<h2>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
<h3><i>The End of the Double-Crank.</i></h3>
<p>Dill himself rode on that last round-up. Considering that it was
all new to him, he made a remarkably good record for himself among
the men, who were more than once heard to remark that
"Dill-pickle's sure making a hand!" Wherever Billy went—and
in those weeks Billy rode and worked with a feverish intensity that
was merely a fight against bitter thinking—Dill's stirrup
clacked close alongside. He was silent, for the most part, but
sometimes he talked reminiscently of Michigan and his earlier life
there. Seldom did he refer to the unhappy end of the Double-Crank,
or to the reason why they were riding from dawn to dusk, sweeping
together all the cattle within the wide circle of riders and later
cutting out every Double-Crank animal and holding them under
careful herd.</p>
<p>Even when they went with the first twelve hundred and turned
them over to Brown and watched his careful counting, Dill made no
comment upon the reason for it beyond one sentence. He read the
receipt over slowly before laying it methodically in the proper
compartment of his long red-leather book, and drew his features
into his puckered imitation of a smile. "Mr. Brown has counted just
twenty-one dollars more into my pocket than I expected," he
remarked. "He tallied one more than you did, William. I ought to
hold that out of your wages, young man."</p>
<p>Rare as were Dill's efforts at joking, even this failed to bring
more than a slight smile to the face of Charming Billy Boyle. He
was trying to look upon it all as a mere incident, a business
matter, pure and simple, but he could not. While he rode the wide
open reaches, there rode with him the keen realization that it was
the end. For him the old life on the range was dead—for had
not Dill made him see it so? And did not every raw-red fencepost
proclaim anew its death? For every hill and every coulée he
buried something of his past and wept secretly beside the grave.
For every whiff of breakfast that mingled with the smell of clean
air in the morning came a pang of homesickness for what would soon
be only a memory.</p>
<p>He was at heart a dreamer—was Charming Billy Boyle;
perhaps an idealist—possibly a sentimentalist. He had never
tried to find a name for the side of his life that struck deepest.
He knew that the ripple of a meadow-lark swinging on a weed against
the sunrise, with diamond-sparkles all on the grass around, gripped
him and hurt him vaguely with its very sweetness. He knew that he
loved to sit alone and look away to a far skyline and day-dream. He
had always known that, for it had been as much a part of his life
as sleeping.</p>
<p>So now it was as if a real, tangible shadow lay on the range. He
could see it always lengthening before him, and always he must ride
within its shade. After a while it would grow quite black, and the
range and the cattle and the riding over hills and into
coulées untamed would all be blotted out; dead and buried
deep in the past, and with the careless, plodding feet of the
plowman trampling unthinkingly upon the grave. It was a tragedy to
Charming Billy Boyle; it was as if the range-land were a woman he
loved well, and as if civilization were the despoiler, against whom
he had no means of defense.</p>
<p>All this—and besides, Flora. He had not spoken to her for
two months. He had not seen her even, save for a passing glimpse
now and then at a distance. He had not named her to any man, or
asked how she did—and yet there had not been an hour when he
had not longed for her. She had told him she would marry the
Pilgrim (she had <i>not</i> said that, but Billy in his rage had so
understood her) and that he could not stop her. He wouldn't
<i>try</i> to stop her. But he would one day settle with the
Pilgrim—settle to the full. And he wanted
her—<i>wanted</i> her!</p>
<p>They had taken the third herd in to Brown, and were back on the
range; Billy meaning to make a last sweep around the outer edges
and gather in what was left—the stragglers that had been
missed before. There would not be many, he knew from experience;
probably not more than a hundred or two all told, even with Billy
anxious to make the count as large as possible.</p>
<p>He was thinking about it uneasily and staring out across the
wide coulée to the red tumble of clouds, that had strange
purples and grays and dainty violet shades here and there. Down at
the creek Dill was trying to get a trout or two more before it grew
too dark for them to rise to the raw beef he was swishing through
the riffle, and an impulse to have the worst over at once and be
done drove Billy down to interrupt.</p>
<p>"Yuh won't get any more there," he said, by way of making
speech.</p>
<p>"I just then had a bite, William," reproved Dill, and swung the
