He’s lost. An’ we got farther
‘n we had any idee. Then my hoss went lame. ‘Fraid we can’t start
home to-night.”
“Where are you from?”
“Hoadley. Bill Hoadley’s town, back thirty miles or so.”
“Well, Roberts, if you’ve no objection we’ll camp here with you,”
continued Kells. “We’ve got some fresh meat.”
With that he addressed a word to his comrades, and they repaired to
a cedar-tree near-by, where they began to unsaddle and unpack.
Then Roberts, bending nearer Joan, as if intent on his own pack,
began to whisper, hoarsely: “That’s Jack Kells, the California road-
agent. He’s a gun fighter–a hell-bent rattlesnake. When I saw him
last he had a rope round his neck an’ was bein’ led away to be
hanged. I heerd afterward he was rescued by pals. Joan, if the idee
comes into his head he’ll kill me. I don’t know what to do. For
God’s sake think of somethin’! … Use your woman’s wits! … We
couldn’t be in a wuss fix!”
Joan felt rather unsteady on her feet, so that it was a relief to
sit down. She was cold and sick inwardly, almost stunned. Some great
peril menaced her. Men like Roberts did not talk that way without
cause. She was brave; she was not unused to danger. But this must be
a different kind, compared with which all she had experienced was
but insignificant. She could not grasp Roberts’s intimation. Why
should he be killed? They had no gold, no valuables. Even their
horses were nothing to inspire robbery. It must be that there was
peril to Roberts and to her because she was a girl, caught out in
the wilds, easy prey for beasts of evil men. She had heard of such
things happening. Still, she could not believe it possible for her.
Roberts could protect her. Then this amiable, well-spoken Kells, he
was no Western rough–he spoke like an educated man; surely he would
not harm her. So her mind revolved round fears, conjectures,
possibilities; she could not find her wits. She could not think how
to meet the situation, even had she divined what the situation was
to be.
While she sat there in the shade of a cedar the men busied
themselves with camp duties. None of them appeared to pay any
attention to Joan. They talked while they worked, as any other group
of campers might have talked, and jested and laughed. Kells made a
fire, and carried water, then broke cedar boughs for later camp-fire
use; one of the strangers whom they called Bill hobbled the horses;
the other unrolled the pack, spread a tarpaulin, and emptied the
greasy sacks; Roberts made biscuit dough for the oven.
The sun sank red and a ruddy twilight fell. It soon passed.
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