Read The Lone Star Ranger and the Mysterious Rider Online
Authors: Zane Grey
Columbine flew away to do his bidding, and so quick and violent was she that when she got back to the corral she was out of breath. Pronto whinnied as she fell, panting, on her knees beside Lem, who was examining bloody gashes on the legs of the mustang.
“Wal, I reckon no great harm did,” said Lem, with relief. “But he shore hed a close shave. Now you help me doctor him up.”
“YesâI'll help,” panted Columbine. “I've done this kindâof thing oftenâbut neverâto Pronto.⦠Oh, I was afraidâhe'd been gored by a steer.”
“Wal, he come damn near bein',” replied Lem, grimly. “An' if it hedn't been fer ridin' you don't see every day, why thet ornery Texas steer'd hev got him.”
“Who was riding? Lem, was it you? Oh, I'll never be able to do enough for you!”
“Wuss luck, it weren't me,” said Lem.
“No? Who, then?”
“Wal, it was Wils, an' he made me swear to tell you nuthin'âleastways about him.”
“Wils! Did
he
save Pronto?⦠And didn't want you to tell me? Lem, something has happened. You're not like yourself.”
“Miss Collie, I reckon I'm nigh all in,” replied Lem, wearily. “When I git this bandagin' done I'll fall right off my hoss.”
“But you're on the ground now, Lem,” said Columbine, with a nervous laugh. “What happened?”
“Did you hear about the argyment this mawnin'?”
“No. Whatâwhoâ”
“You can ask Ole Bill about thet. The way Pronto was hurt come off like this. Buster Jack rode out to where we was brandin' an' jumped his hoss over a fence into the pasture. He hed a rope an' he got to chasin' some hosses over thar. One was Pronto, an' the son-of-a-gun somehow did git the noose over Pronto's head. But he couldn't hold it, or didn't want to, fer Pronto broke loose an' jumped the fence. This wasn't so bad as far as it went. But one of them bad steers got after Pronto. He run an' sure stepped on the rope, an' fell. The big steer nearly piled on him. Pronto broke some records then. He shore was scared. Howsoever he picked out rough ground an' run plumb into some dead brush. Reckon thar he got cut up. We was all a good ways off. The steer went bawlin' an' plungin' after Pronto. Wils yelled fer a rifle, but nobody hed one. Nor a six-shooter, either.⦠I'm goin' back to packin' a gun. Wal, Wils did some ridin' to git over thar in time to save Pronto.”
“Lem, that is not all,” said Columbine, earnestly, as the cowboy concluded. Her knowledge of the range told her that Lem had narrated nothing so far which could have been cause for his cold, grim, evasive manner; and her woman's intuition divined a catastrophe.
“Nope.⦠Wils's hoss fell on him.”
Lem broke that final news with all a cowboy's bluntness.
“Was he hurtâ
Lem!
” cried Columbine.
“Say, Miss Collie,” remonstrated Lem, “we're doctorin' up your hoss. You needn't drop everythin' an' grab me like thet. An' you're white as a sheet, too. It ain't nuthin' much fer a cowboy to hev a hoss fall on him.”
“Lem Billings, I'll hate you if you don't tell me quick,” flashed Columbine, fiercely.
“Ahuh! So thet's how the land lays,” replied Lem, shrewdly. “Wal, I'm sorry to tell you thet Wils was bad hurt. Now, not
real
bad!⦠The hoss fell on his leg an' broke it. I cut off his boot. His foot was all smashed. But thar wasn't any other hurtâhonest! They're takin' him to Kremmlin'.”
“Ah!” Columbine's low cry sounded strangely in her ears, as if some one else had uttered it.
“Buster Jack made two bursts this hyar day,” concluded Lem, reflectively. “Miss Collie, I ain't shore how you're regardin' that individool, but I'm tellin' you this, fer your own good. He's bad medicine. He has his old man's temper thet riles up at nuthin' an' never felt a halter. Wusser'n thet, he's spoiled an' he acts like a colt thet'd tasted loco. The idee of his ropin' Pronto right thar near the round-up! Any one would think he jest come West. Old Bill is no fool. But he wears blinders when he looks at his son. I'm predictin' bad days fer White Slides Ranch.”
CHAPTER 4
Only one man at Meeker appeared to be attracted by the news that Rancher Bill Belllounds was offering employment. This was a little cadaverous-looking fellow, apparently neither young nor old, who said his name was Bent Wade. He had drifted into Meeker with two poor horses and a pack.
