Don’t blame you much. Women are
hell. I was hopin’, though, you might talk a little to thet
poor lonesome kid.”
“What kid?” inquired Duane, in surprise.
“Didn’t I tell you about Jennie–the girl Bland’s holdin’
here–the one Jackrabbit Benson had a hand in stealin’?”
“You mentioned a girl. That’s all. Tell me now,” replied Duane,
abruptly.
“Wal, I got it this way. Mebbe it’s straight, an’ mebbe it
ain’t. Some years ago Benson made a trip over the river to buy
mescal an’ other drinks. He’ll sneak over there once in a
while. An’ as I get it he run across a gang of greasers with
some gringo prisoners. I don’t know, but I reckon there was
some barterin’, perhaps murderin’. Anyway, Benson fetched the
girl back. She was more dead than alive. But it turned out she
was only starved an’ scared half to death. She hadn’t been
harmed. I reckon she was then about fourteen years old.
Benson’s idee, he said, was to use her in his den sellin’
drinks an’ the like. But I never went much on Jackrabbit’s
word. Bland seen the kid right off and took her–bought her
from Benson. You can gamble Bland didn’t do thet from notions
of chivalry. I ain’t gainsayin, however, but thet Jennie was
better off with Kate Bland. She’s been hard on Jennie, but
she’s kept Bland an’ the other men from treatin’ the kid
shameful. Late Jennie has growed into an all-fired pretty girl,
an’ Kate is powerful jealous of her. I can see hell brewin’
over there in Bland’s cabin. Thet’s why I wish you’d come over
with me. Bland’s hardly ever home. His wife’s invited you.
Shore, if she gets sweet on you, as she has on–Wal, thet ‘d
complicate matters. But you’d get to see Jennie, an’ mebbe you
could help her. Mind, I ain’t hintin’ nothin’. I’m just wantin’
to put her in your way. You’re a man an’ can think fer
yourself. I had a baby girl once, an’ if she’d lived she be as
big as Jennie now, an’, by Gawd, I wouldn’t want her here in
Bland’s camp.”
“I’ll go, Euchre.
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