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"Howdy," greeted Lane pleasantly. "I'm looking for Jack Payson."
"That so?" answered Sage-brush. "Who may you be?"
"I'm a friend of his."
The foreman could see no danger to come from this weak, sickly man.
"Then walk right in," he invited; "he's inside."
Sage-brush was about to reenter the house, when d.i.c.k halted him with the request: "I want to see him out here--privately."
"What's the name," asked Sage-brush, his suspicions returning.
"Tell him an old friend from Mexico."
Sage-brush did not like the actions of the stranger and his secrecy.
He was there to fight his boss's battles, if he had any. This was not in the contract, but it was a part read into the paper by Sage-brush.
"Say, my name's Sage-brush Charley," he cried, with a show of importance. "I'm ranch-boss for Payson. If you want to settle any old claim agin' Jack, I'm actin' as his subst.i.toot for him this evenin'."
"On the contrary," said Lane, with a smile at Sage-brush's outbreak, "he has a claim against me."
It was such a pleasant, kindly look he gave Sage-brush, that the foreman was disarmed completely.
"I'll tell him," he said over his shoulder.
d.i.c.k mused over the changes that had occurred since he had left the region. Two years' absence from a growing country means new faces, new ranches, and the wiping out of old landmarks with the advance of population and the invasion of the railroad. He wondered if Jack would know him with his beard. He knew--his mirror told him--that his appearance had changed greatly, and he looked twenty years older than on the day he left the old home ranch.
His trend of thought was interrupted by the entrance of Jack on the porch from the house.
"My name's Payson," Jack began hurriedly, casting a hasty glance backward into the hallway, for the ceremony was about to begin. "You want to see me?"
"Jack!" cried d.i.c.k, holding out his hand eagerly. "Jack, old man, don't you know me?" he continued falteringly, seeing no sign of recognition in his friend's eyes.
Payson gasped, shocked and startled. The man before him was a stranger in looks, but the voice--the voice was that of d.i.c.k Lane, the last man in the world he wanted to see at that moment. Frightened, almost betraying himself, he glanced at the half-open door. If d.i.c.k entered he knew Echo would be lost to him. She might love him truly, and her love for d.i.c.k might have pa.s.sed away, but he knew that Echo would never forgive him for the deception that he had practised upon her.
Grasping his friend's hand weakly, he faltered, "d.i.c.k! d.i.c.k Lane!"
Jack realized he must act quickly. Some way or somehow d.i.c.k must be kept out of the house until after the marriage. Then he, Jack, must take the consequences. d.i.c.k saw his hesitation. It was not what he had expected. But something dreadful might have happened while he was away, there had been so many changes.
"Why, what's the matter?" he asked anxiously. "You got my letter? You knew I was coming?"
"Yes, yes, I know," lamely answered Jack. "But I expected notice--you know you said--"
"I couldn't wait. Jack, I'm a rich man, thanks to you--"
"Yes, yes, that's all right," said Payson, disclaiming the praise of the man he had so grievously wronged with a hurried acknowledgment of his grat.i.tude.
"And I hurried back for fear Echo--"
"Oh, yes. I'll tell her about it, when she's ready to hear it."
"What is the matter, Jack? Are you keeping something from me? Where is she?"
"In there," said Payson feebly, pointing to the door.
d.i.c.k eagerly started toward the house, but Jack halted him, saying: "No--you mustn't go in now. There's a party-you see, she hasn't been well, doesn't expect you to-night. The shock might be too much for her."
Jack grasped at the lame excuse. It was the first to come to his mind.
He must think quickly. This experience was tearing the heart out of him. He could not save himself from betrayal much longer.
"You're right," acquiesced d.i.c.k. "You tell her when you get a chance.
Jack, as I was saying, I've made quite a bit of money out of my Bisbee holdings. I can pay back my stake to you now."
"Not now," said Jack nervously.
Would this torture never end? Here was his friend, whom he had betrayed come back in the very hour of his marriage to the woman who had promised first to marry him. Now he was offering him money, which Jack needed badly, for his prospective mother-in-law was complaining about his taking her daughter to a mortgaged home.
"Sure, now," continued d.i.c.k, pulling a roll of bills from his pocket.
"It's three thousand dollars--here it is, all in one bundle."
"Not now, let that wait," said Jack, pus.h.i.+ng the money aside.
"It's waited long enough," cried d.i.c.k doggedly. "You put the mortgage on your ranch to let me have the money, and it must be about due now."
"Yes, it will be due, but let it wait."
"What's the use? I'm all right now. I brought the cash with me on purpose. I wanted to square it with you on sight."
d.i.c.k pressed the money into Jack's hand, closing his fingers over the roll of bills. With a sigh of relief, as if a disagreeable task was completed, he questioned: "How's Bud?"
Jack replied shortly: "All right; he's inside."
"I didn't write to him," cheerfully resumed d.i.c.k. "I didn't want the kid to know. He is so excitable, he would have blabbed it right out.
I'll sure be glad to see the boy again. He's impulsive, but his heart's all right. I know you've kept a lookout over him."
This trust in him was getting too much for Jack to bear, so the voice of Polly crying to him to hurry up was music to his ears. "I'm coming,"
he shouted. "I'll see you in a few minutes," he told d.i.c.k. "I've something to tell you. I can't tell you now."
"Go in, then," answered d.i.c.k. "I'll wait yonder in the garden. Don't keep me waiting any longer than you can help."
d.i.c.k turned and walked slowly toward the gate which lead to the kitchen-garden, a part of every ranch home in Arizona. It was cut off from the house by a straggling hedge, on which Echo had spent many hours trying to keep it in shape.
Jack hesitated about going into the house. Even if Echo married him, he knew that she would never forgive him when she learned of his dastardly conduct from d.i.c.k Lane's own mouth. It was better to sacrifice the life of one to save three lives from being ruined.
Jack followed Lane up, partly drawing his gun. It would be so easy to shoot him. No one would recognize d.i.c.k Lane in that crippled figure.
Jack's friends would believe him if he told them the stranger had drawn on him, and he had to shoot him in self-defense.
Then the thought of how dastardly was the act of shooting a man in the back, and he his trusting friend, smote him suddenly, and he replaced the pistol in its holster. "It is worse than the murder of 'Ole Man'