Nevada (1995) (43 page)

Read Nevada (1995) Online

Authors: Zane Grey

BOOK: Nevada (1995)
13.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"LACY?" cried Marvie, starting up incredulously. "But you'r
e
Nevada!"

"Son, the Nevada you knew was Jim Lacy."

"My Heaven! what will Ben say? . . . An' Hettie," exclaime
d
Marvie, overcome.

"Reckon they'll say a lot--when they know. But promise me yo
u
won't give me away."

"Aw, Nevada, if you only knew how Ben--"

"Marvie, I'm not askin' you to keep it secret forever," interrupte
d
Jim hastily. "But for a little while. Promise, old pard."

"I--will," replied Marvie, choking.

"An' you, too, Rose?"

"I can keep secrets. An' I mustn't let slip that you're Marvie'
s
old pard Nevada?"

"Shore. An' now, Rose, let's get this confab over. I reckon m
y
hunch is correct. But I need to know more."

"I'll tell anything," she replied, under her breath.

"You told me Dillon is haid of this Pine Tree outfit?" querie
d
Nevada, bending down to the agitated face.

"Yes, sir," replied Rose. "Some of his men called him Campbell.

But he told Cedar his real name was Ed Richardson. He's from Ne
w
Mexico. He figgered in the Lincoln County war an' was close t
o
Billy the Kid. He fetched rustlers here with him. An' he got hol
d
of Cedar, an' Burt Stillwell, an' Stewart, an' other Arizona rider
s
whose names I never heard."

"Rose, how'd you happen on this?" asked Nevada, seriously.

"Cedar fetched Clan Dillon to our ranch, an' he tried to make up t
o
me," went on Rose. "I liked him first off. But I soon saw what h
e
was up to an' I had no use for him. Wal, one day Cedar threw me o
n
a horse an' rode me off to a cabin over here in Pi+-on Brake.

Dillon was there. He tried makin' more love to me. But I bit an'
k
icked an' clawed him. Then he manhandled me bad, with Ceda
r
grinnin' by. He'd have ruined me, too, but the men they wa
s
expectin' rode up an' I got thrown in the loft. Some of them wer
e
drunk. They all had money. An' they gambled an' stayed up al
l
night. In the mornin' they had a powwow. Then Cedar fetched m
e
back home an' swore he'd kill me if I squealed."

"Clan Dillon, then, is Ed Richardson--haid of this Pine Tre
e
outfit," said Nevada, "an' Ben Ide's foreman."

"Yes, sir," replied Rose, bravely, with lips that trembled.

"Good Lord!" ejaculated Marvie. "Ben swears by Dillon. He's gon
e
against Raidy, his oldest hand. . . . Gee! I wouldn't want to b
e
in Dillon's boots when Ben finds out!"

"Wal, Marvie, it's likely that Dillon's boots will be stickin' ou
t
straight when Ben heahs the truth. . . . Rose, is there an
y
particular reason why you'd like to go back home again? Clothes o
r
anythin' you care for?"

"All the duds I own are on my back," replied Rose, ruefully.

"Cedar burned my pretty dance dress--that I bought to look nice fo
r
Marvie. My pony's all I have. An' he's here."

"Marvie, get your horse an' put Rose on hers an' leave heah pront
o
for the Ide ranch. Look sharp an' don't run into any riders. Whe
n
you reach home turn Rose over to Hettie, an' both of you keep you
r
mouth shut."

His compelling force wrung mute promises from both Marvie and th
e
girl.

"My horse is on top, an' I cain't get him down heah. Rustle now."

Marvie started to lead Rose away, when he espied Cedar Hatt's gu
n
lying on the brown pine needles.

"Nevada--can I take it?" he queried, haltingly.

"What? Oh, Cedar's gun? Shore you take it."

The girl turned with lips parted. "Mister Jim--Nevada--we'll se
e
you again?"

"I reckon. Remember, I trust you to keep mum. Look sharp now, an'
h
urry along."

Nevada did not linger to watch them find and mount their horses;
h
owever, as he started up the slope he heard them, and felt tha
t
now all would be well with them. He climbed as one with wings.

How strange that the rough gully presented no obstacles! Reachin
g
his horse, he tightened the cinches, leaped astride, and rode up t
o
the level, where he faced north with a grim smile.

The afternoon had not far advanced. At a steady lope he covere
d
the miles of forested ridge, downhill and easy going until h
e
descended into the brakes. Here his horse toiled for an hour, a
t
last to crash out into the trail. One glance at the bare groun
d
showed him that Marvie and Rose had not yet come so far. H
e
preferred to reach the Ide ranch before they did. His mind clampe
d
round one thing and set there, cold and sure.

Five miles of travel, now slow, now swift, and then a hard clim
b
took Nevada out of the brakes into the beautiful stately forest
,
where the pines thinned and straggled to the desert sage. Ho
w
sweet the fragrance! He had once viewed from afar the Ide ranch
,
with its slope of sage and cedar leading up to the black benches.

The trail grew broad and sandy, so that his speeding horse thudde
d
almost noiselessly on. Clumps of spruce and low branches of pine
s
obscured the bends.

Nevada rode around an abrupt green curve almost to run down a hors
e
coming toward him. He pulled his mount to a sliding halt. H
e
heard a cry. The rider was a woman. Hettie Ide!

Chapter
eighteen.

"Hettie," said Ben Ide as he stood on the porch and spread his arm
s
to the glorious beauty and color of the Arizona landscape, "I onc
e
thought Forlorn River in the fall was pretty close to heaven. Bu
t
Cedar Springs Ranch has it beaten a mile."

"Ben Ide! You going back on Forlorn River!" exclaimed Hettie, i
n
surprise.

"Well, hasn't it? Look around. What do you think, yourself?"

"Long ago, before this wonderful autumn came, I was faithless t
o
California," murmured Hettie, regretfully.

"Hettie, not faithless. I don't love the old home country any th
e
less because I've learned to love this more. Lord knows I'v
e
reason to hate Arizona. But I can't. It grows on me. Here it'
s
way in September. Frost an' ice every mornin'. Indian summe
r
days. Look at the sage. It's purple. Look at the foothills.

Anyone would think they were painted. Look at the patches of gol
d
an' scarlet back up in the woods."

"It's very beautiful," replied Hettie, more dreamily.

"Sister, we mustn't forget that mother is to be taken to San Dieg
o
for the winter months."

"I've not forgotten, Ben. But there's no hurry. This weather i
s
perfect. Mr. Day claims it'll last till Christmas."

"Well, if it does, I could ask no more," said Ben. "Then I'll sen
d
mother with you an' Ina an' the kid to San Diego till spring. Bu
t
I'll stay on here. I'd be afraid to leave."

"It wouldn't be wise, Ben. Things have grown from bad to worse. I
f
ear you are in for more shocks."

"Tom Day says they must grow worse before they get better.

Heigho! . . . Well, I'm not lettin' disappointment sour me
,
anyhow."

"Disappointment? You mean--about ranching in Arizona?"

"Between you an' me, Hettie, I wasn't thinkin' of cattle at all,"
r
eplied Ben, sadly.

Hettie suffered a contraction of her heart. If Ben knew what sh
e
knew! She prayed that he never would. And she gave no sign tha
t
she divined the undercurrent of his words.

Marvie Blaine sat on the porch step, morosely cleaning his rifle
,
which evidently he had used that day. The lad had grown taller
,
thinner, more of a man these last few weeks.

"Marv, you don't ride far away when you hunt, do you?" queried Ben.

"Lots of turkey an' deer right in our back yard," answered Marvie
,
evasively.

"Humph! Much good that does you. I've yet to eat the venison yo
u
killed."

"Ben, I've killed some turkeys," insisted Marvie, stoutly. "An' to-
d
ay I had a shot at a buck."

"Seems to me you take a lot of time off," went on Ben, "an' I'
m
supposed to pay you a cowboy's salary."

"I do the work given me. Dillon sure slights me on every job h
e
can."

"Weren't you pretty smart-alec?" asked Ben.

"I wasn't until he got mean."

"An' when was that? Are you sure you don't imagine things? Dillo
n
is the kindest of foremen."

Marvie looked up deliberately and fastened unfathomable eyes upo
n
this friend of his boyhood.

"Dillon used to like me. But he changed after the cowboys told hi
m
how I'd made up to little Rose Hatt at the dance in Winthrop."

"Rose Hatt! That child of Elam Hatt's? I saw her once. What o
n
earth could it be to Dillon if you did flirt with Rose? As
a
matter of fact, he was merely worried about you. Rose was no gir
l
for you to get friendly with."

"Say, did Dillon tell you that?" queried Marvie, flushing.

"Yes. An' he advised me to put a stop to it. Said you might ge
t
in trouble."

Marvie jumped up as if he had been stung by a hornet.

"Ha! Ha!" he burst out, striding away with his head back. "Ha!

Ha! . . . Ha! Ha! Ha!"

He kept it up until he went out of sight around the house.

"Well, I'll be doggoned," ejaculated Ben, gazing at Hettie fo
r
confirmation of his fears. "Was that boy givin' me the horse-
l
augh?"

"He was surely giving you some kind of a laugh," replied Hettie
,
striving to hide her own amusement.

"Hettie, am I growin' old, thick-headed, absent-minded?" inquire
d
Ben, wistfully.

"No, Ben," returned his sister, dropping her head. "You've onl
y
the worry of the ranch on your mind."

"By George it is a worry," he sighed. "But, old girl, you've no
t
been so bright and happy as you were here at first. Neither i
s
Ina. I'm afraid I've done bad by both of you."

"Ben, it will all come right," spoke up Hettie, forcing a smile.

"We must take our medicine. It's Arizona medicine, which you
r
friend, Tom Day, says is powerful strong."

"Hettie, do you still think of--of--HIM?" asked Ben, in lower tone.

"Always," she replied, quaking inwardly. If only she had th
e
courage and the wit to keep her secret hidden!

"I'm afraid I've given up hope," went on Ben, somberly. "An' it'
s
taken the sap out of me. Don't tell Ina. But I'm fallin' into th
e
same rut as I was in last spring, over home on Tule Lake."

"Given up hope of what?" murmured Hettie.

"Of ever findin' Nevada," he replied, simply, as if the name wa
s
not one he never mentioned. "That's why I came to Arizona. Onc
e
at Forlorn River, when I asked Nevada what he'd do if anythin'
s
eparated us, he said he'd go to Arizona an' take to hard ridin'.

Other books

Highlander's Return by Hildie McQueen
Ransom by Terri Reed
The Mechanical Messiah by Robert Rankin
Pretty Bitches by Ezell Wilson, April
Fethering 09 (2008) - Blood at the Bookies by Simon Brett, Prefers to remain anonymous
Friendship's Bond by Meg Hutchinson