<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h3><i>Prune Pie and Coon-can.</i></h3>
<p>Of a truth, Charming Billy Boyle, living his life in the wide
land that is too big and too far removed from the man-made world
for any but the strong of heart, knew little indeed of
women—her kind of women. When he returned with two chickens
and found that the floor had been swept so thoroughly as to look
strange to him, and that all his scattered belongings were laid in
a neat pile upon the foot of the bunk which was unfamiliar under
straightened blankets and pitifully plumped pillows, he was filled
with astonishment. Miss Bridger smiled a little and went on washing
the dishes.</p>
<p>"It's beginning to storm, isn't it?" she remarked. "But we'll
eat chicken stew before we—before I start home. If you have a
horse that I can borrow till morning, father will bring it
back."</p>
<p>Billy scattered a handful of feathers on the floor and gained a
little time by stooping to pick them up one by one. "I've been
wondering about that," he said reluctantly. "It's just my luck not
to have a gentle hoss in camp. I've got two, but they ain't safe
for women. The Pilgrim's got one hoss that might uh done if it was
here, which it ain't."</p>
<p>She looked disturbed, though she tried to hide it. "I can ride
pretty well," she ventured.</p>
<p>Without glancing at her, Charming Billy shook his head. "You're
all right here"—he stopped to pick up more
feathers—"and it wouldn't be safe for yuh to try it. One hoss
is mean about mounting; yuh couldn't get within a rod of him. The
other one is a holy terror to pitch when anything strange gets near
him. I wouldn't let yuh try it." Charming Billy was
sorry—that showed in his voice—but he was also
firm.</p>
<p>Miss Bridger thoughtfully wiped a tin spoon. Billy gave her a
furtive look and dropped his head at the way the brightness had
gone out of her face. "They'll be worried, at home," she said
quietly.</p>
<p>"A little worry beats a funeral," Billy retorted sententiously,
instinctively mastering the situation because she was a woman and
he must take care of her. "I reckon I could—" He stopped
abruptly and plucked savagely at a stubborn wing feather.</p>
<p>"Of course! You could ride over and bring back a horse!" She
caught eagerly at his half-spoken offer. "It's a lot of bother for
you, but I—I'll be very much obliged." Her face was bright
again.</p>
<p>"You'd be alone here—"</p>
<p>"I'm not the least bit afraid to stay alone. I wouldn't mind
that at all."</p>
<p>Billy hesitated, met a look in her eyes that he did not like to
see there, and yielded. Obviously, from her viewpoint that was the
only thing to do. A cowpuncher who has ridden the range since he
was sixteen should not shirk a night ride in a blizzard, or fear
losing the trail. It was not storming so hard a man might not ride
ten miles—that is, a man like Charming Billy Boyle.</p>
<p>After that he was in great haste to be gone, and would scarcely
wait until Miss Bridger, proudly occupying the position of cook,
told him that the chicken stew was ready. Indeed, he would have
gone without eating it if she had not protested in a way that made
Billy foolishly glad to submit; as it was, he saddled his horse
while he waited, and reached for his sheepskin-lined, "sour-dough"
coat before the last mouthful was fairly swallowed. At the last
minute he unbuckled his gun belt and held it out to her.</p>
<p>"I'll leave you this," he remarked, with an awkward attempt to
appear careless. "You'll feel safer if you have a gun,
and—and if you're scared at anything, shoot it." He finished
with another smile that lighted wonderfully his face and his
eyes.</p>
<p>She shook her head. "I've often stayed alone. There's nothing in
the world to be afraid of—and anyway, I'll have the dog.
Thank you, all the same."</p>
<p>Charming Billy looked at her, opened his mouth and closed it
without speaking. He laid the gun down on the table and turned to
go. "If anything scares yuh," he repeated stubbornly, "shoot it.
Yuh don't want to count too much on that dawg."</p>
<p>He discovered then that Flora Bridger was an exceedingly willful
young woman. She picked up the gun, overtook him, and fairly forced
it into his hands. "Don't be silly; I don't want it. I'm not such a
coward as all that. You must have a very poor opinion of women.
I—I'm deadly afraid of a gun!"</p>
<p>Billy was not particularly impressed by the last statement, but
he felt himself at the end of his resources and buckled the belt
around him without more argument. After all, he told himself, it
was not likely that she would have cause for alarm in the few hours
that he would be gone, and those hours he meant to trim down as
much as possible.</p>
<p>Out of the coulée where the high wall broke the force of
the storm, he faced the snow and wind and pushed on doggedly. It
was bitter riding, that night, but he had seen worse and the
discomfort of it troubled him little; it was not the first time he
had bent head to snow and driving wind and had kept on so for
hours. What harassed him most were the icy hills where the chinook
had melted the snow, and the north wind, sweeping over, had frozen
it all solid again. He could not ride as fast as he had counted
upon riding, and he realized that it would be long hours before he
could get back to the cabin with a horse from Bridger's.</p>
<p>Billy could not tell when first came the impulse to turn back.
It might have been while he was working his way cautiously up a
slippery coulée side, or it might have come suddenly just
when he stopped; for stop he did (just when he should logically
have ridden faster because the way was smoother) and turned his
horse's head downhill.</p>
<p>"If she'd kept the gun—" he muttered, apologizing to
himself for the impulse, and flayed his horse with his <i>romal</i>
because he did not quite understand himself and so was ill at ease.
