-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
data.txt
9769 lines (7332 loc) · 436 KB
/
data.txt
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Man to Man, by Jackson Gregory
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
Title: Man to Man
Author: Jackson Gregory
Release Date: July 29, 2006 [EBook #18933]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAN TO MAN ***
Produced by Al Haines
[Frontispiece: The blazing heat was such that men and horses and steers
suffered terribly.]
MAN TO MAN
BY
JACKSON GREGORY
AUTHOR OF
JUDITH OF BLUE LAKE RANCH, THE BELLS OF SAN JUAN, SIX FEET FOUR, ETC.
ILLUSTRATED BY
J. G. SHEPHERD
GROSSET & DUNLAP
PUBLISHERS -------- NEW YORK
COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
Published October, 1920
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I. STEVE DIVES INTO DEEP WATERS
II. MISS BLUE CLOAK KNOWS WHEN SHE'S BEAT
III. NEWS OF A LEGACY
IV. TERRY BEFORE BREAKFAST
V. HOW STEVE PACKARD CAME HOME
VI. BANK NOTES AND A BLIND MAN
VII. THE OLD MOUNTAIN LION COMES DOWN FROM THE NORTH
VIII. IN RED CREEK TOWN
IX. "IT'S MY FIGHT AND HIS. LET HIM GO!"
X. A RIDE WITH TERRY
XI. THE TEMPTING OF YELLOW BARBEE
XII. IN A DARK ROOM
XIII. AT THE LUMBER CAMP
XIV. THE MAN-BREAKER AT HOME
XV. AT THE FALLEN LOG
XVI. TERRY DEFIES BLENHAM
XVII. AND CALLS ON STEVE
XVIII. "IF HE KNOWS--DOES SHE?"
XIX. TERRY CONFRONTS HELL-FIRE PACKARD
XX. A GATE AND A RECORD SMASHED
XXI. PACKARD WRATH AND TEMPLE RAGE
XXII. THE HAND OF BLENHAM
XXIII. STEVE RIDES BY THE TEMPLE PLACE
XXIV. DOWN FROM THE SKY!
XXV. THE STAMPEDE
XXVI. YELLOW BARBEE KEEPS A PROMISE
XXVII. IN HONOR OF THE FAIRY QUEEN!
ILLUSTRATIONS
The blazing heat was such that men and horses and steers suffered
terribly . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
The men about him and Packard withdrew this way and that leaving empty
floor space.
Terry's head, her face flushed rosily, her eyes never brighter, popped
up on one side of the log.
"Say it!" laughed Terry. "Well, I'm here. Came on business."
MAN TO MAN
CHAPTER I
STEVE DIVES INTO DEEP WATERS
Steve Packard's pulses quickened and a bright eagerness came into his
eyes as he rode deeper into the pine-timbered mountains. To-day he was
on the last lap of a delectable journey. Three days ago he had ridden
out of the sun-baked town of San Juan; three months had passed since he
had sailed out of a South Sea port.
Far down there, foregathering with sailor men in a dirty water-front
boarding-house, he had grown suddenly and even tenderly reminiscent of
a cleaner land which he had roamed as a boy. He stared back across the
departed years as many a man has looked from just some such resort as
Black Jack's boarding-house, a little wistfully withal. Abruptly
throwing down his unplayed hand and forfeiting his ante in a card game,
he had gotten up and taken ship back across the Pacific. The house of
Packard might have spelled its name with the seven letters of the word
"impulse."
Late to-night or early to-morrow he would go down the trail into
Packard's Grab, the valley which had been his grandfather's and,
because of a burst of reckless generosity on the part of the old man,
Steve's father's also. But never Steve's, pondered the man on the
horse; word of his father's death had come to him five months ago and
with it word of Phil Packard's speculations and sweeping losses.
But never had money's coming and money's going been a serious concern
of Steve Packard; and now his anticipation was sufficiently keen. The
world was his; he had no need of a legal paper to state that the small
fragment of the world known as Ranch Number Ten belonged to him. He
could ride upon it again, perhaps find one like old Bill Royce, the
foreman, left. And then he could go on until he came to the other
Packard ranch where his grandfather had lived and still might be living.
After all of this--Well, there were many sunny beaches here and there
along the seven seas where he had still to lie and sun himself. Now it
was a pure joy to note how the boles of pine and cedar pointed straight
toward the clear, cloudless blue; how the little streams trickled
through their worn courses; how the quail scurried to their brushy
retreats; how the sunlight splashed warm and golden through the
branches; how valleys widened and narrowed and the thickly timbered
ravines made a delightful and tempting coolness upon the mountainsides.
It was an adventure with its own thrill to ride around a bend in the
narrow trail and be greeted by an old, well-remembered landmark: a
flat-topped boulder where he had lain when a boy, looking up at the sky
and thrilling to the whispered promises of life; or a pool where he had
fished or swum; or a tree he had climbed or from whose branches he had
shot a gray squirrel. A wagon-road which he might have taken he
abandoned for a trail which better suited his present fancy since it
led with closer intimacy into the woods.
It was late afternoon when he came to the gentle rise which gave first
glint of the little lake so like a blue jewel set in the dusty green of
the wooded slopes. As he rose in his stirrups to gaze down a vista
through the tree-trunks, he saw the bright, vivid blue of a cloak.
"Now, there's a woman," thought Packard without enthusiasm. "The woods
were quite well enough alone without her. As I suppose Eden was. But
along she comes just the same. And of course she must pick out the one
dangerous spot on the whole lake shore to display herself on."
For he knew how, just yonder where the blue cloak caught the sunlight,
there was a sheer bank and how the lapping water had cut into it,
gouging it out year after year so that the loose soil above was always
ready to crumble and spill into the lake. The wearer of the bright
garment stirred and stood up, her back still toward him.
"Young girl, most likely," he hazarded an opinion.
Though she was too far from him to be at all certain, he had sensed
something of youth's own in the very quality of her gesture.
Then suddenly he clapped his spurs to his horse's sides and went racing
down the slope toward the spot where an instant ago she had made such a
gay contrast to dull verdure and gray boulders. For he had glimpsed
the quick flash of an up-thrown arm, had heard a low cry, had guessed
rather than seen through the low underbrush her young body falling.
As he threw himself from his horse's back, his spur caught in the blue
cloak which had dropped from her shoulders; he kicked at it savagely.
He jerked off his boots, poised a moment looking down upon the
disturbed surface of the water which had closed over her head, made out
the sweep of an arm under the widening circles, and dived straight down.
And so deep down under water they met for the first time, Steve Packard
with a sense of annoyance that was almost outright irritation, the girl
struggling frantically as his right arm closed tight about her. A
quick suspicion came to him that she had not fallen but had thrown
herself downward in some passionate quarrel with life; that she wanted
to die and would give him scant thanks for the rescue.
This thought was followed by the other that in her access of terror she
was doing what the drowning person always does--losing her head,
threatening to bind his arms with her own and drag him down with her.
Struggling half blindly and all silently they rose a little toward the
surface. Packard tightened his grip about her body, managed to
imprison one of her arms against her side, beat at the water with his
free hand, and so, just as his lungs seemed ready to burst, he brought
his nostrils into the air.
He drew in a great breath and struck out mightily for the shore,
seeking a less precipitous bank at the head of a little cove. As he
did so, he noted how her struggles had suddenly given over, how she
floated quietly with him, her free arm even aiding in their progress.
A little later he crawled out of the clear, cold water to a pebbly
beach, drawing her after him.
And now he understood that his destiny and his own headlong nature had
again made a consummate fool of him. The same knowledge was offered
him freely in a pair of gray eyes which fairly blazed at him. No
gratitude there of a maiden heroically succored in the hour of her
supreme distress; just the leaping anger of a girl with a temper like
hot fire who had been rudely handled by a stranger.
Her scanty little bathing-suit, bright blue like the discarded cloak,
the red rubber cap binding the bronze hair--she must have donned the
ridiculous thing with incredible swiftness while he batted an
eye--might have been utterly becoming in other eyes than those of Steve
Packard. Now that they merely told him that he was a blundering ass,
he was conscious solely of a desire to pick her up and shake her.
"Gee!" she panted at him with an angry scornfulness which made him
wince. "You're about the freshest proposition I ever came across!"
Later, perhaps, he would admit that she was undeniably and most
amazingly pretty; that the curves of her little white body were
delightfully perfect; that she had made an armful that at another time
would have put sheer delirium into a man's blood.
Just now he knew only that in his moment of nothing less than stupidity
he had angered her and that his own anger though more unreasonable was
scarcely less heated; that he had made and still made but a sorry
spectacle; that he was sopping wet and cold and would be shivering in a
moment like a freezing dog.
"Why did you want to yell like a Comanche Indian when you went in?" he
demanded rudely, offering the only defense he could put mind or tongue
to. "A man would naturally suppose that you were falling."
"You didn't suppose any such thing!" she retorted sharply. "You saw me
dive; if you had the brains of a scared rabbit, you'd know that when a
girl had gone to the trouble to climb into a bathing-suit and then
jumped into the water she wanted a swim. And to be left alone," she
added scathingly.
Packard felt the afternoon breeze through the wet garments which stuck
so close to him, and shivered.
"If you think," he said, as sharply as she had spoken, "that I just
jumped into that infernal ice-pond, clothes and all, for the pure joy
of making your charming acquaintance in some ten feet of water, all I
can say is that you are by no means lacking a full appreciation of your
own attractiveness."
She opened her eyes widely at him, lying at his feet where he had
deposited her. She had not offered to rise. But now she sat up,
drawing her knees into the circle of her clasped arms, tilting her head
back as she stared up at him.
"You've got your nerve, Mr. Man," she informed him coolly. "Any time
that you think I'll stand for a fool man jumping in and spoiling my fun
for me and then scolding me on top of it, you've got another good-sized
think coming. And take it from me, you'll last a good deal longer in
this neck of the woods if you 'tend to your own business after this and
keep your paws off other folks' affairs. Get me that time?"
"I get you all right," grunted Packard. "And I find your gratitude to
a man who has just risked his life for you quite touching."
"Gratitude? Bah!" she told him, leaping suddenly to her feet. "Risked
your life for me, did you?" She laughed jeeringly at that. "Why, you
big lummox, I could have yanked you out as easy as turn a somersault if
you started to drown. And now suppose you hammer the trail while it's
open."
He bestowed upon her a glance whose purpose was to wither her. It
failed miserably, partly because she was patently not the sort to be
withered by a look from a mere man, and partly because a violent and
inopportune shiver shook him from head to foot.
Until now there had been only bright anger in the girl's eyes.
Suddenly the light there changed; what had begun as a sniff at him
altered without warning into a highly amused giggle.
"Golly, Mr. Man," she taunted him. "You're sure some swell picture as
you stand there, hand on hip and popping your eyes out at me! Like a
king in a story-book, only he'd just got a ducking and was trying to
stare the other fellow down. Which is one thing you can't do with me."
Her eyes had the adorable trick of seeming to crinkle to a mirth which
would have been an extremely pleasant phenomenon to witness had she
been laughing with him instead of at him. As matters stood, Packard
was quite prepared to dislike her heartily.
"I'd add to your kind information that the trail is open at both ends,"
he told her significantly. "I'm going to find a sunny spot and dry my
clothes. No objection, I suppose?"
He clambered up the bank and made his way to the spot whence he had
dived after her, bent on retrieving his boots and spurs. Her eyes
followed him interestedly. He ignored her and set about extricating a
spur rowel from the fabric of the bright blue cloak. Her voice floated
up to him then, demanding:
"What in the world are you up to now? Not going to swipe my clothes,
are you?"
"I'd have the right," he called back over his shoulder, "if I happened
to need a makeshift dressing-gown. As it is, however, I am trying to
get my spur out of the thing."
"You great big brute!" she wailed at him, and here she came running
along the bank. "You just dare to tear my cloak and I'll hound you out
of the country for it! I drove forty miles to get it and this is the
first time I ever wore it. Stupid!" And she jerked both the garment
and the spur from him.
The lining was silken, of a deep, rich, golden hue. And already it was
torn, although but the tiniest bit in the world, by one of the sharp
spikes. Her temper, however, ever ready it seemed, flared out again;
the crinkling merriment went from her eyes, leaving no trace; the color
warmed in her cheeks as she cried:
"You're just like all of the rest of your breed, big and awkward,
crowding in where you don't belong, messing up the face of the earth,
spoiling things right and left. I wonder if the good Lord Himself
knows what he made men for, anyway!"
The offending spur, detached by her quick fingers, described a bright
arc in the late sunlight, flew far out, dipped in a little leaping
spurt of spray, and went down quietly in the lake.
"Go jump in and get that, if you are so keen on saving things," she
mocked him. "There's only, about fifteen feet of water to dig through."
"You little devil!" he said.
For the spur with its companion had cost him twenty dollars down on the
Mexican border ten days ago and he had set much store by it.
"Little devil, am I?" she retorted readily. "You'll know it if you
don't keep on your side of the road. Look at that tear! Just look at
it!"
She had stepped quite close to him, holding out the cloak, her eyes
lifted defiantly to his. He put out a sudden hand and laid it on her
wet shoulder. She opened her eyes widely again at the new look in his.
But even so her regard was utterly fearless.
"Young lady," he said sternly, "so help me God, I've got the biggest
notion in the world to take you across my knee and give you the
spanking of your life. If I did crowd in where I don't belong, as you
so sweetly put it, it was at least to do you a kindness. Another time
I'd know better; I'd sooner do a favor for a wildcat."
"Take your dirty paws off of me," she cried, wrenching away from him.
"And--spank me, would you?" The fire leaped higher in her eyes, the
red in her cheeks gave place to an angrier white. "If you ever so much
as dare touch me again----"
She broke off, panting. Packard laughed at her.
"You'd try to scratch me, I suppose," he jeered; "and then, after the
fashion of your own sweet sex when you don't have the strength to put a
thing across, you'd most likely cry!"
"I'd blow your ugly head off your shoulders with a shot-gun," she
concluded briefly.
And despite the extravagance of the words it was borne in upon
Packard's understanding that she meant just exactly what she said.
He was getting colder all the time and knew that in a moment his teeth
would chatter. So a second time he turned his back on her, gathered up
his horse's reins, and moved away, seeking a spot in the woods where he
could get dry and sun his clothes. And since Packard rage comes
swiftly and more often than not goes the same way, within five minutes
over a comforting cigarette he was grinning widely, seeing in a flash
all of the humor of the situation which had successfully concealed
itself from him until now.
"And I don't blame her so much, after all," he chuckled. "Taking a
nice, lonely dive, to have a fool of a man grab her all of a sudden
when she was enjoying herself half a dozen feet under water! It's
enough to stir up a good healthy temper. Which, by the Lord, she has!"
CHAPTER II
MISS BLUE CLOAK KNOWS WHEN SHE'S BEAT
Half an hour later, his clothing wrung out and sun-dried after a
fashion, Packard dressed, swung up into the saddle, and turned back
into the trail. And through the trees, where their rugged trunks made
an open vista, he saw not two hundred yards away the gay spot of color
made by the blue cloak. So she was still here, lingering down the road
that wound about the lake's shores, when already he had fancied her far
on her way. He wondered for the first time where that way led?
He drew rein among the pines, waiting in his turn for her to go on.
The blue cloak did not move. He leaned to one side to see better,
peering around a low-flung cedar bough. His trail here led to the
road; he must pass her unless she went on soon.
Beside the vivid hue of her cloak the sunlight streaming through the
forest showed him another bright, gay color, a streak of red which
through the underbrush he was at first at a loss to account for. He
would have said that she was seated in a low-bodied, red wagon, were it
not that if such had been the case he must have seen the horses.
"An automobile!" he guessed.
He rode on a score of steps and stopped again. Sure enough, there she
sat at the steering-wheel of a long, rakish touring-car, the slump of
her shoulders vaguely hinting at despair and perhaps a stalled engine.
His grin widened joyously. He touched his horse with his one spur,
assumed an expression of vast indifference, and rode on. She jerked up
her head, looked about at him swiftly, gave him her shoulder again.
He rode into the road and came on with tantalizing slowness, knowing
that she would want to turn again and guessing that she would conquer
the impulse. A few paces behind her he stopped again, rolling a fresh
cigarette and seeming, as he had been before the meeting, the most
leisurely man in the world.
He saw her lean forward, busied with ignition and starter; he fancied
that the little breeze brought to him the faintest of guarded
exclamations.
"The blamed old thing won't go," chuckled Packard with vast
satisfaction. "Some car, too. Boyd-Merril Twin Eight, latest model.
And dollars to doughnuts I know just what's wrong--and she doesn't!"
She ignored him with such a perfect unconsciousness of his presence in
the same world with her that he was moved to a keen admiration.
"I'll bet her face is as red as a beet, just the same," was his
cheerful thought. "And right here, Steve Packard, is where you don't
'crowd in' until you're called on."
She straightened up, sitting very erect, her two hands tense upon the
useless wheel. He noted the poise of her head and found in it
something almost queenly. For a moment they were both very still, he
watching and feeling his sense pervaded by the glowing sensation that
all was right with the world, she holding her face averted and keeping
her thoughts to herself.
Presently she got out and lifted the hood, looking in upon the engine,
despairing. But did not glance toward him. Then she closed the hood
and returned to her seat, once more attempting to get some sort of
response from the starting system. Packard felt himself fairly beaming
all over.
"I may be a low-lived dog and a deep-dyed villain besides," he was
frank to admit to himself. "But right now I'm having the time of my
life. And I wouldn't bet two bits which way she's going to jump next,
either--never having met just her type before."
"Well?" she said abruptly.
She hadn't moved, hadn't so much as turned her head to look at him. If
she had done so just then perhaps Packard's extremely good-humored
smile, a contented, eminently satisfied smile, would not have warmed
her to him.
"Speak to me?" he asked innocently.
"I did. Simply because there's nobody else to speak to. Don't happen
to know anything about motor-cars, do you?"
It was all very icily enunciated, but had no noticeably freezing effect
upon the man's mood.
"I sure do," he told her cheerfully. "Know 'em from front bumper to
tail-lamp. Yours is a Boyd-Merril, Twin Eight, this year's model.
Fox-Whiting starting and lighting system. Great little car, too, if
you ask me."
"What I was going to ask you," came the cool little voice, more
haughtily than ever, "was not what you think of the car but if you--if
you happened to know how to make the miserable thing go."
"Sure," he replied to the back of her head, with all of his former
pleasant manner. "Pull out the ignition button; push down the starter
pedal with your right foot; throw out the clutch with your left; put
her into low; let in your clutch slowly; give her a little----"
"Smarty!" He had counted upon some such interruption, and chuckled
when it came. "I know all that."
"Then why don't you do it?" he queried innocently. "You're right
square in my way, the road's narrow, and I've got to be moving on."
"I don't do it," she informed that portion of the world which lay
immediately in front of her slightly elevated nose, "because it won't
work. I pulled out the ignition button and--and nothing happened.
Then I tried to force down the starter pedal and the crazy thing won't
go down."
"I see," said Packard interestedly. "Don't know a whole lot about
cars, do you?"
"The world wasn't made overnight," she said tartly. "I've had this
pesky thing a month. Do you know what's the matter?"
He took his time in replying. He was so long about it, in fact, that
Miss Blue Cloak stirred uneasily and finally shot him a questioning
look over her shoulder, just to make sure, he suspected, that he hadn't
slipped away and left her.
"Well?" she asked again.
"Speak to me?" he repeated himself, pretending to start from a deep
abstraction. "Oh, do I know what's the matter? Sure!"
She waited a reasonable length of time for him to go on. He, secure in
the sense of his own mastery of the situation, waited for her. Between
them they allowed it to grow very quiet there in the wood by the lake
shore. He saw her glance furtively at the lowering sun.
"If you do know," she said finally and somewhat faintly, but as
frigidly as ever, "will you tell me or won't you?"
"Why," he said, as though he had not thought of it, "I don't know. If
I were really sure that I was needed. You know it's mighty hard
telling these days when you stumble upon a damsel in distress whether a
stranger's aid is welcome or not. If there's one thing I won't do it's
shove myself forward when I'm not wanted."
"You're a nasty animal!" she cried hotly.
"For all I know," he resumed in an untroubled tone, "the end of your
journey may be just around the bend, about a hundred yards off. And if
I plunged in to be of assistance I might be suspected of being a fresh
guy."
"It's half a dozen miles to the ranch-house," she condescended to tell
him. "And it's going to get dark in no time. And if you want to know,
Mr. Smarty, that's as close as I've ever come or ever will come to
asking anything of any man that ever lived."
He could have sat there until dark just for the sheer joy of teasing
her, making her pay a little for her recent treatment of him. But
there was a note of finality in her voice which did not escape him; in
another moment she would jump down and go on on foot and he knew it.
So at last he rode up to the car, dismounted, and lifted the hood.
"Ignition," he ordered her.
She pulled out the little button again. His eyes upon hers, his grin
frank and unconcealed, he took a stone from the road and with it tapped
gently upon the shaft running from the pump. Immediately there came
that little hissing sound she had waited for.
"Starter," he commanded.
And now her foot upon the pedal achieved the desired results; the
engine responded, humming pleasantly. He closed the hood and stood
back eying her with a mingling of amusement and triumph. Her face
reddened slowly. And then, startling him with its unheralded
unexpectedness, a gay peal of laughter from her made quite another girl
of her, a dimpling, radiant, altogether adorable and desirable creature.
"Oh, I know when I'm beat!" she cried frankly. "You've put one across
on me to-day, Mr. Man. And since you meant well all along and were
just simply the blunderheaded man God made you, I guess I have been a
little cat. Good luck to you and a worth-while trail to ride."
She blew him a friendly kiss from her brown finger-tips, bent over her
wheel, and took the first turn in the road at a swiftly acquired speed
which left Steve Packard behind in dust and growing wonderment.
"And she's been driving only a month," was his softly whistled comment.
"Reckless little devil!"
Then, in his turn cocking a speculative eye at the sun in the west, he
rode on, following in the track made by the spinning automobile tires.
CHAPTER III
NEWS OF A LEGACY
When Packard came to a forking of the roads he stopped and hesitated.
The automobile tracks led to the left; he was tempted to follow them.
And it was his way in the matter of such impulses to yield to
temptation. But in this case he finally decided that common sense if
not downright wisdom pointed in the other direction.
So, albeit a bit reluctantly, he swerved to the right.
"We'll see you some other time, though, Miss Blue Cloak," he pondered.
"For I have a notion it would be good sport knowing you."
An hour later he made out a lighted window, seen and lost through the
trees. Conscious of a man's-sized appetite he galloped up the long
lane, turned in at a gate sagging wearily upon its hinges, and rode to
the door of the lighted house. The first glance showed him that it was
a long, low, rambling affair resembling in dejectedness the drooping
gate. An untidy sort of man in shirt-sleeves and smoking a pipe came
to the door, kicking into silence his half-dozen dogs.
"What's the chance of something to eat and a place to sleep in the
barn?" asked Packard.
The rancher waved his pipe widely.
"Help yourself, stranger," he answered, in a voice meant to be
hospitable but which through long habit had acquired an unpleasantly
sullen tone. "You'll find the sleeping all right, but when it comes to
something to eat you can take it from me you'll find damn' poor
picking. Get down, feed your horse, and come in."
When he entered the house Packard was conscious of an oddly bare and
cheerless atmosphere which at first he was at a loss to explain. For
the room was large, amply furnished, cheerfully lighted by a crackling
fire of dry sticks in the big rock fireplace, and a lamp swung from the
ceiling. What the matter was dawned on him gradually: time was when
this chamber had been richly, even exquisitely, furnished and
appointed. Now it presented rather a dejected spectacle of faded
splendor, not entirely unlike a fine gentleman of the old school fallen
among bad companions and into tattered ill repute.
The untidy host, more untidy than ever here in the full light, dragged
his slippered feet across the threadbare carpet to a corner cupboard,
from which he took a bottle and two glasses.
"We can have a drink anyhow," he said in that dubious tone which so
harmonized both with himself and his sitting-room. "After which we'll
see what's to eat. Terry fired the cook last week and there's been
small feasting since."
Packard accepted a moderate drink, the rancher filled his own glass
generously, and they drank standing. This ceremony briefly performed
and chairs dragged comfortably up to the fireplace, Packard's host
called out loudly:
"Hi, Terry! There's a man here wants something to eat. Anything left?"
"If he's hungry," came the cool answer from a room somewhere toward the
other end of the long house, "why can't he forage for himself? Wants
me to bring his rations in there and feed it to him, I suppose!"
Packard lifted his eyebrows humorously.
"Is that Terry?" he asked.
"That's Terry," grumbled the rancher. "She's in the kitchen now. And
if I was you, pardner, and had a real hankering for grub I'd mosey
right along in there while there's something left." His eye roved to
the bottle on the chimneypiece and dropped to the fire. "I'll trail
you in a minute."
Here was invitation sufficient, and Packard rose swiftly, went out
through the door at the end of the room, passed through an untidy
chamber which no doubt had been intended originally as a dining-room,
and so came into lamplight again and the presence of Miss Blue Cloak.
He made her a bow and smiled in upon her cheerfully. She, perched on
an oilcloth-covered table, her booted feet swinging, a thick sandwich
in one hand and a steaming cup of coffee in the other, took time to
look him up and down seriously and to swallow before she answered his
bow with a quick, bird-like nod.
"Don't mind me," she said briefly, having swallowed again. "Dig in and
help yourself."
On the table beside her were bread, butter, a very dry and
black-looking roast, and a blacker but more tempting coffee-pot.
"I didn't follow you on purpose," said Packard. "Back there where the
roads forked I saw that you had turned to the left, so I turned to the
right."
"All roads lead to Rome," she said around the corner of the big
sandwich. "Anyway, it's all right. I guess I owe you a square meal
and a night's lodging for being on the job when my car stalled."
"Not to mention for diving into the lake after you," amended Packard.
"I _wouldn't_ mention it if I were you," she retorted. "Seeing that
you just made a fool of yourself that time."
She openly sniffed the air as he stepped by her reaching out for
butcher-knife and roast. "So you are dad's kind, are you? Hitting the
booze every show you get. The Lord deliver me from his chief blunder.
Meaning a man."
"He probably will," grinned Packard genially. "And as for turning up
your nose at a fellow for taking a drop o' kindness with a hospitable
host, why, that's all nonsense, you know."
Terry kicked her high heels impudently and vouchsafed him no further
answer beyond that easy gesture. Packard made his own sandwich, found
the salt, poured a tin cup of coffee.
"The sugar's over there." She jerked her head toward a shelf on which,
after some searching among a lot of empty and nearly empty cans,
Packard found it. "That's all there is and precious little left; help
yourself but don't forget breakfast comes in the morning."
"This is the old Slade place, isn't it?" Packard asked.
"It was, about the time the big wall was building in China. Where've
you been the last couple of hundred years? It's the Temple place now."
"Then you're Miss Temple?"
"Teresa Arriega for my mother, Temple for my dad," she told him in the
quick, bright way which already he found characteristic of her. "Terry
for myself, if you say it quick."
He had suspected from the beginning that there was Southern blood of
some strain in her. Now he studied her frankly, and, just to try her
out, said carelessly:
"If you weren't so tanned you'd be quite fair; your eyes are gray too.
Blue-gray when you smile, dark gray when you are angry; and yet you say
your mother was Mexican----"
"Mexican, your foot!" she flared out at him, her trim little body
stiffening perceptibly, her chin proudly lifted. "The Arriegas were
pure-blooded Castilian, I'd have you understand. There's no mongrel
about me."
He drowned his satisfied chuckle with a draft of coffee.
"I'm looking for a job," he said abruptly. "Happen to know of any of
the cattle outfits around here that are short-handed?"
"Men are scarce right now," she answered. "A good cattle-hand is as
hard to locate as a dodo bird. You could get a job anywhere if you're
worth your salt."
"I was thinking," said Packard, "of moseying on to Ranch Number Ten.
There's a man I used to know--Bill Royce, his name is. Foreman, isn't
he?"
"So you know Bill Royce?" countered Terry. "Well, that's something in
your favor. He's a good scout."
"Then he is still foreman?"
"I didn't say so! No, he isn't. And I guess he'll never be foreman of
that outfit or any other again. He's blind."
Old Bill Royce blind! Here was a shock, and Packard sat back and
stared at her speechlessly. Somehow this was incredible, unthinkable,
nothing short. The old cattle-man who had been the hero of his
boyhood, who had taught him to shoot and ride and swim, who had been so
vital and so quick and keen of eye--blind?
"What happened to him?" asked Packard presently.
"Suppose you ask him," she retorted. "If you know him so well. He is
still with the outfit. A man named Blenham is the foreman now. He's
old Packard's right-hand bower, you know."
"But Phil Packard is dead. And----"
"And old 'Hell-Fire' Packard, Phil Packard's father, never will die.
He's just naturally too low-down mean; the devil himself wouldn't have
him."
"Terry!" came the voice of the untidy man, meant to be remonstrative
but chiefly noteworthy for a newly acquired thickness of utterance.
Terry's eyes sparkled and a hot flush came into her cheeks.
"Leave me alone, will you, pa?" she cried sharply. "I don't owe old
Packard anything; no, nor Blenham either. You can walk easy all you
like, but I'm blamed if I've got to. If you'd smash your cursed old
bottle on their heads and take a brace we'd come alive yet."
"Remember we have a guest with us," grumbled Temple from his place by
the sitting-room fire.
"Oh, shoot!" exclaimed the girl impatiently. Reaching out for a second
sandwich she stabbed the kitchen-knife viciously into the roast. "I've
a notion to pack up and clear out and let the cut-throat crowd clean
you to the last copper and pick your bones into the bargain. When did
you ever get anywhere by taking your hat off and side-stepping for a
Packard? If you're so all-fired strong for remembering, why don't you
try to remember how it feels to stand on two feet like a man instead of
crawling on your belly like a worm!"
"My dear!" expostulated Temple.
Terry sniffed and paid no further attention to him.
"Dad was all man once," she said without lowering her voice, making
clearer than ever that Miss Terry Temple had a way of speaking straight
out what lay in her mind, caring not at all who heard. "I'm hoping
that some day he'll come back. A real man was dad, a man's man. But
that was before the Packards broke him and stepped on him and kicked
him out of the trail. And, believe me, the Packards, though they ought
to be hung to the first tree, are men just the same!"
"So I have heard," admitted the youngest of the defamed house. "You
group them altogether? They're all the same then?"
"Phil Packard's dead," she retorted. "So we'll let him go at that.
Old Hell-Fire Packard, his father, is the biggest lawbreaker out of
jail. He's the only one left, and from the looks of things he'll keep
on living and making trouble another hundred years."
"There was another Packard, wasn't there?" he insisted. "Phil
Packard's son, the old man's grandson?"
"Never knew him," said Terry. "A scamp and a scalawag and a tomfool,
though, if you want to know. If he wasn't, he'd have stuck on the job
instead of messing around in the dirty ports of the seven seas while
his old thief of a grandfather stole his heritage from him."
"How's that?" he asked sharply. "How do you mean 'stole' it from him?"
"The same way he gobbles up everything else he wants. Ranch Number Ten
ought to belong to the fool boy now, oughtn't it? And here's old
Packard's pet dog Blenham running the outfit in old Packard's interests
just the same as if it was his already. Set a thief to rob a thief,"
she concluded briefly.
Steve Packard sat bolt upright in his chair.
"I wouldn't mind getting the straight of this," he told her quietly.
"I thought that Philip Packard had sold the outfit to his father before
his death."
"He didn't sell it to anybody. He mortgaged it right up to the hilt to
the old man. Then he up and died. Of course everything he left,
amounting mostly to a pile of debts, went to his good-for-nothing son."
A light which she could not understand, eager and bright, shone in
young Packard's eyes. If what she told him were true, then the old
home ranch, while commonly looked upon as belonging already to his
grandfather, was the property legally of Steve Packard. And
Blenham--yes, and old Bill Royce--were taking his pay. Suddenly
infinite possibilities stretched out before him.
"Come alive!" laughed Terry. "We were talking about your finding a
job. There's one open here for you; first to teach me all you know
about the insides of my car; second-- What's the matter? Gone to
sleep?"
He started. He had been thinking about Blenham and Bill Royce. As
Terry continued to stare wonderingly at him he smiled.
"If you don't mind," he said non-committally, "we'll forget about the
job for a spell. I left some stuff back at the Packard ranch that
belongs to me. I'm going back for it in the morning. Maybe I'll go to
work there after all."
She shrugged distastefully.
"It's a free country," she said curtly. "Only I can't see your play.
That is, if you're a square guy and not a crook, Number Ten size.
You've got a chance to go to work here with a white crowd; if you want
to tie up with that ornery bunch it's up to you."
"I'll look them over," he said thoughtfully.
"All right; go to it!" she cried with sudden heat. "I said it was a
free country, didn't I? Only you can burn this in your next
wheat-straw: once you go to riding herd with that gang you needn't come
around here again. And you can take Blenham a message for me: Phil
Packard knifed dad and double-crossed him and made him pretty nearly
what he is now; old Hell-Fire Packard finished the job. But just the
same, the Temple Ranch is still on the map and Terry Temple had rather
scrap a scoundrel to the finish than shake hands with one. And one of
these days dad's going to come alive yet; you'll see."
"I believe," he said as much to himself as to her, "that I'll have to
have a word with old man Packard."
She stared at him incredulously. Then she put her head back and
laughed in high amusement.
"Nobody'd miss guessing that you had your nerve with you, Mr. Lanky
Stranger," she cried mirthfully. "But when it comes to tackling
Hell-Fire Packard with a mouthful of fool questions-- Look here; who
are you anyway?"
"Nobody much," he answered quietly and just a trifle bitterly. "Tom
Fool you named me a while ago. Or, if you prefer, Steve Packard."
She flipped from her place on the table to stand erect, twin spots of
red leaping into her cheeks, startling him with the manner in which all
mirth fled from her eyes, which narrowed and grew hard.
"That would mean old Hell-Fire's grandson?" she asked sharply.
He merely nodded, watching her speculatively. Her head went still
higher. Packard heard her father rise hurriedly and shuffle across the
floor toward the kitchen.
"You're a worthy chip off the old stump," Terry was saying
contemptuously. "You're a darned sneak!"
"Terry!" admonished Temple warningly.
Her stiff little figure remained motionless a moment, never an eyelid
stirring. Then she whirled and went out of the room, banging a door
after her.
"She's high-strung, Mr. Packard," said Temple, slow and heavy and a bit
uncertain in his articulation. "High-strung, like her mother. And at
times apt to be unreasonable. Come in with me and have a drink, and
we'll talk things over."
Packard hesitated. Then he turned and followed his host back to the
fireplace. Suddenly he found himself without further enthusiasm for
conversation.
CHAPTER IV
TERRY BEFORE BREAKFAST
A gay young voice singing somewhere through the dawn awoke Steve
Packard and informed him that Terry was up and about. He lay still a
moment, listening. He remembered the song, which, by the way, he had
not heard for a good many years, the ballad of a cowboy sick and lonely
in a big city, yearning for the open country. At times when Terry's
humming was smothered by the walls of the house, Packard's memory
strove for the words which his ears failed to catch. And more often
than not the words, retrieved from oblivion, were less than worth the
effort; no poet had builded the chant, which, rather, grown to goodly
proportions of perhaps a hundred verses, had resulted from a natural
evolution like a modern Odyssey, or some sprawling vine which was what
it was because of its environment. But while lines were faulty and
rhymes were bad, and the composition never rose above the commonplace,
and often enough sank below it, the ballad was sincere and meant much
to those who sang it. Its pictures were homely. Steve, catching
certain fragments and seeking others, got such phrases as:
"My bed on dry pine-needles, my camp-fire blazin' bright,
The smell of dead leaves burnin' through the big wide-open night,"
and with moving but silent lips joined Terry in the triumphant refrain:
"I'm lonesome-sick for the stars through the pines
An' the bawlin' of herds . . . an' the noise
Of rocks rattlin' down from a mountain trail . . .
An' the hills . . . an' my horse . . . an' the boys.
An' I'd rather hear a kiote howl
Than be the King of Rome!
An' when day comes--if day does come--
By cripes, I'm goin' home!
. . . Back home! Hear me comin', boys?
_Yeee_! I said it: 'Comin' home!'"