<h2> CHAPTER X </h2>
<h3> In Which the Demon Opens an Eye and Yawns </h3>
<br/>
<p>A storm held the Double Cross wagons in a sheltered place in the
hills, ten miles from the little town where Ford had spent a
night on his way to the ranch a month before. Mason, taking the
inaction as an excuse, rode home to his family and left Ford to
his own devices with no compunctions whatever. He should,
perhaps, have known better; but he was acting upon his belief
that nothing so braces a man as the absolute confidence of his
friends, and to have stayed in camp on Ford's account would,
according to Mason's code, have been an affront to Ford's
manifest determination to "make good."</p>
<p>It is true that neither had mentioned the matter since the day of
Ford's arrival at the ranch; men do not, as a rule, harp upon the
deeper issues within their lives. For that month, it had been as
though the subject of intemperance concerned them as little as
the political unrest of a hot-tempered people beyond the equator.
They had argued the matter to a more or less satisfactory
conclusion, and had let it rest there.</p>
<p>Ford had ridden with him a part of the way, and when they came to
a certain fork in the trail, he had sent a whimsically solemn
message to Buddy, had pulled the collar of his coat closer
together under his chin, and had faced the wind with a clean
conscience, and with bowed head and hat pulled low over his
brows. There were at least three perfectly valid reasons why Ford
should ride into town that day. He wanted heavier socks and a new
pair of gloves; he was almost out of tobacco, and wanted to see
if he could "pick up" another man so that the hours of
night-guarding might not fall so heavily upon the crew. Ford had
been standing the last guard himself, for the last week, to
relieve the burden a little, and Mason had been urgent on the
subject of another man—or two, he suggested, would be
better. Ford did his simple shopping, therefore, and then rode up
to the first saloon on the one little street, and dismounted with
a mind at ease. If idle men were to be found in that town, he
would have to look for them in a saloon; a fact which every one
took for granted, like the shortening of the days as winter
approached.</p>
<p>Perhaps he over-estimated his powers of endurance, or
under-estimated the strength of his enemy. Certain it is that he
had no intention of drinking whisky when he closed the door upon
the chill wind; and yet, he involuntarily walked straight up to
the bar. There he stuck. The bartender waited expectantly. When
Ford, with a sudden lift of his head, turned away to the stove,
the man looked after him curiously.</p>
<p>At the stove Ford debated with himself while he drew off his
gloves and held his fingers to the welcome heat which emanated
from a red glow where the fire burned hottest within. He had not
made any promise to himself or any one else, he remembered. He
had simply resolved that he would make good, if it were humanly
possible to do so. That, he told himself, did not necessarily
mean that he should turn a teetotaler out and out. Taking a
drink, when a man was cold and felt the need of it, was
not—</p>
<p>At that point in the argument two of his own men entered,
stamping noisily upon the threshold. They were laughing, from
pure animal satisfaction over the comforts within, rather than at
any tangible cause for mirth, and they called to Ford with easy
comradeship. Dick Thomas—the Dick whom Buddy had mentioned
in connection with Josephine—waved his hand hospitably
toward the bar.</p>
<p>"Come on, Campbell," he invited. He may have seen the hesitancy
in Ford's face, for he laughed. "I believe in starting on the
inside and driving the frost out," he said.</p>
<p>The two poured generously from the bottle which the bartender
pushed within easy reach, and Ford watched them. There was a
peculiar lift to Dick's upper lip—the lift which comes when
scorn is the lever. Ford's eyes hardened a little; he walked over
and stood beside Dick, and he took a drink as unemotionally as if
it had been water. He ordered another round, threw a coin upon
the bar, and walked out. He had rather liked Dick, in an
impersonal sort of way, but that half-sneer clung disagreeably to
his memory. A man likes to be held the master—be the slave
circumstance, danger, an opposing human, or his own appetite; and
although Ford was not the type of man who troubles himself much
about the opinions of his fellows, it irked him much that Dick or
any other man should sneer at him for a weakling.</p>
<p>He went to another saloon, found and hired a cow-puncher strayed
up from Valley County, and when Dick came in, a half-hour later,
Ford went to the bar and deliberately "called up the house." He
had been minded to choose a mineral water then, but he caught
Dick's mocking eye upon him, and instead took whisky straight,
and stared challengingly at the other over the glass tilted
against his lips.</p>
<p>After that, the liquor itself waged relentless war against his
good resolutions, so that it did not need the urge of Dick's
fancied derision to send him down the trail which the past had
made familiar. He sat in to a poker game that was creating a
small zone of subdued excitement at the far end of the room, and
while he was arranging his stacks of red, white, and blue chips
neatly before him, he was unpleasantly conscious of Dick's
supercilious smile. Never mind—he was not the first foreman
who ever played poker; they all did, when the mood seized them.
Ford straightened his shoulders instinctively, in defiance of
certain inner misgivings, and pushed forward his ante of two
white chips.</p>
<p>Jim Felton came up and stood at his shoulder, watching the game
in silence; and although he did not once open his lips except to
let an occasional thin ribbon of cigarette smoke drift out and
away to mingle with the blue cloud which hung under the ceiling,
Ford sensed a certain good-will in his nearness, just as
intangibly and yet as surely as he sensed Dick's sardonic
amusement at his apparent lapse.</p>
<p>With every bet he made and won he felt that silent approbation
behind him; insensibly it steadied Ford and sharpened his
instinct for reading the faces of the other players, so that the
miniature towers of red chips and blue grew higher until they
threatened to topple—whereupon other little towers began to
grow up around them. And the men in the saloon began to feel the
fascination of his success, so that they grouped themselves about
his chair and peered down over his shoulder at the game.</p>
<p>Ford gave them no thought, except a vague satisfaction, now and
then, that Jim Felton stuck to his post. Later, when he caught
the dealer, a slit-eyed, sallow-skinned fellow with fingers all
too nimble, slipping a card from the bottom of the deck, and gave
him a resounding slap which sent him and his cards sprawling all
over that locality, he should have been more than ever glad that
Jim was present.</p>
<p>Jim kept back the gambler's partner and the crowd and gave Ford
elbow-room and some moral support, which did its part, in that it
prevented any interference with the chastisement Ford was
administering.</p>
<p>It was not a fight, properly speaking. The gambler, once Ford had
finished cuffing him and stating his opinion of cheating the
while, backed away and muttered vague threats and maledictions.
Ford gathered together what chips he felt certain were his, and
cashed them in with a certain grim insistence of manner which
brooked no argument. After that he left the saloon, with Jim
close behind him.</p>
<p>"If you're going back to camp now, I reckon I'll ride along,"
said Jim, at his elbow. "There's just nice time to get there for
supper—and I sure don't want to miss flopping my lip over
Mose's beefsteak; that yearling we beefed this morning is going
to make some fine eating, if you ask me." His tone was absolutely
devoid of anything approaching persuasion; it simply took a
certain improbable thing as a commonplace fact, and it tilted the
balance of Ford's intentions.</p>
<p>He did not go on to the next saloon, as he had started to do, but
instead he followed Jim to the livery stable and got his horse,
without realizing that Jim had anything to do with the change of
impulse. So Ford went to camp, instead of spending the night
riotously in town as he would otherwise have done, and contented
himself with cursing the game, the gambler who would have given a
"crooked deal," the town, and all it contained. A mile out, he
would have returned for a bottle of whisky; but Jim said he had
enough for two, and put his horse into a lope. Ford, swayed by a
blind instinct to stay with the man who seemed friendly, followed
the pace he set and so was unconsciously led out of the way of
further temptation. And so artfully was he led, that he never
once suspected that he did not go of his own accord.</p>
<p>Neither did he suspect that Jim's stumbling and immediate spasm
of regretful profanity at the bed-wagon where they unsaddled, was
the result of two miles of deep cogitation, and calculated to
account plausibly for not being able to produce a full flask upon
demand. Jim swore volubly and said he had "busted the bottle" by
falling against the wagon wheel; and Ford, for a wonder, believed
and did not ask for proof. He muddled around camp for a few
indecisive minutes, then rolled himself up like a giant cocoon in
his blankets, and slept heavily through the night.</p>
<p>He awoke at daylight, found himself fully clothed and with a
craving for whisky which he knew of old, and tried to remember
just what had occurred the night before; when he could not recall
anything very distinctly, he felt the first twinge of fear that
he had known for years.</p>
<p>"Lordy me! I wonder what kinda fool I made of myself, anyway!" he
thought distressfully. Later, when he discovered more money in
his pockets than his salary would account for, and remembered
playing poker, and having an argument of some sort with some one,
his distress grew upon him. In reality he had not done anything
disgraceful, according to the easy judgment of his fellows; but
Ford did not know that, and he flayed himself unmercifully for a
spineless, drunken idiot whom no man could respect or trust. It
seemed to him that the men eyed him askance; though they were
merely envious over his winnings and inclined to admire the
manner in which he had shown his disapproval of the dealer's
attempt at cheating.</p>
<p>He dreaded Mason's return, and yet he was anxious to see him and
tell him, once for all, that he was not to be trusted. He held
aloof from Jim and he was scantily civil to Dick Thomas, whose
friendship rang false. He pushed the work ahead while the air was
still alive with swirls of mote-like snowflakes, and himself bore
the brunt of it just to dull that gnawing self-disgust which made
his waking hours a mental torment.</p>
<p>Before, when disgust had seized upon him in Sunset, it had been
an abstract rebellion against the futility of life as he was
living it. This was different: This was a definite, concrete
sense of failure to keep faith with himself and with Mason; the
sickening consciousness of a swinish return to the wallow; a
distrust of himself that was beyond any emotion he had ever felt
in his life.</p>
<p>So, for a week of hard work and harder thinking. Mason sent word
by a migratory cowboy, who had stopped all night at the ranch and
whom he had hired and sent on to camp, that he would not return
to the round-up, and that Ford was to go ahead as they had
planned. That balked Ford's determination to turn the work over
to Mason and leave the country, and, after the first day of inner
rebellion, he settled down insensibly to the task before him and
let his own peculiar moral problem wait upon his leisure. He did
not dream that the cowboy had witnessed his chastisement of the
gambler and had gleefully, and in perfect innocence, recounted
the incident at the Double Cross ranch, and that Mason had
deliberately thrown Ford upon his own resources in obedience to
his theory that nothing so braces a man as responsibility.</p>
<p>Ford went about his business with grim industry and a sureness of
judgment born of his thorough knowledge of range work. There was
the winnowing process which left the bigger, stronger calves in
charge of two men, at a line camp known locally as Ten Mile, and
took the younger ones on to the home ranch, where hay and shelter
were more plentiful and the loss would be correspondingly less.</p>
<p>Not until the last cow of the herd was safe inside the big corral
beyond the stables, did Ford relax his vigilance and ride over to
where Ches Mason and Buddy were standing in the shelter of the
stable, waiting to greet him.</p>
<p>"Good boy!" cried Mason, when Ford dismounted and flung the
stirrup up over the saddle, that he might loosen the latigo and
free his steaming horse of its burden. "I didn't look for you
before to-morrow night, at the earliest. But I'm mighty glad
you're here, let me tell you. That leaves me free to hit the
trail to-morrow. I've got to make a trip home; the old man's down
with inflammatory rheumatism, and they want me to
go—haven't been home for six years, so I guess they've got
a license to put in a bid for a month or two of my time, huh? I
didn't want to pull out, though, till you showed up. I'm kinda
leery about leaving the women alone, with just a couple of
sow-egians on the ranch. Bud, you go get a pan of oats for old
Schley. Supper's about ready, Ford. Have the boys shovel some hay
into the corral, and we'll leave the bunch there till morning.
Say, the wagons didn't beat you much; they never pulled in till
after three. Mose says the going's bad, on them dobe patches."</p>
<p>Not much of an opening, that, for saying what Ford felt he was in
duty bound to say. He was constrained to wait until a better
opportunity presented itself—and, as is the way with
opportunity, it did not seem as if it would ever come of its own
accord. There was Buddy, full of exciting anecdotes about
Rambler, and how he had rubbed the liniment on, all alone, and
Rambler never kicked or did a thing; and how he and Josephine
rode clear over to Jenson's and got caught in the storm and
almost got lost—only Buddy's horse knew the way home. And,
later, there was Mrs. Kate's excellent supper and gracious
welcome, and an evening devoted to four-handed
cribbage—with Josephine and Mason as implacable
adversaries—and a steady undercurrent of latent hostility
between him and the girl, which prevented his thinking much about
himself and his duty to Mason. There was everything, in fact, to
thwart a man's resolution to discharge honorably a disagreeable
duty, and to distract his attention.</p>
<p>Ford went to bed with the baffled sense of being placed in a
false position against his will; and, man-like, he speedily gave
over thinking of that, and permitted his thoughts to dwell upon a
certain face which owned a perfectly amazing pair of lashes, and
upon a manner tantalizingly aloof, with glimpses now and then of
fascinating possibilities in the way of comradeship, when the
girl inadvertently lowered her guard in the excitement of close
playing.</p>
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