<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<h3><i>The Day We Celebrate.</i></h3>
<p>The days that followed were to Billy much like a delicious
dream. Sometimes he stopped short and wondered uneasily if he would
wake up pretty soon to find that he was still an exile from the
Double-Crank, wandering with Dill over the country in search of a
location. Sometimes he laughed aloud unexpectedly, and said,
"Hell!" in a chuckling undertone when came fresh realization of the
miracle. But mostly he was an exceedingly busy young man, with
hands and brain too full of the stress of business to do much
wondering.</p>
<p>They were in possession of the Double-Crank, now—he in
full charge, walking the path which his own feet, when he was
merely a "forty-dollar puncher," had helped wear deep to the stable
and corrals; giving orders where he had been wont to receive them;
riding horses which he had long completed, but which had heretofore
been kept sacred to the use of Jawbreaker and old Brown himself;
eating and sleeping in the house with Dill instead of making one of
the crowd in the bunk-house; ordering the coming and going of the
round-up crew and tasting to the full the joys—and the
sorrows—of being "head push" where he had for long been
content to serve. Truly, the world had changed amazingly for one
Charming Billy Boyle.</p>
<p>Most of the men he had kept on, for he liked them well and they
had faith to believe that success would not spoil him. The Pilgrim
he had promised himself the pleasure of firing bodily off the ranch
within an hour of his first taking control—but the Pilgrim
had not waited. He had left the ranch with the Old Man and where he
had gone did not concern Billy at the time. For there was the
shipment of young stock from the South to meet and drive up to the
home range, and there was the calf round-up to start on time, and
after all the red tape of buying the outfit and turning over the
stock had been properly wound up, time was precious in the extreme
through May and June and well into July.</p>
<p>But habit is strong upon a man even after the conditions which
bred the habit have utterly changed. One privilege had been always
kept inviolate at the Double-Crank, until it had come to be looked
upon as an inalienable right. The Glorious Fourth had been
celebrated, come rain, come shine. Usually the celebration was so
generous that it did not stop at midnight; anywhere within a week
was considered permissible, a gradual tapering off—not to say
sobering up—being the custom with the more hilarious
souls.</p>
<p>When Dill with much solemnity tore off June from the calendar in
the dining room—the calendar with Custer's Last Charge
rioting redly above the dates—Billy, home for a day from the
roundup, realized suddenly that time was on the high lope; at
least, that is how he put it to Dill.</p>
<p>"Say, Dilly, we sure got to jar loose from getting rich long
enough to take in that picnic over to Bluebell Grove. Didn't know
there was a picnic or a Bluebell Grove? Well now, there is. Over on
Horned-Toad Creek—nice, pretty name to go with the grove,
ain't it?—they've got a patch uh shade big over as my hat.
Right back up on the hill is the schoolhouse where they do their
dancing, and they've got a table or two and a swing for the kids to
fall outa—and they call it Bluebell Grove because yuh never
saw a bluebell within ten mile uh the place. That's where the
general round-up for the Fourth is pulled off this year—so
Jim Bleeker was telling me this morning. We sure got to be present,
Dilly."</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I'm not the sort of man to shine in society,
William," dissented the other modestly. "You can go,
and—"</p>
<p>"Don't yuh never <i>dance</i>?" Billy eyed him speculatively. A
man under fifty—and Dill might be anywhere between thirty and
forty—who had two sound legs and yet did not dance!</p>
<p>"Oh, I used to, after a fashion. But my feet are so far off that
I find communication with them necessarily slow, and they have a
habit of embarking in wild ventures of their own. I do not believe
they are really popular with the feminine element, William. And so
I'd rather—"</p>
<p>"Aw, you'll have to go and try it a whirl, anyhow. We ain't any
of us experts. Yuh see, the boys have been accustomed to having the
wheels of industry stop revolving on the Fourth, and turning kinda
wobbly for four or five days after. I don't feel like trying to
break 'em in to keep on working—do you?"</p>
<p>"To use your own term," said Dill, suddenly reckless of his
diction, "you're sure the doctor."</p>
<p>"Well, then, the proper dope for this case is, all hands show up
at the picnic." He picked up his hat from the floor, slapped it
twice against his leg to remove the dust, pinched the crown into
four dents, set it upon his head at a jaunty angle and went out,
singing softly:</p>
<p>"She's a young thing, and cannot leave her mother."</p>
<p>Dill, looking after him, puckered his face into what passed with
him for a smile. "I wonder now," he meditated aloud, "if William is
not thinking of some particular young lady who—er—who
'cannot leave her mother'." If he had only known it, William was;
he was also wondering whether she would be at the picnic. And if
she were at the picnic, would she remember him? He had only seen
her that one night—and to him it seemed a very long while
ago. He thought, however, that he might be able to recall himself
to her mind—supposing she had forgotten. It was a long time
ago, he kept reminding himself, and the light was poor and he
hadn't shaved for a week—he had always afterward realized
that with much mental discomfort—and he really did look a lot
different when he had on his "war-togs," by which he meant his best
clothes. He wouldn't blame her at all if she passed him up for a
stranger, just at first. A great deal more he thought on the same
subject, and quite as foolishly.</p>
<p>Because of much thinking on the subject, when he and Dill rode
down the trail which much recent passing had made unusually dusty,
with the hot sunlight of the Fourth making the air quiver palpably
around them; with the cloudless blue arching hotly over their heads
and with the four by six cotton flag flying an involuntary signal
of distress—on account of its being hastily raised
bottom-side-up and left that way—and beckoning them from the
little clump of shade below, the heart of Charming Billy Boyle beat
unsteadily under the left pocket of his soft, cream-colored silk
shirt, and the cheeks of him glowed red under the coppery tan. Dill
was not the sort of man who loves fast riding and they ambled along
quite decorously—"like we was headed for prayer-meeting with
a singing-book under each elbow," thought Billy, secretly resentful
of the pace.</p>
<p>"I reckon there'll be quite a crowd," he remarked wistfully. "I
see a good many horses staked out already."</p>
<p>Dill nodded absently, and Billy took to singing his pet ditty;
one must do something when one is covering the last mile of a
journey toward a place full of all sorts of delightful
possibilities—and covering that mile at a shambling trot
which is truly maddening.</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"She can make a punkin pie quick's a cat can wink her eye,</p>
<p>She's a young thing, and cannot leave her mother!"</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>"But, of course," observed Mr. Dill quite unexpectedly, "you
know, William, time will remedy that drawback."</p>
<p>Billy started, looked suspiciously at the other, grew rather red
and shut up like a clam. He did more; he put the spurs to his horse
and speedily hid himself in a dust-cloud, so that Dill, dutifully
keeping pace with him, made a rather spectacular arrival whether he
would or no.</p>
<p>Charming Billy, his hat carefully dimpled, his blue tie
fastidiously knotted and pierced with the Klondyke nugget-pin which
was his only ornament, wandered hastily through the assembled
groups and slapped viciously at mosquitoes. Twice he shied at a
flutter of woman-garments, retreated to a respectable distance and
reconnoitred with a fine air of indifference, to find that the
flutter accompanied the movements of some girl for whom he cared
not at all.</p>
<p>In his nostrils was the indefinable, unmistakable picnic
odor—the odor of crushed grasses and damp leaf-mould stirred
by the passing of many feet, the mingling of cheap perfumes and
starched muslin and iced lemonade and sandwiches; in his ears the
jumble of laughter and of holiday speech, the squealing of children
in a mob around the swing, the protesting squeak of the ropes as
they swung high, the snorting of horses tied just outside the
enchanted ground. And through the tree-tops he could glimpse the
range-land lying asleep in the hot sunlight, unchanged, uncaring,
with the wild range-cattle feeding leisurely upon the slopes and
lifting heads occasionally to snuff suspiciously the unwonted
sounds and smells that drifted up to them on vagrant breezes.</p>
<p>He introduced Dill to four or five men whom he thought might be
congenial, left him talking solemnly with a man who at some
half-forgotten period had come from Michigan, and wandered
aimlessly on through the grove. Fellows there were in plenty whom
he knew, but he passed them with a brief word or two. Truth to
tell, for the most part they were otherwise occupied and had no
time for him.</p>
<p>He loitered over to the swing, saw that the enthusiasts who were
making so much noise were all youngsters under fifteen or so and
that they hailed his coming with a joy tinged with self-interest.
He rose to the bait of one dark-eyed miss who had her hair done in
two braids crossed and tied close to her head with
red-white-and-blue ribbon, and who smiled alluringly and somewhat
toothlessly and remarked that she liked to go 'way, '<i>way</i> up
till it most turned over, and that it didn't scare her a bit. He
swung her almost into hysterics and straightway found himself
exceedingly popular with other braided-and-tied young misses.
