To The Last Man
by
Zane Grey

Part 2 out of 6



It's got to the sheepmen as hard as bullets."

"Ahuh! That accunts for Colter's seemin' a little sore under the
collar. Well, he said they were goin' to run sheep over Grass Valley,
an' for me to take that hunch to my dad."

Blaisdell had his chair tilted back and his heavy boots against a post
of the porch. Down he thumped. His neck corded with a sudden rush of
blood and his eyes changed to blue fire.

"The hell he did!" he ejaculated, in furious amaze.

Jean gauged the brooding, rankling hurt of this old cattleman by his
sudden break from the cool, easy Texan manner. Blaisdell cursed under
his breath, swung his arms violently, as if to throw a last doubt or
hope aside, and then relapsed to his former state. He laid a brown
hand on Jean's knee.

"Two years ago I called the cards," he said, quietly. "It means
a Grass Valley war."

Not until late that afternoon did Jean's father broach the subject
uppermost in his mind. Then at an opportune moment he drew Jean away
into the cedars out of sight.

"Son, I shore hate to make your home-comin' unhappy," he said,
with evidence of agitation, "but so help me God I have to do it!"

"Dad, you called me Prodigal, an' I reckon you were right. I've
shirked my duty to you. I'm ready now to make up for it," replied
Jean, feelingly.

"Wal, wal, shore thats fine-spoken, my boy. . . . Let's set down heah
an' have a long talk. First off, what did Jim Blaisdell tell you?"

Briefly Jean outlined the neighbor rancher's conversation. Then Jean
recounted his experience with Colter and concluded with Blaisdell's
reception of the sheepman's threat. If Jean expected to see his father
rise up like a lion in his wrath he made a huge mistake. This news of
Colter and his talk never struck even a spark from Gaston Isbel.

"Wal," he began, thoughtfully, "reckon there are only two points in
Jim's talk I need touch on. There's shore goin' to be a Grass Valley
war. An' Jim's idea of the cause of it seems to be pretty much the
same as that of all the other cattlemen. It 'll go down a black blot
on the history page of the Tonto Basin as a war between rival sheepmen
an' cattlemen. Same old fight over water an' grass! . . . Jean, my son,
that is wrong. It 'll not be a war between sheepmen an' cattlemen.
But a war of honest ranchers against rustlers maskin' as sheep-raisers!
. . Mind you, I don't belittle the trouble between sheepmen an'
cattlemen in Arizona. It's real an' it's vital an' it's serious.
It 'll take law an' order to straighten out the grazin' question.
Some day the government will keep sheep off of cattle ranges. . . .
So get things right in your mind, my son. You can trust your dad to
tell the absolute truth. In this fight that 'll wipe out some of the
Isbels--maybe all of them--you're on the side of justice an' right.
Knowin' that, a man can fight a hundred times harder than he who
knows he is a liar an' a thief."

The old rancher wiped his perspiring face and breathed slowly and
deeply. Jean sensed in him the rise of a tremendous emotional strain.
Wonderingly he watched the keen lined face. More than material worries
were at the root of brooding, mounting thoughts in his father's eyes.

"Now next take what Jim said aboot your comin' to chase these
sheep-herders out of the valley. . . . Jean, I started that talk.
I had my tricky reasons. I know these greaser sheep-herders an'
I know the respect Texans have for a gunman. Some say I bragged.
Some say I'm an old fool in his dotage, ravin' aboot a favorite son.
But they are people who hate me an' are afraid. True, son, I talked
with a purpose, but shore I was mighty cold an' steady when I did it.
My feelin' was that you'd do what I'd do if I were thirty years younger.
No, I reckoned you'd do more. For I figured on your blood. Jean,
you're Indian, an' Texas an' French, an' you've trained yourself in
the Oregon woods. When you were only a boy, few marksmen I ever knew
could beat you, an' I never saw your equal for eye an' ear, for trackin'
a hoss, for all the gifts that make a woodsman. . . . Wal, rememberin'
this an' seein' the trouble ahaid for the Isbels, I just broke out
whenever I had a chance. I bragged before men I'd reason to believe
would take my words deep. For instance, not long ago I missed some
stock, an', happenin' into Greaves's place one Saturday night, I shore
talked loud. His barroom was full of men an' some of them were in my
black book. Greaves took my talk a little testy. He said. 'Wal, Gass,
mebbe you're right aboot some of these cattle thieves livin' among us,
but ain't they jest as liable to be some of your friends or relatives
as Ted Meeker's or mine or any one around heah?' That was where
Greaves an' me fell out. I yelled at him: 'No, by God, they're not!
My record heah an' that of my people is open. The least I can say
for you, Greaves, an' your crowd, is that your records fade away on
dim trails.' Then he said, nasty-like, 'Wal, if you could work out
all the dim trails in the Tonto you'd shore be surprised.' An' then
I roared. Shore that was the chance I was lookin' for. I swore the
trails he hinted of would be tracked to the holes of the rustlers who
made them. I told him I had sent for you an' when you got heah these
slippery, mysterious thieves, whoever they were, would shore have hell
to pay. Greaves said he hoped so, but he was afraid I was partial to
my Indian son. Then we had hot words. Blaisdell got between us.
When I was leavin' I took a partin' fling at him. 'Greaves, you
ought to know the Isbels, considerin' you're from Texas. Maybe you've
got reasons for throwin' taunts at my claims for my son Jean. Yes,
he's got Indian in him an' that 'll be the worse for the men who will
have to meet him. I'm tellin' you, Greaves, Jean Isbel is the black
sheep of the family. If you ride down his record you'll find he's
shore in line to be another Poggin, or Reddy Kingfisher, or Hardin',
or any of the Texas gunmen you ought to remember. . . . Greaves,
there are men rubbin' elbows with you right heah that my Indian
son is goin' to track down!' "

Jean bent his head in stunned cognizance of the notoriety with which
his father had chosen to affront any and all Tonto Basin men who were
under the ban of his suspicion. What a terrible reputation and trust
to have saddled upon him! Thrills and strange, heated sensations
seemed to rush together inside Jean, forming a hot ball of fire that
threatened to explode. A retreating self made feeble protests.
He saw his own pale face going away from this older, grimmer man.

"Son, if I could have looked forward to anythin' but blood spillin'
I'd never have given you such a name to uphold," continued the rancher.
"What I'm goin' to tell you now is my secret. My other sons an' Ann
have never heard it. Jim Blaisdell suspects there's somethin' strange,
but he doesn't know. I'll shore never tell anyone else but you.
An' you must promise to keep my secret now an' after I am gone."

"I promise," said Jean.

"Wal, an' now to get it out," began his father, breathing hard.
His face twitched and his hands clenched. "The sheepman heah I
have to reckon with is Lee Jorth, a lifelong enemy of mine. We
were born in the same town, played together as children, an' fought
with each other as boys. We never got along together. An' we both
fell in love with the same girl. It was nip an' tuck for a while.
Ellen Sutton belonged to one of the old families of the South.
She was a beauty, an' much courted, an' I reckon it was hard for
her to choose. But I won her an' we became engaged. Then the war
broke out. I enlisted with my brother Jean. He advised me to marry
Ellen before I left. But I would not. That was the blunder of my life.
Soon after our partin' her letters ceased to come. But I didn't
distrust her. That was a terrible time an' all was confusion.
Then I got crippled an' put in a hospital. An' in aboot a year
I was sent back home."

At this juncture Jean refrained from further gaze at his father's face.

Lee Jorth had gotten out of goin' to war," went on the rancher,
in lower, thicker voice. "He'd married my sweetheart, Ellen. . . .
I knew the story long before I got well. He had run after her like
a hound after a hare. . . . An' Ellen married him. Wal, when I was
able to get aboot I went to see Jorth an' Ellen. I confronted them.
I had to know why she had gone back on me. Lee Jorth hadn't changed
any with all his good fortune. He'd made Ellen believe in my dishonor.
But, I reckon, lies or no lies, Ellen Sutton was faithless. In my
absence he had won her away from me. An' I saw that she loved him
as she never had me. I reckon that killed all my generosity. If she'd
been imposed upon an' weaned away by his lies an' had regretted me a
little I'd have forgiven, perhaps. But she worshiped him. She was his
slave. An' I, wal, I learned what hate was.

"The war ruined the Suttons, same as so many Southerners. Lee Jorth
went in for raisin' cattle. He'd gotten the Sutton range an' after a
few years he began to accumulate stock. In those days every cattleman
was a little bit of a thief. Every cattleman drove in an' branded
calves he couldn't swear was his. Wal, the Isbels were the strongest
cattle raisers in that country. An' I laid a trap for Lee Jorth,
caught him in the act of brandin' calves of mine I'd marked, an' I
proved him a thief. I made him a rustler. I ruined him. We met once.
But Jorth was one Texan not strong on the draw, at least against an
Isbel. He left the country. He had friends an' relatives an' they
started him at stock raisin' again. But he began to gamble an' he
got in with a shady crowd. He went from bad to worse an' then he
came back home. When I saw the change in proud, beautiful Ellen Sutton,
an' how she still worshiped Jorth, it shore drove me near mad between
pity an' hate. . . . Wal, I reckon in a Texan hate outlives any other
feelin'. There came a strange turn of the wheel an' my fortunes changed.
Like most young bloods of the day, I drank an' gambled. An' one night
I run across Jorth an' a card-sharp friend. He fleeced me. We quarreled.
Guns were thrown. I killed my man. . . . Aboot that period the Texas
Rangers had come into existence. . . . An', son, when I said I never
was run out of Texas I wasn't holdin' to strict truth. I rode out on
a hoss.

"I went to Oregon. There I married soon, an' there Bill an' Guy were
born. Their mother did not live long. An' next I married your mother,
Jean. She had some Indian blood, which, for all I could see, made her
only the finer. She was a wonderful woman an' gave me the only
happiness I ever knew. You remember her, of course, an' those home
days in Oregon. I reckon I made another great blunder when I moved
to Arizona. But the cattle country had always called me. I had heard
of this wild Tonto Basin an' how Texans were settlin' there. An' Jim
Blaisdell sent me word to come--that this shore was a garden spot of
the West. Wal, it is. An' your mother was gone--

"Three years ago Lee Jorth drifted into the Tonto. An', strange to me,
along aboot a year or so after his comin' the Hash Knife Gang rode up
from Texas. Jorth went in for raisin' sheep. Along with some other
sheepmen he lives up in the Rim canyons. Somewhere back in the wild
brakes is the hidin' place of the Hash Knife Gang. Nobody but me,
I reckon, associates Colonel Jorth, as he's called, with Daggs an'
his gang. Maybe Blaisdell an' a few others have a hunch. But that's
no matter. As a sheepman Jorth has a legitimate grievance with the
cattlemen. But what could be settled by a square consideration for
the good of all an' the future Jorth will never settle. He'll never
settle because he is now no longer an honest man. He's in with Daggs.
I cain't prove this, son, but I know it. I saw it in Jorth's face
when I met him that day with Greaves. I saw more. I shore saw what
he is up to. He'd never meet me at an even break. He's dead set on
usin' this sheep an' cattle feud to ruin my family an' me, even as I
ruined him. But he means more, Jean. This will be a war between
Texans, an' a bloody war. There are bad men in this Tonto--some of
the worst that didn't get shot in Texas. Jorth will have some of
these fellows. . . . Now, are we goin' to wait to be sheeped off
our range an' to be murdered from ambush?"

"No, we are not," replied Jean, quietly.

"Wal, come down to the house," said the rancher, and led the way
without speaking until he halted by the door. There he placed his
finger on a small hole in the wood at about the height of a man's head.
Jean saw it was a bullet hole and that a few gray hairs stuck to its
edges. The rancher stepped closer to the door-post, so that his head
was within an inch of the wood. Then he looked at Jean with eyes in
which there glinted dancing specks of fire, like wild sparks.

"Son, this sneakin' shot at me was made three mawnin's ago. I recollect
movin' my haid just when I heard the crack of a rifle. Shore was
surprised. But I got inside quick."

Jean scarcely heard the latter part of this speech. He seemed doubled
up inwardly, in hot and cold convulsions of changing emotion. A
terrible hold upon his consciousness was about to break and let go.
The first shot had been fired and he was an Isbel. Indeed, his father
had made him ten times an Isbel. Blood was thick. His father did not
speak to dull ears. This strife of rising tumult in him seemed the
effect of years of calm, of peace in the woods, of dreamy waiting for
he knew not what. It was the passionate primitive life in him that had
awakened to the call of blood ties.

"That's aboot all, son," concluded the rancher. "You understand now
why I feel they're goin' to kill me. I feel it heah." With solemn
gesture he placed his broad hand over his heart. "An', Jean, strange
whispers come to me at night. It seems like your mother was callin'
or tryin' to warn me. I cain't explain these queer whispers. But I
know what I know."

"Jorth has his followers. You must have yours," replied Jean, tensely.

"Shore, son, an' I can take my choice of the best men heah," replied
the rancher, with pride. "But I'll not do that. I'll lay the deal
before them an' let them choose. I reckon it 'll not be a long-winded
fight. It 'll be short an bloody, after the way of Texans. I'm lookin'
to you, Jean, to see that an Isbel is the last man!"

"My God--dad! is there no other way? Think of my sister Ann--of my
brothers' wives--of--of other women! Dad, these damned Texas feuds
are cruel, horrible!" burst out Jean, in passionate protest.

"Jean, would it be any easier for our women if we let these men shoot
us down in cold blood?"

"Oh no--no, I see, there's no hope of--of. . . . But, dad, I wasn't
thinkin' about myself. I don't care. Once started I'll--I'll be
what you bragged I was. Only it's so hard to-to give in."

Jean leaned an arm against the side of the cabin and, bowing his face
over it, he surrendered to the irresistible contention within his
breast. And as if with a wrench that strange inward hold broke.
He let down. He went back. Something that was boyish and hopeful--and
in its place slowly rose the dark tide of his inheritance, the savage
instinct of self-preservation bequeathed by his Indian mother, and the
fierce, feudal blood lust of his Texan father.

Then as he raised himself, gripped by a sickening coldness in his
breast, he remembered Ellen Jorth's face as she had gazed dreamily
down off the Rim--so soft, so different, with tremulous lips, sad,
musing, with far-seeing stare of dark eyes, peering into the unknown,
the instinct of life still unlived. With confused vision and nameless
pain Jean thought of her.

"Dad, it's hard on--the--the young folks," he said, bitterly. "The
sins of the father, you know. An' the other side. How about Jorth?
Has he any children?"

What a curious gleam of surprise and conjecture Jean encountered
in his father's gaze!

"He has a daughter. Ellen Jorth. Named after her mother. The first
time I saw Ellen Jorth I thought she was a ghost of the girl I had
loved an' lost. Sight of her was like a blade in my side. But the
looks of her an' what she is--they don't gibe. Old as I am, my
heart--Bah! Ellen Jorth is a damned hussy!"

Jean Isbel went off alone into the cedars. Surrender and resignation
to his father's creed should have ended his perplexity and worry.
His instant and burning resolve to be as his father had represented
him should have opened his mind to slow cunning, to the craft of the
Indian, to the development of hate. But there seemed to be an obstacle.
A cloud in the way of vision. A face limned on his memory.

Those damning words of his father's had been a shock--how little or
great he could not tell. Was it only a day since he had met Ellen
Jorth? What had made all the difference? Suddenly like a breath
the fragrance of her hair came back to him. Then the sweet coolness
of her lips! Jean trembled. He looked around him as if he were
pursued or surrounded by eyes, by instincts, by fears, by
incomprehensible things.

"Ahuh! That must be what ails me," he muttered. "The look of her--an'
that kiss--they've gone hard me. I should never have stopped to talk.
An' I'm to kill her father an' leave her to God knows what."

Something was wrong somewhere. Jean absolutely forgot that within
the hour he had pledged his manhood, his life to a feud which could
be blotted out only in blood. If he had understood himself he would
have realized that the pledge was no more thrilling and unintelligible
in its possibilities than this instinct which drew him irresistibly.

"Ellen Jorth! So--my dad calls her a damned hussy! So--that explains
the--the way she acted--why she never hit me when I kissed her. An'
her words, so easy an' cool-like. Hussy? That means she's bad--bad!
Scornful of me--maybe disappointed because my kiss was innocent!
It was, I swear. An' all she said: 'Oh, I've been kissed before.'"

Jean grew furious with himself for the spreading of a new sensation
in his breast that seemed now to ache. Had he become infatuated,
all in a day, with this Ellen Jorth? Was he jealous of the men who
had the privilege of her kisses? No! But his reply was hot with shame,
with uncertainty. The thing that seemed wrong was outside of himself.
A blunder was no crime. To be attracted by a pretty girl in the woods
--to yield to an impulse was no disgrace, nor wrong. He had been
foolish over a girl before, though not to such a rash extent. Ellen
Jorth had stuck in his consciousness, and with her a sense of regret.

Then swiftly rang his father's bitter words, the revealing: "But the
looks of her an' what she is--they don't gibe!" In the import of
these words hid the meaning of the wrong that troubled him.
Broodingly he pondered over them.

"The looks of her. Yes, she was pretty. But it didn't dawn on me at
first. I--I was sort of excited. I liked to look at her, but didn't
think." And now consciously her face was called up, infinitely sweet
and more impelling for the deliberate memory. Flash of brown skin,
smooth and clear; level gaze of dark, wide eyes, steady, bold, unseeing;
red curved lips, sad and sweet; her strong, clean, fine face rose
before Jean, eager and wistful one moment, softened by dreamy musing
thought, and the next stormily passionate, full of hate, full of
longing, but the more mysterious and beautiful.

She looks like that, but she's bad," concluded Jean, with bitter
finality. "I might have fallen in love with Ellen Jorth if--if
she'd been different."

But the conviction forced upon Jean did not dispel the haunting
memory of her face nor did it wholly silence the deep and stubborn
voice of his consciousness. Later that afternoon he sought a moment
with his sister.

"Ann, did you ever meet Ellen Jorth?" he asked.

"Yes, but not lately," replied Ann.

"Well, I met her as I was ridin' along yesterday. She was herdin'
sheep," went on Jean, rapidly. "I asked her to show me the way to
the Rim. An' she walked with me a mile or so. I can't say the meetin'
was not interestin', at least to me. . . . Will you tell me what you
know about her?"

"Sure, Jean," replied his sister, with her dark eyes fixed wonderingly
and kindly on his troubled face. "I've heard a great deal, but in this
Tonto Basin I don't believe all I hear. What I know I'll tell you.
I first met Ellen Jorth two years ago. We didn't know each other's
names then. She was the prettiest girl I ever saw. I liked her.
She liked me. She seemed unhappy. The next time we met was at a
round-up. There were other girls with me and they snubbed her.
But I left them and went around with her. That snub cut her to
the heart. She was lonely. She had no friends. She talked about
herself--how she hated the people, but loved Arizona. She had nothin'
fit to wear. I didn't need to be told that she'd been used to better
things. Just when it looked as if we were goin' to be friends she
told me who she was and asked me my name. I told her. Jean, I
couldn't have hurt her more if I'd slapped her face. She turned
white. She gasped. And then she ran off. The last time I saw her
was about a year ago. I was ridin' a short-cut trail to the ranch
where a friend lived. And I met Ellen Jorth ridin' with a man I'd
never seen. The trail was overgrown and shady. They were ridin'
close and didn't see me right off. The man had his arm round her.
She pushed him away. I saw her laugh. Then he got hold of her again
and was kissin' her when his horse shied at sight of mine. They rode
by me then. Ellen Jorth held her head high and never looked at me."

"Ann, do you think she's a bad girl?" demanded Jean, bluntly.

"Bad? Oh, Jean!" exclaimed Ann, in surprise and embarrassment.

"Dad said she was a damned hussy."

"Jean, dad hates the Jorths. "

"Sister, I'm askin' you what you think of Ellen Jorth. Would you
be friends with her if you could?"

"Yes."

"Then you don't believe she's bad."

"No. Ellen Jorth is lonely, unhappy. She has no mother. She lives
alone among rough men. Such a girl can't keep men from handlin' her
and kissin' her. Maybe she's too free. Maybe she's wild. But she's
honest, Jean. You can trust a woman to tell. When she rode past me
that day her face was white and proud. She was a Jorth and I was an
Isbel. She hated herself--she hated me. But no bad girl could look
like that. She knows what's said of her all around the valley.
But she doesn't care. She'd encourage gossip."

"Thank you, Ann," replied Jean, huskily. "Please keep this--this
meetin' of mine with her all to yourself, won't you?"

"Why, Jean, of course I will."

Jean wandered away again, peculiarly grateful to Ann for reviving
and upholding something in him that seemed a wavering part of the
best of him--a chivalry that had demanded to be killed by judgment
of a righteous woman. He was conscious of an uplift, a gladdening
of his spirit. Yet the ache remained. More than that, he found
himself plunged deeper into conjecture, doubt. Had not the Ellen
Jorth incident ended? He denied his father's indictment of her and
accepted the faith of his sister. "Reckon that's aboot all, as dad
says," he soliloquized. Yet was that all? He paced under the cedars.
He watched the sun set. He listened to the coyotes. He lingered
there after the call for supper; until out of the tumult of his
conflicting emotions and ponderings there evolved the staggering
consciousness that he must see Ellen Jorth again.



CHAPTER IV

Ellen Jorth hurried back into the forest, hotly resentful of the
accident that had thrown her in contact with an Isbel.

Disgust filled her--disgust that she had been amiable to a member
of the hated family that had ruined her father. The surprise of
this meeting did not come to her while she was under the spell of
stronger feeling. She walked under the trees, swiftly, with head
erect, looking straight before her, and every step seemed a relief.

Upon reaching camp, her attention was distracted from herself. Pepe,
the Mexican boy, with the two shepherd dogs, was trying to drive sheep
into a closer bunch to save the lambs from coyotes. Ellen loved the
fleecy, tottering little lambs, and at this season she hated all the
prowling beast of the forest. From this time on for weeks the flock
would be besieged by wolves, lions, bears, the last of which were
often bold and dangerous. The old grizzlies that killed the ewes
to eat only the milk-bags were particularly dreaded by Ellen. She
was a good shot with a rifle, but had orders from her father to let
the bears alone. Fortunately, such sheep-killing bears were but few,
and were left to be hunted by men from the ranch. Mexican sheep
herders could not be depended upon to protect their flocks from bears.
Ellen helped Pepe drive in the stragglers, and she took several shots
at coyotes skulking along the edge of the brush. The open glade in
the forest was favorable for herding the sheep at night, and the dogs
could be depended upon to guard the flock, and in most cases to drive
predatory beasts away.

After this task, which brought the time to sunset, Ellen had supper
to cook and eat. Darkness came, and a cool night wind set in.
Here and there a lamb bleated plaintively. With her work done for
the day, Ellen sat before a ruddy camp fire, and found her thoughts
again centering around the singular adventure that had befallen her.
Disdainfully she strove to think of something else. But there was
nothing that could dispel the interest of her meeting with Jean Isbel.
Thereupon she impatiently surrendered to it, and recalled every word
and action which she could remember. And in the process of this
meditation she came to an action of hers, recollection of which
brought the blood tingling to her neck and cheeks, so unusually
and burningly that she covered them with her hands. "What did he
think of me?" she mused, doubtfully. It did not matter what he
thought, but she could not help wondering. And when she came to
the memory of his kiss she suffered more than the sensation of
throbbing scarlet cheeks. Scornfully and bitterly she burst out,
"Shore he couldn't have thought much good of me."

The half hour following this reminiscence was far from being pleasant.
Proud, passionate, strong-willed Ellen Jorth found herself a victim of
conflicting emotions. The event of the day was too close. She could
not understand it. Disgust and disdain and scorn could not make this
meeting with Jean Isbel as if it had never been. Pride could not efface
it from her mind. The more she reflected, the harder she tried to
forget, the stronger grew a significance of interest. And when a hint
of this dawned upon her consciousness she resented it so forcibly that
she lost her temper, scattered the camp fire, and went into the little
teepee tent to roll in her blankets.

Thus settled snug and warm for the night, with a shepherd dog curled
at the opening of her tent, she shut her eyes and confidently bade
sleep end her perplexities. But sleep did not come at her invitation.
She found herself wide awake, keenly sensitive to the sputtering of
the camp fire, the tinkling of bells on the rams, the bleating of lambs,
the sough of wind in the pines, and the hungry sharp bark of coyotes
off in the distance. Darkness was no respecter of her pride. The
lonesome night with its emphasis of solitude seemed to induce clamoring
and strange thoughts, a confusing ensemble of all those that had annoyed
her during the daytime. Not for long hours did sheer weariness bring
her to slumber.

Ellen awakened late and failed of her usual alacrity. Both Pepe and
the shepherd dog appeared to regard her with surprise and solicitude.
Ellen's spirit was low this morning; her blood ran sluggishly; she had
to fight a mournful tendency to feel sorry for herself. And at first
she was not very successful. There seemed to be some kind of pleasure
in reveling in melancholy which her common sense told her had no reason
for existence. But states of mind persisted in spite of common sense.

"Pepe, when is Antonio comin' back?" she asked.

The boy could not give her a satisfactory answer. Ellen had willingly
taken the sheep herder's place for a few days, but now she was impatient
to go home. She looked down the green-and-brown aisles of the forest
until she was tired. Antonio did not return. Ellen spent the day with
the sheep; and in the manifold task of caring for a thousand new-born
lambs she forgot herself. This day saw the end of lambing-time for that
season. The forest resounded to a babel of baas and bleats. When night
came she was glad to go to bed, for what with loss of sleep, and
weariness she could scarcely keep her eyes open.

The following morning she awakened early, bright, eager, expectant,
full of bounding life, strangely aware of the beauty and sweetness
of the scented forest, strangely conscious of some nameless stimulus
to her feelings.

Not long was Ellen in associating this new and delightful variety of
sensations with the fact that Jean Isbel had set to-day for his ride
up to the Rim to see her. Ellen's joyousness fled; her smiles faded.
The spring morning lost its magic radiance.

"Shore there's no sense in my lyin' to myself," she soliloquized,
thoughtfully. "It's queer of me--feelin' glad aboot him--without
knowin'. Lord! I must be lonesome! To be glad of seein' an Isbel,
even if he is different!"

Soberly she accepted the astounding reality. Her confidence died
with her gayety; her vanity began to suffer. And she caught at her
admission that Jean Isbel was different; she resented it in amaze;
she ridiculed it; she laughed at her naive confession. She could
arrive at no conclusion other than that she was a weak-minded,
fluctuating, inexplicable little fool.

But for all that she found her mind had been made up for her, without
consent or desire, before her will had been consulted; and that
inevitably and unalterably she meant to see Jean Isbel again.
Long she battled with this strange decree. One moment she won
a victory over, this new curious self, only to lose it the next.
And at last out of her conflict there emerged a few convictions
that left her with some shreds of pride. She hated all Isbels,
she hated any Isbel, and particularly she hated Jean Isbel. She was
only curious--intensely curious to see if he would come back, and if
he did come what he would do. She wanted only to watch him from some
covert. She would not go near him, not let him see her or guess of
her presence.

Thus she assuaged her hurt vanity--thus she stifled her miserable doubts.

Long before the sun had begun to slant westward toward the
mid-afternoon Jean Isbel had set as a meeting time Ellen directed
her steps through the forest to the Rim. She felt ashamed of her
eagerness. She had a guilty conscience that no strange thrills could
silence. It would be fun to see him, to watch him, to let him wait
for her, to fool him.

Like an Indian, she chose the soft pine-needle mats to tread upon,
and her light-moccasined feet left no trace. Like an Indian also she
made a wide detour, and reached the Rim a quarter of a mile west of the
spot where she had talked with Jean Isbel; and here, turning east, she
took care to step on the bare stones. This was an adventure, seemingly
the first she had ever had in her life. Assuredly she had never before
come directly to the Rim without halting to look, to wonder, to worship.
This time she scarcely glanced into the blue abyss. All absorbed was
she in hiding her tracks. Not one chance in a thousand would she risk.
The Jorth pride burned even while the feminine side of her dominated
her actions. She had some difficult rocky points to cross, then
windfalls to round, and at length reached the covert she desired.
A rugged yellow point of the Rim stood somewhat higher than the spot
Ellen wanted to watch. A dense thicket of jack pines grew to the
very edge. It afforded an ambush that even the Indian eyes Jean
Isbel was credited with could never penetrate. Moreover, if by
accident she made a noise and excited suspicion, she could retreat
unobserved and hide in the huge rocks below the Rim, where a ferret
could not locate her.

With her plan decided upon, Ellen had nothing to do but wait,
so she repaired to the other side of the pine thicket and to the
edge of the Rim where she could watch and listen. She knew that
long before she saw Isbel she would hear his horse. It was altogether
unlikely that he would come on foot.

"Shore, Ellen Jorth, y'u're a queer girl," she mused. "I reckon I
wasn't well acquainted with y'u."

Beneath her yawned a wonderful deep canyon, rugged and rocky with but
few pines on the north slope, thick with dark green timber on the
south slope. Yellow and gray crags, like turreted castles, stood up
out of the sloping forest on the side opposite her. The trees were
all sharp, spear pointed. Patches of light green aspens showed
strikingly against the dense black. The great slope beneath Ellen
was serrated with narrow, deep gorges, almost canyons in themselves.
Shadows alternated with clear bright spaces. The mile-wide mouth of
the canyon opened upon the Basin, down into a world of wild timbered
ranges and ravines, valleys and hills, that rolled and tumbled in
dark-green waves to the Sierra Anchas.

But for once Ellen seemed singularly unresponsive to this panorama
of wildness and grandeur. Her ears were like those of a listening deer,
and her eyes continually reverted to the open places along the Rim.
At first, in her excitement, time flew by. Gradually, however, as
the sun moved westward, she began to be restless. The soft thud of
dropping pine cones, the rustling of squirrels up and down the
shaggy-barked spruces, the cracking of weathered bits of rock,
these caught her keen ears many times and brought her up erect and
thrilling. Finally she heard a sound which resembled that of an
unshod hoof on stone. Stealthily then she took her rifle and slipped
back through the pine thicket to the spot she had chosen. The little
pines were so close together that she had to crawl between their trunks.
The ground was covered with a soft bed of pine needles, brown and
fragrant. In her hurry she pricked her ungloved hand on a sharp pine
cone and drew the blood. She sucked the tiny wound. "Shore I'm
wonderin' if that's a bad omen," she muttered, darkly thoughtful.
Then she resumed her sinuous approach to the edge of the thicket,
and presently reached it.

Ellen lay flat a moment to recover her breath, then raised herself on
her elbows. Through an opening in the fringe of buck brush she could
plainly see the promontory where she had stood with Jean Isbel, and
also the approaches by which he might come. Rather nervously she
realized that her covert was hardly more than a hundred feet from
the promontory. It was imperative that she be absolutely silent.
Her eyes searched the openings along the Rim. The gray form of a
deer crossed one of these, and she concluded it had made the sound
she had heard. Then she lay down more comfortably and waited.
Resolutely she held, as much as possible, to her sensorial perceptions.
The meaning of Ellen Jorth lying in ambush just to see an Isbel was a
conundrum she refused to ponder in the present. She was doing it, and
the physical act had its fascination. Her ears, attuned to all the
sounds of the lonely forest, caught them and arranged them according
to her knowledge of woodcraft.

A long hour passed by. The sun had slanted to a point halfway between
the zenith and the horizon. Suddenly a thought confronted Ellen Jorth:
"He's not comin'," she whispered. The instant that idea presented
itself she felt a blank sense of loss, a vague regret--something that
must have been disappointment. Unprepared for this, she was held by
surprise for a moment, and then she was stunned. Her spirit, swift
and rebellious, had no time to rise in her defense. She was a lonely,
guilty, miserable girl, too weak for pride to uphold, too fluctuating
to know her real self. She stretched there, burying her face in the
pine needles, digging her fingers into them, wanting nothing so much
as that they might hide her. The moment was incomprehensible to Ellen,
and utterly intolerable. The sharp pine needles, piercing her wrists
and cheeks, and her hot heaving breast, seemed to give her exquisite
relief.

The shrill snort of a horse sounded near at hand. With a shock Ellen's
body stiffened. Then she quivered a little and her feelings underwent
swift change. Cautiously and noiselessly she raised herself upon her
elbows and peeped through the opening in the brush. She saw a man
tying a horse to a bush somewhat back from the Rim. Drawing a rifle
from its saddle sheath he threw it in the hollow of his arm and walked
to the edge of the precipice. He gazed away across the Basin and
appeared lost in contemplation or thought. Then he turned to look
back into the forest, as if he expected some one.

Ellen recognized the lithe figure, the dark face so like an Indian's.
It was Isbel. He had come. Somehow his coming seemed wonderful and
terrible. Ellen shook as she leaned on her elbows. Jean Isbel, true
to his word, in spite of her scorn, had come back to see her. The fact
seemed monstrous. He was an enemy of her father. Long had range rumor
been bandied from lip to lip--old Gass Isbel had sent for his Indian
son to fight the Jorths. Jean Isbel--son of a Texan--unerring shot--
peerless tracker--a bad and dangerous man! Then there flashed over
Ellen a burning thought--if it were true, if he was an enemy of her
father's, if a fight between Jorth and Isbel was inevitable, she ought
to kill this Jean Isbel right there in his tracks as he boldly and
confidently waited for her. Fool he was to think she would come.
Ellen sank down and dropped her head until the strange tremor of her
arms ceased. That dark and grim flash of thought retreated. She had
not come to murder a man from ambush, but only to watch him, to try to
see what he meant, what he thought, to allay a strange curiosity.

After a while she looked again. Isbel was sitting on an upheaved
section of the Rim, in a comfortable position from which he could
watch the openings in the forest and gaze as well across the west
curve of the Basin to the Mazatzals. He had composed himself to wait.
He was clad in a buckskin suit, rather new, and it certainly showed
off to advantage, compared with the ragged and soiled apparel Ellen
remembered. He did not look so large. Ellen was used to the long,
lean, rangy Arizonians and Texans. This man was built differently.
He had the widest shoulders of any man she had ever seen, and they
made him appear rather short. But his lithe, powerful limbs proved
he was not short. Whenever he moved the muscles rippled. His hands
were clasped round a knee--brown, sinewy hands, very broad, and fitting
the thick muscular wrists. His collar was open, and he did not wear a
scarf, as did the men Ellen knew. Then her intense curiosity at last
brought her steady gaze to Jean Isbel's head and face. He wore a cap,
evidently of some thin fur. His hair was straight and short, and in
color a dead raven black. His complexion was dark, clear tan, with no
trace of red. He did not have the prominent cheek bones nor the
high-bridged nose usual with white men who were part Indian. Still
he had the Indian look. Ellen caught that in the dark, intent,
piercing eyes, in the wide, level, thoughtful brows, in the stern
impassiveness of his smooth face. He had a straight, sharp-cut profile.

Ellen whispered to herself: "I saw him right the other day. Only,
I'd not admit it. . . . The finest-lookin' man I ever saw in my life
is a damned Isbel! Was that what I come out heah for?"

She lowered herself once more and, folding her arms under her breast,
she reclined comfortably on them, and searched out a smaller peephole
from which she could spy upon Isbel. And as she watched him the new
and perplexing side of her mind waxed busier. Why had he come back?
What did he want of her? Acquaintance, friendship, was impossible for
them. He had been respectful, deferential toward her, in a way that
had strangely pleased, until the surprising moment when he had kissed
her. That had only disrupted her rather dreamy pleasure in a situation
she had not experienced before. All the men she had met in this wild
country were rough and bold; most of them had wanted to marry her,
and, failing that, they had persisted in amorous attentions not
particularly flattering or honorable. They were a bad lot. And
contact with them had dulled some of her sensibilities. But this
Jean Isbel had seemed a gentleman. She struggled to be fair, trying
to forget her antipathy, as much to understand herself as to give him
due credit. True, he had kissed her, crudely and forcibly. But that
kiss had not been an insult. Ellen's finer feeling forced her to
believe this. She remembered the honest amaze and shame and contrition
with which be had faced her, trying awkwardly to explain his bold act.
Likewise she recalled the subtle swift change in him at her words, "Oh,
I've been kissed before!" She was glad she had said that. Still--was
she glad, after all?

She watched him. Every little while he shifted his gaze from the
blue gulf beneath him to the forest. When he turned thus the sun
shone on his face and she caught the piercing gleam of his dark eyes.
She saw, too, that he was listening. Watching and listening for her!
Ellen had to still a tumult within her. It made her feel very young,
very shy, very strange. All the while she hated him because he
manifestly expected her to come. Several times he rose and walked
a little way into the woods. The last time he looked at the westering
sun and shook his head. His confidence had gone. Then he sat and
gazed down into the void. But Ellen knew he did not see anything
there. He seemed an image carved in the stone of the Rim, and he
gave Ellen a singular impression of loneliness and sadness. Was he
thinking of the miserable battle his father had summoned him to lead--
of what it would cost--of its useless pain and hatred? Ellen seemed
to divine his thoughts. In that moment she softened toward him, and
in her soul quivered and stirred an intangible something that was like
pain, that was too deep for her understanding. But she felt sorry for
an Isbel until the old pride resurged. What if he admired her? She
remembered his interest, the wonder and admiration, the growing light
in his eyes. And it had not been repugnant to her until he disclosed
his name. "What's in a name?" she mused, recalling poetry learned in
her girlhood. "'A rose by any other name would smell as sweet'. . . .
He's an Isbel--yet he might be splendid--noble. . . . Bah! he's not--
and I'd hate him anyhow." I

All at once Ellen felt cold shivers steal over her. Isbel's piercing
gaze was directed straight at her hiding place. Her heart stopped
beating. If he discovered her there she felt that she would die of
shame. Then she became aware that a blue jay was screeching in a
pine above her, and a red squirrel somewhere near was chattering his
shrill annoyance. These two denizens of the woods could be depended
upon to espy the wariest hunter and make known his presence to their
kind. Ellen had a moment of more than dread. This keen-eyed,
keen-eared Indian might see right through her brushy covert, might
hear the throbbing of her heart. It relieved her immeasurably to
see him turn away and take to pacing the promontory, with his head
bowed and his hands behind his back. He had stopped looking off into
the forest. Presently he wheeled to the west, and by the light upon
his face Ellen saw that the time was near sunset. Turkeys were
beginning to gobble back on the ridge.

Isbel walked to his horse and appeared to be untying something from
the back of his saddle. When he came back Ellen saw that he carried
a small package apparently wrapped in paper. With this under his arm
he strode off in the direction of Ellen's camp and soon disappeared in
the forest.

For a little while Ellen lay there in bewilderment. If she had made
conjectures before, they were now multiplied. Where was Jean Isbel
going? Ellen sat up suddenly. "Well, shore this heah beats me,"
she said. "What did he have in that package? What was he goin'
to do with it? "

It took no little will power to hold her there when she wanted to
steal after him through the woods and find out what he meant. But his
reputation influenced even her and she refused to pit her cunning in
the forest against his. It would be better to wait until he returned
to his horse. Thus decided, she lay back again in her covert and gave
her mind over to pondering curiosity. Sooner than she expected she
espied Isbel approaching through the forest, empty handed. He had not
taken his rifle. Ellen averted her glance a moment and thrilled to see
the rifle leaning against a rock. Verily Jean Isbel had been far removed
from hostile intent that day. She watched him stride swiftly up to his
horse, untie the halter, and mount. Ellen had an impression of his
arrowlike straight figure, and sinuous grace and ease. Then he looked
back at the promontory, as if to fix a picture of it in his mind, and
rode away along the Rim. She watched him out of sight. What ailed her?
Something was wrong with her, but she recognized only relief.

When Isbel had been gone long enough to assure Ellen that she might
safely venture forth she crawled through the pine thicket to the Rim
on the other side of the point. The sun was setting behind the Black
Range, shedding a golden glory over the Basin. Westward the zigzag Rim
reached like a streamer of fire into the sun. The vast promontories
jutted out with blazing beacon lights upon their stone-walled faces.
Deep down, the Basin was turning shadowy dark blue, going to sleep
for the night.

Ellen bent swift steps toward her camp. Long shafts of gold preceded
her through the forest. Then they paled and vanished. The tips of
pines and spruces turned gold. A hoarse-voiced old turkey gobbler was
booming his chug-a-lug from the highest ground, and the softer chick of
hen turkeys answered him. Ellen was almost breathless when she arrived.
Two packs and a couple of lop-eared burros attested to the fact of
Antonio's return. This was good news for Ellen. She heard the bleat
of lambs and tinkle of bells coming nearer and nearer. And she was glad
to feel that if Isbel had visited her camp, most probably it was during
the absence of the herders.

The instant she glanced into her tent she saw the package Isbel had
carried. It lay on her bed. Ellen stared blankly. "The--the impudence
of him!" she ejaculated. Then she kicked the package out of the tent.
Words and action seemed to liberate a dammed-up hot fury. She kicked
the package again, and thought she would kick it into the smoldering
camp-fire. But somehow she stopped short of that. She left the thing
there on the ground.

Pepe and Antonio hove in sight, driving in the tumbling woolly flock.
Ellen did not want them to see the package, so with contempt for herself,
and somewhat lessening anger, she kicked it back into the tent. What
was in it? She peeped inside the tent, devoured by curiosity. Neat,
well wrapped and tied packages like that were not often seen in the
Tonto Basin. Ellen decided she would wait until after supper, and at
a favorable moment lay it unopened on the fire. What did she care what
it contained? Manifestly it was a gift. She argued that she was highly
incensed with this insolent Isbel who had the effrontery to approach her
with some sort of present.

It developed that the usually cheerful Antonio had returned taciturn
and gloomy. All Ellen could get out of him was that the job of sheep
herder had taken on hazards inimical to peace-loving Mexicans. He had
heard something he would not tell. Ellen helped prepare the supper and
she ate in silence. She had her own brooding troubles. Antonio
presently told her that her father had said she was not to start back
home after dark. After supper the herders repaired to their own tents,
leaving Ellen the freedom of her camp-fire. Wherewith she secured the
package and brought it forth to burn. Feminine curiosity rankled strong
in her breast. Yielding so far as to shake the parcel and press it,
and finally tear a comer off the paper, she saw some words written in
lead pencil. Bending nearer the blaze, she read, "For my sister Ann."
Ellen gazed at the big, bold hand-writing, quite legible and fairly well
done. Suddenly she tore the outside wrapper completely off. From
printed words on the inside she gathered that the package had come
from a store in San Francisco. "Reckon he fetched home a lot of
presents for his folks--the kids--and his sister," muttered Ellen.
"That was nice of him. Whatever this is he shore meant it for sister
Ann. . . . Ann Isbel. Why, she must be that black-eyed girl I met and
liked so well before I knew she was an Isbel. . . . His sister!"

Whereupon for the second time Ellen deposited the fascinating package
in her tent. She could not burn it up just then. She had other
emotions besides scorn and hate. And memory of that soft-voiced,
kind-hearted, beautiful Isbel girl checked her resentment. "I wonder
if he is like his sister,?' she said, thoughtfully. It appeared to
be an unfortunate thought. Jean Isbel certainly resembled his sister.
"Too bad they belong to the family that ruined dad."

Ellen went to bed without opening the package or without burning it.
And to her annoyance, whatever way she lay she appeared to touch this
strange package. There was not much room in the little tent. First
she put it at her head beside her rifle, but when she turned over her
cheek came in contact with it. Then she felt as if she had been stung.
She moved it again, only to touch it presently with her hand. Next she
flung it to the bottom of her bed, where it fell upon her feet, and
whatever way she moved them she could not escape the pressure of this
undesirable and mysterious gift.

By and by she fell asleep, only to dream that the package was a
caressing hand stealing about her, feeling for hers, and holding it
with soft, strong clasp. When she awoke she had the strangest
sensation in her right palm. It was moist, throbbing, hot, and
the feel of it on her cheek was strangely thrilling and comforting.
She lay awake then. The night was dark and still. Only a low moan
of wind in the pines and the faint tinkle of a sheep bell broke the
serenity. She felt very small and lonely lying there in the deep
forest, and, try how she would, it was impossible to think the same
then as she did in the clear light of day. Resentment, pride, anger
--these seemed abated now. If the events of the day had not changed
her, they had at least brought up softer and kinder memories and
emotions than she had known for long. Nothing hurt and saddened
her so much as to remember the gay, happy days of her childhood,
her sweet mother, her, old home. Then her thought returned to Isbel
and his gift. It had been years since anyone had made her a gift.
What could this one be? It did not matter. The wonder was that
Jean Isbel should bring it to her and that she could be perturbed
by its presence. "He meant it for his sister and so he thought
well of me," she said, in finality.

Morning brought Ellen further vacillation. At length she rolled
the obnoxious package inside her blankets, saying that she would
wait until she got home and then consign it cheerfully to the flames.
Antonio tied her pack on a burro. She did not have a horse, and
therefore had to walk the several miles, to her father's ranch.

She set off at a brisk pace, leading the burro and carrying her
rifle. And soon she was deep in the fragrant forest. The morning
was clear and cool, with just enough frost to make the sunlit grass
sparkle as if with diamonds. Ellen felt fresh, buoyant, singularly
full of, life. Her youth would not be denied. It was pulsing,
yearning. She hummed an old Southern tune and every step seemed
one of pleasure in action, of advance toward some intangible future
happiness. All the unknown of life before her called. Her heart
beat high in her breast and she walked as one in a dream. Her thoughts
were swift-changing, intimate, deep, and vague, not of yesterday or
to-day, nor of reality.

The big, gray, white-tailed squirrels crossed ahead of her on the trail,
scampered over the piny ground to hop on tree trunks, and there they
paused to watch her pass. The vociferous little red squirrels barked
and chattered at her. From every thicket sounded the gobble of turkeys.
The blue jays squalled in the tree tops. A deer lifted its head from
browsing and stood motionless, with long ears erect, watching her go by.

Thus happily and dreamily absorbed, Ellen covered the forest miles and
soon reached the trail that led down into the wild brakes of Chevelon
Canyon. It was rough going and less conducive to sweet wanderings of
mind. Ellen slowly lost them. And then a familiar feeling assailed
her, one she never failed to have upon returning to her father's ranch
--a reluctance, a bitter dissatisfaction with her home, a loyal struggle
against the vague sense that all was not as it should be.

At the head of this canyon in a little, level, grassy meadow stood a
rude one-room log shack, with a leaning red-stone chimney on the outside.
This was the abode of a strange old man who had long lived there. His
name was John Sprague and his occupation was raising burros. No sheep
or cattle or horses did he own, not even a dog. Rumor had said Sprague
was a prospector, one of the many who had searched that country for the
Lost Dutchman gold mine. Sprague knew more about the Basin and Rim
than any of the sheepmen or ranchers. From Black Butte to the Cibique
and from Chevelon Butte to Reno Pass he knew every trail, canyon, ridge,
and spring, and could find his way to them on the darkest night. His
fame, however, depended mostly upon the fact that he did nothing but
raise burros, and would raise none but black burros with white faces.
These burros were the finest bred in ail the Basin and were in great
demand. Sprague sold a few every year. He had made a present of one
to Ellen, although he hated to part with them. This old man was
Ellen's one and only friend.

