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The Man Next Door.
by Emerson Hough.
I
HOW COME US TO MOVE
Bonnie Bell was her real name--Bonnie Bell Wright. It sounds like a race horse or a yacht, but she was a girl. Like enough that name don't suit you exactly for a girl, but it suited her pa, Old Man Wright. I don't know as she ever was baptized by that name, or maybe baptized at all, for water was scarce in Wyoming; but it never would of been healthy to complain about that name before Old Man Wright or me, Curly. As far as that goes, she had other names too. Her ma called her Mary Isabel Wright; but her pa got to calling her Bonnie Bell some day when she was little, and it stuck, especial after her ma died.
That was when Bonnie Bell was only four years old, that her ma died, and her dying made a lot of difference on the ranch. I reckon Old Man Wright probably stole Bonnie Bell's ma somewhere back in the States when he was a young man. She must of loved him some or she wouldn't of came to Wyoming with him. She was tallish, and prettier than any picture in colors--and game! She tried all her life to let on she liked the range, but she never was made for it.
Now to see her throw that bluff and get away with it with Old Man Wright--and no one else, especial me--and to see Old Man Wright worrying, trying to figure out what was wrong, and not being able to--that was the hardest thing any of us ever tried. The way he worked to make the ma of Bonnie Bell happy was plain for anybody to see. He'd stand and look at the place where he seen her go by last, and forget he had a rope in his hand and his horse a-waiting.
We had to set at the table, all three of us, after she died--him and the kid and me--and n.o.body at the end of the table where she used to set--her always in clothes that wasn't just like ours. I couldn't hardly stand it. But that was how game Old Man Wright was.
He wasn't really old. Like when he was younger, he was tall and straight, and had sandy hair and blue eyes, and weighed round a hundred and eighty, lean. Everybody on the range always had knew Old Man Wright.
He was captain of the round-up when he was twenty and president of the cattle a.s.sociation as soon as it was begun. I don't know as a better cowman ever was in Wyoming. He grew up at it.
So did Bonnie Bell grow up at it, for that matter. She pleased her pa a plenty, for she took to a saddle like a duck, so to speak. Time she was fifteen she could ride any of the stock we had, and if a bronc' pitched when she rid him she thought that was all right; she thought it was just a way horses had and something to be put up with that didn't amount to much. She didn't know no better. She never did think that anything or anybody in the world had it in for her noways whatever. She natural believed that everything and everybody liked her, for that was the way she felt and that was the way it shaped there on the range. There wasn't a hand on the place that would of allowed anything to cross Bonnie Bell in any way, shape or manner.
She grew up tallish, like her pa, and slim and round, same as her ma.
She had brownish or yellowish hair, too, which was sunburned, for she never wore no bonnet; but her eyes was like her ma's, which was dark and not blue, though her skin was white like her pa's under his s.h.i.+rt sleeves, only she never had no freckles the way her pa had--some was large as nickels on him in places. She maybe had one freckle on her nose, but little.
Bonnie Bell was a rider from the time she was a baby, like I said, and she went into all the range work like she was built for it. Wild she was, like a filly or yearling that kicks up its heels when the sun s.h.i.+nes and the wind blows. And pretty! Say, a new wagon with red wheels and yellow tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs ain't fit for to compare with her, not none at all!
When her ma died Old Man Wright wasn't good for much for a long time, for he was always studying over something. Though he never talked a word about her I allow that somehow or other after she died he kind of come to the conclusion that maybe she hadn't been happy all the time, and he got to thinking that maybe he'd been to blame for it somehow. After it was too late, maybe, he seen that she couldn't never have grew to be no range woman, no matter how long she lived.
But still we all got to take things, and he done so the best he could; and after the kid begun to grow up he was happier. All the time he was a-rolling up the range and the stock, till he was richer than anybody you ever did see, though his clothes was just about the same. But, come round the time when Bonnie Bell was fourteen or fifteen years old, about proportionate like when a filly or heifer is a yearling or so, he begun to study more.
There was a room up in the half-story where sometimes we kept things we didn't need all the time--the fancy saddles and bridles and things. Some old trunks was in it. I reckon maybe Old Man Wright went up there sometimes when he didn't say nothing about it to n.o.body. Anyhow once I went up there for something and I seen him setting on the floor, something in his hand that he was looking at so steady he never heard me. I don't know what it was--picture maybe, or letter; and his face was different somehow--older like--so that he didn't seem like the same man.
You see, Old Man Wright was maybe soft like on the inside, like plenty of us hard men are.
I crept out and felt right much to blame for seeing what I had, though I didn't mean to. Seems like all my life I had been seeing or hearing things I hadn't no business to--some folks never do things right. That's me. I never told Old Man Wright about my seeing him there and he don't know it yet. But it wasn't so long after that he come to me, and he hadn't been shaved for four days, and he was looking kind of odd; and he says to me:
"Curly, we're up against it for fair!" says he.
"Why, what's wrong, Colonel?" says I, for I seen something was wrong all right.
He didn't answer at first, but sort of throwed his hand round to show I was to come along.
At last he says:
"Curly, we're sh.o.r.e up against it!" He sighed then, like he'd lost a whole trainload of cows.
"What's up, Colonel?" says I. "Range thieves?"
"h.e.l.l, no!" says he. "I wish 'twas that--I'd like it."
"Well," says I, "we got plenty of this water, and we branded more than our average per cent of calves this spring." For such was so that year--everything was going fine. We stood to sell eighty thousand dollars' worth of beef cows that fall.
He didn't say a word, and I ast him if there was any nesters coming in; and he shook his head.
"I seen about that when I taken out my patents years ago. No; the range is safe. That's what's the matter with it; the t.i.tle is good--too good."
"Well, Colonel," says I, some disgusted and getting up to walk away, "if ever you want to talk to me any send somebody to where I'm at. I'm busy."
"Set down, Curly," says he, not looking at me.
So I done so.
"Son," says he to me--he often called me that along of me being his segundo for so many years--"don't go away! I need you. I need something."
Now I ain't nothing but a freckled cowpuncher, with red hair, and some says both my eyes don't track the same, and I maybe toe in. Besides, I ain't got much education. But, you see, I've been with Old Man Wright so long we've kind of got to know each other--not that I'm any good for divine Providence neither.
"Curly," says he after a while when he got his nerve up, "Curly, it looks like I got to sell out--I got to sell the Circle Arrow!"
Huh! That was worse than anything that ever hit me all my life, and we've seen some trouble too. I couldn't say a word to that.
After about a hour he begun again.
"I reckon I got to sell her," says he. "I got to quit the game. Curly, you and me has got to make a change--I'm afraid I've got to sell her out--lock, stock and barrel."
"And not be a cowman no more?" says I.
He nods. I look round to see him close. He was plumb sober, and his face was solemn, like it was the time I caught him looking in the trunk.
"That irrigation syndicate is after me again," says he.
"Well, what of it?" says I. "Let 'em go some place else. It ain't needful for us to make no more money--we're plumb rich enough for anybody on earth. Besides, when a man is a cowman he's got as far as he can go--there ain't nothing in the world better than that. You know it and so do I."
He nods, for what I said was true, and he knowed it.
"Colonel," I ast him, "have you been playing poker?"
"Some," says he. "Down to the Cheyenne Club."
"How much did you lose?"
"I didn't lose nothing--I won several thousand dollars and eight hundred head of steers last week," says he.
"Well, then, what in h.e.l.l is wrong?" says I.
"It goes back a long ways," says he after a while, and now his face looked more than ever like it did when he was there a-going through them trunks. I turns my own face away now, so as not to embarra.s.s him, for I seen he was sort of off his balance.
"It's her," says the old man at last.
I might have knew that--might have knew it was either Bonnie Bell or her ma that he had in his mind all the time; but he couldn't say a d.a.m.n word. He went on after a while: