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As she went up the steps of the store with Cleve, Lola of the Golden Cloud, blazing like a comet in her red-and-black came face to face with her purposely. What was in Lola's head none would ever know, but she wanted to see Courtrey's wife.
As they met they stopped dead still, these two women who loved one man, and the look that pa.s.sed between them was electric, deep, revealing. They stood so long staring into each other's eyes that Cleve, frowning, plucked Ellen by the sleeve and made to push forward.
But as suddenly as a flash of light Lola reached out her two hands and caught Ellen's in a tight clasp that only women know, the swift, clinging clasp of the secret fellows.h.i.+p of those who suffer.
For one tense moment she held them, while Ellen swayed forward for all the world as if she would sink in upon the deep full breast of this wanton whom she had hated! Then the spell broke, they fell apart with a rush, Lola swung out and went down the steps, while Ellen obediently followed Cleve into Baston's store, where she sat on a nail keg and waited in a dull lethargy. Outside Courtrey, who had witnessed the thing from across the street, slapped his thigh and laughed uproariously.
It was a funny sight to him. But Lola's beautiful black eyes blazed across at him with a light that none had ever seen before in their inscrutable depths.
Then the hour struck, and all Corvan, it seemed to Cleve, strung out toward the Court House. This was to be in open court--a spectacle.
From somewhere in the adobe outskirts of the town came Ellen's serving women, most of them, whom Cleve had sent in early in the day. They fell in with her and so, with only the brother who had never failed her and these dusky women of the silent tongues to back her, Ellen Courtrey went to her crucifixion as truly as though she had been one of the two thieves on Golgotha.
At the sight of Courtrey across the big bare room she went whiter than she was, if such a thing were possible, and slid weakly into the chair placed for her.
Then the thing proceeded--swiftly, lightly, with smiles on the faces of the crowd.
Old Ben Garland on the judge's bench, was furtive, scared, nervous, fiddling with his papers and clearing his throat from time to time.
The county clerk at his table made a great deal out of the ceremony of swearing in the witnesses--Wylackie Bob, Black Bart, Arizona and one young Wylackie Indian woman who worked at the Stronghold. Cleve put up only the serving women whom he had sent in, some seven of them, every one of whom loved their mistress with the faithful fidelity of a dog. These women knew Ellen Courtrey as not even the master of the Stronghold himself knew her. They knew her in her idle hours, at her small tasks, at her bedside, in the loving solicitude she displayed for all of them--and they knew her on her knees in prayer, for Ellen had a strange and simple religion, half Catholic and half Pomo paganism.
In the straight-backed chair they gave her Ellen sat like a statue, sweet and still, a thing so obviously good that it seemed even Courtrey himself must weaken to behold her. But not Courtrey. He was on fire with the vision of Tharon Last on the Cup Rim's floor, shaking her fist toward him in challenge--at Baston's steps calling him a murderer and worse--at her western door, striking him from her with the strength of a man. He saw the signal fire flaring across the darkened Valley--and nothing on earth or in Heaven could have softened him to the woman who bound him away from this fighting girl, this gun woman whom he was breaking to him slowly but surely. He visioned her in Ellen's room at the Stronghold--and the breath came fast in his throat.
And Ellen?
Ah, Ellen was thinking of the long past day when this man had found her in the barren rocklands and taken her with the high hand of a lover. She, too, drifted away from the chilling courtroom with its judge and its petty officials.... And then all suddenly she knew that men were talking--and about her. She heard the drone of question and answer--the rambling statements of the stranger, Arizona, accusing her of strange things--of asking him to take her on rides in Courtrey's absence--of swinging with him nights in the hammock by the watering trough!
She sat and listened with parted lips and large innocent eyes fixed on the man in wonder. Cleve Whitmore clenched his hands until the nails cut deep, but he held his tongue and controlled his face. Only the blazing blue eyes spoke. She knew that Black Bart tried to tell something, that he made some mistake or other and had to begin all over again. There was a long and tedious time in here when she looked away out the window to where the prairie gra.s.s was blowing in the little winds and the shadows of clouds drifted across the green expanse.... She was numb and far away with misery. She did not care for anything in all this world. It seemed as if she was detached, aloof, dead already in body as she was in soul.... And then she heard the drawling voice of Wylackie Bob--and he was saying something unspeakable--about her! She listened like one in a trance--then she struggled up from her chair with tragic long arms extended, and the cry that rang from her lips was piteous.
"Buck!" it pealed across the stillness of the crowded room, "Buck!--it ain't so! Never in this world, Buck! I ben true to you as your shadow!
Before G.o.d, it ain't true!"
There was a stir throughout the crowd, a breath that was audible.
There were many of the Vigilantes there--a goodly number, all wondering where Tharon Last was, where Kenset was, where were the riders from Last's. They had expected, what they did not know--something, at any rate, for this seemed somehow a test, a turning point. But there was nothing. They stirred and waited, like a great force heaving in its bed, blind, sluggish, but wakening.
And Ellen, chilled by Courtrey's sneering face, the cold disapproval of Ben Garland's striking mallet, sank back in her chair and covered her face with her shaking hands.... She heard some more awful things--then the voice of d.i.c.k Burtree beginning soft, low, silver like running waters. She heard it tell of that far away day of her marriage--of the years that followed--of Courtrey's love for her--of her own gentleness, her beauty, "like the tender sunlight of spring on the snow and the golden sands"--of her service, her loyalty, her love that had "never faltered nor intruded" that "patient obedience to her master had but strengthened and made perfect." Of the pitiful thing that her life had been this man made a wondrous thing, all sweet with twilights and haloed with service.
He talked until the courtroom was still as death and the Indian women behind her were rocking in unison of grief. Then she heard questions again and the gutteral soft voices of her women answering--with love and devotion in every halting word. Once again the crowd in the room stirred--and Courtrey's narrow eyes went over it in that cold, promising glance.
