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<h2> 8 </h2>
<p>In three days—during which time Joan attended Kells as faithfully as
if she were indeed his wife—he thought that he had gained
sufficiently to undertake the journey to the main camp, Cabin Gulch. He
was eager to get back there and imperious in his overruling of any
opposition. The men could take turns at propping him in a saddle. So on
the morning of the fourth day they packed for the ride.</p>
<p>During these few days Joan had verified her suspicion that Kells had two
sides to his character; or it seemed, rather, that her presence developed
a latent or a long-dead side. When she was with him, thereby distracting
his attention, he was entirely different from what he was when his men
surrounded him. Apparently he had no knowledge of this. He showed surprise
and gratitude at Joan's kindness though never pity or compassion for her.
That he had become infatuated with her Joan could no longer doubt. His
strange eyes followed her; there was a dreamy light in them; he was mostly
silent with her.</p>
<p>Before those few days had come to an end he had developed two things—a
reluctance to let Joan leave his sight and an intolerance of the presence
of the other men, particularly Gulden. Always Joan felt the eyes of these
men upon her, mostly in unobtrusive glances, except Gulden's. The giant
studied her with slow, cavernous stare, without curiosity or speculation
or admiration. Evidently a woman was a new and strange creature to him and
he was experiencing unfamiliar sensations. Whenever Joan accidentally met
his gaze—for she avoided it as much as possible—she shuddered
with sick memory of a story she had heard—how a huge and ferocious
gorilla had stolen into an African village and run off with a white woman.
She could not shake the memory. And it was this that made her kinder to
Kells than otherwise would have been possible.</p>
<p>All Joan's faculties sharpened in this period. She felt her own
development—the beginning of a bitter and hard education—an
instinctive assimilation of all that nature taught its wild people and
creatures, the first thing in elemental life—self-preservation.
Parallel in her heart and mind ran a hopeless despair and a driving,
unquenchable spirit. The former was fear, the latter love. She believed
beyond a doubt that she had doomed herself along with Jim Cleve; she felt
that she had the courage, the power, the love to save him, if not herself.
And the reason that she did not falter and fail in this terrible situation
was because her despair, great as it was, did not equal her love.</p>
<p>That morning, before being lifted upon his horse, Kells buckled on his
gun-belt. The sheath and full round of shells and the gun made this belt a
burden for a weak man. And so Red Pearce insisted. But Kells laughed in
his face. The men, always excepting Gulden, were unfailing in kindness and
care. Apparently they would have fought for Kells to the death. They were
simple and direct in their rough feelings. But in Kells, Joan thought, was
a character who was a product of this border wildness, yet one who could
stand aloof from himself and see the possibilities, the unexpected, the
meaning of that life. Kells knew that a man and yet another might show
kindness and faithfulness one moment, but the very next, out of a manhood
retrograded to the savage, out of the circumstance or chance, might
respond to a primitive force far sundered from thought or reason, and rise
to unbridled action. Joan divined that Kells buckled on his gun to be
ready to protect her. But his men never dreamed his motive. Kells was a
strong, bad man set among men like him, yet he was infinitely different
because he had brains.</p>
<p>On the start of the journey Joan was instructed to ride before Kells and
Pearce, who supported the leader in his saddle. The pack-drivers and Bate
Wood and Frenchy rode ahead; Gulden held to the rear. And this order was
preserved till noon, when the cavalcade halted for a rest in a shady,
grassy, and well-watered nook. Kells was haggard, and his brow wet with
clammy dew, and lined with pain. Yet he was cheerful and patient. Still he
hurried the men through their tasks.</p>
<p>In an hour the afternoon travel was begun. The cañon and its surroundings
grew more rugged and of larger dimensions. Yet the trail appeared to get
broader and better all the time. Joan noticed intersecting trails, running
down from side canons and gulches. The descent was gradual, and scarcely
evident in any way except in the running water and warmer air.</p>
<p>Kells, tired before the middle of the afternoon, and he would have fallen
from his saddle but for the support of his fellows. One by one they held
him up. And it was not easy work to ride alongside, holding him up. Joan
observed that Gulden did not offer his services. He seemed a part of this
gang, yet not of it. Joan never lost a feeling of his presence behind her,
and from time to time, when he rode closer, the feeling grew stronger.
Toward the close of that afternoon she became aware of Gulden's strange
attention. And when a halt was made for camp she dreaded something
nameless.</p>
<p>This halt occurred early, before sunset, and had been necessitated by the
fact that Kells was fainting. They laid him out on blankets, with his head
in his saddle. Joan tended him, and he recovered somewhat, though he
lacked the usual keenness.</p>
<p>It was a busy hour with saddles, packs, horses, with wood to cut and fire
to build and meal to cook. Kells drank thirstily, but refused food.</p>
<p>“Joan,” he whispered, at an opportune moment, “I'm only tired—dead
for sleep. You stay beside me. Wake me quick—if you want to!”</p>
<p>He closed his eyes wearily, without explaining, and soon slumbered. Joan
did not choose to allow these men to see that she feared them or
distrusted them or disliked them. She ate with them beside the fire. And
this was their first opportunity to be close to her. The fact had an
immediate and singular influence. Joan had no vanity, though she knew she
was handsome. She forced herself to be pleasant, agreeable, even sweet.
Their response was instant and growing. At first they were bold, then
familiar and coarse. For years she had been used to rough men of the
camps. These however, were different, and their jokes and suggestions had
no effect because they were beyond her. And when this became manifest to
them that aspect of their relation to her changed. She grasped the fact
intuitively, and then she verified it by proof. Her heart beat strong and
high. If she could hide her hate, her fear, her abhorrence, she could
influence these wild men. But it all depended upon her charm, her
strangeness, her femininity. Insensibly they had been influenced, and it
proved that in the worst of men there yet survived some good. Gulden alone
presented a contrast and a problem. He appeared aware of her presence
while he sat there eating like a wolf, but it was as if she were only an
object. The man watched as might have an animal.</p>
<p>Her experience at the camp-fire meal inclined her to the belief that, if
there were such a possibility as her being safe at all, it would be owing
to an unconscious and friendly attitude toward the companions she had been
forced to accept. Those men were pleased, stirred at being in her
vicinity. Joan came to a melancholy and fearful cognizance of her
attraction. While at home she seldom had borne upon her a reality—that
she was a woman. Her place, her person were merely natural. Here it was
all different. To these wild men, developed by loneliness, fierce-blooded,
with pulses like whips, a woman was something that thrilled, charmed,
soothed, that incited a strange, insatiable, inexplicable hunger for the
very sight of her. They did not realize it, but Joan did.</p>
<p>Presently Joan finished her supper and said: “I'll go hobble my horse. He
strays sometimes.”</p>
<p>“Shore I'll go, miss,” said Bate Wood. He had never called her Mrs. Kells,
but Joan believed he had not thought of the significance. Hardened old
ruffian that he was. Joan regarded him as the best of a bad lot. He had
lived long, and some of his life had not been bad.</p>
<p>“Let me go,” added Pearce.</p>
<p>“No, thanks. I'll go myself,” she replied.</p>
<p>She took the rope hobble off her saddle and boldly swung down the trail.
Suddenly she heard two or more of the men speak at once, and then, low and
clear: “Gulden, where'n hell are you goin'?” This was Red Pearce's voice.</p>
<p>Joan glanced back. Gulden had started down the trail after her. Her heart
quaked, her knees shook, and she was ready to run back. Gulden halted,
then turned away, growling. He acted as if caught in something surprising
to himself.</p>
<p>“We're on to you, Gulden,” continued Pearce, deliberately. “Be careful or
we'll put Kells on.”</p>
<p>A booming, angry curse was the response. The men grouped closer and a loud
altercation followed. Joan almost ran down the trail and heard no more. If
any one of them had started her way now she would have plunged into the
thickets like a frightened deer. Evidently, however, they meant to let her
alone. Joan found her horse, and before hobbling him she was assailed by a
temptation to mount him and ride away. This she did not want to do and
would not do under any circumstances; still, she could not prevent the
natural instinctive impulse of a woman.</p>
<p>She crossed to the other side of the brook and returned toward camp under
the spruce and balsam trees, She did not hurry. It was good to be alone,
out of sight of those violent men, away from that constant wearing
physical proof of catastrophe. Nevertheless, she did not feel free or safe
for a moment; she peered fearfully into the shadows of the rocks and
trees; and presently it was a relief to get back to the side of the
sleeping Kells. He lay in a deep slumber of exhaustion. She arranged her
own saddle and blankets near him, and prepared to meet the night as best
she could. Instinctively she took a position where in one swift snatch she
could get possession of Kells's gun.</p>
<p>It was about time of sunset, warm and still in the cañon, with rosy lights
fading upon the peaks. The men were all busy with one thing and another.
Strange it was to see that Gulden, who Joan thought might be a shirker,
did twice the work of any man, especially the heavy work. He seemed to
enjoy carrying a log that would have overweighted two ordinary men. He was
so huge, so active, so powerful that it was fascinating to watch him. They
built the camp-fire for the night uncomfortably near Joan's position;
however, remembering how cold the air would become later, she made no
objection. Twilight set in and the men, through for the day, gathered near
the fire.</p>
<p>Then Joan was not long in discovering that the situation had begun to
impinge upon the feelings of each of these men. They looked at her
differently. Some of them invented pretexts to approach her, to ask
something, to offer service—anything to get near her. A personal and
individual note had been injected into the attitude of each. Intuitively
Joan guessed that Gulden's arising to follow her had turned their eyes
inward. Gulden remained silent and inactive at the edge of the camp-fire
circle of light, which flickered fitfully around him, making him seem a
huge, gloomy ape of a man. So far as Joan could tell, Gulden never cast
his eyes in her direction. That was a difference which left cause for
reflection. Had that hulk of brawn and bone begun to think? Bate Wood's
overtures to Joan were rough, but inexplicable to her because she dared
not wholly trust him.</p>
<p>“An' shore, miss,” he had concluded, in a hoarse whisper, “we-all know you
ain't Kells's wife. Thet bandit wouldn't marry no woman. He's a
woman-hater. He was famous fer thet over in California. He's run off with
you—kidnapped you, thet's shore.... An' Gulden swears he shot his
own men an' was in turn shot by you. Thet bullet-hole in his back was full
of powder. There's liable to be a muss-up any time.... Shore, miss, you'd
better sneak off with me tonight when they're all asleep. I'll git grub
an' hosses, an' take you off to some prospector's camp. Then you can git
home.”</p>
<p>Joan only shook her head. Even if she could have felt trust in Wood—and
she was of half a mind to believe him—it was too late. Whatever
befell her mattered little if in suffering it she could save Jim Cleve
from the ruin she had wrought.</p>
<p>Since this wild experience of Joan's had begun she had been sick so many
times with raw and naked emotions hitherto unknown to her, that she
believed she could not feel another new fear or torture. But these strange
sensations grew by what they had been fed upon.</p>
<p>The man called Frenchy, was audacious, persistent, smiling, amorous-eyed,
and rudely gallant. He cared no more for his companions than if they had
not been there. He vied with Pearce in his attention, and the two of them
discomfited the others. The situation might have been amusing had it not
been so terrible. Always the portent was a shadow behind their interest
and amiability and jealousy. Except for that one abrupt and sinister move
of Gulden's—that of a natural man beyond deceit—there was no
word, no look, no act at which Joan could have been offended. They were
joking, sarcastic, ironical, and sullen in their relation to each other;
but to Joan each one presented what was naturally or what he considered
his kindest and most friendly front. A young and attractive woman had
dropped into the camp of lonely wild men; and in their wild hearts was a
rebirth of egotism, vanity, hunger for notice. They seemed as foolish as a
lot of cock grouse preening themselves and parading before a single
female. Surely in some heart was born real brotherhood for a helpless girl
in peril. Inevitably in some of them would burst a flame of passion as it
had in Kells.</p>
<p>Between this amiable contest for Joan's glances and replies, with its
possibility of latent good to her, and the dark, lurking, unspoken
meaning, such as lay in Gulden's brooding, Joan found another new and
sickening torture.</p>
<p>“Say, Frenchy, you're no lady's man,” declared Red Pearce, “an' you, Bate,
you're too old. Move—pass by—sashay!” Pearce, good-naturedly,
but deliberately, pushed the two men back.</p>
<p>“Shore she's Kells's lady, ain't she?” drawled Wood. “Ain't you all
forgettin' thet?”</p>
<p>“Kells is asleep or dead,” replied Pearce, and he succeeded in getting the
field to himself.</p>
<p>“Where'd you meet Kells anyway?” he asked Joan, with his red face bending
near hers.</p>
<p>Joan had her part to play. It was difficult, because she divined Pearce's
curiosity held a trap to catch her in a falsehood. He knew—they all
knew she was not Kells's wife. But if she were a prisoner she seemed a
willing and contented one. The query that breathed in Pearce's presence
was how was he to reconcile the fact of her submission with what he and
his comrades had potently felt as her goodness?</p>
<p>“That doesn't concern anybody,” replied Joan.</p>
<p>“Reckon not,” said Pearce. Then he leaned nearer with intense face. “What
I want to know—is Gulden right? Did you shoot Kells?”</p>
<p>In the dusk Joan reached back and clasped Kells hand.</p>
<p>For a man as weak and weary as he had been, it was remarkable how quickly
a touch awakened him. He lifted his head.</p>
<p>“Hello! Who's that?” he called out, sharply.</p>
<p>Pearce rose guardedly, startled, but not confused. “It's only me, boss,”
he replied. “I was about to turn in, an' I wanted to know how you are—if
I could do anythin'.”</p>
<p>“I'm all right, Red,” replied Kells, coolly. “Clear out and let me alone.
All of you.”</p>
<p>Pearce moved away with an amiable good-night and joined the others at the
camp-fire. Presently they sought their blankets, leaving Gulden hunching
there silent in the gloom.</p>
<p>“Joan, why did you wake me?” whispered Kells.</p>
<p>“Pearce asked me if I shot you,” replied Joan. “I woke you instead of
answering him.”</p>
<p>“He did!” exclaimed Kells under his breath. Then he laughed. “Can't fool
that gang. I guess it doesn't matter. Maybe it'd be well if they knew you
shot me.”</p>
<p>He appeared thoughtful, and lay there with the fading flare of the fire on
his pale face. But he did not speak again. Presently he fell asleep.</p>
<p>Joan leaned back, within reach of him, with her head in her saddle, and
pulling a blanket up over her, relaxed her limbs to rest. Sleep seemed the
furthest thing from her. She wondered that she dared to think of it. The
night had grown chilly; the wind was sweeping with low roar through the
balsams; the fire burned dull and red. Joan watched the black, shapeless
hulk that she knew to be Gulden. For a long time he remained motionless.
By and by he moved, approached the fire, stood one moment in the dying
ruddy glow, his great breadth and bulk magnified, with all about him vague
and shadowy, but the more sinister for that. The cavernous eyes were only
black spaces in that vast face, yet Joan saw them upon her. He lay down
then among the other men and soon his deep and heavy breathing denoted the
tranquil slumber of an ox.</p>
<p>For hours through changing shadows and starlight Joan lay awake, while a
thousand thoughts besieged her, all centering round that vital and
compelling one of Jim Cleve.</p>
<p>Only upon awakening, with the sun in her face, did Joan realize that she
had actually slept.</p>
<p>The camp was bustling with activity. The horses were in, fresh and
quarrelsome, with ears laid back. Kells was sitting upon a rock near the
fire with a cup of coffee in his hand. He was looking better. When he
greeted Joan his voice sounded stronger. She walked by Pearce and Frenchy
and Gulden on her way to the brook, but they took no notice of her. Bate
Wood, however, touched his sombrero and said: “Mornin', miss.” Joan
wondered if her memory of the preceding night were only a bad dream. There
was a different atmosphere by daylight, and it was dominated by Kells.
Presently she returned to camp refreshed and hungry. Gulden was throwing a
pack, which action he performed with ease and dexterity. Pearce was
cinching her saddle. Kells was talking, more like his old self than at any
time since his injury.</p>
<p>Soon they were on the trail. For Joan time always passed swiftly on
horseback. Movement and changing scene were pleasurable to her. The
passing of time now held a strange expectancy, a mingled fear and hope and
pain, for at the end of this trail was Jim Cleve. In other days she had
flouted him, made fun of him, dominated him, everything except loved and
feared him. And now she was assured of her love and almost convinced of
her fear. The reputation these wild bandits gave Jim was astounding and
inexplicable to Joan. She rode the miles thinking of Jim, dreading to meet
him, longing to see him, and praying and planning for him.</p>
<p>About noon the cavalcade rode out of the mouth of a cañon into a wide
valley, surrounded by high, rounded foot-hills. Horses and cattle were
grazing on the green levels. A wide, shallow, noisy stream split the
valley. Joan could tell from the tracks at the crossing that this place,
whatever and wherever it was, saw considerable travel; and she concluded
the main rendezvous of the bandits was close at hand.</p>
<p>The pack drivers led across the stream and the valley to enter an
intersecting ravine. It was narrow, rough-sided, and floored, but the
trail was good. Presently it opened out into a beautiful V-shaped gulch,
very different from the high-walled, shut-in canons. It had a level floor,
through which a brook flowed, and clumps of spruce and pine, with here and
there a giant balsam. Huge patches of wild flowers gave rosy color to the
grassy slopes. At the upper end of this gulch Joan saw a number of widely
separated cabins. This place, then, was Cabin Gulch.</p>
<p>Upon reaching the first cabin the cavalcade split up. There were men here
who hallooed a welcome. Gulden halted with his pack-horse. Some of the
others rode on. Wood drove other pack-animals off to the right, up the
gentle slope. And Red Pearce, who was beside Kells, instructed Joan to
follow them. They rode up to a bench of straggling spruce-trees, in the
midst of which stood a large log cabin. It was new, as in fact all the
structures in the Gulch appeared to be, and none of them had seen a
winter. The chinks between the logs were yet open. This cabin was of the
rudest make of notched logs one upon another, and roof of brush and earth.
It was low and flat, but very long, and extending before the whole of it
was a porch roof supported by posts. At one end was a corral. There were
doors and windows with nothing in them. Upon the front wall, outside, hung
saddles and bridles.</p>
<p>Joan had a swift, sharp gaze for the men who rose from their lounging to
greet the travelers. Jim Cleve was not among them. Her heart left her
throat then, and she breathed easier. How could she meet him?</p>
<p>Kells was in better shape than at noon of the preceding day. Still, he had
to be lifted off his horse. Joan heard all the men talking at once. They
crowded round Pearce, each lending a hand. However, Kells appeared able to
walk into the cabin. It was Bate Wood who led Joan inside.</p>
<p>There was a long room, with stone fireplace, rude benches and a table,
skins and blankets on the floor, and lanterns and weapons on the wall. At
one end Joan saw a litter of cooking utensils and shelves of supplies.</p>
<p>Suddenly Kells's impatient voice silenced the clamor of questions. “I'm
not hurt,” he said. “I'm all right—only weak and tired. Fellows,
this girl is my wife.... Joan, you'll find a room there—at the back
of the cabin. Make yourself comfortable.”</p>
<p>Joan was only too glad to act upon his suggestion. A door had been cut
through the back wall. It was covered with a blanket. When she swept this
aside she came upon several steep steps that led up to a smaller, lighter
cabin of two rooms, separated by a partition of boughs. She dropped the
blanket behind her and went up the steps. Then she saw that the new cabin
had been built against an old one. It had no door or opening except the
one by which she had entered. It was light because the chinks between the
logs were open. The furnishings were a wide bench of boughs covered with
blankets, a shelf with a blurred and cracked mirror hanging above it, a
table made of boxes, and a lantern. This room was four feet higher than
the floor of the other cabin. And at the bottom of the steps leaned a
half-dozen slender trimmed poles. She gathered presently that these poles
were intended to be slipped under crosspieces above and fastened by a bar
below, which means effectually barricaded the opening. Joan could stand at
the head of the steps and peep under an edge of the swinging blanket into
the large room, but that was the only place she could see through, for the
openings between the logs of each wall were not level. These quarters were
comfortable, private, and could be shut off from intruders. Joan had not
expected so much consideration from Kells and she was grateful.</p>
<p>She lay down to rest and think. It was really very pleasant here. There
were birds nesting in the chinks; a ground squirrel ran along one of the
logs and chirped at her; through an opening near her face she saw a wild
rose-bush and the green slope of the gulch; a soft, warm, fragrant breeze
blew in, stirring her hair. How strange that there could be beautiful and
pleasant things here in this robber den; that time was the same here as
elsewhere; that the sun shone and the sky gleamed blue. Presently she
discovered that a lassitude weighted upon her and she could not keep her
eyes open. She ceased trying, but intended to remain awake—to think,
to listen, to wait. Nevertheless, she did fall asleep and did not awaken
till disturbed by some noise. The color of the western sky told her that
the afternoon was far spent. She had slept hours. Someone was knocking.
She got up and drew aside the blanket. Bate Wood was standing near the
door.</p>
<p>“Now, miss, I've supper ready,” he said, “an' I was reckonin' you'd like
me to fetch yours.”</p>
<p>“Yes, thank you, I would,” replied Joan.</p>
<p>In a few moments Wood returned carrying the top of a box upon which were
steaming pans and cups. He handed this rude tray up to Joan.</p>
<p>“Shore I'm a first-rate cook, miss, when I've somethin' to cook,” he said
with a smile that changed his hard face.</p>
<p>She returned the smile with her thanks. Evidently Kells had a well-filled
larder, and as Joan had fared on coarse and hard food for long, this
supper was a luxury and exceedingly appetizing. While she was eating, the
blanket curtain moved aside and Kells appeared. He dropped it behind him,
but did not step up into the room. He was in his shirt-sleeves, had been
clean shaven, and looked a different man.</p>
<p>“How do you like your—home?” he inquired, with a hint of his former
mockery.</p>
<p>“I'm grateful for the privacy,” she replied.</p>
<p>“You think you could be worse off, then?”</p>
<p>“I know it.”</p>
<p>“Suppose Gulden kills me—and rules the gang—and takes you?...
There's a story about him, the worst I've heard on this border. I'll tell
you some day when I want to scare you bad.”</p>
<p>“Gulden!” Joan shivered as she pronounced the name. “Are you and he
enemies?”</p>
<p>“No man can have a friend on this border. We flock together like buzzards.
There's safety in numbers, but we fight together, like buzzards over
carrion.”</p>
<p>“Kells, you hate this life?”</p>
<p>“I've always hated my life, everywhere. The only life I ever loved was
adventure.... I'm willing to try a new one, if you'll go with me.”</p>
<p>Joan shook her head.</p>
<p>“Why not? I'll marry you,” he went on, speaking lower. “I've got gold;
I'll get more.”</p>
<p>“Where did you get the gold?” she asked</p>
<p>“I've relieved a good many overburdened travelers and prospectors,” he
replied.</p>
<p>“Kells, you're a—a villain!” exclaimed Joan, unable to contain her
sudden heat. “You must be utterly mad—to ask me to marry you.”</p>
<p>“No, I'm not mad,” he rejoined, with a laugh. “Gulden's the mad one. He's
crazy. He's got a twist in his brain. I'm no fool.... I've only lost my
head over you. But compare marrying me, living and traveling among decent
people and comfort, to camps like this. If I don't get drunk I'll be half
decent to you. But I'll get shot sooner or later. Then you'll be left to
Gulden.”</p>
<p>“Why do you say HIM?” she queried, in a shudder of curiosity.</p>
<p>“Well, Gulden haunts me.”</p>
<p>“He does me, too. He makes me lose my sense of proportion. Beside him you
and the others seem good. But you ARE wicked.”</p>
<p>“Then you won't marry me and go away somewhere?... Your choice is strange.
Because I tell you the truth.”</p>
<p>“Kells! I'm a woman. Something deep in me says you won't keep me here—you
can't be so base. Not now, after I saved your life! It would be horrible—inhuman.
I can't believe any man born of a woman could do it.”</p>
<p>“But I want you—I love you!” he said, low and hard.</p>
<p>“Love! That's not love,” she replied in scorn. “God only knows what it
is.”</p>
<p>“Call it what you like,” he went on, bitterly. “You're a young, beautiful,
sweet woman. It's wonderful to be near you. My life has been hell. I've
had nothing. There's only hell to look forward to—and hell at the
end. Why shouldn't I keep you here?”</p>
<p>“But, Kells, listen,” she whispered, earnestly, “suppose I am young and
beautiful and sweet—as you said. I'm utterly in your power. I'm
compelled to seek your protection from even worse men. You're different
from these others. You're educated. You must have had—a—a good
mother. Now you're bitter, desperate, terrible. You hate life. You seem to
think this charm you see in me will bring you something. Maybe a glimpse
of joy! But how can it? You know better. How can it... unless I—I
love you?”</p>
<p>Kells stared at her, the evil and hardness of his passion corded in his
face. And the shadows of comprehending thought in his strange eyes showed
the other side of the man. He was still staring at her while he reached to
put aside the curtains; then he dropped his head and went out.</p>
<p>Joan sat motionless, watching the door where he had disappeared, listening
to the mounting beats of her heart. She had only been frank and earnest
with Kells. But he had taken a meaning from her last few words that she
had not intended to convey. All that was woman in her—mounting,
righting, hating—leaped to the power she sensed in herself. If she
could be deceitful, cunning, shameless in holding out to Kells a possible
return of his love, she could do anything with him. She knew it. She did
not need to marry him or sacrifice herself. Joan was amazed that the idea
remained an instant before her consciousness. But something had told her
this was another kind of life than she had known, and all that was
precious to her hung in the balance. Any falsity was justifiable, even
righteous, under the circumstances. Could she formulate a plan that this
keen bandit would not see through? The remotest possibility of her even
caring for Kells—that was as much as she dared hint. But that,
together with all the charm and seductiveness she could summon, might be
enough. Dared she try it? If she tried and failed Kells would despise her,
and then she was utterly lost. She was caught between doubt and hope. All
that was natural and true in her shrank from such unwomanly deception; all
that had been born of her wild experience inflamed her to play the game,
to match Kells's villainy with a woman's unfathomable duplicity.</p>
<p>And while Joan was absorbed in thought the sun set, the light failed,
twilight stole into the cabin, and then darkness. All this hour there had
been a continual sound of men's voices in the large cabin, sometimes low
and at other times loud. It was only when Joan distinctly heard the name
Jim Cleve that she was startled out of her absorption, thrilling and
flushing. In her eagerness she nearly fell as she stepped and gropped
through the darkness to the door, and as she drew aside the blanket her
hand shook.</p>
<p>The large room was lighted by a fire and half a dozen lanterns. Through a
faint tinge of blue smoke Joan saw men standing and sitting and lounging
around Kells, who had a seat where the light fell full upon him. Evidently
a lull had intervened in the talk. The dark faces Joan could see were all
turned toward the door expectantly.</p>
<p>“Bring him in, Bate, and let's look him over,” said Kells.</p>
<p>Then Bate Wood appeared, elbowing his way in, and he had his hand on the
arm of a tall, lithe fellow. When they got into the light Joan quivered as
if she had been stabbed. That stranger with Wood was Jim Cleve—Jim
Cleve in frame and feature, yet not the same she knew.</p>
<p>“Cleve, glad to meet you,” greeted Kells, extending his hand.</p>
<p>“Thanks. Same to you,” replied Cleve, and he met the proffered hand. His
voice was cold and colorless, unfamiliar to Joan. Was this man really Jim
Cleve?</p>
<p>The meeting of Kells and Cleve was significant because of Kells's interest
and the silent attention of the men of his clan. It did not seem to mean
anything to the white-faced, tragic-eyed Cleve. Joan gazed at him with
utter amazement. She remembered a heavily built, florid Jim Cleve, an
overgrown boy with a good-natured, lazy smile on his full face and sleepy
eyes. She all but failed to recognize him in the man who stood there now,
lithe and powerful, with muscles bulging in his coarse, white shirt.
Joan's gaze swept over him, up and down, shivering at the two heavy guns
he packed, till it was transfixed on his face. The old, or the other, Jim
Cleve had been homely, with too much flesh on his face to show force or
fire. This man seemed beautiful. But it was a beauty of tragedy. He was as
white as Kells, but smoothly, purely white, without shadow or sunburn. His
lips seemed to have set with a bitter, indifferent laugh. His eyes looked
straight out, piercing, intent, haunted, and as dark as night. Great blue
circles lay under them, lending still further depth and mystery. It was a
sad, reckless face that wrung Joan's very heartstrings. She had come too
late to save his happiness, but she prayed that it was not too late to
save his honor and his soul.</p>
<p>While she gazed there had been further exchange of speech between Kells
and Cleve, and she had heard, though not distinguished, what was said.
Kells was unmistakably friendly, as were the other men within range of
Joan's sight. Cleve was surrounded; there were jesting and laughter; and
then he was led to the long table where several men were already gambling.</p>
<p>Joan dropped the curtain, and in the darkness of her cabin she saw that
white, haunting face, and when she covered her eyes she still saw it. The
pain, the reckless violence, the hopeless indifference, the wreck and ruin
in that face had been her doing. Why? How had Jim Cleve wronged her? He
had loved her at her displeasure and had kissed her against her will. She
had furiously upbraided him, and when he had finally turned upon her,
threatening to prove he was no coward, she had scorned him with a girl's
merciless injustice. All her strength and resolve left her, momentarily,
after seeing Jim there. Like a woman, she weakened. She lay on the bed and
writhed. Doubt, hopelessness, despair, again seized upon her, and some
strange, yearning maddening emotion. What had she sacrificed? His
happiness and her own—and both their lives!</p>
<p>The clamor in the other cabin grew so boisterous that suddenly when it
stilled Joan was brought sharply to the significance of it. Again she drew
aside the curtain and peered out.</p>
<p>Gulden, huge, stolid, gloomy, was entering the cabin. The man fell into
the circle and faced Kell with the fire-light dancing in his cavernous
eyes.</p>
<p>“Hello, Gulden!” said Kells, coolly. “What ails you?”</p>
<p>“Anybody tell you about Bill Bailey?” asked Gulden, heavily.</p>
<p>Kells did not show the least concern. “Tell me what?”</p>
<p>“That he died in a cabin, down in the valley?”</p>
<p>Kells gave a slight start and his eyes narrowed and shot steely glints.
“No. It's news to me.”</p>
<p>“Kells, you left Bailey for dead. But he lived. He was shot through, but
he got there somehow—nobody knows. He was far gone when Beady Jones
happened along. Before he died he sent word to me by Beady.... Are you
curious to know what it was?”</p>
<p>“Not the least,” replied Kells. “Bailey was—well, offensive to my
wife. I shot him.”</p>
<p>“He swore you drew on him in cold blood,” thundered Gulden. “He swore it
was for nothing—just so you could be alone with that girl!”</p>
<p>Kells rose in wonderful calmness, with only his pallor and a slight
shaking of his hands to betray excitement. An uneasy stir and murmur ran
through the room. Red Pearce, nearest at hand, stepped to Kells's side.
All in a moment there was a deadly surcharged atmosphere there.</p>
<p>“Well, he swore right!... Now what's it to you?”</p>
<p>Apparently the fact and its confession were nothing particular to Gulden,
or else he was deep where all considered him only dense and shallow.</p>
<p>“It's done. Bill's dead,” continued Gulden. “But why do you double-cross
the gang? What's the game? You never did it before.... That girl isn't
your—”</p>
<p>“Shut up!” hissed Kells. Like a flash his hand flew out with his gun, and
all about him was dark menace.</p>
<p>Gulden made no attempt to draw. He did not show surprise nor fear nor any
emotion. He appeared plodding in mind. Red Pearce stepped between Kells
and Gulden. There was a realization in the crowd, loud breaths, scraping
of feet. Gulden turned away. Then Kells resumed his seat and his pipe as
if nothing out of the ordinary had occurred.</p>
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