Upon her trip out to the Rim with the sheep, Uncle John, as Ellen
called him, had been away on one of his infrequent visits to Grass
Valley. It pleased her now to see a blue column of smoke lazily
lifting from the old chimney and to hear the discordant bray of burros.
As she entered the clearing Sprague saw her from the door of his shack.

"Hello, Uncle John!" she called.

"Wal, if it ain't Ellen!" he replied, heartily. "When I seen thet
white-faced jinny I knowed who was leadin' her. Where you been, girl?"

Sprague was a little, stoop-shouldered old man, with grizzled head
and face, and shrewd gray eyes that beamed kindly on her over his
ruddy cheeks. Ellen did not like the tobacco stain on his grizzled
beard nor the dirty, motley, ragged, ill-smelling garb he wore,
but she had ceased her useless attempts to make him more cleanly.

"I've been herdin' sheep," replied Ellen. "And where have y'u been,
uncle? I missed y'u on the way over."

"Been packin' in some grub. An' I reckon I stayed longer in Grass
Valley than I recollect. But thet was only natural, considerin'--"

"What?" asked Ellen, bluntly, as the old man paused.

Sprague took a black pipe out of his vest pocket and began rimming the
bowl with his fingers. The glance he bent on Ellen was thoughtful and
earnest, and so kind that she feared it was pity. Ellen suddenly
burned for news from the village.

Wal, come in an' set down, won't you?" he asked.

"No, thanks," replied Ellen, and she took a seat on the chopping block.
"Tell me, uncle, what's goin' on down in the Valley?"

"Nothin' much yet--except talk. An' there's a heap of thet."

"Humph! There always was talk," declared Ellen, contemptuously.
"A nasty, gossipy, catty hole, that Grass Valley!"

"Ellen, thar's goin' to be war--a bloody war in the ole Tonto Basin,"
went on Sprague, seriously.

"War! . . . Between whom?"

"The Isbels an' their enemies. I reckon most people down thar, an'
sure all the cattlemen, air on old Gass's side. Blaisdell, Gordon,
Fredericks, Blue--they'll all be in it."

"Who are they goin' to fight?" queried Ellen, sharply.

" Wal, the open talk is thet the sheepmen are forcin' this war. But
thar's talk not so open, an' I reckon not very healthy for any man to
whisper hyarbouts."

"Uncle John, y'u needn't be afraid to tell me anythin', said Ellen.
"I'd never give y'u away. Y'u've been a good friend to me."

"Reckon I want to be, Ellen," he returned, nodding his shaggy head.
"It ain't easy to be fond of you as I am an' keep my mouth shet.
. . I'd like to know somethin'. Hev you any relatives away from
hyar thet you could go to till this fight's over?"

"No. All I have, so far as I know, are right heah."

"How aboot friends?"

"Uncle John, I have none," she said, sadly, with bowed head.

"Wal, wal, I'm sorry. I was hopin' you might git away."

She lifted her face. "Shore y'u don't think I'd run off if my dad got
in a fight? " she flashed.

"I hope you will."

"I'm a Jorth," she said, darkly, and dropped her head again.

Sprague nodded gloomily. Evidently he was perplexed and worried,
and strongly swayed by affection for her.

"Would you go away with me? " he asked. "We could pack over to the
Mazatzals an' live thar till this blows over."

"Thank y'u, Uncle John. Y'u're kind and good. But I'll stay with
my father. His troubles are mine."

"Ahuh! . . . Wal, I might hev reckoned so. . . . Ellen, how do you
stand on this hyar sheep an' cattle question?"

"I think what's fair for one is fair for another. I don't like sheep
as much as I like cattle. But that's not the point. The range is free.
Suppose y'u had cattle and I had sheep. I'd feel as free to run my
sheep anywhere as y'u were to ran your cattle."

"Right. But what if you throwed your sheep round my range an' sheeped
off the grass so my cattle would hev to move or starve?"

"Shore I wouldn't throw my sheep round y'ur range," she declared, stoutly.

"Wal, you've answered half of the question. An' now supposin' a lot
of my cattle was stolen by rustlers, but not a single one of your sheep.
What 'd you think then? "

"I'd shore think rustlers chose to steal cattle because there was no
profit in stealin' sheep."

"Egzactly. But wouldn't you hev a queer idee aboot it?"

"I don't know. Why queer? What 're y'u drivin' at, Uncle John?"

"Wal, wouldn't you git kind of a hunch thet the rustlers was--say
a leetle friendly toward the sheepmen?

Ellen felt a sudden vibrating shock. The blood rushed to her temples.
Trembling all over, she rose.

"Uncle John!" she cried.

"Now, girl, you needn't fire up thet way. Set down an' don't--"

"Dare y'u insinuate my father has--"

"Ellen, I ain't insinuatin' nothin', " interrupted the old man. "I'm
jest askin' you to think. Thet's all. You're ,most grown into a young
woman now. An' you've got sense. Thar's bad times ahead, Ellen.
An' I hate to see you mix in them."

"Oh, y'u do make me think," replied Ellen, with smarting tears in her
eyes. "Y'u make me unhappy. Oh, I know my dad is not liked in this
cattle country. But it's unjust. He happened to go in for sheep
raising. I wish he hadn't. It was a mistake. Dad always was a
cattleman till we came heah. He made enemies--who--who ruined him.
And everywhere misfortune crossed his trail. . . . But, oh, Uncle John,
my dad is an honest man."

"Wal, child, I--I didn't mean to--to make you cry," said the old man,
feelingly, and he averted his troubled gaze. "Never mind what I said.
I'm an old meddler. I reckon nothin' I could do or say would ever
change what's goin' to happen. If only you wasn't a girl! . . .
Thar I go ag'in. Ellen, face your future an' fight your way. All
youngsters hev to do thet. An' it's the right kind of fight thet
makes the right kind of man or woman. Only you must be sure to find
yourself. An' by thet I mean to find the real, true, honest-to-God
best in you an' stick to it an' die fightin' for it. You're a young
woman, almost, an' a blamed handsome one. Which means you'll hev more
trouble an' a harder fight. This country ain't easy on a woman when
once slander has marked her.

"What do I care for the talk down in that Basin?" returned Ellen.
"I know they think I'm a hussy. I've let them think it.
I've helped them to."

"You're wrong, child," said Sprague, earnestly. "Pride an, temper!
You must never let anyone think bad of you, much less help them to."

"I hate everybody down there," cried Ellen, passionately. "I hate
them so I'd glory in their thinkin' me bad. . . . My mother belonged
to the best blood in Texas. I am her daughter. I know WHO AND WHAT
I AM. That uplifts me whenever I meet the sneaky, sly suspicions of
these Basin people. It shows me the difference between them and me.
That's what I glory in."

"Ellen, you're a wild, headstrong child," rejoined the old man, in
severe tones. "Word has been passed ag'in' your good name--your honor.
. . . An' hevn't you given cause fer thet?"

Ellen felt her face blanch and all her blood rush back to her heart
in sickening force. The shock of his words was like a stab from a
cold blade. If their meaning and the stem, just light of the old
man's glance did not kill her pride and vanity they surely killed
her girlishness. She stood mute, staring at him, with her brown,
trembling hands stealing up toward her bosom, as if to ward off
another and a mortal blow.

"Ellen!" burst out Sprague, hoarsely. "You mistook me. Aw, I didn't
mean--what you think, I swear. . . . Ellen, I'm old an' blunt. I ain't
used to wimmen. But I've love for you, child, an' respect, jest the
same as if you was my own. . . . An' I KNOW you're good. . . .
Forgive me. . . . I meant only hevn't you been, say, sort of--
careless?"

"Care-less?" queried Ellen, bitterly and low.

"An' powerful thoughtless an'--an' blind--lettin' men kiss you an'
fondle you--when you're really a growed-up woman now?"

"Yes--I have," whispered Ellen.

"Wal, then, why did you let them?

"I--I don't know. . . . I didn't think. The men never let me alone--
never--never! I got tired everlastingly pushin' them away. And
sometimes--when they were kind--and I was lonely for something I--I
didn't mind if one or another fooled round me. I never thought.
It never looked as y'u have made it look. . . . Then--those few
times ridin' the trail to Grass Valley--when people saw me--then I
guess I encouraged such attentions. . . . Oh, I must be--I am a
shameless little hussy! "

"Hush thet kind of talk," said the old man, as he took her hand.
"Ellen, you're only young an' lonely an' bitter. No mother--no
friends--no one but a lot of rough men! It's a wonder you hev
kept yourself good. But now your eyes are open, Ellen. They're
brave an' beautiful eyes, girl, an' if you stand by the light in
them you will come through any trouble. An' you'll be happy. Don't
ever forgit that. Life is hard enough, God knows, but it's unfailin'
true in the end to the man or woman who finds the best in them an'
stands by it."

"Uncle John, y'u talk so--so kindly. Yu make me have hope. There
seemed really so little for me to live for--hope for. . . . But I'll
never be a coward again--nor a thoughtless fool. I'll find some good
in me--or make some--and never fail it, come what will. I'll remember
your words. I'll believe the future holds wonderful things for me. . . .
I'm only eighteen. Shore all my life won't be lived heah. Perhaps
this threatened fight over sheep and cattle will blow over. . . .
Somewhere there must be some nice girl to be a friend--a sister to
me. . . . And maybe some man who'd believe, in spite of all they
say--that I'm not a hussy."

"Wal, Ellen, you remind me of what I was wantin' to tell you when
you just got here. . . . Yestiddy I heerd you called thet name in a
barroom. An' thar was a fellar thar who raised hell. He near killed
one man an' made another plumb eat his words. An' he scared thet
crowd stiff."

Old John Sprague shook his grizzled head and laughed, beaming upon
Ellen as if the memory of what he had seen had warmed his heart.

"Was it--y'u?" asked Ellen, tremulously.

"Me? Aw, I wasn't nowhere. Ellen, this fellar was quick as a cat
in his actions an' his words was like lightnin'.'

"Who? she whispered.

"Wal, no one else but a stranger jest come to these parts--an Isbel,
too. Jean Isbel."

"Oh!" exclaimed Ellen, faintly.

"In a barroom full of men--almost all of them in sympathy with the
sheep crowd--most of them on the Jorth side--this Jean Isbel resented
an insult to Ellen Jorth. "

"No!" cried Ellen. Something terrible was happening to her mind or
her heart.

"Wal, he sure did," replied the old man, "an, it's goin' to be good
fer you to hear all about it."



CHAPTER V

Old John Sprague launched into his narrative with evident zest.

"I hung round Greaves' store most of two days. An' I heerd a heap.
Some of it was jest plain ole men's gab, but I reckon I got the drift
of things concernin' Grass Valley. Yestiddy mornin' I was packin' my
burros in Greaves' back yard, takin' my time carryin' out supplies from
the store. An' as last when I went in I seen a strange fellar was thar.
Strappin' young man--not so young, either--an' he had on buckskin. Hair
black as my burros, dark face, sharp eyes--you'd took him fer an Injun.
He carried a rifle--one of them new forty-fours--an' also somethin'
wrapped in paper thet he seemed partickler careful about. He wore a
belt round his middle an' thar was a bowie-knife in it, carried like
I've seen scouts an' Injun fighters hev on the frontier in the
'seventies. That looked queer to me, an' I reckon to the rest of
the crowd thar. No one overlooked the big six-shooter he packed
Texas fashion. Wal, I didn't hev no idee this fellar was an Isbel
until I heard Greaves call him thet.

"'Isbel,' said Greaves, 'reckon your money's counterfeit hyar.
I cain't sell you anythin'.'

"'Counterfeit? Not much,' spoke up the young fellar, an' he flipped
some gold twenties on the bar, where they rung like bells. 'Why not?
Ain't this a store? I want a cinch strap.'

"Greaves looked particular sour thet mornin'. I'd been watchin' him
fer two days. He hedn't hed much sleep, fer I hed my bed back of the
store, an' I heerd men come in the night an' hev long confabs with him.
Whatever was in the wind hedn't pleased him none. An' I calkilated
thet young Isbel wasn't a sight good fer Greaves' sore eyes, anyway.
But he paid no more attention to Isbel. Acted jest as if he hedn't
heerd Isbel say he wanted a cinch strap.

"I stayed inside the store then. Thar was a lot of fellars I'd seen,
an' some I knowed. Couple of card games goin', an' drinkin', of course.
I soon gathered thet the general atmosphere wasn't friendly to Jean
Isbel. He seen thet quick enough, but he didn't leave. Between you
an' me I sort of took a likin' to him. An' I sure watched him as close
as I could, not seemin' to, you know. Reckon they all did the same,
only you couldn't see it. It got jest about the same as if Isbel hedn't
been in thar, only you knowed it wasn't really the same. Thet was how
I got the hunch the crowd was all sheepmen or their friends. The day
before I'd heerd a lot of talk about this young Isbel, an' what he'd
come to Grass Valley fer, an' what a bad hombre he was. An' when I
seen him I was bound to admit he looked his reputation.

"Wal, pretty soon in come two more fellars, an' I knowed both of them.
You know them, too, I'm sorry to say. Fer I'm comin' to facts now thet
will shake you. The first fellar was your father's Mexican foreman,
Lorenzo, and the other was Simm Bruce. I reckon Bruce wasn't drunk,
but he'd sure been lookin' on red licker. When he seen Isbel darn me
if he didn't swell an' bustle all up like a mad ole turkey gobbler.

"'Greaves,' he said, 'if thet fellar's Jean Isbel I ain't hankerin'
fer the company y'u keep.' An' he made no bones of pointin' right
at Isbel. Greaves looked up dry an' sour an' he bit out spiteful-like:
'Wal, Simm, we ain't hed a hell of a lot of choice in this heah matter.
Thet's Jean Isbel shore enough. Mebbe you can persuade him thet his
company an' his custom ain't wanted round heah!'

"Jean Isbel set on the counter an took it all in, but he didn't say
nothin'. The way he looked at Bruce was sure enough fer me to see
thet thar might be a surprise any minnit. I've looked at a lot of
men in my day, an' can sure feel events comin'. Bruce got himself
a stiff drink an' then he straddles over the floor in front of Isbel.

"'Air you Jean Isbel, son of ole Gass Isbel?' asked Bruce, sort of
lolling back an' givin' a hitch to his belt.

"'Yes sir, you've identified me,' said Isbel, nice an' polite.

"'My name's Bruce. I'm rangin' sheep heahaboots, an, I hev interest
in Kurnel Lee Jorth's bizness.'

"'Hod do, Mister Bruce,' replied Isbel, very civil ant cool as you
please. Bruce hed an eye fer the crowd thet was now listenin' an'
watchin'. He swaggered closer to Isbel.

"'We heerd y'u come into the Tonto Basin to run us sheepmen off
the range. How aboot thet?'

"'Wal, you heerd wrong,' said Isbel, quietly. 'I came to work fer
my father. Thet work depends on what happens.'

" Bruce began to git redder of face, an' he shook a husky hand in
front of Isbel. 'I'll tell y'u this heah, my Nez Perce Isbel--' an'
when he sort of choked fer more wind Greaves spoke up, 'Simm, I shore
reckon thet Nez Perce handle will stick.' An' the crowd haw-hawed.
Then Bruce got goin' ag'in. 'I'll tell y'u this heah, Nez Perce.
Thar's been enough happen already to run y'u out of Arizona.'

"'Wal, you don't say! What, fer instance?, asked Isbel, quick an'
sarcastic.

"Thet made Bruce bust out puffin' an' spittin': 'Wha-tt, fer instance?
Huh! Why, y'u darn half-breed, y'u'll git run out fer makin' up to
Ellen Jorth. Thet won't go in this heah country. Not fer any Isbel.'

"'You're a liar,' called Isbel, an' like a big cat he dropped off
the counter. I heerd his moccasins pat soft on the floor. An' I bet
to myself thet he was as dangerous as he was quick. But his voice an'
his looks didn't change even a leetle.

"'I'm not a liar,' yelled Bruce. 'I'll make y'u eat thet. I can prove
what I say. . . . Y'u was seen with Ellen Jorth--up on the Rim--day
before yestiddy. Y'u was watched. Y'u was with her. Y'u made up to
her. Y'u grabbed her an' kissed her! . . . An' I'm heah to say, Nez
Perce, thet y'u're a marked man on this range.'

"'Who saw me?' asked Isbel, quiet an' cold. I seen then thet he'd
turned white in the face.

"'Yu cain't lie out of it,' hollered Bruce, wavin' his hands.
'We got y'u daid to rights. Lorenzo saw y'u--follered y'u--watched
y'u.' Bruce pointed at the grinnin' greaser. 'Lorenzo is Kurnel
Jorth's foreman. He seen y'u maulin' of Ellen Jorth. An' when he
tells the Kurnel an' Tad Jorth an' Jackson Jorth! . . . Haw! Haw!
Haw! Why, hell 'd be a cooler place fer yu then this heah Tonto.'

"Greaves an' his gang hed come round, sure tickled clean to thar
gizzards at this mess. I noticed, howsomever, thet they was Texans
enough to keep back to one side in case this Isbel started any action.
. . . Wal, Isbel took a look at Lorenzo. Then with one swift grab he
jerked the little greaser off his feet an' pulled him close. Lorenzo
stopped grinnin'. He began to look a leetle sick. But it was plain
he hed right on his side.

"'You say you saw me?' demanded Isbel.

"'Si, senor,' replied Lorenzo.

"What did you see?'

"'I see senor an' senorita. I hide by manzanita. I see senorita like
grande senor ver mooch. She like senor keese. She--'

"Then Isbel hit the little greaser a back-handed crack in the mouth.
Sure it was a crack! Lorenzo went over the counter backward an' landed
like a pack load of wood. An' he didn't git up.

"'Mister Bruce,' said Isbel, 'an' you fellars who heerd thet lyin'
greaser, I did meet Ellen Jorth. An' I lost my head. I 'I kissed her.
. . . But it was an accident. I meant no insult. I apologized--I tried
to explain my crazy action. . . . Thet was all. The greaser lied. Ellen
Jorth was kind enough to show me the trail. We talked a little. Then--I
suppose--because she was young an' pretty an' sweet--I lost my head. She
was absolutely innocent. Thet damned greaser told a bare-faced lie when
he said she liked me. The fact was she despised me. She said so. An'
when she learned I was Jean Isbel she turned her back on me an' walked
away."'

At this point of his narrative the old man halted as if to impress
Ellen not only with what just had been told, but particularly with
what was to follow. The reciting of this tale had evidently given
Sprague an unconscious pleasure. He glowed. He seemed to carry the
burden of a secret that he yearned to divulge. As for Ellen, she was
deadlocked in breathless suspense. All her emotions waited for the end.
She begged Sprague to hurry.

"Wal, I wish I could skip the next chapter an' hev only the last to
tell," rejoined the old man, and he put a heavy, but solicitous, hand
upon hers. . . . Simm Bruce haw-hawed loud an' loud. . . . 'Say, Nez
Perce,' he calls out, most insolent-like, 'we air too good sheepmen
heah to hev the wool pulled over our eyes. We shore know what y'u
meant by Ellen Jorth. But y'u wasn't smart when y'u told her y'u was
Jean Isbel! . . . Haw-haw!'

"Isbel flashed a strange, surprised look from the red-faced Bruce to
Greaves and to the other men. I take it he was wonderin' if he'd
heerd right or if they'd got the same hunch thet 'd come to him.
An' I reckon he determined to make sure.

"'Why wasn't I smart?' he asked.

"'Shore y'u wasn't smart if y'u was aimin' to be one of Ellen Jorth's
lovers,' said Bruce, with a leer. 'Fer if y'u hedn't give y'urself
away y'u could hev been easy enough.'

"Thar was no mistakin' Bruce's meanin' an' when he got it out some of
the men thar laughed. Isbel kept lookin' from one to another of them.
Then facin' Greaves, he said, deliberately: 'Greaves, this drunken
Bruce is excuse enough fer a show-down. I take it that you are
sheepmen, an' you're goin' on Jorth's side of the fence in the matter
of this sheep rangin'.'

"'Wal, Nez Perce, I reckon you hit plumb center,' said Greaves, dryly.
He spread wide his big hands to the other men, as if to say they'd
might as well own the jig was up.

"'All right. You're Jorth's backers. Have any of you a word to say
in Ellen Jorth's defense? I tell you the Mexican lied. Believin' me
or not doesn't matter. But this vile-mouthed Bruce hinted against thet
girl's honor.'

"Ag'in some of the men laughed, but not so noisy, an' there was a
nervous shufflin' of feet. Isbel looked sort of queer. His neck
had a bulge round his collar. An' his eyes was like black coals of
fire. Greaves spread his big hands again, as if to wash them of this
part of the dirty argument.

"'When it comes to any wimmen I pass--much less play a hand fer a
wildcat like Jorth's gurl,' said Greaves, sort of cold an' thick.
'Bruce shore ought to know her. Accordin' to talk heahaboots an'
what HE says, Ellen Jorth has been his gurl fer two years.'

"Then Isbel turned his attention to Bruce an' I fer one begun to
shake in my boots.

"'Say thet to me!' he called.

"'Shore she's my gurl, an' thet's why Im a-goin' to hev y'u run off
this range.'

"Isbel jumped at Bruce. 'You damned drunken cur! You vile-mouthed liar!
. . . . I may be an Isbel, but by God you cain't slander thet girl to
my face! . . . Then he moved so quick I couldn't see what he did.
But I heerd his fist hit Bruce. It sounded like an ax ag'in' a beef.
Bruce fell clear across the room. An' by Jinny when he landed Isbel
was thar. As Bruce staggered up, all bloody-faced, bellowin' an'
spittin' out teeth Isbel eyed Greaves's crowd an' said: 'If any of
y'u make a move it 'll mean gun-play.' Nobody moved, thet's sure.
In fact, none of Greaves's outfit was packin' guns, at least in sight.
When Bruce got all the way up--he's a tall fellar--why Isbel took a
full swing at him an' knocked him back across the room ag'in' the
counter. Y'u know when a fellar's hurt by the way he yells. Bruce
got thet second smash right on his big red nose. . . . I never seen
any one so quick as Isbel. He vaulted over thet counter jest the
second Bruce fell back on it, an' then, with Greaves's gang in front
so he could catch any moves of theirs, he jest slugged Bruce right
an' left, an' banged his head on the counter. Then as Bruce sunk
limp an' slipped down, lookin' like a bloody sack, Isbel let him
fall to the floor. Then he vaulted back over the counter. Wipin'
the blood off his hands, he throwed his kerchief down in Bruce's
face. Bruce wasn't dead or bad hurt. He'd jest been beaten bad.
He was moanin' an' slobberin'. Isbel kicked him, not hard, but jest
sort of disgustful. Then he faced thet crowd. 'Greaves, thet's what
I think of your Simm Bruce. Tell him next time he sees me to run or
pull a gun.' An' then Isbel grabbed his rifle an' package off the
counter an' went out. He didn't even look back. I seen him nount
his horse an' ride away. . . . Now, girl, what hev you to say?"

