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"The gift?"
"I mean the second sight."
"You believe in that?"
"Well, he foretold his own death."
"Not really?"
"It comes to the same thing. The last night he was at our house he was playing the pipes, and suddenly he stopped and would play no more.
Before he left he told my father he had seen himself lying dead beside running water. A week after that they found him dead beside the creek.
What would you think?"
"I don't know," Faith admitted. "It's a thin veil, and some may see beyond." She s.h.i.+vered. "I wish you had the second sight yourself. Then you might tell me what to do."
"About what?" he asked.
"Uncle G.o.dfrey has made me an offer for my land, and I don't know whether to accept it or not."
"Will he give you a fair price?"
"He offers the price paid for the land and the cost of the improvements I have made."
It seemed to Angus that G.o.dfrey French had some conscience left. But it might be less conscience than fear that the girl would find out how he had cheated her father. Rest.i.tution was practically forced on him if he had the money to make good, and apparently, in spite of what Judge Riley had said, he had.
"I would take his offer," Angus advised reluctantly, for it meant that he would lose his neighbor.
"Why?"
"Why? Why, I've always told you you can't make a success of ranching."
"And I've never admitted it. I'm gaining experience. And land is going up."
"Some land."
"Then why not this? What is the matter with my land?"
Angus evaded the direct challenge. "The place is too big for you.
There's a lot of it, like that little, round mountain, that's no good at all."
"Which is directly against your contention that the place is too big for me. But if this land is worth what was paid for it, it should be worth more to-day."
Suddenly Angus began to wonder what had spurred French's conscience.
"Why does he want to buy?"
"Partly, he says, to take a white elephant off my hands; and partly for Blake."
"For Blake?" Angus exclaimed in amazement.
"Blake wants a ranch of his own. You don't believe it?"
"Not a word of it."
"Perhaps Uncle G.o.dfrey is merely inventing that reason. He may have no other than a desire to take the property off my hands, if he thinks I can't work it profitably."
"It seems funny," Angus said, thoughtfully. "If he wants to buy for Blake he may offer more. I don't think, after all, I'd be in a hurry to decide."
"I'll take that advice, and wait. But here we are at the house. Put Chief in the stable. You'll stay for supper, of course."
Angus stayed. But all evening he was preoccupied. Again and again he went over the puzzle. Why did G.o.dfrey French want to buy that dry ranch?
Why had he given a reason which was not a reason? Why had he lied about Blake? He could find no satisfactory answers to these questions.
His reflections were interrupted by the unexpected appearance of Blake himself, and Blake was obviously half-drunk. He acknowledged Angus'
presence with a nod and a growl, and thereafter ignored him, devoting himself to Faith. His att.i.tude toward her was familiar, and when at his request she went to the piano glad to escape his conversation, he leaned over her, placing a hand on her shoulder, an action which made Angus long to break his neck. But she rose from the piano.
"No, I won't play any more. You must have some refreshments. Tea, coffee or cocoa?"
"Not strong on any of 'em," said Blake. "But all right if _you_ make 'em. Drink anything _you_ make, li'l girl!"
Without reply Faith left the room, and without invitation Angus followed her. In the hall she turned fury blazing in her eyes.
"He's disgusting!"
"Shall I send him home?"
"He wouldn't go. I wish he would."
"I can make him go," Angus said hopefully. "I'd like to."
"No, no, that wouldn't do. I'll just have to put up with him. Perhaps he'll be better. Why, there's somebody in the kitchen. I didn't know Mrs. Foley had a visitor. Why, it's your man, Gus!"
Gus was established in a chair which he had balanced on its hind legs against the wall. Around its front legs his huge feet were hooked. A pipe was clenched in his teeth, and on his face was placid content.
"Yaas," he announced, "Ay ban purty gude man on a rench. Ay roon dat rench for Engus, yoost like Ay roon him for hes fader."
"Ye run th' ranch f'r th' ould man, did ye?" Mrs. Foley commented.
"Sure," Gus affirmed. "Me and him we roon him. Engus, he don't know much about a rench. If it ent for me, Ay tank he mek dam' fule out of the whole t'ing."
"Gawd, but ye hate yerself!" said his auditor. "If ye know so much, why ain't ye got a half section or bether of yer own, instid of dhrillin'
along a hired man?"
"Vell, Ay don't see yoost vat Ay like," Gus explained. "Ay mek gude money."
"Who gets it?" asked Mrs. Foley. "Th' barkeep?"
Big Gus grinned. "Mebbe he gat some. But Ay got a stake saved up. Ven Ay see a gude rench mebbe Ay buy him. But a faller alone on a rench haf purty hard time. He needs a woman to cook and vash by him."