“Whar you from?” asked the innkeeper, observing how Wade cared for his horses before he thought of himself. The query had to be repeated.
“Cripple Creek. I was cook for some miners an' I panned gold between times,” was the reply.
“Humph! Thet oughter been a better-payin' job than any to be hed hereabouts.”
“Yes, got big pay there,” said Wade, with a sigh.
“What'd you leave fer?”
“We hed a fight over the diggin's an' I was the only one left. I'll tell you.⦔ Whereupon Wade sat down on a box, removed his old sombrero, and began to talk. An idler sauntered over, attracted by something. Then a miner happened by to halt and join the group.
Next, old Kemp, the patriarch of the village, came and listened attentively. Wade seemed to have a strange magnetism, a magic tongue.
He was small of stature, but wiry and muscular. His garments were old, soiled, worn. When he removed the wide-brimmed sombrero he exposed a remarkable face. It was smooth except for a drooping mustache, and pallid, with drops of sweat standing out on the high, broad forehead; gaunt and hollow-cheeked, with an enormous nose, and cavernous eyes set deep under shaggy brows. These features, however, were not so striking in themselves. Long, sloping, almost invisible lines of pain, the shadow of mystery and gloom in the deepset, dark eyes, a sad harmony between features and expression, these marked the man's face with a record no keen eye could miss.
Wade told a terrible tale of gold and blood and death. It seemed to relieve him. His face changed, and lost what might have been called its tragic light, its driven intensity.
His listeners shook their heads in awe. Hard tales were common in Colorado, but this one was exceptional. Two of the group left without comment. Old Kemp stared with narrow, half-recognizing eyes at the newcomer.
“Wal! Wal!” ejaculated the innkeeper. “It do beat hell what can happen!⦠Stranger, will you put up your hosses an' stay?”
“I'm lookin' for work,” replied Wade.
It was then that mention was made of Belllounds sending to Meeker for hands.
“Old Bill Belllounds thet settled Middle Park an' made friends with the Utes,” said Wade, as if certain of his facts.
“Yep, you have Bill to rights. Do you know him?”
“I seen him once twenty years ago.”
“Ever been to Middle Park? Belllounds owns ranches there,” said the innkeeper.
“He ain't livin' in the Park now,” interposed Kemp. “He's at White Slides, I reckon, these last eight or ten years. Thet's over the Gore Range.”
“Prospected all through that country,” said Wade.
“Wal, it's a fine part of Colorado. Hay an' stock countryâtoo high fer grain. Did you mean you'd been through the Park?”
“Onceâlong ago,” replied Wade, staring with his great, cavernous eyes into space. Some memory of Middle Park haunted him.
“Wal, then, I won't be steerin' you wrong,” said the innkeeper. “I like thet country. Some people don't. An' I say if you can cook or pack or punch cows or 'most anythin' you'll find a bunk with Old Bill. I understand he was needin' a hunter most of all. Lions an' wolves bad! Can you hunt?”
“Hey?” queried Wade, absently, as he inclined his ear. “I'm deaf on one side.”
“Are you a good man with dogs an' guns?” shouted his questioner.
“Tolerable,” replied Wade.
“Then you're sure of a job.”
“I'll go. Much obliged to you.”
“Not a-tall. I'm doin' Belllounds a favor. Reckon you'll put up here to-night?”
“I always sleep out. But I'll buy feed an' supplies,” replied Wade, as he turned to his horses.
Old Kemp trudged down the road, wagging his gray head as if he was contending with a memory sadly failing him. An hour later when Bent Wade rode out of town he passed Kemp, and hailed him. The old-timer suddenly slapped his leg: “By Golly! I knowed I'd met him before!”
Later, he said with a show of gossipy excitement to his friend the innkeeper, “Thet fellar was Bent Wade!”
“So he told me,” returned the other.
“But didn't you never hear of him?
Bent Wade?
”
“Now you tax me, thet name do 'pear familiar. But dash take it, I can't remember. I knowed he was somebody, though. Hope I didn't wish a gun-fighter or outlaw on Old Bill. Who was he, anyhow?”
“They call him Hell-Bent Wade. I seen him in Wyomin', whar he were a stage-driver. But I never heerd who he was an' what he was till years after. Thet was onct I dropped down into Boulder. Wade was thar, all shot up, bein' nussed by Sam Coles. Sam's dead now. He was a friend of Wade's an' knowed him fer long. Wal, I heerd all thet anybody ever heerd about him, I reckon. Accordin' to Coles this hyar Hell-Bent Wade was a strange, wonderful sort of fellar. He had the most amazin' ways. He could do anythin' under the sun better 'n any one else. Bad with guns! He never stayed in one place fer long. He never hunted trouble, but trouble follered him. As I remember Coles, thet was Wade's queer ideeâhe couldn't shake trouble. No matter whar he went, always thar was hell. Thet's what gave him the name Hell-Bent.⦠An' Coles swore thet Wade was the whitest man he ever knew. Heart of gold, he said. Always savin' somebody, helpin' somebody, givin' his money or timeânever thinkin' of himself a-tall.⦠When he began to tell thet story about Cripple Creek then my ole head begun to ache with rememberin'. Fer I'd heerd Bent Wade talk before. Jest the same kind of story he told hyar, only wuss. Lordy! but thet fellar has seen times. An' queerest of all is thet idee he has how hell's on his trail an' everywhere he roams it ketches up with him, an' thar he meets the man who's got to hear his tale!”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Sunset found Bent Wade far up the valley of White River under the shadow of the Flat Top Mountains.
It was beautiful country. Grassy hills, with colored aspen groves, swelled up on his left, and across the brawling stream rose a league-long slope of black spruce, above which the bare red-and-gray walls of the range towered, glorious with the blaze of sinking sun. White patches of snow showed in the sheltered nooks. Wade's gaze rested longest on the colored heights.
By and by the narrow valley opened into a park, at the upper end of which stood a log cabin. A few cattle and horses grazed in an inclosed pasture. The trail led by the cabin. As Wade rode up a bushy-haired man came out of the door, rifle in hand. He might have been going out to hunt, but his scrutiny of Wade was that of a lone settler in a wild land.
“Howdy, stranger!” he said.
“Good evenin',” replied Wade. “Reckon you're Blair an' I'm nigh the headwaters of this river?”
“Yep, a matter of three miles to Trapper's Lake.”
“My name's Wade. I'm packin' over to take a job with Bill Belllounds.”
“Git down an' come in,” returned Blair. “Bill's man stopped with me some time ago.”
“Obliged, I'm sure, but I'll be goin' on,” responded Wade. “Do you happen to have a hunk of deer meat? Game powerful scarce comin' up this valley.”
“Lots of deer an' elk higher up. I chased a bunch of more 'n thirty, I reckon, right out of my pasture this mornin'.”
Blair crossed to an open shed near by and returned with half a deer haunch, which he tied upon Wade's pack-horse.
“My ole woman's ailin'. Do you happen to hev some terbaccer?”
“I sure doâboth smokin' an' chewin', an' I can spare more chewin'. A little goes a long ways with me.”
“Wal, gimme some of both, most chewin',” replied Blair, with evident satisfaction.
“You acquainted with Belllounds?” asked Wade, as he handed over the tobacco.
“Wal, yes, everybody knows Bill. You'd never find a whiter boss in these hills.”
“Has he any family?”
“Now, I can't say as to thet,” replied Blair. “I heerd he lost a wife years ago. Mebbe he married ag'in. But Bill's gittin' along.”
“Good day to you, Blair,” said Wade, and took up his bridle.
“Good day an' good luck. Take the right-hand trail. Better trot up a bit, if you want to make camp before dark.”
Wade soon entered the spruce forest. Then he came to a shallow, roaring river. The horses drank the water, foaming white and amber around their knees, and then with splash and thump they forded it over the slippery rocks. As they cracked out upon the trail a covey of grouse whirred up into the low branches of spruce-trees. They were tame.
“That's somethin' like,” said Wade. “First birds I've seen this fall. Reckon I can have stew any day.”
He halted his horse and made a move to dismount, but with his eyes on the grouse he hesitated. “Tame as chickens, an' they sure are pretty.”
Then he rode on, leading his pack-horse. The trail was not steep, although in places it had washed out, thus hindering a steady trot. As he progressed the forest grew thick and darker, and the fragrance of pine and spruce filled the air. A dreamy roar of water rushing over rocks rang in the traveler's ears. It receded at times, then grew louder. Presently the forest shade ahead lightened and he rode out into a wide space where green moss and flags and flowers surrounded a wonderful spring-hole. Sunset gleams shone through the trees to color the wide, round pool. It was shallow all along the margin, with a deep, large green hole in the middle, where the water boiled up. Trout were feeding on gnats and playing on the surface, and some big ones left wakes behind them as they sped to deeper water. Wade had an appreciative eye for all this beauty, his gaze lingering longest upon the flowers.