Ellen could only say good-by and the word was so low as to be almost
inaudible. She ran to her burro. She could not see very clearly
through tear-blurred eyes, and her shaking fingers were all thumbs.
It seemed she had to rush away--somewhere, anywhere--not to get away
from old John Sprague, but from herself--this palpitating, bursting
self whose feet stumbled down the trail. All--all seemed ended for
her. That interminable story! It had taken so long. And every
minute of it she had been helplessly torn asunder by feelings she
had never known she possessed. This Ellen Jorth was an unknown
creature. She sobbed now as she dragged the burro down the canyon
trail. She sat down only to rise. She hurried only to stop. Driven,
pursued, barred, she had no way to escape the flaying thoughts, no time
or will to repudiate them. The death of her girlhood, the rending aside
of a veil of maiden mystery only vaguely instinctively guessed, the
barren, sordid truth of her life as seen by her enlightened eyes, the
bitter realization of the vileness of men of her clan in contrast to
the manliness and chivalry of an enemy, the hard facts of unalterable
repute as created by slander and fostered by low minds, all these were
forces in a cataclysm that had suddenly caught her heart and whirled
her through changes immense and agonizing, to bring her face to face
with reality, to force upon her suspicion and doubt of all she had
trusted, to warn her of the dark, impending horror of a tragic bloody
feud, and lastly to teach her the supreme truth at once so glorious
and so terrible--that she could not escape the doom of womanhood.

About noon that day Ellen Jorth arrived at the Knoll, which was the
location of her father's ranch. Three canyons met there to form a
larger one. The knoll was a symmetrical hill situated at the mouth of
the three canyons. It was covered with brush and cedars, with here and
there lichened rocks showing above the bleached grass. Below the Knoll
was a wide, grassy flat or meadow through which a willow-bordered stream
cut its rugged boulder-strewn bed. Water flowed abundantly at this
season, and the deep washes leading down from the slopes attested to
the fact of cloudbursts and heavy storms. This meadow valley was dotted
with horses and cattle, and meandered away between the timbered slopes
to lose itself in a green curve. A singular feature of this canyon was
that a heavy growth of spruce trees covered the slope facing northwest;
and the opposite slope, exposed to the sun and therefore less snowbound
in winter, held a sparse growth of yellow pines. The ranch house of
Colonel Jorth stood round the rough comer of the largest of the three
canyons, and rather well hidden, it did not obtrude its rude and
broken-down log cabins, its squalid surroundings, its black mud-holes
of corrals upon the beautiful and serene meadow valley.

Ellen Jorth approached her home slowly, with dragging, reluctant steps;
and never before in the three unhappy years of her existence there had
the ranch seemed so bare, so uncared for, so repugnant to her. As she
had seen herself with clarified eyes, so now she saw her home. The
cabin that Ellen lived in with her father was a single-room structure
with one door and no windows. It was about twenty feet square. The
huge, ragged, stone chimney had been built on the outside, with the
wide open fireplace set inside the logs. Smoke was rising from the
chimney. As Ellen halted at the door and began unpacking her burro
she heard the loud, lazy laughter of men. An adjoining log cabin had
been built in two sections, with a wide roofed hall or space between
them. The door in each cabin faced the other, and there was a tall
man standing in one. Ellen recognized Daggs, a neighbor sheepman,
who evidently spent more time with her father than at his own home,
wherever that was. Ellen had never seen it. She heard this man drawl,
"Jorth, heah's your kid come home."

Ellen carried her bed inside the cabin, and unrolled it upon a couch
built of boughs in the far corner. She had forgotten Jean Isbel's
package, and now it fell out under her sight. Quickly she covered it.
A Mexican woman, relative of Antonio, and the only servant about the
place, was squatting Indian fashion before the fireplace, stirring a
pot of beans. She and Ellen did not get along well together, and few
words ever passed between them. Ellen had a canvas curtain stretched
upon a wire across a small triangular comer, and this afforded her a
little privacy. Her possessions were limited in number. The crude
square table she had constructed herself. Upon it was a little
old-fashioned walnut-framed mirror, a brush and comb, and a dilapidated
ebony cabinet which contained odds and ends the sight of which always
brought a smile of derisive self-pity to her lips. Under the table
stood an old leather trunk. It had come with her from Texas, and
contained clothing and belongings of her mother's. Above the couch
on pegs hung her scant wardrobe. A tiny shelf held several worn-out
books.

When her father slept indoors, which was seldom except in winter,
he occupied a couch in the opposite corner. A rude cupboard had
been built against the logs next to the fireplace. It contained
supplies and utensils. Toward the center, somewhat closer to the door,
stood a crude table and two benches. The cabin was dark and smelled
of smoke, of the stale odors of past cooked meals, of the mustiness
of dry, rotting timber. Streaks of light showed through the roof
where the rough-hewn shingles had split or weathered. A strip of
bacon hung upon one side of the cupboard, and upon the other a haunch
of venison. Ellen detested the Mexican woman because she was dirty.
The inside of the cabin presented the same unkempt appearance usual
to it after Ellen had been away for a few days. Whatever Ellen had
lost during the retrogression of the Jorths, she had kept her habits
of cleanliness, and straightway upon her return she set to work.

The Mexican woman sullenly slouched away to her own quarters outside
and Ellen was left to the satisfaction of labor. Her mind was as busy
as her hands. As she cleaned and swept and dusted she heard from time
to time the voices of men, the clip-clop of shod horses, the bellow of
cattle. And a considerable time elapsed before she was disturbed,

A tall shadow darkened the doorway.

"Howdy, little one!" said a lazy, drawling voice. "So y'u-all got home?"

Ellen looked up. A superbly built man leaned against the doorpost.
Like most Texans, he was light haired and light eyed. His face was
lined and hard. His long, sandy mustache hid his mouth and drooped
with a curl. Spurred, booted, belted, packing a heavy gun low down
on his hip, he gave Ellen an entirely new impression. Indeed. she was
seeing everything strangely.

"Hello, Daggs!" replied Ellen. "Where's my dad?"

"He's playin' cairds with Jackson an' Colter. Shore's playin' bad,
too, an' it's gone to his haid."

"Gamblin'?" queried Ellen.

"Mah child, when'd Kurnel Jorth ever play for fun?" said Daggs, with
a lazy laugh. "There's a stack of gold on the table. Reckon yo' uncle
Jackson will win it. Colter's shore out of luck."

Daggs stepped inside. He was graceful and slow. His long' spurs
clinked. He laid a rather compelling hand on Ellen's shoulder.

"Heah, mah gal, give us a kiss," he said.

"Daggs, I'm not your girl," replied Ellen as she slipped out from
under his hand.

Then Daggs put his arm round her, not with violence or rudeness,
but with an indolent, affectionate assurance, at once bold and
self-contained. Ellen, however, had to exert herself to get free
of him, and when she had placed the table between them she looked
him square in the eyes.

"Daggs, y'u keep your paws off me," she said.

"Aw, now, Ellen, I ain't no bear," he remonstrated. "What's the
matter, kid?"

"I'm not a kid. And there's nothin' the matter. Y'u're to keep your
hands to yourself, that's all."

He tried to reach her across the table, and his movements were lazy
and slow, like his smile. His tone was coaxing.

"Mah dear, shore you set on my knee just the other day, now, didn't you?"

Ellen felt the blood sting her cheeks.

"I was a child," she returned.

"Wal, listen to this heah grown-up young woman. All in a few days!
. . . Doon't be in a temper, Ellen. . . . Come, give us a kiss."

She deliberately gazed into his eyes. Like the eyes of an eagle,
they were clear and hard, just now warmed by the dalliance of the
moment, but there was no light, no intelligence in them to prove he
understood her. The instant separated Ellen immeasurably from him
and from all of his ilk.

"Daggs, I was a child," she said. "I was lonely--hungry for affection
--I was innocent. Then I was careless, too, and thoughtless when I
should have known better. But I hardly understood y'u men. I put
such thoughts out of my mind. I know now--know what y'u mean--what
y'u have made people believe I am."

"Ahuh! Shore I get your hunch," he returned, with a change of tone.
"But I asked you to marry me?"

"Yes y'u did. The first day y'u got heah to my dad's house. And y'u
asked me to marry y'u after y'u found y'u couldn't have your way with me.
To y'u the one didn't mean any more than the other."

"Shore I did more than Simm Bruce an' Colter," he retorted.
"They never asked you to marry."

"No, they didn't. And if I could respect them at all I'd do it
because they didn't ask me."

"Wal, I'll be dog-goned!" ejaculated Daggs, thoughtfully, as he
stroked his long mustache.

"I'll say to them what I've said to y'u," went on Ellen. "I'll tell
dad to make y'u let me alone. I wouldn't marry one of y'u--y'u loafers
to save my life. I've my suspicions about y'u. Y'u're a bad lot."

Daggs changed subtly. The whole indolent nonchalance of the man
vanished in an instant.

"Wal, Miss Jorth, I reckon you mean we're a bad lot of sheepmen?" he
queried, in the cool, easy speech of a Texan.

"No," flashed Ellen. "Shore I don't say sheepmen. I say y'u're a BAD LOT."

"Oh, the hell you say!" Daggs spoke as he might have spoken to a man;
then turning swiftly on his heel he left her. Outside he encountered
Ellen's father. She heard Daggs speak: "Lee, your little wildcat is
shore heah. An' take mah hunch. Somebody has been talkin' to her."

"Who has?" asked her father, in his husky voice. Ellen knew at once
that he had been drinking.

"Lord only knows," replied Daggs. "But shore it wasn't any friends
of ours."

"We cain't stop people's tongues," said Jorth, resignedly

"Wal, I ain't so shore," continued Daggs, with his slow, cool laugh.
"Reckon I never yet heard any daid men's tongues wag."

Then the musical tinkle of his spurs sounded fainter. A moment later
Ellen's father entered the cabin. His dark, moody face brightened at
sight of her. Ellen knew she was the only person in the world left for
him to love. And she was sure of his love. Her very presence always
made him different. And through the years, the darker their misfortunes,
the farther he slipped away from better days, the more she loved him.

"Hello, my Ellen!" he said, and he embraced her. When he had been
drinking he never kissed her. "Shore I'm glad you're home. This heah
hole is bad enough any time, but when you're gone it's black. . . .
I'm hungry."

Ellen laid food and drink on the table; and for a little while she
did not look directly at him. She was concerned about this new
searching power of her eyes. In relation to him she vaguely dreaded it.

Lee Jorth had once been a singularly handsome man. He was tall, but
did not have the figure of a horseman. His dark hair was streaked
with gray, and was white over his ears. His face was sallow and thin,
with deep lines. Under his round, prominent, brown eyes, like deadened
furnaces, were blue swollen welts. He had a bitter mouth and weak chin,
not wholly concealed by gray mustache and pointed beard. He wore a long
frock coat and a wide-brimmed sombrero, both black in color, and so old
and stained and frayed that along with the fashion of them they betrayed
that they had come from Texas with him. Jorth always persisted in
wearing a white linen shirt, likewise a relic of his Southern prosperity,
and to-day it was ragged and soiled as usual.

Ellen watched her father eat and waited for him to speak. It occured
to her strangely that he never asked about the sheep or the new-born
lambs. She divined with a subtle new woman's intuition that he cared
nothing for his sheep.

"Ellen, what riled Daggs?" inquired her father, presently. "He shore
had fire in his eye."

Long ago Ellen had betrayed an indignity she had suffered at the hands
of a man. Her father had nearly killed him. Since then she had taken
care to keep her troubles to herself. If her father had not been blind
and absorbed in his own brooding he would have seen a thousand things
sufficient to inflame his Southern pride and temper.

"Daggs asked me to marry him again and I said he belonged to a bad lot,"
she replied.

Jorth laughed in scorn. "Fool! My God! Ellen, I must have dragged you
low--that every damned ru--er--sheepman--who comes along thinks he can
marry you."

At the break in his words, the incompleted meaning, Ellen dropped her
eyes. Little things once never noted by her were now come to have a
fascinating significance.

"Never mind, dad," she replied. "They cain't marry me."

"Daggs said somebody had been talkin' to you. How aboot that?"

"Old John Sprague has just gotten back from Grass Valley," said Ellen.
"I stopped in to see him. Shore he told me all the village gossip."

"Anythin' to interest me?" he queried, darkly.

"Yes, dad, I'm afraid a good deal," she said, hesitatingly. Then in
accordance with a decision Ellen had made she told him of the rumored
war between sheepmen and cattlemen; that old Isbel had Blaisdell,
Gordon, Fredericks, Blue and other well-known ranchers on his side;
that his son Jean Isbel had come from Oregon with a wonderful reputation
as fighter and scout and tracker; that it was no secret how Colonel Lee
Jorth was at the head of the sheepmen; that a bloody war was sure to come.

"Hah!" exclaimed Jorth, with a stain of red in his sallow cheek.
"Reckon none of that is news to me. I knew all that."

Ellen wondered if he had heard of her meeting with Jean Isbel. If not
he would hear as soon as Simm Bruce and Lorenzo came back. She decided
to forestall them.

"Dad, I met Jean Isbel. He came into my camp. Asked the way to the Rim.
I showed him. We--we talked a little. And shore were gettin' acquainted
when--when he told me who he was. Then I left him--hurried back to camp."

"Colter met Isbel down in the woods," replied Jorth, ponderingly.
"Said he looked like an Indian--a hard an' slippery customer to
reckon with."

"Shore I guess I can indorse what Colter said," returned Ellen, dryly.
She could have laughed aloud at her deceit. Still she had not lied.

"How'd this heah young Isbel strike you?" queried her father,
suddenly glancing up at her.

Ellen felt the slow, sickening, guilty rise of blood in her face.
She was helpless to stop it. But her father evidently never saw it.
He was looking at her without seeing her.

"He--he struck me as different from men heah," she stammered.

"Did Sprague tell you aboot this half-Indian Isbel--aboot his reputation?"

"Yes."

"Did he look to you like a real woodsman?"

"Indeed he did. He wore buckskin. He stepped quick and soft. He acted
at home in the woods. He had eyes black as night and sharp as lightnin'.
They shore saw about all there was to see."

Jorth chewed at his mustache and lost himself in brooding thought.

"Dad, tell me, is there goin' to be a war?" asked Ellen, presently.

What a red, strange, rolling flash blazed in his eyes! His body jerked.

"Shore. You might as well know."

"Between sheepmen and cattlemen?"

"Yes."

"With y'u, dad, at the haid of one faction and Gaston Isbel the other? "

"Daughter, you have it correct, so far as you go."

"Oh! . . . Dad, can't this fight be avoided?"

"You forget you're from Texas," he replied.

"Cain't it be helped?" she repeated, stubbornly.

"No!" he declared, with deep, hoarse passion.

"Why not?"

"Wal, we sheepmen are goin' to run sheep anywhere we like on the range.
An' cattlemen won't stand for that."

"But, dad, it's so foolish," declared Ellen, earnestly. "Y'u sheepmen
do not have to run sheep over the cattle range."

"I reckon we do."

"Dad, that argument doesn't go with me. I know the country. For years
to come there will be room for both sheep and cattle without overrunnin'.
If some of the range is better in water and grass, then whoever got there
first should have it. That shore is only fair. It's common sense, too."

"Ellen, I reckon some cattle people have been prejudicin' you," said
Jorth, bitterly.

"Dad!" she cried, hotly.

This had grown to be an ordeal for Jorth. He seemed a victim of
contending tides of feeling. Some will or struggle broke within him
and the change was manifest. Haggard, shifty-eyed, with wabbling chin,
he burst into speech.

"See heah, girl. You listen. There's a clique of ranchers down in
the Basin, all those you named, with Isbel at their haid. They have
resented sheepmen comin' down into the valley. They want it all to
themselves. That's the reason. Shore there's another. All the Isbels
are crooked. They're cattle an' horse thieves--have been for years.
Gaston Isbel always was a maverick rustler. He's gettin' old now an'
rich, so he wants to cover his tracks. He aims to blame this cattle
rustlin' an' horse stealin' on to us sheepmen, an' run us out of the
country."

Gravely Ellen Jorth studied her father's face, and the newly found
truth-seeing power of her eyes did not fail her. In part, perhaps
in all, he was telling lies. She shuddered a little, loyally battling
against the insidious convictions being brought to fruition. Perhaps
in his brooding over his failures and troubles he leaned toward false
judgments. Ellen could not attach dishonor to her father's motives or
speeches. For long, however, something about him had troubled her,
perplexed her. Fearfully she believed she was coming to some
revelation, and, despite her keen determination to know, she
found herself shrinking.

"Dad, mother told me before she died that the Isbels had ruined you,"
said Ellen, very low. It hurt her so to see her father cover his
face that she could hardly go on. "If they ruined you they ruined
all of us. I know what we had once--what we lost again and again--and
I see what we are come to now. Mother hated the Isbels. She taught me
to hate the very name. But I never knew how they ruined you--or why--
or when. And I want to know now."

Then it was not the face of a liar that Jorth disclosed. The present
was forgotten. He lived in the past. He even seemed younger 'in the
revivifying flash of hate that made his face radiant. The lines burned
out. Hate gave him back the spirit of his youth.

"Gaston Isbel an' I were boys together in Weston, Texas," began Jorth,
in swift, passionate voice. "We went to school together. We loved
the same girl--your mother. When the war broke out she was engaged
to Isbel. His family was rich. They influenced her people. But she
loved me. When Isbel went to war she married me. He came back an'
faced us. God! I'll never forget that. Your mother confessed her
unfaithfulness--by Heaven! She taunted him with it. Isbel accused
me of winnin' her by lies. But she took the sting out of that.

Isbel never forgave her an' he hounded me to ruin. He made me out
a card-sharp, cheatin' my best friends. I was disgraced. Later he
tangled me in the courts--he beat me out of property--an' last by
convictin' me of rustlin' cattle he run me out of Texas."

Black and distorted now, Jorth's face was a spectacle to make Ellen
sick with a terrible passion of despair and hate. The truth of her
father's ruin and her own were enough. What mattered all else?
Jorth beat the table with fluttering, nerveless hands that seemed
all the more significant for their lack of physical force.

"An' so help me God, it's got to be wiped out in blood!" he hissed.

That was his answer to the wavering and nobility of Ellen. And she
in her turn had no answer to make. She crept away into the corner
behind the curtain, and there on her couch in the semidarkness she
lay with strained heart, and a resurging, unconquerable tumult in her
mind. And she lay there from the middle of that afternoon until the
next morning.

When she awakened she expected to be unable to rise--she hoped she
could not--but life seemed multiplied in her, and inaction was
impossible. Something young and sweet and hopeful that had been
in her did not greet the sun this morning. In their place was a
woman's passion to learn for herself, to watch events, to meet what
must come, to survive.

After breakfast, at which she sat alone, she decided to put Isbel's
package out of the way, so that it would not be subjecting her to
continual annoyance. The moment she picked it up the old curiosity
assailed her.

"Shore I'll see what it is, anyway," she muttered, and with swift
hands she opened the package. The action disclosed two pairs of fine,
soft shoes, of a style she had never seen, and four pairs of stockings,
two of strong, serviceable wool, and the others of a finer texture.
Ellen looked at them in amaze. Of all things in the world, these would
have been the last she expected to see. And, strangely, they were what
she wanted and needed most. Naturally, then, Ellen made the mistake of
taking them in her hands to feel their softness and warmth.

"Shore! He saw my bare legs! And he brought me these presents he'd
intended for his sister. . . . He was ashamed for me--sorry for me.
. . And I thought he looked at me bold-like, as I'm used to be looked
at heah! Isbel or not, he's shore. . ."

But Ellen Jorth could not utter aloud the conviction her intelligence
tried to force upon her.

"It'd be a pity to burn them," she mused. "I cain't do it.
Sometime I might send them to Ann Isbel."

Whereupon she wrapped them up again and hid them in the bottom of the
old trunk, and slowly, as she lowered the lid, looking darkly, blankly
at the wall, she whispered: "Jean Isbel! . . . I hate him!"

Later when Ellen went outdoors she carried her rifle, which was unusual
for her, unless she intended to go into the woods.

The morning was sunny and warm. A group of shirt-sleeved men lounged
in the hall and before the porch of the double cabin. Her father was
pacing up and down, talking forcibly. Ellen heard his hoarse voice.
As she approached he ceased talking and his listeners relaxed their
attention. Ellen's glance ran over them swiftly--Daggs, with his
superb head, like that of a hawk, uncovered to the sun; Colter with
his lowered, secretive looks, his sand-gray lean face; Jackson Jorth,
her uncle, huge, gaunt, hulking, with white in his black beard and hair,
and the fire of a ghoul in his hollow eyes; Tad Jorth, another brother
of her father's, younger, red of eye and nose, a weak-chinned drinker
of rum. Three other limber-legged Texans lounged there, partners of
Daggs, and they were sun-browned, light-haired, blue-eyed men singularly
alike in appearance, from their dusty high-heeled boots to their broad
black sombreros. They claimed to be sheepmen. All Ellen could be sure
of was that Rock Wells spent most of his time there, doing nothing but
look for a chance to waylay her; Springer was a gambler; and the third,
who answered to the strange name of Queen, was a silent, lazy,
watchful-eyed man who never wore a glove on his right hand and who
never was seen without a gun within easy reach of that hand.

"Howdy, Ellen. Shore you ain't goin' to say good mawnin' to this
heah bad lot?" drawled Daggs, with good-natured sarcasm.

"Why, shore! Good morning, y'u hard-working industrious MANANA sheep
raisers," replied Ellen, coolly.

Daggs stared. The others appeared taken back by a greeting so foreign
from any to which they were accustomed from her. Jackson Jorth let out
a gruff haw-haw. Some of them doffed their sombreros, and Rock Wells
managed a lazy, polite good morning. Ellen's father seemed most
significantly struck by her greeting, and the least amused.

"Ellen, I'm not likin' your talk, " he said, with a frown.

"Dad, when y'u play cards don't y'u call a spade a spade?"

"Why, shore I do."

"Well, I'm calling spades spades."

"Ahuh!" grunted Jorth, furtively dropping his eyes. "Where you goin'
with your gun? I'd rather you hung round heah now."

"Reckon I might as well get used to packing my gun all the time,"
replied Ellen. "Reckon I'll be treated more like a man."

Then the event Ellen had been expecting all morning took place.
Simm Bruce and Lorenzo rode around the slope of the Knoll and
trotted toward the cabin. Interest in Ellen was relegated to
the background.

"Shore they're bustin' with news," declared Daggs.

"They been ridin' some, you bet," remarked another.

"Huh!" exclaimed Jorth. "Bruce shore looks queer to me."

"Red liquor," said Tad Jorth, sententiously. "You-all know the
brand Greaves hands out."

"Naw, Simm ain't drunk," said Jackson Jorth. "Look at his bloody shirt."

The cool, indolent interest of the crowd vanished at the red color
pointed out by Jackson Jorth. Daggs rose in a single springy motion
to his lofty height. The face Bruce turned to Jorth was swollen and
bruised, with unhealed cuts. Where his right eye should have been
showed a puffed dark purple bulge. His other eye, however, gleamed
with hard and sullen light. He stretched a big shaking hand toward Jorth.

Thet Nez Perce Isbel beat me half to death," he bellowed.

Jorth stared hard at the tragic, almost grotesque figure, at the
battered face. But speech failed him. It was Daggs who answered Bruce.

"Wal, Simm, I'll be damned if you don't look it."

"Beat you! What with?" burst out Jorth, explosively.

"I thought he was swingin' an ax, but Greaves swore it was his fists,"
bawled Bruce, in misery and fury.


 


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