bait in a wide circle for another awkward cast. He was a persistent
soul, was Dill, when once he got started in a given direction.</p>
<p>Billy, dodging the red morsel of meat, sat down on a grassy
hummock. "Aw, come and set down, Dilly," he urged wearily. "I want
to tell yuh something."</p>
<p>"If it's about the cook being out of evaporated cream, William,
I have already been informed twice. Ah-h! I almost had one
then!"</p>
<p>"Aw, thunder! yuh think I'm worrying over canned cream? What I
want to say may not be more important, but when yuh get fishing
enough I'll say it anyhow." He watched Dill moodily, and then
lifted his eyes to stare at the gorgeous sky—as though there
would be no more sunsets when the range-life was gone, and he must
needs fill well his memory for the barren years ahead.</p>
<p>When Dill flopped a six-inch trout against his ear, so steeped
was he in bitterness that he merely said, "Aw, hell!" wearily and
hunched farther along on the hummock.</p>
<p>"I really beg your pardon, William. From the vicious strike he
made, I was convinced that he weighed at least half a pound, and
exerted more muscular force than was quite necessary. When one
hasn't a reel it is impossible to play them properly, and it is the
first quick pull that one must depend upon. I'm very
sorry—"</p>
<p>"Sure. Don't mention it, Dilly. Say, how many cattle have yuh
got receipts for, to date—if it ain't too much trouble?"</p>
<p>"No trouble at all, William. I have an excellent memory for
figures. Four thousand, three hundred and fifteen. Ah-h! See how
instinct inspires him to flop always toward the water! Did you
ever—"</p>
<p>"Well, yes, I've saw a fish flop toward the water once or twicet
before now. It sure is a great sight, Dilly!" He did not understand
Dill these days, and wondered a good deal at his manifest
indifference to business cares. It never occurred to him that Dill,
knowing quite well how hard the trouble pressed upon his foreman,
was only trying in his awkward way to lighten it by not seeming to
think it worth worrying over.</p>
<p>"I hate to mention trifles at such a time, Dilly, but I thought
maybe yuh ought to know that we won't be able to scare up more than
a couple uh hundred more cattle, best we can do. We're bound to
fall a lot short uh what I estimated—and I ain't saying
nothing about the fine job uh guessing I done! If we bring the
total up to forty-five hundred, we'll do well."</p>
<p>Dill took plenty of time to wind the line around his willow
pole. "To use your own expressive phraseology, William," he said,
when he had quite finished and had laid the pole down on the bank,
"that will leave me in one hell-of-a-hole!"</p>
<p>"That's what I thought," Billy returned apathetically.</p>
<p>"Well, I must take these up to the cook." Dill held up the four
fish he had caught. "I'll think the matter over, William, and I
thank you for telling me. Of course you will go on and gather what
there are."</p>
<p>"Sure," agreed Billy tonelessly, and followed Dill back to camp
and went to bed.</p>
<p>At daybreak it was raining, and Billy after the manner of
cowboys slept late; for there would be no riding until the weather
cleared, and there being no herd to hold, there would be none
working save the horse-wrangler, the night-hawk and cook. It was
the cook who handed him a folded paper and a sealed envelope when
he did finally appear for a cup of coffee. "Dill-pickle left 'em
for yuh," he said.</p>
<p>Billy read the note—just a few lines, with a frown of
puzzlement.</p>
<p>Dear William: Business compels my absence for a time. I hope you
will go on with your plans exactly as if I were with you. I am
leaving a power-of-attorney which will enable you to turn over the
stock and transact any other business that may demand immediate
attention, in case I am detained.</p>
<p>Yours truly,</p>
<p>Alexander P. Dill</p>
<p>It was queer, but Billy did not waste much time in wondering. He
rounded up the last of the Double-Cranks, drove them to Brown's
place and turned them over, with the home ranch, the horses, and
camp outfit—"made a clean sweep uh the whole damn', hoodooed
works," was the way he afterward put it. He had expected that Dill
would be there to attend to the last legal forms, but there was no
sign of him or from him. He had been seen to take the eastbound
train at Tower, and the rest was left to guessing.</p>
<p>"He must uh known them two-hundred odd wouldn't square the
deal," argued Billy loyally to himself. "So uh course he'll come
back and fix it up. But what I'm to do about payin' off the boys
gets me." For two hours he worried, mentally in the dark. Then he
hit upon an expedient that pleased him. He told Brown he would need
to keep a few of the saddle-horses for a few days, and he sent the
boys—those of them who did not transfer their valuable
services to Brown upon the asking—over to the Bridger place
to wait there until further orders.</p>
<p>Also, he rode reluctantly to the Double-Crank ranch, wondering,
as he had often done in the past few weeks, what would become of
Flora and Mama Joy. So far as he knew, they had not heard a word as
to whether Bridger was alive or dead, and if they had friends or
family to whom they might turn, he had never heard either mention
them. If Dill had been there he would have left it to him; but Dill
was gone, and there was no knowing when he would be back, and it
devolved upon Billy to make some arrangements for the women, or at
the least offer his services—and it was, under the
circumstances, quite the most unpleasant duty thus far laid upon
him.</p>
<p>He knew they had been left there at the ranch when round-up
started, because Dill had said something about leaving a gentle
horse or two for them to ride. Whether they were still there he did
not know, although he could easily have asked Spikes, who had been
given charge of the ranch while Dill was away on the range. He
supposed the Pilgrim would be hanging around, as usual—not
that it made much difference, though, except that he hated the
thought of a disagreeable scene before the women.</p>
<p>He rode slowly up to the corral gate, turned his horse inside
and fastened the chain just as he had done a thousand times
before—only this would be the last time. His tired eyes went
from one familiar object to another, listlessly aware of the regret
he should feel but too utterly wearied of sorrow to feel much of
anything. No one seemed to be about, and the whole place had an
atmosphere of desolation that almost stirred him to a
heartache—almost.</p>
<p>He went on to the house. There were some signs of life there,
and some sound. In the very doorway he met old Bridger himself, but
he could not even feel much surprise at seeing him there. He said
hello, and when he saw the other's hand stretching out to meet him,
he clasped it indifferently. Behind her husband, Mama Joy flashed
at him a look he did not try to interpret—of a truth it was
rather complex, with a little of several emotions—and he
lifted his hat a half-inch from his forehead in deference to her
sex. Flora, he thanked God dully, he did not see at all.</p>
<p>He stayed perhaps ten minutes listening impersonally to Bridger,
who talked loudly and enthusiastically of his plans. At the time
they did not seem to concern him at all, though they involved
taking Flora and Mama Joy away to Seattle to spend the winter, and
in the spring moving them on to some place in the North—a
place that sounded strange in the ears of Billy, and was
straightway forgotten.</p>
<p>After that he went to his room and packed what few things he
wanted; and they were not many, because in his present mood nothing
mattered and nothing seemed to him of much value—not even
life. He was more careful of Dill's belongings, and packed
everything he could find that was his. They were not scattered, for
Dill was a methodical man and kept things in their places
instinctively.</p>
<p>He paused over but one object—"The Essays of Elia," which
had somehow fallen behind a trunk. Standing there in the middle of
Dill's room, he turned the little blue book absently in his hand.
There was dust upon the other side, and he wiped it off, manlike,
with a sweep of his forearm. He looked at the trunk; he had just
locked it with much straining of muscles and he hated to open it
again. He looked at the book again. He seemed to see Dill slumped
loosely down in the old rocker, a slippered foot dangling before
him, reading solemnly from this same little blue book, the day he
came to tell him about the ditch, and that he must lease all the
land he could—the day when the shadow of passing first
touched the range-land. At least, the day when he had first seen it
there. He turned a few leaves thoughtfully, heard Flora's voice
asking a question in the kitchen, and thrust the book hastily into
his pocket. "Dilly'll want it, I expect," he muttered. He glanced
quickly, comprehensively around him to make sure that he had missed
nothing, turned toward the open front door and went out hurriedly,
because he thought he heard a woman's step in the dining room and
he did not want to see anybody, not even Flora—least of all,
Flora!</p>
<p>"I'll send a rig out from town for the stuff that's ours," he
called back to Bridger, who came to the kitchen door and called
after him that he better wait and have some supper. "You'll be here
till to-morrow or next day; it ain't likely I'll be back; yuh say
Dill settled up with the—women, so—there's nothing left
to do."</p>
<p>If he had known—but how could he know that Flora was
watching him wistfully from the front porch, when he never once
looked toward the house after he reached the stable?</p>
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