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<h2> CHAPTER XV. SHADOWS ON THE SAGE-SLOPE </h2>
<p>In the cloudy, threatening, waning summer days shadows lengthened down the
sage-slope, and Jane Withersteen likened them to the shadows gathering and
closing in around her life.</p>
<p>Mrs. Larkin died, and little Fay was left an orphan with no known
relative. Jane's love redoubled. It was the saving brightness of a
darkening hour. Fay turned now to Jane in childish worship. And Jane at
last found full expression for the mother-longing in her heart. Upon
Lassiter, too, Mrs. Larkin's death had some subtle reaction. Before, he
had often, without explanation, advised Jane to send Fay back to any
Gentile family that would take her in. Passionately and reproachfully and
wonderingly Jane had refused even to entertain such an idea. And now
Lassiter never advised it again, grew sadder and quieter in his
contemplation of the child, and infinitely more gentle and loving.
Sometimes Jane had a cold, inexplicable sensation of dread when she saw
Lassiter watching Fay. What did the rider see in the future? Why did he,
day by day, grow more silent, calmer, cooler, yet sadder in prophetic
assurance of something to be?</p>
<p>No doubt, Jane thought, the rider, in his almost superhuman power of
foresight, saw behind the horizon the dark, lengthening shadows that were
soon to crowd and gloom over him and her and little Fay. Jane Withersteen
awaited the long-deferred breaking of the storm with a courage and
embittered calm that had come to her in her extremity. Hope had not died.
Doubt and fear, subservient to her will, no longer gave her sleepless
nights and tortured days. Love remained. All that she had loved she now
loved the more. She seemed to feel that she was defiantly flinging the
wealth of her love in the face of misfortune and of hate. No day passed
but she prayed for all—and most fervently for her enemies. It
troubled her that she had lost, or had never gained, the whole control of
her mind. In some measure reason and wisdom and decision were locked in a
chamber of her brain, awaiting a key. Power to think of some things was
taken from her. Meanwhile, abiding a day of judgment, she fought
ceaselessly to deny the bitter drops in her cup, to tear back the slow,
the intangibly slow growth of a hot, corrosive lichen eating into her
heart.</p>
<p>On the morning of August 10th, Jane, while waiting in the court for
Lassiter, heard a clear, ringing report of a rifle. It came from the
grove, somewhere toward the corrals. Jane glanced out in alarm. The day
was dull, windless, soundless. The leaves of the cottonwoods drooped, as
if they had foretold the doom of Withersteen House and were now ready to
die and drop and decay. Never had Jane seen such shade. She pondered on
the meaning of the report. Revolver shots had of late cracked from
different parts of the grove—spies taking snap-shots at Lassiter
from a cowardly distance! But a rifle report meant more. Riders seldom
used rifles. Judkins and Venters were the exceptions she called to mind.
Had the men who hounded her hidden in her grove, taken to the rifle to rid
her of Lassiter, her last friend? It was probable—it was likely. And
she did not share his cool assumption that his death would never come at
the hands of a Mormon. Long had she expected it. His constancy to her, his
singular reluctance to use the fatal skill for which he was famed—both
now plain to all Mormons—laid him open to inevitable assassination.
Yet what charm against ambush and aim and enemy he seemed to bear about
him! No, Jane reflected, it was not charm; only a wonderful training of
eye and ear, and sense of impending peril. Nevertheless that could not
forever avail against secret attack.</p>
<p>That moment a rustling of leaves attracted her attention; then the
familiar clinking accompaniment of a slow, soft, measured step, and
Lassiter walked into the court.</p>
<p>"Jane, there's a fellow out there with a long gun," he said, and, removing
his sombrero, showed his head bound in a bloody scarf.</p>
<p>"I heard the shot; I knew it was meant for you. Let me see—you can't
be badly injured?"</p>
<p>"I reckon not. But mebbe it wasn't a close call!... I'll sit here in this
corner where nobody can see me from the grove." He untied the scarf and
removed it to show a long, bleeding furrow above his left temple.</p>
<p>"It's only a cut," said Jane. "But how it bleeds! Hold your scarf over it
just a moment till I come back."</p>
<p>She ran into the house and returned with bandages; and while she bathed
and dressed the wound Lassiter talked.</p>
<p>"That fellow had a good chance to get me. But he must have flinched when
he pulled the trigger. As I dodged down I saw him run through the trees.
He had a rifle. I've been expectin' that kind of gun play. I reckon now
I'll have to keep a little closer hid myself. These fellers all seem to
get chilly or shaky when they draw a bead on me, but one of them might
jest happen to hit me."</p>
<p>"Won't you go away—leave Cottonwoods as I've begged you to—before
some one does happen to hit you?" she appealed to him.</p>
<p>"I reckon I'll stay."</p>
<p>"But, oh, Lassiter—your blood will be on my hands!"</p>
<p>"See here, lady, look at your hands now, right now. Aren't they fine,
firm, white hands? Aren't they bloody now? Lassiter's blood! That's a
queer thing to stain your beautiful hands. But if you could only see
deeper you'd find a redder color of blood. Heart color, Jane!"</p>
<p>"Oh!... My friend!"</p>
<p>"No, Jane, I'm not one to quit when the game grows hot, no more than you.
This game, though, is new to me, an' I don't know the moves yet, else I
wouldn't have stepped in front of that bullet."</p>
<p>"Have you no desire to hunt the man who fired at you—to find him—and—and
kill him?"</p>
<p>"Well, I reckon I haven't any great hankerin' for that."</p>
<p>"Oh, the wonder of it!... I knew—I prayed—I trusted. Lassiter,
I almost gave—all myself to soften you to Mormons. Thank God, and
thank you, my friend.... But, selfish woman that I am, this is no great
test. What's the life of one of those sneaking cowards to such a man as
you? I think of your great hate toward him who—I think of your
life's implacable purpose. Can it be—"</p>
<p>"Wait!... Listen!" he whispered. "I hear a hoss."</p>
<p>He rose noiselessly, with his ear to the breeze. Suddenly he pulled his
sombrero down over his bandaged head and, swinging his gun-sheaths round
in front, he stepped into the alcove.</p>
<p>"It's a hoss—comin' fast," he added.</p>
<p>Jane's listening ear soon caught a faint, rapid, rhythmic beat of hoofs.
It came from the sage. It gave her a thrill that she was at a loss to
understand. The sound rose stronger, louder. Then came a clear, sharp
difference when the horse passed from the sage trail to the hard-packed
ground of the grove. It became a ringing run—swift in its bell-like
clatterings, yet singular in longer pause than usual between the hoofbeats
of a horse.</p>
<p>"It's Wrangle!... It's Wrangle!" cried Jane Withersteen. "I'd know him
from a million horses!"</p>
<p>Excitement and thrilling expectancy flooded out all Jane Withersteen's
calm. A tight band closed round her breast as she saw the giant sorrel
flit in reddish-brown flashes across the openings in the green. Then he
was pounding down the lane—thundering into the court—crashing
his great iron-shod hoofs on the stone flags. Wrangle it was surely, but
shaggy and wild-eyed, and sage-streaked, with dust-caked lather staining
his flanks. He reared and crashed down and plunged. The rider leaped off,
threw the bridle, and held hard on a lasso looped round Wrangle's head and
neck. Janet's heart sank as she tried to recognize Venters in the rider.
Something familiar struck her in the lofty stature in the sweep of
powerful shoulders. But this bearded, longhaired, unkempt man, who wore
ragged clothes patched with pieces of skin, and boots that showed bare
legs and feet—this dusty, dark, and wild rider could not possibly be
Venters.</p>
<p>"Whoa, Wrangle, old boy! Come down. Easy now. So—so—so. You're
home, old boy, and presently you can have a drink of water you'll
remember."</p>
<p>In the voice Jane knew the rider to be Venters. He tied Wrangle to the
hitching-rack and turned to the court.</p>
<p>"Oh, Bern!... You wild man!" she exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Jane—Jane, it's good to see you! Hello, Lassiter! Yes, it's
Venters."</p>
<p>Like rough iron his hard hand crushed Jane's. In it she felt the
difference she saw in him. Wild, rugged, unshorn—yet how splendid!
He had gone away a boy—he had returned a man. He appeared taller,
wider of shoulder, deeper-chested, more powerfully built. But was that
only her fancy—he had always been a young giant—was the change
one of spirit? He might have been absent for years, proven by fire and
steel, grown like Lassiter, strong and cool and sure. His eyes—were
they keener, more flashing than before?—met hers with clear, frank,
warm regard, in which perplexity was not, nor discontent, nor pain.</p>
<p>"Look at me long as you like," he said, with a laugh. "I'm not much to
look at. And, Jane, neither you nor Lassiter, can brag. You're paler than
I ever saw you. Lassiter, here, he wears a bloody bandage under his hat.
That reminds me. Some one took a flying shot at me down in the sage. It
made Wrangle run some.... Well, perhaps you've more to tell me than I've
got to tell you."</p>
<p>Briefly, in few words, Jane outlined the circumstances of her undoing in
the weeks of his absence.</p>
<p>Under his beard and bronze she saw his face whiten in terrible wrath.</p>
<p>"Lassiter—what held you back?"</p>
<p>No time in the long period of fiery moments and sudden shocks had Jane
Withersteen ever beheld Lassiter as calm and serene and cool as then.</p>
<p>"Jane had gloom enough without my addin' to it by shootin' up the
village," he said.</p>
<p>As strange as Lassiter's coolness was Venters's curious, intent scrutiny
of them both, and under it Jane felt a flaming tide wave from bosom to
temples.</p>
<p>"Well—you're right," he said, with slow pause. "It surprises me a
little, that's all."</p>
<p>Jane sensed then a slight alteration in Venters, and what it was, in her
own confusion, she could not tell. It had always been her intention to
acquaint him with the deceit she had fallen to in her zeal to move
Lassiter. She did not mean to spare herself. Yet now, at the moment,
before these riders, it was an impossibility to explain.</p>
<p>Venters was speaking somewhat haltingly, without his former frankness. "I
found Oldring's hiding-place and your red herd. I learned—I know—I'm
sure there was a deal between Tull and Oldring." He paused and shifted his
position and his gaze. He looked as if he wanted to say something that he
found beyond him. Sorrow and pity and shame seemed to contend for mastery
over him. Then he raised himself and spoke with effort. "Jane I've cost
you too much. You've almost ruined yourself for me. It was wrong, for I'm
not worth it. I never deserved such friendship. Well, maybe it's not too
late. You must give me up. Mind, I haven't changed. I am just the same as
ever. I'll see Tull while I'm here, and tell him to his face."</p>
<p>"Bern, it's too late," said Jane.</p>
<p>"I'll make him believe!" cried Venters, violently.</p>
<p>"You ask me to break our friendship?"</p>
<p>"Yes. If you don't, I shall."</p>
<p>"Forever?"</p>
<p>"Forever!"</p>
<p>Jane sighed. Another shadow had lengthened down the sage slope to cast
further darkness upon her. A melancholy sweetness pervaded her
resignation. The boy who had left her had returned a man, nobler,
stronger, one in whom she divined something unbending as steel. There
might come a moment later when she would wonder why she had not fought
against his will, but just now she yielded to it. She liked him as well—nay,
more, she thought, only her emotions were deadened by the long, menacing
wait for the bursting storm.</p>
<p>Once before she had held out her hand to him—when she gave it; now
she stretched it tremblingly forth in acceptance of the decree
circumstance had laid upon them. Venters bowed over it kissed it, pressed
it hard, and half stifled a sound very like a sob. Certain it was that
when he raised his head tears glistened in his eyes.</p>
<p>"Some—women—have a hard lot," he said, huskily. Then he shook
his powerful form, and his rags lashed about him. "I'll say a few things
to Tull—when I meet him."</p>
<p>"Bern—you'll not draw on Tull? Oh, that must not be! Promise me—"</p>
<p>"I promise you this," he interrupted, in stern passion that thrilled while
it terrorized her. "If you say one more word for that plotter I'll kill
him as I would a mad coyote!"</p>
<p>Jane clasped her hands. Was this fire-eyed man the one whom she had once
made as wax to her touch? Had Venters become Lassiter and Lassiter
Venters?</p>
<p>"I'll—say no more," she faltered.</p>
<p>"Jane, Lassiter once called you blind," said Venters. "It must be true.
But I won't upbraid you. Only don't rouse the devil in me by praying for
Tull! I'll try to keep cool when I meet him. That's all. Now there's one
more thing I want to ask of you—the last. I've found a valley down
in the Pass. It's a wonderful place. I intend to stay there. It's so
hidden I believe no one can find it. There's good water, and browse, and
game. I want to raise corn and stock. I need to take in supplies. Will you
give them to me?"</p>
<p>"Assuredly. The more you take the better you'll please me—and
perhaps the less my—my enemies will get."</p>
<p>"Venters, I reckon you'll have trouble packin' anythin' away," put in
Lassiter.</p>
<p>"I'll go at night."</p>
<p>"Mebbe that wouldn't be best. You'd sure be stopped. You'd better go early
in the mornin'—say, just after dawn. That's the safest time to move
round here."</p>
<p>"Lassiter, I'll be hard to stop," returned Venters, darkly.</p>
<p>"I reckon so."</p>
<p>"Bern," said Jane, "go first to the riders' quarters and get yourself a
complete outfit. You're a—a sight. Then help yourself to whatever
else you need—burros, packs, grain, dried fruits, and meat. You must
take coffee and sugar and flour—all kinds of supplies. Don't forget
corn and seeds. I remember how you used to starve. Please—please
take all you can pack away from here. I'll make a bundle for you, which
you mustn't open till you're in your valley. How I'd like to see it! To
judge by you and Wrangle, how wild it must be!"</p>
<p>Jane walked down into the outer court and approached the sorrel.
Upstarting, he laid back his ears and eyed her.</p>
<p>"Wrangle—dear old Wrangle," she said, and put a caressing hand on
his matted mane. "Oh, he's wild, but he knows me! Bern, can he run as fast
as ever?"</p>
<p>"Run? Jane, he's done sixty miles since last night at dark, and I could
make him kill Black Star right now in a ten-mile race."</p>
<p>"He never could," protested Jane. "He couldn't even if he was fresh."</p>
<p>"I reckon mebbe the best hoss'll prove himself yet," said Lassiter, "an',
Jane, if it ever comes to that race I'd like you to be on Wrangle."</p>
<p>"I'd like that, too," rejoined Venters. "But, Jane, maybe Lassiter's hint
is extreme. Bad as your prospects are, you'll surely never come to the
running point."</p>
<p>"Who knows!" she replied, with mournful smile.</p>
<p>"No, no, Jane, it can't be so bad as all that. Soon as I see Tull there'll
be a change in your fortunes. I'll hurry down to the village.... Now don't
worry."</p>
<p>Jane retired to the seclusion of her room. Lassiter's subtle forecasting
of disaster, Venters's forced optimism, neither remained in mind. Material
loss weighed nothing in the balance with other losses she was sustaining.
She wondered dully at her sitting there, hands folded listlessly, with a
kind of numb deadness to the passing of time and the passing of her
riches. She thought of Venters's friendship. She had not lost that, but
she had lost him. Lassiter's friendship—that was more than love—it
would endure, but soon he, too, would be gone. Little Fay slept
dreamlessly upon the bed, her golden curls streaming over the pillow. Jane
had the child's worship. Would she lose that, too? And if she did, what
then would be left? Conscience thundered at her that there was left her
religion. Conscience thundered that she should be grateful on her knees
for this baptism of fire; that through misfortune, sacrifice, and
suffering her soul might be fused pure gold. But the old, spontaneous,
rapturous spirit no more exalted her. She wanted to be a woman—not a
martyr. Like the saint of old who mortified his flesh, Jane Withersteen
had in her the temper for heroic martyrdom, if by sacrificing herself she
could save the souls of others. But here the damnable verdict blistered
her that the more she sacrificed herself the blacker grew the souls of her
churchmen. There was something terribly wrong with her soul, something
terribly wrong with her churchmen and her religion. In the whirling gulf
of her thought there was yet one shining light to guide her, to sustain
her in her hope; and it was that, despite her errors and her frailties and
her blindness, she had one absolute and unfaltering hold on ultimate and
supreme justice. That was love. "Love your enemies as yourself!" was a
divine word, entirely free from any church or creed.</p>
<p>Jane's meditations were disturbed by Lassiter's soft, tinkling step in the
court. Always he wore the clinking spurs. Always he was in readiness to
ride. She passed out and called him into the huge, dim hall.</p>
<p>"I think you'll be safer here. The court is too open," she said.</p>
<p>"I reckon," replied Lassiter. "An' it's cooler here. The day's sure muggy.
Well, I went down to the village with Venters."</p>
<p>"Already! Where is he?" queried Jane, in quick amaze.</p>
<p>"He's at the corrals. Blake's helpin' him get the burros an' packs ready.
That Blake is a good fellow."</p>
<p>"Did—did Bern meet Tull?"</p>
<p>"I guess he did," answered Lassiter, and he laughed dryly.</p>
<p>"Tell me! Oh, you exasperate me! You're so cool, so calm! For Heaven's
sake, tell me what happened!"</p>
<p>"First time I've been in the village for weeks," went on Lassiter, mildly.
"I reckon there 'ain't been more of a show for a long time. Me an' Venters
walkin' down the road! It was funny. I ain't sayin' anybody was particular
glad to see us. I'm not much thought of hereabouts, an' Venters he sure
looks like what you called him, a wild man. Well, there was some runnin'
of folks before we got to the stores. Then everybody vamoosed except some
surprised rustlers in front of a saloon. Venters went right in the stores
an' saloons, an' of course I went along. I don't know which tickled me the
most—the actions of many fellers we met, or Venters's nerve. Jane, I
was downright glad to be along. You see that sort of thing is my element,
an' I've been away from it for a spell. But we didn't find Tull in one of
them places. Some Gentile feller at last told Venters he'd find Tull in
that long buildin' next to Parsons's store. It's a kind of meetin'-room;
and sure enough, when we peeped in, it was half full of men.</p>
<p>"Venters yelled: 'Don't anybody pull guns! We ain't come for that!' Then
he tramped in, an' I was some put to keep alongside him. There was a hard,
scrapin' sound of feet, a loud cry, an' then some whisperin', an' after
that stillness you could cut with a knife. Tull was there, an' that fat
party who once tried to throw a gun on me, an' other important-lookin'
men, en' that little frog-legged feller who was with Tull the day I rode
in here. I wish you could have seen their faces, 'specially Tull's an' the
fat party's. But there ain't no use of me tryin' to tell you how they
looked.</p>
<p>"Well, Venters an' I stood there in the middle of the room with that batch
of men all in front of us, en' not a blamed one of them winked an eyelash
or moved a finger. It was natural, of course, for me to notice many of
them packed guns. That's a way of mine, first noticin' them things.
Venters spoke up, an' his voice sort of chilled an' cut, en' he told Tull
he had a few things to say."</p>
<p>Here Lassiter paused while he turned his sombrero round and round, in his
familiar habit, and his eyes had the look of a man seeing over again some
thrilling spectacle, and under his red bronze there was strange animation.</p>
<p>"Like a shot, then, Venters told Tull that the friendship between you an'
him was all over, an' he was leaving your place. He said you'd both of you
broken off in the hope of propitiatin' your people, but you hadn't changed
your mind otherwise, an' never would.</p>
<p>"Next he spoke up for you. I ain't goin' to tell you what he said. Only—no
other woman who ever lived ever had such tribute! You had a champion,
Jane, an' never fear that those thick-skulled men don't know you now. It
couldn't be otherwise. He spoke the ringin', lightnin' truth.... Then he
accused Tull of the underhand, miserable robbery of a helpless woman. He
told Tull where the red herd was, of a deal made with Oldrin', that Jerry
Card had made the deal. I thought Tull was goin' to drop, an' that little
frog-legged cuss, he looked some limp an' white. But Venters's voice would
have kept anybody's legs from bucklin'. I was stiff myself. He went on an'
called Tull—called him every bad name ever known to a rider, an'
then some. He cursed Tull. I never hear a man get such a cursin'. He
laughed in scorn at the idea of Tull bein' a minister. He said Tull an' a
few more dogs of hell builded their empire out of the hearts of such
innocent an' God-fearin' women as Jane Withersteen. He called Tull a
binder of women, a callous beast who hid behind a mock mantle of
righteousness—an' the last an' lowest coward on the face of the
earth. To prey on weak women through their religion—that was the
last unspeakable crime!</p>
<p>"Then he finished, an' by this time he'd almost lost his voice. But his
whisper was enough. 'Tull,' he said, 'she begged me not to draw on you
to-day. She would pray for you if you burned her at the stake.... But
listen!... I swear if you and I ever come face to face again, I'll kill
you!'</p>
<p>"We backed out of the door then, an' up the road. But nobody follered us."</p>
<p>Jane found herself weeping passionately. She had not been conscious of it
till Lassiter ended his story, and she experienced exquisite pain and
relief in shedding tears. Long had her eyes been dry, her grief deep; long
had her emotions been dumb. Lassiter's story put her on the rack; the
appalling nature of Venters's act and speech had no parallel as an
outrage; it was worse than bloodshed. Men like Tull had been shot, but had
one ever been so terribly denounced in public? Over-mounting her horror,
an uncontrollable, quivering passion shook her very soul. It was sheer
human glory in the deed of a fearless man. It was hot, primitive instinct
to live—to fight. It was a kind of mad joy in Venters's chivalry. It
was close to the wrath that had first shaken her in the beginning of this
war waged upon her.</p>
<p>"Well, well, Jane, don't take it that way," said Lassiter, in evident
distress. "I had to tell you. There's some things a feller jest can't
keep. It's strange you give up on hearin' that, when all this long time
you've been the gamest woman I ever seen. But I don't know women. Mebbe
there's reason for you to cry. I know this—nothin' ever rang in my
soul an' so filled it as what Venters did. I'd like to have done it, but—I'm
only good for throwin' a gun, en' it seems you hate that.... Well, I'll be
goin' now."</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>"Venters took Wrangle to the stable. The sorrel's shy a shoe, an' I've got
to help hold the big devil an' put on another."</p>
<p>"Tell Bern to come for the pack I want to give him—and—and to
say good-by," called Jane, as Lassiter went out.</p>
<p>Jane passed the rest of that day in a vain endeavor to decide what and
what not to put in the pack for Venters. This task was the last she would
ever perform for him, and the gifts were the last she would ever make him.
So she picked and chose and rejected, and chose again, and often paused in
sad revery, and began again, till at length she filled the pack.</p>
<p>It was about sunset, and she and Fay had finished supper and were sitting
in the court, when Venters's quick steps rang on the stones. She scarcely
knew him, for he had changed the tattered garments, and she missed the
dark beard and long hair. Still he was not the Venters of old. As he came
up the steps she felt herself pointing to the pack, and heard herself
speaking words that were meaningless to her. He said good-by; he kissed
her, released her, and turned away. His tall figure blurred in her sight,
grew dim through dark, streaked vision, and then he vanished.</p>
<p>Twilight fell around Withersteen House, and dusk and night. Little Fay
slept; but Jane lay with strained, aching eyes. She heard the wind moaning
in the cottonwoods and mice squeaking in the walls. The night was
interminably long, yet she prayed to hold back the dawn. What would
another day bring forth? The blackness of her room seemed blacker for the
sad, entering gray of morning light. She heard the chirp of awakening
birds, and fancied she caught a faint clatter of hoofs. Then low, dull
distant, throbbed a heavy gunshot. She had expected it, was waiting for
it; nevertheless, an electric shock checked her heart, froze the very
living fiber of her bones. That vise-like hold on her faculties apparently
did not relax for a long time, and it was a voice under her window that
released her.</p>
<p>"Jane!... Jane!" softly called Lassiter.</p>
<p>She answered somehow.</p>
<p>"It's all right. Venters got away. I thought mebbe you'd heard that shot,
en' I was worried some."</p>
<p>"What was it—who fired?"</p>
<p>"Well—some fool feller tried to stop Venters out there in the sage—an'
he only stopped lead!... I think it'll be all right. I haven't seen or
heard of any other fellers round. Venters'll go through safe. An', Jane,
I've got Bells saddled, an' I'm going to trail Venters. Mind, I won't show
myself unless he falls foul of somebody an' needs me. I want to see if
this place where he's goin' is safe for him. He says nobody can track him
there. I never seen the place yet I couldn't track a man to. Now, Jane,
you stay indoors while I'm gone, an' keep close watch on Fay. Will you?"</p>
<p>"Yes! Oh yes!"</p>
<p>"An' another thing, Jane," he continued, then paused for long—"another
thing—if you ain't here when I come back—if you're gone—don't
fear, I'll trail you—I'll find you out."</p>
<p>"My dear Lassiter, where could I be gone—as you put it?" asked Jane,
in curious surprise.</p>
<p>"I reckon you might be somewhere. Mebbe tied in an old barn—or
corralled in some gulch—or chained in a cave! Milly Erne was—till
she give in! Mebbe that's news to you.... Well, if you're gone I'll hunt
for you."</p>
<p>"No, Lassiter," she replied, sadly and low. "If I'm gone just forget the
unhappy woman whose blinded selfish deceit you repaid with kindness and
love."</p>
<p>She heard a deep, muttering curse, under his breath, and then the silvery
tinkling of his spurs as he moved away.</p>
<p>Jane entered upon the duties of that day with a settled, gloomy calm.
Disaster hung in the dark clouds, in the shade, in the humid west wind.
Blake, when he reported, appeared without his usual cheer; and Jerd wore a
harassed look of a worn and worried man. And when Judkins put in
appearance, riding a lame horse, and dismounted with the cramp of a rider,
his dust-covered figure and his darkly grim, almost dazed expression told
Jane of dire calamity. She had no need of words.</p>
<p>"Miss Withersteen, I have to report—loss of the—white herd,"
said Judkins, hoarsely.</p>
<p>"Come, sit down, you look played out," replied Jane, solicitously. She
brought him brandy and food, and while he partook of refreshments, of
which he appeared badly in need, she asked no questions.</p>
<p>"No one rider—could hev done more—Miss Withersteen," he went
on, presently.</p>
<p>"Judkins, don't be distressed. You've done more than any other rider. I've
long expected to lose the white herd. It's no surprise. It's in line with
other things that are happening. I'm grateful for your service."</p>
<p>"Miss Withersteen, I knew how you'd take it. But if anythin', that makes
it harder to tell. You see, a feller wants to do so much fer you, an' I'd
got fond of my job. We led the herd a ways off to the north of the break
in the valley. There was a big level an' pools of water an' tip-top
browse. But the cattle was in a high nervous condition. Wild—as wild
as antelope! You see, they'd been so scared they never slept. I ain't
a-goin' to tell you of the many tricks that were pulled off out there in
the sage. But there wasn't a day for weeks thet the herd didn't get
started to run. We allus managed to ride 'em close an' drive 'em back an'
keep 'em bunched. Honest, Miss Withersteen, them steers was thin. They was
thin when water and grass was everywhere. Thin at this season—thet'll
tell you how your steers was pestered. Fer instance, one night a strange
runnin' streak of fire run right through the herd. That streak was a
coyote—with an oiled an' blazin' tail! Fer I shot it an' found out.
We had hell with the herd that night, an' if the sage an' grass hadn't
been wet—we, hosses, steers, an' all would hev burned up. But I said
I wasn't goin' to tell you any of the tricks.... Strange now, Miss
Withersteen, when the stampede did come it was from natural cause—jest
a whirlin' devil of dust. You've seen the like often. An' this wasn't no
big whirl, fer the dust was mostly settled. It had dried out in a little
swale, an' ordinarily no steer would ever hev run fer it. But the herd was
nervous en' wild. An' jest as Lassiter said, when that bunch of white
steers got to movin' they was as bad as buffalo. I've seen some buffalo
stampedes back in Nebraska, an' this bolt of the steers was the same kind.</p>
<p>"I tried to mill the herd jest as Lassiter did. But I wasn't equal to it,
Miss Withersteen. I don't believe the rider lives who could hev turned
thet herd. We kept along of the herd fer miles, an' more 'n one of my boys
tried to get the steers a-millin'. It wasn't no use. We got off level
ground, goin' down, an' then the steers ran somethin' fierce. We left the
little gullies an' washes level-full of dead steers. Finally I saw the
herd was makin' to pass a kind of low pocket between ridges. There was a
hog-back—as we used to call 'em—a pile of rocks stickin' up,
and I saw the herd was goin' to split round it, or swing out to the left.
An' I wanted 'em to go to the right so mebbe we'd be able to drive 'em
into the pocket. So, with all my boys except three, I rode hard to turn
the herd a little to the right. We couldn't budge 'em. They went on en'
split round the rocks, en' the most of 'em was turned sharp to the left by
a deep wash we hedn't seen—hed no chance to see.</p>
<p>"The other three boys—Jimmy Vail, Joe Willis, an' thet little Cairns
boy—a nervy kid! they, with Cairns leadin', tried to buck thet herd
round to the pocket. It was a wild, fool idee. I couldn't do nothin'. The
boys got hemmed in between the steers an' the wash—thet they hedn't
no chance to see, either. Vail an' Willis was run down right before our
eyes. An' Cairns, who rode a fine hoss, he did some ridin'. I never seen
equaled, en' would hev beat the steers if there'd been any room to run in.
I was high up an' could see how the steers kept spillin' by twos an'
threes over into the wash. Cairns put his hoss to a place thet was too
wide fer any hoss, an' broke his neck an' the hoss's too. We found that
out after, an' as fer Vail an' Willis—two thousand steers ran over
the poor boys. There wasn't much left to pack home fer burying!... An',
Miss Withersteen, thet all happened yesterday, en' I believe, if the white
herd didn't run over the wall of the Pass, it's runnin' yet."</p>
<p>On the morning of the second day after Judkins's recital, during which
time Jane remained indoors a prey to regret and sorrow for the boy riders,
and a new and now strangely insistent fear for her own person, she again
heard what she had missed more than she dared honestly confess—the
soft, jingling step of Lassiter. Almost overwhelming relief surged through
her, a feeling as akin to joy as any she could have been capable of in
those gloomy hours of shadow, and one that suddenly stunned her with the
significance of what Lassiter had come to mean to her. She had begged him,
for his own sake, to leave Cottonwoods. She might yet beg that, if her
weakening courage permitted her to dare absolute loneliness and
helplessness, but she realized now that if she were left alone her life
would become one long, hideous nightmare.</p>
<p>When his soft steps clinked into the hall, in answer to her greeting, and
his tall, black-garbed form filled the door, she felt an inexpressible
sense of immediate safety. In his presence she lost her fear of the dim
passageways of Withersteen House and of every sound. Always it had been
that, when he entered the court or the hall, she had experienced a
distinctly sickening but gradually lessening shock at sight of the huge
black guns swinging at his sides. This time the sickening shock again
visited her, it was, however, because a revealing flash of thought told
her that it was not alone Lassiter who was thrillingly welcome, but also
his fatal weapons. They meant so much. How she had fallen—how broken
and spiritless must she be—to have still the same old horror of
Lassiter's guns and his name, yet feel somehow a cold, shrinking
protection in their law and might and use.</p>
<p>"Did you trail Venters—find his wonderful valley?" she asked,
eagerly.</p>
<p>"Yes, an' I reckon it's sure a wonderful place."</p>
<p>"Is he safe there?"</p>
<p>"That's been botherin' me some. I tracked him an' part of the trail was
the hardest I ever tackled. Mebbe there's a rustler or somebody in this
country who's as good at trackin' as I am. If that's so Venters ain't
safe."</p>
<p>"Well—tell me all about Bern and his valley."</p>
<p>To Jane's surprise Lassiter showed disinclination for further talk about
his trip. He appeared to be extremely fatigued. Jane reflected that one
hundred and twenty miles, with probably a great deal of climbing on foot,
all in three days, was enough to tire any rider. Moreover, it presently
developed that Lassiter had returned in a mood of singular sadness and
preoccupation. She put it down to a moodiness over the loss of her white
herd and the now precarious condition of her fortune.</p>
<p>Several days passed, and as nothing happened, Jane's spirits began to
brighten. Once in her musings she thought that this tendency of hers to
rebound was as sad as it was futile. Meanwhile, she had resumed her walks
through the grove with little Fay.</p>
<p>One morning she went as far as the sage. She had not seen the slope since
the beginning of the rains, and now it bloomed a rich deep purple. There
was a high wind blowing, and the sage tossed and waved and colored
beautifully from light to dark. Clouds scudded across the sky and their
shadows sailed darkly down the sunny slope.</p>
<p>Upon her return toward the house she went by the lane to the stables, and
she had scarcely entered the great open space with its corrals and sheds
when she saw Lassiter hurriedly approaching. Fay broke from her and,
running to a corral fence, began to pat and pull the long, hanging ears of
a drowsy burro.</p>
<p>One look at Lassiter armed her for a blow.</p>
<p>Without a word he led her across the wide yard to the rise of the ground
upon which the stable stood.</p>
<p>"Jane—look!" he said, and pointed to the ground.</p>
<p>Jane glanced down, and again, and upon steadier vision made out splotches
of blood on the stones, and broad, smooth marks in the dust, leading out
toward the sage.</p>
<p>"What made these?" she asked.</p>
<p>"I reckon somebody has dragged dead or wounded men out to where there was
hosses in the sage."</p>
<p>"Dead—or—wounded—men!"</p>
<p>"I reckon—Jane, are you strong? Can you bear up?"</p>
<p>His hands were gently holding hers, and his eyes—suddenly she could
no longer look into them. "Strong?" she echoed, trembling. "I—I will
be."</p>
<p>Up on the stone-flag drive, nicked with the marks made by the iron-shod
hoofs of her racers, Lassiter led her, his grasp ever growing firmer.</p>
<p>"Where's Blake—and—and Jerb?" she asked, haltingly.</p>
<p>"I don't know where Jerb is. Bolted, most likely," replied Lassiter, as he
took her through the stone door. "But Blake—poor Blake! He's gone
forever!... Be prepared, Jane."</p>
<p>With a cold prickling of her skin, with a queer thrumming in her ears,
with fixed and staring eyes, Jane saw a gun lying at her feet with chamber
swung and empty, and discharged shells scattered near.</p>
<p>Outstretched upon the stable floor lay Blake, ghastly white—dead—one
hand clutching a gun and the other twisted in his bloody blouse.</p>
<p>"Whoever the thieves were, whether your people or rustlers—Blake
killed some of them!" said Lassiter.</p>
<p>"Thieves?" whispered Jane.</p>
<p>"I reckon. Hoss-thieves!... Look!" Lassiter waved his hand toward the
stalls.</p>
<p>The first stall—Bells's stall—was empty. All the stalls were
empty. No racer whinnied and stamped greeting to her. Night was gone!
Black Star was gone!</p>
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