For once in his life Courtrey, the bully, felt a premonitory chill down his spine--because for the first time that promising glance of his failed of its effect! Only here and there along the rows of faces did one cower. There were faces, many faces, that looked back at him with steady eyes and tight lips.... Verily it was time he conquered the riding, shooting, beautiful she-devil who had made this thing possible! The sooner he got Tharon Last away from this bunch of sp.a.w.n the better. Then he would sweep in with all his old swift methods, only sharper ones this time, and "clean" them all. When he got through it would be a different man's Valley, make no mistake about that!
Here Ellen looked straight into his eyes and both were conscious of the shock. Ellen wilted and Courtrey frowned and struck a fist against the railing near him.... He looked up and met the hesitating eyes of Ben Garland on the bench and his own hardened down to pin points.
The farce was finished save for the Judge's decision--d.i.c.k Burtree was slumped in his chair, dead drunk and asleep. Wylackie Bob was lighting a cigarette in his brown fingers, a smile on his evil mouth, his slow, black eyes covering the slim white form of Ellen in a speculative way, as if he dreamed of making true his blasphemous lies. Ellen was sweet as a flower in her open-lipped beauty, her panting despair. Wylackie did not notice the slim man beside her whose lips were so tight that they were a mere line across his face. No one at the Stronghold noticed Cleve much.
Then Ben Garland was speaking, and Ellen gathered her dim wits enough to make out that he was saying strange things--awful things--that had to do with Courtrey's freedom.
Then she knew--swaying and groping with her blue-veined hands--that the thing was done--that she was no longer a wife. That she would never again sleep in the bend of Courtrey's arm as she had slept in those golden days of long ago--that she was an outcast, blackened beyond all hope by the d.a.m.ning and unchoice words of Wylackie Bob....
Then the world faded out for Ellen in merciful blackness.
The petty officials rose with laughter and clanking of boots on the board floors--the crowd filed out in a striking silence. Never before had a crowd in Lost Valley gone out from a courtroom in that strange and bodeful silence.
The sight of Ellen lying white and limp across Cleve Whitmore's shoulder like a sack of grain, as he pa.s.sed out with the moving ma.s.s, had an odd effect. It was partly the white dress that did it--and the time was ripe.
Courtrey and his gang were toward the fore--first out. They spread off to one side with jest and quip, with flash of bottle and slap on shoulder. The populace thinned a bit from the steps.... And then suddenly as a pistol shot Cleve Whitmore's voice rang out like a clarion.
"Wylackie!" it pealed across the subdued noises, "You ---- ---- ---- h.e.l.l hound. _Turn round!_"
There was death in it.
The gun man whirled, drawing like lightning. In the Court House door, Cleve Whitmore with his sister's limp form on his shoulder, beat him to it.
He had drawn as he called. Before the words were off his lips he pulled the trigger and shot Wylackie through the heart.
As his henchman fell Courtrey's good hand flashed to his hip, but Dixon of the Vigilantes, shot out an arm and knocked him forward from behind.
For the second time Courtrey had missed a life because a brave heart dared him. Old Pete had paid the price for that trick. Dixon had no thought of it.
And in one moment the chance was past, for a sound began to roar from that silent crowd which had poured from the courtroom--the deep, bloodcurdling sound of the mob forming, inarticulate, uncertain.
For the first time in his life Courtrey felt real fear grip him.
He had killed and stolen and wronged among these people and gotten away with it. He had never feared them. They had been silent. Now with the first deep rumble from the concrete throat of Lost Valley he got his first instinctive thrill of disaster.
He stood for a moment in utter silence. Then he flung up his hands, snapped out an order, whirled on his heel and went swiftly to the near rack where stood Bolt and the rest of the Ironwoods. Like a set of puppets on strings his men drew after him--and they left Wylackie Bob where he fell.
In a matter of seconds the whole Stronghold gang was mounted and clattering down the street--out of the town toward the open range.
And the killer on the Court House steps?
He stood where he was and looked with blazing eyes over the motley crowd beneath him. Steptoe Service made a step toward him, looked round, wet his lips and thought better of it.
And then, in another second, the crowd was a mob and the mob was the Vigilantes. Some one took Ellen from Cleve's shoulder with careful hands and carried her away. Then some one reached down and picked him up bodily. Another joined, and they set him on their shoulders, lifting him high. The inarticulate mob cry swelled and deepened and rose to a different sound--a shout that gathered volume and roared out across the s.p.a.ces where Courtrey rode with a menace, a portent.
With one accord the mob started on a journey around Corvan.
White as Ellen, Cleve Whitmore rode that triumphant journey, his eyes still blazing, his lips tight. The town went wild. Public feeling came out on every hand. Daring took the weak, hope took the oppressed, and they called Courtrey's reign right there. For three uproarious hours the bar-tenders could not wipe off their bars.
A new regime was ushered in--and she who had been its sponsor was not there to see it.
When the hour of Change was striking for Corvan and all Lost Valley, Tharon Last, who had set it to strike, was scaling False Ridge in the Canon Country. Grim, ash-pale with effort, her blue eyes s.h.i.+ning, she climbed the Secret Way that few had ever found.
How she had come to it through the tortuous cuts and pa.s.ses was a marvel of homing instinct--the heart that homed to its object. It had seemed to her all along this strange, tense journey, that she had had no will of her own, that she had held her breath and shut her eyes, as it were, and gone forward in obedience to some strange thing within that said, "turn here," "go thus." Billy following behind, watched her with tight lips and a secret wonder. As she had told him she would "go straight, Mary willing," so she had gone straight--and it seemed, truly, as if it were right that she should, no matter how his heart ached to see this thing.