The Man of the Forest
CHAPTER XIX
The memory of a woman had ruined Milt Dale's peace, had confounded his
philosophy of self-sufficient, lonely happiness in the solitude of the
wilds, had forced him to come face to face with his soul and the fatal
significance of life.
When he realized his defeat, that things were not as they seemed, that
there was no joy for him in the coming of spring, that he had been blind
in his free, sensorial, Indian relation to existence, he fell into an
inexplicably strange state, a despondency, a gloom as deep as the silence
of his home. Dale reflected that the stronger an animal, the keener its
nerves, the higher its intelligence, the greater must be its suffering
under restraint or injury. He thought of himself as a high order of animal
whose great physical need was action, and now the incentive to action
seemed dead. He grew lax. He did not want to move. He performed his
diminishing duties under compulsion.
He watched for spring as a liberation, but not that he could leave the
valley. He hated the cold, he grew weary of wind and snow; he imagined the
warm sun, the park once more green with grass and bright with daisies, the
return of birds and squirrels and deer to heir old haunts, would be the
means whereby he could break this spell upon him. Then he might gradually
return to past contentment, though it would never be the same.
But spring, coming early to Paradise Park, brought a fever to Dale's blood—a
fire of unutterable longing. It was good, perhaps, that this was so,
because he seemed driven to work, climb, tramp, and keep ceaselessly on
the move from dawn till dark. Action strengthened his lax muscles and kept
him from those motionless, senseless hours of brooding. He at least need
not be ashamed of longing for that which could never be his—the
sweetness of a woman—a home full of light, joy, hope, the meaning
and beauty of children. But those dark moods were sinkings into a pit of
hell.
Dale had not kept track of days and weeks. He did not know when the snow
melted off three slopes of Paradise Park. All he knew was that an age had
dragged over his head and that spring had come. During his restless waking
hours, and even when he was asleep, there seemed always in the back of his
mind a growing consciousness that soon he would emerge from this trial, a
changed man, ready to sacrifice his chosen lot, to give up his lonely life
of selfish indulgence in lazy affinity with nature, and to go wherever his
strong hands might perform some real service to people. Nevertheless, he
wanted to linger in this mountain fastness until his ordeal was over—until
he could meet her, and the world, knowing himself more of a man than ever
before.
One bright morning, while he was at his camp-fire, the tame cougar gave a
low, growling warning. Dale was startled. Tom did not act like that
because of a prowling grizzly or a straying stag. Presently Dale espied a
horseman riding slowly out of the straggling spruces. And with that sight
Dale's heart gave a leap, recalling to him a divination of his future
relation to his kind. Never had he been so glad to see a man!
This visitor resembled one of the Beemans, judging from the way he sat his
horse, and presently Dale recognized him to be John.
At this juncture the jaded horse was spurred into a trot, soon reaching
the pines and the camp.
“Howdy, there, you ole b'ar-hunter!” called John, waving his hand.
For all his hearty greeting his appearance checked a like response from
Dale. The horse was mud to his flanks and John was mud to his knees, wet,
bedraggled, worn, and white. This hue of his face meant more than fatigue.
“Howdy, John?” replied Dale.
They shook hands. John wearily swung his leg over the pommel, but did not
at once dismount. His clear gray eyes were wonderingly riveted upon the
hunter.
“Milt—what 'n hell's wrong?” he queried.
“Why?”
“Bust me if you ain't changed so I hardly knowed you. You've been sick—all
alone here!”
“Do I look sick?”
“Wal, I should smile. Thin an' pale an' down in the mouth! Milt, what ails
you?”
“I've gone to seed.”
“You've gone off your head, jest as Roy said, livin' alone here. You
overdid it, Milt. An' you look sick.”
“John, my sickness is here,” replied Dale, soberly, as he laid a hand on
his heart.
“Lung trouble!” ejaculated John. “With thet chest, an' up in this air?...
Get out!”
“No—not lung trouble,” said Dale.
“I savvy. Had a hunch from Roy, anyhow.”
“What kind of a hunch?”
“Easy now, Dale, ole man.... Don't you reckon I'm ridin' in on you pretty
early? Look at thet hoss!” John slid off and waved a hand at the drooping
beast, then began to unsaddle him. “Wal, he done great. We bogged some
comin' over. An' I climbed the pass at night on the frozen snow.”
“You're welcome as the flowers in May. John, what month is it?”
“By spades! are you as bad as thet?... Let's see. It's the twenty-third of
March.”
“March! Well, I'm beat. I've lost my reckonin'—an' a lot more,
maybe.”
“Thar!” declared John, slapping the mustang. “You can jest hang up here
till my next trip. Milt, how 're your hosses?”
“Wintered fine.”
“Wal, thet's good. We'll need two big, strong hosses right off.”
“What for?” queried Dale, sharply. He dropped a stick of wood and
straightened up from the camp-fire.
“You're goin' to ride down to Pine with me—thet's what for.”
Familiarly then came back to Dale the quiet, intent suggestiveness of the
Beemans in moments foreboding trial.
At this certain assurance of John's, too significant to be doubted, Dale's
thought of Pine gave slow birth to a strange sensation, as if he had been
dead and was vibrating back to life.
“Tell what you got to tell!” he broke out.
Quick as a flash the Mormon replied: “Roy's been shot. But he won't die.
He sent for you. Bad deal's afoot. Beasley means to force Helen Rayner out
an' steal her ranch.”
A tremor ran all through Dale. It seemed another painful yet thrilling
connection between his past and this vaguely calling future. His emotions
had been broodings dreams, longings. This thing his friend said had the
sting of real life.
“Then old Al's dead?” he asked.
“Long ago—I reckon around the middle of February. The property went
to Helen. She's been doin' fine. An' many folks say it's a pity she'll
lose it.”
“She won't lose it,” declared Dale. How strange his voice sounded to his
own ears! It was hoarse and unreal, as if from disuse.
“Wal, we-all have our idees. I say she will. My father says so. Carmichael
says so.”
“Who's he?”
“Reckon you remember thet cow-puncher who came up with Roy an' Auchincloss
after the girls—last fall?”
“Yes. They called him Las—Las Vegas. I liked his looks.”
“Humph! You'll like him a heap when you know him. He's kept the ranch
goin' for Miss Helen all along. But the deal's comin' to a head. Beasley's
got thick with thet Riggs. You remember him?”
“Yes.”
“Wal, he's been hangin' out at Pine all winter, watchin' for some chance
to get at Miss Helen or Bo. Everybody's seen thet. An' jest lately he
chased Bo on hossback—gave the kid a nasty fall. Roy says Riggs was
after Miss Helen. But I think one or t'other of the girls would do thet
varmint. Wal, thet sorta started goin's-on. Carmichael beat Riggs an'
drove him out of town. But he come back. Beasley called on Miss Helen an'
offered to marry her so's not to take the ranch from her, he said.”
Dale awoke with a thundering curse.
“Shore!” exclaimed John. “I'd say the same—only I'm religious. Don't
thet beady-eyed greaser's gall make you want to spit all over yourself? My
Gawd! but Roy was mad! Roy's powerful fond of Miss Helen an' Bo.... Wal,
then, Roy, first chance he got, braced Beasley an' give him some straight
talk. Beasley was foamin' at the mouth, Roy said. It was then Riggs shot
Roy. Shot him from behind Beasley when Roy wasn't lookin'! An' Riggs brags
of bein' a gun-fighter. Mebbe thet wasn't a bad shot for him!”
“I reckon,” replied Dale, as he swallowed hard. “Now, just what was Roy's
message to me?”
“Wal, I can't remember all Roy said,” answered John, dubiously. “But Roy
shore was excited an' dead in earnest. He says: 'Tell Milt what's
happened. Tell him Helen Rayner's in more danger than she was last fall.
Tell him I've seen her look away acrost the mountains toward Paradise Park
with her heart in her eyes. Tell him she needs him most of all!'”
Dale shook all over as with an attack of ague. He was seized by a
whirlwind of passionate, terrible sweetness of sensation, when what he
wildly wanted was to curse Roy and John for their simple-minded
conclusions.
“Roy's—crazy!” panted Dale.
“Wal, now, Milt—thet's downright surprisin' of you. Roy's the
level-headest of any fellars I know.”
“Man! if he MADE me believe him—an' it turned out untrue—I'd—I'd
kill him,” replied Dale.
“Untrue! Do you think Roy Beeman would lie?”
“But, John—you fellows can't see my case. Nell Rayner wants me—needs
me!... It can't be true!”
“Wal, my love-sick pard—it jest IS true!” exclaimed John, feelingly.
“Thet's the hell of life—never knowin'. But here it's joy for you.
You can believe Roy Beeman about women as quick as you'd trust him to
track your lost hoss. Roy's married three girls. I reckon he'll marry some
more. Roy's only twenty-eight an' he has two big farms. He said he'd seen
Nell Rayner's heart in her eyes, lookin' for you—an' you can jest
bet your life thet's true. An' he said it because he means you to rustle
down there an' fight for thet girl.”
“I'll—go,” said Dale, in a shaky whisper, as he sat down on a pine
log near the fire. He stared unseeingly at the bluebells in the grass by
his feet while storm after storm possessed his breast. They were fierce
and brief because driven by his will. In those few moments of contending
strife Dale was immeasurably removed from that dark gulf of self which had
made his winter a nightmare. And when he stood erect again it seemed that
the old earth had a stirring, electrifying impetus for his feet. Something
black, bitter, melancholy, and morbid, always unreal to him, had passed
away forever. The great moment had been forced upon him. He did not
believe Roy Beeman's preposterous hint regarding Helen; but he had gone
back or soared onward, as if by magic, to his old true self.
Mounted on Dale's strongest horses, with only a light pack, an ax, and
their weapons, the two men had reached the snow-line on the pass by noon
that day. Tom, the tame cougar, trotted along in the rear.
The crust of the snow, now half thawed by the sun, would not hold the
weight of a horse, though it upheld the men on foot. They walked, leading
the horses. Travel was not difficult until the snow began to deepen; then
progress slackened materially. John had not been able to pick out the line
of the trail, so Dale did not follow his tracks. An old blaze on the trees
enabled Dale to keep fairly well to the trail; and at length the height of
the pass was reached, where the snow was deep. Here the horses labored,
plowing through foot by foot. When, finally, they sank to their flanks,
they had to be dragged and goaded on, and helped by thick flat bunches of
spruce boughs placed under their hoofs. It took three hours of breaking
toil to do the few hundred yards of deep snow on the height of the pass.
The cougar did not have great difficulty in following, though it was
evident he did not like such traveling.
That behind them, the horses gathered heart and worked on to the edge of
the steep descent, where they had all they could do to hold back from
sliding and rolling. Fast time was made on this slope, at the bottom of
which began a dense forest with snow still deep in places and windfalls
hard to locate. The men here performed Herculean labors, but they got
through to a park where the snow was gone. The ground, however, soft and
boggy, in places was more treacherous than the snow; and the travelers had
to skirt the edge of the park to a point opposite, and then go on through
the forest. When they reached bare and solid ground, just before dark that
night, it was high time, for the horses were ready to drop, and the men
likewise.
Camp was made in an open wood. Darkness fell and the men were resting on
bough beds, feet to the fire, with Tom curled up close by, and the horses
still drooping where they had been unsaddled. Morning, however, discovered
them grazing on the long, bleached grass. John shook his head when he
looked at them.
“You reckoned to make Pine by nightfall. How far is it—the way
you'll go?”
“Fifty mile or thereabouts,” replied Dale.
“Wal, we can't ride it on them critters.”
“John, we'd do more than that if we had to.”
They were saddled and on the move before sunrise, leaving snow and bog
behind. Level parks and level forests led one after another to long slopes
and steep descents, all growing sunnier and greener as the altitude
diminished. Squirrels and grouse, turkeys and deer, and less tame denizens
of the forest grew more abundant as the travel advanced. In this game
zone, however, Dale had trouble with Tom. The cougar had to be watched and
called often to keep him off of trails.
“Tom doesn't like a long trip,” said Dale. “But I'm goin' to take him.
Some way or other he may come in handy.”
“Sic him onto Beasley's gang,” replied John. “Some men are powerful scared
of cougars. But I never was.”
“Nor me. Though I've had cougars give me a darn uncanny feelin'.”
The men talked but little. Dale led the way, with Tom trotting noiselessly
beside his horse. John followed close behind. They loped the horses across
parks, trotted through the forests, walked slow up what few inclines they
met, and slid down the soft, wet, pine-matted descents. So they averaged
from six to eight miles an hour. The horses held up well under that steady
travel, and this without any rest at noon.
Dale seemed to feel himself in an emotional trance. Yet, despite this, the
same old sensorial perceptions crowded thick and fast upon him, strangely
sweet and vivid after the past dead months when neither sun nor wind nor
cloud nor scent of pine nor anything in nature could stir him. His mind,
his heart, his soul seemed steeped in an intoxicating wine of expectation,
while his eyes and ears and nose had never been keener to register the
facts of the forest-land. He saw the black thing far ahead that resembled
a burned stump, but he knew was a bear before it vanished; he saw gray
flash of deer and wolf and coyote, and the red of fox, and the small, wary
heads of old gobblers just sticking above the grass; and he saw deep
tracks of game as well as the slow-rising blades of bluebells where some
soft-footed beast had just trod. And he heard the melancholy notes of
birds, the twitter of grouse, the sough of the wind, the light dropping of
pine-cones, the near and distant bark of squirrels, the deep gobble of a
turkey close at hand and the challenge from a rival far away, the cracking
of twigs in the thickets, the murmur of running water, the scream of an
eagle and the shrill cry of a hawk, and always the soft, dull, steady pads
of the hoofs of the horses.
The smells, too, were the sweet, stinging ones of spring, warm and
pleasant—the odor of the clean, fresh earth cutting its way through
that thick, strong fragrance of pine, the smell of logs rotting in the
sun, and of fresh new grass and flowers along a brook of snow-water.
“I smell smoke,” said Dale, suddenly, as he reined in, and turned for
corroboration from his companion.
John sniffed the warm air.
“Wal, you're more of an Injun than me,” he replied, shaking his head.
They traveled on, and presently came out upon the rim of the last slope. A
long league of green slanted below them, breaking up into straggling lines
of trees and groves that joined the cedars, and these in turn stretched on
and down in gray-black patches to the desert, that glittering and bare,
with streaks of somber hue, faded in the obscurity of distance.
The village of Pine appeared to nestle in a curve of the edge of the great
forest, and the cabins looked like tiny white dots set in green.
“Look there,” said Dale, pointing.
Some miles to the right a gray escarpment of rock cropped out of the
slope, forming a promontory; and from it a thin, pale column of smoke
curled upward to be lost from sight as soon as it had no background of
green.
“Thet's your smoke, shore enough,” replied John, thoughtfully. “Now, I
jest wonder who's campin' there. No water near or grass for hosses.”
“John, that point's been used for smoke signals many a time.”
“Was jest thinkin' of thet same. Shall we ride around there an' take a
peek?”
“No. But we'll remember that. If Beasley's got his deep scheme goin',
he'll have Snake Anson's gang somewhere close.”
“Roy said thet same. Wal, it's some three hours till sundown. The hosses
keep up. I reckon I'm fooled, for we'll make Pine all right. But old Tom
there, he's tired or lazy.”
The big cougar was lying down, panting, and his half-shut eyes were on
Dale.
“Tom's only lazy an' fat. He could travel at this gait for a week. But
let's rest a half-hour an' watch that smoke before movin' on. We can make
Pine before sundown.”
When travel had been resumed, half-way down the slope Dale's sharp eyes
caught a broad track where shod horses had passed, climbing in a long
slant toward the promontory. He dismounted to examine it, and John, coming
up, proceeded with alacrity to get off and do likewise. Dale made his
deductions, after which he stood in a brown study beside his horse,
waiting for John.
“Wal, what 'd you make of these here tracks?” asked that worthy.
“Some horses an' a pony went along here yesterday, an' to-day a single
horse made, that fresh track.”
“Wal, Milt, for a hunter you ain't so bad at hoss tracks,” observed John,
“But how many hosses went yesterday?”
“I couldn't make out—several—maybe four or five.”
“Six hosses an' a colt or little mustang, unshod, to be strict-correct.
Wal, supposin' they did. What 's it mean to us?”
“I don't know as I'd thought anythin' unusual, if it hadn't been for that
smoke we saw off the rim, an' then this here fresh track made along
to-day. Looks queer to me.”
“Wish Roy was here,” replied John, scratching his head. “Milt, I've a
hunch, if he was, he'd foller them tracks.”
“Maybe. But we haven't time for that. We can backtrail them, though, if
they keep clear as they are here. An' we'll not lose any time, either.”
That broad track led straight toward Pine, down to the edge of the cedars,
where, amid some jagged rocks, evidences showed that men had camped there
for days. Here it ended as a broad trail. But from the north came the
single fresh track made that very day, and from the east, more in a line
with Pine, came two tracks made the day before. And these were imprints of
big and little hoofs. Manifestly these interested John more than they did
Dale, who had to wait for his companion.
“Milt, it ain't a colt's—thet little track,” avowed John.
“Why not—an' what if it isn't?” queried Dale.
“Wal, it ain't, because a colt always straggles back, an' from one side to
t'other. This little track keeps close to the big one. An', by George! it
was made by a led mustang.”
John resembled Roy Beeman then with that leaping, intent fire in his gray
eyes. Dale's reply was to spur his horse into a trot and call sharply to
the lagging cougar.
When they turned into the broad, blossom-bordered road that was the only
thoroughfare of Pine the sun was setting red and gold behind the
mountains. The horses were too tired for any more than a walk. Natives of
the village, catching sight of Dale and Beeman, and the huge gray cat
following like a dog, called excitedly to one another. A group of men in
front of Turner's gazed intently down the road, and soon manifested signs
of excitement. Dale and his comrade dismounted in front of Widow Cass's
cottage. And Dale called as he strode up the little path. Mrs. Cass came
out. She was white and shaking, but appeared calm. At sight of her John
Beeman drew a sharp breath.
“Wal, now—” he began, hoarsely, and left off.
“How's Roy?” queried Dale.
“Lord knows I'm glad to see you, boys! Milt, you're thin an'
strange-lookin'. Roy's had a little setback. He got a shock to-day an' it
throwed him off. Fever—an' now he's out of his head. It won't do no
good for you to waste time seein' him. Take my word for it he's all right.
But there's others as—For the land's sakes, Milt Dale, you fetched
thet cougar back! Don't let him near me!”
“Tom won't hurt you, mother,” said Dale, as the cougar came padding up the
path. “You were sayin' somethin'—about others. Is Miss Helen safe?
Hurry!”
“Ride up to see her—an' waste no more time here.”
Dale was quick in the saddle, followed by John, but the horses had to be
severely punished to force them even to a trot. And that was a lagging
trot, which now did not leave Torn behind.
The ride up to Auchincloss's ranch-house seemed endless to Dale. Natives
came out in the road to watch after he had passed. Stern as Dale was in
dominating his feelings, he could not wholly subordinate his mounting joy
to a waiting terrible anticipation of catastrophe. But no matter what
awaited—nor what fateful events might hinge upon this nameless
circumstance about to be disclosed, the wonderful and glorious fact of the
present was that in a moment he would see Helen Rayner.
There were saddled horses in the courtyard, but no riders. A Mexican boy
sat on the porch bench, in the seat where Dale remembered he had
encountered Al Auchincloss. The door of the big sitting-room was open. The
scent of flowers, the murmur of bees, the pounding of hoofs came vaguely
to Dale. His eyes dimmed, so that the ground, when he slid out of his
saddle, seemed far below him. He stepped upon the porch. His sight
suddenly cleared. A tight fullness at his throat made incoherent the words
he said to the Mexican boy. But they were understood, as the boy ran back
around the house. Dale knocked sharply and stepped over the threshold.
Outside, John, true to his habits, was thinking, even in that moment of
suspense, about the faithful, exhausted horses. As he unsaddled them he
talked: “Fer soft an' fat hosses, winterin' high up, wal, you've done
somethin'!”
Then Dale heard a voice in another room, a step, a creak of the door. It
opened. A woman in white appeared. He recognized Helen. But instead of the
rich brown bloom and dark-eyed beauty so hauntingly limned on his memory,
he saw a white, beautiful face, strained and quivering in anguish, and
eyes that pierced his heart. He could not speak.
“Oh! my friend—you've come!” she whispered.
Dale put out a shaking hand. But she did not see it. She clutched his
shoulders, as if to feel whether or not he was real, and then her arms
went up round his neck.
“Oh, thank God! I knew you would come!” she said, and her head sank to his
shoulder.
Dale divined what he had suspected. Helen's sister had been carried off.
Yet, while his quick mind grasped Helen's broken spirit—the
unbalance that was reason for this marvelous and glorious act—he did
not take other meaning of the embrace to himself. He just stood there,
transported, charged like a tree struck by lightning, making sure with all
his keen senses, so that he could feel forever, how she was clinging round
his neck, her face over his bursting heart, her quivering form close
pressed to his.
“It's—Bo,” he said, unsteadily.
“She went riding yesterday—and—never—came—back!”
replied Helen, brokenly.
“I've seen her trail. She's been taken into the woods. I'll find her. I'll
fetch her back,” he replied, rapidly.
With a shock she seemed to absorb his meaning. With another shock she
raised her face—leaned back a little to look at him.
“You'll find her—fetch her back?”
“Yes,” he answered, instantly.
With that ringing word it seemed to Dale she realized how she was
standing. He felt her shake as she dropped her arms and stepped back,
while the white anguish of her face was flooded out by a wave of scarlet.
But she was brave in her confusion. Her eyes never fell, though they
changed swiftly, darkening with shame, amaze, and with feelings he could
not read.
“I'm almost—out of my head,” she faltered.
“No wonder. I saw that.... But now you must get clear-headed. I've no time
to lose.”
He led her to the door.
“John, it's Bo that's gone,” he called. “Since yesterday.... Send the boy
to get me a bag of meat an' bread. You run to the corral an' get me a
fresh horse. My old horse Ranger if you can find him quick. An' rustle.”
Without a word John leaped bareback on one of the horses he had just
unsaddled and spurred him across the courtyard.
Then the big cougar, seeing Helen, got up from where he lay on the porch
and came to her.
“Oh, it's Tom!” cried Helen, and as he rubbed against her knees she patted
his head with trembling hand. “You big, beautiful pet! Oh, how I remember!
Oh, how Bo would love to—”
“Where's Carmichael?” interrupted Dale. “Out huntin' Bo?”
“Yes. It was he who missed her first. He rode everywhere yesterday. Last
night when he came back he was wild. I've not seen him to-day. He made all
the other men but Hal and Joe stay home on the ranch.”
“Right. An' John must stay, too,” declared Dale. “But it's strange.
Carmichael ought to have found the girl's tracks. She was ridin' a pony?”
“Bo rode Sam. He's a little bronc, very strong and fast.”
“I come across his tracks. How'd Carmichael miss them?”
“He didn't. He found them—trailed them all along the north range.
That's where he forbade Bo to go. You see, they're in love with each
other. They've been at odds. Neither will give in. Bo disobeyed him.
There's hard ground off the north range, so he said. He was able to follow
her tracks only so far.”
“Were there any other tracks along with hers?”
“No.”
“Miss Helen, I found them 'way southeast of Pine up on the slope of the
mountain. There were seven other horses makin' that trail—when we
run across it. On the way down we found a camp where men had waited. An'
Bo's pony, led by a rider on a big horse, come into that camp from the
east—maybe north a little. An' that tells the story.”
“Riggs ran her down—made off with her!” cried Helen, passionately.
“Oh, the villain! He had men in waiting. That's Beasley's work. They were
after me.”
“It may not be just what you said, but that's close enough. An' Bo's in a
bad fix. You must face that an' try to bear up under—fears of the
worst.”
“My friend! You will save her!”
“I'll fetch her back, alive or dead.”
“Dead! Oh, my God!” Helen cried, and closed her eyes an instant, to open
them burning black. “But Bo isn't dead. I know that—I feel it.
She'll not die very easy. She's a little savage. She has no fear. She'd
fight like a tigress for her life. She's strong. You remember how strong.
She can stand anything. Unless they murder her outright she'll live—a
long time—through any ordeal.... So I beg you, my friend, don't lose
an hour—don't ever give up!”
Dale trembled under the clasp of her hands. Loosing his own from her
clinging hold, he stepped out on the porch. At that moment John appeared
on Ranger, coming at a gallop.
“Nell, I'll never come back without her,” said Dale. “I reckon you can
hope—only be prepared. That's all. It's hard. But these damned deals
are common out here in the West.”
“Suppose Beasley comes—here!” exclaimed Helen, and again her hand
went out toward him.
“If he does, you refuse to get off,” replied Dale. “But don't let him or
his greasers put a dirty hand on you. Should he threaten force—why,
pack some clothes—an' your valuables—an' go down to Mrs.
Cass's. An' wait till I come back!”
“Wait—till you—come back!” she faltered, slowly turning white
again. Her dark eyes dilated. “Milt—you're like Las Vegas. You'll
kill Beasley!”
Dale heard his own laugh, very cold and strange, foreign to his ears. A
grim, deadly hate of Beasley vied with the tenderness and pity he felt for
this distressed girl. It was a sore trial to see her leaning there against
the door—to be compelled to leave her alone. Abruptly be stalked off
the porch. Tom followed him. The black horse whinnied his recognition of
Dale and snorted at sight of the cougar. Just then the Mexican boy
returned with a bag. Dale tied this, with the small pack, behind the
saddle.
“John, you stay here with Miss Helen,” said Dale. “An' if Carmichael comes
back, keep him, too! An' to-night, if any one rides into Pine from the way
we come, you be sure to spot him.”
“I'll do thet, Milt,” responded John.
Dale mounted, and, turning for a last word to Helen, he felt the words of
cheer halted on his lips as he saw her standing white and broken-hearted,
with her hands to her bosom. He could not look twice.
“Come on there, you Tom,” he called to the cougar. “Reckon on this track
you'll pay me for all my trainin' of you.”
“Oh, my friend!” came Helen's sad voice, almost a whisper to his throbbing
ears. “Heaven help you—to save her! I—”
Then Ranger started and Dale heard no more. He could not look back. His
eyes were full of tears and his breast ached. By a tremendous effort he
shifted that emotion—called on all the spiritual energy of his being
to the duty of this grim task before him.
He did not ride down through the village, but skirted the northern border,
and worked round to the south, where, coming to the trail he had made an
hour past, he headed on it, straight for the slope now darkening in the
twilight. The big cougar showed more willingness to return on this trail
than he had shown in the coming. Ranger was fresh and wanted to go, but
Dale held him in.
A cool wind blew down from the mountain with the coming of night. Against
the brightening stars Dale saw the promontory lift its bold outline. It
was miles away. It haunted him, strangely calling. A night, and perhaps a
day, separated him from the gang that held Bo Rayner prisoner. Dale had no
plan as yet. He had only a motive as great as the love he bore Helen
Rayner.
Beasley's evil genius had planned this abduction. Riggs was a tool, a
cowardly knave dominated by a stronger will. Snake Anson and his gang had
lain in wait at that cedar camp; had made that broad hoof track leading up
the mountain. Beasley had been there with them that very day. All this was
as assured to Dale as if he had seen the men.
But the matter of Dale's recovering the girl and doing it speedily strung
his mental strength to its highest pitch. Many outlines of action flashed
through his mind as he rode on, peering keenly through the night,
listening with practised ears. All were rejected. And at the outset of
every new branching of thought he would gaze down at the gray form of the
cougar, long, graceful, heavy, as he padded beside the horse. From the
first thought of returning to help Helen Rayner he had conceived an
undefined idea of possible value in the qualities of his pet. Tom had
performed wonderful feats of trailing, but he had never been tried on men.
Dale believed he could make him trail anything, yet he had no proof of
this. One fact stood out of all Dale's conjectures, and it was that he had
known men, and brave men, to fear cougars.
Far up on the slope, in a little hollow where water ran and there was a
little grass for Ranger to pick, Dale haltered him and made ready to spend
the night. He was sparing with his food, giving Tom more than he took
himself. Curled close up to Dale, the big cat went to sleep.
But Dale lay awake for long.
The night was still, with only a faint moan of wind on this sheltered
slope. Dale saw hope in the stars. He did not seem to have promised
himself or Helen that he could save her sister, and then her property. He
seemed to have stated something unconsciously settled, outside of his
thinking. Strange how this certainty was not vague, yet irreconcilable
with any plans he created! Behind it, somehow nameless with inconceivable
power, surged all his wonderful knowledge of forest, of trails, of scents,
of night, of the nature of men lying down to sleep in the dark, lonely
woods, of the nature of this great cat that lived its every action in
accordance with his will.
He grew sleepy, and gradually his mind stilled, with his last conscious
thought a portent that he would awaken to accomplish his desperate task.