
of the crossing was fully as great as that of
Duncan’s pony, which had previously passed
through it.</p>
<p>Once on the hard sand of the river trail
it settled into a long, swinging gallop, under
which the miles flew by rapidly and
steadily. Sheila drew the animal up on the
rises, breathing it sometimes, but on the levels
she urged it with whip and spur, and in
something more than an hour after leaving
Doubler’s cabin, she flashed by the quicksand
crossing, which she estimated as being
not more than twelve miles from her journey’s
end.</p>
<p>She was tired after her long vigil at Doubler’s
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_339' name='page_339'></SPAN>339</span>
side, but the weariness was entirely
physical, for her brain was working rapidly,
filling her thoughts with picturesque conjectures,
drawing pictures in which she saw
Dakota being shot down by Allen’s deputies.
And he was innocent!</p>
<p>She did not blame herself for Dakota’s
dilemma, though she felt a keen regret over
her treatment of him, over her unjust suspicions.
He had really been in earnest
when he had told her the night before on the
river trail that he was not guilty—that
everybody had misjudged him. Vivid in
her recollection was the curious expression
on his face when he had said to her just before
leaving her that night:</p>
<p>“Won’t you believe me?”</p>
<p>And that other time, when he had taken
her by the shoulders and looked steadily
into her eyes—she remembered that, too;
she could almost feel his fingers, and the
words he had uttered then were fresh in her
memory: “I’ve treated you mean, Sheila,
about as mean as a man could treat a
woman. I am sorry. I want you to believe
that. And maybe some day—when this
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_340' name='page_340'></SPAN>340</span>
business is over—you’ll understand, and forgive
me.”</p>
<p>There had been mystery in his actions
ever since she had seen him the first time,
and though she could not yet understand it,
she had discovered that there were forces at
work in his affairs which seemed to indicate
that he had not told her that for the purpose
of attempting to justify his previous
actions.</p>
<p>Evidently, whatever the mystery that surrounded
him, her father and Duncan were
concerned in it, and this thought spurred her
on, for it gave her a keen delight to think
that she was arrayed against them, even
though she were on the side of the man who
had wronged her. He, at least, had not
been concerned in the plot to murder Doubler.</p>
<p>When she reached the last rise—on the
crest of which she had sat on her pony on
the morning following her marriage to Dakota
in the cabin and from which she had
seen the parson riding away—she was
trembling with eagerness and dread for fear
that something might happen before she
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_341' name='page_341'></SPAN>341</span>
could arrive. It was three miles down the
slope, and when she reached the level there
was Dakota’s cabin before her.</p>
<p>She drew her pony to a walk, for she saw
men grouped in front of the cabin door,
saw Dakota there himself, standing in the
open doorway, framed in the light from
within. There were no evidences of the conflict
which she had dreaded. She had arrived
in time.</p>
<p>Convinced of this, she felt for the first
time her physical weariness, and she leaned
forward on her pony, holding to its mane
for support, approaching the cabin slowly.</p>
<p>Her father was there, she observed, as
she drew nearer; and three strangers—and
Allen! And near Allen, sitting on his
horse dejectedly, was Duncan!</p>
<p>One of Duncan’s arms swung oddly at
his side, and Sheila thought instantly of his
curse when he had been riding near her at
the river crossing. Evidently Allen’s bullet
had struck him.</p>
<p>Sheila’s presence at Dakota’s cabin was
now unnecessary, for it was evident that an
understanding had been reached with Allen,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_342' name='page_342'></SPAN>342</span>
and Sheila experienced a sudden aversion
to appearing among the men. Turning her
pony, she was about to ride away, intending
to return to Doubler’s cabin, when Allen
turned and saw her. He spurred quickly
to her side, seizing the pony by the bridle
rein and leading it toward the cabin door.</p>
<p>“It’s all right, ma’am,” he said, “I got
him. Holy smoke!” he exclaimed as she
came within the radius of the light. “You
certainly rode some, didn’t you, ma’am?”</p>
<p>She did not answer. She saw her father
look at her, noted his start, smiled scornfully
when she observed a paleness overspreading
his face. She looked from him
to Duncan, and the latter flushed and turned
his head. Then Allen’s voice reached her,
as he spoke to Dakota.</p>
<p>“This young woman has rode twenty
miles to-night—to save your hide—you
durned cuss. If you was anyways hospitable,
you’d——”</p>
<p>Allen’s voice seemed to grow distant to
Sheila, the figures of the men in the group
blurred, the light danced, she reeled in the
saddle, tried to check herself, failed, and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_343' name='page_343'></SPAN>343</span>
toppled limply forward over her pony’s
neck. She heard an exclamation, saw Dakota
spring suddenly from the doorway, felt
his arms around her. She struggled in his
grasp, trying to fight him off, and then she
drifted into oblivion.</p>
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