You can’t see how he does it.”
Euchre’s admiring praise served to create an effective little
silence. Alloway shifted uneasily on his feet, his spurs
jangling faintly, and did not lift his head. Bland seemed
thoughtful.
“That’s about the only qualification I have to make me eligible
for your band,” said Duane, easily.
“It’s good enough,” replied Bland, shortly. “Will you consider
the idea?”
“I’ll think it over. Good night.”
He left the group, followed by Euchre. When they reached the
end of the lane, and before they had exchanged a word, Bland
called Euchre back. Duane proceeded slowly along the moonlit
road to the cabin and sat down under the cottonwoods to wait
for Euchre. The night was intense and quiet, a low hum of
insects giving the effect of a congestion of life. The beauty
of the soaring moon, the ebony canons of shadow under the
mountain, the melancholy serenity of the perfect night, made
Duane shudder in the realization of how far aloof he now was
from enjoyment of these things. Never again so long as he lived
could he be natural. His mind was clouded. His eye and ear
henceforth must register impressions of nature, but the joy of
them had fled.
Still, as he sat there with a foreboding of more and darker
work ahead of him there was yet a strange sweetness left to
him, and it lay in thought of Jennie. The pressure of her cold
little hands lingered in his. He did not think of her as a
woman, and he did not analyze his feelings. He just had vague,
dreamy thoughts and imaginations that were interspersed in the
constant and stern revolving of plans to save her.
A shuffling step roused him. Euchre’s dark figure came crossing
the moonlit grass under the cottonwoods. The moment the outlaw
reached him Duane saw that he was laboring under great
excitement. It scarcely affected Duane. He seemed to be
acquiring patience, calmness, strength.
“Bland kept you pretty long,” he said.
“Wait till I git my breath,” replied Euchre. He sat silent a
little while, fanning himself with a sombrero, though the night
was cool, and then he went into the cabin to return presently
with a lighted pipe.
“Fine night,” he said; and his tone further acquainted Duane
with Euchre’s quaint humor. “Fine night for love-affairs, by
gum!”
“I’d noticed that,” rejoined Duane, dryly.
“Wal, I’m a son of a gun if I didn’t stand an’ watch Bland
choke his wife till her tongue stuck out an’ she got black in
the face.”
“No!” ejaculated Duane.
“Hope to die if I didn’t. Buck, listen to this here yarn. When
I got back to the porch I seen Bland was wakin’ up. He’d been
too fagged out to figger much. Alloway an’ Kate had gone in the
house, where they lit up the lamps. I heard Kate’s high voice,
but Alloway never chirped. He’s not the talkin’ kind, an’ he’s
damn dangerous when he’s thet way. Bland asked me some
questions right from the shoulder. I was ready for them, an’ I
swore the moon was green cheese. He was satisfied.
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