Charming Billy never could tell afterward how long or how many he
swung 'way, '<i>way</i> up; he knew that he pushed and pushed until
his arms ached and the hair on his forehead became unpleasantly
damp under his hat.</p>
<p>"That'll just about have to do yuh, kids," he rebelled suddenly
and left them, anxiously patting his hair and generally resettling
himself as he went. Once more in a dispirited fashion he threaded
the crowd, which had grown somewhat larger, side-stepped a group
which called after him, and went on down to the creek.</p>
<p>"I'm about the limit, I guess," he told himself irritably. "Why
the dickens didn't I have the sense and nerve to ride over and ask
her straight out if she was coming? I coulda drove her over,
maybe—if she'd come with me. I coulda took the bay team and
top-buggy, and done the thing right. I coulda—hell, there's a
<i>heap</i> uh things I coulda done that would uh been a lot more
wise than what I did do! Maybe she ain't coming at all,
and—"</p>
<p>On the heels of that he saw a spring-wagon, come rattling down
the trail across the creek. There were two seats full, and two
parasols were bobbing seductively, and one of them was blue. "I'll
bet a dollar that's them now," murmured Billy, and once more felt
anxiously of his hair where it had gone limp under his hat. "Darned
kids—they'd uh kept me there till I looked like I'd been
wrassling calves half a day," went with the patting. He turned and
went briskly through an empty and untrampled part of the grove to
the place where the wagon would be most likely to stop. "I'm sure
going to make good to-day or—" And a little
farther—"What if it ain't <i>them</i>?"</p>
<p>Speedily he discovered that it was "them," and at the same time
he discovered something else which pleased him not at all. Dressed
with much care, so that even Billy must reluctantly own him
good-looking enough, and riding so close to the blue parasol that
his horse barely escaped grazing a wheel, was the Pilgrim. He
glared at Billy in unfriendly fashion and would have shut him off
completely from approach to the wagon; but a shining milk can, left
carelessly by a bush, caught the eye of his horse, and after that
the Pilgrim was very busy riding erratically in circles and trying
to keep in touch with his saddle.</p>
<p>Billy, grown surprisingly bold, went straight to where the blue
parasol was being closed with dainty deliberation. "A little more,
and you'd have been late for dinner," he announced, smiling up at
her, and held out his eager arms. Diplomacy, perhaps, should have
urged him to assist the other lady first—but Billy Boyle was
quite too direct to be diplomatic and besides, the other lady was
on the opposite side from him.</p>
<p>Miss Bridger may have been surprised, and she may or may not
have been pleased; Billy could only guess at her
emotions—granting she felt any. But she smiled down at him
and permitted the arms to receive her, and she also
permitted—though with some hesitation—Billy to lead her
straight away from the wagon and its occupants and from the
gyrating Pilgrim to the deep delights of the grove.</p>
<p>"Mr. Walland is a good rider, don't you think?" murmured Miss
Bridger, gazing over her shoulder.</p>
<p>"He's a bird," said Billy evenly, and was polite enough not to
mention what kind of bird. He was wondering what on earth had
brought those two together and why, after that night, Miss Bridger
should be friendly with the Pilgrim; but of these things he said
nothing, though he did find a good deal to say upon pleasanter
subjects.</p>
<p>So far as any one knew, Charming Billy Boyle, while he had done
many things, had never before walked boldly into a picnic crowd
carrying a blue parasol as if it were a rifle and keeping step as
best he might over the humps and hollows of the grove with a young
woman. Many there were who turned and looked again—and these
were the men who knew him best. As for Billy, his whole attitude
was one of determination; he was not particularly
lover-like—had he wanted to be, he would not have known how.
He was resolved to make the most of his opportunities, because they
were likely to be few and because he had an instinct that he should
know the girl better—he had even dreamed foolishly, once or
twice, of some day marrying her. But to clinch all, he had no
notion of letting the Pilgrim offend her by his presence.</p>
<p>So he somehow got her wedged between two fat women at one of the
tables, and stood behind and passed things impartially and ate ham
sandwiches and other indigestibles during the intervals. He had the
satisfaction of seeing the Pilgrim come within ten feet of them,
hover there scowling for a minute or two and then retreat. "He
ain't forgot the licking I gave him," thought Billy vaingloriously,
and hid a smile in the delectable softness of a wedge of cake with
some kind of creamy filling.</p>
<p>"<i>I</i> made that cake," announced Miss Bridger over her
shoulder when she saw what he was eating. "Do you like it as well
as—chicken stew?"</p>
<p>Whereupon Billy murmured incoherently and wished the two fat
women ten miles away. He had not dared—he would never have
dared—refer to that night, or mention chicken stew or prune
pies or even dried apricots in her presence; but with her own hand
she had brushed aside the veil of constraint that had hung between
them.</p>
<p>"I wish I'd thought to bring a prune pie," he told her daringly,
in his eagerness half strangling over a crumb of cake.</p>
<p>"Nobody wants prune pie at a picnic," declared one of the fat
women sententiously. "You might as well bring fried bacon and done
with it."</p>
<p>"Picnics," added the other and fatter woman, "iss for getting
somet'ings t' eat yuh don'd haff every day at home." To point the
moral she reached for a plate of fluted and iced molasses
cakes.</p>
<p>"I <i>love</i> prune pies," asserted Miss Bridger, and laughed
at the snorts which came from either side.</p>
<p>Billy felt himself four inches taller just then. "Give me stewed
prairie-chicken," he stooped to murmur in her ear—or, to be
exact, in the blue bow on her hat.</p>
<p>"Ach, you folks didn'd ought to come to a picnic!" grunted the
fatter woman in disgust.</p>
<p>The two who had the secret between them laughed confidentially,
and Miss Bridger even turned her head away around so that their
eyes could meet and emphasize the joke.</p>
<p>Billy looked down at the big, blue bow and at the soft, blue
ruffly stuff on her shoulders—stuff that was just thin enough
so that one caught elusive suggestions of the soft, pinky flesh
beneath—and wondered vaguely why he had never noticed the
beating in his throat before—and what would happen if he
reached around and tilted back her chin and—"Thunder! I guess
I've sure got 'em, all right!" he brought himself up angrily, and
refrained from carrying the subject farther.</p>
<p>It was rumored that the dancing would shortly begin in the
schoolhouse up the hill, and Billy realized suddenly with some
compunction that he had forgotten all about Dill. "I want to
introduce my new boss to yuh, Miss Bridger," he said when they had
left the table and she was smoothing down the ruffly blue stuff in
an adorably feminine way. "He isn't much just to look at, but he's
the whitest man I ever knew. You wait here a minute and I'll go
find him"—which was a foolish thing for him to do, as he
afterward found out.</p>
<p>For when he had hunted the whole length of the grove, he found
Dill standing like a blasted pine tree in the middle of a circle of
men—men who were married, and so were not wholly taken up
with the feminine element—and he was discoursing to them
earnestly and grammatically upon the capitalistic tendencies of
modern politics. Billy stood and listened long enough to see that
there was no hope of weaning his interest immediately, and then
went back to where he had left Miss Bridger. She was not there. He
looked through the nearest groups, approached one of the fat women,
who was industriously sorting the remains of the feast and
depositing the largest and most attractive pieces of cake in her
own basket, and made bold to inquire if she knew where Miss Bridger
had gone.</p>
<p>"Gone home after some prune pie, I guess maybe," she retorted
quellingly, and Billy asked no farther.</p>
<p>Later he caught sight of a blue flutter in the swing;
investigated and saw that it was Miss Bridger, and that the
Pilgrim, smiling and with his hat set jauntily back on his head,
was pushing the swing. They did not catch sight of Billy for he did
not linger there. He turned short around, walked purposefully out
to the edge of the grove where his horse was feeding at the end of
his rope, picked up the rope and led the horse over to where his
saddle lay on its side, the neatly folded saddle-blanket laid
across it. "Darn it, stand still!" he growled unjustly, when the
horse merely took the liberty of switching a fly off his rump.
Billy picked up the blanket, shook the wrinkles out mechanically,
held it before him ready to lay across the waiting back of Barney;
shook it again, hesitated and threw it violently back upon the
saddle.</p>
<p>"Go on off—I don't want nothing of yuh," he admonished the
horse, which turned and looked at him inquiringly. "I ain't through
yet—I got another chip to put up." He made him a cigarette,
lighted it and strolled nonchalantly back to the grove.</p>
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