Afterward, when he was loping steadily down the coulée
bottom with his fresh-made tracks pointing the way before him, he
broke out irrelevantly and viciously: "A real, old range rider yuh
can bank on, one way or the other—but damn a pilgrim!"</p>
<p>The wind and the snow troubled him not so much now that his face
was not turned to meet them, but it seemed to him that the way was
rougher and that the icy spots were more dangerous to the bones of
himself and his horse than when he had come that way before. He did
not know why he need rage at the pace he must at times keep, and it
did strike him as being a foolish thing to do—this turning
back when he was almost halfway to his destination; but for every
time he thought that, he urged his horse more.</p>
<p>The light from the cabin window, twinkling through the storm,
cheered him a little, which was quite as unreasonable as his
uneasiness. It did not, however, cause him to linger at turning his
horse into the stable and shutting the door upon him. When he
passed the cabin window he glanced anxiously in and saw dimly
through the half-frosted glass that Miss Bridger was sitting
against the wall by the table, tight-lipped and watchful. He
hurried to the door and pushed it open.</p>
<p>"Why, hello," greeted the Pilgrim uncertainly, The Pilgrim was
standing in the centre of the room, and he did not look
particularly pleased. Charming Billy, every nerve on edge, took in
the situation at a glance, kicked the Pilgrim's dog and shook the
snow from his hat.</p>
<p>"I lost the trail," he lied briefly and went over to the stove.
He did not look at Miss Bridger directly, but he heard the deep
breath which she took.</p>
<p>"Well, so did I," the Pilgrim began eagerly, with just the least
slurring of his syllables. "I'd have been here before dark, only
one of the horses slipped and lamed himself. It was much as ever I
got home at all. He come in on three legs, and toward the last them
three like to went back on him."</p>
<p>"Which hoss?" asked Billy, though he felt pessimistically that
he knew without being told. The Pilgrim's answer confirmed his
pessimism. Of course, it was the only gentle horse they had.</p>
<p>"Say, Billy, I forgot your tobacco," drawled the Pilgrim, after
a very short silence which Billy used for much rapid thinking.</p>
<p>Ordinarily, Billy would have considered the over sight as
something of a catastrophe, but he passed it up as an unpleasant
detail and turned to the girl. "It's storming something fierce," he
told her in an exceedingly matter-of-fact way, "but I think it'll
let up by daylight so we can tackle it. Right now it's out of the
question; so we'll have another supper—a regular blowout this
time, with coffee and biscuits and all those luxuries. How are yuh
on making biscuits?"</p>
<p>So he got her out of the corner, where she had looked too much
at bay to please him, and in making the biscuits she lost the
watchful look from her eyes. But she was not the Flora Bridger who
had laughed at their makeshifts and helped cook the chicken, and
Charming Billy, raving inwardly at the change, in his heart damned
fervently the Pilgrim.</p>
<p>In the hours that followed, Billy showed the stuff he was made
of. He insisted upon cooking the things that would take the longest
time to prepare; boasted volubly of the prune pies he could make,
and then set about demonstrating his skill and did not hurry the
prunes in the stewing. He fished out a package of dried lima beans
and cooked some of them, changing the water three times and always
adding cold water. For all that, supper was eventually ready and
eaten and the dishes washed—with Miss Bridger wiping them and
with the Pilgrim eying them both in a way that set on edge the
teeth of Charming Billy.</p>
<p>When there was absolutely nothing more to keep them busy, Billy
got the cards and asked Miss Bridger if she could play
coon-can—which was the only game he knew that was rigidly
"two-handed." She did not know the game and he insisted upon
teaching her, though the Pilgrim glowered and hinted strongly at
seven-up or something else which they could all play.</p>
<p>"I don't care for seven-up," Miss Bridger quelled, speaking to
him for the first time since Billy returned. "I want to learn this
game that—er—Billy knows." There was a slight
hesitation on the name, which was the only one she knew to call him
by.</p>
<p>The Pilgrim grunted and retired to the stove, rattled the lids
ill-naturedly and smoked a vile cigar which he had brought from
town. After that he sat and glowered at the two.</p>
<p>Billy did the best he could to make the time pass quickly. He
had managed to seat Miss Bridger so that her back was toward the
stove and the Pilgrim, and he did it so unobtrusively that neither
guessed his reason. He taught her coon-can, two-handed whist and
Chinese solitaire before a gray lightening outside proclaimed that
the night was over. Miss Bridger, heavy-eyed and languid, turned
her face to the window; Billy swept the cards together and stacked
them with an air of finality.</p>
<p>"I guess we can hit the trail now without losing ourselves," he
remarked briskly. "Pilgrim, come on out and help me saddle up;
we'll see if that old skate of yours is able to travel."</p>
<p>The Pilgrim got up sullenly and went out, and Billy followed him
silently. His own horse had stood with the saddle on all night, and
the Pilgrim snorted when he saw it. But Billy only waited till the
Pilgrim had put his saddle on the gentlest mount they had, then
took the reins from him and led both horses to the door.</p>
<p>"All right," he called to the girl; helped her into the saddle
and started off, with not a word of farewell from Miss Bridger to
the Pilgrim.</p>
<p>The storm had passed and the air was still and biting cold. The
eastern sky was stained red and purple with the rising sun, and
beneath the feet of their horses the snow creaked frostily. So they
rode down the coulée and then up a long slope to the top,
struck the trail and headed straight north with a low line of hills
for their goal. And in the hour and a half of riding, neither spoke
a dozen words.</p>
<p>At the door of her own home Billy left her, and gathered up the
reins of the Pilgrim's horse. "Well, good-by. Oh, that's all
right—it wasn't any trouble at all," he said huskily when she
tried to thank him, and galloped away.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />