<h2>CHAPTER V</h2><h3>DAKOTA EVENS A SCORE</h3>
<p>With the thermometer at one hundred
and five it was not to be expected
that there would be much
movement in Lazette. As a matter of fact,
there was little movement anywhere. On
the plains, which began at the edge of town,
there was no movement, no life except
when a lizard, seeking a retreat from the
blistering sun, removed itself to a deeper
shade under the leaves of the sage-brush, or
a prairie-dog, popping its head above the
surface of the sand, took a lightning survey
of its surroundings, and apparently dissatisfied
with the outlook whisked back into
the bowels of the earth.</p>
<p>There was no wind, no motion; the little
whirlwinds of dust that arose settled quickly
down, the desultory breezes which had
caused them departing as mysteriously as
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_89' name='page_89'></SPAN>89</span>
they had come. In the blighting heat the
country lay, dead, spreading to the infinite
horizons; in the sky no speck floated against
the dome of blue. More desolate than a
derelict on the calm surface of the trackless
ocean Lazette lay, its huddled buildings
dingy with the dust of a continuing dry season,
squatting in their dismal lonesomeness
in the shimmering, blinding sun.</p>
<p>In a strip of shade under the eaves of
the station sat the station agent, gazing
drowsily from under the wide brim of his
hat at the two glistening lines of steel that
stretched into the interminable distance.
Some cowponies, hitched to rails in front
of the saloons and the stores, stood with
drooping heads, tormented by myriad flies;
a wagon or two, minus horses, occupied a
space in front of a blacksmith shop.</p>
<p>In the Red Dog saloon some punchers on
a holiday played cards at various tables,
quietly drinking. Behind the rough bar
Pete Moulin, the proprietor stood, talking
to his bartender, Blacky.</p>
<p>“So that jasper’s back again,” commented
the proprietor.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_90' name='page_90'></SPAN>90</span></p>
<p>“Which?” The bartender followed the
proprietor’s gaze, which was on a man
seated at a card table, his profile toward
them, playing cards with several other men.
The bartender’s face showed perplexity.</p>
<p>Moulin laughed. “I forgot you ain’t
been here that long,” he said. “That was
before your time. That fellow settin’ sideways
to us is Texas Blanca.”</p>
<p>“What’s he callin’ himself ‘Texas’ for?”
queried the bartender. “He looks more like
a greaser.”</p>
<p>“Breed, I reckon,” offered the proprietor.
“Claims to have punched cows in
Texas before he come here.”</p>
<p>“What’s he allowin’ to be now?”</p>
<p>“Nobody knows. Used to own the Star—Dakota’s
brand. Sold out to Dakota five
years ago. Country got too hot for him an’
he had to pull his freight.”</p>
<p>“Rustler?”</p>
<p>“You’ve said something. He’s been suspected
of it. But nobody’s talkin’ very loud
about it.”</p>
<p>“Not safe?”</p>
<p>“Not safe. He’s lightning with a six.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_91' name='page_91'></SPAN>91</span>
Got his nerve to come back here, though.”</p>
<p>“How’s that?”</p>
<p>“Ain’t you heard about it? I thought
everybody’d heard about that deal. Blanca
sold Dakota the Star. Then he pulled his
freight immediate. A week or so later Duncan,
of the Double R, rides up to Dakota’s
shack with a bunch of Double R boys an’
accuses Dakota of rustlin’ Double R cattle.
Duncan had found twenty Double R calves
runnin’ with the Star cattle which had been
marked secret. Blanca had run his iron on
them an’ sold them to Dakota for Star stock.
Dakota showed Duncan his bill of sale, all
regular, an’ of course Duncan couldn’t
blame him. But there was some hard words
passed between Duncan an’ Dakota, an’
Dakota ain’t allowin’ they’re particular
friends since.</p>
<p>“Dakota had to give up the calves, sure
enough, an’ he did. But sore! Dakota was
sure some disturbed in his mind. He didn’t
show it much, bein’ one of them quiet kind,
but he says to me one day not long after
Duncan had got the calves back: ‘I’ve
been stung, Pete,’ he says, soft an’ even like;
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_92' name='page_92'></SPAN>92</span>
‘I’ve been stung proper, by that damned
oiler. Not that I’m carin’ for the money
end of it; Duncan findin’ them calves with
my stock has damaged my reputation.’
Then he laffed—one of them little short
laffs which he gets off sometimes when
things don’t just suit him—the way he’s
laffed a couple of times when someone’s
tried to run a cold lead proposition in on
him. He fair freezes my blood when he
gets it off.</p>
<p>“Well, he says to me: ‘Mebbe I’ll be
runnin’ in with Blanca one of these days.’
An’ that’s all he ever says about it. Likely
he expected Blanca to come back. An’ sure
enough he has. Reckon he thinks that
mebbe Dakota didn’t get wise to the calf
deal.”</p>
<p>“In his place,” said Blacky, eyeing
Blanca furtively, “I’d be makin’ some inquiries.
Dakota ain’t no man to trifle
with.”</p>
<p>“Trifle!” Moulin’s voice was pregnant
with awed admiration. “I reckon there
ain’t no one who knows Dakota’s goin’ to
trifle with him—he’s discouraged that long
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_93' name='page_93'></SPAN>93</span>
ago. Square, too, square as they make ’em.”</p>
<p>“The Lord knows the country needs
square men,” observed Blacky.</p>
<p>He caught a sign from a man seated
at a table and went over to him with a bottle
and a glass. While Blacky was engaged in
this task the door opened and Dakota came
in.</p>
<p>Moulin’s admiration and friendship for
Dakota might have impelled him to warn
Dakota of the presence of Blanca, and he
did hold up a covert finger, but Dakota at
that moment was looking in another direction
and did not observe the signal.</p>
<p>He continued to approach the bar and
Blacky, having a leisure moment, came forward
and stood ready to serve him. A short
nod of greeting passed between the three,
and Blacky placed a bottle on the bar and
reached for a glass. Dakota made a negative
sign with his head—short and resolute.</p>
<p>“I’m in for supplies,” he laughed, “but
not that.”</p>
<p>“Not drinkin’?” queried Moulin.</p>
<p>“I’m pure as the driven snow,” drawled
Dakota.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_94' name='page_94'></SPAN>94</span></p>
<p>“How long has that been goin’ on?”
Moulin’s grin was skeptical.</p>
<p>“A month.”</p>
<p>Moulin looked searchingly at Dakota,
saw that he was in earnest, and suddenly
reached a hand over the bar.</p>
<p>“Shake!” he said. “I hate to knock my
own business, an’ you’ve been a pretty good
customer, but if you mean it, it’s the most
sensible thing you ever done. Of course you
didn’t hit it regular, but there’s been times
when I’ve thought that if I could have three
or four customers like you I’d retire in a
year an’ spend the rest of my life countin’
my dust!” He was suddenly serious, catching
Dakota’s gaze and winking expressively.</p>
<p>“Friend of yourn here,” he said.</p>
<p>Dakota took a flashing glance at the men
at the card tables and Moulin saw his lips
straighten and harden. But in the next
instant he was smiling gravely at the proprietor.</p>
<p>“Thanks, Pete,” he said quietly. “But
you’re some reckless with the English language
when you’re calling him my friend.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_95' name='page_95'></SPAN>95</span>
Maybe he’ll be proving that he didn’t mean
to skin me on that deal.”</p>
<p>He smiled again and then left the bar and
strode toward Blanca. The latter continued
his card playing, apparently unaware
of Dakota’s approach, but at the sound of
his former victim’s voice he turned and
looked up slowly, his face wearing a bland
smile.</p>
<p>It was plain to Moulin that Blanca had
known all along of Dakota’s presence in the
saloon—perhaps he had seen him enter.
The other card players ceased playing and
leaned back in their chairs, watching, for
some of them knew something of the calf
deal, and there was that in Dakota’s greeting
to Blanca which warned them of impending
trouble.</p>
<p>“Blanca,” said Dakota quietly, “you can
pay for those calves now.”</p>
<p>It pleased Blanca to dissemble. But it
was plain to Moulin—as it must have been
plain to everybody who watched Blanca—that
a shadow crossed his face at Dakota’s
words. Evidently he had entertained a hope
that his duplicity had not been discovered.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_96' name='page_96'></SPAN>96</span></p>
<p>“Calves?” he said. “What calves, my
frien’?” He dropped his cards to the table
and turned his chair around, leaning far
back in it and hooking his right thumb in
his cartridge belt, just above the holster
of his pistol. “I theenk it mus’ be mistak’.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” returned Dakota, a slow, grimly
humorous smile reaching his face, “it was
a mistake. You made it, Blanca. Duncan
found it out. Duncan took the calves—they
belonged to him. You’re going to pay for
them.”</p>
<p>“I pay for heem?” The bland smile on
Blanca’s face had slowly faded with the realization
that his victim was not to be further
misled by him. In place of the smile his
face now wore an expression of sneering
contempt, and his black eyes had taken on
a watchful glitter. He spoke slowly: “I
pay for no calves, my frien’.”</p>
<p>“You’ll pay,” said Dakota, an ominously
quiet drawl in his voice, “or——”</p>
<p>“Or what?” Blanca showed his white
teeth in a tigerish smirk.</p>
<p>“This town ain’t big enough for both of
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_97' name='page_97'></SPAN>97</span>
us,” said Dakota, his eyes cold and alert as
they watched Blanca’s hand at his cartridge
belt. “One of us will leave it by sundown.
I reckon that’s all.”</p>
<p>He deliberately turned his back on
Blanca and walked to the door, stepping
down into the street. Blanca looked after
him, sneering. An instant later Blanca
turned and smiled at his companions at the
table.</p>
<p>“It ain’t my funeral,” said one of the
card players, “but if I was in your place
I’d begin to think that me stayin’ here was
crowdin’ the population of this town by
one.”</p>
<p>Blanca’s teeth gleamed. “My frien’,” he
said insinuatingly, “it’s your deal.” His
smile grew. “Thees is a nize country,” he
continued. “I like it ver’ much. I come
back here to stay. Dakota—hees got the
Star too cheap.” He tapped his gun holster
significantly. “To-night Dakota hees
go somewhere else. To-morrow who takes
the Star? You?” He pointed to each of
the card players in turn. “You?” he questioned.
“You take it?” He smiled at their
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_98' name='page_98'></SPAN>98</span>
negative signs. “Well, then, Blanca take
it. Peste! Dakota give himself till sundown!”</p>
<hr class='tb' />
<p>The six-o’clock was an hour and thirty
minutes late. For two hours Sheila Langford
had been on the station platform awaiting
its coming. For a full half hour she had
stood at one corner of the platform straining
her eyes to watch a thin skein of smoke
that trailed off down the horizon, but which
told her that the train was coming. It
crawled slowly—like a huge serpent—over
the wilderness of space, growing always
larger, steaming its way through the golden
sunshine of the afternoon, and after a time,
with a grinding of brakes and the shrill hiss
of escaping air, it drew alongside the station
platform.</p>
<p>A brakeman descended, the conductor
strode stiffly to the telegrapher’s window,
two trunks came out of the baggage car,
and a tall man of fifty alighted and was
folded into Sheila’s welcoming arms. For a
moment the two stood thus, while the passengers
smiled sympathetically. Then the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_99' name='page_99'></SPAN>99</span>
man held Sheila off at arm’s length and
looked searchingly at her.</p>
<p>“Crying?” he said. “What a welcome!”</p>
<p>“Oh, daddy!” said Sheila. In this moment
she was very near to telling him what
had happened to her on the day of her
arrival at Lazette, but she felt that it was
impossible with him looking at her; she
could not at a blow cast a shadow over the
joy of his first day in the country where,
henceforth, he was to make his home. And
so she stood sobbing softly on his shoulder
while he, aware of his inability to cope with
anything so mysterious as a woman’s tears,
caressed her gently and waited patiently for
her to regain her composure.</p>
<p>“Then nothing happened to you after
all,” he laughed, patting her cheeks.
“Nothing, in spite of my croaking.”</p>
<p>“Nothing,” she answered. The opportunity
was gone now; she was committed
irrevocably to her secret.</p>
<p>“You like it here? Duncan has made
himself agreeable?”</p>
<p>“It is a beautiful country, though a little
lonesome after—after Albany. I miss my
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_100' name='page_100'></SPAN>100</span>
friends, of course. But Duncan’s sister has
done her best, and I have been able to get
along.”</p>
<p>The engine bell clanged and they stood
side by side as the train pulled slowly away
from the platform. Langford solemnly
waved a farewell to it.</p>
<p>“This is the moment for which I have
been looking for months,” he said, with
what, it seemed to Sheila, was almost a sigh
of relief. He turned to her with a smile.
“I will look after the baggage,” he said,
and leaving her he approached the station
agent and together they examined the
trunks which had come out of the baggage
car.</p>
<p>Sheila watched him while he engaged in
this task. His face seemed a trifle drawn;
he had aged much during the month that
she had been separated from him. The lines
of his face had grown deeper; he seemed,
now that she saw him at a distance, to be
care-worn—tired. She had heard people
call him a hard man; she knew that business
associates had complained of what they were
pleased to call his “sharp methods”; it had
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_101' name='page_101'></SPAN>101</span>
even been hinted that his “methods” were
irregular.</p>
<p>It made no difference to her, however,
what people thought of him, or what they
said of him, he had been a kind and indulgent
parent to her and she supposed that in
business it was everybody’s business to look
sharply after their own interests. For there
were jealous people everywhere; envy stalks
rampant through the world; failure cavils at
mediocrity, mediocrity sneers at genius.
And Sheila had always considered her
father a genius, and the carping of those
over whom her father had ridden roughshod
had always sounded in her ears like
tributes.</p>
<p>As quite unconsciously we are prone to
place the interests of self above considerations
for the comfort and the convenience
of others, so Sheila had grown to judge her
father through the medium of his treatment
of her. Her own father—who had died during
her infancy—could not have treated her
better than had Langford. Since her
mother’s death some years before, Langford
had been both father and mother to her, and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_102' name='page_102'></SPAN>102</span>
her affection for him had flourished in the
sunshine of his. No matter what other
people thought, she was satisfied with him.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact David Dowd Langford
allowed no one—not even Sheila—to
look into his soul. What emotions slumbered
beneath the mask of his habitual imperturbability
no one save Langford himself
knew. During all his days he had successfully
fought against betraying his emotions
and now, at the age of fifty, there was
nothing of his character revealed in his face
except sternness. If addicted to sharp practice
in business no one would be likely to suspect
it, not even his victim. Could one have
looked steadily into his eyes one might find
there a certain gleam to warn one of trickery,
only one would not be able to look
steadily into them, for the reason that they
would not allow you. They were shifty,
crafty eyes that took one’s measure when
one least expected them to do so.</p>
<p>Over the motive which had moved her
father to retire from business while still in
his prime Sheila did not speculate. Nor had
she speculated when he had bought the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_103' name='page_103'></SPAN>103</span>
Double R ranch and announced his intention
to spend the remainder of his days on
it. She supposed that he had grown tired
of the unceasing bustle and activity of city
life, as had she, and longed for something
different, and she had been quite as eager
as he to take up her residence here. This
had been the limit of her conjecturing.</p>
<p>He had told her when she left Albany
that he would follow her in a month. And
therefore, in a month to the day, knowing
his habit of punctuality, Sheila had come
to Lazette for him, having been driven over
from the Double R by one of the cowboys.</p>
<p>She saw the station agent now, beckoning
to the driver of the wagon, and she went
over to the edge of the station platform and
watched while the trunks were tumbled into
the wagon.</p>
<p>The driver was grumbling good naturedly
to Langford.</p>
<p>“That darned six-o’clock train is always
late,” he was saying. “It’s a quarter to
eight now an’ the sun is goin’ down. If
that train had been on time we could have
made part of the trip in the daylight.”
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_104' name='page_104'></SPAN>104</span></p>
<p>The day had indeed gone. Sheila looked
toward the mountains and saw that great
long shadows were lengthening from their
bases; the lower half of the sun had sunk
behind a distant peak; the quiet colors of
the sunset were streaking the sky and glowing
over the plains.</p>
<p>The trunks were in; the station agent
held the horses by the bridles, quieting them;
the driver took up the reins; Sheila was
helped to the seat by her father, he jumped
in himself, and they were off down the
street, toward a dim trail that led up a
slope that began at the edge of town and
melted into space.</p>
<p>The town seemed deserted. Sheila saw a
man standing near the front door of a saloon,
his hands on his hips. He did not
appear interested in either the wagon or its
occupants; his gaze roved up and down the
street and he nervously fingered his cartridge
belt. He was a brown-skinned man,
almost olive, Sheila thought as her gaze
rested on him, attired after the manner of
the country, with leathern chaps, felt hat,
boots, spurs, neckerchief.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_105' name='page_105'></SPAN>105</span></p>
<p>“Why, it is sundown already!” Sheila
heard her father say. “What a sudden
change! A moment ago the light was perfect!”</p>
<p>A subconscious sense only permitted
Sheila to hear her father’s voice, for her
thoughts and eyes were just then riveted on
another man who had come out of the door
of another saloon a little way down the
street. She recognized the man as Dakota
and exclaimed sharply.</p>
<p>She felt her father turn; heard the driver
declare, “It’s comin’ off,” though she had
not the slightest idea of his meaning. Then
she realized that he had halted the horses;
saw that he had turned in his seat and was
watching something to the rear of them
intently.</p>
<p>“We’re out of range,” she heard him say,
speaking to her father.</p>
<p>“What’s wrong?” This was her father’s
voice.</p>
<p>“Dakota an’ Blanca are havin’ a run-in,”
announced the driver. “Dakota’s give
Blanca till sundown to get out of town. It’s
sundown now an’ Blanca ain’t pulled his
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_106' name='page_106'></SPAN>106</span>
freight, an’ it’s likely that hell will be a-poppin’
sorta sudden.”</p>
<p>Sheila cowered in her seat, half afraid to
look at Dakota—who was walking slowly
toward the man who still stood in front of
the saloon—though in spite of her fears and
misgivings the fascination of the scene held
her gaze steadily on the chief actors.</p>
<p>Out of the corners of her eyes she could
see that far down the street men were congregated;
they stood in doorways, at convenient
corners, their eyes directed toward
Dakota and the other man. In the sepulchral
calm which had fallen there came to
Sheila’s ears sounds that in another time
she would not have noticed. Somewhere a
door slammed; there came to her ears the
barking of a dog, the neigh of a horse—sharply
the sounds smote the quiet atmosphere,
they seemed odd to the point of unreality.</p>
<p>However, the sounds did not long distract
her attention from the chief actors in the
scene which was being worked out in front
of her; the noises died away and she gave
her entire attention to the men. She saw
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_107' name='page_107'></SPAN>107</span>
Dakota reach a point about thirty feet from
the man in front of the saloon—Blanca. As
Dakota continued to approach, Sheila observed
an evil smile flash suddenly to
Blanca’s face; saw a glint of metal in the
faint light; heard the crash of his revolver;
shuddered at the flame spurt. She expected
to see Dakota fall—hoped that he might.
Instead, she saw him smile—in much the
fashion in which he had smiled that night
in the cabin when he had threatened to shoot
the parson if she did not consent to marry
him. And then his hand dropped swiftly to
the butt of the pistol at his right hip.</p>
<p>Sheila’s eyes closed; she swayed and felt
her father’s arm come out and grasp her to
keep her from falling. But she was not going
to fall; she had merely closed her eyes to
blot out the scene which she could not turn
from. She held her breath in an agony of
suspense, and it seemed an age until she
heard a crashing report—and then another.
Then silence.</p>
<p>Unable longer to resist looking, Sheila
opened her eyes. She saw Dakota walk
forward and stand over Blanca, looking
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_108' name='page_108'></SPAN>108</span>
down at him, his pistol still in hand. Blanca
was face down in the dust of the street, and
as Dakota stood over him Sheila saw the
half-breed’s body move convulsively and
then become still. Dakota sheathed his
weapon and, without looking toward the
wagon in which Sheila sat, turned and
strode unconcernedly down the street. A
man came out of the door of the saloon in
front of which Blanca’s body lay, looking
down at it curiously. Other men were running
toward the spot; there were shouts,
oaths.</p>
<p>For the first time in her life Sheila had
seen a man killed—murdered—and there
came to her a recollection of Dakota’s words
that night in the cabin: “Have you ever
seen a man die?” She had surmised from
his manner that night that he would not
hesitate to kill the parson, and now she knew
that her sacrifice had not been made in vain.
A sob shook her, the world reeled, blurred,
and she covered her face with her hands.</p>
<p>“Oh!” she said in a strained, hoarse
voice. “Oh! The brute!”</p>
<p>“Hey!” From a great distance the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_109' name='page_109'></SPAN>109</span>
driver’s voice seemed to come. “Hey!
What’s that? Well, mebbe. But I reckon
Blanca won’t rustle any more cattle.”
“God!” he added in an awed voice; “both
of them hit him!”</p>
<p>Blanca was dead then, there could be no
doubt of that. Sheila felt herself swaying
and tried to grasp the end of the seat to
steady herself. She heard her father’s voice
raised in alarm, felt his arm come out again
and grasp her, and then darkness settled
around her.</p>
<p>When she recovered consciousness her
father’s arms were still around her and the
buckboard was in motion. Dusk had come;
above her countless stars flickered in the
deep blue of the sky.</p>
<p>“I reckon she’s plum shocked,” she heard
the driver say.</p>
<p>“I don’t wonder,” returned Langford,
and Sheila felt a shiver run over him.
“Great guns!” Sheila wondered at the
tone he used. “That man is a marvel with
a pistol! Did you notice how cool he took
it?”</p>
<p>“Cool!” The driver laughed. “If you
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_110' name='page_110'></SPAN>110</span>
get acquainted with Dakota you’ll find out
that he’s cool. He’s an iceberg, that’s what
he is!”</p>
<p>“They’ll arrest him, I suppose?” queried
Langford.</p>
<p>“Arrest him! What for? Didn’t he give
Blanca his chance? That’s why I’m tellin’
you he’s cool!”</p>
<p>It was past two o’clock when the buckboard
pulled up at the Double R corral gates
and Langford helped Sheila down. She was
still pale and trembling and did not remain
downstairs to witness her father’s introduction
to Duncan’s sister, but went immediately
to her room. Sleep was far from her,
however, for she kept dwelling over and
over on the odd fortune which had killed
Blanca and allowed Dakota to live, when
the latter’s death would have brought to an
end the distasteful relationship which his
freakish impulse had forced upon her.</p>
<p>She remembered Dakota’s words in the
cabin. Was Fate indeed running this
game—if game it might be called?</p>
<hr class='major' />
<SPAN name='VI_KINDRED_SPIRITS' id='VI_KINDRED_SPIRITS'></SPAN>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_111' name='page_111'></SPAN>111</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />