Read The Lone Star Ranger and the Mysterious Rider Online
Authors: Zane Grey
Her soul was her own, unchangeable through any adversity. She could be with that alone always, aloof from the petty cares and troubles common to people. Wade's words had thrilled her with their secret, with their limitless hope of an unknown world of thought and feeling. Happiness, in the ordinary sense, might never be hers. Alas for her dreams! But there had been given her a glimpse of something higher than pleasure and contentment. Dreams were but dreams. But she could still dream of what had been, of what might have been, of the beauty and mystery of life, of something in nature that called sweetly and irresistibly to her. Who could rob her of the rolling, gray, velvety hills, and the purple peaks and the black ranges, among which she had been found a waif, a little lost creature, born like a columbine under the spruces?
Love, sudden-dawning, inexplicable love, was her secret, still tremulously new, and perilous in its sweetness. That only did she fear to realize and to face, because it was an unknown factor, a threatening flame. Her sudden knowledge of it seemed inextricably merged with the mounting, strong, and steadfast stream of her spirit.
“I'll go to him. I'll tell him,” she murmured. “He shall have
that!
⦠Then I must bid himâgood-byâforever!”
To tell Wilson would be sweet; to leave him would be bitter. Vague possibilities haunted her. What might come of the telling? How dark loomed the bitterness! She could not know what hid in either of these acts until they were fulfilled. And the hours became long, and sleep far off, and the quietness of the house a torment, and the melancholy wail of coyotes a reminder of happy girlhood, never to return.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
When next day the long-deferred hour came Columbine selected a horse that she could run, and she rode up the winding valley swift as the wind. But at the aspen grove, where Wade's keen, gentle voice had given her secret life, she suffered a reaction that made her halt and ascend the slope very slowly and with many stops.
Sight of Wade's horse haltered near the cabin relieved Columbine somewhat of a gathering might of emotion. The hunter would be inside and so she would not be compelled at once to confess her secret. This expectancy gave impetus to her lagging steps. Before she reached the open door she called out.
“Collie, you're late,” answered Wilson, with both joy and reproach, as she entered. The cowboy lay upon his bed, and he was alone in the room.
“Oh!⦠Where is Ben?” exclaimed Columbine.
“He was here. He cooked my dinner. We waited, but you never came. The dinner got cold. I made sure you'd backed outâweren't coming at allâand I couldn't eat.⦠Wade said he knew you'd come. He went off with the hounds, somewhere ⦠and oh, Collie, it's all right now!”
Columbine walked to his bedside and looked down upon him with a feeling as if some giant hand was tugging at her heart. He looked better. The swelling and redness of his face were less marked. And at that moment no pain shadowed his eyes. They were soft, dark, eloquent. If Columbine had not come with her avowed resolution and desire to unburden her heart she would have found that look in his eyes a desperately hard one to resist. Had it ever shone there before? Blind she had been.
“You're better,” she said, happily.
“Sureâ
now
. But I had a bad night. Didn't sleep till near daylight. Wade found me asleep.⦠Collie, it's good of you to come. You look soâso wonderful! I never saw your face glow like that. And your eyesâoh!”
“You think I'm pretty, then?” she asked, dreamily, not occupied at all with that thought.
He uttered a contemptuous laugh.
“Come closer,” he said, reaching for her with a clumsy bandaged hand.
Down upon her knees Columbine fell. Both hands flew to cover her face. And as she swayed forward she shook violently, and there escaped her lips a little, muffled sound.
“WhyâCollie!” cried Moore, astounded. “Good Heavens! Don't cry! IâI didn't mean anything. I only wanted to feel youâtouch your hand.”
“Here,” she answered, blindly holding out her hand, groping for his till she found it. Her other was still pressed to her eyes. One moment longer would Columbine keep her secretâhide her eyesârevel in the unutterable joy and sadness of this crisis that could come to a woman only once.
“What in the world?” ejaculated the cowboy, now bewildered. But he possessed himself of the trembling hand offered. “Collie, you act so strange.⦠You're
not
crying!⦠Am I only locoed, or flighty, or what? Dear, look at me.”
Columbine swept her hand from her eyes with a gesture of utter surrender.
“Wilson, I'm ashamedâand sadâand gloriously happy,” she said, with swift breathlessness.
“Why?” he asked.
“Because ofâof something I have to tell you,” she whispered.
“What is that?”
She bent over him.
“Can't you guess?”
He turned pale, and his eyes burned with intense fire.
“I won't guess ⦠I daren't guess.”
“It's something that's been true for yearsâforever, it seemsâsomething I never dreamed of till last night,” she went on, softly.
“Collie!” he cried. “Don't torture me!”
“Do you remember long agoâwhen we quarreled so dreadfullyâbecause you kissed me?” she asked.
“Do you think I could kiss
you
âand live to forget?”
“I love you!” she whispered, shyly, feeling the hot blood burn her.
That whisper transformed Wilson Moore. His arm flashed round her neck and pulled her face down to his, and, holding her in a close embrace, he kissed her lips and cheeks and wet eyes, and then again her lips, passionately and tenderly.
Then he pressed her head down upon his breast.
“My God! I can't believe! Say it again!” he cried, hoarsely.
Columbine buried her flaming face in the blanket covering him, and her hands clutched it tightly. The wildness of his joy, the strange strength and power of his kisses, utterly changed her. Upon his breast she lay, with out desire to lift her face. All seemed different, wilder, as she responded to his appeal: “Yes, I love you! Oh, I loveâloveâlove you!”
“Dearest!⦠Lift your face.⦠It's true now. I know. It's proved. But let me look at you.”
Columbine lifted herself as best she could. But she was blinded by tears and choked with utterance that would not come, and in the grip of a shuddering emotion that was realization of loss in a moment when she learned the supreme and imperious sweetness of love.
“Kiss me, Columbine,” he demanded.
Through blurred eyes she saw his face, white and rapt, and she bent to it, meeting his lips with her first kiss, which was her last.
“Again, Collieâagain!” he begged.
“Noâno more,” she whispered, very low, and encircling his neck with her arms she hid her face and held him convulsively, and stifled the sobs that shook her.
Then Moore was silent, holding her with his free hand, breathing hard, and slowly quieting down. Columbine felt then that he knew that there was something terribly wrong, and that perhaps he dared not voice his fear. At any rate, he silently held her, waiting. That silent wait grew unendurable for Columbine. She wanted to prolong this moment that was to be all she could ever surrender. But she dared not do so, for she knew if he ever kissed her again her duty to Belllounds would vanish like mist in the sun.
To release her hold upon him seemed like a tearing of her heartstrings. She sat up, she wiped the tears from her eyes, she rose to her feet, all the time striving for strength to face him again.
A loud voice, ringing from the cliffs outside, startled Columbine. It came from Wade calling the hounds. He had returned, and the fact stirred her.
“I'm to marry Jack Belllounds on October first.”
The cowboy raised himself up as far as he was able. It was agonizing for Columbine to watch the changing and whitening of his face!
“Noâno!” he gasped.
“Yes, it's true,” she replied, hopelessly.
“No!”
he exclaimed, hoarsely.
“But, Wilson, I tell you yes. I came to tell you. It's trueâoh, it's true!”
“But, girl, you said you love me,” he declared, transfixing her with dark, accusing eyes.
“That's just as terribly true.”
He softened a little, and something of terror and horror took the place of anger.
Just then Wade entered the cabin with his soft tread, hesitated, and then came to Columbine's side. She could not unrivet her gaze from Moore to look at her friend, but she reached out with trembling hand to him. Wade clasped it in a horny palm.
Wilson fought for self-control in vain.
“Collie, if you love me, how can you marry Jack Belllounds?” he demanded.
“I must.”
“Why must you?”
“I owe my life and my bringing up to his father. He wants me to do it. His heart is set upon my helping Jack to become a man.⦠Dad loves me, and I love him. I must stand by him. I must repay him. It is my duty.”
“You've a duty to yourselfâas a woman!” he rejoined, passionately. “Belllounds is wrapped up in his son. He's blind to the shame of such a marriage. But you're not.”
“Shame?” faltered Columbine.
“Yes. The shame of marrying one man when you love another. You can't love two men.⦠You'll give yourself. You'll be his
wife!
Do you understand what that means?”
“IâI thinkâI do,” replied Columbine, faintly. Where had vanished all her wonderful spirit? This fire-eyed boy was breaking her heart with his reproach.
“But you'll bear his children,” cried Wilson. “Mother ofâthemâwhen you love me!⦠Didn't you think of that?”
“Oh noâI never didâI never did!” wailed Columbine.
“Then you'll think before it's too late?” he implored, wildly. “Dearest Collie, think. You won't ruin yourself! You won't? Say you won't!”
“ButâOh, Wilson, what
can
I say? I've got to marry him.”
“Collie, I'll kill him before he gets you.”
“You mustn't talk so. If you fought againâif anything terrible happened, it'd kill me.”
“You'd be better off!” he flashed, white as a sheet.
Columbine leaned against Wade for support. She was fast weakening in strength, although her spirit held. She knew what was inevitable. But Wilson's agony was rending her.
“Listen,” began the cowboy again. “It's your lifeâyour happinessâyour soul.⦠Belllounds is crazy over that spoiled boy. He thinks the sun rises and sets in him.⦠But Jack Belllounds is no good on this earth!⦠Collie dearest, don't think that's my jealousy. I am horribly jealous. But I know him. He's not worth
you!
No man isâand he the least. He'll break your heart, drag you down, ruin your healthâkill you, as sure as you stand there. I want you to know I could prove to you what he is. But don't make me. Trust me, Collie. Believe me.”
“Wilson, I do believe you,” cried Columbine. “But it doesn't make any difference. It only makes my duty harder.”
“He'll treat you like he treats a horse or a dog. He'll beat youâ”
“He never will! If he ever lays a hand on meâ”
“If not that, he'll tire of you. Jack Belllounds never stuck to anything in his life, and never will. It's not in him. He wants what he can't have. If he gets it, then right off he doesn't want it. Oh, I've known him since he was a kid.⦠Columbine, you've a mistaken sense of duty. No girl need sacrifice her all because some man found her a lost baby and gave her a home. A woman owes more to herself than to any one.”
“Oh, that's true, Wilson. I've thought it all.⦠But you're unjustâhard. You make no allowance forâfor some possible good in every one. Dad swears I can reform Jack. Maybe I can. I'll pray for it.”
“Reform Jack Belllounds! How can you save a bad egg? That damned coward! Didn't he prove to you what he was when he jumped on me and kicked my broken foot till I fainted?⦠What do you want?”
“Don't say any moreâplease,” cried Columbine. “Oh, I'm so sorry.⦠I oughtn't have come.⦠Ben, take me home.”
“But, Collie, I love you,” frantically urged Wilson. “And heâhe may love youâbut he'sâCollieâhe's beenâ”
Here Moore seemed to bite his tongue, to hold back speech, to fight something terrible and desperate and cowardly in himself.
Columbine heard only his impassioned declaration of love, and to that she vibrated.
“You speak as if this was one-sided,” she burst out, as once more the gush of hot blood surged over her. “You don't love me any more than I love you. Not as much, for I'm a woman!⦠I love with all my heart and soul!”
Moore fell back upon the bed, spent and overcome.
“Wade, my friend, for God's sake do something,” he whispered, appealing to the hunter as if in a last hope. “Tell Collie what it'll mean for her to marry Belllounds. If that doesn't change her, then tell her what it'll mean to me. I'll never go home. I'll never leave here. If she hadn't told me she loved me then, I might have stood anything. But now I can't. It'll kill me, Wade.”
“Boy, you're talkin' flighty again,” replied Wade. “This mornin' when I come you were dreamin' an' talkin'âclean out of your head.⦠Well, now, you an' Collie listen. You're right an' she's right. I reckon I never run across a deal with two people fixed just like you. But that doesn't hinder me from feelin' the same about it as I'd feel about somethin' I was used to.”
He paused, and, gently releasing Columbine, he went to Moore, and retied his loosened bandage, and spread out the disarranged blankets. Then he sat down on the edge of the bed and bent over a little, running a roughened hand through the scant hair that had begun to silver upon his head. Presently he looked up, and from that sallow face, with its lines and furrows, and from the deep, inscrutable eyes, there fell a light which, however sad and wise in its infinite understanding of pain and strife, was still ruthless and unquenchable in its hope.