summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:46:01 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:46:01 -0700
commit771d5ec27362ab371808168dc78e84b50c032c14 (patch)
tree48cbdf48c86c8aad499078ebd7a27673c603af34
initial commit of ebook 28956HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--28956-8.txt8336
-rw-r--r--28956-8.zipbin0 -> 144203 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956-h.zipbin0 -> 324002 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956-h/28956-h.htm9041
-rw-r--r--28956-h/images/illus-038.jpgbin0 -> 41571 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956-h/images/illus-097.jpgbin0 -> 6955 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956-h/images/illus-104.jpgbin0 -> 37513 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956-h/images/illus-130.jpgbin0 -> 33459 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956-h/images/illus-159.jpgbin0 -> 4463 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956-h/images/illus-emb.jpgbin0 -> 4724 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956-h/images/illus-fpc.jpgbin0 -> 35613 bytes
-rw-r--r--28956.txt8336
-rw-r--r--28956.zipbin0 -> 144158 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
16 files changed, 25729 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/28956-8.txt b/28956-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8385ea9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8336 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tharon of Lost Valley, by Vingie E. Roe
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Tharon of Lost Valley
+
+Author: Vingie E. Roe
+
+Illustrator: Frank Tenney Johnson
+
+Release Date: May 24, 2009 [EBook #28956]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THARON OF LOST VALLEY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: AS EL REY ROSE ON HIS HIND FEET WHIRLING, THAT UNWAVERING
+MUZZLE WHIRLED ALSO TO KEEP IN LINE]
+
+
+
+
+THARON OF LOST VALLEY
+
+BY VINGIE E. ROE
+
+Author of "The Maid of the Whispering Hills,"
+"The Heart of Night Wind," etc.
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRANK TENNEY JOHNSON
+
+NEW YORK
+
+DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
+
+1919
+
+
+
+
+Copyright, 1919
+
+By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. The Gun Man's Heritage 1
+ II. The Horses of the Finger Marks 29
+ III. The Man in Uniform 52
+ IV. Unbroken Bread 76
+ V. The Working of the Law 102
+ VI. El Rey and Bolt 128
+ VII. The Shot in the Cañons 157
+ VIII. White Ellen 187
+ IX. Signal Fires in the Valley 214
+ X. The Untrue Firing Pin 247
+ XI. Finger Mark and Ironwood at Last 277
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ As El Rey rose on his hind feet whirling, that
+ unwavering muzzle whirled also to keep in line _Frontispiece_
+
+ Near them sat a rider on a buckskin horse 38
+
+ She talked with Conford who rode beside her and
+ now and then she smiled 104
+
+ In fact Courtrey, burning with the new desire
+ that was beginning to obsess him, was working
+ out a new design 131
+
+
+
+
+THARON OF LOST VALLEY
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE GUN MAN'S HERITAGE
+
+
+Lost Valley lay like a sparkling jewel, fashioned in perfection, cast
+in the breast of the illimitable mountain country--and forever after
+forgotten of God.
+
+A tiny world, arrogantly unconscious of any other, it lived its own
+life, went its own ways, had its own conceptions of law--and they were
+based upon primeval instincts.
+
+Cattle by the thousand head ran on its level ranges, riders jogged
+along its trail-less expanses, their broad hats pulled over their
+eyes, their six-guns at their hips. Corvan, its one town, ran its
+nightly games, lined its familiar streets with swinging-doored
+saloons.
+
+Toward the west the Cañon Country loomed behind its sharp-faced
+cliffs, on the east the rolling ranges, dotted with oak and
+digger-pine, went gradually up to the feet of the stupendous peaks
+that cut the sapphire skies.
+
+Lost indeed, it was a paradise, a perfect place of peace but for its
+humans. Through it ran the Broken Bend, coming in from the high and
+jumbled rocklands at the north, going out along the sheer cliffs at
+the south.
+
+Out of its ideal loneliness there were but two known ways, and both
+were worth a man's best effort. Down the river one might drive a band
+of cattle, bring in a loaded pack train, single file against the wall.
+That was a twelve days' trip. Up through the defiles at the west a man
+on foot might make it out, provided he knew each inch of the Secret
+Way that scaled False Ridge.
+
+It was spring, the time of greening ranges and the coming of new
+calves. Soft winds dipped and wantoned with Lost Valley, in the Cañon
+Country shy flowers, waxen, heavy-headed on thin stems, clung to the
+rugged walls.
+
+All day the sun had shone, mild as a lover, coaxing, promising. The
+very wine of life was a-pulse in the air.
+
+All day Tharon Last had sung about her work scouring the boards of the
+kitchen floor until they were soft and white as flax, helping old
+Anita with the dinner for the men, seeing about the number of new
+palings for the garden. She had swept every inch of the deep adobe
+house, had fixed over the arrangement of Indian baskets on the mantel,
+had filled all the lamps with coal-oil. She was very careful with the
+lamps, trimming the wicks to smokeless perfection, for oil was scarce
+and precious in Lost Valley, as were all outside products, since they
+must come in at long intervals and in small quantities. And as she
+worked she sang, wild, wordless melodies in a natural voice as rich as
+a harp. That voice of Tharon's was one of the wonders of Lost Valley.
+Many a rider went by that way on the chance that he might catch its
+golden music adrift on the breeze, her father's men came up at night
+to hear its martial stir, its tenderness, for the voice was the girl,
+and Tharon was an unknown quantity, sometimes all melting sweetness,
+sometimes fire that flashed and was still.
+
+So on this day she sang, since she was happy. Why, she did not know.
+Perhaps it was because of the six new puppies in the milk-house,
+rolling in awkward fatness against their shepherd mother, whose soft
+eyes beamed up at the girl in beautiful pride. Perhaps it was because
+of the springtime in the air.
+
+At any rate she worked with all the will and pleasure of youth in a
+congenial task, and the roses of health bloomed in her cheeks. The
+sun itself shone in her tawny hair where the curls made waves and
+ripples, the blue skies of Lost Valley were faithfully reflected in
+her eyes.
+
+Her skin was soft-golden, the enchanting skin of some half-blonds
+which can never be duplicated by all the arts of earth, and her full
+mouth was scarlet as pomegranates.
+
+Sometimes old Anita who had raised her, would stop and look at her in
+wonder, so beautiful was she to old and faithful eyes.
+
+And not alone to Anita was she entirely lovely.
+
+There was not a full grown man in Lost Valley who would not go many a
+mile to look upon her--with varying desires. Few voiced their
+longings, however, for Jim Last was notorious with his guns and could
+protect his daughter. He had protected her for twenty years, come full
+summer, and he asked no odds of any. His eyes were like Tharon's--blue
+and changing, with odd little lines that crinkled about them at the
+corners, elongating them in appearance. He was a big man, vital and
+quiet. The girl took her stature from him. Her flashes of fire came
+from her mother, of whom she knew little and of whom Jim Last said
+nothing. Once as a child she had asked him, after the manner of
+children, about this mother of dim memories, and his eyes had hazed
+with a look of suffering that scared her, he had struck his palm upon
+a table, and said only:
+
+"She was an angel straight out of Heaven. Don't ask me again."
+
+So Tharon had not asked again, though she had wondered much.
+
+Sometimes old Anita, become garrulous with age, mumbled in the
+twilight when the rose and the lavendar lights swept down the eastern
+ramparts and across the rolling range lands, and the girl gleaned
+scattered pictures of a gentle and lovely creature who had come with
+her father out of a mystic country somewhere "below."
+
+"Below" meant down the river and beyond, an unnamable region.
+
+In the big living room there was one relic of this mysterious mother,
+a tiny melodeon, its rosewood case a trifle marred by unknown
+hardships, its ivory keys yellow with age. It had two small pedals and
+two slender sticks which fitted therein and pushed the bellows up and
+down when one trampled upon them. And to Tharon this little old
+instrument was wealth of the Indies. The low piping of its reedy notes
+made an accompaniment of surpassing sweetness when she sat before it
+and sang her wordless melodies. And just as she found music in her
+throat without conscious effort, so she found it in her fingers, deep,
+resonant chords for her running minors, thin, trickling streams of
+lightness for her own slow notes.
+
+The sun had turned to the west in its majestic course and Tharon, the
+noon work over, drew up the spindle-legged stool and sat down to play
+to herself and Anita. The old woman, half Mexic, half Indian, drowsed
+in a low chair by the eastern window, her toil-hard hands clasped in
+her lap, a black _reboso_ over her head, though the day was warm as
+summer. A kitten frisked in the sunlight at the open door, wild ducks,
+long domesticated, squalled raucously down the yards, some cattle
+slept in the huge corrals and the little world of Last's Holding was
+at peace. It seemed that only the girl idling over the yellowed keys,
+was awake.
+
+For a long and happy hour Tharon sat so, sometimes opening her pretty
+throat in ambitious flights of sound, again humming lowly--and that
+was enchanting, as if one sang lullabies to flaxen heads on
+shoulders.
+
+And it did enchant one--a man who stood for the better part of that
+hour at the edge of the deep window in the adobe wall and watched the
+singer.
+
+He was a splendid figure of a man, tall, broad, muscular, built for
+strength and endurance. His face was unduly lined, even for his age,
+which was near fifty, but the eyes under the arched black brows were
+vital as a hawk's. He wore the customary garments of the Lost Valley
+men, broad sombrero, flannel shirt, corduroys and cowboy boots,
+stitched and decorated above their high heels. At his hips hung two
+guns, spurs clinked when he stepped unguardedly. He rarely stepped
+that way, however.
+
+When presently the girl at the melodeon ceased and drew the lid over
+the keys with reverent fingers, he moved silently back a pace or two
+along the wall. Then he waited. As he had anticipated, she came to the
+door to look upon the budding world, and for another moment he watched
+her with a strange expression. Then he swung forward and let the spurs
+rattle. Tharon flashed to face him like a startled animal.
+
+"Hello, Tharon," he said and smiled. The girl stared at him with quick
+insolence.
+
+"Howdy," she said coldly.
+
+He came close to the doorway, put one hand on the facing, the other on
+his hip and leaned near. She drew back. He reached out suddenly and
+gripped her wrist in fingers that bit like steel.
+
+"Pretty," he said, while his dark eyes narrowed.
+
+Tharon flung her whole young strength against his grip with a
+twisting wrench and came free. The quick, tremendous effort left her
+calm. And she did not retreat a step.
+
+"Hell," said the man admiringly, "little wildcat!"
+
+"What you want?" she asked sharply.
+
+"You," he answered swiftly.
+
+"Buck Courtrey," she said, "you might own an' run Lost Valley--all but
+one outfit. You ain't never run Last nor put your dirty hand on th'
+Holdin'. An' that ain't all. You never will. If you ever touch me
+again, I'll tell Dad Jim an' he'll kill you. I'd a-told him before
+when you met me that day on the range, only I didn't want his honest
+hands smutted up with such as you. He's had his killin's before--but
+they was always in fair-an'-open. You he'd give no quarter--if he knew
+what you ben askin' me."
+
+The man's eyes narrowed evilly. They became calculating.
+
+"Tell him," he said.
+
+"Eh?"
+
+"Tell him."
+
+"You want to feed th' buzzards?" the girl asked with an insulting peal
+of laughter.
+
+"Not yet--but I'll remember that speech some day."
+
+"Remember an' be damned," said Tharon. "Now kindly take your dirty
+carcass off Last's Holding--back to your wife."
+
+The fire was flashing a little in her blue eyes as she spoke, and she
+half turned to enter the house.
+
+As she did so, Courtrey flung out an arm and caught her about the
+shoulders. He drew her against him with the motion and kissed her
+square on the lips. For a second his narrowed eyes were drunken.
+
+As he loosed her Tharon gasped like a swimmer sinking.
+
+She put up a hand and drew it across her mouth, which was pale as
+ashes with sudden rage.
+
+"Now," she said, "I'll tell him."
+
+"Do," said Courtrey, and swung away around the wall of the house.
+
+There were no more artless songs that day at Last's Holding. Anita was
+awake and peering with dim eyes when Tharon came in from the door
+sill.
+
+"_Mi querida_," she asked, "what happened?"
+
+"Nothing," said the girl, "it's time to begin supper. Th' boys'll soon
+be comin' in."
+
+"_Si, si_," said Anita, "I'll ask José to cut the fresh beef--it has
+hung long enough in the cooling house."
+
+Supper at Last's was a lively affair. At the long tables in the
+eating room the riders gathered, lean, tanned men, young mostly, all
+alert, quick-eyed, swift in judgment. Their days were full and earnest
+enough, running Last's cattle on the Lost Valley ranges. The evenings
+were their own, and they made the most of them. The big house was free
+to them, and they made it home, smoking, playing cards on the living
+room table under the hanging lamp, mulling over the work of the day,
+and begging Tharon to sing to them, sometimes with the instrument,
+sometimes sitting in the deep east window, when the moon shone, and
+then they turned out the light and listened in adoring rapture.
+
+For Last's girl was the rose of the Valley, the one absolutely
+unattainable woman, and they worshipped her accordingly.
+
+Not that she was aloof. Far from it. In her deep heart the whole bunch
+of boys had a place; singly and collectively. They were her private
+property, and she would have been inordinately jealous of any one of
+them had he slipped allegiance.
+
+As the purple and crimson veils began to drape the eastern ramparts
+where the forests thickened and swept up the slopes, these riders
+began to come in across the range, driving the herds before them.
+Running cattle in Lost Valley was no child's play. Any small bunch of
+cows left out at night was not there by dawn. Eternal vigilance was
+the price of safety, and then they were not always safe. Witness poor
+Harkness, a year ago shot in the back and left to die alone--his band
+run off in daylight.
+
+They had found him too late, pitifully propped against a stone, the
+cigarette, he had tried to light to comfort him, dead in his nerveless
+hand. Tharon had wept and wept for Harkness, for he had been a good
+comrade, open-hearted and merry. And deep in her soul she harboured
+dim longings for justice on his murderer--revenge, if you will.
+
+Tonight she thought of him, somehow, as she went about the supper work
+along with Anita and José and pretty dark Paula. She stood a moment on
+the broad stone at the kitchen door, a dish of butter from the
+springhouse under the poplars in her hand, and watched Billy Brent and
+Curly bring in a bunch from up Long Meadow way. She thought how bright
+the spotted cattle looked, how lithe and graceful the men, and then
+her eyes lighted as they always did when she beheld the horses of
+Last's Holding--the horses of the Finger Marks.
+
+Billy rode Redbuck, Curly Drumfire, and they were princes of a royal
+blood, albeit Nature's strain alone. Slim, spirited, wiry, eager
+heads up, manes flying, bright hoofs flashing in the late sunlight,
+they came home to Last's after a long day's work, fresh as when they
+went out at dawn.
+
+"Nothin' ever floors them," Tharon said aloud to herself. "Wonderful
+creatures."
+
+She set the butter down on the rock at her feet, cupped her hands
+about her lips and sent out a keen, clear call, two notes, one rising,
+one falling. It had a livening, compelling quality.
+
+Instantly Drumfire flung up his head and answered it with a ringing
+whistle, though he did not lose a stride in the flying curve he was
+performing to head a stubborn yearling that refused in stiff-tailed
+arrogance to go into the corrals.
+
+The girl smiled and, stooping, picked up her dish and entered.
+
+It was late before the last straggler was in from the range. The boys
+washed at the big sink on the porch, and were ready for the hearty
+fare that steamed in the lamp-lighted room. For the last hour Tharon
+had been watching the eastern slopes for her father.
+
+"He's ridin' late, Anita," she said anxiously as the men trooped in
+with the usual jest and laughter.
+
+"He went far, no doubt, _Corazon,"_ said old Anita comfortably. "He
+goes so fast on El Rey that time as well as distance flies beneath the
+shining hoofs."
+
+Anita was like her people, mystic and soft-spoken.
+
+"True," said the girl gently, "I forget, El Rey is mighty. He went
+very far I make no doubt. We'll hear him comin' soon."
+
+Then she poured steaming coffee in the cups about the table, smiling
+down in the eyes upturned to hers. Billy, Curly, Bent Smith, Jack
+Masters and Conford, the foreman, they all had a love-look for her,
+and the girl felt it like a circling guerdon. She was grateful for the
+sense of security that seemed to emanate from her father's riders, a
+bit wistful withal, as if, for the first time in her life, she needed
+something more than she had always had.
+
+"Which way did Dad go, Billy?" she asked, "north or south?"
+
+"North," said Billy, "he rode th' Cup Rim range today."
+
+When the meal, a trifle silent in deference to Tharon's silence, was
+done, the men rose awkwardly. They stood a moment, looking about,
+undecided.
+
+Conford picked them up with his eyes and nodded out. He felt that just
+maybe the girl would rather be alone. But Tharon stopped the
+reluctant egress.
+
+"Don't go, boys," she said, "come on in th' room. There's no moon
+tonight." But she did not play on the melodeon. Instead she sat in the
+deep window that looked over the rolling uplands and was quiet,
+listening.
+
+"Turn out th' light, Bent," she said, "somehow I feel like shadows
+tonight."
+
+So they sat about in the great room, black with the darkness of the
+soft spring night, and like the true worshippers they were, they did
+not speak. Only the red butts of their cigarettes glowed and faded, to
+glow again and again fade out. Tharon sat curled in the window, her
+graceful limbs drawn up to her chin, her eyes half closed, her keen
+ears open like a forest creature's. She was listening for the marked
+rhythm of the great El Rey, the clap-clap, clap-clap of the king of
+Last's Holding as he singlefooted down the hollow slopes of the
+lifting eastern range.
+
+And as she waited she thought of many things. Odd little happenings of
+her childhood came back to her--the time she had caught her father
+killing the winter's beef, had wept in hysterical pity and forbidden
+him to finish.
+
+They had had no meat those long months following--and she had so tired
+of beans, that she had never been able to eat them since. She smiled
+in the dusk as she recalled Jim Last's life-long indulgence of her.
+
+And the time she had wanted to make her own knee-short dresses as long
+as Anita's, to sweep the floors, with fringe upon them and stripes of
+bright print.
+
+She had worn them so--at twelve--until she found that they hindered
+the free use of her young limbs in mounting a horse, free-foot and
+bareback. Then, once again the memory of her father's face when she
+questioned him concerning her mother.
+
+"Boys," she said suddenly, smiling to herself, "did you ever know a
+man like my dad?"
+
+There was a movement among the lounging riders, a shifting of
+position, a striking of cigarette ash.
+
+"No, sir," said Billy promptly, "there hain't another man's good with
+a gun as him, not anywhere's in Lost Valley. Not even Buck Courtrey
+himself. I'd back Jim Last against him, even, in fair-draw. Why?"
+
+"Oh, nothin'," said the girl, "only--listen--Glory!" she added slipping
+down from the window to stand quietly in the gloom, "that's him now! I
+was wishin' hard he'd come. Say--listen----Why,--there's somethin'
+gone wrong with El Rey's feet! 1--2----3, 4, 5, 6----1--2--Boys--he's
+breakin'! Th' king ain't singlefootin' right, for th' first time
+since Jim Last put a halter on him! Come--come quick!"
+
+Ordinarily Tharon was a bit slow in her movements, as the very
+graceful often are. Now she was across the room to the western door
+before a man had moved. They joined her there and she stood at
+attention, one hand at her breast, the breath held still in her
+throat. The light, shining through from the eating room beyond, made a
+halo of her tawny hair. Silently the riders grouped about her and
+listened.
+
+Sure enough. Down along the range that rang as some open stretches do,
+there came the clip-clap of a hurrying horse, only now the hoof beats
+were regular for a little space, to break, halt, start on, and again
+ring true in the beautiful syncopation of the born singlefooter. The
+king was coming home, but, alas! not as he had ever come before, in
+full flight, proud and powerful. He held his speed and sacrificed his
+certainty to the man who clung desperately to the saddle horn and
+swayed in wide arcs, so that he must shift continually to keep under
+him.
+
+Into the dim glow of light at the open door came El Rey at last, great
+blue-silver stallion, his big eyes shining like phosphorus, his
+nostrils wide with horror of the pungent crimson wash that painted his
+right shoulder.
+
+He stopped at the door-stone, his duty done.
+
+"Dad!" screamed Tharon, shrill as a bugle, for Jim Last, white and
+dull as a moon in fog, let go his desperate hold on the pommel and
+slid, deadweight, into the reaching arms that circled him.
+
+They carried him into the living room. Before they had him safely on
+the wide couch where the Indian blankets glowed, Tharon, trembling but
+efficient, had lighted the hanging lamp above the table.
+
+Then she pushed the men aside and knelt beside him.
+
+"Dad," she said clearly, "Jim! Jim Last!"
+
+But the gaining of his goal had been too much. For a moment the
+flickering light in him died down to ashes. Tharon, her face as white
+as his own, waited in a man-like quiet. She held his stiffened hands
+and her eyes burned upon his features. With a deadly knowledge she was
+printing them indelibly upon her heart.
+
+Presently Jim Last sighed and opened his eyes. They sought hers and he
+smiled, a tender lighting from within. He fumbled for the buckle of
+his gun-belt. The girl unclasped it and pulled it free. She noticed
+that both guns were in their holsters.
+
+"Put it on," whispered the master of Last's Holding.
+
+Without a question Tharon stood up and buckled the belt about her
+slender waist.
+
+Her father raising himself with difficulty on an elbow, wet his lips.
+
+"Tharon, my girl," he said, "show your dad th' backhand flip."
+
+Strange play, this, when every second counted, but Last's daughter
+obeyed him to the letter.
+
+She stepped clear by the table, stood at attention a second, and, with
+a peculiar outward whirl, lightning-quick, of her two wrists, had him
+covered with the big blue guns.
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Good as I learned ye," he whispered, "make it better."
+
+"I will," promised Tharon swiftly.
+
+The man closed his eyes, swayed, recovered as Conford caught him, and
+brightened again.
+
+"Now th' under-sling."
+
+Again she obeyed, replacing the weapons, standing that second
+at attention, and flipping them from the holsters so quickly
+that the eye could scarcely catch the motion. Both draws were
+peculiar--and peculiarly Last's own. "Good girl," he said with
+a husk grown suddenly in his voice, "take--three hours--a day.
+I want t' leave you th' best gun-handler in Lost Valley--because,
+my girl--you'll--have--to--to--pro----"
+
+He ceased, wilting forward in Conford's arms.
+
+Then he opened his eyes again for one last smile at the daughter he
+had loved above all things on earth, save and except the memory of the
+woman who had given her to him.
+
+For once in her life Tharon did not wait his finished speech. She saw
+the Hand reach out of the shadows and flung herself upon his breast
+where the blood still seeped and fairly forced the last flutter of
+life to brighten in him. She kissed his rugged cheek.
+
+"Who, Dad," she called into his dulling senses, "tell me who? I'll get
+him, so help me God!" and she loosed one hand to cross herself, as old
+Anita had taught her.
+
+But the promise was late. None knew whether or not Jim Last heard it,
+for before the last word was done the breath had ceased in his
+throat.
+
+Another twilight came down upon Lost Valley. The wide ranges lay dim
+and mysterious, grey and pink and lavendar, as if the hand of a
+Master Painter had coloured them, as indeed it had. The Rockface at
+the west was black with shadow for all its rugged miles, the eastern
+uplands were bathed and aglow with purplish crimson light.
+
+In Corvan lights twinkled all up and down the one main street. Horses
+were tied at the hitch-racks and among them were the Ironwoods
+from Courtrey's Stronghold, beautiful big creatures, blood-bay,
+black-pointed, noticeable in any bunch. There were no Finger Marks,
+however, the blue roans, red roans and buckskins with the four
+black stripes on the outside of the knee, as if one had slapped them
+with a tarred hand, which hailed from Last's. There were horses
+from all up and down the Valley. Cow ponies and half-breeds of the
+Ironwood stock which Courtrey would not keep at the Stronghold but was
+too close to kill, shouldered pintos from the Indian settlements,
+big, half-wild horses from over the mountains at the North. Inside
+the brightly lighted saloons men passed back and forth, drank neat
+liquor at the worn bars, played at the green felt and canvas
+covered tables. At one, The Golden Cloud, more pretentious than the
+rest, there foregathered the leading spirits of the Valley. Here
+Courtrey came and played and drank, his henchmen with him. He was in
+high mettle this night. Always a contained man, slow to laughter
+and to speech, he seemed to have unbent more than usual, to respond
+to the human nature about him. He was not playing steadily as was
+his wont. He took a turn at poker with three men from the south of
+the Valley where the river ran out of the Bottle Neck, won a hand
+or two, threw down the cards and swung away to talk a moment with
+this one, listen a moment where those two spoke of hushed matters.
+Always when he came near he was accorded deference. There was
+nothing sacred from Courtrey of the Stronghold, seated like a feudal
+place at the north head of Lost Valley, no conversation so private
+that he could not come in on it if he chose.
+
+For Courtrey was the king of the country, undisputed sovereign, the
+best gun man north of the Rio Grand and south of the Line, if one
+excepted Jim Last. With him tonight were Black Bart, tall, swarthy,
+gimlet-eyed, a helf-breed Mexican, and Wylackie Bob his right-hand
+man. Without these two he seldom moved. They were both able
+lieutenants, experts with firearms. A formidable trio, the three went
+where and when they listed, and few disputed their right-of-way.
+
+Courtrey, a smile in his dark eyes, the wide black hat at an angle on
+his iron-grey hair, leaned against the high bar and scanned the
+crowded room where the riders played and laughed and swore with
+abandon.
+
+"Heard anything more about Cañon Jim?" he asked Bullard, the
+proprietor of The Golden Cloud, "ain't come in yet?"
+
+Bullard shook his head.
+
+"No--nor he won't, according to my notion. Think he mistook th' False
+Ridge drop. Ain't no man could make it up again without th' hammer
+spike an' rope."
+
+"H'm--don't know. Don't know," mused Courtrey. "I've always thought it
+could be done. There ought to be a way on th' other side, seems
+like."
+
+"Well, _ought_ an' _is_ is two diff'rent things, Buck," grinned
+Bullard.
+
+"Sure," nodded the king, "sure. An' yet--"
+
+"Hello, Buck."
+
+A soft hand touched Courtrey's shoulder with a subtle caress. He
+wheeled on the instant, ready, alert. Then he smiled and reaching up,
+took the hand and held it openly.
+
+"Hello, Lola," he said, "how goes it?"
+
+The newcomer was a woman, full, rounded, dark, and she was past-master
+of men--as witness the slow glance that she turned interestedly out
+over the teeming room, even while the pulse in the wrist in Courtrey's
+clasp leaped like a racer. She was a perfect specimen of a certain
+type, beautiful after a resplendent fashion, full of eye and lip,
+confident, calm. She was brilliantly clad in crimson and black, and
+rings of value shone on her ivory-like hands.
+
+Lola of the Golden Cloud was known all over Lost Valley. Men who had
+no women worshipped her--and some who had, also. At the Stronghold at
+the Valley's head there was a woman who hated her, though she had
+never set eyes on her--Courtrey's wife.
+
+If Lola knew this she had never mentioned it, wise creature that she
+was. Proud of her beauty and her power she had reigned at The Golden
+Cloud in supreme indifference, even to her men themselves, it seemed,
+though hidden undercurrents ran strong in her. Which way they tended
+many a reckless buck of Lost Valley would have given much to know,
+among them Courtrey himself.
+
+Now she pulled her hand away from him and sauntered over to a table
+where five men sat playing, laid it upon the shoulder of one of them,
+leaned down and looked at the cards in his hand.
+
+The man, a tall stripling in a silver-studded belt, looked up,
+flattered.
+
+Courtrey by the bar watched her, still smiling. Then he turned back
+to Bullard and went on with his conversation.
+
+Over by the wall a man on a raised dais began to tune an ancient
+fiddle.
+
+Two more women came in from somewhere at the back, a big blooming girl
+by the name of Sadie, and a small red-head, tragically faded, with
+soft brown eyes that should never have looked upon Bullard's. Two men
+rose and took them as the tune, an old-fashioned waltz, began to
+ripple under the fingers of the fiddler, who was a born musician, and
+the four swung down between the tables and the bar. The Golden Cloud
+was in full swing, running free for the night, though the soft
+twilight was scarcely faded from the beautiful country without.
+
+Slip--step, slip--step--went the dancing feet to the accompaniment of
+rattling spurs. These men were lithe and active, able to dance with
+amazing grace in chaps and the full accoutrement of the rider. They
+even wore their broad brimmed hats.
+
+Why should they not, since none objected?
+
+Bullard, solid, stocky, red-faced, leaned on his bar and watched the
+busy room with pleased eyes.
+
+He did not hear a voice which called his name, once or twice, among
+the jumble of sounds. Presently an odd figure came round the end of
+the bar from a door that opened there into the mysterious back
+regions of the place and elbowed in to face him.
+
+This was a little old man, weazened and bent, his unkempt head thrust
+forward from hunched shoulders. He dragged two grain sacks behind him,
+and he was so grotesquely bow-legged that the first sight of him
+always provoked laughter. This was old Pete the snow-packer, bound on
+his nightly trip to the hills. Outside his burros waited, their
+pack-saddles empty.
+
+By dawn they would come down from the world's rim, the grain sacks
+bulging with hard-packed snow for the cooling of Bullard's liquor.
+
+"Dick," he said when he faced his employer, "here 'tis time t' start
+an' there ain't a damned bit o' grub put up fer me! Ef ye don't make
+that pig-tailed Chink pay 'tention t' my wants, I quit! I quit, I tell
+ye!"
+
+And he emphasized his vehement protest by whirling the bags over his
+head and flailing them upon the floor.
+
+A roar of laughter greeted him, which brought dim tears of indignation
+to his old eyes.
+
+"Ye don't care a damn!" he whimpered in impotent rage. "Jes' 'cause
+it's me. Ef 'twas yer ol' Chink, now--if 'twas him, th' ol'
+he-pigtail, ye'd----"
+
+"Hold on, Pete," said Bullard, slapping an indulgent hand on the
+grotesque shoulder, "You go tell Wan Lee that if he don't put up th'
+best lunch in camp for you, an' _muy pronto_ at that, I'll come in an'
+skin him alive. Tell him----"
+
+But Bullard was never to finish that sentence.
+
+There was a sound of running horses stopping square at the rack
+without, the rattle of chains, the creak of saddles.
+
+Booted feet struck the boards of the porch, and almost upon the
+instant the great iron door of The Golden Cloud swung inward.
+
+The dancers stopped in their stride, the players laid down their
+cards, the noise of the room ceased with the suddenness that
+characterized the time and place, for Lost Valley was quick upon the
+trigger, tragedy often swept in upon hilarity.
+
+In the opening stood Tharon Last, her blue eyes black and sparkling,
+her tawny skin cream white, her lips tight-set and pale. She wore a
+plain dark dress that buttoned up the front, and at her hips there
+hung her father's famous guns. Her two hands rested on their butts.
+
+Behind her head against the starlight there was the dim suggestion of
+massed sombreros.
+
+For a moment she stood so in breathless silence, scanning the room.
+
+Then her glance came to rest on the face of Buck Courtrey.
+
+"Men," she said clearly, "we buried Jim Last today. El Rey brought him
+home last night--finished. You all know he was a gun man--th' best in
+these parts. It was no gun man that killed him, in fair-an'-open, for
+he was shot in th' back. It was a skunk, a coyote, a son-of-th'-devil,
+an' I'm goin' to kill him."
+
+At the last word there was a lightning movement at the bar as
+Courtrey's hand flashed at his hip, a flash of fire, a shot that went
+high and lodged in the deep beam above the door, for the weazened form
+of the snow-packer had leaped up against him in the same instant.
+
+The girl had not moved. Her hands still rested on the guns in their
+holsters. Now a grim smile curled her mouth, but her eyes did not
+laugh.
+
+"I'm a-goin' t' kill him," she said quietly, still in that clear
+voice, "but I'll do it accordin' to th' law Jim Last laid down to me
+all my life--in certainty. I know--but I'll prove. We hain't no
+assassins, Jim Last an' me. Some day I'll draw--an' my father's killer
+must beat me to it."
+
+Without another word Tharon backed out on the porch, the door swung to
+at the pull of an unseen hand on the iron strap by the hinge.
+
+There was again the rattle and creak, the whirl of hoofs, and in the
+breathless stillness that lasted for a few seconds, there came to the
+strained ears in the Golden Cloud the clip-clap of a singlefooter as
+the great El Rey led out of town.
+
+Then Buck Courtrey, flushed and unsmiling, sent his coldly narrowed
+eyes over the crowded room, man by man. Laughter came, a trifle
+cracked and forced, cards slapped on the tables, chairs creaked as the
+players drew up again, the dancers swung into step as the fiddle took
+up its interrupted strain.
+
+Only Lola, over by the door, looked for a pregnant moment at
+Courtrey's face, and shut her lips in a hard, straight line.
+
+Then, lastly, the cold eyes of the king came down to rest upon the
+weazened figure of the snow-packer busily engaged in rolling up his
+sacks for departure. If the strange old creature knew and felt their
+promise, he gave no sign as he trundled himself outdoors on his bandy
+legs.
+
+"Skunks," said Old Pete, as he fumbled with his straps about the
+patient burros, "are plumb pizen t' pure flesh."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HORSES OF THE FINGER MARKS
+
+
+At Last's Holding a change had taken place. The sun of spring still
+shone as brightly, the work of the place went on as usual. The riders
+went at dawn and came at dusk, their herds lowing across the rolling
+green spaces, the days were as busy as they had ever been, but it
+seemed as if Last's waited for something that would never happen, for
+some one who would never come. Conford, quiet, forceful, businesslike,
+carried on the work without a ripple. To a casual eye all things were
+as they had been. But to the keen eyes in the tanned faces of Last's
+riders the change was appallingly apparent. They saw it creep day by
+day into their lives, felt it in the very atmosphere, and it was grim
+and promising.
+
+Old Anita felt it and watched with dim and wistful eyes. Pretty young
+Paula from the Pomo Indian settlement far to the north of the Valley
+under the Rockface felt it and was more silent, cat-like of step than
+ever. José, always full of laughter at his outside work, was sobered.
+
+For this change was not material, but spiritual, and it had to do with
+Tharon, who was now the mistress of Last's.
+
+She no longer sang her wordless songs, no longer played for hours on
+the little old melodeon by the western door. Something had gone from
+the brightness of her face, a shadow had come instead. She was just as
+swift and gentle in her care for all the things of every day, as
+efficient and painstaking, but she did not laugh, and the tiny lines
+that had characterized her father's blue eyes, began to show
+distinctly about her own.
+
+They began to take on the look of great distances, as if she gazed
+far.
+
+And for exactly three hours each day there could be heard the
+monotonous bark-bark-bark of the big guns Jim Last had given her in
+his final hour. To Billy Brent there was something terrible in this.
+Bred to violence and the quick disasters of the country as he was, he
+could not reconcile this grim practice with Tharon Last, the sane and
+loving girl who could not bear the sight of suffering.
+
+"I tell you, Curly," he complained to his friend of nights when they
+came in and lounged in the soft dusk by the bunk-house, "it's
+unnatural. Not that I don't pay full respect to Jim Last's memory,
+an' him th' best man in all this hell-bent Valley, but it ain't right
+an' natural fer no woman t' do what she's doin'. Ain't she Jim Last's
+own daughter already with th' guns? Sure. Can drive a nail nigh as far
+as he could. Quick as Wylackie Bob on th' draw an' as certain, now.
+Then why must she keep it up?"
+
+Curly, more silent in his ways but given to thought, studied the stars
+that rode the darkening heavens and shook his head.
+
+"Let her alone," he said once, "it was Last's command, an' he knew
+what he was about even if he was toppin' th' rise of the Big Divide.
+
+"He said 'you'll have to pro--'--you rec'lect? He meant _protect_ an'
+unless I miss my guess, Billy, he'd have added '_yourself_' if th'
+hand of Ol' Man Death hadn't stopped his words. Somethin' happened out
+there in th' Cup Rim that day when Last got his that had to do with
+Tharon, an' he knew she'd be in danger. Let her alone."
+
+So Billy let her alone, as did the rest. She went her ways, saw to the
+garden and made the butter in the cool springhouse, and sat in the
+window seat in the twilights. She liked to have the men come in as
+usual, but the talk these times was desultory, failing and brightening
+with forced topics, to fail again and drop into silence while the dim
+red lights of the smokers glowed in the shadows.
+
+Time and again she stirred and sighed, and they knew that once again
+she waited for Jim Last, listened for the clip-clap of El Rey coming
+home along the sounding ranges.
+
+Once, on a night when there was no moon and the tree-toads sang in the
+cottonwoods by the spring, the girl, sitting so in the familiar
+window, suddenly dropped her head on her knees and sobbed sharply in
+the silence.
+
+"Never again!" she said thickly from the folds of her denim skirt,
+"I'll never see him comin' home again!"
+
+The riders stirred. Sympathy ached in their hearts, but not a man had
+speech to comfort her. It was Billy, the impulsive, who reached a hand
+to her shoulder and gripped it hard. Tharon reached up and touched the
+hand in gratitude.
+
+It was about this time, when the master of Last's Holding had lain a
+month beneath the staring mound under the pine tree out to the east
+where they had buried Harkness, that José finished a work of art. For
+many days he had laboured secretly in a calf-shed out behind the small
+corrals, and in his slim dark fingers there was beauty unleashed.
+Finest carving he knew, since his forbears, peons across the Border,
+had spent their lives upon the beams of the Missions. None had taught
+José. It was in his blood. Therefore, from a block of the hard grey
+stone of the region, which was almost like granite, he fashioned a
+cross, as tall as Tharon herself, struck it out freehand and true, and
+set upon its austere face fine tracery of vines and Jim Last's name.
+He took into the secret Billy and Curly, since these two he was sure
+of, and together they hauled the huge thing out and set it up.
+
+When Tharon, looking to the east with dawn, as was her habit, beheld
+this silent tribute to the man she had so loved, she leaned her
+forehead against the deep window-case and wept from the depths.
+
+Then she went out to see it and with a knife she set her own mark
+thereon--a tiny cross scratched in the headpiece, another in the arm
+that stretched toward all that was mortal of poor Harkness.
+
+"Two," she said, dry-eyed, while the glorious dawn shot up to bathe
+the world in glory, "full pay for you both."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+El Rey, stamping in his own corral, lifted his beautiful head, scanned
+the wide reaches that spread away in living green, and tossing up his
+muzzle, sent out on the silence a ringing call. He cocked his silver
+ears and listened. No clear-cut human whistle answered him. Once more
+he called and listened.
+
+Then he lowered his head and stepped along the fence. His great body,
+shining like blue satin with a silver frost upon it, gave and lifted
+with every step. The pastern joints above his striped hoofs were
+resilient as pliant springs. The muscles rippled in his shoulders, the
+blue-white cascade of his silver tail flowed to his heels, his mane
+was like a cloud upon the arch of his neck. He was strength and beauty
+incarnate, a monster machine of living might.
+
+Unrest was upon him. Life had become stagnant, a tasteless thing. He
+was keen for the open stretches, honing to be gone down the wind. He
+fretted and ate out his heart for the freedom of the range. Old Anita,
+passing at some work or other, stopped and gazed at him for a
+compassionate moment.
+
+"You, too, _grande caballo_," she said, "there is naught but grief at
+Last's Holding. _Tharone querida_" she called into the house, "come
+here."
+
+Tharon came and stood in the kitchen door.
+
+"What, Anita?" she asked gently.
+
+"El Rey," answered the old woman, "he calls and calls and none come to
+him. He, too, needs help, _Corazon_. Why not take him for a run along
+the plain? It will help you both."
+
+For a long time the girl stood, considering.
+
+"I have not cared to ride lately, Anita," she said, "but you are
+right. El Rey should not be left to fret."
+
+She stepped back in the house, then came out, and she had added
+nothing to her attire save her daddy's belt and guns. Without these
+she never left the Holding now.
+
+Bareheaded, slender, she was a thing of beauty, and there was a quiet
+command about her which subdued the great El Rey himself, the proudest
+horse in all the Valley, outside of Courtrey's Ironwoods, Bolt and
+Arrow.
+
+Between these three horses there was much comment and discussion,
+though they had never been tested out together.
+
+She found a bridle on a corral post, a strong affair of rawhide,
+heavily ornamented with silver, its bit a Spanish spade. Without this
+she could not hold the stallion, and he was no pet to come at her
+caressing call of the double notes.
+
+Only Jim Last himself had ever tamed El Rey to do his bidding by word
+of mouth. The horse had had one master. He would never have another.
+
+Even now, when Tharon bridled him and opened the big gate, promising
+him his long-desired flight, he seemed not to see her, his beautiful
+big eyes looked through, beyond her, as if he sought another. There
+was some one for whom he waited, listened.
+
+From a block of wood set in the yard the girl gathered the rein tight
+in her hand, balanced a moment, and leaped up astride the shining
+back.
+
+With a snort like a pistol shot El Rey flung up his great head, leaped
+into the air and was gone. Around the corner of the adobe house he
+went, out across the trampled yard, and away along the open to the
+south, running level and free. With the first sink-and-lift Tharon had
+slipped back a full span. Now she wound her fingers in the white cloud
+of mane that flailed her face and edged up, inch by inch. When her
+knees were well up on the huge shoulders that worked beneath them
+powerfully, she gathered the reins, one in each hand, leaned down
+along the outstretched neck and let the great king run. The wind sang
+by her ears in a rising whine, the green prairie was a flowing sea
+beneath her, the thunder of the pounding hoofs was stupendous music.
+Tharon shut her eyes and rode, and for the first time since Jim Last's
+death a sense of joy rose in her like a tide.
+
+She had ridden El Rey before, many times. She had felt him sail
+beneath her down the open prairies and always it was so, as if the
+earth slid by, as if the note of the wind lifted minute by minute. She
+had wondered often about this--how long it would continue to rise with
+El Rey's rising speed, how long before he would reach a maximum above
+which he could not go, a place where the singing note would remain
+fixed.
+
+She had never known him reach that point. Always he could go faster.
+Always he had reserves.
+
+Far out ahead she saw a bunch of cattle feeding. They were lazily
+circling in a wide arc, content under the beaming sun. Near them sat a
+rider on a buckskin horse, Bent Smith on Golden. This Golden was one
+of the prides of Last's Holding. Bigger than Drumfire or Redbuck, he
+ranked next to El Rey himself in speed, for his slim legs, slapped
+smartly with the distinguishing finger marks on the outside of the
+knee, were long and shapely, his back short-coupled and strong, his
+withers low, his narrow hips high. Tharon bore hard on El Rey's bit,
+leaned her body to the left, and they swung in toward Bent and Golden
+in a beautiful sweeping curve that brought the cowboy up in his
+stirrups with his hat a-wave above him.
+
+"Good girl!" he yelled with leaping gladness as the superb pair shot
+by. "Good girl! Go to it!"
+
+Tharon loosed a hand long enough to wave back and was gone, on down
+the sloping land toward the country of the Black Coulee, her dark
+skirts fluttering at her knees, the two heavy guns pounding her thighs
+at every jump.
+
+It was a long time before El Rey came down from his sweeping flight.
+
+He had been too long holden in cramping bars. The free winds and the
+rolling earth filled him with a sort of madness. He ran with joy and
+the surety of unbounded power.
+
+The rider, left far behind, watched them anxiously for a time, thought
+of following, glanced at his cattle, remembered the gun man's heritage
+and turned to his business.
+
+The sun was well down over the western Rockface when Tharon and El Rey
+came back to Last's Holding. The riders were bringing in the cattle,
+dust was rising in clouds above the moving masses. From the ranch
+house came the savory smells of cooking.
+
+[Illustration: NEAR THEM SAT A RIDER ON A BUCKSKIN HORSE]
+
+The stallion was limber as a willow. He tossed his handsome head and
+his eyes were bright as stars set in his silver face. Life was at high
+tide in him, flowing magnificently. Tharon, her cheeks whipped into
+pulsing colour by the wind and the bounding speed, her tawny mane
+loosed from its bands and flying in a cloud behind her, smoothed back
+from her face, looked wild as an Indian. As she drew up and sat
+watching the work of the evening, she smiled for the first time in
+many days, and Jack Masters, passing, felt his heart leap with
+gladness.
+
+When the mistress of Last's was sad, so were her people.
+
+When the last big corral gate had swung to and the boys turned in to
+unsaddle, she touched El Rey with a toe and went over among them.
+
+"Line up the horses, boys," she said, "I want to see them all together
+once more. Somethin' came back in me today--somethin' I been missing
+for a long time. I'll be myself again."
+
+Billy turned Redbuck to face her, dropped his rein. Curly rode up on
+Drumfire. These two were red roans, dead matches. Bent brought Golden
+and stood him alongside. From far at the back of the corral they
+called Conford and Jack, who came wondering, the former on Sweetheart,
+true sister of El Rey, almost as big, almost as fast, almost as
+beautiful.
+
+Silver-blue roan, silver-pointed, slim, graceful, springy, she had not
+a single dark spot on her except the sharp black bars of the finger
+marks outside her knees.
+
+"You darlin'!" said Tharon as she wheeled in line.
+
+Then came Jack on Westwind, and he was another buckskin, paler than
+Golden, most marvelously pointed in pure chestnut brown. His finger
+marks were brown instead of black--the only horse at the Holding so
+distinguished, for no matter of what shade or colour, in all the
+others these peculiar marks were jet black. Five splendid creatures
+they stood and pounded the ringing earth, tossed their heads and
+waited, though they had all been far that day and it was feeding
+time.
+
+Out in the horse corrals there were many more of their breed, slim,
+wiry horses, toughened and hardened by long hours and daily work, but
+these were the flower of Last's, the prized favourites.
+
+For a long time Tharon sat and watched them, noting their perfect
+condition, their glistening skins, their shining hoofs, many of which
+were striped, another characteristic.
+
+"I don't believe," she said at last, "that there's a bunch of horses
+in Lost Valley to come nigh 'em. Ironwoods or anything else--I'd back
+th' Finger Marks."
+
+"So would we," said Conford quietly, "though we've seen th' Ironwoods
+run--a little."
+
+"That's th' word, Burt," said Curly, "a little. Who of us has ever
+seen Courtrey let Bolt run like he wanted to? Not a darned one. I've
+seen that big bay devil pull till th' blood dripped from his mouth."
+
+"Sure," put in Masters, "I've seen that, too--but I was lyin' up on
+th' Cup Rim oncet, watchin' a couple mavericks fer funny work, an'
+Courtrey an' Wylackie Bob come along down that way on Bolt an'
+Arrow--an' they wasn't a-holdin' them then. Lord, Lord, how they was
+goin'! Two long red streaks as level as your hand, an' I swear my
+heart came up in my throat to see 'em, an' I almost hollered. It was
+pretty work--pretty work, an' no mistake."
+
+Tharon looked over at him.
+
+"Fast as El Rey, Jack?"
+
+"Who could tell?" said the man. "I know it was some speed, an' that is
+all."
+
+The girl struck a hand on the king's shoulder so passionately that he
+jumped and snorted.
+
+"Some day," she said tensely, "El Rey will run th' Ironwoods off their
+feet--an' I'll run th' heart out of their master, damn him! Put th'
+horses out. It's supper time."
+
+She threw her right limb over the stallion's neck swiftly and with
+lithe grace, and slid abruptly to the ground.
+
+As she did so there came the sound of hoofs on the hard earth at the
+corner of the house, and a stranger came sharply into sight.
+
+He drew up and nodded. Conford, just turning away, turned quickly back
+and came forward.
+
+"Howdy," he said.
+
+The man, tall, lean, dark, returned the salute with another nod.
+
+He was covered with dust, as if he had ridden far and been a long time
+coming. His clothes were much the worse for wear, but they were mostly
+leather, which takes wear standing, as it were. The wide hat pulled
+low over his piercing dark eyes, was ornamented with a vanity of
+silver.
+
+The riding cuffs at his wrists were studded profusely with the same
+metal, as was the wide belt that spanned his narrow waist.
+
+He wore a three days' beard, and a black moustache dropped its long
+points to the edge of his jaw. Black hair showed beneath the hat. He
+was a remarkable figure, even in Lost Valley, and he commanded
+attention.
+
+He carried the customary two guns of the country, and he bestrode a
+horse that was as noticeable as himself.
+
+This horse was no denizen of Lost Valley. It was an utter alien. Its
+colour was a dingy black, as if it had recently been through fire, its
+coat rough and unkempt. Its long head was heavy and slug-like, its
+nose of the type known among horsemen as Roman. It was roughly built,
+raw-boned and angular, and of so stupendous a size that the man atop,
+who was six foot tall himself, seemed small by comparison.
+
+However, for all its ugliness, it possessed a seeming of vast power, a
+suggestion of great strength.
+
+The stranger looked the group over with his keen, hard eyes, and spoke
+in a slow drawl.
+
+"I reckon," he said, "I'm a-ridin' th' wrong trail. I hain't expected
+hyar."
+
+And turning abruptly, without another word, he jogged away around the
+house and started down the long slope already greying with the coming
+night.
+
+The foreman and the five punchers clamped over to the corner of the
+kitchen and watched him in speculative silence. Tharon came along and
+stood by Billy, her hand on the boy's arm. To Billy that sober touch
+confused the distances, set the strange rider dancing on the slope.
+
+"H'm," said Conford, his grey eyes narrow, "come from far an's goin'
+somewheres. I'll watch that duck. He looks like he's a record man to
+me."
+
+At supper there was much speculation about the stranger.
+
+"I'll lay a month's pay he come from Texas," said Billy, casting a
+side glance at his pal Curly, "them long lankys usually do. An'
+somehow it shows in their eyes, sort o' fierce an'--"
+
+"Billy," said Tharon severely, "if I was Curly I'd take a fall out of
+you. He can do it, _you_ know that an' _I_ know it."
+
+"Thanks, Miss Tharon," said Curly in his soft Southern drawl, "if you
+feel that-a-way about it, w'y, I don't care what _no_ little
+yellow-headed whipper-snapper from up Wyomin' way says to th'
+contrary."
+
+Billy was a bit abashed, but he stubbornly supported his contention
+that the stranger was a bad-man from Texas.
+
+"Plenty bad-men right here in Lost Valley," said the girl quietly,
+"an' th' breed ain't dyin' out as I can see. Th' settlers need a new
+leader--now that Jim Last's gone." And she fell to playing absently
+with her fork upon the cloth.
+
+The boys changed the subject hurriedly.
+
+"I found a dead brandin' fire in th' Cup Rim yesterday, Burt," said
+Masters, "quite a scrabbled space around it. Looked like some one'd
+branded several calves."
+
+"Don't doubt it," said the foreman. "Careful as we are there's always
+likely to be stragglers. An' to be a straggler's to be a goner in
+this man's land."
+
+"Unless he belongs t' Last's," said the irrepressible Billy. "I'll lay
+that fer every calf branded by Courtrey's gang we'll get back two."
+
+"Billy," said Tharon again, "Jim Last wasn't a thief. Neither will his
+people be thieves. For every calf branded by Courtrey, _one calf_
+wearin' th' J. L.--an' one calf only. We don't steal, but we won't
+lose."
+
+"You bet your boots an' spurs throwed in, we won't," said the boy
+fervently.
+
+As they rose from the table with all the racket of out-door men there
+came once more the sound of a horse's hoofs on the hard earth
+outside.
+
+Last's Holding was a vast sounding-board. No one on horseback could
+come near without advertising his arrival far ahead.
+
+This time it was no stranger. Tharon went to the western door to bid
+him 'light.
+
+It was John Dement from down at the Rolling Cove. He was a thin, worn
+man, who looked ten years beyond his forty, his face wrinkled by the
+constant fret and worry of the constant loser.
+
+Tonight he was strung up like a wire. His voice shook when he returned
+the hearty greetings that met him.
+
+"Boys," he said abruptly, "an' Tharon--I come t' tell ye all
+good-bye."
+
+"Good-bye! John, what you mean?"
+
+Tharon went forward and put a hand on his arm. Her blue eyes searched
+his face.
+
+The man stood by his horse and struck a tragic fist in a hard palm.
+
+"That's it. I give up. I'm done. I'm goin' down the wall come day--me
+an' my woman an' th' two boys. Got our duffle ready packed, an' Lord
+knows, it ain't enough t' heft th' horses. After five year!"
+
+There was the sound of the hopeless tears of masculine failure in the
+man's tragic voice. His fingers twisted his flabby hat.
+
+"Hold up," said Conford, pushing nearer, "straighten out a bit,
+Dement. Now, tell us what's up."
+
+"Th' last head--th' last hoof--run off last night as we was comin' in
+with 'em a leetle mite late. Had ben up Black Coulee way, an' it got
+dark on us. Just as we got abreast o' th' mouth of th' Coulee, where
+th' poplars grow, three men come a-boilin' out. They was on fast
+horses--o' course--an' right into th' bunch they went, hell-bent.
+Stampeded the hull lot. You know my bunch'd got down t' about a
+hundred head--don't know what I ben a-hangin' on fer, only a man
+hates t' give up an' own hisself beat out. An' my woman--she's a
+fighter.
+
+"She kep' standin' at my back like, oh, like--well, she kep' a-sayin'
+'We'll win out yet, John, you see. Right'll win ev'ry time.' You see
+we are just ready to get th' patent on our land. She couldn't give
+that up, seems like. All this time gone an' nothin' gained. So we ben
+a-hangin' on when things went from bad to worse. Th' herd's been
+a-goin' down an' down. Calves with their tongues slit so's they'd lose
+their mothers--fed up in some coulee by hand an' branded. Knowed 'em
+by my own colour cattle, w'ich I drove in here five year ago--th'
+yellers.
+
+"Mothers killed outright an' th' calves branded. Oh, I know it
+all--but what could I do? Kep' gettin' poorer an' poorer. Couldn't
+afford enough riders t' protect 'em. Then couldn't afford any an'
+tried t' make it go as th' boys got older. Courtrey, damn him, wants
+me offen that piece o' land a-fore th' patent's granted. Him with his
+twenty thousan' acres of Lost Valley now! An' how'd he get it? False
+entry, that's what! How many men's come in here, took up land, 'sold
+out' to Courtrey an' went? Or didn't go. A lot of 'em _didn't go_. We
+all know that. An' who dares to speak in a whisper about it? Th' men
+that did wouldn't go--never--nowheres."
+
+There was the bitterness of utter defeat and hatred in the shaking
+voice. The tree-toads, beginning their nightly chorus from the wet
+places below the cottonwoods, emphasized the dreariness of the
+recital, the ancient hopelessness of the weak beneath the heel of the
+oppressor.
+
+Dement ceased speaking and stood in silhouette against the last
+yellow-and-black of the dead sunset. The protruding apple in his
+hawk-like throat worked up and down grotesquely.
+
+For a long moment there was utter silence.
+
+Then he began again.
+
+"I knowed I wasn't welcome in th' Valley when I hadn't ben here more'n
+six months. Th' first leetle string o' fence I put up fer corrals went
+down, mysterious, as fast as I could fix it. Th' woman's garden was
+broke open an' trampled to dust by cattle, drove in. Winter ketched us
+with mighty leetle t' eat in th' way o' truck. Next year she guarded
+it herself some nights, sleepin' by day, an' oncet she took a shot at
+some one that come prowlin' around. They let her fence alone after
+that, but what'd they do outside? Killed all th' hogs we had one night
+an' piled 'em in a heap in th' front door yard! That was hint enough,
+but I kep' a-thinkin' that ef we behaved decent like, an' minded our
+own business we sartainly must win out. We did," he added grimly after
+a little pause, "like hell. An' how many others of th' settlers has
+gone through th' like? We ain't no tin gods ourselves, I own, but we
+got t' fight fire with fire. Only I ain't got no more light-wood," he
+finished quaintly, "I got to quit."
+
+There was another silence while the tree-toads sang. Then the man held
+out his hand, hardened and warped with the unceasing toil of those
+tragic years.
+
+"Good-bye, Tharon," he said, "I wisht Jim Last was here. With him gone
+Lost Valley's in Courtrey's hand an' no mistake. He was th' only man
+dared face him an' hold his own. Last's was th' only head th' weaker
+faction had, its master their only leader. While he lived we had some
+show, us leetle fellers. Now there ain't no leader. Th' ranchers'll go
+out fast now. It'll be a one-man valley."
+
+In the soft darkness Tharon took the extended hand, held it a moment
+and laid her other one upon it.
+
+"John Dement," she quietly said, "I want you to go home an' bar your
+house for fight. Fix up your fences, unpack your duffle. In the
+morning my riders will drive down to your place a hundred head o'
+cattle. You put your brand on em. There's goin' to be no one-man
+doin's in Lost Valley yet awhile--not while Jim Last's daughter
+lives. See," she dropped his hand and pointed to the east where the
+tall pine lifted to the stars, "out yonder there's a cross at Jim
+Last's grave--an' there's my mark on it. Th' settlers have a leader
+still--an' I name myself that leader. I'm set against Courtrey, now
+an' forever. I mean to fight him t' th' last inch o' ground in Lost
+Valley, th' last word o' law, th' last drop o' blood, both his an'
+mine. You go down among 'em--th' settlers--an' take 'em that word from
+me. Tell 'em Jim Last's daughter stands facin' Courtrey, an' she'll
+need at her back t' fight him every man in Lost Valley that ain't a
+coward."
+
+When the settler had gone, incoherent and half-incredulous, Conford
+drew a long breath and looked at his mistress in the dusk.
+
+"Tharon, dear," he said so gently that his words were like a caress
+"you're jest a-breakin' your riders' hearts. You're heapin' anxiety on
+us mountain-high. Now what on earth'll we do?"
+
+Young Billy Brent pushed near and slapped a hand against a doubled
+fist. His eyes were sparkling like harbour lights, his voice was like
+the sound of running fire.
+
+"Do?" he cried. "Do? We'll stand behind her so tight they can't see
+daylight through, an' we'll fight with an' for her every inch o' that
+way, every word o' that law, every drop o' that blood! Who says
+Last's ain't on th' map in Lost Valley?" Tharon smiled and touched him
+again.
+
+"Billy," she said softly, "you're after my own heart. Now get to bed.
+I want t' think."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE MAN IN UNIFORM
+
+
+Spring was warming swiftly into summer. Where the gently sloping
+ranges went up in waves and swells toward the uplands at the east, the
+bright new green had turned to a darker shade. The tiny purple and
+white flowers had disappeared to give place to sturdier ones of
+crimson and gold. The veil of water that fell sharply down the face of
+the Wall for a thousand feet at the Valley's southern end had thinned
+to sheerest gauze. In the Cañon Country the snow had disappeared from
+most of the high points. Red, black, yellow, the great face of the
+encircling Wall stood in everlasting majesty, looking down upon the
+level cup of Lost Valley. The unspeakable upheaval of peaks and crags,
+of cañons and splits and unfathomable depths, was almost a sealed book
+to the denizens of the Valley. There were those who knew False Ridge.
+
+There were those who said they knew more. Many a man had adventured
+therein, and few had returned to tell of their adventures. Cañon Jim
+had not returned. Not that he was a loss to the community, or that
+they mourned him, but his absence pointed again to the formidable
+secretive power of the Cañon Country.
+
+Tharon Last, standing in her western door, could look across the
+Valley's deceptive miles and see the huge black seams and fissures
+that rent the grim face. These splits and cañons were peculiar in that
+none came down to the Valley's floor, their yawning doorways being, in
+every instance, set from two hundred to five hundred feet up the
+Wall.
+
+Often the girl watched them in the changing lights and her active mind
+formed many a conjecture concerning them.
+
+"Some day," she told young Paula, "I'll go into the Cañon Country and
+see it for myself."
+
+"Saints forbid, Señorita!" said Paula, who had no love for the
+mysterious, and who was more Mexic than Porno, "there are demons and
+devils there!"
+
+"Yes, I doubt not, Paula," said Tharon grimly. "They say Courtrey
+knows th' Cañons, an' when he's there, it's peopled, an' no mistake!
+
+"But it must be beautiful--beautiful! Why--there's a thousand feet of
+crevasse on every hand, I know, steps an' benches an' weathered faces
+that no man can climb. They say there's bright waters that tumble
+down like th' Vestal's Veil and sink into holes without an outlet.
+Just go away in the rock. There's strange flowers an' stunted trees.
+An' they tell of th' Cup of God, a hidden glade so beautiful that th'
+eye of man has never seen its like. All my life it's called me, th'
+Cañon Country.
+
+"Don't you believe, Paula, that there's somethin' there for me? Some
+reason why I know I must some day go into its heart an' give myself up
+to it for a time? If I was free," she finished with a sigh, "if I was
+my own woman, wholly, I'd go soon. There's rest an' peace up there, I
+know--and a place to think of Jim Last without such bitterness that my
+heart turns t' gall."
+
+She shook her bright head against the doorpost and shut her soft lips
+into a straight line.
+
+"Nope," she finished sadly, "I ain't my own woman yet."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Tharon," said Billy Brent this day, clanking around the corner of the
+adobe house, his leather chaps flapping with every step, his yellow
+hair curling boyishly under his hat-brim. "Tharon, I got bad news for
+you."
+
+There was genuine distress in his grey eyes.
+
+"Yes?" asked the mistress of Last's, straightening up.
+
+"Yes, sir, an' I hate like hell t' tell it."
+
+"Out with it, Billy. What's wrong?"
+
+"Somebody's dynamited th' Crystal Spring in th' Cup Rim."
+
+"_What?_"
+
+The word was in italics. Its one syllable told all one might care to
+know of the importance of Billy's news.
+
+"Yes. Opened her up fer two square yards. Spread th' lovely old
+Crystal all over th' range. An' she's gone, as sure's shootin'.
+Nothin' but a lot o' wet an' dryin' mud to show for her."
+
+Tharon drew a long breath.
+
+"Courtrey's beginnin'," she said. "He's heard th' word I sent th'
+settlers. He's goin' t' use th' tactics now with Last's that he's used
+with every poor devil he wanted to run out of th' Valley, th' tactics
+he darsent use while Jim Last lived. Well--go send Conford to me,
+Billy."
+
+The girl sat down in the doorway and gazed sombrely out over the
+summer land.
+
+When her foreman came and stood before her, a slim, efficient figure,
+dark-faced and quiet, she had already made up her mind.
+
+"Burt," she said swiftly, "drive th' cattle down from th' Cup Rim
+right away. We'll run those two bunches under Blue Pine an' Nick Bob
+out toward th' Black Coulee. Tell 'em t' keep close t' th' others. I
+trust th' Indians, but there ain't no Indian livin' can meet
+Courtrey's white renegades in courage an' wits. Then we'll start right
+in an' dig a well th' first well ever dug on th' open range in this
+man's land."
+
+"Good Lord, Tharon!" said Conford, "A well!"
+
+"Yes. Th' livin' water holes have been th' pride of th' Valley, I
+know, but we'll fix this well of ours so's even Courtrey will respect
+it."
+
+There was a grim note in the golden voice.
+
+"How?" asked Conford uneasily.
+
+"Dig it first," said Tharon, "then I'll tell you."
+
+What the mistress said, went. Therefore, the next morning saw a
+disgusted bunch of cowboys and Indian _vaqueros_ setting to with a
+will at a spot much nearer the Holding than the Crystal had been, and
+it took a much shorter time to reach water in a good gravel bed than
+any one had dreamed.
+
+In three days the thing was done and Conford presented himself,
+smiling.
+
+"Now, Miss Secrecy," he said, "come on with th' mystery."
+
+Tharon went in to the big desk which Jim Last had used and which was
+now her own, and returned with a square white slab of pine,
+elaborately smoothed and finished by José.
+
+"Read that," she said, and held it up, face out.
+
+Printed neatly upon its shining surface, in the jet-black ink that old
+Anita made from the berries of a certain bush which grew at the foot
+of the cliffs across the Valley, were these words:
+
+"This well is planted. I hope it blows up the first thief who tries to
+destroy it. Tharon Last."
+
+Conford took the slab, scratched his head, holding his hat between
+thumb and finger, read it over, read it again, smiled, and then looked
+up.
+
+"Might work," he said, "an' you're givin' out your stand an' knowledge
+broadcast, ain't you?"
+
+"Certainly am," said Tharon briefly. "I said I'd fight, an' I want th'
+whole Valley t' know it."
+
+"It does," said Conford with conviction. "I heard in Corvan yesterday
+that John Dement has rode th' range continuous since he finished
+brandin' his new herd to tell th' settlers about it."
+
+"Good," said Tharon, "couldn't be better. There's got to be a change
+in Lost Valley sooner or later. Might as well be sooner."
+
+And with that thought the girl let her quick mind sweep out to take in
+the future. She sent Conford off to post her placard and herself went
+rummaging among the possibilities which her defy had placed before
+her. She knew that Courtrey would be coldly furious. He had lived his
+life as suited him, had taken what and where he listed, by fair means
+or foul, and though every soul in the Valley knew him and his methods,
+none had spoken the convicting word. It was the pen-stroke at the end
+of the death-warrant to do so.
+
+She knew that the faction of the settlers hated him and his with a
+vitriolic passion, that they were in the minority, that they were no
+tin gods themselves, and that they were being beaten out, one by one.
+
+Year by year Courtrey had added to his vast acreage, and it was a
+matter of common knowledge how he had done it. He was rich, powerful,
+bullying, a man whose self-aggrandizement knew no limit, whose merest
+whim was his law, whose will must not be thwarted. Year by year his
+_vaqueros_ drove down the Wall herds of fat cattle, their brands
+blurred, insolently raw and careless. Many a hapless man had stood and
+seen his own stock go by in Courtrey's band and dared not open his
+mouth. In fact Courtrey had been known to stop and chat with such a
+one, smiling his evil smile and enjoying the helpless chagrin of his
+victim.
+
+"Insolent ruffian!" muttered Tharon this day, frowning above her
+daddy's pipes on the desk top. "He's goin' t' get one run for his
+money from now till one of us is whipped. It may be me, but I'll
+leave my mark on him, so help me!
+
+"Straight killin's too good for him. I want to smash him first."
+
+"Tharon, mi _Corazon_," said Anita, stopping soft-foot beside her, "it
+is bad for one to talk so, to himself. The Evil One works on the mind
+that way."
+
+Tharon laughed.
+
+"Perhaps, Anita," she said shortly, "it is with the Evil One I have t'
+do, an' no mistake."
+
+The old woman crossed herself and went away, her wrinkled face dim
+with care. And Tharon dressed herself neatly, put a ribbon on her
+hair, set her wide hat carefully on her head, buckled on her heavy
+gun-belt, and went to the corral for El Rey. Her daddy's saddle was
+her own now, a huge affair carved and ornamented, profusely studded
+with silver.
+
+Along the right side below the pommel ran a darker stain, Jim Last's
+blood, set before his daughter like a star.
+
+She mounted the silver stallion and went away down along the summer
+land, a shaft of light shooting through the green of the ranges.
+
+Far over to her left she could see her cattle, beautiful bunches
+spread like figures in a tapestry. The figures of her riders were
+small dots on the outskirts.
+
+El Rey, always hard on the bit, always strong-headed, wanted to run
+and she swung loose her rein and let him go. But run as he might,
+there was always in his speed that rising note, that seeming of
+reserve power.
+
+She passed the head of Black Coulee, swung out across the edge of
+Rolling Cove, thundered down to the ford of the Broken Bend. Here she
+let the stallion drink, deep draughts that would have slowed a lesser
+horse. El Rey went up the bank beyond the ford like a charging engine,
+squared away and stretched out to finish his run. He was within three
+miles of Corvan, set like a stone in a smooth green surface, before he
+came down and lifted his shoulders into his gait. With the first rock
+and swing of the singlefoot, Tharon smiled and settled herself more
+comfortably in the saddle. This was joy to her, this beautiful
+syncopation, this poetic marked time that reeled off the miles beneath
+her and would scarcely have shaken a pebble from her hat-brim.
+
+As she struck the outskirts of the little town the unmistakable sound
+of El Rey's iron-shod hoofs brought heads into doors, children at the
+house corners to look upon her. She came down the main street at a
+smart clip, to bring up with a slide at the hitch-rail before
+Baston's store where the monthly mail was handled. There were horses
+tied there, and among them she saw what caused her to look twice with
+a narrowing of her keen eyes--a huge, raw-boned, black, rusty and
+slug-headed, among the Ironwood bays from Courtrey's Stronghold.
+
+"H'm," she told herself quietly, "so there's where he was expected."
+
+She tied El Rey to himself, far from the rest, for she knew his
+imperious temper and that trouble would ensue if he was near strange
+horses.
+
+Then she went into Baston's with her meal-sack on her arm. This
+meal-sack was a part of her accoutrement, a regular carry-all for such
+small purchases as she must take home--a roll of print for Paula, some
+tobacco for the men, a dozen spools of the linen thread which was so
+much prized among the women of Lost Valley.
+
+As she stepped in the open door her quick glance went over the big
+room with a comprehensiveness which catalogued its inmates accurately
+and instinctively. Courtrey was not there, though his great bay, Bolt,
+stood outside. However, Wylackie Bob was there. This man, sitting at a
+canvas covered table in a corner, idly fingering a pack of cards, was
+not one to be passed over easily. He was notorious.
+
+Tall, slow of action, sleepy-eyed, he was treacherous as a snake, as
+swift to move when necessary. He had been known to sit as he was now,
+idly playing, to leap up, crouch, draw and kill a man, and be down
+again at his place, idly playing, before the breath was done in his
+victim.
+
+He was a past-master of his gun, and unlike most men of the time and
+place, he carried only one.
+
+He was a quarter-blood Wylackie Indian. Near him sat the stranger who
+had ridden the slug-head black into Lost Valley. They both looked up
+as the girl entered and regarded her with smiles.
+
+Tharon did not look at them again. She saw, however, that they were
+together, of one interest. There were two or three of the settlers in
+the store, Jameson from over under the Rockface at the south, Hill
+from farther up, Thomas from Rolling Cove. She spoke to these men
+quietly and noticed with an inward thrill the eagerness with which
+they responded.
+
+There was an electric something between them which told her that her
+promise had, indeed, gone up and down the country, that in a subtle,
+unheralded manner she stood in Jim Last's place, a head, a leader.
+
+She made her purchases without undue speech, got two letters in her
+father's name--and these brought a smarting under her eyelids--tied up
+her sack and went out without so much as a glance at the two men in
+the corner. Laughter followed her, however, which set the red blood of
+anger pulsing in her cheeks.
+
+At the end of the store porch she came face to face with Courtrey and
+Steptoe Service, the sheriff of Menlo county. She swung to one side to
+descend the rough steps, vouchsafing them no word or look, but Service
+blocked her way. She raised her eyes and looked him full in the face,
+scanning his coarse red features coolly.
+
+"Well?" she said sharply.
+
+"What's this I hear, Tharon?" asked Service, "about you a-makin'
+threats?"
+
+"What have you heard?" she wanted to know.
+
+"W'y, that you're a-makin' threats."
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Well?"
+
+The sheriff flushed darker.
+
+"Look here, young woman,"--he raised his voice suddenly and on the
+instant there was a sound of boots on the store floor and the
+settlers, the two men in the corner, Baston and two clerks came
+crowding out to hear, "you look a-here--don't you know it's a-gin th'
+law for any one t' make a threat like you done, open an' above board,
+in th' Golden Cloud th' other night?"
+
+Tharon shifted the meal-sack higher on her left arm. Courtrey's eyes
+went down to her right hand and stayed there.
+
+The girl's upper lip lifted from her teeth in a sneer that was the
+acme of insult. The fire was beginning to play in her blue eyes.
+
+"Law?" she said. "My God! Law!"
+
+"Yes, _law_! you young hussy, an' don't you fergit that I represent
+it."
+
+The girl threw down the sack and flashed both hands on the gun-butts.
+Courtrey, watching, was half-a-second behind her and stopped with his
+hands hovering.
+
+"Not much, Courtrey," she said, "you fast gun man! You're too slow.
+An' this ain't your game, anyway, not face t' face. You're all right
+on a dark night--_an' from behind_. Fine! But you're a coward. You're
+what I called you before--an assassin."
+
+She was pale as ashes, her eyes narrowed to blazing slits. Jim Last,
+gun man, was in her like those composite pictures which show the
+shadow in the substance. There was a gasp from the store porch where
+Thomas stood with a shaking hand covering his lips. Baston was stuck
+against his wall like a leech, rigid. These men knew that she tempted
+death.
+
+Not a man in Lost Valley could have done it and gotten away with it.
+
+Tharon knew it, too, but she did not care.
+
+"An' now you know what you are, Courtrey. I'll tell th' same to you,
+Step Service. Law! In Lost Valley? Yes, Courtrey's law! Th' law of th'
+gun alone--th' law of thieves--th' law of murderers. An' you stand for
+that, you bet! What were you before you took th' oath of office? Tell
+me that! Th' man who killed old Mike McCrea an' took his cattle down
+th' Wall! Th' whole Valley knows it--but we've never dared to say it
+before!"
+
+The porch was lined with people now. Soft-footed Indians and Mexican
+_vaqueros_, sprung from nowhere, cowboys, ranchers, women, they came
+silently up and listened.
+
+The sheriff's red face was the colour of liver, purple and mottled
+with bursting rage. His fingers worked at his sides. He set his lips,
+and his small eyes never left the girl's face.
+
+Tharon, crouched a bit, her feet apart, her elbows crooked above her
+hips, her fingers curled on her gun-butts with nice precision, wet her
+own pale lips and continued:
+
+"An' who put you in office? That laugh of an office! Who? Why,
+Courtrey--th' biggest thief, th' coldest murderer in th' country! _He_
+put you there! An' what are you good for? My daddy was shot--_in th'
+back_--an' did you make one inquiry into the murder? Come out to
+Last's, even to find a clew? Not you! There's only one sheriff in this
+Valley--one bit o' law that will avenge his death--an' that's _me_!
+Now, you two fine gentlemen--I'm goin'. There's my hand! I throw th'
+cards on th' table! Shoot me in the back if you've got th' nerve. Come
+out in th' open an' fight! _But you better be quick about it!_"
+
+With that she backed slowly along the porch, keeping them in view.
+
+"Get away behind me," she called. There was a path opened instantly,
+the sound of shuffling feet. Along the porch she went, step by step,
+stopping every moment or so to keep close hold on her advantage, every
+nerve strained, every one of her faculties at the top of its power.
+
+She felt for the step with her foot, went down, backed through the
+crowd, brought them all in the range of the guns which she flashed out
+now and held upon them.
+
+She was ashy pale, a flaming, vibrant thing. Not a man there but knew
+she was more dangerous at the moment than cool Jim Last had ever been,
+for she radiated hatred of her father's killer in every bitter
+glance. She had none for whom to be cautious. She was the last of her
+blood. She was efficient, and she knew it.
+
+Courtrey knew it, and felt the sweat start on his skin.
+
+Service knew it, and hated her for it.
+
+As the girl backed clear there came into her vision a strange
+figure--the straight, trim figure of a man who stood stiffly at
+attention, where her imperious words had caught him.
+
+He wore a uniform of semi-military style, leather leggings, a flannel
+shirt of butternut and a smart, tan, broad-brimmed hat.
+
+He, too, came in the range of the travelling guns and waited their
+pleasure.
+
+Tharon reached El Rey. She stuck her right-hand weapon in its holster,
+loosed the rein, flung it over the stallion's head, stepped around his
+shoulder and mounted deftly and swiftly from the wrong side. It was a
+pretty trick of horsemanship and showed up her adroitness. As El Rey
+rose on his hind feet, whirling, that unwavering muzzle whirled also,
+to keep in line. The king struck into his gait and his rider, facing
+backward, swung away down the narrow street. Until she was well out of
+range the tension held.
+
+Then Steptoe Service struck a fist into a palm and began to swear in
+a fury, but Courtrey laughed, one of his rare, short bursts of mirth
+that were more bodeful than oaths.
+
+He turned on his heel and strode back the way he had come.
+
+The stranger in the uniform walked forward, went up the steps, crossed
+the porch, and, stooping, picked up the meal-sack which Tharon had
+dropped.
+
+"Will some one kindly tell me who the young lady is and where she
+lives?" he asked gravely.
+
+Baston, unglued from the wall, spoke up with his usual pompous
+eagerness.
+
+"Tharon, from Last's Holdin'," he said.
+
+"Thanks," and the man wrapped the sack into a small bundle and tied it
+with its own string.
+
+He stuck it under one arm and taking out a short brown pipe, proceeded
+to fill and light it.
+
+Courtrey, halted a few rods away, eyed him sharply.
+
+As he turned, rolling his match to death in his fingers, the sun
+struck mellowly upon something on his breast, a small, dark copper
+shield which bore strange heraldry.
+
+At the sight Courtrey's eyes sought Service's and held them for a
+swift, questioning moment.
+
+Strangers in Lost Valley were contraband.
+
+The three settlers looked covertly at each other, drifted apart, got
+their horses and presently left town by different ways.
+
+Three hours later these men met by common consent at the head of
+Rolling Cove and talked long and earnestly of the happening. They knew
+that Courtrey would never take silently that bitter arraignment, that
+something would transpire swiftly to show his resentment, to prove his
+absolute power over Lost Valley.
+
+"'Tain't Tharon that'll suffer, even ef he did try t' shoot her that
+night in th' Golden Cloud, because Courtrey wants her himself," said
+Jameson quietly, "th' whole country knows that. There was only one man
+who didn't know it, an' that was Jim Last himself. No, he won't monkey
+with th' Holdin' yet, not to any great extent. It'll be us little
+fellers, us others who he knows would stan' behind her. Some of us'll
+lose somethin' soon, an' don't you forget it."
+
+"If we do," said Hill passionately, "it's time t' show our hand. We've
+been hounded long enough. Th' men from Last's will be with us, we can
+gamble on that."
+
+"Yes," said Thomas, "but it'll be war. Open war. There'll be killin's
+then."
+
+Jameson, a quiet man with deep eyes, made a wide gesture.
+
+"What if there is?" he asked, "might's well be done in th' open as in
+th' dark an' unseen. Might better be! I move we ride th' Valley an'
+ask th' settlers to band together, under Last's, an' give our
+ultimatum t' Courtrey on th' heels of this. What say you?"
+
+"I say yes," said Hill swiftly. Thomas, of less stern stuff, wavered.
+
+"Well, let's wait awhile. Let's don't be too quick. Courtrey now, he's
+mighty quick an' hot. They ain't no tellin'----"
+
+"All right," said Jameson promptly, "suit yourself--we ain't
+a-pressin' no man into this."
+
+"Why, now, I'm fer it, boys--that is, I'm believin' it's got t' be
+done, only I counsels time."
+
+"No time," cried Hill, "we ben counselin' time an' quiet an' not doin'
+anything to stir 'em up, an' what d' we get? Cattle stole every
+spring, waterholes taken an' fenced fer Courtrey's stock right on th'
+open range, hogs drove off, fences tore down, like pore old John
+Dement's an' some of us left t' rot every year in some coulee. We done
+waited a sight too long. Courtrey thinks he owns Lost Valley, an' he
+comes near doin' it, what with his hired killers, Wylackie an' Black
+Bart an' this new gun man that's just come in. I heered today he's
+from Arizona, an' imported article."
+
+Jameson turned to him and held out his hand.
+
+"I'm goin' to ride tomorrow," he said.
+
+Hill grasped the extended hand and looked hard in the other's eyes.
+
+"Me, too," he said.
+
+Thomas, still of the timid, doubting heart, watched them with a hand
+over his mouth to hide its shaking.
+
+Without a word the others turned their horses and rode away in
+different directions. As they went farther from him in the wash of the
+late light the uncertain hand came down with a jerk. Fear was in his
+eyes, the deep, quaking fear of the man poor in courage, but he beat
+it down.
+
+"Boys!" he cried in a panic, "don't leave me out! For God's sake,
+don't think I ain't willin'! I'll be out come day tomorrow!"
+
+The others both stopped and turned in their saddles.
+
+"Glad to hear ye come through, Thomas," called Jameson, "you ride
+south along th' Rockface. You'll go over Black Coulee way, won't ye,
+Dan?"
+
+"I will," said Hill.
+
+"Good. I'll go north."
+
+There was a quiet grimness in the few words, for he who rode north on
+such an errand tempted fate.
+
+Then the three separated, and there was only the silence and the red
+light of the dying day at the head of Rolling Cove.
+
+That same evening Tharon Last sat in her western doorway and watched
+the sun go down in majesty over the weathered peaks and ridges of the
+Cañon Country.
+
+Billy Brent lounged on the hard earth beside the step, his fair head
+shining in the afterglow, his grey eyes upon the girl's face in a sort
+of idol-worship.
+
+The curve of her cheek, golden with tan and red with the hue of youth,
+was more to him than all the sunsets the world had ever seen.
+
+A deep light shone in his young eyes which, had the girl been wise,
+she might have seen. But Tharon was as elemental as the kitten chasing
+a moth out by the pansy bed, and could look in a man's face with the
+unconscious eyes of a child.
+
+Now she watched the pageant of the dying day in a rapt delight.
+
+"Billy," she said presently, "I've often wondered if there's another
+place in all the world as lovely as our Valley. Jim Last told me once
+that there were places so much bigger out below, that we wouldn't be a
+patchin' to them. Don't seem like there could be."
+
+She lifted her slim body up along the doorpost and looked long and
+earnestly all up and down the wonderful stretch of country that lay
+along the Wall from north to south. She could see the tiny dots that
+went for the different homesteads, scattered here and there. Up at the
+head there lay, hard against the frowning hills, the squat, wide blur
+that was Courtrey's Stronghold. Her lips compressed at sight of it.
+
+"Nope," she said, shaking her head, "I don't believe he meant it. He
+used to tease me a lot, you know. It's an awful big valley, an' no
+mistake."
+
+The rider, who had drifted up along the Wall five years before, looked
+down at the playing kitten and smiled with a lean crinkling of his
+cheeks.
+
+"It's a sure-enough big place, Tharon," he said gravely, "an' it's
+lovely as Eden."
+
+"Huh?" said Tharon, "where's that, Billy?"
+
+The boy sobered and looked up into her blue eyes.
+
+"Why, Tharon," he whispered, "that's where th' heart is."
+
+For a moment she regarded him. Then she smiled.
+
+"Billy," she said severely, "you're stringin' your boss. I'm sure
+goin' to fire you, some day, like I ben a-threatenin'."
+
+"Do--an' hire me over!"
+
+"Nope."
+
+The girl shut her pretty lips and the man's hand crept softly up and
+touched her wrist where it lay against her knee.
+
+"All right," he said airily, "gimme my time. I quit."
+
+There was an odd note in his voice, as if under the play there was a
+purpose. For a second Tharon held her breath.
+
+"What you mean, Billy?" she asked so sharply that the boy jumped.
+
+Then he laughed, still in that light fashion.
+
+"What I said," he affirmed doggedly.
+
+But the mistress of Last's took a clutch on his hand that was
+authority in force and leaned down to look anxiously in his face.
+
+"Why, Billy," she said with a quiver in her voice, "Last's couldn't
+run without you, boy. An' what's more, I thought all th' riders of th'
+Holdin' would stand by th' place."
+
+Billy, fully sobered, straightened up and held hard to that clutching
+hand. The red light of the sunset flushed his cheeks, but it never set
+the glow that was in his eyes.
+
+"Don't you know yet, Tharon," he said quietly, "when I'm a-jokin' with
+you? I'd stand by Last's an' you to my last breath. Don't you know
+that?"
+
+For a long moment Tharon regarded him gravely.
+
+"Yes, I do," she said, "but somehow I don't like to have you talk
+that-a-way, Billy. Don't do it no more."
+
+"All right," promised the rider, "if you say so, Boss. Only don't talk
+about firin' me, then. I'm very sensitive."
+
+And he looked away with smiling eyes to where the deep black shadows
+fell prone into the Valley from the forbidding face of the great
+Wall.
+
+Only the towering peaks were alight with crimson and gold, which
+haloed their bulk in majestic mystery.
+
+Night was coming fast across Lost Valley, while the tree-toads out by
+the springhouse set up their nightly chorus.
+
+"It's Eden," thought the man, "as sure's th' world, made an' forgot
+with all its trimmin's--innocence an' sweetness an' plenty, an' th'
+silence of perfect peace, not to overlook th' last unnecessary evil,
+th' livin' presence of his majesty, th' devil."
+
+Then the light died wholly and there came the disturbing sound of
+boots on the ringing stones. The rest of the riders were coming in to
+claim their share of Billy's Eden.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+UNBROKEN BREAD
+
+
+Jameson, Hill and Thomas were as good as their word. During the week
+that followed the spectacular denouncement of Courtrey and Service at
+Baston's store, they went quietly to every settler in the Valley and
+declared themselves. In almost every instance they met with eager
+pledges of approval. They knew, every man of them, that this slow
+banding together for resistance against Courtrey and his power meant
+open war. For years they had suffered indignities and hardship without
+protest. While Jim Last lived they had had a sort of leader, an
+example, though they had feared to follow in his lead too strongly.
+
+They had copied his methods of guarding possessions, of corraling
+every cattle-brute at night, of keeping every horse under bars. Last
+had looked Courtrey in the face. The rest dared not.
+
+Now with Last gone, they felt the lack, as if a bastion had been
+razed, leaving them in the open. Secrecy in Lost Valley had been
+brought to a work of art. They could hold their tongues.
+
+But with the new knowledge Tharon Last took on a light, a halo.
+
+Men spoke in whispers about her daring. They felt it themselves.
+
+Word of her lightning quickness with her daddy's guns, of her
+accuracy, went softly all about and about, garbled and accentuated.
+They said she could shoot the studs from the sides of a man's belt and
+never touch him. They said she could drive a nail farther than the
+ordinary man could see. They said she could draw so swiftly that the
+motion of the hands was lost.
+
+A slow excitement took the faction of the settlers.
+
+But out at Last's Holding a grave anxiety sat upon Tharon's riders.
+Conford knew--and Billy knew--and Curly knew more about Courtrey's
+intent than some of the others. Young Paula, half asleep in the deep
+recesses of the house, had witnessed that furious encounter by the
+western door on the soft spring day when Jim Last had come home to die
+at dusk. She knew that the look in Courtrey's eyes had been
+covetousness--and she had told José. José, loyal and sensible, had
+told the boys. So now there was always one or more of them on duty
+near the mistress of Last's on one pretext or another. To Tharon, who
+knew more than all of them put together, this was funny.
+
+It stirred the small mirth there was in her these days, and often she
+sent them away, to have them turn up at the most unexpected times and
+places.
+
+"You boys!" she would say whimsically, "you think Courtrey's goin' to
+cart me off livin'?"
+
+"That's just what we are afraid of, Tharon," answered Conford gravely
+once, "we know it'd not be _livin'_."
+
+And Tharon had looked away toward José's cross, and frowned.
+
+"No," she said, "an' it won't be any way, _livin'_ or dead."
+
+One night toward the end of that week a strange cavalcade wound up
+along the levels, past the head of Black Coulee, forded the Broken
+Bend in silence save for the stroke of hoof and iron shoe on stone,
+and went toward Last's. There were thirty men, riding close, and they
+had nothing to say in the darkness.
+
+At the Holding Tharon Last waited them on her western doorstep.
+
+As they rode in along the sounding-board the muffled ringing of the
+hoofs seemed to the girl as the call of clarions. The heart in her
+breast leaped with a strange thrill, a gladness. She felt as if her
+father's spirit stood behind her waiting the first step toward the
+fulfillment of her promise.
+
+The riders stopped in the soft darkness. There was no moon and the
+very winds seemed to have hushed their whispers in the cottonwoods.
+
+"Tharon," said the man who rode in the lead, and she recognized the
+voice of Jameson from the southern end of the Valley, "we've come."
+
+That was all. A simple declaration, awaiting her disposal.
+
+Conford, not half approving, his heart heavy with foreboding, stood at
+his mistress' shoulder and waited, too.
+
+For a long moment there was no sound save the eternal tree-toads at
+their concert. Then the girl spoke, and it seemed to those shadowy
+listeners that they heard again the voice of Jim Last, sane,
+commanding, full of courage and conviction.
+
+"I'm glad," said Tharon simply, "th' time has come when Lost Valley
+has got t' stand or fall forever. Courtrey's gettin' stronger every
+day, more careless an' open. He's been content to steal a bunch of
+cattle here, another there, a little at a time. Now he's takin' them
+by th' herds, like John Dement's last month. He's got a wife, an' from
+what I've always heard, she's a sight too good fer him. But he wants
+more--he wants _me_. He's offered me th' last insult, an' as Jim
+Last's daughter I'm a-goin' to even up my score with him, an' it's got
+three counts. You've all got scores against him."
+
+Here there were murmurs through the silent group.
+
+"Th' next outrage from Courtrey, on any one of us, gets all of us
+together. For every cattle-brute run off by Courtrey's band, we'll
+take back one in open day, all of us ridin'. We'll have to shoot, but
+I'm ready. Are you?"
+
+Every man answered on the instant.
+
+"Then," said the girl tensely, "get down an' sign."
+
+There was a rattle of stirrups and bits, a creak of leather as thirty
+men swung off their horses.
+
+Tharon stepped back in the lighted room. Her men stood there against
+the walls. The settlers came diffidently in across the sill, lean,
+poor men for the most part, their strained eyes and furrowed faces
+showing the effect of hardships. Not a man there but had seen himself
+despoiled, had swallowed the bitter dose in helplessness.
+
+Most of them were married and had families. Some of them had killings
+to their record. Many of them were none too upright.
+
+Jameson was a good man, and so was Dan Hill. Thomas was merely weak.
+Buford was a gun man who had protected his own much better than the
+rest. McIntyre was like him. One by one they came forward as Tharon
+called them by name, and leaning down, put their names or their marks
+to a sheet of paper which bore these few simple lines:
+
+"We, the signers named below, do solemnly promise and pledge ourselves
+to stand together, through all consequences of this act, for the
+protection of our lives and property. For every piece of property
+taken from any one of us, we shall go together and take back it, or
+its worth, from whoever took it. For every person killed in any way,
+but fair-and-open, we promise to hang the murderer."
+
+Billy had drafted the document. Tharon, whom Jim Last had taught her
+letters, read it aloud. The names of Last's Holding headed it. The
+thirty names and marks--and of the latter there were many--stretched
+to the bottom of the sheet.
+
+When it was done the girl folded it solemnly and put it away in the
+depths of the big desk. Old Anita, watching from the shadows of the
+eating room beyond, put her _reboso_ over her head and rocked in
+silent grief. She had seen tragic things before.
+
+Then these lean and quiet men filed out, mounted the waiting horses
+and went away in the darkness, mysterious figures against the stars.
+
+That night Tharon Last sat late by the deep window in her own room at
+the south of the ranch house. It was a huge old room, high walled and
+sombre. There were bright blankets hung like pictures on the walls,
+baskets marvelously woven of grass and rushes, thick mats on the floor
+made in like manner and of a tough, long-fibred grass that grew down
+in a swale beyond the Black Coulee, while in one corner there shone
+pale in the darkness the one great treasure of that unknown mother, an
+almost life-size statue of the Holy Virgin.
+
+Of this beautiful thing Tharon had stood in awe from babyhood.
+
+A half fearful reverence bowed her before it on those rare times when
+Anita, throwing back to her Mexic ancestors, worshipped with vague
+rites at its feet.
+
+Always its waxen hands bore offerings, silent tribute from the girl's
+still nature. Sometimes these were the prairie flowers, little wild
+things, sweet and fragile. Sometimes they were sprays of the water
+vines that grew by the wonderful spring of the Holding.
+
+Again they were strings of bright beads, looped and falling in
+glistening cascades over the tarnished gilt robes of the Virgin.
+
+Under the deep window there was a wide couch, piled high with a narrow
+mattress of wild goose feathers and covered with a crimson blanket.
+Here the girl sat with her arms on the sill and looked out into the
+darkness that covered the Valley. She thought of the thirty men who
+had signed her paper, riding far and by in the sounding basin,
+returning to their uncertain homes. She thought of her father asleep
+under his peaceful cross, of young Harkness beside him.
+
+She thought of Courtrey and Service and Wylackie Bob, of Black Bart
+and the stranger from Arizona. They were a hard bunch to tackle.
+
+They had the Valley under their thumbs to do with as they pleased,
+like the veriest Roman potentate of old. Her daddy had told her once,
+when she was small and lonely of winter nights, strange old tales of
+rulers and their helpless subjects. Jim Last could talk when he
+needed, though he was a man of conserved speech.
+
+Yes, Courtrey was like a king in Lost Valley, absolute. She thought of
+the many crimes done and laid to his door since she could remember, of
+countless cattle run off, of horses stolen and shamelessly ridden in
+grinning defiance of any who might dare to identify them, of Cap Hart
+killed on the Stronghold's range and left to rot under the open skies,
+a warning like those birds of prey that are shot and hung to scare
+their kind. Her soft lips drew themselves into a hard line, very like
+Jim Last's, and the heart in her ratified its treaty with the thirty
+men.
+
+She had none to mourn her, she thought a trifle sadly--well Anita and
+Paula, of course, and there were her riders. Billy would grieve--he'd
+kill some one if she were killed--and Conford and Jack.
+
+A warm glow pervaded her being. Yes, she had folks, even if she was
+the last of her blood.
+
+But she didn't intend to be killed. She was right, and she had
+listened enough to Anita to believe with a superstitious certainty,
+that right was invulnerable. For instance, if she and Courtrey should
+draw at the same second, she believed absolutely, that because she was
+in the right, her bullet would travel a bit the swifter, her aim be
+truer. She felt in her heart with a profound conviction that some day
+she would kill Courtrey. She thought of his wife, Ellen, a pale flower
+of a woman, white as milk, with hair the colour of unripe maize, and
+wondered if she loved the man who made her life hell, so the Valley
+whispered. Tharon wondered how it would seem to love a man, as women
+who were wives must love their men--if the agony of loss to Ellen
+could be as acute and terrifying as hers had been ever since that soft
+night in spring when her best friend, Jim Last, had come home on El
+Rey.
+
+She thought of the grey look on his face, of the pinched line at his
+nostrils' base, and the tears came miserably under her lids, she laid
+her head on the cloth mat that covered the wide window ledge and wept
+like any child for a time. Then she wiped her face with her hands,
+sighed, and fell again to thinking.
+
+An hour later as she rose to make ready for bed, she thought she
+caught a faint sound out where the little rock-bordered paths ran in
+what she was pleased to call her garden, since a few hardy flowers
+grew by the spring's trickle, and she held her breath to listen. It
+was nothing, however, she thought, and turned into the deep room.
+
+Only the tree-toads, long since silent, knew that a cigarette,
+carefully shielded in a palm, glowed in the darkness.
+
+Two days after this a visitor came to Last's. From far down they saw
+him coming, in the mid-morning while the work of the house went
+forward. Paula, bringing a pan of milk from the springhouse spied him
+first and stopped to satisfy her young eyes with the unwonted
+appearance of him. She looked long, and hurried in to tell her
+mistress.
+
+"Señorita," she said excitedly, "see who comes! A stranger who has
+different clothes from any other. He rides not like Lost Valley men,
+either, being too stiff and straight. Come, see."
+
+And Tharon, busy about the kitchen in her starched print dress,
+dropped everything at once to run with Paula to the western door of
+the living room that they might look south.
+
+"_Muchachas_ both," complained old Anita, "the milk is spilled and the
+_pan dulce_ burns in the oven! Tch, tch!"
+
+But the young creatures in the west door cared naught for her
+grumbling.
+
+"Who can it be, to come so, Señorita?" wondered Paula, her brown cheek
+beside her mistress, "is he not handsome!"
+
+"For mercy sake, Paula," chided Tharon laughing, "I believe you'd look
+for beauty in th' ol' Nick himself if he rode up. But I've seen this
+man before."
+
+"Where? When?"
+
+"In town that day I met Courtrey an' Service. I remember seen' him
+come into line as I backed out--he was standin' between th' racks an'
+th' porch, somewhere." And she narrowed her eyes and studied the rider
+as he came jogging up across the range.
+
+"H'm," she said presently, "he does ride funny. I bet he ain't rode
+range much in _his_ life. Stiff as a ramrod, an' no mistake."
+
+Then with an unconscious grace and poise that set well upon her as the
+mistress of Last's, Tharon moved into the open door and waited.
+
+As the stranger came closer both girls subjected him to a frank and
+careful scrutiny that in any other place than Lost Valley would have
+been rudeness itself.
+
+Here it catalogued the stranger, set the style of his welcome.
+
+It left him stripped of surprise, outwardly, before he was within
+speaking distance.
+
+It told the observers that he was young, of some twenty-six or seven,
+that his face, the first point taken in with lightning swiftness--was
+different from most faces they had ever seen, that it was open,
+smiling, easy, that he was straight as a ramrod, indeed, that he rode
+as if he feared nothing in the earth or the heavens, that he carried
+no gun, that he wore the peculiar uniform that Tharon had noticed
+before, and that there was something on his breast, a dark shield of
+some sort which made them think of Steptoe Service and his disgraced
+sheriff's star. This thought brought a frown to Tharon's brows, and it
+was there to greet the stranger when he rode up to the step and
+halted, his smart tan hat in his hand. The morning sun burned warmly
+down on his dark hair, which was brushed straight back from his
+forehead in a way unknown in those parts. His dark eyes, slow and deep
+but somehow merry, took in the pretty picture in the door.
+
+"Miss Last?" he asked in a low voice.
+
+"Yes," said Tharon promptly and waited.
+
+Every one waited in Lost Valley for a stranger to make known his
+business. Paula drew back behind her mistress.
+
+The man sat still on his horse and waited, too. The silence became
+profound. The hens cackling about the barns intruded sharply.
+
+"Well," he said presently, "I am a stranger, and I came to see you."
+
+The girl in the doorway felt a hot surge of discomfort flare over her
+for the first time in her life for such a reason.
+
+There was something in the low voice that implied a lack, accused her
+of something. She resented it instantly.
+
+"If that is so," she said slowly, "light."
+
+The man laughed delightedly, and swung quickly down, dropping his
+rein. Tharon noticed that. That much was natural. He held his hat
+against his breast with one hand and came forward with the same
+quickness, holding out the other. Tharon was not used to shaking
+hands with strange men. She gave her hand diffidently, because he so
+evidently expected it, and took it away swiftly.
+
+"My name," he said, "is Kenset--David Kenset, and I am from
+Washington, D. C."
+
+He might as well have said Timbuctoo. Tharon Last knew little outside
+her own environment. Words and names that had to do with unknown
+places were vague things to her.
+
+"Yes?" she answered politely, "I make no doubt you've come far. Come
+in. Dinner'll soon be ready," and she moved back from the door with a
+smile that covered her pitiful ignorance as with a garment of gold.
+When Tharon smiled like that she was wholly adorable, and the man knew
+it at once.
+
+Why she had so quickly invited him in before he had fully declared
+himself, she did not know, unless it was because of that lack in her
+which his first words had implied.
+
+Old Anita, whose manners were the simple and perfect ones of the
+Mexican coupled to a kindly heart, had taught her how to comport.
+
+Her easy and constant association with the riders and _vaqueros_ had
+dulled her somewhat, but she could be royal on occasion.
+
+Now she simply stepped back in the deep cool room where the _ollas_
+swung in the windows, smiled--and she was changed entirely from the
+girl of a few moments before.
+
+The man came in, laid his hat on the flat top of the melodeon, walked
+over to a chair and sat down. There was an ease about him, a
+taking-for-granted, that amazed Tharon beyond words.
+
+Then he looked frankly at her and began to talk as if he had known her
+always.
+
+"I've come to live in Lost Valley, Miss Last," he said, "for a long
+while, I think. Wish me luck."
+
+"Come here to live?" said Tharon, "a settler? Goin' to homestead?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"No."
+
+A quick suspicion seized her. Perhaps Washington was like Arizona, a
+place from which they imported gun men. Only this man wore no gun, and
+he had not a look of prowess. No. This man was different.
+
+"Then what you goin' to do?" she asked as frankly as a child.
+
+"First," he said, "I'm going up where the pines grow yonder and build
+myself a house," and he waved a hand toward the east where the ranges
+rolled up to the thickening fringes of the forest that marched back
+into the ramparts of the trail-less hills.
+
+"I want to find an ideal spot, a glade where the pines stand round the
+edges, with a spring of living water running down, and where I can
+look down and over the magnificent reaches of Lost Valley. I shall
+make me a home, and then I shall work."
+
+"Ride?" asked the girl succinctly.
+
+"Ride? Of course, that will be a great part of that work."
+
+"Who for?"
+
+He looked at her sharply.
+
+"Who for?"
+
+"Yes. What outfit?"
+
+There was a hard quality in her voice. If he had come in to ride for
+Courtrey, why he must know at once that Last's was no friend of his,
+now or ever.
+
+He caught the drift of her thought in part.
+
+"For no outfit, Miss Last," he said with a gentle dignity. "I am in
+the employ of the United States Government."
+
+A swift change came over Tharon's face.
+
+Government!
+
+That was no word to conjure by in Lost Valley. Steptoe Service prated
+of Gov'ment. It was a farce, a synonym for juggled duty, a word to
+suggest the one-man law of the place, for even Courtrey, who made the
+sheriffs--and unmade them--did it under the grandiloquent name of
+Government. She looked at him keenly, and there was a sudden hardening
+in her young eyes.
+
+"Then I reckon, Mister," she said coolly, "that you an' me can't be
+friends."
+
+"What?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Are you in earnest?"
+
+"Certainly am," said Tharon. "I ain't on good terms at present with
+anything that has t' do with law."
+
+David Kenset leaned forward and looked into her face with his deep,
+compelling eyes.
+
+"I guessed as much from my first knowledge of you the other day," he
+answered, "but we are on unfamiliar ground. You have a wrong
+conception of Government, a perverted idea of law and what it stands
+for."
+
+"All right, Mister," said the girl rising. "We won't argy. I asked you
+t' dinner, but I take it back. I ask ye t' forgive me my manners, but
+th' sooner we part th' better. Then we won't be a-hurtin' each other's
+feelin's. I'm fer law, too, but it ain't your kind, an' we ain't
+likely to agree."
+
+She picked up his hat from where it lay on the melodeon and fingered
+it a bit, smiling at him in the ingenuous manner that was utterly
+disarming.
+
+A slow dark flush spread over the man's face. He laughed, however, and
+in reaching for the hat, caught two of her fingers, whether purposely
+or not, Tharon could not tell.
+
+"Admirable hospitality in the last frontier," he said. "But perhaps I
+should not have expected anything different."
+
+"You make me ashamed," said Tharon straightly, "but Last's ain't
+takin' chances these days. You may belong to Government, an' you may
+belong to Courtrey, an' I'm against 'em both."
+
+She walked with him to the door, stepped out, as if with some thought
+to soften her unprecedented treatment of the stranger under her roof.
+She noted the trim figure of him in its peculiar garb, the proud
+carriage, the even and easy comportment under insult.
+
+From his saddle he untied a package wrapped in paper.
+
+"Will you please take this?" he asked lightly, holding it out. "Just
+on general principles."
+
+But she shook her head.
+
+"I can't take no favours from you when I've just took stand against
+you, can I?" she asked in turn.
+
+"Well, of all the ridiculous----"
+
+The man laughed again shortly, tossed the package on the step,
+mounted, whirled and rode away without a backward glance.
+
+Tharon stood frowning where he left her until the brown horse and its
+rider were well down along the levels toward Black Coulee.
+
+Then a sigh at her shoulder recalled her and she turned to see the
+wistful dark face of Paula gazing raptly in the same direction.
+
+"He was so handsome, Señorita," said the girl, "to be so hardly dealt
+with."
+
+"Paula," said the mistress bitingly, "will you remember who you're
+talkin' to? Do you want to go back to th' Pomos under th' Rockface?"
+
+"Saints forbid!" cried Paula instantly.
+
+"Then keep your sighs for José an' mind your manners. Pick up that
+bundle."
+
+Swiftly and obediently the girl did as she was told, unrolling the
+wrapper from the package.
+
+She brought to light the meal-sack which Tharon had dropped that day
+on Baston's porch.
+
+A slow flush stained Tharon's cheeks at the sight, and she went
+abruptly into the house.
+
+When the riders came in at night she told them in detail about the
+whole affair, for Last's and its men were one, their interests the
+same.
+
+They held counsel around the long table in the dining room under the
+hanging lamp, and Conford at her right was spokesman for the rest.
+
+"He's somethin' official, all right, I make no doubt, Tharon," he said
+when he had listened attentively, "but what or who I don't know. I
+heard from Dixon about him comin' into Corvan that day, an' that he
+had rode far. No one knows his business, or what he's in Lost Valley
+for. He's some mysterious."
+
+"He's goin' to stay, so he told me," went on the girl, "goin' to build
+a house up where the pines begin an' means to ride. But how'll he
+live? What an' who will he ride for? He said for Government."
+
+"What's he mean by that?"
+
+"Search me."
+
+"Wasn't there nothin' about him different? Nothin' you could judge him
+by?" asked Billy.
+
+"Yes, there was. He wore somethin' on his breast, a sign, a dull-like
+thing with words an' letters on it."
+
+"So?" said Conford quickly, "what was it like, Tharon? Can't you
+describe it?"
+
+"Can with a pencil," said Tharon, rising. "Come on in."
+
+She went swiftly to the big desk in the other room and rummaged among
+its drawers for paper and pencil. These things were precious in Lost
+Valley.
+
+Jim Last had had great stacks of paper, neat, glazed sheets with faint
+lines upon them, made somewhere in that mysterious "below" and brought
+in by pack train. It was on one of these, with the distinctive words
+"Last's Holding" printed at the top, that the thirty men had signed
+themselves into the new law of the Valley.
+
+To Tharon these sheets had always been magic, invested with grave
+dignity.
+
+Anything done upon them was of import, irrevocable.
+
+Thus had Jim Last inscribed the semi-yearly letters that went down the
+Wall with the cattle, or for supplies.
+
+Now she spread a shining pad under the light, sat down in her father's
+chair and began, carefully and minutely to reproduce the badge that
+meant authority of a sort, yet was not a sheriff's star.
+
+The riders, clustered at her shoulder, watched the thing take shape
+and form. At the end of twenty painstaking minutes Tharon straightened
+and looked up in the interested faces.
+
+"There," she said, "an' its dull copper colour!"
+
+And this was the shield with its unknown heraldry which Conford took
+up and studied carefully for a long time.
+
+"'Forest Service,'" he read aloud, "'Department of Agriculture.' Well,
+so far as I can see, it ain't so terrifyin'. That last means raisin'
+things, like beets an' turnips an' so on, an' as for th' forest part,
+why, if he stays up in his 'fringe o' pines' I guess we ain't got no
+call to kick. Don't you worry, Tharon, about this new bird."
+
+"I'm a darned sight more worried about that other one, th' Arizona
+beauty which Courtrey's got in."
+
+"Forget th' gun man, Burt," said Billy, "this feller's a heap more
+interestin' to me, for I've got a hunch he's a poet. Now who on this
+footstool but a poet would come ridin' into Lost Valley with his badge
+o' beets an' his line o' talk about 'fringes o' pines' an' 'runnin'
+streams,' to quote Tharon?"
+
+"Even poets are human, you young limb," drawled Curly in his soft
+voice, "an' I'm sorry for him if he starts your 'interest,' so to
+speak. He'll need all his poetic vision t' survive."
+
+"I hope, Billy," said Tharon severely, and with lofty inconsistency,
+"that you'll remember your manners an' not start anything. Last's is
+in for trouble enough without any side issues."
+
+"True," said the boy instantly, "I'll promise to leave th' poet
+alone."
+
+Then the talk fell about the new well that had taken the place of the
+old Crystal and which was proving a huge success.
+
+"Can't draw her dry," said Bent Smith, "pulled all of three hours with
+Nick Bob an' Blue Pine yesterday an' never even riled her.
+
+"She's good as th' Gold Pool or th' Silver Hollow now."
+
+"You're some range man t' make any such a comparison," said Curly with
+conviction, "there ain't no artificial water-well extent that can hold
+a candle t' th' real livin' springs of a cattle country, when they're
+such bubblin', shinin' beauties as th' Springs of Last's."
+
+"You're right, Curly," said Tharon quietly from under the light,
+"there's nothin' like them. They must be th' blessin's of God, an' no
+mistake. They're th' stars at night, an' th' winds an' th' sunshine.
+They're th' lovers of th' horses, th' treasure of th' masters. I love
+my springs."
+
+"So do th' herds," put in Jack Masters. "They'll come fast at night
+now because they can smell th' water far off, an' it's gettin' pretty
+dry on th' range."
+
+"Yes," sighed Tharon, "it's summer now, an' Jim Last died in spring. A
+whole season gone."
+
+A whole season had gone, indeed, since that tragic night.
+
+Last's Holding had missed its master at each turn and point. A
+thousand times did Conford, the foreman, catch himself in the act of
+going to the big room to find him at his desk, a big, vital force,
+intent on the accounts of the ranch, a thousand times did he long for
+his keen insight. The _vaqueros_ missed him and his open hand.
+
+The very dogs at the steps missed him, and so did El Rey, waiting in
+his corral for the step that did not come, the strong hand on his
+bit.
+
+And how much his daughter missed him only the stars and the pale
+Virgin knew.
+
+For the next few days following the short, awkward visit of the
+stranger Tharon felt a prickle of uneasiness under her skin at every
+thought of it. There was something in the memory that confused and
+distressed her, a feeling of failure, of a lack in her that put her in
+a bad light to herself.
+
+She knew that, instinctively, she had been protecting her own, that
+since Last's had stepped out in the light against Courtrey she must
+take no chance. But should she have taken back the common courtesy of
+the offered meal? Would it not have been better to let him stay and
+meet Conford who would have been in at noon?
+
+She vexed herself a while with these questions, and then dismissed
+them with her cool good sense.
+
+"It's done," she told herself, "an' can't be helped. An' yet, there
+was somethin' about him, somethin' that made me think of Jim Last
+himself--somethin' in his quiet eyes--as if they had both come from
+somewhere outside Lost Valley where they grow different men. It was
+a--bigness, a softness. I don't know."
+
+And with that last wistful thought she forgot all about the incident
+and the man, for the prediction of Jameson that dusk at the head of
+Rolling Cove became reality.
+
+Dixon, who lived north along the Wall near the Pomo settlement, lost
+ten head of steers, all white and deeply earmarked, unmistakable
+cattle that could not be disguised.
+
+Courtrey was resenting the vague something in the air that was
+crystallizing into resistance about him.
+
+Word of the stealing ran about the Valley like a grass fire, more
+boldly than usual.
+
+It came to Last's in eighteen hours, brought by a horseman who had
+carried it to many a lonely homestead.
+
+Tharon received it with a thrill of joy.
+
+"Good enough," she said, "no use wasting time."
+
+And she sent out a call for the thirty men.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WORKING OF THE LAW
+
+
+It was a clear, bright morning in early summer. All up and down Lost
+Valley the little winds wimpled the grass where the cattle grazed, and
+brought the scent of flowers. In the thin, clear atmosphere points and
+landmarks stood out with wonderful boldness.
+
+The homesteads set in the endless green like tiny gems, the stupendous
+face of the Wall, stretching from north to south and sheer as a plumb
+line for a thousand feet, was fretted with a myriad of tiny seams and
+crevasses not ordinarily visible.
+
+Far up at the Valley's head against the huge uplift of the jumbled and
+barren rocklands the scattered squat buildings of the Stronghold
+brooded like a monster.
+
+Spread out on the velvet slopes below lay the herds that belonged to
+it, sleek fat cattle, guarded carelessly by a few lazy and desultory
+riders. Courtrey was too secure in his insolent might to take those
+rigid and untiring precautions which were the only price of safety to
+the lesser men of the community. Toward the south where the Valley
+narrowed to the Bottle Neck and the Broken Bend went out, there
+shimmered and shone like a silver ribbon hung down the cliff the thin,
+long shower of Vestal's Veil fall.
+
+The roar of it could be heard for miles like the constant and
+incessant wail of winds in time-worn cañons.
+
+Along the floor of the Cup Rim range, sunken and hidden from the upper
+levels, there rode a compact group of horsemen. They went abreast, in
+column of fours, and they were armed to the teeth, a bristling
+presentation. All in all there were forty-two of them and at their
+head rode Tharon on El Rey, a slim and gallant young figure.
+
+Her bright hair, tied with a scarlet ribbon, shone under her wide hat
+like an aureole. She talked with Conford who rode beside her, and now
+and then she smiled, for all the world as if she went to some young
+folks' gathering, instead of to the first uncertain issue of blind mob
+law against outlaws.
+
+But if she felt a lightness of excitement in her heart it was more
+than actuated by the grim and quiet band that followed.
+
+They knew--and she knew, also--that what they did this day, in the
+open sunlight, meant savage strife and bloodshed for some as sure as
+death.
+
+For two hours they rode across the sunken range where the cottonwoods
+and aspens made a lovely and mottled shade, to reach at last the sharp
+ascent to the uplands above. When they topped the rim and started
+forward, the huge herds of Courtrey lay spread before them, bright as
+paint on the living green. Two thousand cattle grazed there in peace
+and plenty. Here and there a rider sat his horse in idleness. At the
+first sight of the solidly formed mass coming out of the Cup Rim on to
+the levels, these riders straightened in their saddles and rode in
+closer to their charges.
+
+The eyes of the newcomers went over the bright pattern of the grazing
+cattle. A motley bunch they were, red, black and white, with here and
+there descendants of the yellows which none but John Dement had ever
+owned in Lost Valley. Dement, riding near the head of the line saw
+this and muttered in his beard.
+
+"Thar's some o' mine," he said pointing, "th' very ones that was
+stampeded. I'd know 'em in hell."
+
+[Illustration: SHE TALKED WITH CONFORD WHO RODE BESIDE HER AND NOW AND
+THEN SHE SMILED]
+
+With the nearing of the line of horsemen a rider detached himself from
+the right of the herd and went sailing away across the levels toward
+the distant Stronghold.
+
+Quick as a flash Tharon Last lifted the rifle that lay ready on her
+pommel and sent a shot whining toward him.
+
+"Just to show we mean business," she muttered to herself.
+
+The cowboy caught the warning and drew his running horse up to slide
+ten feet on its haunches.
+
+He had meant to warn his boss, but a chance was one thing, certainty
+another.
+
+"Dixon--Dement," called Tharon rising in her stirrups, "when we get to
+work you pick out as near as you can, cattle that look like yours, an'
+th' same amount--not a head more."
+
+Then they swung forward at a run and swept down along the left flank
+of the herd. Here a rider raised his arm and fired point blank at the
+leaders. One-two-three his six-gun counted. He was a lean youngster,
+scarce more than a boy, a wild admirer of Courtrey, and he stood his
+defence with a sturdy gallantry that was worthy of a better cause.
+
+"Damn you!" he yelled, standing in his stirrups, "what's this?"
+
+"Law!" pealed the high voice of Tharon as El Rey thundered down toward
+him. Then Buford, riding midway of the sweeping line, fired and the
+boy dropped his gun, swayed and clung to his saddle horn as his horse
+bolted and tore off at a tangent to the right, away from the herd.
+
+"God!" cried the girl hoarsely, "I wish we didn't have to! Did you
+kill him?"
+
+"No," called Buford sharply, "broke his arm."
+
+Tharon, to whom the high blue vault had seemed suddenly to swing in
+strange circles, shut her teeth with a click.
+
+Abreast of the cattle she swerved El Rey aside, drew her guns and
+waited.
+
+In among the grazing cattle, many of which had raised startled heads
+to eye the intruders, went the men. They worked swiftly and deftly.
+They knew that they were in plain sight of the Stronghold and expected
+every moment to see Courtrey and a dozen riders come boiling out.
+Those cowboys who had been in charge of the herd, sat where they were,
+without a move. Out of the bright mass the settlers cut first the ten
+head of steers, as nearly as possible all white, to take the place of
+Dixon's band. Thomas and Black stood guard over them. Then they went
+back and took out yellows and yellow-spotted to the number of one
+hundred. It was fast work, the fastest ever done on the Lost Valley
+ranges, and every nerve was strained like a singing wire.
+
+Under the dust cloud raised by the plunging hoofs, the whirling
+horses, the workers kept as close together as possible.
+
+They rounded up the cut-outs, bunched them together compactly and
+swinging into a half circle, drove them rapidly back toward the
+oak-fringed edge of the Cup Rim. They passed close to where the slim
+boy stood by his horse, trying to wind the big red kerchief from his
+neck about his right arm from which the blood ran in a bright stream.
+Tharon swung out of her course and shot toward him.
+
+"Here," she cried swiftly, "let me tie it."
+
+"To hell with you," said the lad bitterly, raising blazing eyes to her
+face. "You've made me false t' Courtrey. I'd die first."
+
+"Die, then!" she flung back, "an' tell your master that th' law is
+workin' in this Valley at last!"
+
+As the last rider of the cavalcade went down over the slanting edge of
+the Cup Rim there came the sound of quick shots snapping in the
+distance and the belated sight of riders streaming down from the
+Stronghold hurried the descent.
+
+They had reached the level floor of the sunken range and spread out
+upon it for better travelling before Courtrey and his men, some ten or
+fifteen riders, appeared on the upper crest.
+
+The settlers stopped instantly at a call from Conford, drew together
+behind the cattle, turned and faced them. They were too far away for
+speech, out of rifle range, but the still, grim defiance of that
+compact front halted the outlaw cattle king and his followers.
+
+For the first time in all his years of rising power in Lost Valley
+Courtrey felt a challenge. For the first time he knew that a tide was
+banking in full force against him. A red rage flushed up under his
+dark skin, and he raised a silent fist and shook it at the blue
+heavens.
+
+The grim watchers below knew that gesture, significant, majestic,
+boded ill to them.
+
+But Tharon Last, muttering to herself in the hatred that possessed her
+of late at sight of Courtrey, raised her own doubled fist and shook it
+high toward him, an answer, an acceptance of that challenge.
+
+Then they calmly turned and drove the recovered cattle down along the
+sloping levels at a fast trot.
+
+The die was struck. Lost Valley was no longer a stamping-ground for
+wrong and oppression. It had gone to war.
+
+That night the white and yellow herd bedded at the Holding, _vaqueros_
+rode about it all night long, quietly, softly under the stars. The
+settlers walked about, smoking, or sat silently in the darkened
+living room. At midnight Tharon and young Paula made huge pots of
+coffee which they dispensed along with crullers.
+
+By dawn the cattle were well on their way, still safeguarded by the
+band of men, down toward the homesteads where they belonged.
+
+During that night of unlighted silence plans had been perfected in low
+voices, a name chosen for the band itself. They would call themselves
+the Vigilantes, as many another organization had called itself in the
+desperate straits that made its existence imperative.
+
+By sundown the hundred head had been driven, hot and tired, into John
+Dement's corrals, the ten white steers were bedded by Black's Spring
+over toward the Wall. They had farther to go and would not reach
+Dixon's until the morning.
+
+And with each band there was a group of determined men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Word of this exploit ran all over the Valley in a matter of hours. To
+each faction it had a deep significance.
+
+But speech concerning it was sparse as it had ever been anent the
+doings of Courtrey. A man's tongue was a prisoner to his common sense
+those days.
+
+To Tharon Last, busy at her tasks about the Holding, it was a vital
+matter. She felt a strong surge, an uplift within her. She had begun
+the task she had set herself and solemn joy pervaded her being.
+
+But of all those whom it affected there was none to whom it meant what
+it did to Courtrey himself. In him it set loose something which burned
+in him like a consuming fire. Where he had thought of Tharon Last
+before with a certain intent, now he thought of her in a sort of
+madness. He was a king himself, in a manner, an eagle, a prowler of
+great spaces, a rule-or-ruin force. Down there on the sloping floor of
+the Cup Rim had been a fit mate for him in the slim girl who had
+shaken her fist back at him in strong defiance.
+
+He felt his blood leap hot at the thought of her. She was built of
+fighting stuff. No pale willy-nilly, like some he knew who wept whole
+fountains daily. No--neither was she like Lola of the Golden Cloud,
+past-master of men because she had belonged to many.
+
+Courtrey, who had run life's gamut himself, thought of Tharon Last's
+straight young purity with growing desire.
+
+It began to obsess him with a mania. His temper, bad at all times,
+became worse. Ellen, the veriest slave through her devotion to him,
+found her life at the Stronghold almost unbearable.
+
+She was a white woman, like a lily, with transparent flesh where the
+blue veins showed. Her pale blue eyes, like the painted eyes of a
+china doll, were red with constant tears under their corn-silk lashes.
+The pale gold hair on her temples was often damp with the sweat that
+comes with agony of soul.
+
+"It jes' seems I can't live another minute, Cleve," she would tell her
+brother who lived at the Stronghold, "seems like I don't want to. Th'
+very sunlight looks sad t' me, an' I hate th' tree-toads that are
+singin' eternal down in th' runnel."
+
+This brother, her only relative, would stir uneasily at such times and
+the fire that shot from his eyes, light, too, under the same corn-silk
+lashes, was a rare thing. Nothing but this had ever set it burning. He
+was a slight man, narrow-chested and thin. They had been from run-down
+stock, these two, a strain that seemed indigenous to the Valley,
+without other memories. Their name was Whitmore, and they had lived
+all their lives in a poor cove up beyond the Valley's head where the
+barren rocklands came down out of the skies. There had been, besides
+themselves, only the father and mother, worn-out workers, who had
+died at last, leaving the brother and sister to live as best they
+might in the solitudes.
+
+Here Courtrey had found them, both in their teens, and he had promptly
+taken them both along with their scant affairs. It was about the only
+thing to his credit that he had married Ellen, hard and fast enough,
+with the offices of a bona fide justice, a matter which he had
+regretted often enough in the years that followed.
+
+It was this knowledge which set the light burning in Cleve's eyes.
+
+He knew how Ellen loved Courtrey.
+
+He knew also that Lola of the Golden Cloud had made the cattle king
+step lively for over a year. He saw the daily growing impatience with
+which Courtrey regarded his marriage.
+
+He resented with every ounce of the repressed spirit there was in him
+the girl's poor standing at the Stronghold.
+
+Black Bart and Wylackie Bob treated her with no more consideration
+than any of the Indian serving women. They swore and drank before her
+with an abandon that made the young man's nails cut deep in his palms
+at times, the blood mount high in his white cheeks.
+
+And Ellen drooped like a lily on a broken stem, brooded over her
+husband's absences, and hated the name of Lola, used openly to her as
+a cruel joke.
+
+The Stronghold was a huge place. The house was like the majority of
+the habitations of the region, built of adobe and able to stand siege
+against a regiment. It was shaded by cottonwoods and spruces, flanked
+by corrals and barns and sheds until the place resembled a small
+town.
+
+Cleve Whitmore rode for Courtrey but his heart was not in Courtrey's
+game. He was slim and sullen, dissatisfied, slow of speech,
+repressed.
+
+He worked early and late and thought a lot.
+
+Courtrey, who kept close count of the favours he did for others,
+considered Cleve deep in his debt and paid him a niggardly wage. So it
+was, that when the newly organized Vigilantes under Tharon Last came
+out in broad day and took back their own from Courtrey's herds, there
+was one at the Stronghold who laughed quietly to himself in sympathy
+with the defy.
+
+"Good enough," he told the wide sky and the silence as he rode herd
+under the beetling rocklands, "hope t' God some one gits him good an'
+plenty."
+
+But Courtrey was hard to get. His aides and lieutenants were picked
+men. He was like a king in his domain.
+
+But if strife and ferment seethed under the calm surface in Lost
+Valley, its surges died before they reached the rolling slopes where
+the forests came down to the eastern plains. Up among the pines and
+oaks, the ridges and the age-worn, tumbled rocks David Kenset had
+found his ideal spot, his glade where the pines stood guard and a
+talking stream ran down. High on the wooded slopes he had set his
+mark, begun that home of which he had told Tharon. From Corvan he had
+hired three men, a teamster by the name of Drake and his two sons, and
+together they had felled and dressed trees enough for a cabin, laid
+them up with clay brought five miles on mule-back, roofed the
+structure with shakes made on the spot with a froe, and the result was
+pleasing, indeed, to this man straight from the far eastern cities.
+
+The cabin faced southwest, set at an angle to command the circled
+glade, the dropping slopes, the distant range lands, the wooded line
+of the Broken Bend, and farther off the levels and slants of the
+gently undulating Valley, with the mighty Rockface of the Wall rising
+like a mystery beyond. Kenset cut all trees at the west and south of
+the glade, thus forming a splendid doorway into his retreat, through
+which all this shone in, like those wonderful etched landscapes one
+sometimes sees in tiny toys that fit the narrowed eye.
+
+Before the cabin was finished, Starret, who ran the regular
+pack-train, brought in a string of trunks and boxes which caused much
+curious comment in Corvan. These came up, after much delay, to be
+dumped in the door yard of the house in the glade, and Kenset felt as
+if the gateway to the outside world might close and he care very
+little.
+
+Here was the wilderness, in all verity, here was work, that greatest
+of boons, here were health and plenty and the hazard of outlawry, that
+he was beginning to dimly sense under the calmly flowing currents of
+Lost Valley.
+
+And here was Romance, as witness the slim girl who had backed out from
+a group of men that first day of his coming--backed out with her guns
+upon them, himself included, and mounted a silver stallion, whose like
+he had not known existed. In fact, Kenset had thought he knew horses,
+but he stood in open-mouthed wonder before the horses of Lost
+Valley--the magnificent Ironwood bays of Courtrey's, with their
+wonderful long manes and tails that shone like a lady's hair, the
+Finger Marks which he had seen once or twice, and marvelled at.
+
+With the opening of the boxes the cabin in the glade took on a look of
+home, of individuality. A big dark rug, woven of strong cord in green
+and brown, came out and went down on the rough floor, leather runners
+were flung on the two tables, a student lamp of nickel, a pair of old
+candlesticks in hammered brass, added their touch of gleam and shine
+to table and shelf-above-the-hearth, college pennants, in all the
+colours of the rainbow, were hung about the walls between four fine
+prints in sepia, gay cushions, much the worse for wear, landed in the
+handsome chairs, and lastly, but far from being least, three long
+shelves beneath the northern windows were filled to the last inch with
+books.
+
+When all these things had been put in place Kenset stood back and
+surveyed the room with a smile in his dark eyes.
+
+"Some spot," he said aloud, "some spot!"
+
+On the small table that was to do duty as a desk in the corner between
+the southwest window and the fireplace he stacked neatly a mass of
+literature, all marked with the same peculiar shield of the pine trees
+and the big U. S. that shone always on his breast.
+
+To the Drakes these things were of quick interest, but they asked no
+questions.
+
+When the last thing had been done to the cabin they set to work and
+built a smaller cabin for the good brown horse which Kenset had bought
+far down to the south and west in the Coast Country, for Sam Drake
+told him that Lost Valley locked its doors to all the world in winter.
+He would house his only friend as he housed himself.
+
+When the Drakes, father and sons, were gone back down to Corvan for
+good, Kenset stretched himself, physically and mentally, and began his
+life in the last frontier.
+
+He began to be out from dawn to dark riding the ridges, exploring the
+wooded slopes, the boldly upsweeping breasts of the nameless
+mountains, making friends with the rugged land. It was a beautiful
+country, hushed and silent, save for the soft song of the pines, the
+laughter of streams that ran to the Valley, cold as snow and clear as
+wind. Strange flowers nodded on tall stems in glade and opening,
+peeped from the flat earth by stone and moss-bed. Few birds were here,
+though squirrels were plentiful.
+
+Sometimes he saw a horseman sitting on some slant watching him
+intently. These invariably rode rapidly away on being discovered, not
+troubling to return his salute of a hand waved high above him.
+
+"Funny tribe," he told himself, half puzzled, half irritated, "their
+manners seem to be peculiarly their own. As witness the offered meal
+so calmly 'taken back' by the young highway-woman of Last's
+Holding."
+
+That had rankled. Sane as Kenset was, as cool and self-contained, he
+could not repress a cold prickle of resentment at that memory.
+
+He had gone to the Holding in such good faith, actuated by a lively
+desire to see Tharon again after that one amazing meeting at Baston's
+steps, and he had been so readily received at first, so coolly turned
+out at last. But he had not forgotten the look in the girl's blue
+eyes, nor the disarming smile which had seemed to make it reasonable.
+
+She merely did not hold with law, and wanted him to have no false
+impressions. This incident furnished him with more food for thought
+than he was aware of in those first long days when he rode the silent
+forest.
+
+What was Tharon Last, anyway? What did she mean by those words of hers
+about his law and hers? That they were not the same sort of law--that
+he and she would not agree?
+
+They could not be friends, she had said.
+
+Well, Kenset was not so sure of that. There was something about this
+girl of the guns that sent a thrill tingling in his blood already,
+made him recall each expression of her speaking face, each line of her
+lean young figure.
+
+He did not go near Last's again, though his business took him far and
+by in the Valley, for the big maps, hung on a rack beyond his
+fireplace, covered full half the ranges thereof and stretched away
+into the mysterious and illimitable forests that went up and away into
+the eastern mountains.
+
+It was as if some fateful Power at Washington had set down a careless
+finger on a map of the U.\S.\A., and said to Kenset, "Here is your
+country," without knowledge or interest. Sometimes he wondered if
+there was another forest in the land as utterly lost as this, as
+little known.
+
+But with this wonder came a thrill. He had read romances of the great
+West in his youth and felt a vague regret that he had not lived in the
+rollicking days of '49. Now as he rode his new domain he smiled to
+himself and thought that out of a modern college he had been set back
+half a century. Here was the rule of might, if he was not mistaken.
+Here was romance in its most vital and appealing form. Yes, he felt
+himself lucky.
+
+So he took up his life and his duties with a vim. He rode early and
+late, took notes and gathered data for his first reports, and set up
+for himself in Lost Valley a spreading antagonism.
+
+If he rode herd on the range lands, the timber sections, there were
+those who rode herd on him. Not a movement of his that was not
+reported faithfully to Courtrey, not a coming or going that was not
+watched from start to finish.
+
+And the cattle king narrowed his eyes and listened to his lieutenants
+with growing disapproval.
+
+"Took up land, think?" he asked Wylackie Bob. "Homesteadin'?"
+
+Wylackie shook his head.
+
+"Ain't goin' accordin' to entry," he said, "no more'n th' cabin. Don't
+see no signs of tillin'. He ain't fencin', nor goin' to fence, as near
+as I can find out."
+
+"Cattle?"
+
+"No. Nor horses."
+
+"Hogs, then?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Damn it! maybe it's sheep!" and the red flush rose in the bully's
+dark cheeks.
+
+"Don't think so. Seems like he's after somethin', but what it is I
+can't make out."
+
+But it was not long before the Stronghold solved the mystery, for
+Kenset rode boldly in one day and introduced himself.
+
+It was mid-afternoon, for the cabin in the glade lay a long way from
+the Valley's head, and the whole big place lay silent as death in the
+summer sun.
+
+The Indian serving women were off in the depths somewhere, the few
+_vaqueros_ left at home were out about the spreading corrals, and all
+the men that counted at the ranch had ridden into Corvan early in the
+day.
+
+Only Ellen, pale as a flower, her sweet mouth drooping, sat listlessly
+on the hard beaten earth at the eastern side of the squat house where
+the spruce trees grew, her hands folded in her lap, a sunbonnet
+covering the golden mass of her hair.
+
+At the sound of his horse's hoofs on the stone-flagged yard Kenset saw
+her start, half rise, fling a startled look at him and then sink back,
+as if even the advent of a stranger was of slight import in the heavy
+current of her dull life.
+
+He came in close, drew up, and, with his hat in his hand, sat smiling
+down at her. To Kenset it was more natural to smile than not to.
+
+The girl, for she was scarce more, looked up at him and he saw at
+once, even under the disfiguring headgear, that here was a breaking
+heart laid open for all eyes. The very droop and tremble of the lips
+were proof.
+
+"Mrs. Courtrey?" he asked gently.
+
+At the words, the smile, the unusual courtesy of the removed hat,
+Ellen rose from her chair, a tall, slim wisp of a woman, whose
+blue-veined hands were almost transparent.
+
+"Yes," she said, and waited.
+
+That little waiting, calm, unruffled, made him think sharply of
+Tharon Last who had waited also for his accounting for himself.
+
+"I am Kenset," he said, "of over in the foothills. Is your husband at
+home?"
+
+"No," said Ellen, "he's gone in t' Corvan."
+
+There was a world of meaning in the inflection.
+
+"Yes? Now that's too bad. It's taken me a long time to come and I
+particularly wished to see him. Do you mind if I wait?"
+
+"Why, no," said Ellen a bit reluctantly, "no, sir, I guess not."
+
+Kenset swung off the brown horse and dropped the rein.
+
+"Tired, Captain?" he asked whimsically, rubbing the sweaty mane, while
+the animal drew a long whistling breath and in turn rubbed the sticky
+brow band on its forehead on Kenset's arm.
+
+"Looks like he's thirsty," said Ellen presently. "There's a trough
+round yonder at th' back," and she waved a long hand.
+
+Kenset led Captain around back where a living spring sang and gurgled
+into a section of tree, deeply hollowed and covered with moss.
+
+When he came back to the shade the woman had brought from some near
+place a second chair, and he dropped gratefully into it, weary from
+his long ride.
+
+He laid his hat on the earth beside him and smoothed the sleek, dark
+hair back from his forehead.
+
+Ellen sat still and watched him with a steady gaze.
+
+She was finding him strange. She looked at his olive drab garments, at
+the trim leather leggings that encased his lower limbs, at his smooth
+hands, at his face, and lastly at the dark shield on his breast.
+
+"Law?" she asked succinctly.
+
+"Well," smiled Kenset, "after a fashion."
+
+She moved uneasily in her chair, and the man had a sudden feeling of
+pity for her.
+
+"Not as you mean, Mrs. Courtrey," he hastened. "I am in the United
+States Forest Service, if you know what that is."
+
+"No," said Ellen, "I don't know."
+
+"It is simply a service for the conservation of the timber of this
+country," he explained gently, but he saw that he was not making it
+clear.
+
+"The saving of the trees," he went on, "the care of the forests."
+
+"Oh," she said, relieved.
+
+"We look after the ranges, protect the woods from fire, and so on."
+
+"Look after th' ranges? How?"
+
+"Regulate grazing, grant permits."
+
+"Permits?"
+
+"Yes." And seeing that at last he had caught her interest, Kenset
+talked quietly for an hour and told her more than he had vouchsafed
+any other in Lost Valley about his work.
+
+Gradually, however, he fell to talking to amuse her, for he saw the
+emptiness behind the big blue eyes, the aching void which there was
+nothing to fill, neither love nor hope.
+
+As the sun sank lower toward the west Ellen took off the atrocity of
+calico and starch, and he saw with wonder the amazing beauty of her
+ropes of hair.
+
+When he ceased talking the silence became profound, for she had
+nothing to say and speech did not come easy to her anyway. He did not
+know that at the windows and behind the door-jambs of the deep old
+house were clustered almost a dozen dusky women and children, drawn
+from all over the place and listening in utter silence.
+
+Unconsciously he had drifted back to his life in the outside world,
+encouraged by the absorbing interest of the pale eyes that never left
+his face. He told Ellen of boat races on the Hudson, of theatres on
+Broadway, of college pranks and frolics, ranged over half the
+continent in little story and snatch of description.
+
+Neither one noticed how the shadows were lengthening, nor that the
+sun had dropped in majesty behind the mighty Wall.
+
+It took the sound of running horses, many of them coming up along the
+slopes, to bring Kenset back to the present with a snap, to make the
+woman reach swiftly for the bonnet and clap it on her head.
+
+"Mrs. Courtrey," said Kenset hurriedly, "this has been the first real
+talk I have had with any of my neighbours, and I want to thank you for
+it."
+
+"Oh," quavered the woman, "I don't know as I'd ought to a-let you
+stayed! Mebby I'd oughtn't. But--but seems like you bein' so
+different, an' I not seein' no one, come day in day out, w'y I--I--"
+
+"Sure," he returned quickly, understanding. "You did just right. I
+wanted to stay."
+
+Then he rose to his feet and there came the thunder of the horses, the
+noise of men stopping from a run, dismounting.
+
+Ellen rose and he followed her around the corner of the house to the
+door yard.
+
+As they waited, Courtrey, clad in dark leather chaps, his guns
+swinging, came toward them. At sight of Kenset he stopped short and an
+oath rolled from his lips. The kerchief at his neck was turned
+knot-back and hung like a glob of crimson blood upon his breast.
+
+Under his hat, set at an angle, his dark hair fluffed strangely.
+
+He was a splendid figure of a man, broad shouldered, slim hipped.
+
+Now he looked hard at the stranger and a slow grin lifted his upper
+lip.
+
+"What's this?" he said, and there was a light suspicion of thickness
+in his voice, "my wife got com-ny?"
+
+Kenset heard the woman catch her breath, and the feeling of pity that
+had taken him at first for her intensified.
+
+"No, Mr. Courtrey," he said advancing, "but you have," and he held out
+his hand. "I'm Kenset, from the foothills."
+
+Courtrey, not four feet from him, did not look at the hand. Instead
+the glittering eyes under the hat-brim looked steadily into his with
+an expression that only one man in a hundred could have interpreted.
+
+That one man, however, stood by the watering trough, his hand on the
+neck of a drinking horse--Cleve Whitmore who watched Courtrey without
+blinking.
+
+For a moment Kenset stood so, his hand extended, waiting. Then the
+colour rose in his face and he drew back the hand, raised it,
+scrutinized it smilingly, and put it quietly on his hip.
+
+Still smiling he raised his eyes again to Courtrey's face.
+
+"Courtrey," he said, this time without the Mr., "I've come to Lost
+Valley to _stay_. I had hoped to be friends with all my neighbours. It
+would have made my work easier. However, with or without, I stay."
+
+And he picked up his hat, set it on his head, walked over to the brown
+horse, flung up the rein, mounted and rode out of the Stronghold in
+utter silence.
+
+His face was flaming, the blood of outraged dignity and deep anger
+beat in his temples like a drum. As he rode farther away he heard the
+embarrassing silence broken by the hoarse shouts of laughter of half
+drunken men.
+
+"Go to it," he said aloud, clinching his fists on his saddle horn,
+"this is part of my duty. The Big Chief was right when he said, 'If
+you help the Service to tame Lost Valley you've got your work cut
+out.' It's a man-size job. I mustn't doubt my ability."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+EL REY AND BOLT
+
+
+Tharon Last and all her followers held themselves in readiness for
+anything in the days that followed the taking of the herds from
+Courtrey's range.
+
+They locked their doors at night, stood double guard at corral and
+stable. Mothers scattered throughout Lost Valley gathered in their
+little ones and watched the slopes and levels when their men were
+out.
+
+But a strange quietness seemed to settle down upon them. That for
+which they waited did not materialize. Courtrey and his gun men rode
+into Corvan and up and down the Valley on mysterious missions which
+were as unsettling as open depredations, but nothing happened. In
+fact, Courtrey, burning with the new desire that was beginning to
+obsess him, was working out a new design.
+
+He began to draw away from Lola. His triweekly visits to the Golden
+Cloud dropped off a bit. He took to drifting about from saloon to
+saloon, to being less pronounced in his frequenting of one or two
+places.
+
+His cold eyes, however, set in their narrow slits beneath the heavy
+brows, picked out every settler that he met and promised vague things
+for the future. He knew to a man who had ridden up from Last's that
+day, and he meant that not one should escape full payment--some time.
+Now he thought of the girl who had defied him and he waited with
+leaping pulse. The memory of that kiss, taken by violence at her
+western door, was with him night and day. She stood for right and the
+dignity of order. He meant, for a time, to play her hand.
+
+Therefore the settlers waited, and held their breath while they did
+so.
+
+And Courtrey took to riding much more alone, to watching the slopes
+and stretches with a hand at his hat-brim, shading his keen eyes. He
+looked far and wide in the golden summer land for the sight of a
+silver horse cutting down the wind with a slim girl in saddle.
+
+But Tharon was busy at the Holding and El Rey stamped and whistled in
+his paddock. The mistress knew that she had set stern tides flowing in
+the Valley, that sooner or later they were due to sweep away the peace
+and quiet that pervaded the cottonwoods and the singing springs. She
+knew that Courtrey waited, but she made the most of that waiting.
+
+Conford and Billy and the rest of the riders made strong bolts for all
+the doors of the house, reinforced the fences that held the herds at
+night, put trick locks on all the gates.
+
+But the time came when the close retreat became irksome to the girl,
+and she went from room to room in an uneasiness that was foreign to
+her calm and happy nature. She read over and over the two or three old
+books that had been at the Holding since she could remember, made new
+covers for the tables in the living room, kept the hands of the Virgin
+full of fresh offerings. But these things staled.
+
+She began to long for the distances, the open spaces, the feel of the
+swooping stallion under her sailing down the wind. Courtrey or no
+Courtrey, she could not fight it down. So, on a golden day when all
+the boys were out with the herds and only the Indian _vaqueros_ left
+in charge by Conford were at the stables, she flung the big saddle
+with its silver studs and its sombre stain on El Rey, mounted and went
+out and away like the wind itself. Not since the day of the raid on
+Courtrey's stolen herds had she been on El Rey's back and the first
+long leap and drop of the great horse beneath her set the lights to
+sparkling in her eyes, the blood to burning in her golden cheeks. She
+lay low on his neck and let him run, and her heart leaped up with
+lightness as it ever did when she rode in these thundering bursts.
+
+[Illustration: IN FACT COURTREY, BURNING WITH THE NEW DESIRE THAT WAS
+BEGINNING TO OBSESS HIM, WAS WORKING OUT A NEW DESIGN]
+
+There was no other horse in Lost Valley like the great king! Neither
+Redbuck nor Golden nor Drumfire! Neither Sweetheart nor Westwind! No,
+nor any Ironwood Bay that came down from Courtrey's Stronghold, Bolt
+and Arrow not excepted.
+
+Tharon laughed and stroked the king's neck, thewed like steel beneath
+her hands. She had no fear of Courtrey and his hired killers. Sooner
+or later the issue would come, of course. Then she would kill the man
+as she had promised Jim Last, without a thought.
+
+Nay, she thought of Ellen, fragile white flower, of whom she had
+heard.
+
+A softening came about her young mouth at thought of her, a shadow
+flickered in her blue eyes for a moment. Then it was gone and she
+laughed, a whooping gale of joy, there alone in the green stretches
+between the earth and sky, with the note of El Rey's speed steadily
+rising in her ears.
+
+It beat in her very heart, that singing note. She loved the king as
+she loved nothing else on earth, save only the memory of her father.
+
+She went south toward the Black Coulee and she thanked her stars that
+her riders were grazing the herds north toward the Cup Rim. Here there
+was none to say her nay, to urge her with loving solicitude to go
+back.
+
+The miles sped backward and she scarce noted their travel. She drew
+the king down a bit, slowed him from the swooping run, set him into
+the wonderful rock-and-away of the singlefoot and retied the ribbon on
+her hair. She wore no hat this day and the tawny cloud of her hair
+fluffed back from her forehead, straining at its bands, its loose ends
+standing up like fairy stuff all over her head. So, with her two arms
+held high above her and the reins in her teeth, she rode down by the
+mouth of Black Coulee--and up from the depths of the rugged wash that
+split the plain for seven miles there came across her path a man on a
+great bay horse.
+
+Courtrey on Bolt! She knew the beautiful animal even so far away. It
+did not need the challenging toss of El Rey's head, the piercing
+scream that rang from his open mouth across the silence, nor the
+sudden lunge and strain against the bit.
+
+That was Bolt, the mighty, and no mistake. None but Arrow carried his
+splendid head so regally, _none_ other bore so huge a cloud of mane on
+his arching neck, so long a tail that spread like a fan between his
+knees and almost swept the ground.
+
+So, Courtrey came out of the Coulee to meet her! He would, maybe,
+force the issue. But Tharon was not ready for that. What was plain
+killing? No, she wanted more than that. She wanted to see him scourged
+and beaten, humiliated and robbed as he had robbed Lost Valley.
+
+So she turned El Rey, though it took the whole strength of her young
+arms, and headed him back the way they had come. With the first turn
+and straightening leap her heart thumped hard against her ribs.
+
+There, between her and the Holding, far distant, there were two
+riders--and they rode bay horses, both!
+
+She made no doubt that they were Wylackie Bob and Black Bart, on Arrow
+and Slingshot.
+
+A sudden mist of fear came across her eyes. A tightening caught her
+throat. She looked around the illimitable spaces that stretched away
+on all sides. There was nothing in all the spreading plains but the
+three riders, sprung from nowhere, it seemed, and herself.
+
+Courtrey came rapidly up toward her, swinging a bit to the west. The
+others, set somewhat apart to right and left, bore down upon her. It
+looked very much as if they meant to ride her down to the Black
+Coulee.
+
+Once in its sheltering deep wash she would be helpless, cut off from
+escape. The Black Coulee went back into the eastern hills, lost itself
+up in the rugged and torturous clefts and chasms that cut the unknown
+ramparts, dark with forest and mysterious.
+
+No! Not the Black Coulee and Courtrey to take her prisoner!
+
+She looked this way and that. Then she saw that toward her right she
+had some margin. There was space there to swing away from the man in
+front who came like the wind itself toward her. She caught the seeming
+of great speed and her heart leaped again.
+
+She recalled the day she had asked Jack Masters if Bolt could run like
+El Rey.
+
+"How do I know?" he had answered. "I know it was speed, an' that is
+all." True enough. It was Bolt, coming like his namesake, down along
+the sloping stretches.
+
+But a great wave of exultation swept over her. She rose in her
+stirrups, shook an insulting hand above her, dropped on El Rey's neck,
+swerved him east and swept away toward the lifting skirts of the
+wooded hills. She heard a yell behind her, glanced back and saw that
+the three Ironwoods were sweeping behind her, closing in together. It
+was to be a race at last!
+
+At last the whispered comparisons that had stirred under the speech of
+the Valley concerning the Ironwoods and the Finger Marks was to have
+justification. For the first and only time, in her knowledge, they
+were to run.
+
+"All right!" cried Tharon aloud. "Come on, you bastards! It's the king
+you come against an' Jim Last's blood! You'll never put a hand on
+either."
+
+She struck her heels into El Rey's flanks, leaned over her pommel,
+wished she was on the king's bare back, reached her hands far out
+along the reins and began to call in his ear.
+
+"Yeeoo! Yeeoo! Yeeoo!" she cried, a high, exciting note that keened in
+the singing wind. And El Rey, ever keen to run for no reason, finding
+himself called upon, stretched out his great body, dropped low to
+earth and began to run. The wind cut by Tharon's face like a knife in
+the first few leaps.
+
+It shut her eyes in a dozen. She rode and laughed with a half sob in
+her throat. The thunder of the king's iron-shod hoofs was in her ears
+like the roar of the spring freshets when the empty cañons poured
+their temporary torrents down the Rockface into the Valley.
+
+She knew he was running as she had never ridden before. She had never
+called upon him before. It was like being adrift upon the wind. She
+heard the note of his speed rising in her ears. It was as it had ever
+been, save that it was a higher note, thinner, sharper. There was
+scarce a sense of touch beneath her, a lack of jar, of vibration, so
+evenly and smoothly did the shining hoofs take the grassy plain.
+
+Tears were in her eyes. Laughter was on her lips. This was speed
+indeed! She had a sick longing that Jim Last might see his two loved
+ones go!
+
+Then she gathered herself to turn her head across her leaning shoulder
+and look back.
+
+As her eyes swept into focus behind, the laughter slipped off her lips
+as if wiped by an invisible hand.
+
+There, the same distance away as when they started, rode Courtrey!
+
+No farther away!
+
+Bolt, shining in the sun, was keeping pace with El Rey!
+
+Farther back--a little farther back--was Arrow, running magnificently,
+too.
+
+A greater distance behind the two came Slingshot.
+
+Tharon was frightened. Not for herself. Not for the intent of the men
+who came after her. Not for gun-fire, nor for capture.
+
+She was afraid for the king! Afraid that Bolt could hold that
+wonderful pace! Then a surging rage rose and sickened her.
+
+She leaned down again and called once more into the stallion's ear and
+once more the note rose a notch. She felt that great pulsing seeming
+of reserve. Always when she called there was the answer. The plain
+swam beneath her like a blur. The thunder of the king's hoofs was a
+single note also.
+
+Then Tharon raised her eyes and saw that she had left the open land
+behind. The mountains were rising swiftly before, she was sweeping up
+their skirts. Trees flew by. She heard the singing of waters. The
+forests seemed to come down out of the skies to meet her, dark,
+forbidding.
+
+She felt a sense of disaster, of helplessness. Where was she going,
+she and El Rey, with her enemies behind and coming fast? What was to
+be the end of the race? And then, all suddenly, the woods seemed to
+fall away on either side, a gateway to open up before her. A lovely
+open glade spread into the heart of the forest and the great king
+thundered in between the guarding pines. Like a silver flame he shot
+up the sloping floor, slowed, changed and came to stop before a cabin
+that sat securely at the glade's head.
+
+With the crashing pound of El Rey's ploughing hoofs upon the very
+stones at the step, a man came quickly from the interior of the cabin
+and stepped out, his hand lifted.
+
+Tharon Last, her hair beating on her shoulders, her face pale as
+ashes, her breast heaving, looked back toward the opening in the
+trees, and saw Courtrey swing in a wide arc and circle past to
+disappear toward the north.
+
+After him swept his two lieutenants, to fade swiftly from sight behind
+the shielding forest.
+
+A grim expression spread over the face of the man at the step as he,
+too, beheld the end of the vital play.
+
+Then he looked up at the girl on the silver stallion and his dark eyes
+were alight.
+
+"What's this?" he asked abruptly.
+
+Then Tharon seemed to become conscious of him for the first time.
+
+She looked down at him and the black pupils were spread across the
+azure of her eyes, making them strangely exciting in their straight
+glance.
+
+"This," she said, panting, "is some of the law of Lost Valley.
+Courtrey's law. That is the man I'm goin' to kill some day."
+
+Kenset felt the blood flow back upon his heart, an icy flood. The
+words were simple, sincere, unconscious of dramatic effect. They were
+as final as death itself, and he dropped his eyes unconsciously to the
+two guns at her hips. He wondered why she had ridden without a shot
+this time.
+
+He found his lips suddenly dry and moistened them before he spoke.
+
+"Why?" he asked, and his voice sounded strange to him.
+
+"Because," said Tharon simply, "because he kissed me--once--an' shot
+my daddy--in th' back, th' hound!"
+
+"God!" said Kenset
+
+For a moment there was silence while a bird called sharply from a pine
+top and the voice of the little stream became subtly audible.
+
+It seemed to the man that all his values of life had suddenly become
+shifted, changed. The commonplace had become the unreal, the unlikely
+the familiar.
+
+Guns and threats and racing horses with a woman for prize became on
+the moment natural events in this hidden setting.
+
+And what a woman she was! He looked up in her face again and saw there
+sweetness and strength, and grim purpose beyond his conception. He
+knew that her words were downright, and that they meant no more to her
+than duty to be done, a conscience cleared of debt. He glanced at the
+hand lying so quietly on the pommel and thought of it as stained with
+blood. At the fancy he frowned and mentally shook himself.
+
+Then, with an impulse wholly beyond his command, he reached up and
+laid his own hand over that one on the pommel.
+
+"Miss Last," he said gravely, "I have no words to express what I feel
+this moment about Lost Valley and its people. Will you get down and
+let me show you my house, here in my glade?"
+
+Tharon sat quietly for a moment and looked down at him. She did not
+remove her hand from under his, neither did she seem to be conscious
+of it.
+
+"Why should I?" she asked presently, "you don't owe me anything. I
+sent you away from my house. I wouldn't have come here if I'd known
+where I was goin'. It was a chance."
+
+"Granted. And yet I want you to come across my threshold, to sit in my
+big chair. Will you come?"
+
+Never in her life had the girl heard so low a voice. It was soft and
+gentle, yet full of a vibrant quality that belied its softness. The
+man himself was unlike Lost Valley men. He wore the olive drab
+trousers of the semi-military uniform, the leather leggings, a tan
+leather belt and a soft woolen shirt of the same drab color. It lay
+open at the throat, and the base of his strong neck was white as a
+woman's. The dark eyes upturned to hers were deep and winning. The
+dark beard showed through his sharply shaven cheeks where the red
+blood pulsed, like dusky shadows.
+
+A strange man, surely.
+
+Tharon wondered what made him so different from other men she had
+known. There was Billy who had come into Lost Valley from somewhere
+"below," and Conford, and Curly. Jack Masters had been born in the
+Valley. So had Bent Smith. These men were her men, like herself and
+Jim Last. This man was from "below," too, yet he was unlike.
+
+While she studied him he met her glance with the same grave look.
+
+Presently, without a word, she swung herself from the saddle, dropped
+El Rey's rein, and stepped around his shoulder.
+
+"All right," she said briefly, "but I won't stay any longer than I let
+you stay."
+
+For the first time Kenset laughed.
+
+"Twenty minutes, then," he said, "I don't think you let me exceed that
+limit."
+
+He led the way to the door, stepped back and let her enter. As she did
+so she passed close to him and caught the scent of him, the clean
+soft smell of shaving soap, blended with the aroma of good tobacco.
+
+That, too, was different.
+
+Inside the cabin there was a sense of comfort, of brightness. The long
+pennants, like captured rainbows, tacked to the rough walls, the soft
+toned prints, the gay cushions, all these lent an air of permanence,
+of home, that she had never before seen in a man's cabin. She stood
+and looked all around with that same half-insolent stare which had
+greeted Kenset at the Holding that memorable day.
+
+Then she went slowly forward and sat down in the big chair by the
+table.
+
+The man stood in her presence for a moment, thereby giving a subtle
+effect of deference which was not wholly lost upon Tharon, though she
+would have been at a loss to define it.
+
+Then, he, too, sat down on the edge of the table desk in the corner,
+and with folded arms waited while she finished her scrutiny of the
+interior.
+
+"I am proud of my home, Miss Last," he said presently. "What do you
+think of it?"
+
+"I think," said Tharon slowly, "that it looks like there's a woman
+somewhere."
+
+This time Kenset laughed in earnest, a ringing peal that startled El
+Rey at the doorstep, and made him clink his bit-chains.
+
+"There is," said the man, "assuredly."
+
+Tharon turned her head and looked quickly over her shoulder.
+
+"Where?" she asked in surprise.
+
+"There in my big chair."
+
+"Oh--I meant a woman livin' here, th' woman who owns the pretties."
+
+And she waved a hand at the gay furnishings.
+
+"No," said Kenset, "these are all my own pretties. I have books, as
+you see, and my maps and several more pictures to put up, not to
+mention some Mexican pottery that I brought from Ciudad Juarez, and my
+chiefest treasure, a tapestry from France. That last I can't decide
+upon. I have two splendid spaces--over there between the northern
+windows, facing the door, and yonder at the end. Perhaps you will be
+good enough to help me choose."
+
+There was a boyish eagerness in his voice.
+
+"Will you? After a while, I mean, when you have rested from your
+ride."
+
+"Rested?"
+
+Tharon looked at him in wonder. That ride had been like wine to her, a
+stimulant, a thing that sent the blood pounding in her veins.
+
+Over the excitement had fallen a subtle shade, however, a hush, with
+the sight of Bolt so close behind El Rey. If it had not been for that
+grave thing she would have felt like a wound-up spring, intent with
+energy, filled with action. She was always so when El Rey ran beneath
+her. And this stranger spoke of rest! Tharon Last could ride all day
+without a thought of rest.
+
+"Sure," she said, "I'll help you if I can. But what's this thing?"
+
+"A sort of picture," replied Kenset quickly, "a picture woven in
+cloth. But first, if you'll be so kind, I want you to break bread with
+me. You said we would not be friends. I'm not so sure of that. There
+is nothing like a man's bread and salt for the refutation of logic."
+
+He slipped off the desk with a lithe rippling of his body, but Tharon
+was first on her feet.
+
+"You mean stay to supper?" she asked decisively. "No, I can't do that.
+I took back a meal from you. That stan's between."
+
+"Why, you funny girl," said Kenset, "nothing stands between. And I
+don't mean supper, exactly, either. Please sit down."
+
+Tharon stood, considering. She turned the matter over in her mind.
+
+She had taken this man's house by storm. It had, indeed, given her
+refuge. If it had not been for the glade in the pines, she wondered
+where she would be now--driven deep into Black Coulee, she made no
+doubt, a prisoner to Courtrey.
+
+"All right," she said abruptly, "I'll stay. But you must be quick. Th'
+time is goin' fast."
+
+Kenset went swiftly across the cabin to that part which served as
+kitchen, and took from a curtain-covered set of shelves, a shiny
+nickel object on spindly legs, which he brought and placed near Tharon
+on the table.
+
+He struck a match and presently a clean blue flame grew up beneath
+it.
+
+He lifted the lid and filled the small pot, thereby exposed, with
+water from the bucket on a bench. Then he delved in one of the big
+trunks against the farther wall and brought out a little tin of cakes,
+such as one could buy in any city of the world.
+
+All this was absorbing to the girl in the big chair, who watched with
+grave eyes. And Kenset kept up a running stream of gay talk all the
+time. He wanted to make her at ease, to cover the thought of the
+strain between them, and how much he wanted to drive from his own mind
+the knowledge that this sweet and wholesome creature was a potential
+murderer, he did not know. From a can he measured chocolate. From a
+pan somewhere outdoors he brought milk. Sugar he added carefully as a
+woman, and presently he spread between them on the table a small
+repast that was strange to this girl of the wilderness.
+
+He watched her with appraising eyes and saw that there was in her no
+consciousness of the unusual. She might have sat at meat in the big
+room of the Holding for all the flutter there was in her.
+
+He told her somewhat of himself, of his life in the East, but he was
+careful not to ask about Lost Valley, to make mention of the
+circumstances that had brought her to his door. And so an hour passed
+as if it had been a bagatelle. The afternoon was waning when Tharon
+rose swiftly and abruptly terminated this first visit inside his home
+of any Lost Valley denizen.
+
+"Bring out your picture," she said decisively, "I'll help you hang it,
+an' then I must go home."
+
+So Kenset dived once more into the mysterious recesses of the trunk
+and this time brought out a thing of rare beauty and value, a large
+tapestry, some four by six feet in size, a wonderful thing of soft and
+deathless hues, of cunning distances, of Greek figures and leaning
+trees, of sea-line so faint as to be almost lost in the misty skies.
+
+"Oh!" said Tharon Last with an intake of her breath, "Oh, where do
+they make such things?"
+
+"Far on the other side of the world," said Kenset gently, pleased
+with the wonder in her wide eyes, the evident and quick realization of
+beauty.
+
+She whirled from it and glanced quickly at the two spaces on the
+rugged walls.
+
+"There," she said, pointing to the broad expanse between the northern
+windows, "hang it there."
+
+"Done," said Kenset, and went promptly for a hammer.
+
+When the huge thick mat was securely stretched in place, Tharon
+helping to hold it while he pounded in the broad-topped tacks, Kenset
+stepped back and wondered how he had ever for a moment considered
+hanging it in any other spot. The tempered light from the door came in
+upon it, bringing out each enchanted charm, each tender vista.
+
+"Wonderful!" he said to himself, "I never knew how lovely it was amid
+conventional surroundings!"
+
+"Huh?" asked Tharon.
+
+The man laughed in spite of himself and turned his eyes to hers, to
+lose his quick amusement in the earnest blue depths that seemed to
+question him at every angle.
+
+"I mean that it looks better here in my cabin than it ever did on city
+walls."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well--I don't know. Contrast, perhaps."
+
+Tharon stood a moment thinking.
+
+"Perhaps," she answered slowly, "yes, perhaps. I guess that's why you
+seem so diff'rent to me. Jim Last used to say that was why th' Valley
+was so soft-like an' lovely, contrasted by th' Rockface."
+
+"Do I seem different to you?" asked Kenset quickly. "How?"
+
+"Yes. I don't know how. You seem soft, like a woman--some women--an'
+I'm afraid----"
+
+She stopped suddenly, abruptly halted in her naïve speech, as if she
+had come face to face with something she had not meant to meet.
+
+"Afraid?" probed the man gravely, "go on. You are afraid--of what?"
+
+"No," said Tharon, "I won't say it"
+
+"Please do. I want to know."
+
+"Then," answered the girl straightly, after the honest and downright
+fashion of all her dealings, "I'm afraid you are--are too soft. You
+don't pack a gun. I'm afraid you wouldn't use it if you did."
+
+There was a certain finality about the short speech, as if she had put
+the last word of condemnation to his estate.
+
+Kenset looked down at his hands, spread them out a bit.
+
+"You're right," he said shortly, though his voice was still gentle. "I
+don't. And I wouldn't. Not until the last extremity."
+
+"An' what would that be?" she asked.
+
+"I don't just know, Miss Last," he answered smiling and raising his
+eyes once more to hers, "it would have to be--the _last_ extremity, I
+know.
+
+"The hands of all my forbears have been clean, so far as I know. I
+have a deep horror of that imaginary stain which human blood seems to
+leave on the hands of the killer. Blood guilt."
+
+"You call it that? My daddy had his killin's, but they were all in
+fair-an'-open. _I_ called him a _man_."
+
+There was a ringing quality in her voice, a depth and resonance that
+spoke of war and heroes. The fire that all the Holding knew was
+suddenly in her eyes, flashing and flaming. Kenset caught it, and a
+thrill shot through him.
+
+"Granted," he said quickly. "But is there only _one_ type of man?"
+
+"For me," said Tharon, "yes."
+
+"I'm sorry," said he, and for the life of him he did not know why.
+
+"So'm I," said Tharon honestly.
+
+They looked at each other for a pregnant moment, while a silence fell
+on the cabin and they could hear the singing water running down the
+slopes.
+
+Then the girl stooped and rearranged the cushion in the big chair,
+laid a book more neatly on top of another at the table's edge.
+
+"Th' time is up," she said, "I must be goin'."
+
+She straightened her shoulders and looked at him again.
+
+"I thank you for th' meal," she said, "an' some day I'll return it--in
+some manner. I don't know yet just what you're here for, nor if you're
+Courtrey's man or not--------"
+
+"Good Lord!" ejaculated Kenset, but she went on.
+
+"I won't shake hands with you, for whilst I ain't done no killin' yet,
+I'm sworn--an' Jim Last's hands was red--they would be to such as
+you--an' down to th' last drop o' blood, th' last beat o' my heart,
+I'm Jim Last's girl--th' best gun man in Lost Valley, if I do say
+so."
+
+And she swung quickly to the door.
+
+Kenset followed her. He longed for words, but found none.
+
+There was a sudden tragic seeming in the very air, a change from the
+pleasant commonplace to the tense and unexpected. It was always so in
+these strange meetings with the people of Lost Valley, it seemed, as
+if he was never to find his way among them, the sane and quiet course
+that he must travel.
+
+As they reached the step at the door sill El Rey stamped and whinnied
+a shrill blast. In through the gateway between the pines there came a
+rider on a running horse, Billy on Golden who ploughed to a stop
+before them, his grey eyes troubled.
+
+"Hello, Billy," said Tharon. "How's this?"
+
+"Been lookin' for you," said the boy. "We saw Courtrey an' his
+ruffians ridin' up east--watched 'em with th' glass, an' Anita said
+you rode south. Thought you might have met 'em."
+
+"I didn't meet 'em, so to speak," she said, smiling, "though if I'd
+been on anythin' but El Rey I would. They tried to drive me into Black
+Coulee."
+
+"Hell!" said Billy softly.
+
+Then the Mistress of Last's remembered her manners.
+
+"Billy," she said, "I make you acquainted with Kenset of th'
+foothills. I rode in here just in time to shake th' Stronghold
+bunch."
+
+The two men spoke, reached to shake each other's hands, and took a
+long survey that was mutual. As the two pairs of eyes met, a wall
+seemed to rear itself between them, a mist, a curtain, something
+intangible, but there.
+
+They looked across the woman's shoulder, and from that moment she was
+to stand between, though what there could be in common between the man
+in the U. S. service and the common rider from Last's was not
+apparent. El Rey was eager for flight and by the time Tharon's foot
+was in the stirrup he was up on his hind feet, fore feet beating the
+air, silver mane like a flying cloud. The girl rose with him
+gracefully, threw her leg across the saddle, waved a hand to Kenset in
+the door, and in another moment they were gone away down the grassy
+slope, out through the opening, had stretched away along the
+oak-dotted plain, swung toward the north, and were out of sight.
+
+The forest man turned away from the doorway, stood a moment looking
+over the cabin where the late light was making golden patterns on the
+green and brown rug, sighed and reached for his pipe.
+
+Somehow all the spirit seem to have gone from the summer day. The long
+twilight was setting in.
+
+"She wouldn't shake hands," he muttered to himself, "and what she said
+was true as death. She's _sworn_--and it is a solemn oath to her. God
+help the man who killed her daddy!"
+
+Then once more he sighed, unconsciously.
+
+"And Lord God help her!" he finished very gravely, "she is so
+sweet--so wild and spirited and sweet."
+
+Tharon and Billy let the horses run. Golden was a racer himself,
+though he could not hold a candle to the silver king, and the two
+young creatures atop were free as the summer winds, as buoyant and
+filled with joy of being. So they shot down along the levels, Tharon
+holding El Rey up a bit, though it was a man-size job to do so, and
+Billy's rein swinging loose on Golden's neck. They passed the last of
+the scattered oaks, came out to the green stretches. The sun was
+swinging like a copper ball above the Wall at the west. Down through
+the cañons the light came in long red shafts that cut through the
+cobalt shadows like sharp lances of fire and reached half across Lost
+Valley. All the western part of the Valley lay in that blue-black
+shadow. They could see Corvan set like a dull gem in the wide green
+country, the scattered ranches, miles apart.
+
+They swung down to the west a bit, for Tharon said she wanted to go by
+the Gold Pool and see how it was holding out.
+
+"Fine," said Billy, "she's deep as she ever was at this time of year,
+an' cold as snow."
+
+Where one tall cottonwood stood like a sentinel in the widespread
+landscape they drew rein and dismounted. Here a huge boulder cropped
+from the plain and under its protecting bulk there lay as lovely a
+spring as one would care to see, deep and golden as its name implied,
+above its swirling sands, for the waters were in constant turmoil as
+they pressed up from below.
+
+The girl lay flat at its edge and with her face to the crystal
+surface, drank long and deeply.
+
+As she looked up with a smile, Billy Brent felt the heart in him
+contract with a sudden ache.
+
+Her fresh face, its cheeks whipped pink under their tan by the winds,
+its blue eyes sparkling, its wet red lips parted over the white teeth,
+hurt him with a downright pain.
+
+"Oh, Tharon," he said with an accent that was all-revealing, "Oh,
+Tharon, dear!"
+
+The girl scrambled to her feet and looked at him in surprise.
+
+"Billy," she said sharply, "what's th' matter with you? Are you
+sick?"
+
+"Yes," said the boy with conviction, "I am. Let's go home."
+
+"Sick, how?" she pressed, with the born tyranny of the loving woman,
+"have you got that pain in your stomach again?"
+
+Billy laughed in spite of himself, and the romantic ache was
+shattered.
+
+"For the love of Pete!" he complained, "don't you ever forget that?
+You know I've never et an ounce of Anita's puddin's since. No, I
+think," he finished judiciously as he mounted Golden, "that I've
+caught somethin', Tharon--caught somethin' from that feller of th'
+red-beet badge. Leastways I've felt it ever sence I left th'
+clearin'."
+
+And as they swung away from the spring toward the Holding, far ahead
+under its cottonwoods, he let out the young horse for another
+stretch.
+
+"Bet Golden can beat El Rey up home," he said over his shoulder.
+
+"Beat th' king?" cried Tharon aghast, "you're foolin', Billy, an' I
+don't want to run nohow. I've run enough this day."
+
+So the rider held up again and together they paced slowly up through
+the gathering twilight where long blue shadows were reaching out to
+touch them from the western Wall and the golden shafts were turning to
+crimson, were lifting as the sun sank, were travelling up and up along
+the eastern mountains toward the pale skies. Soon they rode in purple
+dusk while the whole upper world was bathed in crimson and lavender
+light and Lost Valley lay deep in the earth's heart, a sinister spot,
+secret and dark.
+
+"Sometimes, Billy," said Tharon softly, "I like to ride like this, in
+th' big shadows--an' then I like to have some one with me that I know,
+some one like you, some one who will understand when I don't talk, an'
+who is always there beside me. It's a wonderful feelin'--but somehow,
+it's soft, too--mebby too soft--like--like--like a woman who's just a
+woman."
+
+The boy swallowed once, miserably.
+
+"Always, Tharon," he said huskily, "always--when you want me--or need
+me--I'll be there, beside you. An' you don't need to even speak a word
+to me. I'm like th' dogs--there whether you call or not."
+
+"I know," said the girl, and reaching over she caught the rider's
+hand, brown beneath its vanity of studded leather cuff, and gave it a
+little tender pressure.
+
+Billy set his teeth to keep from crushing her fingers, and together
+they rode slowly up along the sounding slopes to the beautiful
+security and comfort of Last's Holding.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE SHOT IN THE CAÑONS
+
+
+Kenset of the foothills was very busy. Between study of his maps and
+the endless riding of their claimed areas he was out from dawn till
+dark.
+
+He found, indeed, that none but he, of late years, had ridden those
+sloping forest covered skirts. Some one, sometime, must have done so,
+else the maps themselves would not have been, but what marks they must
+have left were either gone through the erosion of the elements or been
+wantonly destroyed.
+
+He fancied the former had been the case, for he saw no signs of
+destruction, and the very curiosity of the denizens of the Valley
+precluded familiarity with forest work.
+
+So he laid out for himself the labour of a dozen men and went at it
+with a vim that kept him at high tension. Therefore he had little time
+to think of Tharon Last and the strange life in Lost Valley. Only
+when he rode between given points, unintent on the land around, did he
+give up to his speculations. At such times his mind invariably went
+back to that first day at Baston's steps and he saw her again as he
+had seen her then, tense, stooping, her elbows bent above the guns at
+her hips, coming backward along the porch, feeling for the steps with
+her foot.
+
+Always he saw the ashen whiteness of her cheeks beneath her blowing
+hair.
+
+Always he frowned at the memory and always he felt a thrill go down
+his nerves. What was she, anyway, this wild, sweet creature of the
+wilderness who held herself aloof from his friendship, and said that
+she was "sworn?"
+
+Kenset, sane, quiet, peace loving, shook himself mentally and tried
+not to think of her. But day after day he came down along the edges of
+the scattered woods where the cattle grazed--on the forest lands--and
+looked over to where the Holding lay like a greener spot on the green
+stretches.
+
+He thought of her, living in this feudal hold, mistress of her riders,
+her cattle, and her wonderful racing horses of the Finger Marks,
+sweet, fair, wholesome--with the six-guns at her slender hips!
+
+If only he, Kenset, could take those weapons from her clinging hands,
+could wipe out of her young heart the calm intent to kill!
+
+It was preposterous! It was awful!
+
+Bred to another life, another law, another type of woman, he could not
+reconcile this girl of Lost Valley with anything he knew.
+
+He went over in his mind again and again the serene calmness of her in
+his cabin that day of the race with Courtrey, and shook his head in
+puzzlement.
+
+But why should he trouble himself about her at all?
+
+He had come here in his Government's service to reclaim its forest, to
+look after its interest.
+
+Why should he bother with the moral code of Lost Valley?
+
+But reason as he might, the face of Tharon Last came back to haunt
+him, waking or asleep.
+
+He knew that it troubled him and was, in a way, ashamed. So he worked
+hard at his tasks, relocated boundaries, marked them with a peculiar
+blaze in convenient trees which looked something like this:
+
+and set up monuments with odd and undecipherable hieroglyphics upon
+them.
+
+And with each blaze, each mark and monument and sign, he drew closer
+in about him the net of suspicion and disapproval which was weaving in
+Lost Valley, for there was not one but ran the gamut of close
+inspection and speculation by Courtrey's men, by the settlers who came
+many miles over from the western side of the Valley for the purpose,
+and by Tharon's riders.
+
+Low mutters of disapproval growled in the Valley.
+
+Who was this upstart, anyway, to come setting signs and marks in the
+land that had been theirs from time immemorial? What mattered the
+little copper-coloured badge on his breast? What mattered it that he
+was beginning to send out word of his desire to work with and for the
+cattlemen of Lost Valley, the settlers, the homesteaders?
+
+What was this matter of "grazing permits" of which he had spoken at
+the Stronghold?
+
+Permits?
+
+They had grazed their cattle where and when they chose--and
+could--from their earliest memory.
+
+They asked no leave from Government.
+
+When Kenset rode into Corvan he was treated with exaggerated politeness
+by those with whom he had to deal, with utter unconsciousness by all
+the rest. To cattleman and settler alike he was as if he had not been.
+
+None spoke to him in the few broad streets, none asked him to a bar to
+drink.
+
+Serene, quiet, soft spoken, he came and went about his business, and
+sneers followed him covertly.
+
+It was not long after Tharon's visit to the cabin in the glade, that
+Kenset, riding alone along the twilight land, passed close to the
+mouth of Black Coulee one day at dusk. He rode loosely, slouching
+sidewise in his saddle, for he had been to Corvan for his monthly mail
+and a few supplies tied in a bag behind his saddle, and he carried his
+broad hat in his hand.
+
+The little cool wind that blew in from the narrow gorge of the Bottle
+Neck and spread out like an invisible fan, breathed on his face with a
+grateful touch. The day had been hot, for the summer was opening
+beautifully, and he had ridden Captain far. Therefore he jogged and
+rested, his arms hanging listlessly at his sides, his thoughts two
+thousand miles away.
+
+At the mouth of Black Coulee where the sinister split of the deep wash
+came up to the level, there grew a fringe of wild poplar trees. They
+were beautiful things, tall and straight and thickly covered with a
+million shiny leaves that whirled and rustled softly in the wind,
+showing all their soft white silver sides when the breeze came up from
+the south as it did this day. There was water in Black Coulee, many
+small springs, not deep enough nor steady enough to count for water in
+a range country, but sufficient to keep the poplars growing on the rim
+of the great wash, to stand them thick on the caving sides. Whole
+benches of earth with their trees upon them slipped down these sides
+from time to time, making of the Coulee a mysterious labyrinth of
+thickets and shelves, of winding ways and secret places.
+
+Kenset had heard a few wild stories about Black Coulee. Sam Drake had
+talked a bit more than most men of Lost Valley would have talked, and
+he had listened idly.
+
+Now as he rode up along the levels and neared the dark mouth of the
+cut he studied it with appraising eyes. It was sinister enough, in all
+truth, a deep, dark place behind its veil of poplars, secretive,
+hushed.
+
+The red light that dyed Lost Valley so wondrously at the hour of the
+sun's sharp decline above the peaks and ridges of the Cañon Country
+was awash in all the great sunken cup, save at the west under the
+Rockface where the shadows were already dark.
+
+Kenset drank in the beauty of the scene with smiling eyes. Already a
+love for this hidden paradise had grown wonderfully in his heart. He
+felt as if he had never lived before, as if he had never known
+beauty.
+
+And so, dreaming a little of other scenes, smiling to himself, he
+jogged along on Captain and was nearly past the frowning mouth of the
+Coulee, when there came the sharp snap of a rifle in the stillness,
+and Captain changed his feet, sagged and quivered, then caught himself
+and leaped ahead. For one amazed moment Kenset thought the horse was
+hit. Then, as he straightened in his saddle and dropped his hand to
+catch up his hanging rein, he looked quickly down. Where he was
+accustomed to the smooth feel of the pommel beneath his palm there was
+a sharp raw edge. A splinter of wood stood up and a small flare of
+leather hung to one side.
+
+A bullet, singing out of Black Coulee, had carried away part of the
+pommel.
+
+Kenset shut his lips in a new line, gathered up his rein and drew the
+horse down to a walk with an iron hand.
+
+Slowly, without a backward glance, he rode on across the darkening
+levels. He was no fool.
+
+He knew he had had his warning.
+
+Very well. He would give back his acceptance of that warning.
+
+He had said to Courtrey that night at the Stronghold that he had come
+to stay.
+
+No bunch of lawless bullies were going to scare him out.
+
+No other shot followed. He had not expected one.
+
+For a time after that he went about his work as usual. Nothing
+happened; he had no outward sign of the distaste with which he was
+regarded by all factions alike, it seemed.
+
+He met Courtrey face to face in Corvan one day and spoke to him
+civilly, but Courtrey did not speak. Wylackie Bob did, however--a
+sneering salutation that was a covert insult. Kenset touched his hat
+with dignity and passed on.
+
+"Of all th' tenderfeet!" said Baston, watching the small by-play. "I
+b'lieve you could spit on him, boys."
+
+"I don't," spoke up Old Pete, shuffling by on his bandy legs,
+"sometimes that quiet, soft-spoken kind rises--an' then hell's to pay
+in their veecinity."
+
+But Wylackie looked at the weazened snow-packer with his snake-like
+eyes and snapped out a warning.
+
+"Some folks takes sides too quick, sometimes."
+
+But Old Pete went on about his business. He knew, as did all the
+Valley, that a price was on his head with Courtrey's band for the
+daring leap which had saved the life of Tharon Last that day in
+spring.
+
+Sooner or later that price would be paid, but Old Pete was true
+western stuff. He had lived his life, had had his day, and he was full
+of pride at the turn of fate which had made him a hero in a way at the
+end.
+
+All the Valley stood off and admired Jim Last's daughter.
+
+Pete basked in the reflected light. And Tharon herself had taken his
+gnarled old hand one day in Baston's store and called him a
+thoroughbred.
+
+Folks in Lost Valley were chary of words, conservative to the last
+degree. That simple word, the handclasp, the look in the clear blue
+eyes, had been his eulogy.
+
+It was whispered about, as was every smallest happening, and came to
+the ears of Courtrey himself, who had promised those vague things for
+the future on the fateful night. But Courtrey was playing a waiting
+game. He was obsessed with the image of Tharon. Sooner or later he
+meant to have her, to install her at the Valley's head. He had always
+had what he wanted. Therefore, he expected to have this girl with the
+challenging eyes, the maddening mouth, like crimson sumac.
+
+Ellen?
+
+Already he was setting in motion a thing that was to take care of
+Ellen.
+
+The thing in hand now was to placate Tharon, the mistress of Last's,
+to play the overwhelming lover.
+
+Courtrey knew better than to go near the Holding. Bully that he was he
+yet had sense enough to know that no fear of him dwelt in the huge old
+house under the cottonwoods. If Tharon herself did not shoot him,
+one--or all--of her riders would. The day of the armed band riding
+down to take her was, if not past, passing fast. He recalled the look
+of the settlers--poor spawn that he hated--whirling their solid column
+behind her to face him that day from the Cup Rim's floor.
+
+No. Courtrey meant to have the girl some day--to hold in his arms that
+ached for her loveliness, the strong, resistant young body of her--to
+sate his thief's mouth with kisses. But he would call her to him of
+her own will, would taste the savage triumph of seeing her come suing
+for his mercy.
+
+If Tharon meant to break Courtrey, he meant no less to break her.
+
+Outlawry--mob law--they were pitted against each other.
+
+And, lifting its head dimly through the smother of hatred, of wrong,
+of repression and reprisal, another law was struggling toward the
+light in Lost Valley--the sane, quiet law of right and equality,
+typified by the smiling, dark-eyed man of the cabin in the forest
+glade.
+
+Courtrey sent word to Tharon--an illy spelled letter, mailed at
+Baston's--that he had meant nothing by that race above the Black
+Coulee, except another kiss. There was Courtrey's daring in the
+affronting words.
+
+She sent the letter back to him--riding in on El Key alone--with the
+outline of a gun traced across it.
+
+"Th' little wildcat!" grinned the man, "she's sure spunky!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once again Tharon met Kenset in the days that followed. Riding by the
+Silver Hollow she stopped one breathless afternoon, drank of the
+snow-cold waters, shared them with El Rey, dropped the rein over the
+stallion's head and flung herself full length on the earth beside the
+spring. A clump of willow trees grew here, for every spring in Lost
+Valley had its lone sentinels to call its presence across the
+stretching miles. As the girl lay flat on her back with her hands
+beneath her head, she looked up into the blue heart of the arching
+skies where the fleecy white clouds sailed, and a sense of sweetness
+and peace came down upon her like a garment.
+
+"You're sure some lovely spot, Lost Valley," she said aloud, "an' no
+mistake. I know, more'n ever as th' days go by that Jim Last was only
+jokin' when he told me of those other places out below, big as you,
+lovely as you. It just ain't possible. Is it, El Rey, old boy?"
+
+And she moved a booted foot to the king's striped hoof and tapped it
+smartly.
+
+El Rey, always aloof, always touchy, never sure of temper, jumped and
+snorted. The girl laughed and crossed her feet and fell to speculating
+idly about the world that lay beyond Lost Valley. Little she knew of
+it. Only the brief words of her father from time to time, the
+reluctant speech of Last's riders, for the master of the Holding had
+laid down the law concerning this.
+
+His daughter was of the Valley, content. He meant her to be so always.
+The man who had instilled into her young mind a discontent with her
+environment, a longing for the "flesh-pots" of the world as he had
+styled it once, would have had short shrift at Last's. He would have
+received his time and "gone packing" swiftly.
+
+And Tharon was content.
+
+Barring the loneliness that had come with Jim Last's death, she was
+well content.
+
+So she lay by the willows and hummed a sliding tune, a soft, sweet
+thing of minors and high notes falling, like rippling waters, and
+lazily watched the high white clouds sail by.
+
+And as she lay she became conscious of something else in the drowsing
+land beside herself and her horse. She felt it first, this presence--a
+thin, dim vibration that sang in the earth beneath her. It stopped the
+wordless song on her lips, stilled the breath in her throat, set every
+nerve in her to listening, as it were.
+
+Presently she sat up and felt quickly for the gun-butts in their
+scabbards. Then she parted the willows and looked out over the rolling
+slopes and levels. True enough. A horseman was coming in from the
+west, making for the Silver Hollow, but Tharon smiled and her fingers
+relaxed on the gun. This man rode straight--like a lance, she
+thought--and his mount was brown, a good-enough common horse, but no
+steed of Lost Valley.
+
+Captain lacked the fire, the ramping keenness of the Ironwoods, the
+spirit and dash of the Finger Marks. For a long time the girl in the
+willows watched them. Then as they came near she rose and caught El
+Rey's bridle.
+
+He was no gentleman, this big blue-silver king. He was savage and wild
+and imperious. He hated other horses with a quick hatred sometimes and
+had been known to wreak this sudden rage upon them in sickening fury.
+
+So Tharon held him with a strong brown hand wrapped in the chain below
+the Spanish spade bit in his mouth. She stood beside him, waiting, a
+slim, golden creature, tawny of hair and blue of eye, and the great
+horse towered above her mightily, his silver mane blowing up above his
+arching neck in the little wind that came from the south.
+
+They made a picture that Kenset never forgot, as he swung round the
+willows and faced them.
+
+El Rey screamed and pounded with his striped hoofs, but Tharon jerked
+him down with no gentle hand.
+
+"Be still, you bully!" she said sharply.
+
+"Why, Miss Last!" cried the forest man, "I'm so glad to meet you!"
+
+There was the genuine delight of a boy in his voice, and Tharon caught
+the note. The sweet, disarming smile parted her lips and she was all
+girl at the moment, artless, innocent, unstained by the shadow of
+lawlessness and crime that seemed to ever hang above her in Kenset's
+thoughts.
+
+"Are you?"
+
+"I certainly am."
+
+He swung down, gave Captain a drink at the edge of the spring farthest
+from El Rey, dropped the rein when he had finished, and swung around
+to face the girl. He took off his wide hat and wiped his forehead with
+a square of linen finer than anything of its kind she had ever seen.
+
+Then he stood for a moment looking straight into her eyes with his
+smiling dark ones. It seemed to Tharon that this man was always
+smiling.
+
+"This is your spring, isn't it?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. The Silver Hollow. Th' Gold Pool is farther south toward th'
+Black Coulee. There was another one, fine as this, perhaps a better
+one, up on th' Cup Rim Range, but Courtrey blew her up, damn him! She
+was called th' Crystal." Kenset caught his breath, mentally, all but
+physically, and put up a hand to cover his lips.
+
+This _was_ another type of woman from any he had ever met, in truth.
+
+The oath, rolling roundly over her full red lips, was as unconscious
+as the long breath that lifted her breast at the memory of that
+outrage.
+
+"We replaced her with a well--an' it's a corker. Mebby better than
+th' old Crystal, though she was a lovely thing. As clear as--as ice
+that's frozen hard without a ripple of white. You know that kind?"
+
+"Yes," said Kenset gravely.
+
+"Well," sighed Tharon, "she's gone, an' there ain't no use cryin' over
+spilt milk. What you ben a-doin' sence I helped you hang th'
+picture?"
+
+"Won't you sit down?" Kenset stepped aside. "It is uncomfortable to
+stand through a visit--and I mean to have a long talk-fest with you,
+if you will be so kind."
+
+Tharon flung herself down at the spring's edge, eased the right gun
+from under her hip, leaned on her elbow and prepared to listen.
+
+"Fire away," she said.
+
+Kenset laughed.
+
+"For goodness' sake!" he ejaculated, "I said visit. That takes two.
+What have you been doing?"
+
+"Well, everythin', mostly. Made a new shirt for Billy, for one thing.
+An' I showed Courtrey th' picture o' this."
+
+She patted the blue gun that lay half in her lap, its worn scabbard
+black against her brown skirt.
+
+Kenset sobered at once. As ever when he let his mind dwell on that
+dark shadow which sat so lightly on this girl, he had no feeling for
+mirth.
+
+A very real chill went down his spine and he looked intently into her
+eyes.
+
+"How?" he asked, "what did you do?"
+
+But Tharon shook her head.
+
+"Nothin' you'd understand," she said quietly.
+
+"I can show you something you will understand," he said, and reached
+for Captain's bridle. He pulled the horse around and pointed to the
+saddle horn.
+
+"See that?"
+
+She looked up quickly. With the sure instinct of a dweller in a gun
+man's land she knew the meaning of the splintered wood of the pommel,
+the torn and ragged leather that had covered it.
+
+"Hell!" she said softly, "where did you get that?"
+
+"At the mouth of Black Coulee, at dusk a week ago."
+
+For a long moment Tharon studied the saddle. Then her gaze dimmed,
+lengthened, went beyond into infinitude. The pupils of her eyes drew
+down to tiny points of black against the brilliant blue.
+
+At last she turned and held out a hand, rising from her elbow.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Mister," she said quaintly, "fer that day at the
+Holdin' an' th' meal I offered an' took, an' fer my words. I know now
+that you are--that you were--straight. I don't yet know what you may
+mean in Lost Valley with your talk of Government, but I do know you
+ain't a Courtrey man."
+
+Kenset took the hand. It was firm and shapely and vibrant with the
+young life there was in her. He laid his other one over it and held it
+in a close clasp for a moment.
+
+"I mean only right," he said, "sanity and law and decency. I think I
+have a big problem to handle here--aside from my work on the forest--a
+problem I must solve before I can be effective in that work--and I am
+more sincerely glad than I can say that my friend, the outlaw, took
+that warning shot at me. It ruined a perfectly good saddle, but it has
+made one point clear to you. I am no Courtrey man, and that's a solemn
+fact."
+
+"An' I ain't ashamed to say I'm glad, too," said Tharon.
+
+So, with the sun shining in the cloud-flecked heavens and the little
+winds blowing up from the south to ruffle the hair at the girl's
+temples, these two sat by the Silver Hollow and talked of a thousand
+things, after the manner of the young, for Kenset found himself
+reverting to the things of youth in the light of Tharon's grave
+simplicity.
+
+They looked into each other's eyes and found there strange depths and
+lights. They were aliens, strangers, groping dimly for a common
+ground, and finding little, though presently they fell once more upon
+the law in Lost Valley and earnestness deepened into gravity.
+
+"Miss Last," said Kenset, thrilling at his daring, "why must this law
+dwell in these?" and he reached a hand to tap the gun on her lap.
+
+"Why? That very question'd show your ignorance to any Lost Valley man.
+Because it's all there is. You've seen Courtrey. You've seen Steptoe
+Service. Can't you judge from them?"
+
+"Surely, so far as they two go. A bad man and a bad sheriff. But they
+are not all the officers of this County. Where and who is your
+Superior Judge?"
+
+"Poor ol' Ben Garland. Weaker'n skim milk. Scared to say his soul's
+his own."
+
+There was infinite scorn in her voice.
+
+"No, it's Steptoe Service, or nothin'."
+
+Kenset thought a moment.
+
+"Who's the Coroner?" he asked presently.
+
+"Jim Banner," she answered quickly, "as straight a man as ever lived.
+Brave, too. He's been shot at more'n once fer takin' exception to some
+raw piece o' work in this Valley, fer pokin' his nose in, so to speak.
+Jim Last used to say he was th' only _man_ at the Seat, which is
+Corvan, you know, of course."
+
+"District Attorney?"
+
+"Tom Nord. Keen as a razor an' married to Courtrey's sister. Now do
+you see why this is th' law?" She, too, tapped the gun.
+
+Kenset frowned and looked down along the green range. He thought of
+the unpainted pine building in Corvan which was the Court House. A
+strange personnel, truly, to invest it with authortity!
+
+"I see," he said briefly, "but there must be some way out. This is not
+the right way, the way that must come and last."
+
+Tharon's lips drew into the thin line that made them like her
+father's. "It's th' law that's here," she said and there was an
+instant coldness in her voice, "an' it's th' law that'll last until
+Courtrey or I go down."
+
+The man, watching, saw that thinning of the lips, the hardening of all
+the young lines of her face. He knew he had blundered. Talk was cheap.
+It was action that counted in Lost Valley.
+
+With a quick motion he reached over and caught the girl's hand and
+drew it to him, covering it with both of his.
+
+Her eyes followed, came to rest on his face, cool, appraising,
+waiting.
+
+She was, in all that had counted in his life, crude, untutored,
+basic.
+
+Yet that calm look made his impulsive action seem unpardonable in the
+next second. However a warm surge of feeling shot through him with the
+quiet resting of that firm brown hand between his own, and he held it
+tighter. Kenset had thought he was sophisticated, that little or
+nothing could stir him deeply--not since Ethel Van Riper had gone to
+Europe as the bride of the old Count of Easthaven. That had been four
+years back. He had been pretty young then, but the young feel deeply.
+
+Now he held a gun woman's hand in the thin shade of a willow clump in
+the heart of Lost Valley--and the blood surged in his ears, the levels
+and slopes danced before his vision.
+
+"Miss Tharon," he said, for the first time using her given name, "I
+beg your pardon. You are strong, simple, serene. You know your land
+and its ways. I am an alien, an interloper--but I can't bear to think
+of you as waiting for the time to kill a man--or to be killed in the
+killing. It sickens me."
+
+Tharon snatched her hand from his and leaped to her feet.
+
+"Don't talk like that!" she cried passionately, "I don't like to hear
+it! I thought you were a real man, maybe, but you're not! You--you're
+a woman! A soft woman--I hate th' breed!"
+
+Her face was flushed, for what reason Kenset, stunned by her vehement
+words, could not tell. She flung the rein up and followed it, leaping
+to saddle like a man.
+
+"I tol' you we couldn't be friends!" she cried, her eyes blazing with
+sudden fire, "there ain't no manner of use a-tryin'."
+
+Kenset, springing forward, caught El Rey's bit. The stallion reared
+and struck, but he held him down.
+
+"There is use, Tharon," he panted. "It's vital! Since that day on
+Baston's steps, when you backed out past me I have had you in my
+mind--my thoughts by day and night--there is use, and I'll keep your
+hands from blood--Courtrey's or any other--if it takes my life--so
+help me God!"
+
+The girl leaned down and her blue eyes blazed in his face.
+
+"An' make me false to th' crosses on Jim Last's stone?" she cried.
+"No--not you or anybody else--could do that trick! Let go!"
+
+The next moment she had whirled out from the flickering shade of the
+willows and was gone around toward the north--there was only the sound
+of hoofs ringing on the earth. Kenset, left alone where the Silver
+Hollow bubbled softly above its snowy sands, passed a trembling hand
+across his eyes and stood as in a trance.
+
+What did it mean? What had he promised? What vital emotion had gripped
+him that his usually quiet tongue had rushed into that torrential
+speech that dealt with life and death? What was Tharon Last to him?
+
+A figure of the old West! A romantic gun woman with her weapons on her
+hips! A rider of wild horses!
+
+Slowly, as if he had gained an added weight of years, he reined
+Captain and swung himself up. He rode east from the spring toward the
+lacy and far-reaching skirts of the forest, and for the first time he
+saw the rolling country with tragic eyes.
+
+It held deep issues--life and death and the passing or continuing of
+régimes and and dynasties--but it was a wondrous country, and, come
+good or bad, it had become his own. He swung around in his saddle and
+looked far back across the Valley. He saw the golden light on its
+uncounted acres, the shadow falling at the foot of the great Rockface,
+the mighty Wall itself with the silver ribbon of the Vestal's Veil
+falling straight down from the upper rim, the distant town, looking
+always like a dull gem in a dark setting, and a thrill shot to his
+heart.
+
+Yes, if he lived to do his work in the hidden Valley--if he was shot
+this night on his own doorstep, it was his country.
+
+He who was alien in every way, was yet native.
+
+Something in the depths of him came down as from far distant racial
+haunts and was at home.
+
+So he rode slowly up among the scattered oaks with his hands folded on
+the mutilated pommel, and he knew that his lines were definitely
+cast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tharon Last rode into the Holding and dismounted in unwonted silence.
+
+There was a frown between her brows, an unusual thing. She turned the
+stallion into his corral, dragged off the big saddle to hang it on its
+peg, flung the studded bridle on a post.
+
+The men were not in yet. Far toward the north beyond the big corrals
+she could see the cattle grazing toward home. A surge of savage joy in
+her possessions flooded over her. These things were her own. They were
+what Jim Last had worked for all his life.
+
+Not one hoof or hide should Courtrey take without swift reprisal.
+
+Not one inch should he push her from her avowed purpose--not though
+all the strangers in the world came to Lost Valley and prated of
+blood-guilt.
+
+But for some vague reason which she could not have analyzed had she
+wished, she went to the paled-in garden where the silver waters
+trickled and searched among the few flowers growing there for some
+blossom, sweeter, tenderer, more mild and timid than usual for the
+pale hands of the Virgin in the deep south room.
+
+With the posy in her fingers she slipped quietly to her sanctuary and
+knelt before the statue, pensive, frowning, vaguely stirred. She
+whispered the prayers that Anita had taught her, but she found with a
+start that the words were meaningless, that she was saying them
+mechanically.
+
+Her mind had been at the Silver Hollow, seeing again the forest man's
+dark eyes, so grave, so quiet, so deep--her right hand was conscious
+as it had never been in all her life before. She heard a strange man's
+condemning voice, felt the warmth of his hands pressed upon hers.
+
+The mistress of Last's shook herself, both mentally and physically,
+and set herself to resay her prayers.
+
+When she came out to the life and bustle of the ranch house the cattle
+were streaming into the far corrals under their dust, the riders were
+shouting, young Paula sang in the kitchen, and Anita passed back and
+forth about the evening meal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a slim moon in the west above the Cañon Country. The skies
+were softly alight, high and vaulted, deep and mysterious and sweet.
+
+World-silence, profound as eternity, hung tangibly above Lost Valley
+and the Wall, the eastern ramparts of the shelving mountains, the
+rocklands at the north. There was little sound in all this sleeping
+wilderness.
+
+Bird life was rare. The waters that fell at seasons from the open
+mouths of the cañons half way up the Rockface were dried. Down in the
+Valley itself there could be seen the lights of Corvan which never
+went out from dusk to dawn. Far to the north a black blot might have
+been visible with a fuller moon--Courtrey's herds bedded on the range,
+the only stock in the Valley so privileged.
+
+Along the foot of the Rockface in the early evening a tiny procession
+had crawled, three burros, their pack-saddles empty save for a couple
+of sacks tied across each, and a weazened form that followed them--Old
+Pete, the snow-packer, bound on his nightly journey to the Cañon
+Country for the bags of snow for the cooling of the Golden Cloud's
+refreshments.
+
+He was a little old man, grotesque and misshapen, yet he followed
+briskly after the burros, which were the fastest travelers of their
+kind in the land. He rolled on his bandy legs and kept the little
+animals on a constant trot with the wisp of stick he carried and the
+deep, harsh cries that heralded his coming for a mile ahead and sent
+the echoes reverberating between the cañon walls. A little north of
+Corvan he had followed the Rockface close for a distance, then
+suddenly turned back on his tracks and disappeared, burros and all.
+This was the invisible entrance to the Cañon Country, a narrow mouth
+that opened sidewise into the very breast of the thousand-foot Wall
+and led back along a thin sheet of rock that stood between the gorge
+and the Valley. The floor of this cut or cañon, which was so narrow
+that the laden burros had a "narrow squeak" to pass, as Pete said,
+lifted sharply. It rose smoothly underfoot in the pitch darkness, for
+the cut was roofed in the living rock five hundred feet above, and
+climbed for a mile. It was a dead, flat place, without sound, for the
+footsteps of the burros and the man fell dully on the soft and sliding
+floor, and it seemed to have no acoustic properties.
+
+At the end of the mile this snake-like split in the solid rock came
+suddenly out into a broader, more steeply pitched cañon whose walls
+went straight up to the open skies above. Here there were heaps and
+piles and long slides of dead stone, weathered and powdered, that had
+fallen from time to time from the parent walls. This in turn led up
+and on to other breaks and splits and cuts, all open, all lifting to
+the upper world, and all as blind and dangerous to follow as any
+deathtrap that old Dame Nature ever devised. Here, at any crosscut,
+any debouching cañon, a man might turn to his undoing, might travel on
+and up and never reach those beckoning heights, seen clearly from some
+blind pocket he had wandered into, might never find his way back to
+the original cañon among the continuous cuts that met and crossed and
+passed each other among the towering points and sheets.
+
+But Old Pete knew where he was going. Not for nothing had he threaded
+these passages for fifteen years. He knew the Cañon Country for the
+lower part better than any man in the Valley, if Courtrey be
+excepted.
+
+So this night he climbed and shouted to his burros and thought no more
+of the sounding splits, for here the echoes raved, than he would have
+thought of the open plains below.
+
+He passed on and up to where a certain cut lay full, year after year,
+of packed and hardened snow. For fifteen years Old Pete had visited
+this cut, a deeper drop into the nether world of rock, and cut his
+supplies from its surface. Every season he took what he needed,
+leaving a widening circle at the edge from which he worked, where the
+cut he traveled passed the mouth of the pent cañon, and every year the
+snows, sifting from high above, leveled it again. There was no known
+outlet for this glacier-like pack, no sliding chance, yet it was
+always on a certain level--each summer seeming to lose just what it
+gained in winter. It lay level at the mouth of the passing cut, was
+never filled higher.
+
+Starting at dusk from Corvan, Pete reached his destination around two
+o'clock, filled his sacks, tied them on his mules and started down,
+coming out of the Rockface in time to meet the dawn that quivered on
+the eastern ramparts.
+
+But this night Old Pete, sturdy, fearless, unarmed, was not to see the
+accustomed pageant of the rising sun, the fleeing veils of shadows
+shifting on the Valley floor that he had watched with silent joy for
+all these years.
+
+This night he was well down along his backward way, shouting in the
+darkness, for the slim moon had dropped down behind the lofty peaks
+above, when all the echoes in the world, it seemed, let loose in the
+cañons and all the weight of the universe itself came pressing hard
+upon his dauntless heart with the crack of a gun.
+
+"Th' price!" whispered Old Pete as he fell sprawling on his face, "fer
+pure flesh!" With which cryptic word he bade farewell to the sounding
+passes, the tenets of manhood as he conceived them, the valour, and
+the grumbling at life in general.
+
+The little burros, placid and faithful, went on and saw the pageant of
+the dawn from the hidden gateway in the Wall, crept down the Rockface,
+single file, and at their accustomed hour stood at their accustomed
+place before the Golden Cloud.
+
+It was Wan Lee, Old Pete's _bête noir_, who found them there and ran
+shouting through the crowd of belated players in the saloon's big
+room, his pig-tail flying, his almond eyes popping, to upset a table
+and batter on his master's door and scream that the "bullos" were
+here, "allesame lone," and that there was blood all spattered on the
+hind one's rump!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WHITE ELLEN
+
+
+So old Pete, the snow-packer, had paid the price of gallantry. The
+bullet he had averted from Tharon Last's young head that day in the
+Golden Cloud but sheathed itself to wait for him. All the Valley knew
+it. Not a soul beneath the Rockface but knew beyond a shadow of a
+doubt who, or whose agents, had followed Pete that night to the Cañon
+Country. Whispers went flying about as usual, and as usual nothing
+happened.
+
+When the news of this came to Last's Holding the mistress sat down at
+the big desk in the living room, laid her tawny head on her arms and
+wept.
+
+There was in her a new softness, a new feeling of misery--as if one
+had wantonly killed a rollicking puppy before her eyes. Those tears
+were Old Pete's requiem. She dried them quickly, however, and set
+another notch to her score with Courtrey.
+
+It was then that the waiting game ceased abruptly.
+
+Tharon, riding on El Rey, went in to Corvan. She tied the horse at
+the Court House steps and went boldly in to the sheriff's office.
+
+Behind her were Billy, like her shadow, and the sane and quiet
+Conford.
+
+Steptoe Service, fat and important, was busy at his desk. His spurs
+lay on a table, his wide hat beside them. The star of his office shone
+on his suspender strap.
+
+"Step Service," said the girl straightly, "when are you goin' to look
+into this here murder?"
+
+Service swung round and shot an ugly look at her from his small eyes.
+
+"Have already done so," he said, "ben out an' saw to th' buryin'!"
+
+Tharon gasped.
+
+"Buried him already? How dared you do it?"
+
+"Say," said Service, banging a fist on his table, "I'm th' sheriff of
+Menlo County, young woman. I ordered him buried."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"What's it to you?"
+
+"Was Jim Banner there?"
+
+"Jim Banner's sick in bed--got th' cholery morbus."
+
+Tharon's eyes began to blaze.
+
+"Bah!" she snapped, "th' time's ripe! Come on, boys," and she whirled
+from the Court House.
+
+As she ran across the street to where the Finger Marks were tied, she
+came face to face with Kenset on Captain.
+
+Her face was red from brow to throat, her voice thick with rage.
+
+"You talked o' law, Mr. Kenset," she cried at the brown horse's
+shoulder, her eyes upraised to his, "an' see what law there is in
+Lost Valley! Step Service has buried th' snow-packer--without a
+by-your-leave from nobody! Th' man--or woman--that kills Courtrey
+now 'counts for three men--Harkness, Last an' Pete. I'm on my way
+to th' Stronghold."
+
+She whirled again to run for the stallion, but the forest man leaned
+down and caught her shoulder in a grip of steel.
+
+"Not now," he said in that compelling low voice, "not now. I want to
+talk to you."
+
+"But I don't want to talk to you!" she flung out, "I'm goin'!"
+
+Over her head Conford's anxious eyes met Kenset's.
+
+"Hold her," they begged plainly, "we can't."
+
+And Kenset held her, by physical strength.
+
+The grey eyes of Billy were on him coldly. The boy was hot with anger
+at the man. He put a hand on Kenset's arm.
+
+"Let go," he said, but Kenset shook him off.
+
+"Come out on the plain a little way with me, all of you," he said,
+"this is no place to talk."
+
+Tharon, standing where he had stopped her, her breast heaving, her
+lips apart, seemed struggling against an unknown force. She put up a
+hand and tried to dislodge his fingers on her shoulder, but could
+not.
+
+Presently she wet her lips and looked around the street, already
+filled with watching folk, then up at Kenset.
+
+"What for?" she asked.
+
+"I think I can tell you something," he answered quietly.
+
+"All right," she said briefly, "let go an' I'll come."
+
+Without a word the man loosed her. She went to El Rey and mounted.
+
+Her riders mounted with her, Billy's face frowning and set. From the
+steps of Baston's store a few cowboys watched. There were no
+Stronghold men in town, for it was too early in the day.
+
+In silence Kenset led out of town at a brisk canter. His lips were
+set, his eyes very grave.
+
+In the short gallop that followed while they cleared the skirts of the
+town, he did some swift thinking, settled some heavy questions for
+himself.
+
+He was about to take a decided step, to put himself on record in
+something that did not concern his work in the Valley.
+
+He was going directly opposite to the teaching of his craft. He was
+about to take sides in this thing, when he had laid down for himself
+rigid lines of non-partisanship. His mind was working swiftly.
+
+If he flung himself and his knowledge of the outside world and the law
+into this thing he sunk abruptly the thing for which he had come to
+Lost Valley--the middle course, the influence for order that he had
+hoped to establish that he might do his work for the Government.
+
+But he could not help it. At any or all costs he must stop this
+blue-eyed girl from riding north to challenge Courtrey on his
+doorstep.
+
+The blood congealed about his heart at the thought.
+
+Where the rolling levels came up to the confines of the town they rode
+out far enough to be safe from eavesdroppers, halted and faced each
+other.
+
+"Miss Last," said Kenset gently, "I'm a stranger to you. I have little
+or no influence with you, but I beg you to listen to me. You say there
+is no help for the conditions existing in Lost Valley. That outrage
+follows outrage. True. I grant the thing is appalling. But there is
+redress. There is a law above the sheriff, when it can be proven that
+that officer has refused to do his duty. That law is invested in the
+coroner. Your coroner can arrest your sheriff. He can investigate a
+murder--he can issue a warrant and serve it anywhere in the State. He
+can subpoena witnesses. Did you know that?"
+
+Tharon shook her head.
+
+"Nor you?" he asked Conford.
+
+"I knew somethin' like that--but what's th' use? Banner's a brave man,
+but he's got a family. An' he's been only one against th' whole push.
+What could he do when there wasn't another man in th' Valley dared to
+stand behind him? You saw what happened to Pete. He struck up
+Courtrey's arm when he shot at Tharon one night last spring. Th' same
+thing'd happen to Banner if he tried to pull off anythin' like that."
+
+A light flamed up in Kenset's eyes.
+
+"If you, Miss Last," he said straightly, "will give me your word to do
+no shooting, something like that will be pulled off here, and
+shortly."
+
+He looked directly at Tharon, and for the first time in her life she
+felt the strength of a gaze she couldn't meet--not fully.
+
+But Tharon shook her head.
+
+"I'm sworn," she said simply.
+
+Kenset's face lost a bit of colour. Billy, watching, turned grey
+beneath his tan. He saw something which none other did, a thing that
+darkened the heavens all suddenly.
+
+"Then," said Kenset quietly, "we'll have to do without your promise
+and go ahead anyway. We'll ride back to town, demand of Service a
+proper investigation by a coroner's jury, and begin at the bottom."
+
+Tharon moved uneasily in her saddle.
+
+"Why are you doin' this?" she asked. "Why are you mixin' up in our
+troubles? Why don't you go back to your cabin an' your pictures an'
+books an' things, an' let us work out our own affairs?"
+
+Kenset lifted a quick hand, dropped it again.
+
+"God knows!" he said. "Let's go."
+
+And he wheeled his horse and started for Corvan, the others falling
+into line at his side.
+
+When Kenset, quietly impervious to the veiled hostility that met him
+everywhere, faced Steptoe Service and made his request, that dignitary
+felt a chill go down his spine. Like Old Pete he felt the man beneath
+the surface. He met him, however, with bluster and refused all
+reopening of a matter which he declared settled with the burial of the
+snow-packer in the sliding cañons where he was found.
+
+"Very well," said Kenset shortly, "you see I have witnesses to this,"
+and he turned on his heel and went out.
+
+"Now, Miss Last," he said when they were in the wholesome summer
+sunlight once more, "if you have any friends whom you think would
+stand for the right, send for them."
+
+"Th' Vigilantes," said the girl, "we'll gather them in twenty-four
+hours."
+
+"The Vigilantes?"
+
+"Th' settlers," said Conford.
+
+"All right. Until they are here we'll guard the mouth of this cañon
+that leads into the Rockface, as I understand it. Now take me to this
+man Banner."
+
+At a low, rambling house in the outskirts of Corvan they found Jim
+Banner, sitting on the edge of his bed, undeniably sick from some
+acute attack. His eyes were steady, however, and he listened in
+silence while Kenset talked.
+
+"Mary," he said, "bring me my boots an' guns. I been layin' for this
+day ever sence I been in office. I wisht Jim Last was here to witness
+it."
+
+In two hours Kenset was on his way to the blind mouth of the pass that
+led into the Cañon Country, Tharon was shooting back to the Holding on
+El Rey to put things on a watching basis there, while Conford and
+Billy went south and west to rouse the Vigilantes.
+
+With Kenset rode Banner, weak and not quite steady in his saddle, but
+a fighting man notwithstanding.
+
+All through the golden hours of that noonday while he jogged steadily
+on Captain, Kenset was thinking. He had food for thought, indeed. He
+carried a gun at last--he who had ridden the Valley unarmed, had meant
+never to carry one. He felt a stir within him of savagery, of
+excitement.
+
+He meant to have justice done, to put a hard hand on the law of Lost
+Valley. Murders uninvestigated, cattle stolen at will, settlers' homes
+burned over their heads, their hearths blown up by planted powder when
+they returned from any small trip, their horses run off--these things
+had seemed to him preposterous, mere shadows of facts. Now they were
+down to straight points before him, tangible, solid. He got them from
+the blue eyes of Tharon Last, the gun woman, and he had taken sides!
+He who had meant to keep so far out of the boiling turmoil.
+
+He camped that night at the base of the Wall where the blind door
+entered, made his bed just inside the dead black passage, and watched
+while Banner, weary and still weak, slept in his blankets beside
+him.
+
+This was new work for Kenset, strange work, this waiting for men who
+called themselves the Vigilantes--for a slim golden girl who rode and
+swore and pledged herself to blood!
+
+More than once in the quiet night that followed, Kenset wiped a hand
+across his brow and found it moist with sweat.
+
+What did he mean? Again and again he asked himself that question.
+
+What did he mean by Tharon Last? What was this cold fire that burned
+him when he thought of her pulling those sinister blue guns on
+Courtrey? Did he fear to see her kill Courtrey--to see that shadowy
+stain on her hands--or did he fear something worse, infinitely
+worse--to see Courtrey, famous gun man, beat her to it!
+
+He shuddered and sweat in the clear cold of the starlit night and
+searched his bewildered heart. He could find no answer save and except
+the weary one that Tharon Last must be holden from her sworn course.
+
+Tharon Last who looked at him with those deep blue eyes and spoke so
+coolly of this promised killing! He recalled the earnest frown between
+her brows, the simple directness of her duty as she saw it and told it
+to him.
+
+Either way--either way--she was lost to him forever--There he caught
+himself and started all over again.
+
+What was she to him?
+
+What could she ever be? She with her strange soul, _her lack of
+soul_!
+
+What did he want her to be? One moment he ached with her loveliness--the
+next he shuddered at her savagery.
+
+He did not want her to be anything! Why not go out to the dim and
+half-remembered world that he had left, the world of lights, padded
+floors and marble steps, leave this impossible land with its blood and
+wrongs? Nay, he could not leave Lost Valley. He was as much a part of
+it as the grim Rockface itself, the Vestal's Veil eternally shimmering
+in its thousand feet of beauty. Life or death, for Kenset, it must be
+here.
+
+So he waited and listened and watched the stars wheeling in
+everlasting majesty, and he found his hands falling now and again upon
+the gun-butts at his sides!
+
+Near dawn Banner awoke, refreshed and stronger, and made him lie down
+for a few hours' sleep.
+
+When he awoke the sun was well up along the heavens and Banner was
+offering him a piece of dry bread and some jerky, spiced and smoked
+and as dry and sweet as anything he had ever eaten in all his life.
+
+"They're comin'," said the man, "thar's five comin' from down along
+th' Wall at th' south--that'll be Jameson, Hill and Thomas, an' some
+others--an' I see about ten or twelve, near's I can make out, driftin'
+in from up toward th' Pomo settlement. Thar's a dust cloud movin' up
+from th' Bottle Neck, too. They'll be here by one o'clock at th'
+furdest."
+
+And they were, a grim, silent group of men, determined, watchful, bent
+on the second step of the program to which they had pledged themselves
+that night at Last's Holding. Tharon was there, too, and with her Bent
+Smith on Golden.
+
+It was a goodly number who left their horses in charge of Hill and
+Dixon at the blind mouth and entered the long black cut. They climbed
+in low spoken quiet, their voices sounding back upon them with an odd
+dead effect. They went faster than Old Pete was wont to travel, for
+they meant to reach the spot of the tragedy before the early shadows
+should begin to sift down from the high world above. Tharon went
+eagerly, her eyes dilated.
+
+Always she had dreamed of the Cañon Country. Always she had wondered
+what it was like. When she left the mouth of the black roofed cut and
+came out into the narrow, rockwalled cañon with its painted faces
+reaching up into the very skies, she gasped with amaze. Above her head
+she could see the endless cuts and crosscuts, the standing spires and
+narrow wedgelike walls that made a labyrinthian maze.
+
+Billy, close beside her, as always, watched her with a pensive
+sadness.
+
+And so the Vigilantes went in and up along the lower ways. There were
+those among them who had been here before, who from time to time had
+accompanied the snow-packer on his nightly trips just for the
+curiosity of the thing. These several men, among whom were Albright
+from the Pomo settlement--a squawman--took the lead, and Albright,
+keen as a hound on trail, picked up Old Pete's marks and signs at a
+running walk.
+
+And so it was, that, while the sun was still shining on the high peaks
+above and the cañons were filled with a strange pink light reflected
+from the red and yellow faces of the rock, the Vigilantes came
+suddenly to a halt, for Albright had stopped.
+
+"Here's where it happened," he said, "there's a blood-sign." And he
+pointed to the Wall at a spot about breast high. A thin dark line, no
+wider than a blade of grass and about as long, spraying out to nothing
+at the upper end, leaned along the rock like a native marking. No
+other eye had seen it. Not one in a thousand would have seen it.
+
+"Good," said Kenset, "you're the man for more of this."
+
+They crowded around and examined the telltale spray.
+
+Not one among them but knew it for the stain of blood.
+
+From that they spread out and back to search the sliding heaps of
+dust-like powdery rock-slide that lay everywhere along the walls.
+
+It took Albright five minutes by Kenset's watch to find the disturbed
+and clumsily smoothed dump which held all that was mortal of the
+snow-packer.
+
+"Miss Last," said Kenset as the men began to dig with the spades
+brought along for the purpose, "you had best step back a bit."
+
+But Tharon pushed nearer.
+
+"This is my work," she said with dignity. "I started this, I think."
+
+It was a pitiful job that Service and those with him had done for Old
+Pete. Rolled head-first into a shallow hole--no doubt with jest and
+laughter--it was his booted foot which first came to view, sticking
+grotesquely up through the loose slide-stuff.
+
+It was brief work and grim work that followed, and soon the weazened
+form, bent and stiffened into something hardly human, lay in the soft
+pink light on the cañon's floor.
+
+Jim Banner knelt and examined it carefully and minutely, then every
+man in the group did likewise. They found evidence of one simple,
+staring fact--Old Pete had been shot squarely from behind, a little to
+the left.
+
+The bullet had undoubtedly pierced the heart--a great gaping hole in
+the left centre of the breast in front attesting its course.
+
+"Here," said Albright, coming back from a short distance down, beneath
+the spray on the wall, "here's where something was taken up from th'
+floor--th' blood he lost, I make no doubt."
+
+"Gentlemen,--Miss Last," said Kenset, "I move we all move back and
+leave the ground to Albright. There is fine work here."
+
+With one accord the mass moved back, clearing a goodly space.
+
+In the immediate vicinity there was little chance of doing anything,
+for Service's bunch, and themselves, had trampled over the soft floor
+until all original traces of the murder were blotted out.
+
+Albright looked around and seemed to hesitate.
+
+"Me, alone?" he asked. "Gimme Dick Compos, there."
+
+"Done," said Kenset.
+
+A tall, silent half-breed stepped forward and without another word the
+two began to scan the walls, the floors, the heaps of rotted rock, the
+loose and tumbled boulders, not yet decomposed, that lined the cut on
+both sides.
+
+They stood in their tracks and looked, and the concentration in their
+eyes was akin to that in the eyes of a wild animal, hiding,
+hard-pressed, and looking for a loophole for life.
+
+The Vigilantes watched them in silence.
+
+Presently Dick Compos stepped forward, leaned down and searched the
+wall at the left. Then he went forward, bent over, scanning each inch.
+He looked above and below, the height of a man's shoulders, his hips,
+his knees.
+
+Then he crept back, stopped at a particular upstanding piece of stone,
+searched it closely--stepped in behind.
+
+When he came out he looked over at Tharon Last standing at the head of
+her people.
+
+"Some one went along th' Wall here," he waved a slender brown hand at
+the cañon face. "Three signs--here--here--here."
+
+He indicated the heights he had scanned. They stepped a bit nearer and
+looked. Several pairs of Valley eyes saw what Dick Compos had seen, a
+sign so fine that few would have called it that--merely a brushing, a
+smoothing of the fine-sandstone surface where a man's shoulders, his
+hips, his knees might have pressed had he stood waiting there.
+
+A bit nearer the standing pinnacle of rock, they were evident again.
+
+With one accord they turned and looked down the cañon to where that
+thin line sprayed the face. A close shot, such as would be necessary
+in the darkness of the cut. Albright and Compos both stepped to the
+rock and stood looking with those narrowed, concentrated eyes.
+
+Suddenly Albright, looking back across his shoulders, moved like a cat
+and picked up something from ten feet away.
+
+He held it on his palm--an empty shell, such as fitted a .44 Smith and
+Wesson.
+
+He scanned it minutely, turned it over this way and that, looked at it
+fore and aft.
+
+"Firin' pin's nicked," he said, "an' a leetle off centre."
+
+For ten minutes the thing went from hand to hand.
+
+Then Kenset gave it to the coroner.
+
+"There's your clew, Mr. Banner," he said. "Now we can begin. Let us be
+going back to Corvan."
+
+And so it was that Old Pete, the snow-packer, went back in state to
+the Golden Cloud, by relays on men's shoulders down the sounding
+passes, through the dead cut, by pack-horse across the levels, lashed
+stiffly to the saddle, a pitiful burden.
+
+Tharon Last, riding close after the calm fashion of a strong man in
+the face of tragedy, thought pensively of that night in spring when
+this little old man had taken his life in his hands to save her own.
+
+It was a gift he had given her, nothing less, and she made up her mind
+that Old Pete should sleep in peace under the pointing pine at Last's
+Holding--and that his cross should also stand beside those other two
+in the carved granite.
+
+Billy, watching, read her mind with the half-tragic eyes of love.
+
+Kenset, seemingly unconscious, but keenly alive to everything, was at
+great loss to do so.
+
+He hoped, with a surging tenseness, that this fateful thing was
+sliding over into his hands to work out, his and Banner's. He knew
+full well that he and Banner both were like to be slated for an early
+death, but he did not care. In Corvan, night had fallen when the
+cavalcade passed through.
+
+Bullard of the Golden Cloud had the grace to come out and look at the
+little old man who had worked for him so long and faithfully. But
+that was all. They carried him home to Last's and buried him decently
+at dawn.
+
+Then the Vigilantes again rode out. At their head was Tharon; though
+both Kenset and Billy tried to dissuade her.
+
+At Corvan, Banner went through the town like a wind, asking for the
+gun of every man he met. By noon every .44 had been examined, one
+shell exploded. Not one left the nicked, uneven sign of the mysterious
+hammer which had snapped its death into Old Pete's heart.
+
+When the sun was straight overhead and all Lost Valley was sweet with
+the summer haze, the Vigilantes, close packed and silent, swung out
+toward the Stronghold.
+
+It was blue-dusk when they drew up at the corrals beside the fortress
+house. Lounging around in cat-like quiet were some thirty men, riders,
+gun men, _vaqueros_.
+
+When Banner called for Courtrey there was a sound of boots on the
+board floors, inside, a woman's pleading voice, and the cattle king
+came swinging out, his hands at his waist, his two guns covering the
+crowd.
+
+Tall, straight as a lance, his iron-grey head uncovered, he was a
+striking figure of a man. His henchmen watched him sharply. At his
+side clung the slim woman, Ellen, her milky face thin and tragic. He
+shook her loose and faced the newcomers.
+
+"Well?" he snapped, "what's this?"
+
+"Courtrey," said Banner, "we're here in th' name o' th' law. We demand
+t' see them guns o' yours."
+
+If the knowledge that Jim Banner was a brave man needed confirmation,
+it had it in that speech. Few men in the world could have made it, and
+gotten away with it. None in a different setting. Courtrey heard it,
+but he paid little heed to it at the moment. His eyes went to the face
+of Tharon Last and drank in its beauty hungrily.
+
+Presently he shifted his gaze and regarded Kenset with a cold light
+that was evil.
+
+"Who wants 'em?" he asked drawlingly.
+
+"We do."
+
+"Hell! Want _Courtrey's_ guns! You're modest, Jim.
+
+"An' what do you want, Tharon?"
+
+In spite of the tenseness of the moment the voice that had laughed at
+death and torture in Round Valley became melting soft as it addressed
+the girl.
+
+"Law!" said Tharon, "Law--th' law I promised you on Baston's porch!"
+
+"Yes? An' how do you think you'll get that? If I nod my head we'll
+drive this bunch o' spawn out o' here so quick it'll make your head
+swim! What do you think you're doin'?"
+
+"I don't _think_. I _know_ now. Know what we can do--what th' law
+means."
+
+Courtrey glanced again at Kenset.
+
+"Got some imported knowledge, I take it."
+
+"Take it or leave it! Show us them guns!" cried Tharon harshly.
+
+"I--don't--think--so," said Courtrey, nodding.
+
+Like a pair of snakes gliding forward, Wylackie Bob and the Arizona
+stranger were suddenly in the foreground, hands hanging apparently
+loose and careless, in reality tense as strung wires, ready to snap
+with fire and lead.
+
+The moment was pregnant. The very air seemed charged with danger and
+death.
+
+Then, with a strange cry, Tharon Last swung sidewise from her saddle,
+for all the world as if she were breaking under the strain, leaned far
+over El Rey's shoulder, and the next moment there came a shot,
+snapping in the stillness.
+
+With an oath and a lurch Courtrey flung backward, tossed up his right
+arm, and fired with his left. His ball went high in the air, wild. The
+blood from that tossed right hand spurted over Wylackie Bob beside
+him, the gun it had held went hurtling away along the earth.
+
+There was a movement, a surge, the flash of guns and one of the
+settlers tumbled from his saddle, poor Thomas of the doubting heart.
+Courtrey's men flashed together as one, thundered backward to the wide
+doorstep, pressed together, waited. The voice of Kenset rang like a
+clarion.
+
+"Stop!" he cried, "don't shoot!"
+
+And he swung off his horse to leap for that gun.
+
+But another was before him.
+
+With a scream of anguish that rang heaven-high, Ellen shot forward and
+snatched it from the spot where it had fallen.
+
+Tall, white as a ghost in the rose-pink light that was tinged with
+purple, she stood, swaying on her feet, and faced them.
+
+And she put the gun to her temple!
+
+"I ain't got nothin' t' live for," she said clearly and pitifully,
+"but Courtrey's life is worth what I got to me. If you don't clear out
+I'll pull th' trigger."
+
+She was tragic as death itself. The big blue wells of her eyes were
+black with the spreading pupils. Dark circles lay beneath them.
+
+Her blue-veined hands were so thin the light seemed to shine through
+them.
+
+Her long white dress clung to her slim form. From far back by the
+corral fence Cleve Whitmore watched her silently, his hands clenched
+hard.
+
+Tharon Last looked at her with wide eyes. She had forgotten all about
+this woman in the passionate hatred of Courtrey and the desire to pin
+his crimes upon him. Now she wet her lips and looked at Ellen long and
+silently. The pale lips were quivering, the long arm shook as it held
+the gun.
+
+"God!" whispered the girl, watching, "she loves him! Like I loved Jim
+Last! Th' pain's in her heart, an' no mistake!"
+
+Then, as if something strong within her folded its iron arm upon
+itself, she began to back El Rey. "Back out!" she called, "we ain't no
+woman-killers!"
+
+With one accord, carefully, watching, the Vigilantes began to back,
+counting the seconds, expecting each moment to witness the most
+pitiful thing Lost Valley with all its crimes, had ever seen.
+
+Some one lifted the body of Thomas and swung it across a horse.
+
+Back to the corner of the house, around, they went, and finally, out
+in front they turned as one man and rode away from the Stronghold--and
+Jim Banner was swearing like a fury, steadily, in a high-pitched
+voice.
+
+"Failed!" he cried between his oaths, "failed in our biggest job!
+That's th' gun, all right, all right, an' that damned woman beat us to
+it! Beat us to it with her fool's courage an' her sickenin' love! Oh,
+t' hell with Courtrey an' all this Valley! I'm a-goin' t' move down
+th' Wall, s'help me!"
+
+But Tharon Last forged to his side and gripped his arm in her strong
+fingers.
+
+"Shut up, Jim Banner," she said tensely. "You've only begun. That's
+th' gun, I make no doubt, an' Ellen knew it--but if we're worth
+killin' we'll dig into this harder'n ever. Here's poor Thomas, makes
+one more notch on my record. I'm not sayin' quit! An' you're th'
+bravest man in Corvan, too!"
+
+At Last's Holding the Vigilantes stopped for rest and food.
+
+They had been in saddle the better part of forty-eight hours.
+
+Young Paula, José and Anita set up a steaming meal, and they ate like
+famished men, by relays at the big table in the dining room.
+
+Tharon Last sat quietly at the board's head throughout the meal,
+pensive, thinking of Ellen, but grimly planning for the future.
+
+And Billy and Kenset watched her, each with a secret pain at his
+heart.
+
+"Lord, Lord," said Billy to himself, "she's listenin' when he speaks
+like she never listened to any one before!"
+
+In Kenset's mind drilled over and over again the ceaseless thought "A
+hand or a heart--she could hit them both with ease. It's true,
+true,--she's a gun woman! Oh, Tharon, Tharon!" and he did not know he
+spoke her name beneath his breath.
+
+But other things were crowding forward--he was leaning forward telling
+that circle of grim, lean faces, that if they could not handle this
+thing themselves, there were those in the big world of below who
+could--that there were men of the Secret Service who could find that
+gun no matter where Courtrey or Ellen hid it, that Lost Valley, no
+matter what its isolation or its history, was yet in the U. S. A., and
+could be tamed.
+
+Then the Vigilantes were gone with jangle of spur and bit-chain, and
+he was the last to go, standing by Captain in the dim starlight.
+Tharon stood beside him, and for some unaccountable reason the grim
+purpose of their acquaintance seemed to drift away, to leave them
+together, alone under the stars, a man and a maid. Kenset stood for a
+long moment and looked at the faint outline of her face. She was still
+in her riding clothes, her head bare with its ribbon half untied in
+the nape of her slender neck.
+
+The tree-toads were singing off by the springhouse and the cattle in
+the big corrals made the low, ceaseless night-sounds common to a
+herd.
+
+The riders were gone, the _vaqueros_ were at their posts around the
+resting stock, the low adobe house was settling into the quiet of the
+night.
+
+Miserably Kenset looked at this slip of a girl.
+
+She was strange to him, unfathomable. There were depths beneath the
+changing blue eyes which appalled him. How would he feel toward her
+when the thing was done--when she had killed Courtrey?
+
+But she must not be allowed to do it. Not though it took his life.
+
+If she was pledged to this thing, he was no less pledged to its
+prevention.
+
+He felt a sadness within him as he saw the soft curve of her cheek,
+the outline of her tawny head.
+
+With an impulse which he could not govern he reached out suddenly and
+took her hands in his and pressed them against his heart. The pounding
+of that heart was noticeable through her hands into his.
+
+But he did not speak--he could not.
+
+But he had no need. He could have said nothing that would have
+cleared the situation, would have told himself or her what was in that
+pounding heart of his--for to save his life he did not know.
+
+And Tharon frowned in the darkness and drew her hands from under those
+pressing ones.
+
+"Mr. Kenset," she said steadily, "you're always tryin' to make me
+weak, to break me down with words an' looks an' touches. These hands
+o' yours,--_damn 'em_, they _do_ make me weak! Don't put 'em on me
+again!"
+
+And with a sudden, sharp savagery she struck his hands off his breast,
+whirled away in the darkness and was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+SIGNAL FIRES IN THE VALLEY
+
+
+Kenset, two days later, gave Sam Drake a check for five hundred
+dollars and a letter, unpostmarked but sealed with tape and wax.
+Drake, who owned some half-breed Ironwoods, rode the best one down the
+Wall.
+
+Kenset had cautioned him not to talk before he left--he feared Drake's
+propensity for speech. But he was the only man in Lost Valley whom he
+felt he could approach.
+
+With the courier's departure he rode back to the Holding and told
+Tharon and Conford what he had done.
+
+"These men are the best to be had," he said, "and they will go
+anywhere on earth for money."
+
+But Tharon frowned and struck a fist into a soft palm.
+
+"What you mean?" she cried, "by takin' my work out of my hands like
+this? I won't have it! I won't wait!"
+
+"What I meant when I caught your bridle that day in the glade,"
+answered the man, "to stop you from bloodshed."
+
+Then he went back to his cabin and his interrupted work and set
+himself to wait in patience for the return of Drake.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But in Lost Valley a leaven was rising. It had begun insidiously to
+work with the appearance of Kenset in Tharon's band at Courtrey's
+doorstep. It burst up like a mushroom with a chance remark made by
+Lola of the Golden Cloud--Lola, who had seen, since that night in
+spring when Tharon Last stood in the door and promised to "get" her
+father's killer, that Courtrey was slipping from her. A woman like
+Lola is hard to deceive.
+
+Much experience had taught her to feel the change of winds in the
+matter of allegiance.
+
+She knew that surely and swiftly this man had gone down the path of
+unreasoning love, that he would give anything he possessed, do
+anything possible, to win for himself this slim mistress of Last's
+Holding.
+
+Therefore she played the one card she held, hoping to rouse the bully,
+and did just the thing she was trying to avert.
+
+"Buck," she said, her black head on his shoulder, her dark eyes
+watching covertly his careless face, "the Last girl is lost to every
+Valley man. Sooner or later she'll leave the country, mark my word,
+with this Forest Service fellow, for she's in love with him, though
+she doesn't know it yet."
+
+With a slow movement Courtrey loosed his arm about Lola and lifted her
+from him. His eyes were narrowed as he looked into her face.
+
+"For God's sake!" he said, "what makes you think that?"
+
+"Knowledge," said Lola, "long knowledge of women and men."
+
+"If I thought that," said Courtrey slowly, his eyes losing sight of
+her as he seemed to look beyond her. "If--I--thought that--why, hell!
+If that's th' truth--why, it--it's th' lever!"
+
+And he rose abruptly, though he had just settled himself in Lola's
+apartment for a pleasant chat, as was his habit whenever he rode in
+from the Stronghold.
+
+"Lola," he said presently, "I might's well tell you that I'm plannin'
+to have this girl for mine,--_mine_, you understand, legally, by law.
+I can't have her like I've had you. She'd blow my head off th' first
+time I stopped holdin' her hands." He laughed at the picture he had
+conjured, then went on.
+
+"An' so I feel grateful to you, old girl, for that remark. It sets me
+thinkin'." And he stooped and kissed her on the lips. The woman
+returned the kiss, a wonderful caress, slow, soft, alluring, but the
+man did not notice.
+
+His face was flushed, his eyes studying.
+
+Then he swung quickly out through the Golden, Cloud, and Lola slipped
+limply down on a couch and covered her ashen cheeks with her hands.
+
+"Oh, Buck!" she whispered brokenly, "Oh, Buck! Buck!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Courtrey went straight home, still, cold, thinking hard. His henchmen
+left him in solitude after the first word or two. They knew him well,
+and that something was brewing.
+
+At midnight that night he roused Wylackie Bob, Black Bart and the man
+who was known as Arizona, and the four of them went out on the levels
+for a secret talk.
+
+The next day the master of the Stronghold rode away on Bolt. As he
+left, Ellen, standing in the doorway like a pale ghost, lifted her
+tragic eyes to his face with the look of a faithful dog.
+
+"Where you goin', Buck?" she asked timidly.
+
+"Off," said the man shortly.
+
+"Ain't you goin'--goin' to kiss me?"
+
+He laughed cruelly.
+
+"Not after what I ben a-hearin', I ain't!"
+
+She sprang forward, catching at his knee.
+
+"What--what you ben a-hearin'? There ain't nothin' about me you could
+a-heard, Buck, dear! Nothin' in this world! I ben true to you as your
+shadow!"
+
+Every soul within hearing knew the words for the utter and absolute
+truth, yet Courtrey looked at Wylackie Bob, at Arizona, and laughed.
+
+"Like hell, you have!" he said, struck the Ironwood and was gone
+around the corner of the house with the sound of thunder.
+
+Ellen wet her lips and looked around like a wounded animal.
+
+Her brother Cleve, saddling up a little way apart, cast a long
+studying glance at Wylackie and Arizona. He jerked the cinch so
+savagely that the horse leaped and struck.
+
+For four days there was absolute dearth at the Stronghold.
+
+Courtrey did not return. Ellen timidly tried to find out from the
+_vaqueros_ where he had gone, but they evaded her.
+
+Then, on the morning of that day, Steptoe Service, grinning and
+important, came to the Stronghold and served on Ellen a summons in
+suit for divorce.
+
+She met him at the door and invited him in, timidly and shyly, but he
+stood on the stone and made known his business.
+
+At first she did not understand, was like a child told something too
+deep for its intellect to grasp, bewildered.
+
+Then, when Service made it brutally plain, she slipped down along
+the doorpost like a wilted lily and lay long and white on the
+sand-scrubbed floor. Her women, loving her desperately, gathered her
+up and shut the door in the sheriff's face.
+
+They sent for Cleve, and not even the presence of Black Bart in the
+near corral could keep the brother from running into the darkened room
+where Ellen lay, too stunned to rally.
+
+"Damn him!" he gritted, falling on his knees beside her, "this's
+what's come of it! I ben lookin' for something of its like. Let him
+go. We'll leave Lost Valley, Ellen. We'll go out an' start another
+life, begin all over again. We're both too young to be floored by a
+man like Courtrey. Let him go."
+
+But the woman turned her waxen face to the wall and shook her head.
+
+"There ain't no life in this world for me without Buck," she
+whispered. "If he don't want me, I don't want myself."
+
+"You dont' want to hang to him, do you, Sis?" begged the man, "don't
+want to stay at th' Stronghold after this?"
+
+"Rather stay here under Buck's feet like th' poorest of his dogs than
+be well-off somewheres where I couldn't never see him again, never
+look in his face."
+
+"God!" groaned Cleve, "you love him like that!"
+
+"Yes," said Ellen, wearily, "like that."
+
+"Then by th' Eternal!" swore Cleve softly, "here you'll stay if it
+takes all th' law in th' United States to keep you here. I'll file
+your answer tomorrow--protest to th' last word!"
+
+And he rode into Corvan, only to find that Courtrey and Courtrey's
+influence had been there before him, that a cold sense of disaster
+seemed to permeate the town and all those whom he met therein.
+
+He found the "Court House crowd" tight-lipped and careful.
+
+And Ben Garland set the day for trial at a ridiculously early date,
+for all the world as if the thing had been cut and dried at some
+secret conclave.
+
+Courtrey was playing his game with a daring hand, true to his name and
+habit.
+
+Dusk was falling in Lost Valley. The long blue shadows had swept out
+from the Rockface, covering first the homesteads under the Wall, then
+the great grazing stretches, then Corvan, then the open levels again,
+then the mouth of Black Coulee and lastly sweeping eastward to hush
+the life at Last's Holding in that soft, sweet quiet which comes with
+the day's work done.
+
+Out at the corrals Billy and Conford, Jack and Bent and Curly, put the
+finishing touches to the routine of precaution which the Holding never
+relaxed, day or night.
+
+Inside the dusky living room where the bright blankets glowed on the
+walls and the _ollas_ hung in the deep window places, Tharon Last sat
+at the little old melodeon and played her nameless tunes. She did not
+look at the yellowed keys. Instead her blue eyes, deep and glowing,
+wandered down along the southern slopes and she was lost in
+unconscious dreams. Once again she saw the trim figure of the forest
+man as she had seen him come stiffly into her range of vision that day
+in Corvan. She recalled his quiet eyes, dark and speaking, the odd way
+his hair went straight back from his forehead. She wondered why she
+should think of him at all.
+
+He was against her--was a force that played directly against all her
+plans of life, her precepts. Moreover, she had told him she feared he
+was soft--like a woman--some women--that there was in him a lack of
+the straight man-courage which was the only standard in Lost Valley.
+
+And yet--she waited on his word, somehow--held her hand from her sworn
+duty for a while, waiting--for what?
+
+Ah, she knew! Deep in the soul of her she knew, vaguely and dimly to
+be sure, but she knew that it was for the time when the die should be
+cast--that he might prove himself for what he was.
+
+For some vague reason she knew she would not kill Courtrey until this
+man stood by.
+
+She wondered what Courtrey meant by this strange quiet following the
+tragic moment at the Stronghold steps when the Vigilantes had
+challenged him and ridden away.
+
+And then, all suddenly, into her dreaming there came the sound of a
+horse's hoofs on the sounding-board without--slow hoofs, uncertain.
+For one swift second that sound, coming out of the dusk with its
+uncertainty, sent a chill of memory down her nerves. So had come El
+Rey that night in spring when he brought Jim Last home to die!
+
+She rose swiftly and silently and stepped to the western door.
+
+There, in the shadows and the softness of coming night, a horse loomed
+along the green stretch, came plodding up to stop and stand before
+her, a brown horse, with the stirrups of his saddle hung on the
+pommel, his rein tied short up--Captain, the good, common friend of
+Kenset--of the--foothills!
+
+Tharon felt the blood pour back upon her heart and stay there for an
+awful moment. She put up a hand and touched her throat, and to save
+her life she did not know why this sudden sickening fear should come
+upon her.
+
+She had seen men killed, had known tragedy and loss and heartache, but
+never before had she seen the crest of the distant Wall to dance upon
+the pale skyline so. Then she whirled into the house and her young
+voice pealed out a call--Billy, Conford, Bent--she drew them to her
+running through the deep house--to point to the silent messenger and
+question them with wide blue eyes where fear rose up like a living
+thing.
+
+Billy at her shoulder, looked not at Captain, but at her.
+
+A sigh lifted his breast, but he stifled it at birth and turned with
+the others back toward the corrals. Tharon, running toward the deep
+room where the Virgin stood in Her everlasting beauty, unfastened her
+soft white dress as she ran. Inside she flung herself on her knees
+before the Holy Mother and poured out a trembling prayer.
+
+"Not that! Oh, Mary, not that! Let it not be _that_!" she whispered
+thickly. Then she was up, into her riding clothes--was out where the
+boys were hurriedly saddling the Finger Marks. Presently she was on El
+Rey and shooting like a silver shaft in the summer dusk down along the
+green levels toward the east. They rode in silence, Conford, Bent,
+Jack, Curly, Billy and herself, and a thousand thoughts were boiling
+miserably in two hearts.
+
+El Rey, Golden, Redbuck, Drumfire, Westwind and Sweetheart, they went
+down along the sounding dark plain, a magnificent band. The whole
+earth seemed to resound to the thunder of their going, and for once in
+their lives her beauties could not run fast enough for the mistress of
+Last's.
+
+They went like the wind itself, and yet they were slow to Tharon.
+
+Out of the open levels there swung up to meet them and to fade into
+the night, the standing willows by the Silver Hollow. The sloping
+stretches began to lift, dotted by the oaks and digger-pines for whose
+sake Kenset had come to Lost Valley. They shot through them, up along
+the sharply lifting skirts of the hills, in between the guarding pines
+that formed the gateway to the little glade where the singing stream
+went down and the cabin stood at the head. Tharon's throat was tight,
+as if a hand pressed hard upon it. The high tops of the pines seemed
+to cut the sky grotesquely. There was no light at the dim log house,
+no sound in the silent glade. Off to the right they heard the low of
+the little red cow which served the forest man with milk.
+
+They pounded to a sliding stop in the cabin's yard and Conford called
+sharply into the silent darkness.
+
+"Kenset! Hello--Kenset!"
+
+Tharon held her breath and listened. There was no sound except a night
+bird calling from the highest pine-tip.
+
+Carefully the men dismounted.
+
+"You stay up, Tharon, dear," the foreman said quietly, "until we look
+around."
+
+But to save her life the girl could not. What was this trembling that
+seized her limbs? Why did the stars, come out on the purple sky, shift
+so strangely to her eyes? She slipped off El Rey and stood by his
+shoulder waiting. Conford struck a flare and lit a candle, holding it
+carefully before him, shielding it with his palm behind it to throw
+the gleam away from his face, into the cabin. The pale light illumined
+the whole interior, and it was empty. The keen eyes of the riders went
+over every inch of space before they entered--along the walls, in the
+bed, under the tables. Then they filed in and Tharon followed, gazing
+around with eyes that ached behind their lids. There on the northern
+wall between the windows, was the great spread of the beautiful
+picture she had helped the forest man to hang. There were his books on
+the table's edge. She looked twice--the last one on the pile at a
+certain corner was just as she had placed it there, a trifle crooked
+with the edge, but neatly in line with those beneath it. There was the
+big chair in which she had waited while he made the little meal--there
+was his desk in the ingle nook, his maps upon it. It was all so
+familiar, so filled with his personality, that Tharon felt the very
+power of his dark eyes, smiling, grave----
+
+"Hello!" said Jack Masters suddenly. "Burt, what's this?"
+
+Conford stepped quickly around the table and held his candle down.
+
+Tharon pushed forward and looked over the leaning shoulders.
+
+There on the brown and green grass rug a rich dark stain was
+drying--blood, some three days old.
+
+Then, indeed, did the universe sag and darken to the Mistress of
+Last's.
+
+She put out a hand to steady herself and found it grasped in the
+strong one of Billy, who stood at her shoulder like her shadow.
+
+"Steady!" he whispered. "Steady, Tharon."
+
+She drew her trembling fingers across her eyes, wet her lips which
+felt dry as ashes. The same ache that had come with Jim Last's final
+smile was already in her heart, but intensified a thousand times. She
+felt all suddenly, as if there was nothing in Lost Valley worth while,
+nothing in all the world! That drying stain at her feet seemed to shut
+out the sun, moon and stars with its sinister darkness. She felt a
+nausea at the pit of her stomach, a need for air in her cramped
+lungs.
+
+Strange, she had never known that one could be so detached from all
+familiar things, could seem so lost in a sea of stupid agony. Why was
+it so? If this dark blot of blood had come from the veins of Billy
+now, of Conford, or Jack or Curly, her own men, would she have lost
+her grip like this? And then she became dully conscious that Billy had
+put her in the big chair by the table and had joined the others in
+their exhaustive search for any clew to the tragedy. She saw the moon
+rising over the tops of the pine trees at the glade's edge, heard the
+little song of the running stream.
+
+That was the little stream that Kenset had looked for in his ideal
+spot, this was the home he had made for himself, these were the things
+of the other life he had known, these soft, dark pictures, the books
+on the tables, the brass things shining in the light from the lamp....
+She knew that she was cold in the summer night, that she was staring
+miserably out of the open door, scarcely conscious of the scattered
+voices of her men, searching, searching, hunting, in widening circles
+outside.... Then they came back talking in low voices and she roused
+herself desperately. Her limbs were stiff when she rose from the big
+chair, her hands were icy.
+
+"No use, Tharon," said Conford quietly, "we can't find a damned thing.
+If Courtrey's bunch killed Kenset they made a clean get-away with all
+evidence. That much has th' new law done in th' Valley--killed th'
+insolence of th' gun man. Let's go home."
+
+It was Billy, faithful and still, who helped her--for the first time
+in her life!--to mount a horse. She went up on El Rey as if she
+were old. Then they were riding down the smooth floor of the little
+glade, leaving that darkened cabin at its head to stand in tragic
+loneliness.
+
+She saw the tops of the guarding pines at the gateway, rode out
+between them. The moon was up in majesty, and by its light Jack
+Masters suddenly leaned down to look at something, pulled up, swept
+down from his saddle, cowboy fashion, hanging by a foot and a hand,
+and picked up something which he examined keenly.
+
+"Look," he said quickly, "th' beet-man's badge!"
+
+He held out on his palm a small dark object, the copper-coloured
+shield which had shone on Kenset's breast!
+
+Its double-tongued fastener was twisted far awry, as if it had been
+wrenched away by violence.
+
+Conford turned and looked back to the cabin, as if he measured the
+distance.
+
+"There's been funny work here as sure's hell," he said profoundly.
+
+Then they rode on, all silent, thinking. It was near dawn when they
+rode up along the sounding-board and put in at Last's. Billy reached
+up tender arms and took Tharon off El Rey, and for the first time she
+gave herself wearily into them as if she were done.
+
+As she opened the door into her own dusky room the pale Virgin,
+touched by a silver shaft of the sinking moon, stood out in startling,
+ethereal beauty, Her meek hands folded on Her breast. Tharon Last
+stumbled forward and sank in a heap at Her feet, her arms about the
+statue's knees.
+
+"Hail--Mary--intercede for--him--" she faltered, and then the shining
+Virgin, the dim mystery of the shadowy room, faded out to leave her
+for the first time in her strong life, a bit of senseless clay.
+
+When she again opened her eyes the little winds of day were fanning
+her cheeks and old Anita was tugging at her shoulders, voluble with
+fright.
+
+To the riders of Last's the tragedy was nothing more than any other
+that they had known in Lost Valley. They went about their work as
+usual.
+
+Only Billy was filled with a sickening anguish at the knowledge that
+he was not able to offer one smallest saving straw to the girl in the
+big house--for Billy knew.
+
+All day Tharon sat like a rock in her own room, staring with unseeing
+eyes at the blank whitewashed walls. She did not yet know what ailed
+her, why this killing, more than that of poor Harkness, should make
+her sick to her soul's foundations. Yet it was so. Even the thought of
+her sworn duty was vague before her for a time. Then it seemed to come
+forward out of the mass of fleeting memories--Kenset that day at
+Baston's steps shapely, trim, halted--Kenset laughing over the little
+meal beside the table where the books lay--Kenset grasping her
+shoulder when she whirled to mount El Rey and challenge the Stronghold
+single-handed--to come forward like a calming, steadying thing and
+turn the pain to purpose.
+
+There was no one now to hold her back, no vital hands to press hers
+upon a beating heart, to make her untrue to her given word!
+
+Now she could go out, reckless and grim in her utter disregard of the
+outcome, and kill Courtrey where he stood. The time had come. There
+should be another cross in the granite beneath the pointing pine.
+
+As if the whirling universe settled back to its ordered place the
+right proportion came back to her vision, the breath seemed to lighten
+her holden lungs.
+
+Once again the girl arose and steadied herself, smoothed her tawny
+hair, looked at her hands to find them free from the shaking that had
+weakened them.
+
+She dressed herself and went out among her people, quiet and pale.
+
+The twilight had fallen and all the western part of the Valley was
+blue with shadow. Only on Kenset's foothills was the rosy light
+glowing, a tragic, aching light, it seemed to her. She saw all the
+little world of Lost Valley with new eyes, sombre eyes, in which there
+was no sense of its beauty. She wondered anxiously how soon she could
+meet Courtrey, and where. And then with the suddenness of an ordered
+play, the question was answered for her, for out of the dusk and the
+purple shadows a Pomo rider came on a running pony and halted out a
+stone's throw, calling for the "Señorita," his hands held up in token
+of friendliness.
+
+Without a thought of treachery Tharon went out to him and took the
+letter he handed her--swinging around for flight as the paper left his
+hand, for the riders of Last's were known all up and down the land.
+This dusky messenger took no chances he could avoid. He was well down
+along the slope by the time the boys came clanking around the house.
+
+And Tharon, standing in the twilight like a slim white ghost, was
+staring over their heads, her lips ashen, the scrawled letter
+trembling in her hands. For this is what she read, straining her young
+eyes in the fading light.
+
+ "Tharon. You must know by now that I mean bisness. All this
+ Vigilant bisness ain't a-goin' to help things eny. If it hadn't of
+ ben that I love you, what you think I'd a-done to that bunch?
+ That's th' truth. I ben holdin' off thinkin' you'd come to your
+ senses an' see that Buck Courtrey ain't to be met with vilence.
+ Now I'm playin' my trump card--now, tonight.
+
+ "Lola says you love this dude from below. That don't cut no ice
+ with me. I ain't carin' for no love from you at present. All I
+ want is _you_. I can make you love me once I've got you safe at
+ th' Stronghold. I ain't never failed with no woman yet. An' I mean
+ to have you, fair means or foul.
+
+ "Rather have you fair. So here's my last word.
+
+ "This Kenset ain't dead--yet. I went and took him. I've got him
+ safe as hell in the Cañon Country. Ain't no man in th' Valley can
+ find God's Cup but me. He's guarded an' there's a lookout on th'
+ peak above th' Cup that can see a signal fire at th' Stronghold.
+ One fire out by my big corral means 'Send him out by False Ridge
+ with ten days' grub.' Two fires means 'Put a true bullet in his
+ head an' leave him there.' Now, here's the word. I've got a case
+ fixed up to divorce Ellen, legal. If you'll marry me soon's I'm
+ free, I'll build one fire out by that corral.
+
+ "If you say yes, you build one fire out by th' cottonwoods to th'
+ left of the Holdin'. I'm watchin' an' will see it at once. You can
+ see for yourself I mean bisness, as if you'll watch too, you'll
+ see that one fire here.
+
+ COURTREY."
+
+For a long moment the Mistress of Last's stood in profound quiet, as
+if she could not move. She was held in a trance like those dreadful
+night-dreams when one is locked in deadly inertia, helpless. The net
+which had been weaving in Courtrey's fertile brain was finished,
+flung, and closing in upon her before she knew of its existence. An
+awe of his cleverness, his trickery, gripped her in a clutch of ice.
+The whole fabric of her own desires and plans and purposes seemed to
+crumple like the white ash in a dead fire, leaving her nothing. She
+had been out-witted instead of outfought. One more evidence of the
+man's baseness, his unscrupulous cunning.
+
+He played his trump card and it was a winner, sweeping the table--for
+she knew before she finished that difficult reading that she would do
+anything in all the world to stop that "true bullet" in the heart that
+had pounded beneath her open palms.... Knew she would break her given
+word to Jim Last--knew she would forsake the Holding--that she would
+crawl to Courtrey's feet and kiss his hand, if only he would spare
+Kenset of the foothills, would send him out to that vague world of
+below, never to return!
+
+She swayed drunkenly on her feet for a time that seemed ages long.
+Then life came back in her with a rush. She broke the nightmare dream
+and gasped out a broken command to her faithful ones.
+
+"Billy!" she said thickly, "Oh, Billy! If you love me, run! Run an'
+build a fire--one fire!--only _one_ fire, Billy, dear--out by th'
+cottonwoods to th' left--of th' Holdin'!"
+
+Then she went and sat limply down on the step at the western door,
+leaned her head against the deep adobe wall, and fell to weeping as if
+the very heart in her would wash itself away in tears.
+
+And Billy, numb with anguish but true to the love he bore her, went
+swiftly out and set that beacon glowing. Its red light flaring against
+the blue darkness of the falling night seemed like a bodeful omen of
+sorrow and disaster, of death and failure and despair.
+
+Tharon on the sill roused herself to watch it leap and glow, then
+turned her deep eyes to where she knew the Stronghold lay.
+
+Presently out upon the distant black curtain of the night there flared
+that other fire, signal of life to Kenset somewhere in the Cañon
+Country--and then her lips drew into a thin hard line and she
+straightened her young form stiffly up, put a hand hard upon her
+breast.
+
+"A little time, Courtrey!" she whispered to herself, "Jus' a little
+time an' luck, an' I'll give you th' double-cross or die, damn your
+soul to hell!"
+
+Billy, coming softly in along the adobe wall, caught the whisper,
+felt rather than heard its meaning, and turned back with the step of a
+cat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An hour later, when all the Holding was quiet for the night, drifting
+to early rest after the day's hard work, the Mistress of Last's,
+booted, dressed in riding clothes, her fair head covered by a
+sombrero, her daddy's guns at her hips, crept softly to the gate of El
+Rey's own corral. She went like a thief, crouching, watching, without
+a sound, and saddled the big stallion in careful softness. She led him
+gently out and around toward the cottonwoods, away from the house.
+When she was well away she put foot to stirrup and went up as the king
+leaped for his accustomed flight.
+
+But Tharon pulled him down. She wanted no thunder on the sounding-board
+tonight. But soft as she had been, as careful, there was one at the
+Holding who followed her every act, who went for a horse, too, who
+saddled Drumfire in silence and who crept down the sounding-board--Billy
+the faithful. Far down along the plain toward the Black Coulee he let
+the red roan out, so that the girl, keen of hearing as of sight, caught
+the following beat of hoofs, stopped, listened, understood and reined El
+Rey up to wait.
+
+And soon out of the shadows cast by the eastern ramparts, where the
+moon was rising, she saw the rider coming. A quick mist of tears
+suffused her eyes, a sick feeling gripped her heart.
+
+Here was another mixed in the sorry tangle! She had always known
+vaguely that Billy was one with her, that his heart was the deep heart
+of her friend.
+
+He was the one she always wanted near her in times of stress, it was
+with him she liked to ride in the Big Shadow when the sun went down
+behind the Cañon Country.
+
+But now she did not want him. She had a keen desire to see him safely
+out of this--this which was to be the end, one way or the other, of
+the blood-feud between the Stronghold and Last's.
+
+Now as he loped up and stopped abreast of her in silence, she reached
+out a hand and caught his in a close clasp.
+
+"I don't want you, Billy, dear," she said miserably, "not because I
+don't love you, but because I ain't a-goin' to see you shot by
+Courtrey's gang. This is one time, boy, when I want you to leave me
+alone, to go back without me."
+
+The rider shook his head against the stars.
+
+"Couldn't do it, little girl," he said wistfully, "you know I couldn't
+do it."
+
+"Ain't I your mistress, Billy?" asked Tharon sternly. "Ain't I your
+boss?"
+
+"Sure are," said the boy with conviction.
+
+"Ain't I always been a good boss to you?"
+
+"Best in th' world. Good as Jim Last."
+
+"Then," said Tharon sharply, "it's up to you to take my orders. I
+order you now--go back."
+
+The cowboy leaned down suddenly and kissed the hand he held.
+
+"I'm at your shoulder, Tharon, dear," he said with simple dignity,
+"like your shadow. At your foot like the dogs that never forsake th'
+herds. I couldn't go back an' leave you--not though I died for it
+tonight.
+
+"We'll say no more about it. I don't know where you're goin', but
+wherever it is, there I'm goin', too, an' on my way. You can tell me
+or not, just as you please, but let's go."
+
+For a long time Tharon Last sat in the starlight and watched the
+crests of the distant mountains fringed with the silver of the moon
+that was rising behind them, and her throat ached with tears. All
+these things that hurt her, these unknown, tangled things that she
+knew dimly meant Life, had come to her with the advent of Kenset in
+Lost Valley. She wished passionately for a fleeting moment that he had
+never come, that the old swinging, rushing life of the ranges had
+never known his holding influence. Then she felt again the hammering
+of his heart beneath her palms, and nothing mattered in all the world
+beside.
+
+It was a thing beyond her ken, something ordered by fate. She must go
+on, blindly as running waters, regardless of all that drowned.
+
+But she loosed her hand from Billy's, leaned to his shoulder, put her
+arm about his neck and drew his face to hers. Softly, tenderly, she
+kissed him upon the lips, and she did not know that that was the
+cruelest thing she had ever done in all her kindly life, did not see
+the deathly pallor that overspread his face.
+
+"I'm goin' to th' Cañon Country, Billy," she said simply, "to find th'
+Cup o' God an' Kenset."
+
+Then she straightened in her saddle and gave El Rey the rein.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was two of the clock by the starry heavens when these two riders
+entered the blind opening in the Rockface and disappeared. El Rey, the
+mighty, tossed his great head and whistled, stamped his hoofs in the
+dead sift of the silencing floor. He had never before lost sight of
+the sky, never felt other breath in his nostrils than the keen plain's
+wind.
+
+Now he shook himself and halted, went on again, and again halted, to
+be urged forward by Tharon's spurred heels in his flanks. Up through
+the eerie pass they went without speech, for each heart was filled to
+overflowing with thoughts and fears.
+
+To Billy there was something fateful, bodeful in the dead darkness,
+the stillness. It seemed to him as if he left forever behind him the
+open life of the ranges, the gay and careless days of riding after
+Tharon's cattle.
+
+For five years he had lived at Last's, under master and mistress,
+content, happy. The half-remembered world of below had never called
+him. The light on the table under the swinging lamp with Tharon's face
+therein, the murmur of the stream through her garden, the whisper of
+the cottonwoods, these had been sufficient. He had, subconsciously,
+thanked his Maker for these things, had served them with a whole
+heart. They had been his all, his life. Now the cottonwoods seemed far
+away, remote, the life of the deep ranch house a thing of long ago.
+All these things had given way to something that sapped the sunlight
+from the air, the very blueness from the vaulted skies, something that
+had come with the quiet man of the pine-tree badge. So Billy sighed in
+the darkness and sat easily on Drumfire, his slim left hand fidgeting
+with the swinging rein.
+
+And Tharon was lost, too, in a maze of thoughts. She sat straight
+as a lance, tense, alive, keen, staring into the narrow bore of the high
+ceiled cut, thinking feverishly. Was Kenset really alive? Had
+Courtrey been square with her? Or was he even now lying stiff and
+stark somewhere in the high cuts, his dark eyes dull with death, that
+beating heart forever stilled? She caught her breath with a whistling
+sigh, felt her head swim at the picture. If he was--_if_--_he_--_was_--!
+She fingered the big guns at her hip and savagery took hold of her.
+Courtrey's left wrist to match his right. Then some pretty work about
+him to make him wait--then a shot through his stomach--he would spit
+blood and reel, but he wouldn't die--the butcher!--for a little while,
+and she would taunt him with Harkness--and Jim. Last shot in the
+back--with Old Pete--and with--with Kenset--the one man--Oh, the one
+man in all the world whose quiet smile was unforgettable, whose vital
+hands were upon hers now, like ghost-hands, would always be upon hers
+if she lived to be old like Anita or died at dawn today! And Kenset
+had counseled her to peace! To keep the stain of blood from her own
+hands! She laughed aloud, suddenly, a ghastly sound that made cold
+chills go down her rider's spine, for it was the mad laughter of the
+blood-lust! Billy knew that Jim Last in his best moments was never
+so coldly a killer as his daughter was tonight.
+
+So they traversed the roofed cut and came out into the starlight of
+the first cañon. Up this they went in single file. They passed the
+place where Albright had found the dark spray on the cañon wall, the
+standing rock where the gun with the untrue firing pin had kicked away
+its shell. A little farther on was the disturbed and trampled heap of
+slide which had held Old Pete's body. In silence they rode on, the
+horses' hoofs striking a million echoes from the reverberating
+crosscuts.
+
+The moon was shining above, but here there was only a sifted light, a
+ghostly radiance of starlight and painted walls. Tharon, riding ahead,
+went unerringly forward as if she traveled the open ways of the Valley
+floor. She turned from the main cañon toward the left and passed the
+mouth of Old Pete's snow-bed. Between this and that standing spire and
+pinnacle she went, with a strong certainty that presently stirred
+Billy to speech.
+
+"Tharon, dear," he said gently, "hadn't we better leave a mark or two
+along this-a-way? Ain't you got no landmarks?"
+
+"Can if you want," the girl said briefly, "I don't need landmarks."
+
+"Then how you know the way? There ain't no one knows th' Cañon
+Country--but Courtrey."
+
+"I don't know it," she said simply but with profound conviction. "I'm
+_feelin'_ it, Billy. I know I'm goin' straight to th' Cup o' God. I'm
+blind as a bat, it seems, yet goin' straight."
+
+She lifted a hand and crossed herself.
+
+"Goin' straight--Mary willin'--an' I'll come back straight. It lies up
+there an' to th' left again." She made a wide gesture that swept up
+and out, embracing the towering walls, the half-seen peaks against the
+stars.
+
+Billy shut his lips and said no more.
+
+Up there lay False Ridge, the sinister, dropping spine that came down
+from the uplands outside where the real great world began, and lured
+those who traveled down it to crumbling precipice and yawning pit, to
+sliding slope and slant that, once ridden down, could never be scaled
+again, according to the weird stories that were told of it.
+
+But if Tharon went to the Cañons, there lay his trail, too. If she
+went down False Ridge to death in the pits and waterless cuts, he
+asked no better lot than to follow--the faithful dog at her foot, the
+shadow at her shoulder.
+
+And so it was that dawn crept up the blue-velvet of the night sky and
+sent its steel-blue light deep in the painted splits, and they rode
+unerringly forward up the sounding passes.
+
+When the light increased enough to show the way they came abruptly to
+the spot where it was necessary to leave the horses. The floor of the
+cañon up which they were traveling lifted sharply in one huge step,
+breast-high to a man.
+
+Tharon in the lead halted and looked for a moment all up and down the
+wondrous maze of pale, tall openings that encompassed them all round.
+
+She turned in her saddle and looked back the way they had come. There
+was darker shadow, going downward, but here and there those pale
+mouths gaped, long ribbons of space dropping from the heights above
+down to their level.
+
+Up any one a man might turn and lose himself completely, for they in
+turn were cut and ribboned with other mouths, leaving spires and walls
+and faces a thousand-fold on every hand.
+
+Tharon, even in the tensity and preoccupation of the hour, drew in her
+breath and the pupils of her blue eyes spread.
+
+"Th' Cañon Country!" she said softly, "I always knew it would be like
+this--too great to tell about! I knew it would hold somethin' for
+me--always knew it--either life an' its best--or death."
+
+There was a simple grandeur about the earnest words, and Billy, his
+face grey in the steely light, felt the heart in his breast thrill
+with their portent.
+
+No matter what the Cañons held for her--either that glorious
+fulfillment of life, or the simple austerity of death--he would have a
+part in it, would have served her to the last, true to the love he
+bore her, true to himself.
+
+And nothing--nothing under God's heaven, save death itself--could ever
+wipe out the memory of that kiss, given from the depths of her loving
+heart, the sign-manuel of her undying affection and friendship, the
+one and only touch of her inviolate red lips that he had ever known
+the Mistress of Last's to give to any man, save Jim Last himself.
+
+He wiped a hand across his forehead, damp with more than the night
+cold, and dismounted.
+
+"We'll leave th' horses here," he said. "I've an extra rope to string
+across an' make a small corral."
+
+He did not add that he would fasten this slim barrier lightly, so that
+a horse that really wanted to break out--in the frantic madness of
+thirst, say,--might do so.
+
+Then he set about his task--but Tharon stood with strained eyes
+looking up--and up--and ever up to the dimly appearing, looming spine
+of False Ridge.
+
+Over there, she knew in her heart, lay the hidden Cup o' God, with its
+secret, the secret that meant all the world to her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE UNTRUE FIRING PIN
+
+
+Tharon turned back and looked long at El Rey. She wondered if she
+would ever see the great silver-blue stallion again, ever feel the
+wind singing by her cheeks, ever hear the thunder of his running on
+the hollow ranges. She saw the stain of Jim Last's blood on the big
+studded saddle and a pain like death stabbed her.
+
+"I'll get him," she had promised on that tragic day, "so help me God!"
+and had made the sign of the Cross.
+
+What did she now?
+
+Cast away all certainty of that fulfilment because a man--a man almost
+a stranger--lay somewhere in the Cañon Country, crawled somewhere
+along False Ridge, perhaps, wounded and sick with fever.
+
+"Oh, hurry!" she whispered as Billy made secure his last light knot in
+the rope gateway across the cut and came to join her.
+
+She scrambled up the bench in the cañon floor, gained her feet and
+went forward at a rush.
+
+"Steady, Tharon," warned the rider, "you ain't used to climbin'. Save
+your wind."
+
+It was true advice. Long before the sun was high overhead and day was
+broad in the painted cracks she had begun to heed it. As she swung up
+the ever lifting floors, threaded this way and that between the thin
+intercepting walls that towered hundreds of feet straight up, she cast
+her wide eyes up in wonder. Always she had watched the Cañon Country
+from her western door, always it had held her with a binding lure.
+
+There was that about its mystery, its austere majesty, that had
+thrilled her heart from babyhood. She had pictured it a thousand times
+and always it had looked just so--pink and grey and saffron, pale and
+misty with light when the sun was high, blue and wonderful and black
+as the luminary lowered, leaving the quick shadows.
+
+Hour after hour they climbed, mostly in silence, speaking now and then
+some necessary word of caution, of assent. This way and that Tharon
+turned, but always moving upward in the same direction. From time to
+time Billy dropped a shred of the red kerchief about his neck, touched
+the soft walls with the handle of the knife he carried. This left a
+mark plain as a trail to his trained eyes.
+
+At noon they halted for a little rest. From Tharon's saddle Billy had
+taken the flask of water, the tightly rolled bundle of bread and meat
+in its meal-sack. They ate sparingly of this, drank more sparingly of
+the water. Billy wondered miserably how soon this last might become
+more precious than fine gold to him, as he thought of the waterless
+pockets of the blind and sliding country.
+
+Long before she had rested sufficiently Tharon was up and ready to go.
+Ever her eager eyes were on the heights above. Ever they turned to the
+left of the steady line she set herself through and above the winding
+passes. From time to time Billy looked back. There was not a sign by
+which one might tell which way he had come if the last mark he made
+was around the first corner. Hundreds and thousands of spires and
+faces towered about them. It was a mystic maze of dead stone, cut and
+weathered by the elements.
+
+"No wonder!" he told himself, "that the Indians call it the Enchanted
+Land!"
+
+"We'll reach False Ridge tomorrow, Billy," Tharon told him confidently,
+"an' over it lies God's Cup. There's water there--an' Kenset."
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"I don't know. Just feel. He's there--alive or--" a half sob clutched
+at her voice--"or dead. But he's there."
+
+"There'll be some one with him if he's alive, most likely."
+
+"Sure," said Tharon briefly.
+
+All the afternoon they traveled, sometimes touching with outstretched
+hands the faces on either side of them, again walking upward through
+majestic halls, solemn and beautiful. Everything about them was
+beautiful, the height, the sheer, straight walls, the myriad little
+blue shadows of tiny projections on their faces. Night came so early
+in the pits that long before they wished they were compelled to camp.
+In a blind pocket, walled like a room and round as an apple, they
+stopped, and Billy spread down the blanket he had taken from
+Drumfire's back. This was their only preparation. They had nothing to
+do, no fire to build, no water to bring.
+
+Tharon, scarcely conscious of the many miles she had traveled since
+the previous night, sat down upon the blanket, gathered her knees in
+her arms and stared at the vague blue phantoms of cliffs through the
+tall straight mouth that led into this sheltered pocket.
+
+Outside the winds were drawing up the cañons. All day they had walked
+in this wind. It drew constantly up and down the cuts, this way and
+that, like contrary currents that met and fought each other, swung in
+together, went a little way in peace, to again split and surge away
+through other channels. The echoes were alive with every sound, both
+of their own making and that of the wind's. A constant sighing droned
+through the depths, a mournful, whispering sound that sent the shivers
+down Tharon's spine, made her think sadly of all the tragedies she had
+ever known.
+
+Billy, lying full length beside her, his hands beneath his head,
+looked up to the narrow blue spot of sky so far away, and thought his
+own thoughts, and they were not wholly sad.
+
+They fell to talking, softly, in low tones, as if in all the
+mysterious solitude there might be one to hear, and it was mostly
+speech of long ago--when Billy had first come into Lost Valley.
+
+After a long and quiet hour the man insisted that she should
+sleep--that after the hard day and in view of the coming hard morrow,
+she needed rest.
+
+"But I'm not tired, Billy," Tharon protested, "no more'n as if I'd
+been ridin' all day after th' cattle."
+
+But Billy shook his head and hollowed a little place in the soft slide
+stuff at the Wall's foot. In this he spread the blanket, folding it
+half back.
+
+"Lie down," he commanded, "an' you'll be asleep so quick you won't
+know when it happens."
+
+Tharon slipped off her daddy's belt and stretched her slim young form
+in the hollow, which fitted it like a cradle. Not for nothing had
+Billy slept out many a night with nothing save the earth and stars for
+bed and blanket. The hollow was craftily deepened at hip and shoulder,
+making a restful couch. As she settled herself therein he lapped the
+loose half of the blanket over her and tucked it in. Then he took his
+hat, folded it sharply and placed it under the tawny head.
+
+In its place he would fain have laid his heart.
+
+His fingers, settling the improvised pillow, tangled themselves
+wistfully in the sun-bright hair, and the boy groaned aloud.
+
+"What's the matter, Billy, dear?" asked Tharon anxiously, but Billy
+laughed lightly, a thin sound in the mighty caverns.
+
+"Nothing in God's world, Tharon," he lied. "Now go to sleep."
+
+And he walked away to the tall mouth and sat down with his back
+against one of the walls. From his pocket he took papers and tobacco
+and proceeded to roll himself a cigarette.... Dawn showed the narrow
+doorway strewn with their butts, as leaves strew mountain trails in
+autumn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Things were ready to happen in Lost Valley--several things.
+
+At the Golden Cloud, Lola looked across the level stretches toward the
+Stronghold with tragic dark eyes, and smiled at a dozen men whom she
+scarcely saw. Settlers from all up and down the Wall drifted into
+Corvan and out again, intent, silent, watchful. _Vaqueros_ and riders
+from the Stronghold also came and went, as intent, as silent. They
+passed each other with hostile eyes and trigger fingers were unusually
+limber. The air was pregnant with change.
+
+Buck Courtrey was conspicuous by his absence.
+
+He was not seen in the town, neither was he at the Stronghold.
+
+There were soft whispers afloat that he was with the Pomos up under
+the Rockface at the north.
+
+And at the Stronghold, poor Ellen, whiter than ever, more like a
+broken lily drooping on its stem, trembled and waited for a day that
+was set soon--too terribly soon!--the day, farcically appointed, for
+the suit for divorce against her.
+
+Word of this was abroad through all the Valley. Underground
+speculation was rife as to which of the two women whom Courtrey
+favoured, Lola or Tharon, was responsible. Some said one, some the
+other. But Lola knew.
+
+Then came the day itself--a golden summer day as sweet and bright as
+that one years ago when Courtrey had married Ellen--at this same pine
+building where the laughable legal farces were enacted now.
+
+Pale as a new moon Ellen rode in across the rolling stretches on one
+of the Ironwoods, with Cleve beside her. She was spiritless, silent.
+Cleve was silent, too, though for a far different reason. There was a
+frown between his brows, a glitter in his narrowed eyes. He was
+thinking of the only man in Corvan whom he had been able to persuade
+to present Ellen's protest--Dick Burtree, one-time lawyer and man of
+parts in the outside, now a puffed and threadbare vagabond, whose
+paramount idea was whiskey and more whiskey. But Burtree could talk.
+Over his mottled and shapeless lips could, on occasion, pour a stream
+of pure oratory silver as the Vestal's Veil.
+
+When he was drunk he feared neither man nor devil, and he could speak
+best so. Therefore Cleve had given him enough money in advance to put
+him in trim.
+
+"What you think Buck'll say about me, Cleve?" Ellen asked anxiously.
+"What's he mean to accuse me of?"
+
+"Any dirty thing he can trump up, Sis," said Cleve gravely, "he's
+a-goin' to make it a nasty mess--an' I wish to God you'd jest ride on
+down th' Wall with me an' never even look back."
+
+He leaned from his saddle and took the blue-veined hand in his. There
+was an unspeakable tenderness in his eyes as he regarded his sister.
+"What you say, Ellen? There's life below, an' work an' other men.
+You'll marry again, sometime----"
+
+But Ellen shook her head with its maize-gold crown.
+
+"Nary other man, Cleve," she said gently. "I'm all Buck's woman."
+
+So they rode on toward the town, and Cleve knew that his last faint
+hope was dead.
+
+In the town itself there was a stir. Courtrey was there, and Wylackie
+Bob, and Black Bart and Arizona, a bunch of dark, evil men in all
+surety.
+
+The Ironwoods were in evidence everywhere, but strange to say, there
+were no Finger Marks. Not a man from the Holding was in town.
+
+When Cleve and Ellen, alone together, rode in, it lacked yet a half
+hour of the time set for trial. There was no place to go but Baston's,
+so they dismounted at the hitch-rack. Ellen, swaying on her feet,
+looked all around with her big pale eyes, and when she saw Courtrey
+some distance away she put a hand to her heart as simply as a hurt
+child. She was a pitiful creature in her long white dress, for she
+had ridden in on an old sidesaddle, and she shook out the crumpled
+folds in a wistful attempt to look proper. On her head was the
+inevitable sunbonnet of slats and calico.
+
+As she went up the steps of the store with Cleve, Lola of the Golden
+Cloud, blazing like a comet in her red-and-black came face to face
+with her purposely. What was in Lola's head none would ever know, but
+she wanted to see Courtrey's wife.
+
+As they met they stopped dead still, these two women who loved one
+man, and the look that passed between them was electric, deep,
+revealing. They stood so long staring into each other's eyes that
+Cleve, frowning, plucked Ellen by the sleeve and made to push
+forward.
+
+But as suddenly as a flash of light Lola reached out her two hands and
+caught Ellen's in a tight clasp that only women know, the swift,
+clinging clasp of the secret fellowship of those who suffer.
+
+For one tense moment she held them, while Ellen swayed forward for all
+the world as if she would sink in upon the deep full breast of this
+wanton whom she had hated! Then the spell broke, they fell apart with
+a rush, Lola swung out and went down the steps, while Ellen obediently
+followed Cleve into Baston's store, where she sat on a nail keg and
+waited in a dull lethargy. Outside Courtrey, who had witnessed the
+thing from across the street, slapped his thigh and laughed
+uproariously.
+
+It was a funny sight to him. But Lola's beautiful black eyes blazed
+across at him with a light that none had ever seen before in their
+inscrutable depths.
+
+Then the hour struck, and all Corvan, it seemed to Cleve, strung out
+toward the Court House. This was to be in open court--a spectacle.
+From somewhere in the adobe outskirts of the town came Ellen's serving
+women, most of them, whom Cleve had sent in early in the day. They
+fell in with her and so, with only the brother who had never failed
+her and these dusky women of the silent tongues to back her, Ellen
+Courtrey went to her crucifixion as truly as though she had been one
+of the two thieves on Golgotha.
+
+At the sight of Courtrey across the big bare room she went whiter than
+she was, if such a thing were possible, and slid weakly into the chair
+placed for her.
+
+Then the thing proceeded--swiftly, lightly, with smiles on the faces
+of the crowd.
+
+Old Ben Garland on the judge's bench, was furtive, scared, nervous,
+fiddling with his papers and clearing his throat from time to time.
+
+The county clerk at his table made a great deal out of the ceremony
+of swearing in the witnesses--Wylackie Bob, Black Bart, Arizona and
+one young Wylackie Indian woman who worked at the Stronghold. Cleve
+put up only the serving women whom he had sent in, some seven of them,
+every one of whom loved their mistress with the faithful fidelity of a
+dog. These women knew Ellen Courtrey as not even the master of the
+Stronghold himself knew her. They knew her in her idle hours, at her
+small tasks, at her bedside, in the loving solicitude she displayed
+for all of them--and they knew her on her knees in prayer, for Ellen
+had a strange and simple religion, half Catholic and half Pomo
+paganism.
+
+In the straight-backed chair they gave her Ellen sat like a statue,
+sweet and still, a thing so obviously good that it seemed even
+Courtrey himself must weaken to behold her. But not Courtrey. He was
+on fire with the vision of Tharon Last on the Cup Rim's floor, shaking
+her fist toward him in challenge--at Baston's steps calling him a
+murderer and worse--at her western door, striking him from her with
+the strength of a man. He saw the signal fire flaring across the
+darkened Valley--and nothing on earth or in Heaven could have softened
+him to the woman who bound him away from this fighting girl, this gun
+woman whom he was breaking to him slowly but surely. He visioned her
+in Ellen's room at the Stronghold--and the breath came fast in his
+throat.
+
+And Ellen?
+
+Ah, Ellen was thinking of the long past day when this man had found
+her in the barren rocklands and taken her with the high hand of a
+lover. She, too, drifted away from the chilling courtroom with its
+judge and its petty officials.... And then all suddenly she knew that
+men were talking--and about her. She heard the drone of question and
+answer--the rambling statements of the stranger, Arizona, accusing her
+of strange things--of asking him to take her on rides in Courtrey's
+absence--of swinging with him nights in the hammock by the watering
+trough!
+
+She sat and listened with parted lips and large innocent eyes fixed on
+the man in wonder. Cleve Whitmore clenched his hands until the nails
+cut deep, but he held his tongue and controlled his face. Only the
+blazing blue eyes spoke. She knew that Black Bart tried to tell
+something, that he made some mistake or other and had to begin all
+over again. There was a long and tedious time in here when she looked
+away out the window to where the prairie grass was blowing in the
+little winds and the shadows of clouds drifted across the green
+expanse.... She was numb and far away with misery. She did not care
+for anything in all this world. It seemed as if she was detached,
+aloof, dead already in body as she was in soul.... And then she heard
+the drawling voice of Wylackie Bob--and he was saying something
+unspeakable--about her! She listened like one in a trance--then she
+struggled up from her chair with tragic long arms extended, and the
+cry that rang from her lips was piteous.
+
+"Buck!" it pealed across the stillness of the crowded room, "Buck!--it
+ain't so! Never in this world, Buck! I ben true to you as your shadow!
+Before God, it ain't true!"
+
+There was a stir throughout the crowd, a breath that was audible.
+There were many of the Vigilantes there--a goodly number, all
+wondering where Tharon Last was, where Kenset was, where were
+the riders from Last's. They had expected, what they did not
+know--something, at any rate, for this seemed somehow a test, a
+turning point. But there was nothing. They stirred and waited,
+like a great force heaving in its bed, blind, sluggish, but
+wakening.
+
+And Ellen, chilled by Courtrey's sneering face, the cold disapproval
+of Ben Garland's striking mallet, sank back in her chair and covered
+her face with her shaking hands.... She heard some more awful
+things--then the voice of Dick Burtree beginning soft, low, silver
+like running waters. She heard it tell of that far away day of her
+marriage--of the years that followed--of Courtrey's love for her--of
+her own gentleness, her beauty, "like the tender sunlight of spring on
+the snow and the golden sands"--of her service, her loyalty, her love
+that had "never faltered nor intruded" that "patient obedience to her
+master had but strengthened and made perfect." Of the pitiful thing
+that her life had been this man made a wondrous thing, all sweet with
+twilights and haloed with service.
+
+He talked until the courtroom was still as death and the Indian women
+behind her were rocking in unison of grief. Then she heard questions
+again and the gutteral soft voices of her women answering--with love
+and devotion in every halting word. Once again the crowd in the room
+stirred--and Courtrey's narrow eyes went over it in that cold,
+promising glance.
+
+For once in his life Courtrey, the bully, felt a premonitory chill
+down his spine--because for the first time that promising glance of
+his failed of its effect! Only here and there along the rows of faces
+did one cower. There were faces, many faces, that looked back at him
+with steady eyes and tight lips.... Verily it was time he conquered
+the riding, shooting, beautiful she-devil who had made this thing
+possible! The sooner he got Tharon Last away from this bunch of spawn
+the better. Then he would sweep in with all his old swift methods,
+only sharper ones this time, and "clean" them all. When he got through
+it would be a different man's Valley, make no mistake about that!
+
+Here Ellen looked straight into his eyes and both were conscious of
+the shock. Ellen wilted and Courtrey frowned and struck a fist against
+the railing near him.... He looked up and met the hesitating eyes of
+Ben Garland on the bench and his own hardened down to pin points.
+
+The farce was finished save for the Judge's decision--Dick Burtree was
+slumped in his chair, dead drunk and asleep. Wylackie Bob was lighting
+a cigarette in his brown fingers, a smile on his evil mouth, his slow,
+black eyes covering the slim white form of Ellen in a speculative way,
+as if he dreamed of making true his blasphemous lies. Ellen was sweet
+as a flower in her open-lipped beauty, her panting despair. Wylackie
+did not notice the slim man beside her whose lips were so tight that
+they were a mere line across his face. No one at the Stronghold
+noticed Cleve much.
+
+Then Ben Garland was speaking, and Ellen gathered her dim wits enough
+to make out that he was saying strange things--awful things--that had
+to do with Courtrey's freedom.
+
+Then she knew--swaying and groping with her blue-veined hands--that
+the thing was done--that she was no longer a wife. That she would
+never again sleep in the bend of Courtrey's arm as she had slept in
+those golden days of long ago--that she was an outcast, blackened
+beyond all hope by the damning and unchoice words of Wylackie Bob....
+Then the world faded out for Ellen in merciful blackness.
+
+The petty officials rose with laughter and clanking of boots on the
+board floors--the crowd filed out in a striking silence. Never before
+had a crowd in Lost Valley gone out from a courtroom in that strange
+and bodeful silence.
+
+The sight of Ellen lying white and limp across Cleve Whitmore's
+shoulder like a sack of grain, as he passed out with the moving mass,
+had an odd effect. It was partly the white dress that did it--and the
+time was ripe.
+
+Courtrey and his gang were toward the fore--first out. They spread off
+to one side with jest and quip, with flash of bottle and slap on
+shoulder. The populace thinned a bit from the steps.... And then
+suddenly as a pistol shot Cleve Whitmore's voice rang out like a
+clarion.
+
+"Wylackie!" it pealed across the subdued noises, "You ---- ---- ----
+hell hound. _Turn round!_"
+
+There was death in it.
+
+The gun man whirled, drawing like lightning. In the Court House door,
+Cleve Whitmore with his sister's limp form on his shoulder, beat him
+to it.
+
+He had drawn as he called. Before the words were off his lips he
+pulled the trigger and shot Wylackie through the heart.
+
+As his henchman fell Courtrey's good hand flashed to his hip, but
+Dixon of the Vigilantes, shot out an arm and knocked him forward from
+behind.
+
+For the second time Courtrey had missed a life because a brave heart
+dared him. Old Pete had paid the price for that trick. Dixon had no
+thought of it.
+
+And in one moment the chance was past, for a sound began to roar from
+that silent crowd which had poured from the courtroom--the deep,
+bloodcurdling sound of the mob forming, inarticulate, uncertain.
+
+For the first time in his life Courtrey felt real fear grip him.
+
+He had killed and stolen and wronged among these people and gotten
+away with it. He had never feared them. They had been silent. Now with
+the first deep rumble from the concrete throat of Lost Valley he got
+his first instinctive thrill of disaster.
+
+He stood for a moment in utter silence. Then he flung up his hands,
+snapped out an order, whirled on his heel and went swiftly to the near
+rack where stood Bolt and the rest of the Ironwoods. Like a set of
+puppets on strings his men drew after him--and they left Wylackie Bob
+where he fell.
+
+In a matter of seconds the whole Stronghold gang was mounted and
+clattering down the street--out of the town toward the open range.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And the killer on the Court House steps?
+
+He stood where he was and looked with blazing eyes over the motley
+crowd beneath him. Steptoe Service made a step toward him, looked
+round, wet his lips and thought better of it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then, in another second, the crowd was a mob and the mob was the
+Vigilantes. Some one took Ellen from Cleve's shoulder with careful
+hands and carried her away. Then some one reached down and picked him
+up bodily. Another joined, and they set him on their shoulders,
+lifting him high. The inarticulate mob cry swelled and deepened and
+rose to a different sound--a shout that gathered volume and roared out
+across the spaces where Courtrey rode with a menace, a portent.
+
+With one accord the mob started on a journey around Corvan.
+
+White as Ellen, Cleve Whitmore rode that triumphant journey, his eyes
+still blazing, his lips tight. The town went wild. Public feeling came
+out on every hand. Daring took the weak, hope took the oppressed, and
+they called Courtrey's reign right there. For three uproarious hours
+the bar-tenders could not wipe off their bars.
+
+A new regime was ushered in--and she who had been its sponsor was not
+there to see it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When the hour of Change was striking for Corvan and all Lost Valley,
+Tharon Last, who had set it to strike, was scaling False Ridge in the
+Cañon Country. Grim, ash-pale with effort, her blue eyes shining, she
+climbed the Secret Way that few had ever found.
+
+How she had come to it through the tortuous cuts and passes was a
+marvel of homing instinct--the heart that homed to its object. It had
+seemed to her all along this strange, tense journey, that she had had
+no will of her own, that she had held her breath and shut her eyes, as
+it were, and gone forward in obedience to some strange thing within
+that said, "turn here," "go thus." Billy following behind, watched her
+with tight lips and a secret wonder. As she had told him she would
+"go straight, Mary willing," so she had gone straight--and it seemed,
+truly, as if it were right that she should, no matter how his heart
+ached to see this thing.
+
+Verily there was something supernatural about it all, something
+uncanny.
+
+If it had been he, Billy, whom Tharon loved, and had he lain, wounded
+in the Cup o' God, would the girl have been given this blind instinct
+for direction? Would she have gone as unerringly to the Secret Way?
+
+Nay--there must be something in the old saying that, for every heart
+in the world there was its true mate.
+
+Tharon had found hers in Kenset.
+
+But where would he ever find his? The boy shook his fair head
+hopelessly at the sliding floors. For all perfection there must be
+sacrifice. He was the sacrifice for Tharon's perfection--a willing
+one, so help him!
+
+That they had found the Secret Way across False Ridge was perfectly
+plain, for here in the living rock before them were marks, the first
+marks they had found in the Cañons. Thin, small crosses, cut in the
+stone of the walls, began to lead upward from the last liftings cut
+straight up the Rockface of False Ridge itself. It seemed, to look at
+the dim traces, that no living thing without wings could scale that
+steep and forbidding cliff, but when they tried to climb, they found
+that each step had been set with artful cunning. The set of steps
+followed the form of a "switchback," working from right to left, and
+always rising a little. False Ridge itself, a towering, mighty spine,
+came down in a swiftly dropping ridge from somewhere in the high upper
+country at the west of all the cañons. It was known to lead
+deceptively down among the cuts and passes, as if it went straight
+down to the lower levels, and to end abruptly in a precipice that none
+could descend or climb. On all its rugged sides there were treacherous
+slopes which looked hard enough to support a man, but which, once
+stepped on, gave sickeningly away to slide and slither for a hundred
+feet straight down to some abrupt edge, where they fell in dusty
+cataracts to blind basins and walled cups below.
+
+In these blind cups were many skeletons of deer and other animals that
+had ventured down from the upper world, never to return. Somewhere up
+here must be the bones of Cañon Jim.
+
+But the Secret Way was safe. Under every carefully worked out step
+there was solid stone, for every handhold there was a firm stake set.
+These stakes were old for the most part, but here and there had been
+set in a new one--Courtrey's work, they made no doubt, for Courtrey
+was said to know the Cañons. It took Tharon and Billy two hours to
+make the climb, stopping from time to time to rest. At such times the
+boy stood close and took her hand. It was grim work looking down the
+sheer face, and one might well be excused for holding a hand for
+steadiness. And it would soon be the time for no more touches of this
+girl's fair self for Billy.
+
+And so, climbing steadily and in comparative silence, these two, whose
+hearts were strong, came at last to the top of False Ridge--a thin
+knife-blade of stone--and looked abruptly and suddenly down on the
+other side.
+
+With a little gasp Tharon put a hand to her throat, for there, an
+unbelievably short distance down, lay the Cup o' God, without a doubt.
+A small, round glade of living green, watered by a whispering stream
+that lost itself the Lord knew where, it lay like a tiny gem in the
+pink stone setting. Trees stood in utter quiet about its edges, for
+there was here no slightest breath of air. Lush grass carpeted its
+level floor. And there, almost directly under the marked way leading
+down, lay a tiny camp--the ashes of a dead fire, a gun against a tree,
+and--here Tharon leaned far out and looked as if her very spirit would
+penetrate the distance--a blanket spread on the level earth, on which
+there lay the body of a man!
+
+It was a trim body, they could see from where they stood, clad in dark
+garments of olive drab that hugged the lean limbs close.
+
+"Kenset!" whispered Tharon with paling lips. "Kenset of th'
+foothills,--an'--he--looks," she wet those ashy lips, "he--looks like
+he is dead."
+
+Without another word she set her feet in the precarious way and went
+down so fast that Billy's heart rose in his throat and choked him, and
+for the first time since he could remember, he called fervently upon
+his Maker with honest reverence. He thought at every slip and scramble
+that she must fall and go hurtling down the Rockface.
+
+But that uncanny instinct which had brought her this far was at her
+command still. She went down faster than it seemed possible for
+anything to go, and before the rider was able to catch up she had
+leaped to the grassy floor, and was running forward toward that still
+form on the blanket.
+
+"Kenset!" she cried like a bugle, "Kenset! Kenset! Oh,--David!"
+
+And then it was that the quiet form stirred, rolled over on its side,
+lifted itself on an elbow--and held out two arms that wavered
+grotesquely, but were eloquent of love's power and its need.
+
+And the Mistress of Last's flung herself on her knees, gathered up
+this strange man as if he had been a child, pressed him hard against
+her breast, and kissed him as we kiss our dead. She pushed his face
+from her and looked into it as if she would see his very soul, the
+tears running on her white cheeks, her lips working soundlessly.
+
+This was love! This agony--this ecstasy--this sublime forgetting of
+all the world beside--this reward after struggle.
+
+Billy stood for a second at the foot of the Wall, and the nails cut in
+his palms. Then he whirled and went fast as he could walk toward the
+first trees that presented themselves--and he could not see where he
+was going for the bleak grey mist that swam in his eyes.
+
+This was love! This dreary colour of the golden sunlight of noon in
+the high country--this dumb ache that locked his throat--this high
+courage that brought him serving love's object to the bitter-sweet
+end. How long he stood there he did not know. His heart was dead, like
+the weathered stone country about him. He knew that he heard Tharon's
+voice after a while, that golden voice which had been the bells of
+Last's, in rapid question and answer--and Kenset's voice, too, weak
+and slow, but filled with joy unspeakable. It was lilting and soft, a
+lover's voice, a victor's voice, and presently he caught a few of the
+broken words that passed between them--"Clean! Clean! Oh, Tharon,
+darling--there is no blood on these dear hands! Tell me you did not
+kill Courtrey!"
+
+He heard Tharon answer in the negative.
+
+And then all the world fell about him, it seemed, for a gun cracked
+from the trees beyond him and a wasp stung his cheek.
+
+In one instant the sunlight became brilliant again, the joy came back
+in the day. Here was something more to do for Tharon, a new task at
+hand when he had thought his tasks were all but done.
+
+He whirled, looked, drew his six-gun and began firing at the man who
+stood in plain sight just where he had stepped into the Cup from the
+mouth of a little blind cut where the stream went out in noise and
+lost itself.
+
+This was a big man, sinister and cold and dark, a half-breed Pomo of
+Courtrey's gang, a still-hunter who did a lot of the dirty work which
+the others refused. Billy had seen him before, knew his record.
+
+Now they two stood face to face and fired at each other swiftly,
+coolly. He saw the half-breed stagger once, knew that he had touched
+him somewhere. And then a sound cut into the snapping of the shots, a
+sound that was like nothing he had ever heard in all his life before,
+a sound as savage as the roar of a she-bear whose cub is killed before
+her eyes. As he flung away his empty gun and snatched the other, he
+moved enough to bring into his range of vision Tharon Last, standing
+over Kenset, her mouth open in that savage cry.
+
+Then before he could draw and fire again he saw the prettiest piece of
+work he had ever witnessed. He saw the gun woman crouch and stoop, saw
+her hands flash in Jim Last's famous backhand flip, saw the red flame
+spurt from her hips, and the Pomo half-breed flung up his hands and
+fell in a heap, his face in the grass. He did not move. Only a long
+ripple passed over his body. He was still as the ageless rocks, as
+much a part of eternity. For a moment Billy stood, the gun hanging in
+his hand. Then he knew that Tharon was coming toward him--that her
+hands were on his shoulders--her deep eyes piercing his with a look
+that meant more to him than all the earth beside. It was the fierce,
+mother-look of changeless affection, the companion to that savage cry.
+She held him in a pinching grip, and made sure that he was unhurt,
+save for that scratch on the cheek.
+
+"If he had killed you, Billy," she said tensely, "I'd a-gone a-muck
+an' shot up th' whole of Lost Valley."
+
+And the boy knew in his heart she spoke the solemn truth.
+
+He slipped his hands down her arms and caught her fingers tightly.
+
+"Stained!" his heart whispered to itself in stifling exhilaration, "in
+spite of all--her first killin'--an' for me!"
+
+Then he could bear her face no more, and turned to look at Kenset.
+Half off the edge of his blanket the forest man lay with his face
+buried in his hands, and beside him lay another gun, the smoke still
+curling from its muzzle.
+
+"By God!" said the rider, softly, "what's this?" and he ran forward to
+pick up the weapon.
+
+"Three of us!" he said aloud, "pepperin' him at once! Kenset, where
+did you get this gun?"
+
+But Kenset did not speak. His shoulders trembled, his dark head was
+bowed to the earth.
+
+"Answer me," said Billy, "for as sure's I live, this here's Buck
+Courtrey's favourite gun--the gun with the untrue firin' pin. Look
+here." And he held it toward Tharon who leaned near to look. True
+enough.
+
+In the right side of the plunger there was a small, shining nick, as
+if, at some previous time, a tiny chink had been broken out of it.
+
+"I found it where I saw Courtrey hide it that night they brought me
+here," said Kenset in a muffled voice. "I crawled when the Pomo was
+out in the Cañons after meat."
+
+"An' you used it--at last. I see. Not till th' last."
+
+"No," said Kenset miserably, "not till the last."
+
+Slowly Tharon knelt down beside him and put a tender arm across his
+shoulders. Her face was shining--like Billy's heart.
+
+"Mr. Kenset," she said softly, "I told you once that I was afraid you
+was soft--like a woman--that you wouldn't shoot if you had a gun. An'
+you said, 'You're right. I wouldn't. Not until th' last extremity.'
+
+"What was this last extremity? Tell me. Why did you shoot when you
+knew right well I'd get him myself?"
+
+"To beat you to it!" cried the man with sudden passion, "to take the
+stain myself!"
+
+For a long moment the girl knelt there beside him and gazed unseeingly
+at the inscrutable calm of the silent country. Something in the depths
+of her blue eyes was changing--deepening, growing in subtle beauty, as
+if the universe was suddenly become perfect, as if there was nowhere a
+flaw.
+
+"There's only one kind of man, after all, Mr. Kenset," she said at
+last with a sweet dignity, "th' man who is true an' honest to th'
+best there is in him, accordin' to his lights. That's my kind of
+man."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then she rose, and it was as if a light of activity burned up in her.
+She became practical on the instant.
+
+"I'm glad you brought th' thin rope, Billy," she said, "it's longer'n
+mine. An' th' little axe, too. We'll need 'em all to get him up an'
+down False Ridge. An' we must get busy right pronto. Th' Pomo killer
+we'll leave where he is. The Cañon Country will make him a silent
+grave."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+FINGER MARK AND IRONWOOD AT LAST
+
+
+It was another noon in Lost Valley. The summer sun sailed the azure
+skies in majesty. Little soft winds from the south wimpled the grass
+of the rolling ranges, shook all the leaves of the poplars. Down the
+face of the Wall the Vestal's Veil shimmered and shone like a million
+miles of lace.
+
+At Corvan wild excitement ruled. Swift things had come upon them,
+things that staggered the tight-lipped community, even though it was
+used to speed and tragedy. For one thing, Ellen, pale, sweet flower,
+had hanged herself in the gaudy apartment of Lola behind the Golden
+Cloud where the dance-hall woman had peremptorily brought her when
+they took her off Cleve Whitmore's shoulder. She left a little note
+for Courtrey, a pathetic short scrawl, which simply reiterated that
+she had "ben true to him as his shadow," and that if he did no longer
+want her, she did not want herself.
+
+At that pitiful end to a guiltless life, Lola, who knew innocence and
+sin, sat down on the only carpeted floor in Corvan and wept. When she
+finished, she was done with Corvan and Lost Valley, ready to move on
+as she had moved through an eventful life.
+
+For another thing, two strange men had ridden up the Wall from the
+Bottle Neck a few days back, and they had put through some mysterious
+doings.
+
+This day at noon these two strangers were riding down on Corvan from
+up the Pomo way, while from the Stronghold, Buck Courtrey's men were
+thundering in with the cattle king at their head. He was grim and
+silent, black with gathering rage. His news-veins tapped the Valley,
+he knew a deal that others tried to hide, and he was coming in to
+reach a savage hand once more toward that supremacy which he knew full
+well to be slipping from him.
+
+And from the blind mouth in the Rockface at the west where the roofed
+cut led to the mystery and the grandeur of the Cañon Country, a
+strange procession came slowly out to crawl across the green
+expanse--a woman on a silver horse, a rider on a red roan who sat
+behind the saddle and bore in his arms a man whose heavy head lolled
+upon his shoulder in all but mortal weakness.
+
+Thus Fate, who had for so long played with life and death in Lost
+Valley, tiring of the play, drew in the strings of the puppets and set
+the stage for the last act.
+
+As Tharon and Billy crept up to Baston's store and stopped at the
+steps, a dozen eager men leaped forward to their help.
+
+"Easy!" warned the girl. "He's ben hurt a long time, an' he's had an
+awful trip. There's fever in him, an' th' wound in his shoulder opened
+a bit with th' haulin'. Lay him down on th' porch a while to rest."
+
+But Kenset opened his dark eyes with the old quiet smile and looked at
+her.
+
+"I'm worth a dozen dead men yet, Miss Last," he said.
+
+As he lay, a trim, long figure in his semi-military garments, on the
+edge of the porch, the populace of Corvan streamed in from the
+outskirts and gathered in the open street. Whispers and comments were
+rife among them, a new courage was noticeable everywhere. The
+Vigilantes were present, many of them.
+
+Question and answer passed swiftly and quietly back and forth between
+Dixon, Jameson, Hill and Tharon. In a few pregnant moments she knew
+what had happened in Corvan--they knew the secret of False Ridge and
+the Cup o' God.
+
+"An' now these strangers from below--they ben a-actin' awful queer,
+ain't a-feared o' nothin' an' they ben goin' all over like a couple o'
+hounds. One of 'em's got on a badge of some sort," said Jameson,
+"didn't mean t' show it, I allow, but Hill, here, seen it by
+chanct----"
+
+Kenset raised himself quickly on an elbow.
+
+"By all that's lucky!" he said softly, excitedly. "Burn-Harris and
+O'Hallan! My Secret Service men!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And it was even so, for by the end of another hour the two strangers
+came riding in and were brought forward to the steps where Kenset lay,
+to clasp his hand and greet him with all the pleasure of previous
+acquaintance.
+
+Then they requested that a space be cleared to the end of ear-shot and
+together with Kenset, Tharon, Billy, and all the Vigilantes, they held
+a long and earnest colloquy.
+
+At its end Kenset's eyes were deep and troubled, but Tharon's were
+beginning to glow with the old fire that all the Holding knew, the
+leaping flame that rose and died and rose again, exciting to the
+beholder, promising, threatening, unfathomable.
+
+"Why, it's a cinch!" said O'Hallan, "a dead moral cinch! Don't see how
+it's held on like it has. Couldn't have in any other place in the good
+old U. S. A. but this God forsaken hole! Well named, Lost Valley!
+Why, we've found enough evidence already to convict a dozen men! Your
+Courtrey's the man that planned a dozen murders, I can see that, and
+he's pulled off a lot of them himself. The people are talking now,
+rumbling from one end of the Valley to the other. We've had to hold up
+our hands to ward them off lately. Your Vigilantes here have opened up
+since we got them together and showed some of them your letter. You
+were wise to tell us to go ahead if you were not here--what did you
+look for?"
+
+"Just about what I got," said Kenset smiling, "and I wanted things to
+be pushed through anyway."
+
+"Well,--they're pushing," said Burn-Harris. "Your little old sheriff
+has had the fear-of-the-Lord put into him somewhat. He's shaking in
+his boots about the snow-packer. There's only one thing lacking to
+make our grip close down on Courtrey, and that's vital--the gun with
+the untrue firing pin you speak about in your instructions."
+
+"Not lackin'," said Tharon grimly, "we've got it, Mister."
+
+The Secret Service man whirled to her.
+
+"You have?" he cried, "then show me your man!"
+
+But Tharon stood for a long moment looking off across the rolling
+green stretches, toward the north where a moving dot was drawing
+down--the riders from the Stronghold.
+
+"This," she said at last, tapping the gun which Billy handed over,
+"this, then, is proof--is proof in law?"
+
+"If it's the true gun that fits the shell which Mr. Kenset left for us
+here at Baston's--yes."
+
+"Then," said Burn-Harris, "a little time and your man's ours as sure's
+the sun shines. Why, this is a hot-bed of crime--there's enough work
+here to keep a whole force busy for months."
+
+But Tharon Last did not heed his words. Her mind had leaped away from
+the present back to that day in spring when Jim Last came home to die.
+She heard again his last command, "Th' best gun woman in Lost Valley,"
+heard her own voice promising to his dulling ears, "I'll get him, so
+help me, God!"
+
+And this was the end. Strangers were waiting to fulfill that promise,
+to take her work out of her hands. She absently watched the moving dot
+take form and sharply string out into a line of riding men. These
+strangers with their hidden signs of authority would bring to his just
+desserts Buck Courtrey, the man who had instigated the killing of poor
+Harkness, who had personally shot her daddy in the back! For them,
+then, she had made her crosses of promise in the granite under the
+pointing pine.
+
+They who had no right in Lost Valley would settle its blood scores,
+would pay her debts!
+
+She frowned and the fingers of her right hand fiddled at the gun-butt
+at her hip.
+
+For what had she striven all these many months? For what had she
+perfected herself in Jim Last's art?
+
+A little white line drew in about her lips, the flame in her blue eyes
+leaped and flickered. The tawny brows gathered into a puckered frown.
+
+Billy, watching, moved restlessly on his booted feet. He it was who
+saw--who feared. He touched her wrist with timid fingers and she
+flashed him a swift glance that half melted to a smile. Then she
+forgot him and all the rest--for the Ironwoods were thundering in from
+the outside levels, were coming into town.
+
+Ahead rode Courtrey, big, black, keen, his wide hat swept back on his
+iron-grey hair, an imposing presence.
+
+"Here's your man!" said Kenset softly, rising excitedly on his elbow.
+"He's coming! And God grant that there is no bloodshed!"
+
+All of Corvan, so long meek and quiet under Courtrey's foot, moved
+dramatically back to give him room to come thundering down to his
+accounting.
+
+In a few seconds he would be encompassed by his enemies.
+
+And then, on the tick of fate, that universally unknown factor, a
+woman's heart, flung its last pawn in the balance.
+
+Lola, gleaming like a bird of paradise in her gay habiliments, leaning
+forward from the further steps of Baston's store where she had slipped
+up unnoticed, cupped her white hands to her scarlet mouth, and sent
+out a cry like a clarion.
+
+"Buck!" she called, bell-like, clear, far-reaching--"Buck! Turn back!
+They've called your turn! It's all up for you! Go! Go--down--the Wall!
+And--God bless you--Buck! Good-bye!"
+
+For one awful moment the great red Ironwood, Bolt, flung up his head
+and slid forward on his haunches, ploughing up the earth in a cloud.
+
+Then, while the half-stunned crowd gaped in silence, he gathered
+himself, straightened, whirled, shook his giant frame and leaped clear
+of the ground in a spectacular turn. The man on his back snatched off
+his hat and shook it defiantly at the town--the people--the very
+Valley that he had ruled so long. It was a dramatic gesture--daring,
+scorning, renouncing. Then, without a word to his henchmen, a single
+look of farewell, Buck Courtrey struck the Ironwood, and was gone back
+along the little street.
+
+His men whirled after him, but strange turn of destiny, they swung
+directly north away from him, for he was turning south at the town's
+edge.
+
+"For the--Wall!" breathed Lola, her face like milk, one hand on her
+glittering breast. "He--goes--for below!"
+
+Then all the watchers knew the same.
+
+The master of the Stronghold, having played for Lost Valley and for a
+woman and lost them both--was done with both.
+
+He leaned on the Ironwood's mighty neck and went south toward the
+Bottle Neck.
+
+All eyes were upon him--all, that is, save the earnest grey ones of
+Billy Brent. They were fixed in anguish on the face of Tharon Last
+beside him--Tharon Last, who shoved the gun-butts hard down in the
+holsters at her hips, who whirled on her booted heel, who cleared the
+space between her and El Rey in three cat-like leaps.
+
+As she went up the stallion rose with her, came down with a pounding
+of iron-shod hoofs, dropped his huge hips in the first leap--and was
+away.
+
+Corvan saw the silver horse shoot out from its midst and woke from its
+lethargy.
+
+"_Th' race!_" some one cried, high and shrill, "_th' race at last!_"
+
+The two strangers saw it, and their lips fell open with amaze.
+
+Kenset from his low porch saw it--and dropped his face on his arms.
+
+"Lord God!" he groaned, "it's come! I couldn't hold her! I might have
+known! I might have known! She's Valley bred--she _is_ the Valley!
+I--and all I stand for--chaff in the wind! Nothing could hold her now!
+Aye--nothing could hold her."
+
+True at last to herself--true to Harkness--true to Jim Last--true to
+the Vigilantes and to the Valley she loved, Tharon flung the sombrero
+from her bright head, settled her feet in the stirrups, slid the rein
+on El Rey's neck, leaned down above him and began to call in his
+ears.
+
+No need of that cry.
+
+El Rey heeded nothing that she might say. She was not his master--never
+had been. He had had but one, the big, stern man whose sharp word
+had been his law--the one who had ever had his best, his love and his
+speed.
+
+What was it now that rode in his saddle--the saddle with the long dark
+stain?
+
+Assuredly it was not the slim girl-thing with the golden voice!
+
+El Rey had ever looked through, beyond her.
+
+Nay, it was something bigger, stronger, sterner--who shall say?
+Perhaps the spirit of that master whom he had served, whom he had
+brought faithfully home that night in spring, for whom he had looked
+and listened all these weary months! There was something, indeed--for
+El Rey, the great, lay down to earth and ran without the need of
+guidance. He set the long red horse out there on the green plain
+before him like a beacon and put the mighty machinery of his massive
+body into motion. Bolt was a rival worthy of his best--Bolt, the king
+of the Ironwoods, huge, spirited, fast as the wind and wild as fire.
+El Rey's silver ears lay back along his neck, the mane above them was
+like a cloud, his long tail streamed behind him like a comet--and
+forgotten was his singlefooting. He ran, his great limbs gathering and
+spreading beneath him--gathering and spreading--with the regularity,
+of clock-work.
+
+Tharon's blue eyes were narrow as her father's, the little lines about
+them stood out. She rode low, like a limpet clinging, and her mind was
+on the two ahead--the man and the great bay horse.
+
+As she felt the wind sing by her cheeks, sting the tears beneath her
+lids, she shut her lips tighter and hugged the pommel closer.
+
+The green carpet went by beneath her like a blur. The thunder of El
+Rey's beating hoofs was like the sound of the cataracts when the
+cañons shot their freshets from the Rockface.
+
+The note of his speed was rising--rising--rising. The blood began to
+pound in her temples with pride and exultation.
+
+She saw the distance narrowing just the smallest bit between her and
+Courtrey. Just the smallest trifle, indeed, but _narrowing_.
+
+"He ain't a-puttin' Bolt down to his best," she told herself tensely,
+"I know what he can do." And she remembered that ride from the mouth
+of Black Coulee to the pine-guarded glade--and Kenset. At that thought
+she pressed her lips tighter.
+
+No thought of Kenset must come to her now--to weaken her with memory
+of those pressing, vital hands of his above his pounding heart.
+
+No--she was herself again--Tharon Last, Jim Last's girl, the gun woman
+of Lost Valley--and yonder went her father's killer.
+
+She leaned down and called again in El Rey's ear.
+
+No slightest spurt of speed rewarded her--nothing but the rising note.
+Then she saw that the distance was widening--just a tiny bit.
+
+Truly it was widening. Courtrey, looking back, had caught the sun on
+her golden hair, on her face as white as milk. He saw that her hands
+were at her hips--loosely set back at her hips--and what thought he
+might have had of mercy at her hands--what wild vision he might have
+seen of speech with her--of parley--of persuasion--was dead.
+
+He leaned down and struck the Ironwood with his open hand.
+
+Bolt, the beautiful, leaped in answer. A little more--slowly--the
+distance between pursuer and pursued widened. Then--Tharon blinked the
+mist from her eyes to make sure--the gain was lost. Slowly, steadily,
+El Rey closed up the extra width. Then for a time there was no change.
+The open plain resounded to the roar of hoofs, the wind sang by like
+taut strings struck. The earth was still that racing green blur
+beneath.
+
+And still the electric note of rising speed hummed softly higher.
+
+If Jim Last rode his silver stallion to the goal of vengeance he must
+surely have been satisfied. The great shoulders worked like pistons,
+the whole massive body was level as the flowing floor beneath, the
+steel-thewed limbs reached and doubled--reached and doubled--with
+wonderful power and precision.
+
+And then at last Tharon knew--knew that El Rey was gaining, slowly,
+steadily, surely. The splendid bay horse was running magnificently,
+but El Rey ran like a super-horse. His silver head was straight as a
+level, his ears laid back, his nostrils wide and flaring, red as
+blood, his big eyes glowed with the wildness of savage flight.
+
+The great king was mad with speed!
+
+Jim Last's girl was mad also--mad with the lust of conquest, of
+revenge.
+
+She rose a little from the stallion's whipping mane, and her blue eyes
+burned on the man ahead.
+
+"I said I'd get you, Buck Courtrey!" she muttered, "that some day I'd
+run th' Ironwoods off their feet--th' heart out of their master!
+
+"Run, damn you--for it's your last ride!"
+
+Then she dropped forward again and watched the distance closing down.
+
+Nearer--nearer--nearer!
+
+The note rose another notch.
+
+Never in his life had El Rey run as he ran now. Always he had had
+reserves. He had them now. The bottom of his power was not reached.
+
+Bolt was doing his best. Once he threw up his head and foam flew on
+the wind--red foam that shot back and whipped on Tharon's hand, a wet
+pink stain, thinned and faded.
+
+At that sight an exultant cry, savage, inhuman, ugly, burst from her
+throat.
+
+She was within long gunshot now--was closing her fingers lightly on
+the blue gun-butts----.
+
+Courtrey heard that cry.
+
+He rose in his saddle--turned--flashed up his hand and fired. Quick as
+the motion of the gun man was, Tharon Last was quicker. She dropped
+over El Rey's shoulder like a cat, firing as she went.
+
+Courtrey's bullet clipped the cantle of the big saddle an inch above
+her flattened leg across it. Hers did something else--what she had
+dreamed of. It struck that other wrist of Courtrey's, the left--and
+sent his six-gun tumbling.
+
+Once again she yelled as she came back in her saddle.
+
+And El Rey was closing--closing up the gap between.
+
+Once again Tharon raised her guns to shoot--both, this time, as her
+daddy had taught her. This was the pinnacle of her life, her skill,
+her training.
+
+Never again would she live a moment like it. She laughed and crouched
+for the final act.
+
+But a sudden coldness went over her from head to foot, sent the hot
+blood shaking down her spine.
+
+What was Courtrey doing?
+
+He rode straight up at last, like an Indian showing, and his bleeding
+left hand swung at his side. With the other he had swept off his wide
+hat, so that his handsome iron-grey head was bare to the summer sun.
+His keen hawk face was lifted. He made a spectacular figure--like a
+warrior, unarmed, waiting his end with courage.
+
+_Unarmed!_
+
+That it was which struck Tharon like a hand across her face. The gun
+he had used with his left hand was his only one! He had carried but
+one since that night at the Stronghold when she had first marked him.
+
+She should have known! Word of this had been about Corvan and the
+Valley.
+
+And so she had Buck Courtrey at her mercy. She could close the
+lessening gap and kill him in his saddle----
+
+But the icy blood still seemed to trickle down her back.
+
+She--and Jim Last--they had always fought in fair-and-open. They
+were no murderers.... They did not strike in the dark--shoot a man from
+ambush--nor kill a man unarmed.... And Kenset--Kenset of the
+foothills--what had he said about the stain of blood--blood-guilt--clean
+hands----
+
+The girl caught her breath with a choking sob.
+
+The game was up.
+
+Neither Jim Last--nor Kenset--nor she--would shoot a man unarmed.
+
+And Courtrey was riding toward the Bottle Neck.
+
+He would go down the Wall to freedom.
+
+And the crosses in Jim Last's granite--they would be forever
+unredeemed, a shame, a sadness, a living accusation!
+
+Nay--not that! Not that!
+
+She had promised--and the Law was waiting--the big Law of below.
+
+She was Jim Last's daughter still.
+
+She leaned closer to El Rey's neck--held her two guns ready--and rode
+with the very wind.
+
+She was near now--she could see Courtrey's face, waxen white but
+fearless, his dark eyes turned back toward her in a sort of desperate
+admiration.... Courtrey loved strength and courage and all things wild
+and fierce. She could see Bolt's staring eyeballs, his open mouth,
+gasping and piteous. One more moment--another--yet one more--then she
+rose in her stirrups and fired straight at the broad bay temple,
+shining and black with sweat!
+
+The great gallant Ironwood went down in a huge arc--first his
+beautiful head, then the sinking arch of his neck, then the shoulders
+that had worked so wondrously. He rolled on his back like a hoop, his
+iron-shod hoofs spinning for one spectacular moment in the air. Then
+he lay at sudden ease, his still fluttering nose pointing directly
+back the way he had come.
+
+With the first catching stumble of the true forefeet, the man on his
+back had shot out of the saddle and far ahead. He landed twenty feet
+away and squarely on his head and shoulders. Like Bolt, Courtrey's
+body turned a complete somersault--and lay still, at sudden peace.
+
+Tharon Last and El Rey went on like an arrow--they could not stop.
+
+When at last she did draw the great king down she was far and away
+from the spot. She turned her head, panting and dizzy, and looked
+back.... She could see the prone red heap that was Bolt--a little way
+beyond that other, lesser, darker heap....
+
+For a long time she sat on El Rey's heaving back and stared unseeingly
+at the green earth where the short grasses quivered in the little
+wind.
+
+There was a deathly white line about her lips, but her eyes blazed
+with the fire that had characterized them from birth, the flickering,
+unfathomable flame that came and went.
+
+Then, presently, new lines came in her young face, unstable lines that
+quivered and worked, and all the good green earth danced grotesquely
+before her vision, for a wall of tears shut out the world. ... She
+laid her head down on El Rey's cloudy mane--and wept.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was early dawn at Last's Holding. The sun was not yet up behind the
+eastern ramparts. The cottonwoods whispered in the dawn-wind, the
+spring beneath the milk-house talked and murmured. Out in the big
+corrals the cattle were beginning to stir and bawl.
+
+In the kitchen old Anita and young Paula had breakfast waiting for the
+men.
+
+Deep in that dim south room where the pale Virgin kept watch and ward,
+Kenset of the foothills slept in healing peace.
+
+And at the step of the western door, Billy stood by Golden--Golden the
+beautiful, who ranked next to El Rey himself--and his face was lifted
+to Tharon who drooped against the lintel with her forehead on her
+arm.
+
+The boy held her hand clasped in both of his own, and there was a
+yearning tenderness in his soft voice when he spoke, a pride and joy
+ineffable that glowed above the pain that was never to leave him.
+
+"It ain't that I love you less, Tharon, dear," he said gently, "that I
+must go. Not that, little girl. I'll love you till I die--that I know
+in dead certainty. But I can't stay here--not where I'll have to see
+you givin' all your sweet self to another man. A good man, too,
+Tharon--I think there ain't a better one in th' land--but--well,--I
+can't--that's all. I can't thank you for all you've done for me sence
+you was a little mite of a girl--five years back,"--his voice broke a
+bit, but he controlled it, "nor for th' joy you've given me--th' rides
+together--an' th' jokes an' playin'----"
+
+He paused a moment, unhappily, and the mistress of Last's drooped more
+heavily against the old adobe wall.
+
+"Nor for Golden here," went on the rider, "we'll be pals as long as we
+both live--nor fer-fer--" he stopped again, hesitated, looked
+yearningly at the quivering cheek against the curving arm, and went on
+to the finish.
+
+"Nor fer that one kiss, Tharon--it's my one treasure for life, so help
+me, God--that you give me that night. An' over all I want to thank you
+fer--fer--killin' th' Pomo half-breed in th' Cup o' God--_fer you done
+that trick fer me_! Th' one stain on your dear hands--fer me--the
+_only_ one, fer Fate killed Courtrey, not you. His neck was clean
+broke when they picked him up.... That memory will keep me alive, will
+save th' beauty of th' stars at night fer me, will make th' rest worth
+livin'.... That one kiss."
+
+He stopped again and stood for a long time looking at her as if he
+would fix forever in his memory the beauty of her, the fire, the
+spirit, the elusive quality that was Tharon Last herself.
+
+Then he sighed and smiled and gently shook the hand he held.
+
+"Come--tell me good-bye, Tharon, dear," he said softly.
+
+For answer the mistress of Last's once again reached out her arms and
+drew his head to her heart--once more pressed her lips upon his own.
+
+"Oh, Billy," she said with a sound of tears in her voice, "Kenset's
+th' one man--that's true, an' I'm helpless before th' fact--but
+there'll never be another can take your place in my heart--there'll
+never be no one to ride with me in th' Big Shadow in just th' same
+way, Billy--to hold my hand as we come home to Last's with that same
+sweet, honest friendship, that don't need words! I've got my
+life-love, but I've lost my life-friend--an' my heart's sore--sore
+with pain!"
+
+The rider lifted his face and it was glorified in the first rays of
+the sun that was rising over the eastern mountains. His gayly studded
+belt and riding cuffs, his spurs and the vanity of silver on his wide
+hat caught the glow and sparkled brightly. Joy became paramount over
+sadness.
+
+"Don't you fret, Tharon," he said, still in that soft voice, "I'm
+always at your shoulder in spirit--in body, too, if you ever want me
+or need me. So long."
+
+And he kissed both the hands he held, dropped them, turned and mounted
+Golden, waved a hand to all the Holding, and putting the horse to a
+run, went down the sounding-board as if he dared not look back.
+
+Until horse and rider were a tiny speck on the living green--until
+they passed the Silver Hollow and the mouth of Black Coulee, Tharon
+Last stood in the western door and watched them with dim blue eyes.
+
+Ail the wide expanse of Lost Valley was still and sweet with dawn,
+smiling as if with a new and wondrous peace, the Vestal's Veil
+shimmered on the Rockface, the distant peaks above the Cañon Country
+cut the skies.
+
+She scanned the little world about and felt this peace press down upon
+her soul--as if the questions all were answered, the duty done.
+
+Never in all her life before had Last's Holding seemed to her so
+secure and settled, so sweet and to be desired....
+
+Within it lay her destiny--the man in the cool south room.
+
+Without in the great Valley lay a future.
+
+Love was with her--friendship would be with her always in memory, one
+glowing with its vital presence, the other softened and doubly sweet
+with the sorrow of absence.
+
+She raised her hand and made the sign of the Cross between herself and
+that disappearing speck, then she turned and followed old Anita
+carrying gruels to that dim south room.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Tharon of Lost Valley, by Vingie E. Roe
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THARON OF LOST VALLEY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 28956-8.txt or 28956-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/9/5/28956/
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/28956-8.zip b/28956-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e09d625
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956-h.zip b/28956-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bc98ace
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956-h/28956-h.htm b/28956-h/28956-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6408124
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h/28956-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,9041 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+<title>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tharon of Lost Valley, by Vingie E. Roe.
+</title>
+
+<style type="text/css">
+ p {margin-top: 0.5em; text-align: justify; margin-bottom: 0.5em;}
+ body {margin-left: 11%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ a {text-decoration: none;}
+ @media screen {
+ hr.pb {margin:30px 0; width:100%; border:none;border-top:thin dashed silver;}
+ .pagenum {display: inline; font-size: x-small; text-align: right; position: absolute; right: 2%; padding: 1px 3px; font-style: normal; font-variant:normal; font-weight:normal; text-decoration: none; background-color: inherit; border:1px solid #eee;}
+ .pncolor {color: silver;}
+ }
+ @media print {
+ hr.pb {border:none;page-break-after: always;}
+ .pagenum { display:none; }
+ }
+ h3 {font-size:1.0em;}
+ h1,h2,h3 {text-align:center; font-weight:normal;}
+ .figcenter {margin: 2em auto 2em auto; text-align: center;}
+ p.tp {font-size:1em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:center;}
+ .caption {font-size:smaller;}
+ hr.tb {border:none; margin-top: 2em;}
+ table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; clear: both;}
+ h1 {font-size:1.3em;}
+ hr.major {width: 65%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em; border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver; clear:both;}
+ h2 {font-size:1.2em;}
+</style>
+
+</head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tharon of Lost Valley, by Vingie E. Roe
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Tharon of Lost Valley
+
+Author: Vingie E. Roe
+
+Illustrator: Frank Tenney Johnson
+
+Release Date: May 24, 2009 [EBook #28956]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THARON OF LOST VALLEY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 387px; height: 591px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center; width: 387px;'>
+AS EL REY ROSE ON HIS HIND FEET WHIRLING, THAT UNWAVERING MUZZLE WHIRLED ALSO TO KEEP IN LINE<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:2em;margin-bottom:1em;'>THARON OF LOST<br />VALLEY</p>
+<p class='tp' >BY</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.4em;'>VINGIE E. ROE</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;margin-bottom:3em;'>Author of &#8220;The Maid of the Whispering Hills,&#8221;
+&#8220;The Heart<br />of Night Wind,&#8221; etc.</p>
+<p class='tp' >ILLUSTRATIONS BY</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;'>FRANK TENNEY JOHNSON</p>
+
+<div style='margin:40px auto; text-align:center;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-emb.jpg' />
+</div>
+
+<p class='tp' >NEW YORK<br />DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY<br />1919</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:center'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Copyright, 1919</span><br />
+<br />
+By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Inc.</span><br /></p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'><span style='font-size:small;'>CHAPTER</span></td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align='right'><span style='font-size:small;'>PAGE</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>I.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Gun Man&#8217;s Heritage</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_I_THE_GUN_MANS_HERITAGE'>1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>II.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Horses of the Finger Marks</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_II_THE_HORSES_OF_THE_FINGER_MARKS'>29</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>III.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Man in Uniform</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_III_THE_MAN_IN_UNIFORM'>52</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>IV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Unbroken Bread</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IV_UNBROKEN_BREAD'>76</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>V.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Working of the Law</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_V_THE_WORKING_OF_THE_LAW'>102</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>El Rey and Bolt</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VI_EL_REY_AND_BOLT'>128</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Shot in the Cañons</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VII_THE_SHOT_IN_THE_CAONS'>157</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>White Ellen</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII_WHITE_ELLEN'>187</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>IX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Signal Fires in the Valley</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IX_SIGNAL_FIRES_IN_THE_VALLEY'>214</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>X.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Untrue Firing Pin</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_X_THE_UNTRUE_FIRING_PIN'>247</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Finger Mark and Ironwood at Last</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XI_FINGER_MARK_AND_IRONWOOD_AT_LAST'>277</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>ILLUSTRATIONS</h3>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Illustrations' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<col style='width:80%;' />
+<col style='width:20%;' />
+<tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align='right'><span style='font-size:small'>PAGE</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>As El Rey rose on his hind feet whirling, that unwavering muzzle whirled also to keep in line</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_1'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>Near them sat a rider on a buckskin horse</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_2'>38</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>She talked with Conford who rode beside her and now and then she smiled</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_3'>104</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>In fact Courtrey, burning with the new desire that was beginning to obsess him, was working out a new design</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_4'>131</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h1>THARON OF LOST VALLEY</h1>
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 0; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_1' name='page_1'></a>1</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_I_THE_GUN_MANS_HERITAGE' id='CHAPTER_I_THE_GUN_MANS_HERITAGE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<h3>THE GUN MAN&#8217;S HERITAGE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Lost Valley lay like a sparkling jewel,
+fashioned in perfection, cast in the breast
+of the illimitable mountain country&ndash;&ndash;and
+forever after forgotten of God.</p>
+<p>A tiny world, arrogantly unconscious of any
+other, it lived its own life, went its own ways, had
+its own conceptions of law&ndash;&ndash;and they were based
+upon primeval instincts.</p>
+<p>Cattle by the thousand head ran on its level
+ranges, riders jogged along its trail-less expanses,
+their broad hats pulled over their eyes, their six-guns
+at their hips. Corvan, its one town, ran its
+nightly games, lined its familiar streets with
+swinging-doored saloons.</p>
+<p>Toward the west the Ca&ntilde;on Country loomed
+behind its sharp-faced cliffs, on the east the rolling
+ranges, dotted with oak and digger-pine, went
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2' name='page_2'></a>2</span>
+gradually up to the feet of the stupendous peaks
+that cut the sapphire skies.</p>
+<p>Lost indeed, it was a paradise, a perfect place
+of peace but for its humans. Through it ran the
+Broken Bend, coming in from the high and jumbled
+rocklands at the north, going out along the
+sheer cliffs at the south.</p>
+<p>Out of its ideal loneliness there were but two
+known ways, and both were worth a man&#8217;s best
+effort. Down the river one might drive a band
+of cattle, bring in a loaded pack train, single file
+against the wall. That was a twelve days&#8217; trip.
+Up through the defiles at the west a man on foot
+might make it out, provided he knew each inch of
+the Secret Way that scaled False Ridge.</p>
+<p>It was spring, the time of greening ranges and
+the coming of new calves. Soft winds dipped and
+wantoned with Lost Valley, in the Ca&ntilde;on Country
+shy flowers, waxen, heavy-headed on thin
+stems, clung to the rugged walls.</p>
+<p>All day the sun had shone, mild as a lover,
+coaxing, promising. The very wine of life was
+a-pulse in the air.</p>
+<p>All day Tharon Last had sung about her work
+scouring the boards of the kitchen floor until they
+were soft and white as flax, helping old Anita with
+the dinner for the men, seeing about the number
+of new palings for the garden. She had swept
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span>
+every inch of the deep adobe house, had fixed over
+the arrangement of Indian baskets on the mantel,
+had filled all the lamps with coal-oil. She was
+very careful with the lamps, trimming the wicks to
+smokeless perfection, for oil was scarce and precious
+in Lost Valley, as were all outside products,
+since they must come in at long intervals and in
+small quantities. And as she worked she sang,
+wild, wordless melodies in a natural voice as rich
+as a harp. That voice of Tharon&#8217;s was one of the
+wonders of Lost Valley. Many a rider went by
+that way on the chance that he might catch its
+golden music adrift on the breeze, her father&#8217;s
+men came up at night to hear its martial stir, its
+tenderness, for the voice was the girl, and Tharon
+was an unknown quantity, sometimes all melting
+sweetness, sometimes fire that flashed and was
+still.</p>
+<p>So on this day she sang, since she was happy.
+Why, she did not know. Perhaps it was because
+of the six new puppies in the milk-house, rolling
+in awkward fatness against their shepherd
+mother, whose soft eyes beamed up at the girl
+in beautiful pride. Perhaps it was because of the
+springtime in the air.</p>
+<p>At any rate she worked with all the will and
+pleasure of youth in a congenial task, and the
+roses of health bloomed in her cheeks. The sun
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span>
+itself shone in her tawny hair where the curls
+made waves and ripples, the blue skies of Lost
+Valley were faithfully reflected in her eyes.</p>
+<p>Her skin was soft-golden, the enchanting skin
+of some half-blonds which can never be duplicated
+by all the arts of earth, and her full mouth was
+scarlet as pomegranates.</p>
+<p>Sometimes old Anita who had raised her, would
+stop and look at her in wonder, so beautiful was
+she to old and faithful eyes.</p>
+<p>And not alone to Anita was she entirely lovely.</p>
+<p>There was not a full grown man in Lost Valley
+who would not go many a mile to look upon her&ndash;&ndash;with
+varying desires. Few voiced their longings,
+however, for Jim Last was notorious with his guns
+and could protect his daughter. He had protected
+her for twenty years, come full summer, and he
+asked no odds of any. His eyes were like
+Tharon&#8217;s&ndash;&ndash;blue and changing, with odd little lines
+that crinkled about them at the corners, elongating
+them in appearance. He was a big man, vital
+and quiet. The girl took her stature from him.
+Her flashes of fire came from her mother, of
+whom she knew little and of whom Jim Last said
+nothing. Once as a child she had asked him, after
+the manner of children, about this mother of dim
+memories, and his eyes had hazed with a look of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span>
+suffering that scared her, he had struck his palm
+upon a table, and said only:</p>
+<p>&#8220;She was an angel straight out of Heaven.
+Don&#8217;t ask me again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So Tharon had not asked again, though she had
+wondered much.</p>
+<p>Sometimes old Anita, become garrulous with
+age, mumbled in the twilight when the rose and
+the lavendar lights swept down the eastern ramparts
+and across the rolling range lands, and the
+girl gleaned scattered pictures of a gentle and
+lovely creature who had come with her father out
+of a mystic country somewhere &#8220;below.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Below&#8221; meant down the river and beyond, an
+unnamable region.</p>
+<p>In the big living room there was one relic of
+this mysterious mother, a tiny melodeon, its rosewood
+case a trifle marred by unknown hardships,
+its ivory keys yellow with age. It had two small
+pedals and two slender sticks which fitted therein
+and pushed the bellows up and down when one
+trampled upon them. And to Tharon this little
+old instrument was wealth of the Indies. The low
+piping of its reedy notes made an accompaniment
+of surpassing sweetness when she sat before it and
+sang her wordless melodies. And just as she found
+music in her throat without conscious effort, so she
+found it in her fingers, deep, resonant chords for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span>
+her running minors, thin, trickling streams of lightness
+for her own slow notes.</p>
+<p>The sun had turned to the west in its majestic
+course and Tharon, the noon work over, drew up
+the spindle-legged stool and sat down to play to
+herself and Anita. The old woman, half Mexic,
+half Indian, drowsed in a low chair by the eastern
+window, her toil-hard hands clasped in her lap, a
+black <i>reboso</i> over her head, though the day was
+warm as summer. A kitten frisked in the sunlight
+at the open door, wild ducks, long domesticated,
+squalled raucously down the yards, some
+cattle slept in the huge corrals and the little world
+of Last&#8217;s Holding was at peace. It seemed that
+only the girl idling over the yellowed keys, was
+awake.</p>
+<p>For a long and happy hour Tharon sat so, sometimes
+opening her pretty throat in ambitious
+flights of sound, again humming lowly&ndash;&ndash;and that
+was enchanting, as if one sang lullabies to flaxen
+heads on shoulders.</p>
+<p>And it did enchant one&ndash;&ndash;a man who stood for
+the better part of that hour at the edge of the
+deep window in the adobe wall and watched the
+singer.</p>
+<p>He was a splendid figure of a man, tall, broad,
+muscular, built for strength and endurance. His
+face was unduly lined, even for his age, which was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span>
+near fifty, but the eyes under the arched black
+brows were vital as a hawk&#8217;s. He wore the customary
+garments of the Lost Valley men, broad
+sombrero, flannel shirt, corduroys and cowboy
+boots, stitched and decorated above their high
+heels. At his hips hung two guns, spurs clinked
+when he stepped unguardedly. He rarely stepped
+that way, however.</p>
+<p>When presently the girl at the melodeon ceased
+and drew the lid over the keys with reverent
+fingers, he moved silently back a pace or two along
+the wall. Then he waited. As he had anticipated,
+she came to the door to look upon the budding
+world, and for another moment he watched her
+with a strange expression. Then he swung forward
+and let the spurs rattle. Tharon flashed to
+face him like a startled animal.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, Tharon,&#8221; he said and smiled. The
+girl stared at him with quick insolence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Howdy,&#8221; she said coldly.</p>
+<p>He came close to the doorway, put one hand
+on the facing, the other on his hip and leaned
+near. She drew back. He reached out suddenly
+and gripped her wrist in fingers that bit
+like steel.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Pretty,&#8221; he said, while his dark eyes narrowed.</p>
+<p>Tharon flung her whole young strength
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span>
+against his grip with a twisting wrench and came
+free. The quick, tremendous effort left her calm.
+And she did not retreat a step.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hell,&#8221; said the man admiringly, &#8220;little wildcat!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What you want?&#8221; she asked sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You,&#8221; he answered swiftly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buck Courtrey,&#8221; she said, &#8220;you might own
+an&#8217; run Lost Valley&ndash;&ndash;all but one outfit. You ain&#8217;t
+never run Last nor put your dirty hand on th&#8217;
+Holdin&#8217;. An&#8217; that ain&#8217;t all. You never will. If
+you ever touch me again, I&#8217;ll tell Dad Jim an&#8217; he&#8217;ll
+kill you. I&#8217;d a-told him before when you met me
+that day on the range, only I didn&#8217;t want his honest
+hands smutted up with such as you. He&#8217;s had
+his killin&#8217;s before&ndash;&ndash;but they was always in fair-an&#8217;-open.
+You he&#8217;d give no quarter&ndash;&ndash;if he knew
+what you ben askin&#8217; me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man&#8217;s eyes narrowed evilly. They became
+calculating.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell him,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Eh?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You want to feed th&#8217; buzzards?&#8221; the girl
+asked with an insulting peal of laughter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not yet&ndash;&ndash;but I&#8217;ll remember that speech some
+day.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Remember an&#8217; be damned,&#8221; said Tharon.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span>
+&#8220;Now kindly take your dirty carcass off Last&#8217;s
+Holding&ndash;&ndash;back to your wife.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The fire was flashing a little in her blue eyes
+as she spoke, and she half turned to enter the
+house.</p>
+<p>As she did so, Courtrey flung out an arm and
+caught her about the shoulders. He drew her
+against him with the motion and kissed her square
+on the lips. For a second his narrowed eyes were
+drunken.</p>
+<p>As he loosed her Tharon gasped like a swimmer
+sinking.</p>
+<p>She put up a hand and drew it across her mouth,
+which was pale as ashes with sudden rage.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll tell him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do,&#8221; said Courtrey, and swung away around
+the wall of the house.</p>
+<p>There were no more artless songs that day at
+Last&#8217;s Holding. Anita was awake and peering
+with dim eyes when Tharon came in from the
+door sill.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Mi querida</i>,&#8221; she asked, &#8220;what happened?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothing,&#8221; said the girl, &#8220;it&#8217;s time to begin
+supper. Th&#8217; boys&#8217;ll soon be comin&#8217; in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Si, si</i>,&#8221; said Anita, &#8220;I&#8217;ll ask Jos&eacute; to cut the
+fresh beef&ndash;&ndash;it has hung long enough in the cooling
+house.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Supper at Last&#8217;s was a lively affair. At the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span>
+long tables in the eating room the riders gathered,
+lean, tanned men, young mostly, all alert, quick-eyed,
+swift in judgment. Their days were full and
+earnest enough, running Last&#8217;s cattle on the Lost
+Valley ranges. The evenings were their own, and
+they made the most of them. The big house was
+free to them, and they made it home, smoking,
+playing cards on the living room table under the
+hanging lamp, mulling over the work of the day,
+and begging Tharon to sing to them, sometimes
+with the instrument, sometimes sitting in the deep
+east window, when the moon shone, and then they
+turned out the light and listened in adoring
+rapture.</p>
+<p>For Last&#8217;s girl was the rose of the Valley, the
+one absolutely unattainable woman, and they worshipped
+her accordingly.</p>
+<p>Not that she was aloof. Far from it. In her
+deep heart the whole bunch of boys had a place;
+singly and collectively. They were her private
+property, and she would have been inordinately
+jealous of any one of them had he slipped
+allegiance.</p>
+<p>As the purple and crimson veils began to drape
+the eastern ramparts where the forests thickened
+and swept up the slopes, these riders began to
+come in across the range, driving the herds before
+them. Running cattle in Lost Valley was no child&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span>
+play. Any small bunch of cows left out at night
+was not there by dawn. Eternal vigilance was the
+price of safety, and then they were not always safe.
+Witness poor Harkness, a year ago shot in the
+back and left to die alone&ndash;&ndash;his band run off in
+daylight.</p>
+<p>They had found him too late, pitifully propped
+against a stone, the cigarette, he had tried to light
+to comfort him, dead in his nerveless hand.
+Tharon had wept and wept for Harkness, for he
+had been a good comrade, open-hearted and
+merry. And deep in her soul she harboured dim
+longings for justice on his murderer&ndash;&ndash;revenge, if
+you will.</p>
+<p>Tonight she thought of him, somehow, as she
+went about the supper work along with Anita and
+Jos&eacute; and pretty dark Paula. She stood a moment
+on the broad stone at the kitchen door, a dish
+of butter from the springhouse under the poplars
+in her hand, and watched Billy Brent and Curly
+bring in a bunch from up Long Meadow way. She
+thought how bright the spotted cattle looked, how
+lithe and graceful the men, and then her eyes
+lighted as they always did when she beheld the
+horses of Last&#8217;s Holding&ndash;&ndash;the horses of the
+Finger Marks.</p>
+<p>Billy rode Redbuck, Curly Drumfire, and they
+were princes of a royal blood, albeit Nature&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span>
+strain alone. Slim, spirited, wiry, eager heads up,
+manes flying, bright hoofs flashing in the late
+sunlight, they came home to Last&#8217;s after a long
+day&#8217;s work, fresh as when they went out at
+dawn.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothin&#8217; ever floors them,&#8221; Tharon said aloud
+to herself. &#8220;Wonderful creatures.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She set the butter down on the rock at her feet,
+cupped her hands about her lips and sent out a
+keen, clear call, two notes, one rising, one falling.
+It had a livening, compelling quality.</p>
+<p>Instantly Drumfire flung up his head and
+answered it with a ringing whistle, though he did
+not lose a stride in the flying curve he was performing
+to head a stubborn yearling that refused in
+stiff-tailed arrogance to go into the corrals.</p>
+<p>The girl smiled and, stooping, picked up her
+dish and entered.</p>
+<p>It was late before the last straggler was in from
+the range. The boys washed at the big sink on the
+porch, and were ready for the hearty fare that
+steamed in the lamp-lighted room. For the last
+hour Tharon had been watching the eastern slopes
+for her father.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s ridin&#8217; late, Anita,&#8221; she said anxiously as
+the men trooped in with the usual jest and
+laughter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He went far, no doubt, <i>Corazon,&#8221;</i> said old
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span>
+Anita comfortably. &#8220;He goes so fast on El Rey
+that time as well as distance flies beneath the
+shining hoofs.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Anita was like her people, mystic and soft-spoken.</p>
+<p>&#8220;True,&#8221; said the girl gently, &#8220;I forget, El
+Rey is mighty. He went very far I make no
+doubt. We&#8217;ll hear him comin&#8217; soon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then she poured steaming coffee in the cups
+about the table, smiling down in the eyes upturned
+to hers. Billy, Curly, Bent Smith, Jack Masters
+and Conford, the foreman, they all had a love-look
+for her, and the girl felt it like a circling
+guerdon. She was grateful for the sense of security
+that seemed to emanate from her father&#8217;s
+riders, a bit wistful withal, as if, for the first time
+in her life, she needed something more than she
+had always had.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Which way did Dad go, Billy?&#8221; she asked,
+&#8220;north or south?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;North,&#8221; said Billy, &#8220;he rode th&#8217; Cup Rim
+range today.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When the meal, a trifle silent in deference to
+Tharon&#8217;s silence, was done, the men rose awkwardly.
+They stood a moment, looking about,
+undecided.</p>
+<p>Conford picked them up with his eyes and
+nodded out. He felt that just maybe the girl
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
+would rather be alone. But Tharon stopped the
+reluctant egress.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t go, boys,&#8221; she said, &#8220;come on in th&#8217;
+room. There&#8217;s no moon tonight.&#8221; But she did
+not play on the melodeon. Instead she sat in the
+deep window that looked over the rolling uplands
+and was quiet, listening.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Turn out th&#8217; light, Bent,&#8221; she said, &#8220;somehow
+I feel like shadows tonight.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So they sat about in the great room, black with
+the darkness of the soft spring night, and like the
+true worshippers they were, they did not speak.
+Only the red butts of their cigarettes glowed and
+faded, to glow again and again fade out. Tharon
+sat curled in the window, her graceful limbs
+drawn up to her chin, her eyes half closed, her
+keen ears open like a forest creature&#8217;s. She was
+listening for the marked rhythm of the great El
+Rey, the clap-clap, clap-clap of the king of Last&#8217;s
+Holding as he singlefooted down the hollow slopes
+of the lifting eastern range.</p>
+<p>And as she waited she thought of many things.
+Odd little happenings of her childhood came back
+to her&ndash;&ndash;the time she had caught her father killing
+the winter&#8217;s beef, had wept in hysterical pity
+and forbidden him to finish.</p>
+<p>They had had no meat those long months following&ndash;&ndash;and
+she had so tired of beans, that she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span>
+had never been able to eat them since. She smiled
+in the dusk as she recalled Jim Last&#8217;s life-long
+indulgence of her.</p>
+<p>And the time she had wanted to make her own
+knee-short dresses as long as Anita&#8217;s, to sweep the
+floors, with fringe upon them and stripes of bright
+print.</p>
+<p>She had worn them so&ndash;&ndash;at twelve&ndash;&ndash;until she
+found that they hindered the free use of her
+young limbs in mounting a horse, free-foot and
+bareback. Then, once again the memory of her
+father&#8217;s face when she questioned him concerning
+her mother.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Boys,&#8221; she said suddenly, smiling to herself,
+&#8220;did you ever know a man like my
+dad?&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a movement among the lounging
+riders, a shifting of position, a striking of cigarette
+ash.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, sir,&#8221; said Billy promptly, &#8220;there hain&#8217;t
+another man&#8217;s good with a gun as him, not anywhere&#8217;s
+in Lost Valley. Not even Buck Courtrey
+himself. I&#8217;d back Jim Last against him, even, in
+fair-draw. Why?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, nothin&#8217;,&#8221; said the girl, &#8220;only&ndash;&ndash;listen&ndash;&ndash;Glory!&#8221;
+she added slipping down from the window
+to stand quietly in the gloom, &#8220;that&#8217;s him
+now! I was wishin&#8217; hard he&#8217;d come.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
+Say&ndash;&ndash;listen&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;Why,&ndash;&ndash;there&#8217;s somethin&#8217; gone wrong with El
+Rey&#8217;s feet! 1&ndash;&ndash;2&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;3, 4, 5, 6&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;1&ndash;&ndash;2&ndash;&ndash;Boys&ndash;&ndash;he&#8217;s
+breakin&#8217;! Th&#8217; king ain&#8217;t singlefootin&#8217;
+right, for th&#8217; first time since Jim Last put a halter
+on him! Come&ndash;&ndash;come quick!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Ordinarily Tharon was a bit slow in her movements,
+as the very graceful often are. Now she
+was across the room to the western door before a
+man had moved. They joined her there and she
+stood at attention, one hand at her breast, the
+breath held still in her throat. The light, shining
+through from the eating room beyond, made a
+halo of her tawny hair. Silently the riders
+grouped about her and listened.</p>
+<p>Sure enough. Down along the range that rang
+as some open stretches do, there came the clip-clap
+of a hurrying horse, only now the hoof beats
+were regular for a little space, to break, halt,
+start on, and again ring true in the beautiful syncopation
+of the born singlefooter. The king was
+coming home, but, alas! not as he had ever come
+before, in full flight, proud and powerful. He
+held his speed and sacrificed his certainty to the
+man who clung desperately to the saddle horn and
+swayed in wide arcs, so that he must shift continually
+to keep under him.</p>
+<p>Into the dim glow of light at the open door
+came El Rey at last, great blue-silver stallion, his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span>
+big eyes shining like phosphorus, his nostrils wide
+with horror of the pungent crimson wash that
+painted his right shoulder.</p>
+<p>He stopped at the door-stone, his duty done.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dad!&#8221; screamed Tharon, shrill as a bugle,
+for Jim Last, white and dull as a moon in fog, let
+go his desperate hold on the pommel and slid,
+deadweight, into the reaching arms that circled
+him.</p>
+<p>They carried him into the living room. Before
+they had him safely on the wide couch where the
+Indian blankets glowed, Tharon, trembling but
+efficient, had lighted the hanging lamp above the
+table.</p>
+<p>Then she pushed the men aside and knelt beside
+him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dad,&#8221; she said clearly, &#8220;Jim! Jim Last!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But the gaining of his goal had been too much.
+For a moment the flickering light in him died down
+to ashes. Tharon, her face as white as his own,
+waited in a man-like quiet. She held his stiffened
+hands and her eyes burned upon his features. With
+a deadly knowledge she was printing them indelibly
+upon her heart.</p>
+<p>Presently Jim Last sighed and opened his eyes.
+They sought hers and he smiled, a tender lighting
+from within. He fumbled for the buckle of
+his gun-belt. The girl unclasped it and pulled it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+free. She noticed that both guns were in their
+holsters.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Put it on,&#8221; whispered the master of Last&#8217;s
+Holding.</p>
+<p>Without a question Tharon stood up and
+buckled the belt about her slender waist.</p>
+<p>Her father raising himself with difficulty on an
+elbow, wet his lips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tharon, my girl,&#8221; he said, &#8220;show your dad
+th&#8217; backhand flip.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Strange play, this, when every second counted,
+but Last&#8217;s daughter obeyed him to the letter.</p>
+<p>She stepped clear by the table, stood at attention
+a second, and, with a peculiar outward whirl,
+lightning-quick, of her two wrists, had him covered
+with the big blue guns.</p>
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good as I learned ye,&#8221; he whispered, &#8220;make
+it better.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will,&#8221; promised Tharon swiftly.</p>
+<p>The man closed his eyes, swayed, recovered as
+Conford caught him, and brightened again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now th&#8217; under-sling.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again she obeyed, replacing the weapons,
+standing that second at attention, and flipping
+them from the holsters so quickly that the eye
+could scarcely catch the motion. Both draws were
+peculiar&ndash;&ndash;and peculiarly Last&#8217;s own.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
+&#8220;Good girl,&#8221; he said with a husk grown suddenly
+in his voice, &#8220;take&ndash;&ndash;three hours&ndash;&ndash;a day. I
+want t&#8217; leave you th&#8217; best gun-handler in Lost Valley&ndash;&ndash;because,
+my girl&ndash;&ndash;you&#8217;ll&ndash;&ndash;have&ndash;&ndash;to&ndash;&ndash;to&ndash;&ndash;pro&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>He ceased, wilting forward in Conford&#8217;s arms.</p>
+<p>Then he opened his eyes again for one last smile
+at the daughter he had loved above all things on
+earth, save and except the memory of the woman
+who had given her to him.</p>
+<p>For once in her life Tharon did not wait his
+finished speech. She saw the Hand reach out of
+the shadows and flung herself upon his breast
+where the blood still seeped and fairly forced the
+last flutter of life to brighten in him. She kissed
+his rugged cheek.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who, Dad,&#8221; she called into his dulling
+senses, &#8220;tell me who? I&#8217;ll get him, so help me
+God!&#8221; and she loosed one hand to cross herself,
+as old Anita had taught her.</p>
+<p>But the promise was late. None knew whether
+or not Jim Last heard it, for before the last
+word was done the breath had ceased in his
+throat.</p>
+<p>Another twilight came down upon Lost Valley.
+The wide ranges lay dim and mysterious, grey and
+pink and lavendar, as if the hand of a Master
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span>
+Painter had coloured them, as indeed it had.
+The Rockface at the west was black with shadow
+for all its rugged miles, the eastern uplands
+were bathed and aglow with purplish crimson
+light.</p>
+<p>In Corvan lights twinkled all up and down the
+one main street. Horses were tied at the hitch-racks
+and among them were the Ironwoods from
+Courtrey&#8217;s Stronghold, beautiful big creatures,
+blood-bay, black-pointed, noticeable in any bunch.
+There were no Finger Marks, however, the blue
+roans, red roans and buckskins with the four black
+stripes on the outside of the knee, as if one had
+slapped them with a tarred hand, which hailed
+from Last&#8217;s. There were horses from all up and
+down the Valley. Cow ponies and half-breeds of
+the Ironwood stock which Courtrey would not
+keep at the Stronghold but was too close to kill,
+shouldered pintos from the Indian settlements,
+big, half-wild horses from over the mountains at
+the North. Inside the brightly lighted saloons
+men passed back and forth, drank neat liquor at
+the worn bars, played at the green felt and canvas
+covered tables. At one, The Golden Cloud, more
+pretentious than the rest, there foregathered the
+leading spirits of the Valley. Here Courtrey came
+and played and drank, his henchmen with him.
+He was in high mettle this night. Always a contained
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+man, slow to laughter and to speech, he
+seemed to have unbent more than usual, to respond
+to the human nature about him. He was not playing
+steadily as was his wont. He took a turn at
+poker with three men from the south of the Valley
+where the river ran out of the Bottle Neck,
+won a hand or two, threw down the cards and
+swung away to talk a moment with this one, listen
+a moment where those two spoke of hushed matters.
+Always when he came near he was accorded
+deference. There was nothing sacred
+from Courtrey of the Stronghold, seated like a
+feudal place at the north head of Lost Valley, no
+conversation so private that he could not come in
+on it if he chose.</p>
+<p>For Courtrey was the king of the country, undisputed
+sovereign, the best gun man north of the
+Rio Grand and south of the Line, if one excepted
+Jim Last. With him tonight were Black Bart, tall,
+swarthy, gimlet-eyed, a helf-breed Mexican, and
+Wylackie Bob his right-hand man. Without these
+two he seldom moved. They were both able lieutenants,
+experts with firearms. A formidable trio,
+the three went where and when they listed, and
+few disputed their right-of-way.</p>
+<p>Courtrey, a smile in his dark eyes, the wide
+black hat at an angle on his iron-grey hair, leaned
+against the high bar and scanned the crowded
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span>
+room where the riders played and laughed and
+swore with abandon.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Heard anything more about Ca&ntilde;on Jim?&#8221;
+he asked Bullard, the proprietor of The Golden
+Cloud, &#8220;ain&#8217;t come in yet?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Bullard shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No&ndash;&ndash;nor he won&#8217;t, according to my notion.
+Think he mistook th&#8217; False Ridge drop. Ain&#8217;t no
+man could make it up again without th&#8217; hammer
+spike an&#8217; rope.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;H&#8217;m&ndash;&ndash;don&#8217;t know. Don&#8217;t know,&#8221; mused
+Courtrey. &#8220;I&#8217;ve always thought it could be done.
+There ought to be a way on th&#8217; other side, seems
+like.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, <i>ought</i> an&#8217; <i>is</i> is two diff&#8217;rent things,
+Buck,&#8221; grinned Bullard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; nodded the king, &#8220;sure. An&#8217; yet&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, Buck.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A soft hand touched Courtrey&#8217;s shoulder with
+a subtle caress. He wheeled on the instant, ready,
+alert. Then he smiled and reaching up, took the
+hand and held it openly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, Lola,&#8221; he said, &#8220;how goes it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The newcomer was a woman, full, rounded,
+dark, and she was past-master of men&ndash;&ndash;as witness
+the slow glance that she turned interestedly out
+over the teeming room, even while the pulse in the
+wrist in Courtrey&#8217;s clasp leaped like a racer. She
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span>
+was a perfect specimen of a certain type, beautiful
+after a resplendent fashion, full of eye and lip,
+confident, calm. She was brilliantly clad in crimson
+and black, and rings of value shone on her
+ivory-like hands.</p>
+<p>Lola of the Golden Cloud was known all over
+Lost Valley. Men who had no women worshipped
+her&ndash;&ndash;and some who had, also. At the
+Stronghold at the Valley&#8217;s head there was a
+woman who hated her, though she had never set
+eyes on her&ndash;&ndash;Courtrey&#8217;s wife.</p>
+<p>If Lola knew this she had never mentioned it,
+wise creature that she was. Proud of her beauty
+and her power she had reigned at The Golden
+Cloud in supreme indifference, even to her men
+themselves, it seemed, though hidden undercurrents
+ran strong in her. Which way they tended
+many a reckless buck of Lost Valley would have
+given much to know, among them Courtrey
+himself.</p>
+<p>Now she pulled her hand away from him and
+sauntered over to a table where five men sat
+playing, laid it upon the shoulder of one of
+them, leaned down and looked at the cards in
+his hand.</p>
+<p>The man, a tall stripling in a silver-studded
+belt, looked up, flattered.</p>
+<p>Courtrey by the bar watched her, still smiling.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span>
+Then he turned back to Bullard and went on with
+his conversation.</p>
+<p>Over by the wall a man on a raised dais began
+to tune an ancient fiddle.</p>
+<p>Two more women came in from somewhere at
+the back, a big blooming girl by the name of
+Sadie, and a small red-head, tragically faded, with
+soft brown eyes that should never have looked
+upon Bullard&#8217;s. Two men rose and took them as
+the tune, an old-fashioned waltz, began to ripple
+under the fingers of the fiddler, who was a born
+musician, and the four swung down between the
+tables and the bar. The Golden Cloud was in
+full swing, running free for the night, though the
+soft twilight was scarcely faded from the beautiful
+country without.</p>
+<p>Slip&ndash;&ndash;step, slip&ndash;&ndash;step&ndash;&ndash;went the dancing feet
+to the accompaniment of rattling spurs. These
+men were lithe and active, able to dance with
+amazing grace in chaps and the full accoutrement
+of the rider. They even wore their broad
+brimmed hats.</p>
+<p>Why should they not, since none objected?</p>
+<p>Bullard, solid, stocky, red-faced, leaned on his
+bar and watched the busy room with pleased eyes.</p>
+<p>He did not hear a voice which called his name,
+once or twice, among the jumble of sounds. Presently
+an odd figure came round the end of the bar
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span>
+from a door that opened there into the mysterious
+back regions of the place and elbowed in to face
+him.</p>
+<p>This was a little old man, weazened and bent,
+his unkempt head thrust forward from hunched
+shoulders. He dragged two grain sacks behind
+him, and he was so grotesquely bow-legged that
+the first sight of him always provoked laughter.
+This was old Pete the snow-packer, bound on his
+nightly trip to the hills. Outside his burros
+waited, their pack-saddles empty.</p>
+<p>By dawn they would come down from the
+world&#8217;s rim, the grain sacks bulging with hard-packed
+snow for the cooling of Bullard&#8217;s liquor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dick,&#8221; he said when he faced his employer,
+&#8220;here &#8217;tis time t&#8217; start an&#8217; there ain&#8217;t a damned
+bit o&#8217; grub put up fer me! Ef ye don&#8217;t make that
+pig-tailed Chink pay &#8217;tention t&#8217; my wants, I quit!
+I quit, I tell ye!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he emphasized his vehement protest by
+whirling the bags over his head and flailing them
+upon the floor.</p>
+<p>A roar of laughter greeted him, which brought
+dim tears of indignation to his old eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ye don&#8217;t care a damn!&#8221; he whimpered in
+impotent rage. &#8220;Jes&#8217; &#8217;cause it&#8217;s me. Ef &#8217;twas
+yer ol&#8217; Chink, now&ndash;&ndash;if &#8217;twas him, th&#8217; ol&#8217; he-pigtail,
+ye&#8217;d&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Hold on, Pete,&#8221; said Bullard, slapping an
+indulgent hand on the grotesque shoulder, &#8220;You
+go tell Wan Lee that if he don&#8217;t put up th&#8217; best
+lunch in camp for you, an&#8217; <i>muy pronto</i> at that,
+I&#8217;ll come in an&#8217; skin him alive. Tell him&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Bullard was never to finish that sentence.</p>
+<p>There was a sound of running horses stopping
+square at the rack without, the rattle of chains,
+the creak of saddles.</p>
+<p>Booted feet struck the boards of the porch, and
+almost upon the instant the great iron door of
+The Golden Cloud swung inward.</p>
+<p>The dancers stopped in their stride, the players
+laid down their cards, the noise of the room
+ceased with the suddenness that characterized
+the time and place, for Lost Valley was quick
+upon the trigger, tragedy often swept in upon
+hilarity.</p>
+<p>In the opening stood Tharon Last, her blue
+eyes black and sparkling, her tawny skin cream
+white, her lips tight-set and pale. She wore a
+plain dark dress that buttoned up the front, and
+at her hips there hung her father&#8217;s famous guns.
+Her two hands rested on their butts.</p>
+<p>Behind her head against the starlight there was
+the dim suggestion of massed sombreros.</p>
+<p>For a moment she stood so in breathless silence,
+scanning the room.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span></p>
+<p>Then her glance came to rest on the face of
+Buck Courtrey.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Men,&#8221; she said clearly, &#8220;we buried Jim Last
+today. El Rey brought him home last night&ndash;&ndash;finished.
+You all know he was a gun man&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217;
+best in these parts. It was no gun man that killed
+him, in fair-an&#8217;-open, for he was shot in th&#8217; back.
+It was a skunk, a coyote, a son-of-th&#8217;-devil, an&#8217;
+I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to kill him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At the last word there was a lightning movement
+at the bar as Courtrey&#8217;s hand flashed at his
+hip, a flash of fire, a shot that went high and
+lodged in the deep beam above the door, for the
+weazened form of the snow-packer had leaped up
+against him in the same instant.</p>
+<p>The girl had not moved. Her hands still
+rested on the guns in their holsters. Now a grim
+smile curled her mouth, but her eyes did not laugh.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m a-goin&#8217; t&#8217; kill him,&#8221; she said quietly, still
+in that clear voice, &#8220;but I&#8217;ll do it accordin&#8217; to th&#8217;
+law Jim Last laid down to me all my life&ndash;&ndash;in certainty.
+I know&ndash;&ndash;but I&#8217;ll prove. We hain&#8217;t no
+assassins, Jim Last an&#8217; me. Some day I&#8217;ll draw&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217;
+my father&#8217;s killer must beat me to it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Without another word Tharon backed out on
+the porch, the door swung to at the pull of an
+unseen hand on the iron strap by the hinge.</p>
+<p>There was again the rattle and creak, the whirl
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span>
+of hoofs, and in the breathless stillness that lasted
+for a few seconds, there came to the strained ears
+in the Golden Cloud the clip-clap of a singlefooter
+as the great El Rey led out of town.</p>
+<p>Then Buck Courtrey, flushed and unsmiling,
+sent his coldly narrowed eyes over the crowded
+room, man by man. Laughter came, a trifle
+cracked and forced, cards slapped on the tables,
+chairs creaked as the players drew up again, the
+dancers swung into step as the fiddle took up its
+interrupted strain.</p>
+<p>Only Lola, over by the door, looked for a pregnant
+moment at Courtrey&#8217;s face, and shut her lips
+in a hard, straight line.</p>
+<p>Then, lastly, the cold eyes of the king came
+down to rest upon the weazened figure of the
+snow-packer busily engaged in rolling up his sacks
+for departure. If the strange old creature knew
+and felt their promise, he gave no sign as he
+trundled himself outdoors on his bandy legs.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Skunks,&#8221; said Old Pete, as he fumbled with
+his straps about the patient burros, &#8220;are plumb
+pizen t&#8217; pure flesh.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_II_THE_HORSES_OF_THE_FINGER_MARKS' id='CHAPTER_II_THE_HORSES_OF_THE_FINGER_MARKS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<h3>THE HORSES OF THE FINGER MARKS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>At Last&#8217;s Holding a change had taken place.
+The sun of spring still shone as brightly,
+the work of the place went on as usual.
+The riders went at dawn and came at dusk, their
+herds lowing across the rolling green spaces, the
+days were as busy as they had ever been, but it
+seemed as if Last&#8217;s waited for something that
+would never happen, for some one who would
+never come. Conford, quiet, forceful, businesslike,
+carried on the work without a ripple. To a
+casual eye all things were as they had been. But
+to the keen eyes in the tanned faces of Last&#8217;s
+riders the change was appallingly apparent. They
+saw it creep day by day into their lives, felt it
+in the very atmosphere, and it was grim and
+promising.</p>
+<p>Old Anita felt it and watched with dim and
+wistful eyes. Pretty young Paula from the Pomo
+Indian settlement far to the north of the Valley
+under the Rockface felt it and was more silent,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+cat-like of step than ever. Jos&eacute;, always full of
+laughter at his outside work, was sobered.</p>
+<p>For this change was not material, but spiritual,
+and it had to do with Tharon, who was now the
+mistress of Last&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>She no longer sang her wordless songs, no
+longer played for hours on the little old melodeon
+by the western door. Something had gone from
+the brightness of her face, a shadow had come instead.
+She was just as swift and gentle in her
+care for all the things of every day, as efficient and
+painstaking, but she did not laugh, and the tiny
+lines that had characterized her father&#8217;s blue eyes,
+began to show distinctly about her own.</p>
+<p>They began to take on the look of great distances,
+as if she gazed far.</p>
+<p>And for exactly three hours each day there
+could be heard the monotonous bark-bark-bark
+of the big guns Jim Last had given her in his final
+hour. To Billy Brent there was something terrible
+in this. Bred to violence and the quick disasters
+of the country as he was, he could not reconcile
+this grim practice with Tharon Last, the sane and
+loving girl who could not bear the sight of
+suffering.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I tell you, Curly,&#8221; he complained to his
+friend of nights when they came in and lounged in
+the soft dusk by the bunk-house, &#8220;it&#8217;s unnatural.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
+Not that I don&#8217;t pay full respect to Jim Last&#8217;s
+memory, an&#8217; him th&#8217; best man in all this hell-bent
+Valley, but it ain&#8217;t right an&#8217; natural fer no woman
+t&#8217; do what she&#8217;s doin&#8217;. Ain&#8217;t she Jim Last&#8217;s own
+daughter already with th&#8217; guns? Sure. Can drive
+a nail nigh as far as he could. Quick as Wylackie
+Bob on th&#8217; draw an&#8217; as certain, now. Then why
+must she keep it up?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Curly, more silent in his ways but given to
+thought, studied the stars that rode the darkening
+heavens and shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let her alone,&#8221; he said once, &#8220;it was Last&#8217;s
+command, an&#8217; he knew what he was about even
+if he was toppin&#8217; th&#8217; rise of the Big Divide.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He said &#8216;you&#8217;ll have to pro&ndash;&ndash;&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;you rec&#8217;lect?
+He meant <i>protect</i> an&#8217; unless I miss my guess, Billy,
+he&#8217;d have added &#8216;<i>yourself</i>&#8217; if th&#8217; hand of Ol&#8217;
+Man Death hadn&#8217;t stopped his words. Somethin&#8217;
+happened out there in th&#8217; Cup Rim that day when
+Last got his that had to do with Tharon, an&#8217; he
+knew she&#8217;d be in danger. Let her alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So Billy let her alone, as did the rest. She
+went her ways, saw to the garden and made the
+butter in the cool springhouse, and sat in the
+window seat in the twilights. She liked to have
+the men come in as usual, but the talk these times
+was desultory, failing and brightening with forced
+topics, to fail again and drop into silence while
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span>
+the dim red lights of the smokers glowed in the
+shadows.</p>
+<p>Time and again she stirred and sighed, and they
+knew that once again she waited for Jim Last,
+listened for the clip-clap of El Rey coming home
+along the sounding ranges.</p>
+<p>Once, on a night when there was no moon and
+the tree-toads sang in the cottonwoods by the
+spring, the girl, sitting so in the familiar window,
+suddenly dropped her head on her knees and
+sobbed sharply in the silence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never again!&#8221; she said thickly from the
+folds of her denim skirt, &#8220;I&#8217;ll never see him
+comin&#8217; home again!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The riders stirred. Sympathy ached in their
+hearts, but not a man had speech to comfort her.
+It was Billy, the impulsive, who reached a hand
+to her shoulder and gripped it hard. Tharon
+reached up and touched the hand in gratitude.</p>
+<p>It was about this time, when the master of
+Last&#8217;s Holding had lain a month beneath the
+staring mound under the pine tree out to the east
+where they had buried Harkness, that Jos&eacute; finished
+a work of art. For many days he had
+laboured secretly in a calf-shed out behind the
+small corrals, and in his slim dark fingers there was
+beauty unleashed. Finest carving he knew, since
+his forbears, peons across the Border, had spent
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span>
+their lives upon the beams of the Missions. None
+had taught Jos&eacute;. It was in his blood. Therefore,
+from a block of the hard grey stone of the region,
+which was almost like granite, he fashioned a
+cross, as tall as Tharon herself, struck it out freehand
+and true, and set upon its austere face fine
+tracery of vines and Jim Last&#8217;s name. He took
+into the secret Billy and Curly, since these two he
+was sure of, and together they hauled the huge
+thing out and set it up.</p>
+<p>When Tharon, looking to the east with dawn,
+as was her habit, beheld this silent tribute to the
+man she had so loved, she leaned her forehead
+against the deep window-case and wept from the
+depths.</p>
+<p>Then she went out to see it and with a knife
+she set her own mark thereon&ndash;&ndash;a tiny cross
+scratched in the headpiece, another in the arm that
+stretched toward all that was mortal of poor
+Harkness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Two,&#8221; she said, dry-eyed, while the glorious
+dawn shot up to bathe the world in glory, &#8220;full
+pay for you both.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>El Rey, stamping in his own corral, lifted his
+beautiful head, scanned the wide reaches that
+spread away in living green, and tossing up his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+muzzle, sent out on the silence a ringing call. He
+cocked his silver ears and listened. No clear-cut
+human whistle answered him. Once more he
+called and listened.</p>
+<p>Then he lowered his head and stepped along the
+fence. His great body, shining like blue satin with
+a silver frost upon it, gave and lifted with every
+step. The pastern joints above his striped hoofs
+were resilient as pliant springs. The muscles
+rippled in his shoulders, the blue-white cascade
+of his silver tail flowed to his heels, his mane was
+like a cloud upon the arch of his neck. He was
+strength and beauty incarnate, a monster machine
+of living might.</p>
+<p>Unrest was upon him. Life had become stagnant,
+a tasteless thing. He was keen for the open
+stretches, honing to be gone down the wind. He
+fretted and ate out his heart for the freedom of
+the range. Old Anita, passing at some work or
+other, stopped and gazed at him for a compassionate
+moment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You, too, <i>grande caballo</i>,&#8221; she said, &#8220;there is
+naught but grief at Last&#8217;s Holding. <i>Tharone
+querida</i>&#8221; she called into the house, &#8220;come here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon came and stood in the kitchen door.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What, Anita?&#8221; she asked gently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;El Rey,&#8221; answered the old woman, &#8220;he calls
+and calls and none come to him. He, too, needs
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+help, <i>Corazon</i>. Why not take him for a run
+along the plain? It will help you both.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a long time the girl stood, considering.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have not cared to ride lately, Anita,&#8221; she
+said, &#8220;but you are right. El Rey should not be
+left to fret.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She stepped back in the house, then came out,
+and she had added nothing to her attire save her
+daddy&#8217;s belt and guns. Without these she never
+left the Holding now.</p>
+<p>Bareheaded, slender, she was a thing of beauty,
+and there was a quiet command about her which
+subdued the great El Rey himself, the proudest
+horse in all the Valley, outside of Courtrey&#8217;s Ironwoods,
+Bolt and Arrow.</p>
+<p>Between these three horses there was much
+comment and discussion, though they had never
+been tested out together.</p>
+<p>She found a bridle on a corral post, a strong
+affair of rawhide, heavily ornamented with silver,
+its bit a Spanish spade. Without this she could not
+hold the stallion, and he was no pet to come at her
+caressing call of the double notes.</p>
+<p>Only Jim Last himself had ever tamed El Rey
+to do his bidding by word of mouth. The horse
+had had one master. He would never have
+another.</p>
+<p>Even now, when Tharon bridled him and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span>
+opened the big gate, promising him his long-desired
+flight, he seemed not to see her, his beautiful
+big eyes looked through, beyond her, as if he
+sought another. There was some one for whom
+he waited, listened.</p>
+<p>From a block of wood set in the yard the girl
+gathered the rein tight in her hand, balanced a
+moment, and leaped up astride the shining back.</p>
+<p>With a snort like a pistol shot El Rey flung up
+his great head, leaped into the air and was gone.
+Around the corner of the adobe house he went,
+out across the trampled yard, and away along the
+open to the south, running level and free. With
+the first sink-and-lift Tharon had slipped back a
+full span. Now she wound her fingers in the white
+cloud of mane that flailed her face and edged up,
+inch by inch. When her knees were well up on
+the huge shoulders that worked beneath them
+powerfully, she gathered the reins, one in each
+hand, leaned down along the outstretched neck
+and let the great king run. The wind sang by her
+ears in a rising whine, the green prairie was a
+flowing sea beneath her, the thunder of the pounding
+hoofs was stupendous music. Tharon shut
+her eyes and rode, and for the first time since
+Jim Last&#8217;s death a sense of joy rose in her like
+a tide.</p>
+<p>She had ridden El Rey before, many times. She
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
+had felt him sail beneath her down the open prairies
+and always it was so, as if the earth slid by,
+as if the note of the wind lifted minute by minute.
+She had wondered often about this&ndash;&ndash;how long it
+would continue to rise with El Rey&#8217;s rising speed,
+how long before he would reach a maximum above
+which he could not go, a place where the singing
+note would remain fixed.</p>
+<p>She had never known him reach that point.
+Always he could go faster. Always he had
+reserves.</p>
+<p>Far out ahead she saw a bunch of cattle feeding.
+They were lazily circling in a wide arc, content
+under the beaming sun. Near them sat a rider on
+a buckskin horse, Bent Smith on Golden. This
+Golden was one of the prides of Last&#8217;s Holding.
+Bigger than Drumfire or Redbuck, he ranked next
+to El Rey himself in speed, for his slim legs,
+slapped smartly with the distinguishing finger
+marks on the outside of the knee, were long and
+shapely, his back short-coupled and strong, his
+withers low, his narrow hips high. Tharon bore
+hard on El Rey&#8217;s bit, leaned her body to the left,
+and they swung in toward Bent and Golden in a
+beautiful sweeping curve that brought the cowboy
+up in his stirrups with his hat a-wave above
+him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good girl!&#8221; he yelled with leaping gladness
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
+as the superb pair shot by. &#8220;Good girl! Go to
+it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon loosed a hand long enough to wave
+back and was gone, on down the sloping land toward
+the country of the Black Coulee, her dark
+skirts fluttering at her knees, the two heavy guns
+pounding her thighs at every jump.</p>
+<p>It was a long time before El Rey came down
+from his sweeping flight.</p>
+<p>He had been too long holden in cramping bars.
+The free winds and the rolling earth filled him
+with a sort of madness. He ran with joy and the
+surety of unbounded power.</p>
+<p>The rider, left far behind, watched them anxiously
+for a time, thought of following, glanced at
+his cattle, remembered the gun man&#8217;s heritage and
+turned to his business.</p>
+<p>The sun was well down over the western Rockface
+when Tharon and El Rey came back to Last&#8217;s
+Holding. The riders were bringing in the cattle,
+dust was rising in clouds above the moving masses.
+From the ranch house came the savory smells of
+cooking.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-038.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 383px; height: 537px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center; width: 383px;'>
+NEAR THEM SAT A RIDER ON A BUCKSKIN HORSE<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>The stallion was limber as a willow. He tossed
+his handsome head and his eyes were bright as
+stars set in his silver face. Life was at high tide
+in him, flowing magnificently. Tharon, her cheeks
+whipped into pulsing colour by the wind and the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span>
+bounding speed, her tawny mane loosed from its
+bands and flying in a cloud behind her, smoothed
+back from her face, looked wild as an Indian. As
+she drew up and sat watching the work of the
+evening, she smiled for the first time in many days,
+and Jack Masters, passing, felt his heart leap with
+gladness.</p>
+<p>When the mistress of Last&#8217;s was sad, so were
+her people.</p>
+<p>When the last big corral gate had swung to and
+the boys turned in to unsaddle, she touched El Rey
+with a toe and went over among them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Line up the horses, boys,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I want
+to see them all together once more. Somethin&#8217;
+came back in me today&ndash;&ndash;somethin&#8217; I been missing
+for a long time. I&#8217;ll be myself again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Billy turned Redbuck to face her, dropped his
+rein. Curly rode up on Drumfire. These two
+were red roans, dead matches. Bent brought
+Golden and stood him alongside. From far at
+the back of the corral they called Conford and
+Jack, who came wondering, the former on Sweetheart,
+true sister of El Rey, almost as big, almost
+as fast, almost as beautiful.</p>
+<p>Silver-blue roan, silver-pointed, slim, graceful,
+springy, she had not a single dark spot on her
+except the sharp black bars of the finger marks
+outside her knees.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You darlin&#8217;!&#8221; said Tharon as she wheeled in
+line.</p>
+<p>Then came Jack on Westwind, and he was another
+buckskin, paler than Golden, most marvelously
+pointed in pure chestnut brown. His finger
+marks were brown instead of black&ndash;&ndash;the only
+horse at the Holding so distinguished, for no matter
+of what shade or colour, in all the others these
+peculiar marks were jet black. Five splendid
+creatures they stood and pounded the ringing
+earth, tossed their heads and waited, though
+they had all been far that day and it was feeding
+time.</p>
+<p>Out in the horse corrals there were many more
+of their breed, slim, wiry horses, toughened and
+hardened by long hours and daily work, but these
+were the flower of Last&#8217;s, the prized favourites.</p>
+<p>For a long time Tharon sat and watched them,
+noting their perfect condition, their glistening
+skins, their shining hoofs, many of which were
+striped, another characteristic.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe,&#8221; she said at last, &#8220;that there&#8217;s
+a bunch of horses in Lost Valley to come nigh &#8217;em.
+Ironwoods or anything else&ndash;&ndash;I&#8217;d back th&#8217; Finger
+Marks.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So would we,&#8221; said Conford quietly, &#8220;though
+we&#8217;ve seen th&#8217; Ironwoods run&ndash;&ndash;a little.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s th&#8217; word, Burt,&#8221; said Curly, &#8220;a little.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
+Who of us has ever seen Courtrey let Bolt run
+like he wanted to? Not a darned one. I&#8217;ve seen
+that big bay devil pull till th&#8217; blood dripped from
+his mouth.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; put in Masters, &#8220;I&#8217;ve seen that, too&ndash;&ndash;but
+I was lyin&#8217; up on th&#8217; Cup Rim oncet, watchin&#8217;
+a couple mavericks fer funny work, an&#8217; Courtrey
+an&#8217; Wylackie Bob come along down that way on
+Bolt an&#8217; Arrow&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; they wasn&#8217;t a-holdin&#8217; them
+then. Lord, Lord, how they was goin&#8217;! Two
+long red streaks as level as your hand, an&#8217; I swear
+my heart came up in my throat to see &#8217;em, an&#8217; I
+almost hollered. It was pretty work&ndash;&ndash;pretty
+work, an&#8217; no mistake.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon looked over at him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fast as El Rey, Jack?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who could tell?&#8221; said the man. &#8220;I know it
+was some speed, an&#8217; that is all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl struck a hand on the king&#8217;s shoulder
+so passionately that he jumped and snorted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Some day,&#8221; she said tensely, &#8220;El Rey will run
+th&#8217; Ironwoods off their feet&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; I&#8217;ll run th&#8217; heart
+out of their master, damn him! Put th&#8217; horses out.
+It&#8217;s supper time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She threw her right limb over the stallion&#8217;s
+neck swiftly and with lithe grace, and slid abruptly
+to the ground.</p>
+<p>As she did so there came the sound of hoofs on
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span>
+the hard earth at the corner of the house, and a
+stranger came sharply into sight.</p>
+<p>He drew up and nodded. Conford, just turning
+away, turned quickly back and came forward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Howdy,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>The man, tall, lean, dark, returned the salute
+with another nod.</p>
+<p>He was covered with dust, as if he had ridden
+far and been a long time coming. His clothes
+were much the worse for wear, but they were
+mostly leather, which takes wear standing, as it
+were. The wide hat pulled low over his piercing
+dark eyes, was ornamented with a vanity of silver.</p>
+<p>The riding cuffs at his wrists were studded profusely
+with the same metal, as was the wide belt
+that spanned his narrow waist.</p>
+<p>He wore a three days&#8217; beard, and a black moustache
+dropped its long points to the edge of his
+jaw. Black hair showed beneath the hat. He
+was a remarkable figure, even in Lost Valley, and
+he commanded attention.</p>
+<p>He carried the customary two guns of the
+country, and he bestrode a horse that was as
+noticeable as himself.</p>
+<p>This horse was no denizen of Lost Valley. It
+was an utter alien. Its colour was a dingy black,
+as if it had recently been through fire, its coat
+rough and unkempt. Its long head was heavy and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
+slug-like, its nose of the type known among horsemen
+as Roman. It was roughly built, raw-boned
+and angular, and of so stupendous a size that the
+man atop, who was six foot tall himself, seemed
+small by comparison.</p>
+<p>However, for all its ugliness, it possessed a
+seeming of vast power, a suggestion of great
+strength.</p>
+<p>The stranger looked the group over with his
+keen, hard eyes, and spoke in a slow drawl.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;m a-ridin&#8217; th&#8217; wrong
+trail. I hain&#8217;t expected hyar.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And turning abruptly, without another word, he
+jogged away around the house and started down
+the long slope already greying with the coming
+night.</p>
+<p>The foreman and the five punchers clamped
+over to the corner of the kitchen and watched
+him in speculative silence. Tharon came along
+and stood by Billy, her hand on the boy&#8217;s arm.
+To Billy that sober touch confused the distances,
+set the strange rider dancing on the slope.</p>
+<p>&#8220;H&#8217;m,&#8221; said Conford, his grey eyes narrow,
+&#8220;come from far an&#8217;s goin&#8217; somewheres. I&#8217;ll
+watch that duck. He looks like he&#8217;s a record man
+to me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At supper there was much speculation about the
+stranger.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll lay a month&#8217;s pay he come from Texas,&#8221;
+said Billy, casting a side glance at his pal Curly,
+&#8220;them long lankys usually do. An&#8217; somehow it
+shows in their eyes, sort o&#8217; fierce an&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Billy,&#8221; said Tharon severely, &#8220;if I was Curly
+I&#8217;d take a fall out of you. He can do it, <i>you</i> know
+that an&#8217; <i>I</i> know it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thanks, Miss Tharon,&#8221; said Curly in his soft
+Southern drawl, &#8220;if you feel that-a-way about it,
+w&#8217;y, I don&#8217;t care what <i>no</i> little yellow-headed
+whipper-snapper from up Wyomin&#8217; way says to th&#8217;
+contrary.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Billy was a bit abashed, but he stubbornly supported
+his contention that the stranger was a
+bad-man from Texas.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Plenty bad-men right here in Lost Valley,&#8221;
+said the girl quietly, &#8220;an&#8217; th&#8217; breed ain&#8217;t dyin&#8217;
+out as I can see. Th&#8217; settlers need a new
+leader&ndash;&ndash;now that Jim Last&#8217;s gone.&#8221; And she
+fell to playing absently with her fork upon the
+cloth.</p>
+<p>The boys changed the subject hurriedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I found a dead brandin&#8217; fire in th&#8217; Cup Rim
+yesterday, Burt,&#8221; said Masters, &#8220;quite a scrabbled
+space around it. Looked like some one&#8217;d
+branded several calves.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t doubt it,&#8221; said the foreman. &#8220;Careful
+as we are there&#8217;s always likely to be stragglers.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span>
+An&#8217; to be a straggler&#8217;s to be a goner in this man&#8217;s
+land.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Unless he belongs t&#8217; Last&#8217;s,&#8221; said the irrepressible
+Billy. &#8220;I&#8217;ll lay that fer every calf branded
+by Courtrey&#8217;s gang we&#8217;ll get back two.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Billy,&#8221; said Tharon again, &#8220;Jim Last wasn&#8217;t
+a thief. Neither will his people be thieves. For
+every calf branded by Courtrey, <i>one calf</i> wearin&#8217;
+th&#8217; J. L.&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; one calf only. We don&#8217;t steal, but
+we won&#8217;t lose.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You bet your boots an&#8217; spurs throwed in, we
+won&#8217;t,&#8221; said the boy fervently.</p>
+<p>As they rose from the table with all the racket
+of out-door men there came once more the sound
+of a horse&#8217;s hoofs on the hard earth outside.</p>
+<p>Last&#8217;s Holding was a vast sounding-board. No
+one on horseback could come near without advertising
+his arrival far ahead.</p>
+<p>This time it was no stranger. Tharon went to
+the western door to bid him &#8217;light.</p>
+<p>It was John Dement from down at the Rolling
+Cove. He was a thin, worn man, who looked
+ten years beyond his forty, his face wrinkled
+by the constant fret and worry of the constant
+loser.</p>
+<p>Tonight he was strung up like a wire. His
+voice shook when he returned the hearty greetings
+that met him.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Boys,&#8221; he said abruptly, &#8220;an&#8217; Tharon&ndash;&ndash;I
+come t&#8217; tell ye all good-bye.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye! John, what you mean?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon went forward and put a hand on his
+arm. Her blue eyes searched his face.</p>
+<p>The man stood by his horse and struck a tragic
+fist in a hard palm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s it. I give up. I&#8217;m done. I&#8217;m goin&#8217;
+down the wall come day&ndash;&ndash;me an&#8217; my woman an&#8217;
+th&#8217; two boys. Got our duffle ready packed, an&#8217;
+Lord knows, it ain&#8217;t enough t&#8217; heft th&#8217; horses.
+After five year!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was the sound of the hopeless tears of
+masculine failure in the man&#8217;s tragic voice. His
+fingers twisted his flabby hat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hold up,&#8221; said Conford, pushing nearer,
+&#8220;straighten out a bit, Dement. Now, tell us
+what&#8217;s up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Th&#8217; last head&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; last hoof&ndash;&ndash;run off last
+night as we was comin&#8217; in with &#8217;em a leetle mite
+late. Had ben up Black Coulee way, an&#8217; it got
+dark on us. Just as we got abreast o&#8217; th&#8217; mouth
+of th&#8217; Coulee, where th&#8217; poplars grow, three men
+come a-boilin&#8217; out. They was on fast horses&ndash;&ndash;o&#8217;
+course&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; right into th&#8217; bunch they went, hell-bent.
+Stampeded the hull lot. You know my
+bunch&#8217;d got down t&#8217; about a hundred head&ndash;&ndash;don&#8217;t
+know what I ben a-hangin&#8217; on fer, only a man hates
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span>
+t&#8217; give up an&#8217; own hisself beat out. An&#8217; my
+woman&ndash;&ndash;she&#8217;s a fighter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She kep&#8217; standin&#8217; at my back like, oh, like&ndash;&ndash;well,
+she kep&#8217; a-sayin&#8217; &#8216;We&#8217;ll win out yet, John,
+you see. Right&#8217;ll win ev&#8217;ry time.&#8217; You see we
+are just ready to get th&#8217; patent on our land. She
+couldn&#8217;t give that up, seems like. All this time
+gone an&#8217; nothin&#8217; gained. So we ben a-hangin&#8217; on
+when things went from bad to worse. Th&#8217; herd&#8217;s
+been a-goin&#8217; down an&#8217; down. Calves with their
+tongues slit so&#8217;s they&#8217;d lose their mothers&ndash;&ndash;fed
+up in some coulee by hand an&#8217; branded. Knowed
+&#8217;em by my own colour cattle, w&#8217;ich I drove in here
+five year ago&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; yellers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mothers killed outright an&#8217; th&#8217; calves
+branded. Oh, I know it all&ndash;&ndash;but what could I
+do? Kep&#8217; gettin&#8217; poorer an&#8217; poorer. Couldn&#8217;t
+afford enough riders t&#8217; protect &#8217;em. Then
+couldn&#8217;t afford any an&#8217; tried t&#8217; make it go as th&#8217;
+boys got older. Courtrey, damn him, wants me
+offen that piece o&#8217; land a-fore th&#8217; patent&#8217;s granted.
+Him with his twenty thousan&#8217; acres of Lost Valley
+now! An&#8217; how&#8217;d he get it? False entry, that&#8217;s
+what! How many men&#8217;s come in here, took up
+land, &#8216;sold out&#8217; to Courtrey an&#8217; went? Or didn&#8217;t
+go. A lot of &#8217;em <i>didn&#8217;t go</i>. We all know that.
+An&#8217; who dares to speak in a whisper about it? Th&#8217;
+men that did wouldn&#8217;t go&ndash;&ndash;never&ndash;&ndash;nowheres.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span></p>
+<p>There was the bitterness of utter defeat and
+hatred in the shaking voice. The tree-toads, beginning
+their nightly chorus from the wet places
+below the cottonwoods, emphasized the dreariness
+of the recital, the ancient hopelessness of the
+weak beneath the heel of the oppressor.</p>
+<p>Dement ceased speaking and stood in silhouette
+against the last yellow-and-black of the dead
+sunset. The protruding apple in his hawk-like
+throat worked up and down grotesquely.</p>
+<p>For a long moment there was utter silence.</p>
+<p>Then he began again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I knowed I wasn&#8217;t welcome in th&#8217; Valley
+when I hadn&#8217;t ben here more&#8217;n six months. Th&#8217;
+first leetle string o&#8217; fence I put up fer corrals
+went down, mysterious, as fast as I could fix it.
+Th&#8217; woman&#8217;s garden was broke open an&#8217; trampled
+to dust by cattle, drove in. Winter ketched us
+with mighty leetle t&#8217; eat in th&#8217; way o&#8217; truck. Next
+year she guarded it herself some nights, sleepin&#8217;
+by day, an&#8217; oncet she took a shot at some one that
+come prowlin&#8217; around. They let her fence alone
+after that, but what&#8217;d they do outside? Killed all
+th&#8217; hogs we had one night an&#8217; piled &#8217;em in a heap
+in th&#8217; front door yard! That was hint enough,
+but I kep&#8217; a-thinkin&#8217; that ef we behaved decent
+like, an&#8217; minded our own business we sartainly
+must win out. We did,&#8221; he added grimly after a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span>
+little pause, &#8220;like hell. An&#8217; how many others of
+th&#8217; settlers has gone through th&#8217; like? We ain&#8217;t
+no tin gods ourselves, I own, but we got t&#8217; fight
+fire with fire. Only I ain&#8217;t got no more light-wood,&#8221;
+he finished quaintly, &#8220;I got to quit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was another silence while the tree-toads
+sang. Then the man held out his hand, hardened
+and warped with the unceasing toil of those tragic
+years.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye, Tharon,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I wisht Jim
+Last was here. With him gone Lost Valley&#8217;s in
+Courtrey&#8217;s hand an&#8217; no mistake. He was th&#8217; only
+man dared face him an&#8217; hold his own. Last&#8217;s
+was th&#8217; only head th&#8217; weaker faction had, its
+master their only leader. While he lived we had
+some show, us leetle fellers. Now there ain&#8217;t no
+leader. Th&#8217; ranchers&#8217;ll go out fast now. It&#8217;ll
+be a one-man valley.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In the soft darkness Tharon took the extended
+hand, held it a moment and laid her other one
+upon it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;John Dement,&#8221; she quietly said, &#8220;I want
+you to go home an&#8217; bar your house for fight. Fix
+up your fences, unpack your duffle. In the morning
+my riders will drive down to your place a
+hundred head o&#8217; cattle. You put your brand on
+em. There&#8217;s goin&#8217; to be no one-man doin&#8217;s in
+Lost Valley yet awhile&ndash;&ndash;not while Jim Last&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span>
+daughter lives. See,&#8221; she dropped his hand and
+pointed to the east where the tall pine lifted to the
+stars, &#8220;out yonder there&#8217;s a cross at Jim Last&#8217;s
+grave&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; there&#8217;s my mark on it. Th&#8217; settlers
+have a leader still&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; I name myself that leader.
+I&#8217;m set against Courtrey, now an&#8217; forever. I
+mean to fight him t&#8217; th&#8217; last inch o&#8217; ground in Lost
+Valley, th&#8217; last word o&#8217; law, th&#8217; last drop o&#8217; blood,
+both his an&#8217; mine. You go down among &#8217;em&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217;
+settlers&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; take &#8217;em that word from me. Tell
+&#8217;em Jim Last&#8217;s daughter stands facin&#8217; Courtrey,
+an&#8217; she&#8217;ll need at her back t&#8217; fight him every man
+in Lost Valley that ain&#8217;t a coward.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When the settler had gone, incoherent and half-incredulous,
+Conford drew a long breath and
+looked at his mistress in the dusk.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tharon, dear,&#8221; he said so gently that his
+words were like a caress &#8220;you&#8217;re jest a-breakin&#8217;
+your riders&#8217; hearts. You&#8217;re heapin&#8217; anxiety on
+us mountain-high. Now what on earth&#8217;ll we
+do?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Young Billy Brent pushed near and slapped a
+hand against a doubled fist. His eyes were sparkling
+like harbour lights, his voice was like the
+sound of running fire.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do?&#8221; he cried. &#8220;Do? We&#8217;ll stand behind
+her so tight they can&#8217;t see daylight through, an&#8217;
+we&#8217;ll fight with an&#8217; for her every inch o&#8217; that way,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
+every word o&#8217; that law, every drop o&#8217; that blood!
+Who says Last&#8217;s ain&#8217;t on th&#8217; map in Lost Valley?&#8221;
+Tharon smiled and touched him again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Billy,&#8221; she said softly, &#8220;you&#8217;re after my own
+heart. Now get to bed. I want t&#8217; think.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_III_THE_MAN_IN_UNIFORM' id='CHAPTER_III_THE_MAN_IN_UNIFORM'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<h3>THE MAN IN UNIFORM</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Spring was warming swiftly into summer.
+Where the gently sloping ranges went up in
+waves and swells toward the uplands at the
+east, the bright new green had turned to a darker
+shade. The tiny purple and white flowers had
+disappeared to give place to sturdier ones of crimson
+and gold. The veil of water that fell sharply
+down the face of the Wall for a thousand feet at
+the Valley&#8217;s southern end had thinned to sheerest
+gauze. In the Ca&ntilde;on Country the snow had disappeared
+from most of the high points. Red,
+black, yellow, the great face of the encircling Wall
+stood in everlasting majesty, looking down
+upon the level cup of Lost Valley. The unspeakable
+upheaval of peaks and crags, of ca&ntilde;ons and
+splits and unfathomable depths, was almost a
+sealed book to the denizens of the Valley. There
+were those who knew False Ridge.</p>
+<p>There were those who said they knew more.
+Many a man had adventured therein, and few
+had returned to tell of their adventures. Ca&ntilde;on
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span>
+Jim had not returned. Not that he was a loss
+to the community, or that they mourned him, but
+his absence pointed again to the formidable secretive
+power of the Ca&ntilde;on Country.</p>
+<p>Tharon Last, standing in her western door,
+could look across the Valley&#8217;s deceptive miles and
+see the huge black seams and fissures that rent the
+grim face. These splits and ca&ntilde;ons were peculiar
+in that none came down to the Valley&#8217;s floor, their
+yawning doorways being, in every instance, set
+from two hundred to five hundred feet up the
+Wall.</p>
+<p>Often the girl watched them in the changing
+lights and her active mind formed many a conjecture
+concerning them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Some day,&#8221; she told young Paula, &#8220;I&#8217;ll go
+into the Ca&ntilde;on Country and see it for myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Saints forbid, Se&ntilde;orita!&#8221; said Paula, who had
+no love for the mysterious, and who was more
+Mexic than Porno, &#8220;there are demons and devils
+there!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I doubt not, Paula,&#8221; said Tharon
+grimly. &#8220;They say Courtrey knows th&#8217; Ca&ntilde;ons,
+an&#8217; when he&#8217;s there, it&#8217;s peopled, an&#8217; no mistake!</p>
+<p>&#8220;But it must be beautiful&ndash;&ndash;beautiful! Why&ndash;&ndash;there&#8217;s
+a thousand feet of crevasse on every hand,
+I know, steps an&#8217; benches an&#8217; weathered faces that
+no man can climb. They say there&#8217;s bright waters
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span>
+that tumble down like th&#8217; Vestal&#8217;s Veil and sink
+into holes without an outlet. Just go away in the
+rock. There&#8217;s strange flowers an&#8217; stunted trees.
+An&#8217; they tell of th&#8217; Cup of God, a hidden glade
+so beautiful that th&#8217; eye of man has never seen
+its like. All my life it&#8217;s called me, th&#8217; Ca&ntilde;on
+Country.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you believe, Paula, that there&#8217;s somethin&#8217;
+there for me? Some reason why I know I
+must some day go into its heart an&#8217; give myself up
+to it for a time? If I was free,&#8221; she finished with
+a sigh, &#8220;if I was my own woman, wholly, I&#8217;d go
+soon. There&#8217;s rest an&#8217; peace up there, I know&ndash;&ndash;and
+a place to think of Jim Last without such bitterness
+that my heart turns t&#8217; gall.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She shook her bright head against the doorpost
+and shut her soft lips into a straight line.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nope,&#8221; she finished sadly, &#8220;I ain&#8217;t my own
+woman yet.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>&#8220;Tharon,&#8221; said Billy Brent this day, clanking
+around the corner of the adobe house, his leather
+chaps flapping with every step, his yellow hair
+curling boyishly under his hat-brim. &#8220;Tharon, I
+got bad news for you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was genuine distress in his grey eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; asked the mistress of Last&#8217;s, straightening
+up.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir, an&#8217; I hate like hell t&#8217; tell it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Out with it, Billy. What&#8217;s wrong?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Somebody&#8217;s dynamited th&#8217; Crystal Spring in
+th&#8217; Cup Rim.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>What?</i>&#8221;</p>
+<p>The word was in italics. Its one syllable told
+all one might care to know of the importance of
+Billy&#8217;s news.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. Opened her up fer two square yards.
+Spread th&#8217; lovely old Crystal all over th&#8217; range.
+An&#8217; she&#8217;s gone, as sure&#8217;s shootin&#8217;. Nothin&#8217; but a
+lot o&#8217; wet an&#8217; dryin&#8217; mud to show for her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon drew a long breath.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Courtrey&#8217;s beginnin&#8217;,&#8221; she said. &#8220;He&#8217;s heard
+th&#8217; word I sent th&#8217; settlers. He&#8217;s goin&#8217; t&#8217; use th&#8217;
+tactics now with Last&#8217;s that he&#8217;s used with every
+poor devil he wanted to run out of th&#8217; Valley, th&#8217;
+tactics he darsent use while Jim Last lived. Well&ndash;&ndash;go
+send Conford to me, Billy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl sat down in the doorway and gazed
+sombrely out over the summer land.</p>
+<p>When her foreman came and stood before her,
+a slim, efficient figure, dark-faced and quiet, she
+had already made up her mind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Burt,&#8221; she said swiftly, &#8220;drive th&#8217; cattle
+down from th&#8217; Cup Rim right away. We&#8217;ll run
+those two bunches under Blue Pine an&#8217; Nick Bob
+out toward th&#8217; Black Coulee. Tell &#8217;em t&#8217; keep
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span>
+close t&#8217; th&#8217; others. I trust th&#8217; Indians, but there
+ain&#8217;t no Indian livin&#8217; can meet Courtrey&#8217;s white
+renegades in courage an&#8217; wits. Then we&#8217;ll start
+right in an&#8217; dig a well th&#8217; first well ever dug
+on th&#8217; open range in this man&#8217;s land.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good Lord, Tharon!&#8221; said Conford, &#8220;A
+well!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. Th&#8217; livin&#8217; water holes have been th&#8217;
+pride of th&#8217; Valley, I know, but we&#8217;ll fix this well
+of ours so&#8217;s even Courtrey will respect it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a grim note in the golden voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How?&#8221; asked Conford uneasily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dig it first,&#8221; said Tharon, &#8220;then I&#8217;ll tell you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>What the mistress said, went. Therefore, the
+next morning saw a disgusted bunch of cowboys
+and Indian <i>vaqueros</i> setting to with a will at a
+spot much nearer the Holding than the Crystal
+had been, and it took a much shorter time to reach
+water in a good gravel bed than any one had
+dreamed.</p>
+<p>In three days the thing was done and Conford
+presented himself, smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, Miss Secrecy,&#8221; he said, &#8220;come on with
+th&#8217; mystery.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon went in to the big desk which Jim Last
+had used and which was now her own, and returned
+with a square white slab of pine, elaborately
+smoothed and finished by Jos&eacute;.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Read that,&#8221; she said, and held it up, face
+out.</p>
+<p>Printed neatly upon its shining surface, in the
+jet-black ink that old Anita made from the berries
+of a certain bush which grew at the foot of the
+cliffs across the Valley, were these words:</p>
+<p>&#8220;This well is planted. I hope it blows up the
+first thief who tries to destroy it. Tharon Last.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Conford took the slab, scratched his head, holding
+his hat between thumb and finger, read it over,
+read it again, smiled, and then looked up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Might work,&#8221; he said, &#8220;an&#8217; you&#8217;re givin&#8217; out
+your stand an&#8217; knowledge broadcast, ain&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly am,&#8221; said Tharon briefly. &#8220;I said
+I&#8217;d fight, an&#8217; I want th&#8217; whole Valley t&#8217; know it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It does,&#8221; said Conford with conviction. &#8220;I
+heard in Corvan yesterday that John Dement has
+rode th&#8217; range continuous since he finished brandin&#8217;
+his new herd to tell th&#8217; settlers about it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good,&#8221; said Tharon, &#8220;couldn&#8217;t be better.
+There&#8217;s got to be a change in Lost Valley sooner
+or later. Might as well be sooner.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And with that thought the girl let her quick
+mind sweep out to take in the future. She sent
+Conford off to post her placard and herself went
+rummaging among the possibilities which her defy
+had placed before her. She knew that Courtrey
+would be coldly furious. He had lived his life
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span>
+as suited him, had taken what and where he listed,
+by fair means or foul, and though every soul in
+the Valley knew him and his methods, none had
+spoken the convicting word. It was the pen-stroke
+at the end of the death-warrant to do so.</p>
+<p>She knew that the faction of the settlers hated
+him and his with a vitriolic passion, that they
+were in the minority, that they were no tin gods
+themselves, and that they were being beaten out,
+one by one.</p>
+<p>Year by year Courtrey had added to his vast
+acreage, and it was a matter of common knowledge
+how he had done it. He was rich, powerful,
+bullying, a man whose self-aggrandizement knew
+no limit, whose merest whim was his law, whose
+will must not be thwarted. Year by year his
+<i>vaqueros</i> drove down the Wall herds of fat cattle,
+their brands blurred, insolently raw and careless.
+Many a hapless man had stood and seen his
+own stock go by in Courtrey&#8217;s band and dared
+not open his mouth. In fact Courtrey had been
+known to stop and chat with such a one, smiling
+his evil smile and enjoying the helpless chagrin
+of his victim.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Insolent ruffian!&#8221; muttered Tharon this day,
+frowning above her daddy&#8217;s pipes on the desk
+top. &#8220;He&#8217;s goin&#8217; t&#8217; get one run for his money
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
+from now till one of us is whipped. It may be
+me, but I&#8217;ll leave my mark on him, so help me!</p>
+<p>&#8220;Straight killin&#8217;s too good for him. I want
+to smash him first.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tharon, mi <i>Corazon</i>,&#8221; said Anita, stopping
+soft-foot beside her, &#8220;it is bad for one to talk
+so, to himself. The Evil One works on the mind
+that way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon laughed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps, Anita,&#8221; she said shortly, &#8220;it is with
+the Evil One I have t&#8217; do, an&#8217; no mistake.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The old woman crossed herself and went away,
+her wrinkled face dim with care. And Tharon
+dressed herself neatly, put a ribbon on her hair,
+set her wide hat carefully on her head, buckled
+on her heavy gun-belt, and went to the corral for
+El Rey. Her daddy&#8217;s saddle was her own now, a
+huge affair carved and ornamented, profusely
+studded with silver.</p>
+<p>Along the right side below the pommel ran a
+darker stain, Jim Last&#8217;s blood, set before his
+daughter like a star.</p>
+<p>She mounted the silver stallion and went away
+down along the summer land, a shaft of light
+shooting through the green of the ranges.</p>
+<p>Far over to her left she could see her cattle,
+beautiful bunches spread like figures in a tapestry.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
+The figures of her riders were small dots on the
+outskirts.</p>
+<p>El Rey, always hard on the bit, always strong-headed,
+wanted to run and she swung loose her
+rein and let him go. But run as he might, there
+was always in his speed that rising note, that
+seeming of reserve power.</p>
+<p>She passed the head of Black Coulee, swung
+out across the edge of Rolling Cove, thundered
+down to the ford of the Broken Bend. Here she
+let the stallion drink, deep draughts that would
+have slowed a lesser horse. El Rey went up the
+bank beyond the ford like a charging engine,
+squared away and stretched out to finish his run.
+He was within three miles of Corvan, set like a
+stone in a smooth green surface, before he came
+down and lifted his shoulders into his gait. With
+the first rock and swing of the singlefoot, Tharon
+smiled and settled herself more comfortably in
+the saddle. This was joy to her, this beautiful
+syncopation, this poetic marked time that reeled
+off the miles beneath her and would scarcely have
+shaken a pebble from her hat-brim.</p>
+<p>As she struck the outskirts of the little town
+the unmistakable sound of El Rey&#8217;s iron-shod
+hoofs brought heads into doors, children at the
+house corners to look upon her. She came down
+the main street at a smart clip, to bring up with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
+a slide at the hitch-rail before Baston&#8217;s store
+where the monthly mail was handled. There were
+horses tied there, and among them she saw what
+caused her to look twice with a narrowing of her
+keen eyes&ndash;&ndash;a huge, raw-boned, black, rusty and
+slug-headed, among the Ironwood bays from
+Courtrey&#8217;s Stronghold.</p>
+<p>&#8220;H&#8217;m,&#8221; she told herself quietly, &#8220;so there&#8217;s
+where he was expected.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She tied El Rey to himself, far from the rest,
+for she knew his imperious temper and that trouble
+would ensue if he was near strange horses.</p>
+<p>Then she went into Baston&#8217;s with her meal-sack
+on her arm. This meal-sack was a part of her
+accoutrement, a regular carry-all for such small
+purchases as she must take home&ndash;&ndash;a roll of print
+for Paula, some tobacco for the men, a dozen
+spools of the linen thread which was so much
+prized among the women of Lost Valley.</p>
+<p>As she stepped in the open door her quick glance
+went over the big room with a comprehensiveness
+which catalogued its inmates accurately and instinctively.
+Courtrey was not there, though his
+great bay, Bolt, stood outside. However, Wylackie
+Bob was there. This man, sitting at a canvas
+covered table in a corner, idly fingering a pack
+of cards, was not one to be passed over easily.
+He was notorious.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span></p>
+<p>Tall, slow of action, sleepy-eyed, he was treacherous
+as a snake, as swift to move when necessary.
+He had been known to sit as he was now, idly
+playing, to leap up, crouch, draw and kill a man,
+and be down again at his place, idly playing, before
+the breath was done in his victim.</p>
+<p>He was a past-master of his gun, and unlike
+most men of the time and place, he carried only
+one.</p>
+<p>He was a quarter-blood Wylackie Indian. Near
+him sat the stranger who had ridden the slug-head
+black into Lost Valley. They both looked up as
+the girl entered and regarded her with smiles.</p>
+<p>Tharon did not look at them again. She saw,
+however, that they were together, of one interest.
+There were two or three of the settlers
+in the store, Jameson from over under the Rockface
+at the south, Hill from farther up, Thomas
+from Rolling Cove. She spoke to these men
+quietly and noticed with an inward thrill the eagerness
+with which they responded.</p>
+<p>There was an electric something between them
+which told her that her promise had, indeed, gone
+up and down the country, that in a subtle, unheralded
+manner she stood in Jim Last&#8217;s place, a
+head, a leader.</p>
+<p>She made her purchases without undue speech,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span>
+got two letters in her father&#8217;s name&ndash;&ndash;and these
+brought a smarting under her eyelids&ndash;&ndash;tied up
+her sack and went out without so much as a
+glance at the two men in the corner. Laughter
+followed her, however, which set the red blood of
+anger pulsing in her cheeks.</p>
+<p>At the end of the store porch she came face
+to face with Courtrey and Steptoe Service, the
+sheriff of Menlo county. She swung to one side to
+descend the rough steps, vouchsafing them no
+word or look, but Service blocked her way. She
+raised her eyes and looked him full in the face,
+scanning his coarse red features coolly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; she said sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s this I hear, Tharon?&#8221; asked Service,
+&#8220;about you a-makin&#8217; threats?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What have you heard?&#8221; she wanted to know.</p>
+<p>&#8220;W&#8217;y, that you&#8217;re a-makin&#8217; threats.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The sheriff flushed darker.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look here, young woman,&#8221;&ndash;&ndash;he raised his
+voice suddenly and on the instant there was a
+sound of boots on the store floor and the settlers,
+the two men in the corner, Baston and two clerks
+came crowding out to hear, &#8220;you look a-here&ndash;&ndash;don&#8217;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span>
+you know it&#8217;s a-gin th&#8217; law for any one t&#8217;
+make a threat like you done, open an&#8217; above
+board, in th&#8217; Golden Cloud th&#8217; other night?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon shifted the meal-sack higher on her
+left arm. Courtrey&#8217;s eyes went down to her right
+hand and stayed there.</p>
+<p>The girl&#8217;s upper lip lifted from her teeth in a
+sneer that was the acme of insult. The fire was
+beginning to play in her blue eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Law?&#8221; she said. &#8220;My God! Law!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, <i>law</i>! you young hussy, an&#8217; don&#8217;t you fergit
+that I represent it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl threw down the sack and flashed both
+hands on the gun-butts. Courtrey, watching, was
+half-a-second behind her and stopped with his
+hands hovering.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not much, Courtrey,&#8221; she said, &#8220;you fast
+gun man! You&#8217;re too slow. An&#8217; this ain&#8217;t your
+game, anyway, not face t&#8217; face. You&#8217;re all right
+on a dark night&ndash;&ndash;<i>an&#8217; from behind</i>. Fine! But
+you&#8217;re a coward. You&#8217;re what I called you before&ndash;&ndash;an
+assassin.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She was pale as ashes, her eyes narrowed to
+blazing slits. Jim Last, gun man, was in her like
+those composite pictures which show the shadow
+in the substance. There was a gasp from the
+store porch where Thomas stood with a shaking
+hand covering his lips. Baston was stuck against
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
+his wall like a leech, rigid. These men knew that
+she tempted death.</p>
+<p>Not a man in Lost Valley could have done it
+and gotten away with it.</p>
+<p>Tharon knew it, too, but she did not care.</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; now you know what you are, Courtrey.
+I&#8217;ll tell th&#8217; same to you, Step Service. Law! In
+Lost Valley? Yes, Courtrey&#8217;s law! Th&#8217; law of
+th&#8217; gun alone&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; law of thieves&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; law of
+murderers. An&#8217; you stand for that, you bet!
+What were you before you took th&#8217; oath of office?
+Tell me that! Th&#8217; man who killed old Mike
+McCrea an&#8217; took his cattle down th&#8217; Wall! Th&#8217;
+whole Valley knows it&ndash;&ndash;but we&#8217;ve never dared to
+say it before!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The porch was lined with people now. Soft-footed
+Indians and Mexican <i>vaqueros</i>, sprung
+from nowhere, cowboys, ranchers, women, they
+came silently up and listened.</p>
+<p>The sheriff&#8217;s red face was the colour of liver,
+purple and mottled with bursting rage. His fingers
+worked at his sides. He set his lips, and his
+small eyes never left the girl&#8217;s face.</p>
+<p>Tharon, crouched a bit, her feet apart, her
+elbows crooked above her hips, her fingers curled
+on her gun-butts with nice precision, wet her own
+pale lips and continued:</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; who put you in office? That laugh of an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
+office! Who? Why, Courtrey&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; biggest thief,
+th&#8217; coldest murderer in th&#8217; country! <i>He</i> put you
+there! An&#8217; what are you good for? My daddy
+was shot&ndash;&ndash;<i>in th&#8217; back</i>&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; did you make one inquiry
+into the murder? Come out to Last&#8217;s, even
+to find a clew? Not you! There&#8217;s only one sheriff
+in this Valley&ndash;&ndash;one bit o&#8217; law that will avenge his
+death&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; that&#8217;s <i>me</i>! Now, you two fine gentlemen&ndash;&ndash;I&#8217;m
+goin&#8217;. There&#8217;s my hand! I throw th&#8217;
+cards on th&#8217; table! Shoot me in the back if you&#8217;ve
+got th&#8217; nerve. Come out in th&#8217; open an&#8217; fight!
+<i>But you better be quick about it!</i>&#8221;</p>
+<p>With that she backed slowly along the porch,
+keeping them in view.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Get away behind me,&#8221; she called. There was a
+path opened instantly, the sound of shuffling feet.
+Along the porch she went, step by step, stopping
+every moment or so to keep close hold on her
+advantage, every nerve strained, every one of her
+faculties at the top of its power.</p>
+<p>She felt for the step with her foot, went down,
+backed through the crowd, brought them all in
+the range of the guns which she flashed out now
+and held upon them.</p>
+<p>She was ashy pale, a flaming, vibrant thing.
+Not a man there but knew she was more dangerous
+at the moment than cool Jim Last had ever
+been, for she radiated hatred of her father&#8217;s killer
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+in every bitter glance. She had none for whom to
+be cautious. She was the last of her blood. She
+was efficient, and she knew it.</p>
+<p>Courtrey knew it, and felt the sweat start on
+his skin.</p>
+<p>Service knew it, and hated her for it.</p>
+<p>As the girl backed clear there came into her
+vision a strange figure&ndash;&ndash;the straight, trim figure
+of a man who stood stiffly at attention, where her
+imperious words had caught him.</p>
+<p>He wore a uniform of semi-military style,
+leather leggings, a flannel shirt of butternut and a
+smart, tan, broad-brimmed hat.</p>
+<p>He, too, came in the range of the travelling guns
+and waited their pleasure.</p>
+<p>Tharon reached El Rey. She stuck her right-hand
+weapon in its holster, loosed the rein, flung
+it over the stallion&#8217;s head, stepped around his
+shoulder and mounted deftly and swiftly from the
+wrong side. It was a pretty trick of horsemanship
+and showed up her adroitness. As El Rey
+rose on his hind feet, whirling, that unwavering
+muzzle whirled also, to keep in line. The king
+struck into his gait and his rider, facing backward,
+swung away down the narrow street.
+Until she was well out of range the tension
+held.</p>
+<p>Then Steptoe Service struck a fist into a palm
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span>
+and began to swear in a fury, but Courtrey
+laughed, one of his rare, short bursts of mirth that
+were more bodeful than oaths.</p>
+<p>He turned on his heel and strode back the way
+he had come.</p>
+<p>The stranger in the uniform walked forward,
+went up the steps, crossed the porch, and, stooping,
+picked up the meal-sack which Tharon had
+dropped.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will some one kindly tell me who the young
+lady is and where she lives?&#8221; he asked gravely.</p>
+<p>Baston, unglued from the wall, spoke up with
+his usual pompous eagerness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tharon, from Last&#8217;s Holdin&#8217;,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thanks,&#8221; and the man wrapped the sack into
+a small bundle and tied it with its own string.</p>
+<p>He stuck it under one arm and taking out a
+short brown pipe, proceeded to fill and light it.</p>
+<p>Courtrey, halted a few rods away, eyed him
+sharply.</p>
+<p>As he turned, rolling his match to death in his
+fingers, the sun struck mellowly upon something
+on his breast, a small, dark copper shield which
+bore strange heraldry.</p>
+<p>At the sight Courtrey&#8217;s eyes sought Service&#8217;s
+and held them for a swift, questioning moment.</p>
+<p>Strangers in Lost Valley were contraband.</p>
+<p>The three settlers looked covertly at each other,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
+drifted apart, got their horses and presently left
+town by different ways.</p>
+<p>Three hours later these men met by common
+consent at the head of Rolling Cove and talked
+long and earnestly of the happening. They knew
+that Courtrey would never take silently that bitter
+arraignment, that something would transpire
+swiftly to show his resentment, to prove his absolute
+power over Lost Valley.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tain&#8217;t Tharon that&#8217;ll suffer, even ef he did
+try t&#8217; shoot her that night in th&#8217; Golden Cloud,
+because Courtrey wants her himself,&#8221; said Jameson
+quietly, &#8220;th&#8217; whole country knows that. There
+was only one man who didn&#8217;t know it, an&#8217; that
+was Jim Last himself. No, he won&#8217;t monkey with
+th&#8217; Holdin&#8217; yet, not to any great extent. It&#8217;ll be
+us little fellers, us others who he knows would
+stan&#8217; behind her. Some of us&#8217;ll lose somethin&#8217;
+soon, an&#8217; don&#8217;t you forget it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If we do,&#8221; said Hill passionately, &#8220;it&#8217;s time t&#8217;
+show our hand. We&#8217;ve been hounded long
+enough. Th&#8217; men from Last&#8217;s will be with us, we
+can gamble on that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Thomas, &#8220;but it&#8217;ll be war. Open
+war. There&#8217;ll be killin&#8217;s then.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Jameson, a quiet man with deep eyes, made a
+wide gesture.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What if there is?&#8221; he asked, &#8220;might&#8217;s well be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span>
+done in th&#8217; open as in th&#8217; dark an&#8217; unseen. Might
+better be! I move we ride th&#8217; Valley an&#8217; ask th&#8217;
+settlers to band together, under Last&#8217;s, an&#8217; give
+our ultimatum t&#8217; Courtrey on th&#8217; heels of this.
+What say you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I say yes,&#8221; said Hill swiftly. Thomas, of less
+stern stuff, wavered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, let&#8217;s wait awhile. Let&#8217;s don&#8217;t be too
+quick. Courtrey now, he&#8217;s mighty quick an&#8217; hot.
+They ain&#8217;t no tellin&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said Jameson promptly, &#8220;suit
+yourself&ndash;&ndash;we ain&#8217;t a-pressin&#8217; no man into this.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, now, I&#8217;m fer it, boys&ndash;&ndash;that is, I&#8217;m believin&#8217;
+it&#8217;s got t&#8217; be done, only I counsels time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No time,&#8221; cried Hill, &#8220;we ben counselin&#8217;
+time an&#8217; quiet an&#8217; not doin&#8217; anything to stir &#8217;em
+up, an&#8217; what d&#8217; we get? Cattle stole every spring,
+waterholes taken an&#8217; fenced fer Courtrey&#8217;s stock
+right on th&#8217; open range, hogs drove off, fences tore
+down, like pore old John Dement&#8217;s an&#8217; some of
+us left t&#8217; rot every year in some coulee. We
+done waited a sight too long. Courtrey thinks he
+owns Lost Valley, an&#8217; he comes near doin&#8217; it,
+what with his hired killers, Wylackie an&#8217; Black
+Bart an&#8217; this new gun man that&#8217;s just come in. I
+heered today he&#8217;s from Arizona, an&#8217; imported
+article.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Jameson turned to him and held out his hand.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to ride tomorrow,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>Hill grasped the extended hand and looked hard
+in the other&#8217;s eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Me, too,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>Thomas, still of the timid, doubting heart,
+watched them with a hand over his mouth to hide
+its shaking.</p>
+<p>Without a word the others turned their horses
+and rode away in different directions. As they
+went farther from him in the wash of the late light
+the uncertain hand came down with a jerk. Fear
+was in his eyes, the deep, quaking fear of the man
+poor in courage, but he beat it down.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Boys!&#8221; he cried in a panic, &#8220;don&#8217;t leave me
+out! For God&#8217;s sake, don&#8217;t think I ain&#8217;t willin&#8217;!
+I&#8217;ll be out come day tomorrow!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The others both stopped and turned in their
+saddles.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glad to hear ye come through, Thomas,&#8221;
+called Jameson, &#8220;you ride south along th&#8217; Rockface.
+You&#8217;ll go over Black Coulee way, won&#8217;t
+ye, Dan?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will,&#8221; said Hill.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good. I&#8217;ll go north.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a quiet grimness in the few words,
+for he who rode north on such an errand tempted
+fate.</p>
+<p>Then the three separated, and there was only
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
+the silence and the red light of the dying day at
+the head of Rolling Cove.</p>
+<p>That same evening Tharon Last sat in her
+western doorway and watched the sun go down
+in majesty over the weathered peaks and ridges of
+the Ca&ntilde;on Country.</p>
+<p>Billy Brent lounged on the hard earth beside the
+step, his fair head shining in the afterglow, his
+grey eyes upon the girl&#8217;s face in a sort of idol-worship.</p>
+<p>The curve of her cheek, golden with tan and
+red with the hue of youth, was more to him than
+all the sunsets the world had ever seen.</p>
+<p>A deep light shone in his young eyes which, had
+the girl been wise, she might have seen. But
+Tharon was as elemental as the kitten chasing a
+moth out by the pansy bed, and could look in a
+man&#8217;s face with the unconscious eyes of a child.</p>
+<p>Now she watched the pageant of the dying day
+in a rapt delight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Billy,&#8221; she said presently, &#8220;I&#8217;ve often wondered
+if there&#8217;s another place in all the world as
+lovely as our Valley. Jim Last told me once that
+there were places so much bigger out below, that
+we wouldn&#8217;t be a patchin&#8217; to them. Don&#8217;t seem
+like there could be.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She lifted her slim body up along the doorpost
+and looked long and earnestly all up and down the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span>
+wonderful stretch of country that lay along the
+Wall from north to south. She could see the tiny
+dots that went for the different homesteads, scattered
+here and there. Up at the head there lay,
+hard against the frowning hills, the squat, wide
+blur that was Courtrey&#8217;s Stronghold. Her lips
+compressed at sight of it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nope,&#8221; she said, shaking her head, &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+believe he meant it. He used to tease me a lot,
+you know. It&#8217;s an awful big valley, an&#8217; no
+mistake.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The rider, who had drifted up along the Wall
+five years before, looked down at the playing
+kitten and smiled with a lean crinkling of his
+cheeks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a sure-enough big place, Tharon,&#8221; he
+said gravely, &#8220;an&#8217; it&#8217;s lovely as Eden.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Huh?&#8221; said Tharon, &#8220;where&#8217;s that, Billy?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boy sobered and looked up into her blue
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, Tharon,&#8221; he whispered, &#8220;that&#8217;s where
+th&#8217; heart is.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a moment she regarded him. Then she
+smiled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Billy,&#8221; she said severely, &#8220;you&#8217;re stringin&#8217;
+your boss. I&#8217;m sure goin&#8217; to fire you, some day,
+like I ben a-threatenin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; hire me over!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Nope.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl shut her pretty lips and the man&#8217;s
+hand crept softly up and touched her wrist where
+it lay against her knee.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; he said airily, &#8220;gimme my time.
+I quit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was an odd note in his voice, as if under
+the play there was a purpose. For a second
+Tharon held her breath.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What you mean, Billy?&#8221; she asked so sharply
+that the boy jumped.</p>
+<p>Then he laughed, still in that light fashion.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What I said,&#8221; he affirmed doggedly.</p>
+<p>But the mistress of Last&#8217;s took a clutch on his
+hand that was authority in force and leaned down
+to look anxiously in his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, Billy,&#8221; she said with a quiver in her
+voice, &#8220;Last&#8217;s couldn&#8217;t run without you, boy.
+An&#8217; what&#8217;s more, I thought all th&#8217; riders of th&#8217;
+Holdin&#8217; would stand by th&#8217; place.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Billy, fully sobered, straightened up and held
+hard to that clutching hand. The red light of the
+sunset flushed his cheeks, but it never set the glow
+that was in his eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you know yet, Tharon,&#8221; he said quietly,
+&#8220;when I&#8217;m a-jokin&#8217; with you? I&#8217;d stand by Last&#8217;s
+an&#8217; you to my last breath. Don&#8217;t you know
+that?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span></p>
+<p>For a long moment Tharon regarded him
+gravely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I do,&#8221; she said, &#8220;but somehow I don&#8217;t
+like to have you talk that-a-way, Billy. Don&#8217;t
+do it no more.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; promised the rider, &#8220;if you say
+so, Boss. Only don&#8217;t talk about firin&#8217; me, then.
+I&#8217;m very sensitive.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he looked away with smiling eyes to where
+the deep black shadows fell prone into the Valley
+from the forbidding face of the great Wall.</p>
+<p>Only the towering peaks were alight with crimson
+and gold, which haloed their bulk in majestic
+mystery.</p>
+<p>Night was coming fast across Lost Valley, while
+the tree-toads out by the springhouse set up their
+nightly chorus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s Eden,&#8221; thought the man, &#8220;as sure&#8217;s th&#8217;
+world, made an&#8217; forgot with all its trimmin&#8217;s&ndash;&ndash;innocence
+an&#8217; sweetness an&#8217; plenty, an&#8217; th&#8217; silence
+of perfect peace, not to overlook th&#8217; last unnecessary
+evil, th&#8217; livin&#8217; presence of his majesty, th&#8217;
+devil.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then the light died wholly and there came the
+disturbing sound of boots on the ringing stones.
+The rest of the riders were coming in to claim
+their share of Billy&#8217;s Eden.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IV_UNBROKEN_BREAD' id='CHAPTER_IV_UNBROKEN_BREAD'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<h3>UNBROKEN BREAD</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Jameson, Hill and Thomas were as good as
+their word. During the week that followed
+the spectacular denouncement of Courtrey
+and Service at Baston&#8217;s store, they went quietly to
+every settler in the Valley and declared themselves.
+In almost every instance they met with eager
+pledges of approval. They knew, every man of
+them, that this slow banding together for resistance
+against Courtrey and his power meant open
+war. For years they had suffered indignities and
+hardship without protest. While Jim Last lived
+they had had a sort of leader, an example, though
+they had feared to follow in his lead too strongly.</p>
+<p>They had copied his methods of guarding possessions,
+of corraling every cattle-brute at night,
+of keeping every horse under bars. Last had
+looked Courtrey in the face. The rest dared not.</p>
+<p>Now with Last gone, they felt the lack, as if a
+bastion had been razed, leaving them in the open.
+Secrecy in Lost Valley had been brought to a
+work of art. They could hold their tongues.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span></p>
+<p>But with the new knowledge Tharon Last took
+on a light, a halo.</p>
+<p>Men spoke in whispers about her daring. They
+felt it themselves.</p>
+<p>Word of her lightning quickness with her daddy&#8217;s
+guns, of her accuracy, went softly all about
+and about, garbled and accentuated. They said
+she could shoot the studs from the sides of a
+man&#8217;s belt and never touch him. They said she
+could drive a nail farther than the ordinary man
+could see. They said she could draw so swiftly
+that the motion of the hands was lost.</p>
+<p>A slow excitement took the faction of the settlers.</p>
+<p>But out at Last&#8217;s Holding a grave anxiety sat
+upon Tharon&#8217;s riders. Conford knew&ndash;&ndash;and Billy
+knew&ndash;&ndash;and Curly knew more about Courtrey&#8217;s intent
+than some of the others. Young Paula, half
+asleep in the deep recesses of the house, had witnessed
+that furious encounter by the western door
+on the soft spring day when Jim Last had come
+home to die at dusk. She knew that the look in
+Courtrey&#8217;s eyes had been covetousness&ndash;&ndash;and she
+had told Jos&eacute;. Jos&eacute;, loyal and sensible, had told
+the boys. So now there was always one or more
+of them on duty near the mistress of Last&#8217;s on
+one pretext or another. To Tharon, who knew
+more than all of them put together, this was funny.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span></p>
+<p>It stirred the small mirth there was in her these
+days, and often she sent them away, to have them
+turn up at the most unexpected times and places.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You boys!&#8221; she would say whimsically, &#8220;you
+think Courtrey&#8217;s goin&#8217; to cart me off livin&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s just what we are afraid of, Tharon,&#8221;
+answered Conford gravely once, &#8220;we know it&#8217;d
+not be <i>livin&#8217;</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And Tharon had looked away toward Jos&eacute;&#8217;s
+cross, and frowned.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; she said, &#8220;an&#8217; it won&#8217;t be any way, <i>livin&#8217;</i>
+or dead.&#8221;</p>
+<p>One night toward the end of that week a strange
+cavalcade wound up along the levels, past the head
+of Black Coulee, forded the Broken Bend in silence
+save for the stroke of hoof and iron shoe on
+stone, and went toward Last&#8217;s. There were thirty
+men, riding close, and they had nothing to say in
+the darkness.</p>
+<p>At the Holding Tharon Last waited them on
+her western doorstep.</p>
+<p>As they rode in along the sounding-board the
+muffled ringing of the hoofs seemed to the girl as
+the call of clarions. The heart in her breast
+leaped with a strange thrill, a gladness. She felt
+as if her father&#8217;s spirit stood behind her waiting
+the first step toward the fulfillment of her promise.</p>
+<p>The riders stopped in the soft darkness. There
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span>
+was no moon and the very winds seemed to have
+hushed their whispers in the cottonwoods.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tharon,&#8221; said the man who rode in the lead,
+and she recognized the voice of Jameson from the
+southern end of the Valley, &#8220;we&#8217;ve come.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That was all. A simple declaration, awaiting
+her disposal.</p>
+<p>Conford, not half approving, his heart heavy
+with foreboding, stood at his mistress&#8217; shoulder
+and waited, too.</p>
+<p>For a long moment there was no sound save the
+eternal tree-toads at their concert. Then the girl
+spoke, and it seemed to those shadowy listeners
+that they heard again the voice of Jim Last, sane,
+commanding, full of courage and conviction.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad,&#8221; said Tharon simply, &#8220;th&#8217; time has
+come when Lost Valley has got t&#8217; stand or fall
+forever. Courtrey&#8217;s gettin&#8217; stronger every day,
+more careless an&#8217; open. He&#8217;s been content to steal
+a bunch of cattle here, another there, a little at a
+time. Now he&#8217;s takin&#8217; them by th&#8217; herds, like
+John Dement&#8217;s last month. He&#8217;s got a wife, an&#8217;
+from what I&#8217;ve always heard, she&#8217;s a sight too
+good fer him. But he wants more&ndash;&ndash;he wants <i>me</i>.
+He&#8217;s offered me th&#8217; last insult, an&#8217; as Jim Last&#8217;s
+daughter I&#8217;m a-goin&#8217; to even up my score with
+him, an&#8217; it&#8217;s got three counts. You&#8217;ve all got
+scores against him.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span></p>
+<p>Here there were murmurs through the silent
+group.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Th&#8217; next outrage from Courtrey, on any one
+of us, gets all of us together. For every cattle-brute
+run off by Courtrey&#8217;s band, we&#8217;ll take back
+one in open day, all of us ridin&#8217;. We&#8217;ll have to
+shoot, but I&#8217;m ready. Are you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Every man answered on the instant.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then,&#8221; said the girl tensely, &#8220;get down an&#8217;
+sign.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a rattle of stirrups and bits, a creak
+of leather as thirty men swung off their horses.</p>
+<p>Tharon stepped back in the lighted room. Her
+men stood there against the walls. The settlers
+came diffidently in across the sill, lean, poor men
+for the most part, their strained eyes and furrowed
+faces showing the effect of hardships. Not
+a man there but had seen himself despoiled, had
+swallowed the bitter dose in helplessness.</p>
+<p>Most of them were married and had families.
+Some of them had killings to their record. Many
+of them were none too upright.</p>
+<p>Jameson was a good man, and so was Dan Hill.
+Thomas was merely weak. Buford was a gun
+man who had protected his own much better than
+the rest. McIntyre was like him. One by one
+they came forward as Tharon called them by
+name, and leaning down, put their names or their
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+marks to a sheet of paper which bore these few
+simple lines:</p>
+<p>&#8220;We, the signers named below, do solemnly
+promise and pledge ourselves to stand together,
+through all consequences of this act, for the protection
+of our lives and property. For every piece
+of property taken from any one of us, we shall go
+together and take back it, or its worth, from whoever
+took it. For every person killed in any way,
+but fair-and-open, we promise to hang the murderer.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Billy had drafted the document. Tharon, whom
+Jim Last had taught her letters, read it aloud.
+The names of Last&#8217;s Holding headed it. The
+thirty names and marks&ndash;&ndash;and of the latter there
+were many&ndash;&ndash;stretched to the bottom of the sheet.</p>
+<p>When it was done the girl folded it solemnly
+and put it away in the depths of the big desk. Old
+Anita, watching from the shadows of the eating
+room beyond, put her <i>reboso</i> over her head and
+rocked in silent grief. She had seen tragic things
+before.</p>
+<p>Then these lean and quiet men filed out,
+mounted the waiting horses and went away in the
+darkness, mysterious figures against the stars.</p>
+<p>That night Tharon Last sat late by the deep
+window in her own room at the south of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span>
+ranch house. It was a huge old room, high walled
+and sombre. There were bright blankets hung
+like pictures on the walls, baskets marvelously
+woven of grass and rushes, thick mats on the floor
+made in like manner and of a tough, long-fibred
+grass that grew down in a swale beyond the
+Black Coulee, while in one corner there shone pale
+in the darkness the one great treasure of that unknown
+mother, an almost life-size statue of the
+Holy Virgin.</p>
+<p>Of this beautiful thing Tharon had stood in
+awe from babyhood.</p>
+<p>A half fearful reverence bowed her before it
+on those rare times when Anita, throwing back to
+her Mexic ancestors, worshipped with vague rites
+at its feet.</p>
+<p>Always its waxen hands bore offerings, silent
+tribute from the girl&#8217;s still nature. Sometimes
+these were the prairie flowers, little wild things,
+sweet and fragile. Sometimes they were sprays
+of the water vines that grew by the wonderful
+spring of the Holding.</p>
+<p>Again they were strings of bright beads, looped
+and falling in glistening cascades over the tarnished
+gilt robes of the Virgin.</p>
+<p>Under the deep window there was a wide couch,
+piled high with a narrow mattress of wild goose
+feathers and covered with a crimson blanket.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span>
+Here the girl sat with her arms on the sill and
+looked out into the darkness that covered the
+Valley. She thought of the thirty men who had
+signed her paper, riding far and by in the sounding
+basin, returning to their uncertain homes. She
+thought of her father asleep under his peaceful
+cross, of young Harkness beside him.</p>
+<p>She thought of Courtrey and Service and
+Wylackie Bob, of Black Bart and the stranger
+from Arizona. They were a hard bunch to
+tackle.</p>
+<p>They had the Valley under their thumbs to do
+with as they pleased, like the veriest Roman potentate
+of old. Her daddy had told her once, when
+she was small and lonely of winter nights, strange
+old tales of rulers and their helpless subjects. Jim
+Last could talk when he needed, though he was
+a man of conserved speech.</p>
+<p>Yes, Courtrey was like a king in Lost Valley,
+absolute. She thought of the many crimes done
+and laid to his door since she could remember, of
+countless cattle run off, of horses stolen and shamelessly
+ridden in grinning defiance of any who
+might dare to identify them, of Cap Hart killed
+on the Stronghold&#8217;s range and left to rot under the
+open skies, a warning like those birds of prey that
+are shot and hung to scare their kind. Her soft
+lips drew themselves into a hard line, very like
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
+Jim Last&#8217;s, and the heart in her ratified its treaty
+with the thirty men.</p>
+<p>She had none to mourn her, she thought a trifle
+sadly&ndash;&ndash;well Anita and Paula, of course, and there
+were her riders. Billy would grieve&ndash;&ndash;he&#8217;d kill
+some one if she were killed&ndash;&ndash;and Conford and
+Jack.</p>
+<p>A warm glow pervaded her being. Yes, she had
+folks, even if she was the last of her blood.</p>
+<p>But she didn&#8217;t intend to be killed. She was
+right, and she had listened enough to Anita to
+believe with a superstitious certainty, that right
+was invulnerable. For instance, if she and Courtrey
+should draw at the same second, she believed
+absolutely, that because she was in the right, her
+bullet would travel a bit the swifter, her aim be
+truer. She felt in her heart with a profound conviction
+that some day she would kill Courtrey.
+She thought of his wife, Ellen, a pale flower of a
+woman, white as milk, with hair the colour of
+unripe maize, and wondered if she loved the man
+who made her life hell, so the Valley whispered.
+Tharon wondered how it would seem to love a
+man, as women who were wives must love their
+men&ndash;&ndash;if the agony of loss to Ellen could be as
+acute and terrifying as hers had been ever since
+that soft night in spring when her best friend, Jim
+Last, had come home on El Rey.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span></p>
+<p>She thought of the grey look on his face, of
+the pinched line at his nostrils&#8217; base, and the tears
+came miserably under her lids, she laid her head on
+the cloth mat that covered the wide window ledge
+and wept like any child for a time. Then she
+wiped her face with her hands, sighed, and fell
+again to thinking.</p>
+<p>An hour later as she rose to make ready for
+bed, she thought she caught a faint sound out
+where the little rock-bordered paths ran in what
+she was pleased to call her garden, since a few
+hardy flowers grew by the spring&#8217;s trickle, and
+she held her breath to listen. It was nothing,
+however, she thought, and turned into the deep
+room.</p>
+<p>Only the tree-toads, long since silent, knew that
+a cigarette, carefully shielded in a palm, glowed
+in the darkness.</p>
+<p>Two days after this a visitor came to Last&#8217;s.
+From far down they saw him coming, in the mid-morning
+while the work of the house went forward.
+Paula, bringing a pan of milk from the
+springhouse spied him first and stopped to satisfy
+her young eyes with the unwonted appearance of
+him. She looked long, and hurried in to tell her
+mistress.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Se&ntilde;orita,&#8221; she said excitedly, &#8220;see who comes!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
+A stranger who has different clothes from
+any other. He rides not like Lost Valley men,
+either, being too stiff and straight. Come, see.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And Tharon, busy about the kitchen in her
+starched print dress, dropped everything at once
+to run with Paula to the western door of the living
+room that they might look south.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Muchachas</i> both,&#8221; complained old Anita,
+&#8220;the milk is spilled and the <i>pan dulce</i> burns in the
+oven! Tch, tch!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But the young creatures in the west door cared
+naught for her grumbling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who can it be, to come so, Se&ntilde;orita?&#8221; wondered
+Paula, her brown cheek beside her mistress,
+&#8220;is he not handsome!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;For mercy sake, Paula,&#8221; chided Tharon
+laughing, &#8220;I believe you&#8217;d look for beauty in th&#8217;
+ol&#8217; Nick himself if he rode up. But I&#8217;ve seen
+this man before.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where? When?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In town that day I met Courtrey an&#8217; Service.
+I remember seen&#8217; him come into line as I backed
+out&ndash;&ndash;he was standin&#8217; between th&#8217; racks an&#8217; th&#8217;
+porch, somewhere.&#8221; And she narrowed her eyes
+and studied the rider as he came jogging up across
+the range.</p>
+<p>&#8220;H&#8217;m,&#8221; she said presently, &#8220;he does ride
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+funny. I bet he ain&#8217;t rode range much in <i>his</i> life.
+Stiff as a ramrod, an&#8217; no mistake.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then with an unconscious grace and poise that
+set well upon her as the mistress of Last&#8217;s, Tharon
+moved into the open door and waited.</p>
+<p>As the stranger came closer both girls subjected
+him to a frank and careful scrutiny that in any
+other place than Lost Valley would have been
+rudeness itself.</p>
+<p>Here it catalogued the stranger, set the style
+of his welcome.</p>
+<p>It left him stripped of surprise, outwardly,
+before he was within speaking distance.</p>
+<p>It told the observers that he was young, of some
+twenty-six or seven, that his face, the first point
+taken in with lightning swiftness&ndash;&ndash;was different
+from most faces they had ever seen, that it was
+open, smiling, easy, that he was straight as a
+ramrod, indeed, that he rode as if he feared
+nothing in the earth or the heavens, that he carried
+no gun, that he wore the peculiar uniform that
+Tharon had noticed before, and that there was
+something on his breast, a dark shield of some
+sort which made them think of Steptoe Service and
+his disgraced sheriff&#8217;s star. This thought brought
+a frown to Tharon&#8217;s brows, and it was there to
+greet the stranger when he rode up to the step and
+halted, his smart tan hat in his hand. The morning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span>
+sun burned warmly down on his dark hair,
+which was brushed straight back from his forehead
+in a way unknown in those parts. His dark
+eyes, slow and deep but somehow merry, took in
+the pretty picture in the door.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Miss Last?&#8221; he asked in a low voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Tharon promptly and waited.</p>
+<p>Every one waited in Lost Valley for a stranger
+to make known his business. Paula drew back
+behind her mistress.</p>
+<p>The man sat still on his horse and waited, too.
+The silence became profound. The hens cackling
+about the barns intruded sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said presently, &#8220;I am a stranger,
+and I came to see you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl in the doorway felt a hot surge of
+discomfort flare over her for the first time in her
+life for such a reason.</p>
+<p>There was something in the low voice that implied
+a lack, accused her of something. She
+resented it instantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If that is so,&#8221; she said slowly, &#8220;light.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man laughed delightedly, and swung
+quickly down, dropping his rein. Tharon noticed
+that. That much was natural. He held his hat
+against his breast with one hand and came forward
+with the same quickness, holding out the
+other. Tharon was not used to shaking hands
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
+with strange men. She gave her hand diffidently,
+because he so evidently expected it, and took it
+away swiftly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My name,&#8221; he said, &#8220;is Kenset&ndash;&ndash;David
+Kenset, and I am from Washington, D. C.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He might as well have said Timbuctoo. Tharon
+Last knew little outside her own environment.
+Words and names that had to do with unknown
+places were vague things to her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; she answered politely, &#8220;I make no
+doubt you&#8217;ve come far. Come in. Dinner&#8217;ll soon
+be ready,&#8221; and she moved back from the door
+with a smile that covered her pitiful ignorance as
+with a garment of gold. When Tharon smiled
+like that she was wholly adorable, and the man
+knew it at once.</p>
+<p>Why she had so quickly invited him in before
+he had fully declared himself, she did not know,
+unless it was because of that lack in her which his
+first words had implied.</p>
+<p>Old Anita, whose manners were the simple and
+perfect ones of the Mexican coupled to a kindly
+heart, had taught her how to comport.</p>
+<p>Her easy and constant association with the
+riders and <i>vaqueros</i> had dulled her somewhat, but
+she could be royal on occasion.</p>
+<p>Now she simply stepped back in the deep cool
+room where the <i>ollas</i> swung in the windows, smiled&ndash;&ndash;and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span>
+she was changed entirely from the girl of a
+few moments before.</p>
+<p>The man came in, laid his hat on the flat top
+of the melodeon, walked over to a chair and sat
+down. There was an ease about him, a taking-for-granted,
+that amazed Tharon beyond words.</p>
+<p>Then he looked frankly at her and began to
+talk as if he had known her always.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve come to live in Lost Valley, Miss Last,&#8221;
+he said, &#8220;for a long while, I think. Wish me
+luck.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come here to live?&#8221; said Tharon, &#8220;a settler?
+Goin&#8217; to homestead?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A quick suspicion seized her. Perhaps Washington
+was like Arizona, a place from which they
+imported gun men. Only this man wore no gun,
+and he had not a look of prowess. No. This
+man was different.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then what you goin&#8217; to do?&#8221; she asked as
+frankly as a child.</p>
+<p>&#8220;First,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;m going up where the pines
+grow yonder and build myself a house,&#8221; and he
+waved a hand toward the east where the ranges
+rolled up to the thickening fringes of the forest
+that marched back into the ramparts of the trail-less
+hills.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I want to find an ideal spot, a glade where
+the pines stand round the edges, with a spring of
+living water running down, and where I can look
+down and over the magnificent reaches of Lost
+Valley. I shall make me a home, and then I shall
+work.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ride?&#8221; asked the girl succinctly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ride? Of course, that will be a great part of
+that work.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who for?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked at her sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who for?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. What outfit?&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a hard quality in her voice. If he
+had come in to ride for Courtrey, why he must
+know at once that Last&#8217;s was no friend of his,
+now or ever.</p>
+<p>He caught the drift of her thought in part.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For no outfit, Miss Last,&#8221; he said with a
+gentle dignity. &#8220;I am in the employ of the
+United States Government.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A swift change came over Tharon&#8217;s face.</p>
+<p>Government!</p>
+<p>That was no word to conjure by in Lost Valley.
+Steptoe Service prated of Gov&#8217;ment. It was a
+farce, a synonym for juggled duty, a word to suggest
+the one-man law of the place, for even Courtrey,
+who made the sheriffs&ndash;&ndash;and unmade them&ndash;&ndash;did
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+it under the grandiloquent name of Government.
+She looked at him keenly, and there was a
+sudden hardening in her young eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I reckon, Mister,&#8221; she said coolly,
+&#8220;that you an&#8217; me can&#8217;t be friends.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you in earnest?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly am,&#8221; said Tharon. &#8220;I ain&#8217;t on
+good terms at present with anything that has t&#8217; do
+with law.&#8221;</p>
+<p>David Kenset leaned forward and looked into
+her face with his deep, compelling eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guessed as much from my first knowledge
+of you the other day,&#8221; he answered, &#8220;but we are
+on unfamiliar ground. You have a wrong conception
+of Government, a perverted idea of law
+and what it stands for.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, Mister,&#8221; said the girl rising. &#8220;We
+won&#8217;t argy. I asked you t&#8217; dinner, but I take it
+back. I ask ye t&#8217; forgive me my manners, but th&#8217;
+sooner we part th&#8217; better. Then we won&#8217;t be a-hurtin&#8217;
+each other&#8217;s feelin&#8217;s. I&#8217;m fer law, too,
+but it ain&#8217;t your kind, an&#8217; we ain&#8217;t likely to agree.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She picked up his hat from where it lay on the
+melodeon and fingered it a bit, smiling at him in
+the ingenuous manner that was utterly disarming.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span></p>
+<p>A slow dark flush spread over the man&#8217;s face.
+He laughed, however, and in reaching for the hat,
+caught two of her fingers, whether purposely or
+not, Tharon could not tell.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Admirable hospitality in the last frontier,&#8221;
+he said. &#8220;But perhaps I should not have expected
+anything different.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You make me ashamed,&#8221; said Tharon
+straightly, &#8220;but Last&#8217;s ain&#8217;t takin&#8217; chances these
+days. You may belong to Government, an&#8217; you
+may belong to Courtrey, an&#8217; I&#8217;m against &#8217;em
+both.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She walked with him to the door, stepped out,
+as if with some thought to soften her unprecedented
+treatment of the stranger under her roof.
+She noted the trim figure of him in its peculiar
+garb, the proud carriage, the even and easy comportment
+under insult.</p>
+<p>From his saddle he untied a package wrapped
+in paper.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you please take this?&#8221; he asked lightly,
+holding it out. &#8220;Just on general principles.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But she shook her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t take no favours from you when I&#8217;ve
+just took stand against you, can I?&#8221; she asked
+in turn.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, of all the ridiculous&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man laughed again shortly, tossed the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
+package on the step, mounted, whirled and rode
+away without a backward glance.</p>
+<p>Tharon stood frowning where he left her until
+the brown horse and its rider were well down
+along the levels toward Black Coulee.</p>
+<p>Then a sigh at her shoulder recalled her and
+she turned to see the wistful dark face of Paula
+gazing raptly in the same direction.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He was so handsome, Se&ntilde;orita,&#8221; said the
+girl, &#8220;to be so hardly dealt with.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Paula,&#8221; said the mistress bitingly, &#8220;will you
+remember who you&#8217;re talkin&#8217; to? Do you want
+to go back to th&#8217; Pomos under th&#8217; Rockface?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Saints forbid!&#8221; cried Paula instantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then keep your sighs for Jos&eacute; an&#8217; mind your
+manners. Pick up that bundle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Swiftly and obediently the girl did as she was
+told, unrolling the wrapper from the package.</p>
+<p>She brought to light the meal-sack which
+Tharon had dropped that day on Baston&#8217;s porch.</p>
+<p>A slow flush stained Tharon&#8217;s cheeks at the
+sight, and she went abruptly into the house.</p>
+<p>When the riders came in at night she told them
+in detail about the whole affair, for Last&#8217;s and its
+men were one, their interests the same.</p>
+<p>They held counsel around the long table in the
+dining room under the hanging lamp, and Conford
+at her right was spokesman for the rest.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s somethin&#8217; official, all right, I make no
+doubt, Tharon,&#8221; he said when he had listened
+attentively, &#8220;but what or who I don&#8217;t know. I
+heard from Dixon about him comin&#8217; into Corvan
+that day, an&#8217; that he had rode far. No one knows
+his business, or what he&#8217;s in Lost Valley for. He&#8217;s
+some mysterious.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s goin&#8217; to stay, so he told me,&#8221; went on
+the girl, &#8220;goin&#8217; to build a house up where the
+pines begin an&#8217; means to ride. But how&#8217;ll he live?
+What an&#8217; who will he ride for? He said for
+Government.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s he mean by that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Search me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wasn&#8217;t there nothin&#8217; about him different?
+Nothin&#8217; you could judge him by?&#8221; asked
+Billy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, there was. He wore somethin&#8217; on his
+breast, a sign, a dull-like thing with words an&#8217;
+letters on it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So?&#8221; said Conford quickly, &#8220;what was it
+like, Tharon? Can&#8217;t you describe it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can with a pencil,&#8221; said Tharon, rising.
+&#8220;Come on in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She went swiftly to the big desk in the other
+room and rummaged among its drawers for paper
+and pencil. These things were precious in Lost
+Valley.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span></p>
+<p>Jim Last had had great stacks of paper, neat,
+glazed sheets with faint lines upon them, made
+somewhere in that mysterious &#8220;below&#8221; and
+brought in by pack train. It was on one of these,
+with the distinctive words &#8220;Last&#8217;s Holding&#8221;
+printed at the top, that the thirty men had signed
+themselves into the new law of the Valley.</p>
+<p>To Tharon these sheets had always been magic,
+invested with grave dignity.</p>
+<p>Anything done upon them was of import,
+irrevocable.</p>
+<p>Thus had Jim Last inscribed the semi-yearly
+letters that went down the Wall with the cattle,
+or for supplies.</p>
+<p>Now she spread a shining pad under the light,
+sat down in her father&#8217;s chair and began, carefully
+and minutely to reproduce the badge that
+meant authority of a sort, yet was not a sheriff&#8217;s
+star.</p>
+<p>The riders, clustered at her shoulder, watched
+the thing take shape and form. At the end of
+twenty painstaking minutes Tharon straightened
+and looked up in the interested faces.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There,&#8221; she said, &#8220;an&#8217; its dull copper
+colour!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And this was the shield with its unknown
+heraldry which Conford took up and studied carefully
+for a long time.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span></p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-097.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 106px; height: 121px;' /><br />
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Forest Service,&#8217;&#8221; he read aloud, &#8220;&#8216;Department
+of Agriculture.&#8217; Well, so far as I can see,
+it ain&#8217;t so terrifyin&#8217;. That last means raisin&#8217;
+things, like beets an&#8217; turnips an&#8217; so on, an&#8217; as for
+th&#8217; forest part, why, if he stays up in his &#8216;fringe o&#8217;
+pines&#8217; I guess we ain&#8217;t got no call to kick. Don&#8217;t
+you worry, Tharon, about this new bird.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m a darned sight more worried about that
+other one, th&#8217; Arizona beauty which Courtrey&#8217;s
+got in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Forget th&#8217; gun man, Burt,&#8221; said Billy, &#8220;this
+feller&#8217;s a heap more interestin&#8217; to me, for I&#8217;ve got
+a hunch he&#8217;s a poet. Now who on this footstool
+but a poet would come ridin&#8217; into Lost Valley with
+his badge o&#8217; beets an&#8217; his line o&#8217; talk about &#8216;fringes
+o&#8217; pines&#8217; an&#8217; &#8216;runnin&#8217; streams,&#8217; to quote Tharon?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Even poets are human, you young limb,&#8221;
+drawled Curly in his soft voice, &#8220;an&#8217; I&#8217;m sorry
+for him if he starts your &#8216;interest,&#8217; so to speak.
+He&#8217;ll need all his poetic vision t&#8217; survive.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope, Billy,&#8221; said Tharon severely, and with
+lofty inconsistency, &#8220;that you&#8217;ll remember your
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span>
+manners an&#8217; not start anything. Last&#8217;s is in for
+trouble enough without any side issues.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;True,&#8221; said the boy instantly, &#8220;I&#8217;ll promise
+to leave th&#8217; poet alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then the talk fell about the new well that had
+taken the place of the old Crystal and which was
+proving a huge success.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t draw her dry,&#8221; said Bent Smith, &#8220;pulled
+all of three hours with Nick Bob an&#8217; Blue Pine
+yesterday an&#8217; never even riled her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s good as th&#8217; Gold Pool or th&#8217; Silver
+Hollow now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re some range man t&#8217; make any such a
+comparison,&#8221; said Curly with conviction, &#8220;there
+ain&#8217;t no artificial water-well extent that can hold a
+candle t&#8217; th&#8217; real livin&#8217; springs of a cattle country,
+when they&#8217;re such bubblin&#8217;, shinin&#8217; beauties as th&#8217;
+Springs of Last&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re right, Curly,&#8221; said Tharon quietly
+from under the light, &#8220;there&#8217;s nothin&#8217; like them.
+They must be th&#8217; blessin&#8217;s of God, an&#8217; no mistake.
+They&#8217;re th&#8217; stars at night, an&#8217; th&#8217; winds an&#8217; th&#8217;
+sunshine. They&#8217;re th&#8217; lovers of th&#8217; horses, th&#8217;
+treasure of th&#8217; masters. I love my springs.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So do th&#8217; herds,&#8221; put in Jack Masters.
+&#8220;They&#8217;ll come fast at night now because they can
+smell th&#8217; water far off, an&#8217; it&#8217;s gettin&#8217; pretty dry
+on th&#8217; range.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; sighed Tharon, &#8220;it&#8217;s summer now, an&#8217;
+Jim Last died in spring. A whole season
+gone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A whole season had gone, indeed, since that
+tragic night.</p>
+<p>Last&#8217;s Holding had missed its master at each
+turn and point. A thousand times did Conford,
+the foreman, catch himself in the act of going
+to the big room to find him at his desk, a big, vital
+force, intent on the accounts of the ranch, a thousand
+times did he long for his keen insight. The
+<i>vaqueros</i> missed him and his open hand.</p>
+<p>The very dogs at the steps missed him, and so
+did El Rey, waiting in his corral for the step that
+did not come, the strong hand on his bit.</p>
+<p>And how much his daughter missed him only
+the stars and the pale Virgin knew.</p>
+<p>For the next few days following the short,
+awkward visit of the stranger Tharon felt a
+prickle of uneasiness under her skin at every
+thought of it. There was something in the memory
+that confused and distressed her, a feeling of
+failure, of a lack in her that put her in a bad light
+to herself.</p>
+<p>She knew that, instinctively, she had been protecting
+her own, that since Last&#8217;s had stepped out
+in the light against Courtrey she must take no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span>
+chance. But should she have taken back the common
+courtesy of the offered meal? Would it not
+have been better to let him stay and meet Conford
+who would have been in at noon?</p>
+<p>She vexed herself a while with these questions,
+and then dismissed them with her cool good
+sense.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s done,&#8221; she told herself, &#8220;an&#8217; can&#8217;t be
+helped. An&#8217; yet, there was somethin&#8217; about him,
+somethin&#8217; that made me think of Jim Last himself&ndash;&ndash;somethin&#8217;
+in his quiet eyes&ndash;&ndash;as if they had
+both come from somewhere outside Lost Valley
+where they grow different men. It was a&ndash;&ndash;bigness,
+a softness. I don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And with that last wistful thought she forgot
+all about the incident and the man, for the prediction
+of Jameson that dusk at the head of Rolling
+Cove became reality.</p>
+<p>Dixon, who lived north along the Wall near
+the Pomo settlement, lost ten head of steers, all
+white and deeply earmarked, unmistakable cattle
+that could not be disguised.</p>
+<p>Courtrey was resenting the vague something
+in the air that was crystallizing into resistance
+about him.</p>
+<p>Word of the stealing ran about the Valley
+like a grass fire, more boldly than usual.</p>
+<p>It came to Last&#8217;s in eighteen hours, brought by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
+a horseman who had carried it to many a lonely
+homestead.</p>
+<p>Tharon received it with a thrill of joy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good enough,&#8221; she said, &#8220;no use wasting
+time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And she sent out a call for the thirty men.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_V_THE_WORKING_OF_THE_LAW' id='CHAPTER_V_THE_WORKING_OF_THE_LAW'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<h3>THE WORKING OF THE LAW</h3>
+</div>
+<p>It was a clear, bright morning in early summer.
+All up and down Lost Valley the little
+winds wimpled the grass where the cattle
+grazed, and brought the scent of flowers. In the
+thin, clear atmosphere points and landmarks stood
+out with wonderful boldness.</p>
+<p>The homesteads set in the endless green like
+tiny gems, the stupendous face of the Wall,
+stretching from north to south and sheer as a
+plumb line for a thousand feet, was fretted with
+a myriad of tiny seams and crevasses not ordinarily
+visible.</p>
+<p>Far up at the Valley&#8217;s head against the huge
+uplift of the jumbled and barren rocklands the
+scattered squat buildings of the Stronghold
+brooded like a monster.</p>
+<p>Spread out on the velvet slopes below lay the
+herds that belonged to it, sleek fat cattle, guarded
+carelessly by a few lazy and desultory riders.
+Courtrey was too secure in his insolent might to
+take those rigid and untiring precautions which
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
+were the only price of safety to the lesser men of
+the community. Toward the south where the Valley
+narrowed to the Bottle Neck and the Broken
+Bend went out, there shimmered and shone like
+a silver ribbon hung down the cliff the thin, long
+shower of Vestal&#8217;s Veil fall.</p>
+<p>The roar of it could be heard for miles like the
+constant and incessant wail of winds in time-worn
+ca&ntilde;ons.</p>
+<p>Along the floor of the Cup Rim range, sunken
+and hidden from the upper levels, there rode a
+compact group of horsemen. They went abreast,
+in column of fours, and they were armed to the
+teeth, a bristling presentation. All in all there
+were forty-two of them and at their head rode
+Tharon on El Rey, a slim and gallant young
+figure.</p>
+<p>Her bright hair, tied with a scarlet ribbon,
+shone under her wide hat like an aureole. She
+talked with Conford who rode beside her, and now
+and then she smiled, for all the world as if she
+went to some young folks&#8217; gathering, instead of to
+the first uncertain issue of blind mob law against
+outlaws.</p>
+<p>But if she felt a lightness of excitement in her
+heart it was more than actuated by the grim and
+quiet band that followed.</p>
+<p>They knew&ndash;&ndash;and she knew, also&ndash;&ndash;that what
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span>
+they did this day, in the open sunlight, meant
+savage strife and bloodshed for some as sure as
+death.</p>
+<p>For two hours they rode across the sunken
+range where the cottonwoods and aspens made a
+lovely and mottled shade, to reach at last the
+sharp ascent to the uplands above. When they
+topped the rim and started forward, the huge
+herds of Courtrey lay spread before them, bright
+as paint on the living green. Two thousand cattle
+grazed there in peace and plenty. Here and
+there a rider sat his horse in idleness. At the
+first sight of the solidly formed mass coming out
+of the Cup Rim on to the levels, these riders
+straightened in their saddles and rode in closer
+to their charges.</p>
+<p>The eyes of the newcomers went over the bright
+pattern of the grazing cattle. A motley bunch
+they were, red, black and white, with here and
+there descendants of the yellows which none but
+John Dement had ever owned in Lost Valley.
+Dement, riding near the head of the line saw this
+and muttered in his beard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thar&#8217;s some o&#8217; mine,&#8221; he said pointing, &#8220;th&#8217;
+very ones that was stampeded. I&#8217;d know &#8217;em in
+hell.&#8221;</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-104.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 384px; height: 471px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center; width: 384px;'>
+SHE TALKED WITH CONFORD WHO RODE BESIDE HER AND NOW AND THEN SHE SMILED<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>With the nearing of the line of horsemen a
+rider detached himself from the right of the herd
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span>
+and went sailing away across the levels toward the
+distant Stronghold.</p>
+<p>Quick as a flash Tharon Last lifted the rifle that
+lay ready on her pommel and sent a shot whining
+toward him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just to show we mean business,&#8221; she muttered
+to herself.</p>
+<p>The cowboy caught the warning and drew his
+running horse up to slide ten feet on its haunches.</p>
+<p>He had meant to warn his boss, but a chance
+was one thing, certainty another.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dixon&ndash;&ndash;Dement,&#8221; called Tharon rising in her
+stirrups, &#8220;when we get to work you pick out as
+near as you can, cattle that look like yours, an&#8217; th&#8217;
+same amount&ndash;&ndash;not a head more.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then they swung forward at a run and swept
+down along the left flank of the herd. Here a
+rider raised his arm and fired point blank at the
+leaders. One-two-three his six-gun counted. He
+was a lean youngster, scarce more than a boy, a
+wild admirer of Courtrey, and he stood his defence
+with a sturdy gallantry that was worthy of
+a better cause.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Damn you!&#8221; he yelled, standing in his stirrups,
+&#8220;what&#8217;s this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Law!&#8221; pealed the high voice of Tharon as
+El Rey thundered down toward him. Then
+Buford, riding midway of the sweeping line, fired
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span>
+and the boy dropped his gun, swayed and clung
+to his saddle horn as his horse bolted and tore off
+at a tangent to the right, away from the herd.</p>
+<p>&#8220;God!&#8221; cried the girl hoarsely, &#8220;I wish we
+didn&#8217;t have to! Did you kill him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; called Buford sharply, &#8220;broke his arm.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon, to whom the high blue vault had
+seemed suddenly to swing in strange circles, shut
+her teeth with a click.</p>
+<p>Abreast of the cattle she swerved El Rey aside,
+drew her guns and waited.</p>
+<p>In among the grazing cattle, many of which
+had raised startled heads to eye the intruders,
+went the men. They worked swiftly and deftly.
+They knew that they were in plain sight of the
+Stronghold and expected every moment to see
+Courtrey and a dozen riders come boiling out.
+Those cowboys who had been in charge of the
+herd, sat where they were, without a move. Out
+of the bright mass the settlers cut first the ten
+head of steers, as nearly as possible all white, to
+take the place of Dixon&#8217;s band. Thomas and
+Black stood guard over them. Then they went
+back and took out yellows and yellow-spotted to
+the number of one hundred. It was fast work,
+the fastest ever done on the Lost Valley ranges,
+and every nerve was strained like a singing wire.</p>
+<p>Under the dust cloud raised by the plunging
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
+hoofs, the whirling horses, the workers kept as
+close together as possible.</p>
+<p>They rounded up the cut-outs, bunched them
+together compactly and swinging into a half circle,
+drove them rapidly back toward the oak-fringed
+edge of the Cup Rim. They passed close to where
+the slim boy stood by his horse, trying to wind
+the big red kerchief from his neck about his right
+arm from which the blood ran in a bright stream.
+Tharon swung out of her course and shot toward
+him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here,&#8221; she cried swiftly, &#8220;let me tie it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To hell with you,&#8221; said the lad bitterly, raising
+blazing eyes to her face. &#8220;You&#8217;ve made me
+false t&#8217; Courtrey. I&#8217;d die first.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Die, then!&#8221; she flung back, &#8220;an&#8217; tell your
+master that th&#8217; law is workin&#8217; in this Valley at
+last!&#8221;</p>
+<p>As the last rider of the cavalcade went down
+over the slanting edge of the Cup Rim there came
+the sound of quick shots snapping in the distance
+and the belated sight of riders streaming down
+from the Stronghold hurried the descent.</p>
+<p>They had reached the level floor of the sunken
+range and spread out upon it for better travelling
+before Courtrey and his men, some ten or fifteen
+riders, appeared on the upper crest.</p>
+<p>The settlers stopped instantly at a call from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span>
+Conford, drew together behind the cattle, turned
+and faced them. They were too far away for
+speech, out of rifle range, but the still, grim
+defiance of that compact front halted the outlaw
+cattle king and his followers.</p>
+<p>For the first time in all his years of rising power
+in Lost Valley Courtrey felt a challenge. For the
+first time he knew that a tide was banking in full
+force against him. A red rage flushed up under
+his dark skin, and he raised a silent fist and shook
+it at the blue heavens.</p>
+<p>The grim watchers below knew that gesture,
+significant, majestic, boded ill to them.</p>
+<p>But Tharon Last, muttering to herself in the
+hatred that possessed her of late at sight of
+Courtrey, raised her own doubled fist and shook
+it high toward him, an answer, an acceptance of
+that challenge.</p>
+<p>Then they calmly turned and drove the recovered
+cattle down along the sloping levels at a
+fast trot.</p>
+<p>The die was struck. Lost Valley was no longer
+a stamping-ground for wrong and oppression. It
+had gone to war.</p>
+<p>That night the white and yellow herd bedded
+at the Holding, <i>vaqueros</i> rode about it all night
+long, quietly, softly under the stars. The settlers
+walked about, smoking, or sat silently in the darkened
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+living room. At midnight Tharon and young
+Paula made huge pots of coffee which they dispensed
+along with crullers.</p>
+<p>By dawn the cattle were well on their way,
+still safeguarded by the band of men, down toward
+the homesteads where they belonged.</p>
+<p>During that night of unlighted silence plans had
+been perfected in low voices, a name chosen for
+the band itself. They would call themselves the
+Vigilantes, as many another organization had
+called itself in the desperate straits that made its
+existence imperative.</p>
+<p>By sundown the hundred head had been driven,
+hot and tired, into John Dement&#8217;s corrals, the ten
+white steers were bedded by Black&#8217;s Spring over
+toward the Wall. They had farther to go and
+would not reach Dixon&#8217;s until the morning.</p>
+<p>And with each band there was a group of determined
+men.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Word of this exploit ran all over the Valley in
+a matter of hours. To each faction it had a deep
+significance.</p>
+<p>But speech concerning it was sparse as it had
+ever been anent the doings of Courtrey. A man&#8217;s
+tongue was a prisoner to his common sense those
+days.</p>
+<p>To Tharon Last, busy at her tasks about the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+Holding, it was a vital matter. She felt a strong
+surge, an uplift within her. She had begun the
+task she had set herself and solemn joy pervaded
+her being.</p>
+<p>But of all those whom it affected there was
+none to whom it meant what it did to Courtrey
+himself. In him it set loose something which
+burned in him like a consuming fire. Where he
+had thought of Tharon Last before with a certain
+intent, now he thought of her in a sort of madness.
+He was a king himself, in a manner, an eagle, a
+prowler of great spaces, a rule-or-ruin force.
+Down there on the sloping floor of the Cup Rim
+had been a fit mate for him in the slim girl who
+had shaken her fist back at him in strong defiance.</p>
+<p>He felt his blood leap hot at the thought of her.
+She was built of fighting stuff. No pale willy-nilly,
+like some he knew who wept whole fountains
+daily. No&ndash;&ndash;neither was she like Lola of the
+Golden Cloud, past-master of men because she had
+belonged to many.</p>
+<p>Courtrey, who had run life&#8217;s gamut himself,
+thought of Tharon Last&#8217;s straight young purity
+with growing desire.</p>
+<p>It began to obsess him with a mania. His
+temper, bad at all times, became worse. Ellen,
+the veriest slave through her devotion to him,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
+found her life at the Stronghold almost unbearable.</p>
+<p>She was a white woman, like a lily, with transparent
+flesh where the blue veins showed. Her
+pale blue eyes, like the painted eyes of a china
+doll, were red with constant tears under their corn-silk
+lashes. The pale gold hair on her temples
+was often damp with the sweat that comes with
+agony of soul.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It jes&#8217; seems I can&#8217;t live another minute,
+Cleve,&#8221; she would tell her brother who lived at
+the Stronghold, &#8220;seems like I don&#8217;t want to. Th&#8217;
+very sunlight looks sad t&#8217; me, an&#8217; I hate th&#8217; tree-toads
+that are singin&#8217; eternal down in th&#8217; runnel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>This brother, her only relative, would stir uneasily
+at such times and the fire that shot from his
+eyes, light, too, under the same corn-silk lashes,
+was a rare thing. Nothing but this had ever set
+it burning. He was a slight man, narrow-chested
+and thin. They had been from run-down stock,
+these two, a strain that seemed indigenous to the
+Valley, without other memories. Their name was
+Whitmore, and they had lived all their lives in a
+poor cove up beyond the Valley&#8217;s head where the
+barren rocklands came down out of the skies.
+There had been, besides themselves, only the
+father and mother, worn-out workers, who had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span>
+died at last, leaving the brother and sister to live
+as best they might in the solitudes.</p>
+<p>Here Courtrey had found them, both in their
+teens, and he had promptly taken them both along
+with their scant affairs. It was about the only
+thing to his credit that he had married Ellen, hard
+and fast enough, with the offices of a bona fide
+justice, a matter which he had regretted often
+enough in the years that followed.</p>
+<p>It was this knowledge which set the light burning
+in Cleve&#8217;s eyes.</p>
+<p>He knew how Ellen loved Courtrey.</p>
+<p>He knew also that Lola of the Golden Cloud
+had made the cattle king step lively for over a
+year. He saw the daily growing impatience with
+which Courtrey regarded his marriage.</p>
+<p>He resented with every ounce of the repressed
+spirit there was in him the girl&#8217;s poor standing
+at the Stronghold.</p>
+<p>Black Bart and Wylackie Bob treated her with
+no more consideration than any of the Indian
+serving women. They swore and drank before
+her with an abandon that made the young man&#8217;s
+nails cut deep in his palms at times, the blood
+mount high in his white cheeks.</p>
+<p>And Ellen drooped like a lily on a broken stem,
+brooded over her husband&#8217;s absences, and hated
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span>
+the name of Lola, used openly to her as a cruel
+joke.</p>
+<p>The Stronghold was a huge place. The house
+was like the majority of the habitations of the
+region, built of adobe and able to stand siege
+against a regiment. It was shaded by cottonwoods
+and spruces, flanked by corrals and barns
+and sheds until the place resembled a small town.</p>
+<p>Cleve Whitmore rode for Courtrey but his
+heart was not in Courtrey&#8217;s game. He was slim
+and sullen, dissatisfied, slow of speech, repressed.</p>
+<p>He worked early and late and thought a lot.</p>
+<p>Courtrey, who kept close count of the favours
+he did for others, considered Cleve deep in his debt
+and paid him a niggardly wage. So it was, that
+when the newly organized Vigilantes under
+Tharon Last came out in broad day and took back
+their own from Courtrey&#8217;s herds, there was one
+at the Stronghold who laughed quietly to himself
+in sympathy with the defy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good enough,&#8221; he told the wide sky and the
+silence as he rode herd under the beetling rocklands,
+&#8220;hope t&#8217; God some one gits him good an&#8217;
+plenty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Courtrey was hard to get. His aides and
+lieutenants were picked men. He was like a king
+in his domain.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span></p>
+<p>But if strife and ferment seethed under the
+calm surface in Lost Valley, its surges died before
+they reached the rolling slopes where the forests
+came down to the eastern plains. Up among the
+pines and oaks, the ridges and the age-worn,
+tumbled rocks David Kenset had found his ideal
+spot, his glade where the pines stood guard and a
+talking stream ran down. High on the wooded
+slopes he had set his mark, begun that home of
+which he had told Tharon. From Corvan he
+had hired three men, a teamster by the name of
+Drake and his two sons, and together they had
+felled and dressed trees enough for a cabin, laid
+them up with clay brought five miles on mule-back,
+roofed the structure with shakes made on the
+spot with a froe, and the result was pleasing, indeed,
+to this man straight from the far eastern
+cities.</p>
+<p>The cabin faced southwest, set at an angle to
+command the circled glade, the dropping slopes,
+the distant range lands, the wooded line of the
+Broken Bend, and farther off the levels and slants
+of the gently undulating Valley, with the mighty
+Rockface of the Wall rising like a mystery beyond.
+Kenset cut all trees at the west and south of the
+glade, thus forming a splendid doorway into his
+retreat, through which all this shone in, like
+those wonderful etched landscapes one sometimes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span>
+sees in tiny toys that fit the narrowed eye.</p>
+<p>Before the cabin was finished, Starret, who ran
+the regular pack-train, brought in a string of
+trunks and boxes which caused much curious comment
+in Corvan. These came up, after much
+delay, to be dumped in the door yard of the house
+in the glade, and Kenset felt as if the gateway to
+the outside world might close and he care very
+little.</p>
+<p>Here was the wilderness, in all verity, here was
+work, that greatest of boons, here were health and
+plenty and the hazard of outlawry, that he was
+beginning to dimly sense under the calmly flowing
+currents of Lost Valley.</p>
+<p>And here was Romance, as witness the slim girl
+who had backed out from a group of men that
+first day of his coming&ndash;&ndash;backed out with her guns
+upon them, himself included, and mounted a silver
+stallion, whose like he had not known existed. In
+fact, Kenset had thought he knew horses, but he
+stood in open-mouthed wonder before the horses
+of Lost Valley&ndash;&ndash;the magnificent Ironwood bays
+of Courtrey&#8217;s, with their wonderful long manes
+and tails that shone like a lady&#8217;s hair, the Finger
+Marks which he had seen once or twice, and
+marvelled at.</p>
+<p>With the opening of the boxes the cabin in the
+glade took on a look of home, of individuality. A
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span>
+big dark rug, woven of strong cord in green and
+brown, came out and went down on the rough
+floor, leather runners were flung on the two tables,
+a student lamp of nickel, a pair of old candlesticks
+in hammered brass, added their touch of gleam
+and shine to table and shelf-above-the-hearth, college
+pennants, in all the colours of the rainbow,
+were hung about the walls between four fine prints
+in sepia, gay cushions, much the worse for wear,
+landed in the handsome chairs, and lastly, but far
+from being least, three long shelves beneath the
+northern windows were filled to the last inch with
+books.</p>
+<p>When all these things had been put in place
+Kenset stood back and surveyed the room with a
+smile in his dark eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Some spot,&#8221; he said aloud, &#8220;some spot!&#8221;</p>
+<p>On the small table that was to do duty as a desk
+in the corner between the southwest window and
+the fireplace he stacked neatly a mass of literature,
+all marked with the same peculiar shield of
+the pine trees and the big U.&nbsp;S. that shone always
+on his breast.</p>
+<p>To the Drakes these things were of quick interest,
+but they asked no questions.</p>
+<p>When the last thing had been done to the cabin
+they set to work and built a smaller cabin for the
+good brown horse which Kenset had bought far
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+down to the south and west in the Coast Country,
+for Sam Drake told him that Lost Valley
+locked its doors to all the world in winter. He
+would house his only friend as he housed himself.</p>
+<p>When the Drakes, father and sons, were gone
+back down to Corvan for good, Kenset stretched
+himself, physically and mentally, and began his
+life in the last frontier.</p>
+<p>He began to be out from dawn to dark riding
+the ridges, exploring the wooded slopes, the
+boldly upsweeping breasts of the nameless mountains,
+making friends with the rugged land. It
+was a beautiful country, hushed and silent, save for
+the soft song of the pines, the laughter of streams
+that ran to the Valley, cold as snow and clear as
+wind. Strange flowers nodded on tall stems in
+glade and opening, peeped from the flat earth by
+stone and moss-bed. Few birds were here,
+though squirrels were plentiful.</p>
+<p>Sometimes he saw a horseman sitting on some
+slant watching him intently. These invariably
+rode rapidly away on being discovered, not troubling
+to return his salute of a hand waved high
+above him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Funny tribe,&#8221; he told himself, half puzzled,
+half irritated, &#8220;their manners seem to be peculiarly
+their own. As witness the offered meal so
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
+calmly &#8216;taken back&#8217; by the young highway-woman
+of Last&#8217;s Holding.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That had rankled. Sane as Kenset was, as cool
+and self-contained, he could not repress a cold
+prickle of resentment at that memory.</p>
+<p>He had gone to the Holding in such good faith,
+actuated by a lively desire to see Tharon again
+after that one amazing meeting at Baston&#8217;s steps,
+and he had been so readily received at first, so
+coolly turned out at last. But he had not forgotten
+the look in the girl&#8217;s blue eyes, nor the disarming
+smile which had seemed to make it reasonable.</p>
+<p>She merely did not hold with law, and wanted
+him to have no false impressions. This incident
+furnished him with more food for thought than
+he was aware of in those first long days when he
+rode the silent forest.</p>
+<p>What was Tharon Last, anyway? What did
+she mean by those words of hers about his law
+and hers? That they were not the same sort of
+law&ndash;&ndash;that he and she would not agree?</p>
+<p>They could not be friends, she had said.</p>
+<p>Well, Kenset was not so sure of that. There
+was something about this girl of the guns that
+sent a thrill tingling in his blood already, made
+him recall each expression of her speaking face,
+each line of her lean young figure.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span></p>
+<p>He did not go near Last&#8217;s again, though his
+business took him far and by in the Valley, for the
+big maps, hung on a rack beyond his fireplace,
+covered full half the ranges thereof and stretched
+away into the mysterious and illimitable forests
+that went up and away into the eastern mountains.</p>
+<p>It was as if some fateful Power at Washington
+had set down a careless finger on a map of the
+U.\S.\A., and said to Kenset, &#8220;Here is your
+country,&#8221; without knowledge or interest. Sometimes
+he wondered if there was another forest
+in the land as utterly lost as this, as little known.</p>
+<p>But with this wonder came a thrill. He had read
+romances of the great West in his youth and felt
+a vague regret that he had not lived in the rollicking
+days of &#8217;49. Now as he rode his new domain
+he smiled to himself and thought that out of a
+modern college he had been set back half a century.
+Here was the rule of might, if he was not
+mistaken. Here was romance in its most vital
+and appealing form. Yes, he felt himself lucky.</p>
+<p>So he took up his life and his duties with a vim.
+He rode early and late, took notes and gathered
+data for his first reports, and set up for himself
+in Lost Valley a spreading antagonism.</p>
+<p>If he rode herd on the range lands, the timber
+sections, there were those who rode herd on him.
+Not a movement of his that was not reported faithfully
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span>
+to Courtrey, not a coming or going that was
+not watched from start to finish.</p>
+<p>And the cattle king narrowed his eyes and listened
+to his lieutenants with growing disapproval.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Took up land, think?&#8221; he asked Wylackie
+Bob. &#8220;Homesteadin&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Wylackie shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; accordin&#8217; to entry,&#8221; he said, &#8220;no
+more&#8217;n th&#8217; cabin. Don&#8217;t see no signs of tillin&#8217;.
+He ain&#8217;t fencin&#8217;, nor goin&#8217; to fence, as near as I
+can find out.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Cattle?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No. Nor horses.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hogs, then?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Damn it! maybe it&#8217;s sheep!&#8221; and the red
+flush rose in the bully&#8217;s dark cheeks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t think so. Seems like he&#8217;s after somethin&#8217;,
+but what it is I can&#8217;t make out.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But it was not long before the Stronghold
+solved the mystery, for Kenset rode boldly in one
+day and introduced himself.</p>
+<p>It was mid-afternoon, for the cabin in the glade
+lay a long way from the Valley&#8217;s head, and the
+whole big place lay silent as death in the summer
+sun.</p>
+<p>The Indian serving women were off in the
+depths somewhere, the few <i>vaqueros</i> left at home
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span>
+were out about the spreading corrals, and all the
+men that counted at the ranch had ridden into
+Corvan early in the day.</p>
+<p>Only Ellen, pale as a flower, her sweet mouth
+drooping, sat listlessly on the hard beaten earth at
+the eastern side of the squat house where the
+spruce trees grew, her hands folded in her lap, a
+sunbonnet covering the golden mass of her hair.</p>
+<p>At the sound of his horse&#8217;s hoofs on the stone-flagged
+yard Kenset saw her start, half rise, fling
+a startled look at him and then sink back, as if even
+the advent of a stranger was of slight import in
+the heavy current of her dull life.</p>
+<p>He came in close, drew up, and, with his hat
+in his hand, sat smiling down at her. To Kenset
+it was more natural to smile than not to.</p>
+<p>The girl, for she was scarce more, looked up at
+him and he saw at once, even under the disfiguring
+headgear, that here was a breaking heart laid open
+for all eyes. The very droop and tremble of the
+lips were proof.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mrs. Courtrey?&#8221; he asked gently.</p>
+<p>At the words, the smile, the unusual courtesy of
+the removed hat, Ellen rose from her chair, a tall,
+slim wisp of a woman, whose blue-veined hands
+were almost transparent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she said, and waited.</p>
+<p>That little waiting, calm, unruffled, made him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span>
+think sharply of Tharon Last who had waited
+also for his accounting for himself.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am Kenset,&#8221; he said, &#8220;of over in the foothills.
+Is your husband at home?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Ellen, &#8220;he&#8217;s gone in t&#8217; Corvan.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a world of meaning in the inflection.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes? Now that&#8217;s too bad. It&#8217;s taken me a
+long time to come and I particularly wished to see
+him. Do you mind if I wait?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, no,&#8221; said Ellen a bit reluctantly, &#8220;no,
+sir, I guess not.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset swung off the brown horse and dropped
+the rein.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tired, Captain?&#8221; he asked whimsically, rubbing
+the sweaty mane, while the animal drew a
+long whistling breath and in turn rubbed the sticky
+brow band on its forehead on Kenset&#8217;s arm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Looks like he&#8217;s thirsty,&#8221; said Ellen presently.
+&#8220;There&#8217;s a trough round yonder at th&#8217; back,&#8221;
+and she waved a long hand.</p>
+<p>Kenset led Captain around back where a living
+spring sang and gurgled into a section of tree,
+deeply hollowed and covered with moss.</p>
+<p>When he came back to the shade the woman
+had brought from some near place a second chair,
+and he dropped gratefully into it, weary from his
+long ride.</p>
+<p>He laid his hat on the earth beside him and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
+smoothed the sleek, dark hair back from his
+forehead.</p>
+<p>Ellen sat still and watched him with a steady
+gaze.</p>
+<p>She was finding him strange. She looked at his
+olive drab garments, at the trim leather leggings
+that encased his lower limbs, at his smooth hands,
+at his face, and lastly at the dark shield on his
+breast.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Law?&#8221; she asked succinctly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; smiled Kenset, &#8220;after a fashion.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She moved uneasily in her chair, and the man
+had a sudden feeling of pity for her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not as you mean, Mrs. Courtrey,&#8221; he hastened.
+&#8220;I am in the United States Forest Service,
+if you know what that is.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Ellen, &#8220;I don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is simply a service for the conservation
+of the timber of this country,&#8221; he explained gently,
+but he saw that he was not making it clear.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The saving of the trees,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;the
+care of the forests.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; she said, relieved.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We look after the ranges, protect the woods
+from fire, and so on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look after th&#8217; ranges? How?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Regulate grazing, grant permits.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Permits?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221; And seeing that at last he had caught
+her interest, Kenset talked quietly for an hour
+and told her more than he had vouchsafed any
+other in Lost Valley about his work.</p>
+<p>Gradually, however, he fell to talking to amuse
+her, for he saw the emptiness behind the big blue
+eyes, the aching void which there was nothing to
+fill, neither love nor hope.</p>
+<p>As the sun sank lower toward the west Ellen
+took off the atrocity of calico and starch, and he
+saw with wonder the amazing beauty of her ropes
+of hair.</p>
+<p>When he ceased talking the silence became profound,
+for she had nothing to say and speech did
+not come easy to her anyway. He did not know
+that at the windows and behind the door-jambs of
+the deep old house were clustered almost a
+dozen dusky women and children, drawn from
+all over the place and listening in utter
+silence.</p>
+<p>Unconsciously he had drifted back to his life in
+the outside world, encouraged by the absorbing
+interest of the pale eyes that never left his face.
+He told Ellen of boat races on the Hudson, of
+theatres on Broadway, of college pranks and frolics,
+ranged over half the continent in little story
+and snatch of description.</p>
+<p>Neither one noticed how the shadows were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
+lengthening, nor that the sun had dropped in
+majesty behind the mighty Wall.</p>
+<p>It took the sound of running horses, many of
+them coming up along the slopes, to bring Kenset
+back to the present with a snap, to make the
+woman reach swiftly for the bonnet and clap it
+on her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mrs. Courtrey,&#8221; said Kenset hurriedly, &#8220;this
+has been the first real talk I have had with any
+of my neighbours, and I want to thank you for it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; quavered the woman, &#8220;I don&#8217;t know
+as I&#8217;d ought to a-let you stayed! Mebby I&#8217;d
+oughtn&#8217;t. But&ndash;&ndash;but seems like you bein&#8217; so different,
+an&#8217; I not seein&#8217; no one, come day in day out,
+w&#8217;y I&ndash;&ndash;I&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; he returned quickly, understanding.
+&#8220;You did just right. I wanted to stay.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then he rose to his feet and there came the
+thunder of the horses, the noise of men stopping
+from a run, dismounting.</p>
+<p>Ellen rose and he followed her around the
+corner of the house to the door yard.</p>
+<p>As they waited, Courtrey, clad in dark leather
+chaps, his guns swinging, came toward them. At
+sight of Kenset he stopped short and an oath rolled
+from his lips. The kerchief at his neck was turned
+knot-back and hung like a glob of crimson blood
+upon his breast.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span></p>
+<p>Under his hat, set at an angle, his dark hair
+fluffed strangely.</p>
+<p>He was a splendid figure of a man, broad
+shouldered, slim hipped.</p>
+<p>Now he looked hard at the stranger and a slow
+grin lifted his upper lip.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s this?&#8221; he said, and there was a light
+suspicion of thickness in his voice, &#8220;my wife got
+com-ny?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset heard the woman catch her breath, and
+the feeling of pity that had taken him at first for
+her intensified.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, Mr. Courtrey,&#8221; he said advancing, &#8220;but
+you have,&#8221; and he held out his hand. &#8220;I&#8217;m
+Kenset, from the foothills.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Courtrey, not four feet from him, did not look
+at the hand. Instead the glittering eyes under the
+hat-brim looked steadily into his with an expression
+that only one man in a hundred could have interpreted.</p>
+<p>That one man, however, stood by the watering
+trough, his hand on the neck of a drinking horse&ndash;&ndash;Cleve
+Whitmore who watched Courtrey without
+blinking.</p>
+<p>For a moment Kenset stood so, his hand extended,
+waiting. Then the colour rose in his face
+and he drew back the hand, raised it, scrutinized
+it smilingly, and put it quietly on his hip.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span></p>
+<p>Still smiling he raised his eyes again to Courtrey&#8217;s
+face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Courtrey,&#8221; he said, this time without the Mr.,
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve come to Lost Valley to <i>stay</i>. I had hoped
+to be friends with all my neighbours. It would
+have made my work easier. However, with or
+without, I stay.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he picked up his hat, set it on his head,
+walked over to the brown horse, flung up the
+rein, mounted and rode out of the Stronghold in
+utter silence.</p>
+<p>His face was flaming, the blood of outraged
+dignity and deep anger beat in his temples like a
+drum. As he rode farther away he heard the
+embarrassing silence broken by the hoarse shouts
+of laughter of half drunken men.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go to it,&#8221; he said aloud, clinching his fists on
+his saddle horn, &#8220;this is part of my duty. The
+Big Chief was right when he said, &#8216;If you help
+the Service to tame Lost Valley you&#8217;ve got your
+work cut out.&#8217; It&#8217;s a man-size job. I mustn&#8217;t
+doubt my ability.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VI_EL_REY_AND_BOLT' id='CHAPTER_VI_EL_REY_AND_BOLT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<h3>EL REY AND BOLT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Tharon Last and all her followers held
+themselves in readiness for anything in the
+days that followed the taking of the herds
+from Courtrey&#8217;s range.</p>
+<p>They locked their doors at night, stood double
+guard at corral and stable. Mothers scattered
+throughout Lost Valley gathered in their little
+ones and watched the slopes and levels when their
+men were out.</p>
+<p>But a strange quietness seemed to settle down
+upon them. That for which they waited did not
+materialize. Courtrey and his gun men rode into
+Corvan and up and down the Valley on mysterious
+missions which were as unsettling as open depredations,
+but nothing happened. In fact, Courtrey,
+burning with the new desire that was beginning to
+obsess him, was working out a new design.</p>
+<p>He began to draw away from Lola. His triweekly
+visits to the Golden Cloud dropped off a
+bit. He took to drifting about from saloon to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span>
+saloon, to being less pronounced in his frequenting
+of one or two places.</p>
+<p>His cold eyes, however, set in their narrow slits
+beneath the heavy brows, picked out every settler
+that he met and promised vague things for the
+future. He knew to a man who had ridden up
+from Last&#8217;s that day, and he meant that not one
+should escape full payment&ndash;&ndash;some time. Now
+he thought of the girl who had defied him and
+he waited with leaping pulse. The memory of
+that kiss, taken by violence at her western door,
+was with him night and day. She stood for right
+and the dignity of order. He meant, for a time,
+to play her hand.</p>
+<p>Therefore the settlers waited, and held their
+breath while they did so.</p>
+<p>And Courtrey took to riding much more alone,
+to watching the slopes and stretches with a hand
+at his hat-brim, shading his keen eyes. He looked
+far and wide in the golden summer land for the
+sight of a silver horse cutting down the wind
+with a slim girl in saddle.</p>
+<p>But Tharon was busy at the Holding and El
+Rey stamped and whistled in his paddock. The
+mistress knew that she had set stern tides flowing
+in the Valley, that sooner or later they were due
+to sweep away the peace and quiet that pervaded
+the cottonwoods and the singing springs. She
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span>
+knew that Courtrey waited, but she made the
+most of that waiting.</p>
+<p>Conford and Billy and the rest of the riders
+made strong bolts for all the doors of the house,
+reinforced the fences that held the herds at night,
+put trick locks on all the gates.</p>
+<p>But the time came when the close retreat became
+irksome to the girl, and she went from room to
+room in an uneasiness that was foreign to her
+calm and happy nature. She read over and over
+the two or three old books that had been at the
+Holding since she could remember, made new
+covers for the tables in the living room, kept the
+hands of the Virgin full of fresh offerings. But
+these things staled.</p>
+<p>She began to long for the distances, the open
+spaces, the feel of the swooping stallion under
+her sailing down the wind. Courtrey or no Courtrey,
+she could not fight it down. So, on a golden
+day when all the boys were out with the herds and
+only the Indian <i>vaqueros</i> left in charge by Conford
+were at the stables, she flung the big saddle
+with its silver studs and its sombre stain on El
+Rey, mounted and went out and away like the
+wind itself. Not since the day of the raid on
+Courtrey&#8217;s stolen herds had she been on El Rey&#8217;s
+back and the first long leap and drop of the great
+horse beneath her set the lights to sparkling in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span>
+her eyes, the blood to burning in her golden
+cheeks. She lay low on his neck and let him run,
+and her heart leaped up with lightness as it ever
+did when she rode in these thundering bursts.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-130.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 378px; height: 600px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center; width: 378px;'>
+IN FACT COURTREY, BURNING WITH THE NEW DESIRE THAT WAS BEGINNING TO OBSESS HIM, WAS WORKING OUT A NEW DESIGN<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>There was no other horse in Lost Valley like
+the great king! Neither Redbuck nor Golden nor
+Drumfire! Neither Sweetheart nor Westwind!
+No, nor any Ironwood Bay that came down from
+Courtrey&#8217;s Stronghold, Bolt and Arrow not
+excepted.</p>
+<p>Tharon laughed and stroked the king&#8217;s neck,
+thewed like steel beneath her hands. She had no
+fear of Courtrey and his hired killers. Sooner or
+later the issue would come, of course. Then she
+would kill the man as she had promised Jim Last,
+without a thought.</p>
+<p>Nay, she thought of Ellen, fragile white flower,
+of whom she had heard.</p>
+<p>A softening came about her young mouth at
+thought of her, a shadow flickered in her blue
+eyes for a moment. Then it was gone and she
+laughed, a whooping gale of joy, there alone in
+the green stretches between the earth and sky,
+with the note of El Rey&#8217;s speed steadily rising in
+her ears.</p>
+<p>It beat in her very heart, that singing note. She
+loved the king as she loved nothing else on earth,
+save only the memory of her father.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span></p>
+<p>She went south toward the Black Coulee and
+she thanked her stars that her riders were grazing
+the herds north toward the Cup Rim. Here there
+was none to say her nay, to urge her with loving
+solicitude to go back.</p>
+<p>The miles sped backward and she scarce noted
+their travel. She drew the king down a bit, slowed
+him from the swooping run, set him into the wonderful
+rock-and-away of the singlefoot and retied
+the ribbon on her hair. She wore no hat this day
+and the tawny cloud of her hair fluffed back from
+her forehead, straining at its bands, its loose ends
+standing up like fairy stuff all over her head. So,
+with her two arms held high above her and the
+reins in her teeth, she rode down by the mouth of
+Black Coulee&ndash;&ndash;and up from the depths of the
+rugged wash that split the plain for seven miles
+there came across her path a man on a great bay
+horse.</p>
+<p>Courtrey on Bolt! She knew the beautiful animal
+even so far away. It did not need the challenging
+toss of El Rey&#8217;s head, the piercing scream
+that rang from his open mouth across the silence,
+nor the sudden lunge and strain against the bit.</p>
+<p>That was Bolt, the mighty, and no mistake.
+None but Arrow carried his splendid head so
+regally, <i>none</i> other bore so huge a cloud of mane
+on his arching neck, so long a tail that spread like
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span>
+a fan between his knees and almost swept the
+ground.</p>
+<p>So, Courtrey came out of the Coulee to meet
+her! He would, maybe, force the issue. But
+Tharon was not ready for that. What was plain
+killing? No, she wanted more than that.
+She wanted to see him scourged and beaten,
+humiliated and robbed as he had robbed Lost
+Valley.</p>
+<p>So she turned El Rey, though it took the whole
+strength of her young arms, and headed him
+back the way they had come. With the first turn
+and straightening leap her heart thumped hard
+against her ribs.</p>
+<p>There, between her and the Holding, far distant,
+there were two riders&ndash;&ndash;and they rode bay
+horses, both!</p>
+<p>She made no doubt that they were Wylackie
+Bob and Black Bart, on Arrow and Slingshot.</p>
+<p>A sudden mist of fear came across her eyes. A
+tightening caught her throat. She looked around
+the illimitable spaces that stretched away on all
+sides. There was nothing in all the spreading
+plains but the three riders, sprung from nowhere,
+it seemed, and herself.</p>
+<p>Courtrey came rapidly up toward her, swinging
+a bit to the west. The others, set somewhat apart
+to right and left, bore down upon her. It looked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span>
+very much as if they meant to ride her down to the
+Black Coulee.</p>
+<p>Once in its sheltering deep wash she would be
+helpless, cut off from escape. The Black Coulee
+went back into the eastern hills, lost itself up in
+the rugged and torturous clefts and chasms that
+cut the unknown ramparts, dark with forest and
+mysterious.</p>
+<p>No! Not the Black Coulee and Courtrey to take
+her prisoner!</p>
+<p>She looked this way and that. Then she saw
+that toward her right she had some margin. There
+was space there to swing away from the man in
+front who came like the wind itself toward her.
+She caught the seeming of great speed and her
+heart leaped again.</p>
+<p>She recalled the day she had asked Jack Masters
+if Bolt could run like El Rey.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How do I know?&#8221; he had answered. &#8220;I
+know it was speed, an&#8217; that is all.&#8221; True enough.
+It was Bolt, coming like his namesake, down along
+the sloping stretches.</p>
+<p>But a great wave of exultation swept over her.
+She rose in her stirrups, shook an insulting hand
+above her, dropped on El Rey&#8217;s neck, swerved
+him east and swept away toward the lifting skirts
+of the wooded hills. She heard a yell behind her,
+glanced back and saw that the three Ironwoods
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span>
+were sweeping behind her, closing in together. It
+was to be a race at last!</p>
+<p>At last the whispered comparisons that had
+stirred under the speech of the Valley concerning
+the Ironwoods and the Finger Marks was to have
+justification. For the first and only time, in her
+knowledge, they were to run.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right!&#8221; cried Tharon aloud. &#8220;Come
+on, you bastards! It&#8217;s the king you come against
+an&#8217; Jim Last&#8217;s blood! You&#8217;ll never put a hand
+on either.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She struck her heels into El Rey&#8217;s flanks, leaned
+over her pommel, wished she was on the king&#8217;s
+bare back, reached her hands far out along the
+reins and began to call in his ear.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yeeoo! Yeeoo! Yeeoo!&#8221; she cried, a high,
+exciting note that keened in the singing wind. And
+El Rey, ever keen to run for no reason, finding
+himself called upon, stretched out his great body,
+dropped low to earth and began to run. The wind
+cut by Tharon&#8217;s face like a knife in the first few
+leaps.</p>
+<p>It shut her eyes in a dozen. She rode and
+laughed with a half sob in her throat. The
+thunder of the king&#8217;s iron-shod hoofs was in her
+ears like the roar of the spring freshets when the
+empty ca&ntilde;ons poured their temporary torrents
+down the Rockface into the Valley.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span></p>
+<p>She knew he was running as she had never
+ridden before. She had never called upon him
+before. It was like being adrift upon the wind.
+She heard the note of his speed rising in her
+ears. It was as it had ever been, save that it was
+a higher note, thinner, sharper. There was scarce
+a sense of touch beneath her, a lack of jar, of
+vibration, so evenly and smoothly did the shining
+hoofs take the grassy plain.</p>
+<p>Tears were in her eyes. Laughter was on her
+lips. This was speed indeed! She had a sick
+longing that Jim Last might see his two loved
+ones go!</p>
+<p>Then she gathered herself to turn her head
+across her leaning shoulder and look back.</p>
+<p>As her eyes swept into focus behind, the laughter
+slipped off her lips as if wiped by an invisible
+hand.</p>
+<p>There, the same distance away as when they
+started, rode Courtrey!</p>
+<p>No farther away!</p>
+<p>Bolt, shining in the sun, was keeping pace with
+El Rey!</p>
+<p>Farther back&ndash;&ndash;a little farther back&ndash;&ndash;was
+Arrow, running magnificently, too.</p>
+<p>A greater distance behind the two came
+Slingshot.</p>
+<p>Tharon was frightened. Not for herself. Not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
+for the intent of the men who came after her.
+Not for gun-fire, nor for capture.</p>
+<p>She was afraid for the king! Afraid that Bolt
+could hold that wonderful pace! Then a surging
+rage rose and sickened her.</p>
+<p>She leaned down again and called once more
+into the stallion&#8217;s ear and once more the note
+rose a notch. She felt that great pulsing seeming
+of reserve. Always when she called there was
+the answer. The plain swam beneath her like a
+blur. The thunder of the king&#8217;s hoofs was a single
+note also.</p>
+<p>Then Tharon raised her eyes and saw that she
+had left the open land behind. The mountains
+were rising swiftly before, she was sweeping up
+their skirts. Trees flew by. She heard the singing
+of waters. The forests seemed to come
+down out of the skies to meet her, dark, forbidding.</p>
+<p>She felt a sense of disaster, of helplessness.
+Where was she going, she and El Rey, with her
+enemies behind and coming fast? What was to
+be the end of the race? And then, all suddenly,
+the woods seemed to fall away on either side, a
+gateway to open up before her. A lovely open
+glade spread into the heart of the forest and the
+great king thundered in between the guarding
+pines. Like a silver flame he shot up the sloping
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span>
+floor, slowed, changed and came to stop before a
+cabin that sat securely at the glade&#8217;s head.</p>
+<p>With the crashing pound of El Rey&#8217;s ploughing
+hoofs upon the very stones at the step, a man
+came quickly from the interior of the cabin and
+stepped out, his hand lifted.</p>
+<p>Tharon Last, her hair beating on her shoulders,
+her face pale as ashes, her breast heaving, looked
+back toward the opening in the trees, and saw
+Courtrey swing in a wide arc and circle past to
+disappear toward the north.</p>
+<p>After him swept his two lieutenants, to fade
+swiftly from sight behind the shielding forest.</p>
+<p>A grim expression spread over the face of the
+man at the step as he, too, beheld the end of the
+vital play.</p>
+<p>Then he looked up at the girl on the silver
+stallion and his dark eyes were alight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s this?&#8221; he asked abruptly.</p>
+<p>Then Tharon seemed to become conscious of
+him for the first time.</p>
+<p>She looked down at him and the black pupils
+were spread across the azure of her eyes, making
+them strangely exciting in their straight glance.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This,&#8221; she said, panting, &#8220;is some of the law
+of Lost Valley. Courtrey&#8217;s law. That is the
+man I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to kill some day.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset felt the blood flow back upon his heart,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span>
+an icy flood. The words were simple, sincere,
+unconscious of dramatic effect. They were as final
+as death itself, and he dropped his eyes unconsciously
+to the two guns at her hips. He wondered
+why she had ridden without a shot this time.</p>
+<p>He found his lips suddenly dry and moistened
+them before he spoke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; he asked, and his voice sounded
+strange to him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because,&#8221; said Tharon simply, &#8220;because he
+kissed me&ndash;&ndash;once&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; shot my daddy&ndash;&ndash;in th&#8217; back,
+th&#8217; hound!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;God!&#8221; said Kenset</p>
+<p>For a moment there was silence while a bird
+called sharply from a pine top and the voice of
+the little stream became subtly audible.</p>
+<p>It seemed to the man that all his values of life
+had suddenly become shifted, changed. The commonplace
+had become the unreal, the unlikely the
+familiar.</p>
+<p>Guns and threats and racing horses with a
+woman for prize became on the moment natural
+events in this hidden setting.</p>
+<p>And what a woman she was! He looked up in
+her face again and saw there sweetness and
+strength, and grim purpose beyond his conception.
+He knew that her words were downright, and that
+they meant no more to her than duty to be done,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+a conscience cleared of debt. He glanced at the
+hand lying so quietly on the pommel and thought
+of it as stained with blood. At the fancy he
+frowned and mentally shook himself.</p>
+<p>Then, with an impulse wholly beyond his command,
+he reached up and laid his own hand over
+that one on the pommel.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Miss Last,&#8221; he said gravely, &#8220;I have no
+words to express what I feel this moment about
+Lost Valley and its people. Will you get down
+and let me show you my house, here in my glade?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon sat quietly for a moment and looked
+down at him. She did not remove her hand from
+under his, neither did she seem to be conscious
+of it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why should I?&#8221; she asked presently, &#8220;you
+don&#8217;t owe me anything. I sent you away from my
+house. I wouldn&#8217;t have come here if I&#8217;d known
+where I was goin&#8217;. It was a chance.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Granted. And yet I want you to come across
+my threshold, to sit in my big chair. Will you
+come?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Never in her life had the girl heard so low a
+voice. It was soft and gentle, yet full of a vibrant
+quality that belied its softness. The man himself
+was unlike Lost Valley men. He wore the olive
+drab trousers of the semi-military uniform, the
+leather leggings, a tan leather belt and a soft
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span>
+woolen shirt of the same drab color. It lay open
+at the throat, and the base of his strong neck
+was white as a woman&#8217;s. The dark eyes upturned
+to hers were deep and winning. The
+dark beard showed through his sharply shaven
+cheeks where the red blood pulsed, like dusky
+shadows.</p>
+<p>A strange man, surely.</p>
+<p>Tharon wondered what made him so different
+from other men she had known. There was Billy
+who had come into Lost Valley from somewhere
+&#8220;below,&#8221; and Conford, and Curly. Jack Masters
+had been born in the Valley. So had Bent Smith.
+These men were her men, like herself and Jim
+Last. This man was from &#8220;below,&#8221; too, yet he
+was unlike.</p>
+<p>While she studied him he met her glance with
+the same grave look.</p>
+<p>Presently, without a word, she swung herself
+from the saddle, dropped El Rey&#8217;s rein, and
+stepped around his shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; she said briefly, &#8220;but I won&#8217;t
+stay any longer than I let you stay.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For the first time Kenset laughed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Twenty minutes, then,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+think you let me exceed that limit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He led the way to the door, stepped back and
+let her enter. As she did so she passed close to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span>
+him and caught the scent of him, the clean soft
+smell of shaving soap, blended with the aroma of
+good tobacco.</p>
+<p>That, too, was different.</p>
+<p>Inside the cabin there was a sense of comfort,
+of brightness. The long pennants, like captured
+rainbows, tacked to the rough walls, the soft
+toned prints, the gay cushions, all these lent an
+air of permanence, of home, that she had never
+before seen in a man&#8217;s cabin. She stood and looked
+all around with that same half-insolent stare which
+had greeted Kenset at the Holding that memorable
+day.</p>
+<p>Then she went slowly forward and sat down in
+the big chair by the table.</p>
+<p>The man stood in her presence for a moment,
+thereby giving a subtle effect of deference which
+was not wholly lost upon Tharon, though she
+would have been at a loss to define it.</p>
+<p>Then, he, too, sat down on the edge of the
+table desk in the corner, and with folded arms
+waited while she finished her scrutiny of the
+interior.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am proud of my home, Miss Last,&#8221; he said
+presently. &#8220;What do you think of it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; said Tharon slowly, &#8220;that it looks
+like there&#8217;s a woman somewhere.&#8221;</p>
+<p>This time Kenset laughed in earnest, a ringing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span>
+peal that startled El Rey at the doorstep, and
+made him clink his bit-chains.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is,&#8221; said the man, &#8220;assuredly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon turned her head and looked quickly
+over her shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where?&#8221; she asked in surprise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There in my big chair.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh&ndash;&ndash;I meant a woman livin&#8217; here, th&#8217; woman
+who owns the pretties.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And she waved a hand at the gay furnishings.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Kenset, &#8220;these are all my own
+pretties. I have books, as you see, and my maps
+and several more pictures to put up, not to mention
+some Mexican pottery that I brought from
+Ciudad Juarez, and my chiefest treasure, a tapestry
+from France. That last I can&#8217;t decide upon.
+I have two splendid spaces&ndash;&ndash;over there between
+the northern windows, facing the door, and yonder
+at the end. Perhaps you will be good enough to
+help me choose.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a boyish eagerness in his voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you? After a while, I mean, when you
+have rested from your ride.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rested?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon looked at him in wonder. That ride
+had been like wine to her, a stimulant, a thing
+that sent the blood pounding in her veins.</p>
+<p>Over the excitement had fallen a subtle shade,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span>
+however, a hush, with the sight of Bolt so close
+behind El Rey. If it had not been for that grave
+thing she would have felt like a wound-up spring,
+intent with energy, filled with action. She was
+always so when El Rey ran beneath her. And this
+stranger spoke of rest! Tharon Last could ride
+all day without a thought of rest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll help you if I can. But
+what&#8217;s this thing?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A sort of picture,&#8221; replied Kenset quickly, &#8220;a
+picture woven in cloth. But first, if you&#8217;ll be so
+kind, I want you to break bread with me. You
+said we would not be friends. I&#8217;m not so sure of
+that. There is nothing like a man&#8217;s bread and salt
+for the refutation of logic.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He slipped off the desk with a lithe rippling of
+his body, but Tharon was first on her feet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean stay to supper?&#8221; she asked decisively.
+&#8220;No, I can&#8217;t do that. I took back a meal
+from you. That stan&#8217;s between.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, you funny girl,&#8221; said Kenset, &#8220;nothing
+stands between. And I don&#8217;t mean supper, exactly,
+either. Please sit down.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon stood, considering. She turned the
+matter over in her mind.</p>
+<p>She had taken this man&#8217;s house by storm. It
+had, indeed, given her refuge. If it had not been
+for the glade in the pines, she wondered where
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span>
+she would be now&ndash;&ndash;driven deep into Black Coulee,
+she made no doubt, a prisoner to Courtrey.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; she said abruptly, &#8220;I&#8217;ll stay. But
+you must be quick. Th&#8217; time is goin&#8217; fast.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset went swiftly across the cabin to that
+part which served as kitchen, and took from a
+curtain-covered set of shelves, a shiny nickel object
+on spindly legs, which he brought and placed near
+Tharon on the table.</p>
+<p>He struck a match and presently a clean blue
+flame grew up beneath it.</p>
+<p>He lifted the lid and filled the small pot, thereby
+exposed, with water from the bucket on a bench.
+Then he delved in one of the big trunks against
+the farther wall and brought out a little tin of
+cakes, such as one could buy in any city of the
+world.</p>
+<p>All this was absorbing to the girl in the big
+chair, who watched with grave eyes. And Kenset
+kept up a running stream of gay talk all the time.
+He wanted to make her at ease, to cover the
+thought of the strain between them, and how much
+he wanted to drive from his own mind the knowledge
+that this sweet and wholesome creature was a
+potential murderer, he did not know. From a can
+he measured chocolate. From a pan somewhere
+outdoors he brought milk. Sugar he added carefully
+as a woman, and presently he spread between
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span>
+them on the table a small repast that was strange
+to this girl of the wilderness.</p>
+<p>He watched her with appraising eyes and saw
+that there was in her no consciousness of the
+unusual. She might have sat at meat in the big
+room of the Holding for all the flutter there was
+in her.</p>
+<p>He told her somewhat of himself, of his life
+in the East, but he was careful not to ask about
+Lost Valley, to make mention of the circumstances
+that had brought her to his door. And so an
+hour passed as if it had been a bagatelle. The
+afternoon was waning when Tharon rose swiftly
+and abruptly terminated this first visit inside his
+home of any Lost Valley denizen.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bring out your picture,&#8221; she said decisively,
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll help you hang it, an&#8217; then I must go home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So Kenset dived once more into the mysterious
+recesses of the trunk and this time brought out a
+thing of rare beauty and value, a large tapestry,
+some four by six feet in size, a wonderful thing
+of soft and deathless hues, of cunning distances, of
+Greek figures and leaning trees, of sea-line so faint
+as to be almost lost in the misty skies.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; said Tharon Last with an intake of
+her breath, &#8220;Oh, where do they make such
+things?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Far on the other side of the world,&#8221; said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span>
+Kenset gently, pleased with the wonder in her wide
+eyes, the evident and quick realization of beauty.</p>
+<p>She whirled from it and glanced quickly at the
+two spaces on the rugged walls.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There,&#8221; she said, pointing to the broad expanse
+between the northern windows, &#8220;hang it
+there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Done,&#8221; said Kenset, and went promptly for
+a hammer.</p>
+<p>When the huge thick mat was securely stretched
+in place, Tharon helping to hold it while he
+pounded in the broad-topped tacks, Kenset stepped
+back and wondered how he had ever for a moment
+considered hanging it in any other spot. The
+tempered light from the door came in upon it,
+bringing out each enchanted charm, each tender
+vista.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wonderful!&#8221; he said to himself, &#8220;I never
+knew how lovely it was amid conventional surroundings!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Huh?&#8221; asked Tharon.</p>
+<p>The man laughed in spite of himself and turned
+his eyes to hers, to lose his quick amusement in
+the earnest blue depths that seemed to question
+him at every angle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean that it looks better here in my cabin
+than it ever did on city walls.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Well&ndash;&ndash;I don&#8217;t know. Contrast, perhaps.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon stood a moment thinking.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; she answered slowly, &#8220;yes, perhaps.
+I guess that&#8217;s why you seem so diff&#8217;rent to
+me. Jim Last used to say that was why th&#8217; Valley
+was so soft-like an&#8217; lovely, contrasted by th&#8217;
+Rockface.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do I seem different to you?&#8221; asked Kenset
+quickly. &#8220;How?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. I don&#8217;t know how. You seem soft, like
+a woman&ndash;&ndash;some women&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; I&#8217;m afraid&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>She stopped suddenly, abruptly halted in her
+na&iuml;ve speech, as if she had come face to face with
+something she had not meant to meet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Afraid?&#8221; probed the man gravely, &#8220;go on.
+You are afraid&ndash;&ndash;of what?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Tharon, &#8220;I won&#8217;t say it&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Please do. I want to know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then,&#8221; answered the girl straightly, after the
+honest and downright fashion of all her dealings,
+&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid you are&ndash;&ndash;are too soft. You don&#8217;t
+pack a gun. I&#8217;m afraid you wouldn&#8217;t use it if you
+did.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a certain finality about the short
+speech, as if she had put the last word of condemnation
+to his estate.</p>
+<p>Kenset looked down at his hands, spread them
+out a bit.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re right,&#8221; he said shortly, though his
+voice was still gentle. &#8220;I don&#8217;t. And I wouldn&#8217;t.
+Not until the last extremity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; what would that be?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t just know, Miss Last,&#8221; he answered
+smiling and raising his eyes once more to hers, &#8220;it
+would have to be&ndash;&ndash;the <i>last</i> extremity, I know.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The hands of all my forbears have been
+clean, so far as I know. I have a deep horror of
+that imaginary stain which human blood seems
+to leave on the hands of the killer. Blood
+guilt.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You call it that? My daddy had his killin&#8217;s,
+but they were all in fair-an&#8217;-open. <i>I</i> called him a
+<i>man</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a ringing quality in her voice, a
+depth and resonance that spoke of war and heroes.
+The fire that all the Holding knew was suddenly
+in her eyes, flashing and flaming. Kenset caught
+it, and a thrill shot through him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Granted,&#8221; he said quickly. &#8220;But is there
+only <i>one</i> type of man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;For me,&#8221; said Tharon, &#8220;yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry,&#8221; said he, and for the life of him
+he did not know why.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So&#8217;m I,&#8221; said Tharon honestly.</p>
+<p>They looked at each other for a pregnant moment,
+while a silence fell on the cabin and they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span>
+could hear the singing water running down the
+slopes.</p>
+<p>Then the girl stooped and rearranged the
+cushion in the big chair, laid a book more neatly
+on top of another at the table&#8217;s edge.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Th&#8217; time is up,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I must be goin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She straightened her shoulders and looked at
+him again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thank you for th&#8217; meal,&#8221; she said, &#8220;an&#8217;
+some day I&#8217;ll return it&ndash;&ndash;in some manner. I don&#8217;t
+know yet just what you&#8217;re here for, nor if you&#8217;re
+Courtrey&#8217;s man or not&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good Lord!&#8221; ejaculated Kenset, but she went
+on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t shake hands with you, for whilst I
+ain&#8217;t done no killin&#8217; yet, I&#8217;m sworn&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; Jim Last&#8217;s
+hands was red&ndash;&ndash;they would be to such as you&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217;
+down to th&#8217; last drop o&#8217; blood, th&#8217; last beat o&#8217;
+my heart, I&#8217;m Jim Last&#8217;s girl&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; best gun man
+in Lost Valley, if I do say so.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And she swung quickly to the door.</p>
+<p>Kenset followed her. He longed for words, but
+found none.</p>
+<p>There was a sudden tragic seeming in the very
+air, a change from the pleasant commonplace to
+the tense and unexpected. It was always so in
+these strange meetings with the people of Lost
+Valley, it seemed, as if he was never to find his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
+way among them, the sane and quiet course that
+he must travel.</p>
+<p>As they reached the step at the door sill El Rey
+stamped and whinnied a shrill blast. In through
+the gateway between the pines there came a
+rider on a running horse, Billy on Golden who
+ploughed to a stop before them, his grey eyes
+troubled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, Billy,&#8221; said Tharon. &#8220;How&#8217;s this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Been lookin&#8217; for you,&#8221; said the boy. &#8220;We
+saw Courtrey an&#8217; his ruffians ridin&#8217; up east&ndash;&ndash;watched
+&#8217;em with th&#8217; glass, an&#8217; Anita said you
+rode south. Thought you might have met &#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t meet &#8217;em, so to speak,&#8221; she said,
+smiling, &#8220;though if I&#8217;d been on anythin&#8217; but El
+Rey I would. They tried to drive me into Black
+Coulee.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hell!&#8221; said Billy softly.</p>
+<p>Then the Mistress of Last&#8217;s remembered her
+manners.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Billy,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I make you acquainted with
+Kenset of th&#8217; foothills. I rode in here just in
+time to shake th&#8217; Stronghold bunch.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two men spoke, reached to shake each
+other&#8217;s hands, and took a long survey that was
+mutual. As the two pairs of eyes met, a wall
+seemed to rear itself between them, a mist, a
+curtain, something intangible, but there.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span></p>
+<p>They looked across the woman&#8217;s shoulder, and
+from that moment she was to stand between,
+though what there could be in common between
+the man in the U.&nbsp;S. service and the common rider
+from Last&#8217;s was not apparent. El Rey was eager
+for flight and by the time Tharon&#8217;s foot was in
+the stirrup he was up on his hind feet, fore feet
+beating the air, silver mane like a flying cloud.
+The girl rose with him gracefully, threw her leg
+across the saddle, waved a hand to Kenset in the
+door, and in another moment they were gone
+away down the grassy slope, out through the
+opening, had stretched away along the oak-dotted
+plain, swung toward the north, and were out of
+sight.</p>
+<p>The forest man turned away from the doorway,
+stood a moment looking over the cabin
+where the late light was making golden patterns
+on the green and brown rug, sighed and reached
+for his pipe.</p>
+<p>Somehow all the spirit seem to have gone from
+the summer day. The long twilight was setting
+in.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She wouldn&#8217;t shake hands,&#8221; he muttered to
+himself, &#8220;and what she said was true as death.
+She&#8217;s <i>sworn</i>&ndash;&ndash;and it is a solemn oath to her. God
+help the man who killed her daddy!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then once more he sighed, unconsciously.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;And Lord God help her!&#8221; he finished very
+gravely, &#8220;she is so sweet&ndash;&ndash;so wild and spirited
+and sweet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon and Billy let the horses run. Golden
+was a racer himself, though he could not hold a
+candle to the silver king, and the two young
+creatures atop were free as the summer winds,
+as buoyant and filled with joy of being. So they
+shot down along the levels, Tharon holding El
+Rey up a bit, though it was a man-size job to do
+so, and Billy&#8217;s rein swinging loose on Golden&#8217;s
+neck. They passed the last of the scattered oaks,
+came out to the green stretches. The sun was
+swinging like a copper ball above the Wall at the
+west. Down through the ca&ntilde;ons the light came in
+long red shafts that cut through the cobalt
+shadows like sharp lances of fire and reached half
+across Lost Valley. All the western part of the
+Valley lay in that blue-black shadow. They could
+see Corvan set like a dull gem in the wide green
+country, the scattered ranches, miles apart.</p>
+<p>They swung down to the west a bit, for Tharon
+said she wanted to go by the Gold Pool and see
+how it was holding out.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fine,&#8221; said Billy, &#8220;she&#8217;s deep as she ever
+was at this time of year, an&#8217; cold as snow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Where one tall cottonwood stood like a sentinel
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span>
+in the widespread landscape they drew rein
+and dismounted. Here a huge boulder cropped
+from the plain and under its protecting bulk there
+lay as lovely a spring as one would care to see,
+deep and golden as its name implied, above its
+swirling sands, for the waters were in constant
+turmoil as they pressed up from below.</p>
+<p>The girl lay flat at its edge and with her face
+to the crystal surface, drank long and deeply.</p>
+<p>As she looked up with a smile, Billy Brent felt
+the heart in him contract with a sudden ache.</p>
+<p>Her fresh face, its cheeks whipped pink under
+their tan by the winds, its blue eyes sparkling, its
+wet red lips parted over the white teeth, hurt him
+with a downright pain.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Tharon,&#8221; he said with an accent that was
+all-revealing, &#8220;Oh, Tharon, dear!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl scrambled to her feet and looked at him
+in surprise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Billy,&#8221; she said sharply, &#8220;what&#8217;s th&#8217; matter
+with you? Are you sick?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the boy with conviction, &#8220;I am.
+Let&#8217;s go home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sick, how?&#8221; she pressed, with the born tyranny
+of the loving woman, &#8220;have you got that
+pain in your stomach again?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Billy laughed in spite of himself, and the
+romantic ache was shattered.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;For the love of Pete!&#8221; he complained, &#8220;don&#8217;t
+you ever forget that? You know I&#8217;ve never et
+an ounce of Anita&#8217;s puddin&#8217;s since. No, I think,&#8221;
+he finished judiciously as he mounted Golden,
+&#8220;that I&#8217;ve caught somethin&#8217;, Tharon&ndash;&ndash;caught
+somethin&#8217; from that feller of th&#8217; red-beet badge.
+Leastways I&#8217;ve felt it ever sence I left th&#8217; clearin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And as they swung away from the spring toward
+the Holding, far ahead under its cottonwoods,
+he let out the young horse for another
+stretch.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bet Golden can beat El Rey up home,&#8221; he
+said over his shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Beat th&#8217; king?&#8221; cried Tharon aghast, &#8220;you&#8217;re
+foolin&#8217;, Billy, an&#8217; I don&#8217;t want to run nohow. I&#8217;ve
+run enough this day.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So the rider held up again and together they
+paced slowly up through the gathering twilight
+where long blue shadows were reaching out to
+touch them from the western Wall and the golden
+shafts were turning to crimson, were lifting as the
+sun sank, were travelling up and up along the
+eastern mountains toward the pale skies. Soon
+they rode in purple dusk while the whole upper
+world was bathed in crimson and lavender light
+and Lost Valley lay deep in the earth&#8217;s heart, a
+sinister spot, secret and dark.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sometimes, Billy,&#8221; said Tharon softly, &#8220;I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span>
+like to ride like this, in th&#8217; big shadows&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217;
+then I like to have some one with me that I know,
+some one like you, some one who will understand
+when I don&#8217;t talk, an&#8217; who is always there beside
+me. It&#8217;s a wonderful feelin&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;but somehow, it&#8217;s
+soft, too&ndash;&ndash;mebby too soft&ndash;&ndash;like&ndash;&ndash;like&ndash;&ndash;like a
+woman who&#8217;s just a woman.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boy swallowed once, miserably.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Always, Tharon,&#8221; he said huskily, &#8220;always&ndash;&ndash;when
+you want me&ndash;&ndash;or need me&ndash;&ndash;I&#8217;ll be there,
+beside you. An&#8217; you don&#8217;t need to even speak a
+word to me. I&#8217;m like th&#8217; dogs&ndash;&ndash;there whether
+you call or not.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know,&#8221; said the girl, and reaching over she
+caught the rider&#8217;s hand, brown beneath its vanity
+of studded leather cuff, and gave it a little tender
+pressure.</p>
+<p>Billy set his teeth to keep from crushing her
+fingers, and together they rode slowly up along
+the sounding slopes to the beautiful security and
+comfort of Last&#8217;s Holding.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VII_THE_SHOT_IN_THE_CAONS' id='CHAPTER_VII_THE_SHOT_IN_THE_CAONS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<h3>THE SHOT IN THE CA&Ntilde;ONS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Kenset of the foothills was very busy.
+Between study of his maps and the endless
+riding of their claimed areas he was out
+from dawn till dark.</p>
+<p>He found, indeed, that none but he, of late
+years, had ridden those sloping forest covered
+skirts. Some one, sometime, must have done so,
+else the maps themselves would not have been, but
+what marks they must have left were either gone
+through the erosion of the elements or been wantonly
+destroyed.</p>
+<p>He fancied the former had been the case, for
+he saw no signs of destruction, and the very curiosity
+of the denizens of the Valley precluded
+familiarity with forest work.</p>
+<p>So he laid out for himself the labour of a
+dozen men and went at it with a vim that kept
+him at high tension. Therefore he had little
+time to think of Tharon Last and the strange life
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span>
+in Lost Valley. Only when he rode between given
+points, unintent on the land around, did he give
+up to his speculations. At such times his mind
+invariably went back to that first day at Baston&#8217;s
+steps and he saw her again as he had seen her
+then, tense, stooping, her elbows bent above the
+guns at her hips, coming backward along the
+porch, feeling for the steps with her foot.</p>
+<p>Always he saw the ashen whiteness of her
+cheeks beneath her blowing hair.</p>
+<p>Always he frowned at the memory and always
+he felt a thrill go down his nerves. What was
+she, anyway, this wild, sweet creature of the
+wilderness who held herself aloof from his friendship,
+and said that she was &#8220;sworn?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset, sane, quiet, peace loving, shook himself
+mentally and tried not to think of her. But day
+after day he came down along the edges of the
+scattered woods where the cattle grazed&ndash;&ndash;on the
+forest lands&ndash;&ndash;and looked over to where the Holding
+lay like a greener spot on the green stretches.</p>
+<p>He thought of her, living in this feudal hold,
+mistress of her riders, her cattle, and her wonderful
+racing horses of the Finger Marks, sweet, fair,
+wholesome&ndash;&ndash;with the six-guns at her slender hips!</p>
+<p>If only he, Kenset, could take those weapons
+from her clinging hands, could wipe out of her
+young heart the calm intent to kill!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span></p>
+<p>It was preposterous! It was awful!</p>
+<p>Bred to another life, another law, another type
+of woman, he could not reconcile this girl of
+Lost Valley with anything he knew.</p>
+<p>He went over in his mind again and again the
+serene calmness of her in his cabin that day of the
+race with Courtrey, and shook his head in puzzlement.</p>
+<p>But why should he trouble himself about her at
+all?</p>
+<p>He had come here in his Government&#8217;s service
+to reclaim its forest, to look after its interest.</p>
+<p>Why should he bother with the moral code of
+Lost Valley?</p>
+<p>But reason as he might, the face of Tharon Last
+came back to haunt him, waking or asleep.</p>
+<p>He knew that it troubled him and was, in a way,
+ashamed. So he worked hard at his tasks, relocated
+boundaries, marked them with a peculiar
+blaze in convenient trees which looked something
+like this:</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-159.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 71px; height: 108px;' /><br />
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span></div>
+<p>and set up monuments with odd and undecipherable
+hieroglyphics upon them.</p>
+<p>And with each blaze, each mark and monument
+and sign, he drew closer in about him the net of
+suspicion and disapproval which was weaving in
+Lost Valley, for there was not one but ran the
+gamut of close inspection and speculation by
+Courtrey&#8217;s men, by the settlers who came many
+miles over from the western side of the Valley
+for the purpose, and by Tharon&#8217;s riders.</p>
+<p>Low mutters of disapproval growled in the
+Valley.</p>
+<p>Who was this upstart, anyway, to come setting
+signs and marks in the land that had been theirs
+from time immemorial? What mattered the little
+copper-coloured badge on his breast? What mattered
+it that he was beginning to send out word
+of his desire to work with and for the cattlemen of
+Lost Valley, the settlers, the homesteaders?</p>
+<p>What was this matter of &#8220;grazing permits&#8221; of
+which he had spoken at the Stronghold?</p>
+<p>Permits?</p>
+<p>They had grazed their cattle where and when
+they chose&ndash;&ndash;and could&ndash;&ndash;from their earliest
+memory.</p>
+<p>They asked no leave from Government.</p>
+<p>When Kenset rode into Corvan he was treated
+with exaggerated politeness by those with whom
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span>
+he had to deal, with utter unconsciousness by all
+the rest. To cattleman and settler alike he was
+as if he had not been.</p>
+<p>None spoke to him in the few broad streets,
+none asked him to a bar to drink.</p>
+<p>Serene, quiet, soft spoken, he came and went
+about his business, and sneers followed him
+covertly.</p>
+<p>It was not long after Tharon&#8217;s visit to the cabin
+in the glade, that Kenset, riding alone along the
+twilight land, passed close to the mouth of Black
+Coulee one day at dusk. He rode loosely, slouching
+sidewise in his saddle, for he had been to
+Corvan for his monthly mail and a few supplies
+tied in a bag behind his saddle, and he carried his
+broad hat in his hand.</p>
+<p>The little cool wind that blew in from the narrow
+gorge of the Bottle Neck and spread out like
+an invisible fan, breathed on his face with a grateful
+touch. The day had been hot, for the summer
+was opening beautifully, and he had ridden
+Captain far. Therefore he jogged and rested, his
+arms hanging listlessly at his sides, his thoughts
+two thousand miles away.</p>
+<p>At the mouth of Black Coulee where the sinister
+split of the deep wash came up to the level, there
+grew a fringe of wild poplar trees. They were
+beautiful things, tall and straight and thickly covered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
+with a million shiny leaves that whirled and
+rustled softly in the wind, showing all their soft
+white silver sides when the breeze came up from
+the south as it did this day. There was water in
+Black Coulee, many small springs, not deep enough
+nor steady enough to count for water in a range
+country, but sufficient to keep the poplars growing
+on the rim of the great wash, to stand them thick
+on the caving sides. Whole benches of earth with
+their trees upon them slipped down these sides
+from time to time, making of the Coulee a mysterious
+labyrinth of thickets and shelves, of winding
+ways and secret places.</p>
+<p>Kenset had heard a few wild stories about
+Black Coulee. Sam Drake had talked a bit more
+than most men of Lost Valley would have talked,
+and he had listened idly.</p>
+<p>Now as he rode up along the levels and neared
+the dark mouth of the cut he studied it with
+appraising eyes. It was sinister enough, in all
+truth, a deep, dark place behind its veil of poplars,
+secretive, hushed.</p>
+<p>The red light that dyed Lost Valley so wondrously
+at the hour of the sun&#8217;s sharp decline
+above the peaks and ridges of the Ca&ntilde;on Country
+was awash in all the great sunken cup, save at
+the west under the Rockface where the shadows
+were already dark.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span></p>
+<p>Kenset drank in the beauty of the scene with
+smiling eyes. Already a love for this hidden
+paradise had grown wonderfully in his heart. He
+felt as if he had never lived before, as if he had
+never known beauty.</p>
+<p>And so, dreaming a little of other scenes, smiling
+to himself, he jogged along on Captain and
+was nearly past the frowning mouth of the Coulee,
+when there came the sharp snap of a rifle in the
+stillness, and Captain changed his feet, sagged and
+quivered, then caught himself and leaped ahead.
+For one amazed moment Kenset thought the horse
+was hit. Then, as he straightened in his saddle
+and dropped his hand to catch up his hanging rein,
+he looked quickly down. Where he was accustomed
+to the smooth feel of the pommel beneath
+his palm there was a sharp raw edge. A splinter
+of wood stood up and a small flare of leather hung
+to one side.</p>
+<p>A bullet, singing out of Black Coulee, had carried
+away part of the pommel.</p>
+<p>Kenset shut his lips in a new line, gathered up
+his rein and drew the horse down to a walk with
+an iron hand.</p>
+<p>Slowly, without a backward glance, he rode
+on across the darkening levels. He was no
+fool.</p>
+<p>He knew he had had his warning.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span></p>
+<p>Very well. He would give back his acceptance
+of that warning.</p>
+<p>He had said to Courtrey that night at the
+Stronghold that he had come to stay.</p>
+<p>No bunch of lawless bullies were going to scare
+him out.</p>
+<p>No other shot followed. He had not expected
+one.</p>
+<p>For a time after that he went about his work
+as usual. Nothing happened; he had no outward
+sign of the distaste with which he was regarded by
+all factions alike, it seemed.</p>
+<p>He met Courtrey face to face in Corvan one
+day and spoke to him civilly, but Courtrey
+did not speak. Wylackie Bob did, however&ndash;&ndash;a
+sneering salutation that was a covert insult.
+Kenset touched his hat with dignity and passed
+on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of all th&#8217; tenderfeet!&#8221; said Baston, watching
+the small by-play. &#8220;I b&#8217;lieve you could spit
+on him, boys.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t,&#8221; spoke up Old Pete, shuffling by on
+his bandy legs, &#8220;sometimes that quiet, soft-spoken
+kind rises&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; then hell&#8217;s to pay in their veecinity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Wylackie looked at the weazened snow-packer
+with his snake-like eyes and snapped out
+a warning.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Some folks takes sides too quick, sometimes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Old Pete went on about his business. He
+knew, as did all the Valley, that a price was on his
+head with Courtrey&#8217;s band for the daring leap
+which had saved the life of Tharon Last that day
+in spring.</p>
+<p>Sooner or later that price would be paid, but
+Old Pete was true western stuff. He had lived
+his life, had had his day, and he was full of pride
+at the turn of fate which had made him a hero in
+a way at the end.</p>
+<p>All the Valley stood off and admired Jim Last&#8217;s
+daughter.</p>
+<p>Pete basked in the reflected light. And Tharon
+herself had taken his gnarled old hand one day
+in Baston&#8217;s store and called him a thoroughbred.</p>
+<p>Folks in Lost Valley were chary of words, conservative
+to the last degree. That simple word,
+the handclasp, the look in the clear blue eyes,
+had been his eulogy.</p>
+<p>It was whispered about, as was every smallest
+happening, and came to the ears of Courtrey himself,
+who had promised those vague things for the
+future on the fateful night. But Courtrey was
+playing a waiting game. He was obsessed with
+the image of Tharon. Sooner or later he meant
+to have her, to install her at the Valley&#8217;s head.
+He had always had what he wanted. Therefore,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
+he expected to have this girl with the challenging
+eyes, the maddening mouth, like crimson sumac.</p>
+<p>Ellen?</p>
+<p>Already he was setting in motion a thing that
+was to take care of Ellen.</p>
+<p>The thing in hand now was to placate Tharon,
+the mistress of Last&#8217;s, to play the overwhelming
+lover.</p>
+<p>Courtrey knew better than to go near the Holding.
+Bully that he was he yet had sense enough
+to know that no fear of him dwelt in the huge old
+house under the cottonwoods. If Tharon herself
+did not shoot him, one&ndash;&ndash;or all&ndash;&ndash;of her riders
+would. The day of the armed band riding down
+to take her was, if not past, passing fast. He
+recalled the look of the settlers&ndash;&ndash;poor spawn
+that he hated&ndash;&ndash;whirling their solid column behind
+her to face him that day from the Cup Rim&#8217;s
+floor.</p>
+<p>No. Courtrey meant to have the girl some day&ndash;&ndash;to
+hold in his arms that ached for her loveliness,
+the strong, resistant young body of her&ndash;&ndash;to
+sate his thief&#8217;s mouth with kisses. But he would
+call her to him of her own will, would taste the
+savage triumph of seeing her come suing for his
+mercy.</p>
+<p>If Tharon meant to break Courtrey, he meant
+no less to break her.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span></p>
+<p>Outlawry&ndash;&ndash;mob law&ndash;&ndash;they were pitted against
+each other.</p>
+<p>And, lifting its head dimly through the smother
+of hatred, of wrong, of repression and reprisal,
+another law was struggling toward the light in
+Lost Valley&ndash;&ndash;the sane, quiet law of right and
+equality, typified by the smiling, dark-eyed man of
+the cabin in the forest glade.</p>
+<p>Courtrey sent word to Tharon&ndash;&ndash;an illy spelled
+letter, mailed at Baston&#8217;s&ndash;&ndash;that he had meant
+nothing by that race above the Black Coulee, except
+another kiss. There was Courtrey&#8217;s daring
+in the affronting words.</p>
+<p>She sent the letter back to him&ndash;&ndash;riding in on
+El Key alone&ndash;&ndash;with the outline of a gun traced
+across it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Th&#8217; little wildcat!&#8221; grinned the man, &#8220;she&#8217;s
+sure spunky!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Once again Tharon met Kenset in the days that
+followed. Riding by the Silver Hollow she
+stopped one breathless afternoon, drank of the
+snow-cold waters, shared them with El Rey,
+dropped the rein over the stallion&#8217;s head and flung
+herself full length on the earth beside the spring.
+A clump of willow trees grew here, for every
+spring in Lost Valley had its lone sentinels to call
+its presence across the stretching miles. As the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span>
+girl lay flat on her back with her hands beneath
+her head, she looked up into the blue heart of the
+arching skies where the fleecy white clouds sailed,
+and a sense of sweetness and peace came down
+upon her like a garment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re sure some lovely spot, Lost Valley,&#8221;
+she said aloud, &#8220;an&#8217; no mistake. I know, more&#8217;n
+ever as th&#8217; days go by that Jim Last was only
+jokin&#8217; when he told me of those other places out
+below, big as you, lovely as you. It just ain&#8217;t
+possible. Is it, El Rey, old boy?&#8221;</p>
+<p>And she moved a booted foot to the king&#8217;s
+striped hoof and tapped it smartly.</p>
+<p>El Rey, always aloof, always touchy, never
+sure of temper, jumped and snorted. The girl
+laughed and crossed her feet and fell to speculating
+idly about the world that lay beyond Lost
+Valley. Little she knew of it. Only the brief
+words of her father from time to time, the
+reluctant speech of Last&#8217;s riders, for the master
+of the Holding had laid down the law concerning
+this.</p>
+<p>His daughter was of the Valley, content.
+He meant her to be so always. The man who
+had instilled into her young mind a discontent
+with her environment, a longing for the &#8220;flesh-pots&#8221;
+of the world as he had styled it once,
+would have had short shrift at Last&#8217;s. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span>
+would have received his time and &#8220;gone packing&#8221;
+swiftly.</p>
+<p>And Tharon was content.</p>
+<p>Barring the loneliness that had come with Jim
+Last&#8217;s death, she was well content.</p>
+<p>So she lay by the willows and hummed a sliding
+tune, a soft, sweet thing of minors and high notes
+falling, like rippling waters, and lazily watched
+the high white clouds sail by.</p>
+<p>And as she lay she became conscious of something
+else in the drowsing land beside herself and
+her horse. She felt it first, this presence&ndash;&ndash;a thin,
+dim vibration that sang in the earth beneath her.
+It stopped the wordless song on her lips, stilled
+the breath in her throat, set every nerve in her to
+listening, as it were.</p>
+<p>Presently she sat up and felt quickly for the
+gun-butts in their scabbards. Then she parted the
+willows and looked out over the rolling slopes and
+levels. True enough. A horseman was coming
+in from the west, making for the Silver Hollow,
+but Tharon smiled and her fingers relaxed on the
+gun. This man rode straight&ndash;&ndash;like a lance, she
+thought&ndash;&ndash;and his mount was brown, a good-enough
+common horse, but no steed of Lost Valley.</p>
+<p>Captain lacked the fire, the ramping keenness
+of the Ironwoods, the spirit and dash of the
+Finger Marks. For a long time the girl in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span>
+willows watched them. Then as they came near
+she rose and caught El Rey&#8217;s bridle.</p>
+<p>He was no gentleman, this big blue-silver king.
+He was savage and wild and imperious. He hated
+other horses with a quick hatred sometimes and
+had been known to wreak this sudden rage upon
+them in sickening fury.</p>
+<p>So Tharon held him with a strong brown hand
+wrapped in the chain below the Spanish spade bit
+in his mouth. She stood beside him, waiting, a
+slim, golden creature, tawny of hair and blue of
+eye, and the great horse towered above her mightily,
+his silver mane blowing up above his arching
+neck in the little wind that came from the
+south.</p>
+<p>They made a picture that Kenset never forgot,
+as he swung round the willows and faced them.</p>
+<p>El Rey screamed and pounded with his striped
+hoofs, but Tharon jerked him down with no gentle
+hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Be still, you bully!&#8221; she said sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, Miss Last!&#8221; cried the forest man,
+&#8220;I&#8217;m so glad to meet you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was the genuine delight of a boy in his
+voice, and Tharon caught the note. The sweet,
+disarming smile parted her lips and she was all
+girl at the moment, artless, innocent, unstained
+by the shadow of lawlessness and crime that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
+seemed to ever hang above her in Kenset&#8217;s
+thoughts.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I certainly am.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He swung down, gave Captain a drink at the
+edge of the spring farthest from El Rey, dropped
+the rein when he had finished, and swung around
+to face the girl. He took off his wide hat and
+wiped his forehead with a square of linen finer
+than anything of its kind she had ever seen.</p>
+<p>Then he stood for a moment looking straight
+into her eyes with his smiling dark ones. It
+seemed to Tharon that this man was always
+smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is your spring, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. The Silver Hollow. Th&#8217; Gold Pool is
+farther south toward th&#8217; Black Coulee. There
+was another one, fine as this, perhaps a better one,
+up on th&#8217; Cup Rim Range, but Courtrey blew her
+up, damn him! She was called th&#8217; Crystal.&#8221;
+Kenset caught his breath, mentally, all but physically,
+and put up a hand to cover his lips.</p>
+<p>This <i>was</i> another type of woman from any he
+had ever met, in truth.</p>
+<p>The oath, rolling roundly over her full red lips,
+was as unconscious as the long breath that lifted
+her breast at the memory of that outrage.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We replaced her with a well&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; it&#8217;s a corker.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span>
+Mebby better than th&#8217; old Crystal, though she was
+a lovely thing. As clear as&ndash;&ndash;as ice that&#8217;s frozen
+hard without a ripple of white. You know that
+kind?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Kenset gravely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; sighed Tharon, &#8220;she&#8217;s gone, an&#8217; there
+ain&#8217;t no use cryin&#8217; over spilt milk. What you ben
+a-doin&#8217; sence I helped you hang th&#8217; picture?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you sit down?&#8221; Kenset stepped aside.
+&#8220;It is uncomfortable to stand through a visit&ndash;&ndash;and
+I mean to have a long talk-fest with you, if
+you will be so kind.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon flung herself down at the spring&#8217;s edge,
+eased the right gun from under her hip, leaned
+on her elbow and prepared to listen.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fire away,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>Kenset laughed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For goodness&#8217; sake!&#8221; he ejaculated, &#8220;I said
+visit. That takes two. What have you been
+doing?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, everythin&#8217;, mostly. Made a new shirt
+for Billy, for one thing. An&#8217; I showed Courtrey
+th&#8217; picture o&#8217; this.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She patted the blue gun that lay half in her lap,
+its worn scabbard black against her brown skirt.</p>
+<p>Kenset sobered at once. As ever when he let
+his mind dwell on that dark shadow which sat so
+lightly on this girl, he had no feeling for mirth.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span></p>
+<p>A very real chill went down his spine and he
+looked intently into her eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How?&#8221; he asked, &#8220;what did you do?&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Tharon shook her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothin&#8217; you&#8217;d understand,&#8221; she said quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can show you something you will understand,&#8221;
+he said, and reached for Captain&#8217;s bridle.
+He pulled the horse around and pointed to the
+saddle horn.</p>
+<p>&#8220;See that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She looked up quickly. With the sure instinct
+of a dweller in a gun man&#8217;s land she knew the
+meaning of the splintered wood of the pommel,
+the torn and ragged leather that had covered it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hell!&#8221; she said softly, &#8220;where did you get
+that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;At the mouth of Black Coulee, at dusk a
+week ago.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a long moment Tharon studied the saddle.
+Then her gaze dimmed, lengthened, went beyond
+into infinitude. The pupils of her eyes drew down
+to tiny points of black against the brilliant blue.</p>
+<p>At last she turned and held out a hand, rising
+from her elbow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon, Mister,&#8221; she said quaintly,
+&#8220;fer that day at the Holdin&#8217; an&#8217; th&#8217; meal I offered
+an&#8217; took, an&#8217; fer my words. I know now
+that you are&ndash;&ndash;that you were&ndash;&ndash;straight. I don&#8217;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span>
+yet know what you may mean in Lost Valley with
+your talk of Government, but I do know you ain&#8217;t
+a Courtrey man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset took the hand. It was firm and shapely
+and vibrant with the young life there was in her.
+He laid his other one over it and held it in a
+close clasp for a moment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean only right,&#8221; he said, &#8220;sanity and law
+and decency. I think I have a big problem to
+handle here&ndash;&ndash;aside from my work on the forest&ndash;&ndash;a
+problem I must solve before I can be effective
+in that work&ndash;&ndash;and I am more sincerely glad than
+I can say that my friend, the outlaw, took that
+warning shot at me. It ruined a perfectly good
+saddle, but it has made one point clear to you. I
+am no Courtrey man, and that&#8217;s a solemn fact.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; I ain&#8217;t ashamed to say I&#8217;m glad, too,&#8221;
+said Tharon.</p>
+<p>So, with the sun shining in the cloud-flecked
+heavens and the little winds blowing up from the
+south to ruffle the hair at the girl&#8217;s temples, these
+two sat by the Silver Hollow and talked of a
+thousand things, after the manner of the young,
+for Kenset found himself reverting to the things
+of youth in the light of Tharon&#8217;s grave simplicity.</p>
+<p>They looked into each other&#8217;s eyes and found
+there strange depths and lights. They were aliens,
+strangers, groping dimly for a common ground,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span>
+and finding little, though presently they fell once
+more upon the law in Lost Valley and earnestness
+deepened into gravity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Miss Last,&#8221; said Kenset, thrilling at his daring,
+&#8220;why must this law dwell in these?&#8221; and
+he reached a hand to tap the gun on her lap.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why? That very question&#8217;d show your ignorance
+to any Lost Valley man. Because it&#8217;s all
+there is. You&#8217;ve seen Courtrey. You&#8217;ve seen
+Steptoe Service. Can&#8217;t you judge from them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Surely, so far as they two go. A bad man
+and a bad sheriff. But they are not all the officers
+of this County. Where and who is your
+Superior Judge?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Poor ol&#8217; Ben Garland. Weaker&#8217;n skim milk.
+Scared to say his soul&#8217;s his own.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was infinite scorn in her voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, it&#8217;s Steptoe Service, or nothin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset thought a moment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s the Coroner?&#8221; he asked presently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jim Banner,&#8221; she answered quickly, &#8220;as
+straight a man as ever lived. Brave, too. He&#8217;s
+been shot at more&#8217;n once fer takin&#8217; exception to
+some raw piece o&#8217; work in this Valley, fer pokin&#8217;
+his nose in, so to speak. Jim Last used to say
+he was th&#8217; only <i>man</i> at the Seat, which is Corvan,
+you know, of course.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;District Attorney?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Tom Nord. Keen as a razor an&#8217; married to
+Courtrey&#8217;s sister. Now do you see why this is
+th&#8217; law?&#8221; She, too, tapped the gun.</p>
+<p>Kenset frowned and looked down along the
+green range. He thought of the unpainted pine
+building in Corvan which was the Court House.
+A strange personnel, truly, to invest it with
+authortity!</p>
+<p>&#8220;I see,&#8221; he said briefly, &#8220;but there must be
+some way out. This is not the right way, the way
+that must come and last.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon&#8217;s lips drew into the thin line that made
+them like her father&#8217;s. &#8220;It&#8217;s th&#8217; law that&#8217;s here,&#8221;
+she said and there was an instant coldness in her
+voice, &#8220;an&#8217; it&#8217;s th&#8217; law that&#8217;ll last until Courtrey
+or I go down.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man, watching, saw that thinning of the
+lips, the hardening of all the young lines of her
+face. He knew he had blundered. Talk was
+cheap. It was action that counted in Lost Valley.</p>
+<p>With a quick motion he reached over and caught
+the girl&#8217;s hand and drew it to him, covering it
+with both of his.</p>
+<p>Her eyes followed, came to rest on his face,
+cool, appraising, waiting.</p>
+<p>She was, in all that had counted in his life,
+crude, untutored, basic.</p>
+<p>Yet that calm look made his impulsive action
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span>
+seem unpardonable in the next second. However
+a warm surge of feeling shot through him with
+the quiet resting of that firm brown hand between
+his own, and he held it tighter. Kenset had
+thought he was sophisticated, that little or nothing
+could stir him deeply&ndash;&ndash;not since Ethel Van Riper
+had gone to Europe as the bride of the old Count
+of Easthaven. That had been four years back.
+He had been pretty young then, but the young feel
+deeply.</p>
+<p>Now he held a gun woman&#8217;s hand in the thin
+shade of a willow clump in the heart of Lost
+Valley&ndash;&ndash;and the blood surged in his ears, the levels
+and slopes danced before his vision.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Miss Tharon,&#8221; he said, for the first time
+using her given name, &#8220;I beg your pardon. You
+are strong, simple, serene. You know your land
+and its ways. I am an alien, an interloper&ndash;&ndash;but
+I can&#8217;t bear to think of you as waiting for the
+time to kill a man&ndash;&ndash;or to be killed in the killing.
+It sickens me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon snatched her hand from his and leaped
+to her feet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t talk like that!&#8221; she cried passionately,
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t like to hear it! I thought you were a
+real man, maybe, but you&#8217;re not! You&ndash;&ndash;you&#8217;re a
+woman! A soft woman&ndash;&ndash;I hate th&#8217; breed!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her face was flushed, for what reason Kenset,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span>
+stunned by her vehement words, could not tell.
+She flung the rein up and followed it, leaping to
+saddle like a man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I tol&#8217; you we couldn&#8217;t be friends!&#8221; she cried,
+her eyes blazing with sudden fire, &#8220;there ain&#8217;t no
+manner of use a-tryin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset, springing forward, caught El Rey&#8217;s
+bit. The stallion reared and struck, but he held
+him down.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is use, Tharon,&#8221; he panted. &#8220;It&#8217;s vital!
+Since that day on Baston&#8217;s steps, when you backed
+out past me I have had you in my mind&ndash;&ndash;my
+thoughts by day and night&ndash;&ndash;there is use, and I&#8217;ll
+keep your hands from blood&ndash;&ndash;Courtrey&#8217;s or any
+other&ndash;&ndash;if it takes my life&ndash;&ndash;so help me God!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl leaned down and her blue eyes blazed
+in his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; make me false to th&#8217; crosses on Jim
+Last&#8217;s stone?&#8221; she cried. &#8220;No&ndash;&ndash;not you or anybody
+else&ndash;&ndash;could do that trick! Let go!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The next moment she had whirled out from the
+flickering shade of the willows and was gone
+around toward the north&ndash;&ndash;there was only the
+sound of hoofs ringing on the earth. Kenset, left
+alone where the Silver Hollow bubbled softly
+above its snowy sands, passed a trembling hand
+across his eyes and stood as in a trance.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span></p>
+<p>What did it mean? What had he promised?
+What vital emotion had gripped him that his
+usually quiet tongue had rushed into that torrential
+speech that dealt with life and death? What was
+Tharon Last to him?</p>
+<p>A figure of the old West! A romantic gun
+woman with her weapons on her hips! A rider
+of wild horses!</p>
+<p>Slowly, as if he had gained an added weight of
+years, he reined Captain and swung himself up.
+He rode east from the spring toward the lacy
+and far-reaching skirts of the forest, and for the
+first time he saw the rolling country with tragic
+eyes.</p>
+<p>It held deep issues&ndash;&ndash;life and death and the
+passing or continuing of r&eacute;gimes and and dynasties&ndash;&ndash;but
+it was a wondrous country, and, come good
+or bad, it had become his own. He swung around
+in his saddle and looked far back across the Valley.
+He saw the golden light on its uncounted
+acres, the shadow falling at the foot of the great
+Rockface, the mighty Wall itself with the silver
+ribbon of the Vestal&#8217;s Veil falling straight down
+from the upper rim, the distant town, looking
+always like a dull gem in a dark setting, and a
+thrill shot to his heart.</p>
+<p>Yes, if he lived to do his work in the hidden
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
+Valley&ndash;&ndash;if he was shot this night on his own
+doorstep, it was his country.</p>
+<p>He who was alien in every way, was yet native.</p>
+<p>Something in the depths of him came down as
+from far distant racial haunts and was at home.</p>
+<p>So he rode slowly up among the scattered oaks
+with his hands folded on the mutilated pommel,
+and he knew that his lines were definitely cast.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Tharon Last rode into the Holding and dismounted
+in unwonted silence.</p>
+<p>There was a frown between her brows, an
+unusual thing. She turned the stallion into his
+corral, dragged off the big saddle to hang it on
+its peg, flung the studded bridle on a post.</p>
+<p>The men were not in yet. Far toward the north
+beyond the big corrals she could see the cattle
+grazing toward home. A surge of savage joy
+in her possessions flooded over her. These things
+were her own. They were what Jim Last had
+worked for all his life.</p>
+<p>Not one hoof or hide should Courtrey take
+without swift reprisal.</p>
+<p>Not one inch should he push her from her
+avowed purpose&ndash;&ndash;not though all the strangers in
+the world came to Lost Valley and prated of
+blood-guilt.</p>
+<p>But for some vague reason which she could not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span>
+have analyzed had she wished, she went to the
+paled-in garden where the silver waters trickled
+and searched among the few flowers growing there
+for some blossom, sweeter, tenderer, more mild
+and timid than usual for the pale hands of the
+Virgin in the deep south room.</p>
+<p>With the posy in her fingers she slipped quietly
+to her sanctuary and knelt before the statue, pensive,
+frowning, vaguely stirred. She whispered
+the prayers that Anita had taught her, but she
+found with a start that the words were meaningless,
+that she was saying them mechanically.</p>
+<p>Her mind had been at the Silver Hollow, seeing
+again the forest man&#8217;s dark eyes, so grave, so
+quiet, so deep&ndash;&ndash;her right hand was conscious as it
+had never been in all her life before. She heard
+a strange man&#8217;s condemning voice, felt the warmth
+of his hands pressed upon hers.</p>
+<p>The mistress of Last&#8217;s shook herself, both
+mentally and physically, and set herself to resay
+her prayers.</p>
+<p>When she came out to the life and bustle of
+the ranch house the cattle were streaming into the
+far corrals under their dust, the riders were shouting,
+young Paula sang in the kitchen, and Anita
+passed back and forth about the evening meal.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>There was a slim moon in the west above the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span>
+Ca&ntilde;on Country. The skies were softly alight,
+high and vaulted, deep and mysterious and sweet.</p>
+<p>World-silence, profound as eternity, hung
+tangibly above Lost Valley and the Wall, the
+eastern ramparts of the shelving mountains, the
+rocklands at the north. There was little sound
+in all this sleeping wilderness.</p>
+<p>Bird life was rare. The waters that fell at
+seasons from the open mouths of the ca&ntilde;ons half
+way up the Rockface were dried. Down in the
+Valley itself there could be seen the lights of
+Corvan which never went out from dusk to dawn.
+Far to the north a black blot might have been visible
+with a fuller moon&ndash;&ndash;Courtrey&#8217;s herds bedded
+on the range, the only stock in the Valley so
+privileged.</p>
+<p>Along the foot of the Rockface in the early
+evening a tiny procession had crawled, three
+burros, their pack-saddles empty save for a couple
+of sacks tied across each, and a weazened form
+that followed them&ndash;&ndash;Old Pete, the snow-packer,
+bound on his nightly journey to the Ca&ntilde;on Country
+for the bags of snow for the cooling of the
+Golden Cloud&#8217;s refreshments.</p>
+<p>He was a little old man, grotesque and misshapen,
+yet he followed briskly after the burros,
+which were the fastest travelers of their kind in
+the land. He rolled on his bandy legs and kept
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
+the little animals on a constant trot with the wisp
+of stick he carried and the deep, harsh cries that
+heralded his coming for a mile ahead and sent the
+echoes reverberating between the ca&ntilde;on walls. A
+little north of Corvan he had followed the Rockface
+close for a distance, then suddenly turned
+back on his tracks and disappeared, burros and all.
+This was the invisible entrance to the Ca&ntilde;on
+Country, a narrow mouth that opened sidewise
+into the very breast of the thousand-foot Wall
+and led back along a thin sheet of rock that stood
+between the gorge and the Valley. The floor
+of this cut or ca&ntilde;on, which was so narrow that
+the laden burros had a &#8220;narrow squeak&#8221; to pass,
+as Pete said, lifted sharply. It rose smoothly
+underfoot in the pitch darkness, for the cut was
+roofed in the living rock five hundred feet above,
+and climbed for a mile. It was a dead, flat place,
+without sound, for the footsteps of the burros
+and the man fell dully on the soft and sliding
+floor, and it seemed to have no acoustic properties.</p>
+<p>At the end of the mile this snake-like split in the
+solid rock came suddenly out into a broader, more
+steeply pitched ca&ntilde;on whose walls went straight
+up to the open skies above. Here there were
+heaps and piles and long slides of dead stone,
+weathered and powdered, that had fallen from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span>
+time to time from the parent walls. This in turn
+led up and on to other breaks and splits and cuts,
+all open, all lifting to the upper world, and all
+as blind and dangerous to follow as any deathtrap
+that old Dame Nature ever devised. Here,
+at any crosscut, any debouching ca&ntilde;on, a man
+might turn to his undoing, might travel on and
+up and never reach those beckoning heights, seen
+clearly from some blind pocket he had wandered
+into, might never find his way back to the original
+ca&ntilde;on among the continuous cuts that met and
+crossed and passed each other among the towering
+points and sheets.</p>
+<p>But Old Pete knew where he was going. Not
+for nothing had he threaded these passages for
+fifteen years. He knew the Ca&ntilde;on Country for
+the lower part better than any man in the Valley,
+if Courtrey be excepted.</p>
+<p>So this night he climbed and shouted to his
+burros and thought no more of the sounding
+splits, for here the echoes raved, than he would
+have thought of the open plains below.</p>
+<p>He passed on and up to where a certain cut
+lay full, year after year, of packed and hardened
+snow. For fifteen years Old Pete had visited this
+cut, a deeper drop into the nether world of rock,
+and cut his supplies from its surface. Every
+season he took what he needed, leaving a widening
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
+circle at the edge from which he worked, where
+the cut he traveled passed the mouth of the pent
+ca&ntilde;on, and every year the snows, sifting from
+high above, leveled it again. There was no known
+outlet for this glacier-like pack, no sliding chance,
+yet it was always on a certain level&ndash;&ndash;each summer
+seeming to lose just what it gained in winter. It
+lay level at the mouth of the passing cut, was
+never filled higher.</p>
+<p>Starting at dusk from Corvan, Pete reached his
+destination around two o&#8217;clock, filled his sacks, tied
+them on his mules and started down, coming out
+of the Rockface in time to meet the dawn that
+quivered on the eastern ramparts.</p>
+<p>But this night Old Pete, sturdy, fearless, unarmed,
+was not to see the accustomed pageant of
+the rising sun, the fleeing veils of shadows shifting
+on the Valley floor that he had watched with silent
+joy for all these years.</p>
+<p>This night he was well down along his backward
+way, shouting in the darkness, for the slim moon
+had dropped down behind the lofty peaks above,
+when all the echoes in the world, it seemed, let
+loose in the ca&ntilde;ons and all the weight of the
+universe itself came pressing hard upon his dauntless
+heart with the crack of a gun.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Th&#8217; price!&#8221; whispered Old Pete as he fell
+sprawling on his face, &#8220;fer pure flesh!&#8221; With
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span>
+which cryptic word he bade farewell to the sounding
+passes, the tenets of manhood as he conceived
+them, the valour, and the grumbling at life in
+general.</p>
+<p>The little burros, placid and faithful, went on
+and saw the pageant of the dawn from the hidden
+gateway in the Wall, crept down the Rockface,
+single file, and at their accustomed hour stood at
+their accustomed place before the Golden Cloud.</p>
+<p>It was Wan Lee, Old Pete&#8217;s <i>b&ecirc;te noir</i>, who
+found them there and ran shouting through the
+crowd of belated players in the saloon&#8217;s big room,
+his pig-tail flying, his almond eyes popping, to
+upset a table and batter on his master&#8217;s door and
+scream that the &#8220;bullos&#8221; were here, &#8220;allesame
+lone,&#8221; and that there was blood all spattered on
+the hind one&#8217;s rump!</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VIII_WHITE_ELLEN' id='CHAPTER_VIII_WHITE_ELLEN'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<h3>WHITE ELLEN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>So old Pete, the snow-packer, had paid the
+price of gallantry. The bullet he had averted
+from Tharon Last&#8217;s young head that day in
+the Golden Cloud but sheathed itself to wait for
+him. All the Valley knew it. Not a soul beneath the
+Rockface but knew beyond a shadow of a doubt
+who, or whose agents, had followed Pete that
+night to the Ca&ntilde;on Country. Whispers went
+flying about as usual, and as usual nothing
+happened.</p>
+<p>When the news of this came to Last&#8217;s Holding
+the mistress sat down at the big desk in the living
+room, laid her tawny head on her arms and wept.</p>
+<p>There was in her a new softness, a new feeling
+of misery&ndash;&ndash;as if one had wantonly killed a rollicking
+puppy before her eyes. Those tears were Old
+Pete&#8217;s requiem. She dried them quickly, however,
+and set another notch to her score with Courtrey.</p>
+<p>It was then that the waiting game ceased
+abruptly.</p>
+<p>Tharon, riding on El Rey, went in to Corvan.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
+She tied the horse at the Court House steps and
+went boldly in to the sheriff&#8217;s office.</p>
+<p>Behind her were Billy, like her shadow, and
+the sane and quiet Conford.</p>
+<p>Steptoe Service, fat and important, was busy
+at his desk. His spurs lay on a table, his wide hat
+beside them. The star of his office shone on his
+suspender strap.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Step Service,&#8221; said the girl straightly, &#8220;when
+are you goin&#8217; to look into this here murder?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Service swung round and shot an ugly look at
+her from his small eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have already done so,&#8221; he said, &#8220;ben out an&#8217;
+saw to th&#8217; buryin&#8217;!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon gasped.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buried him already? How dared you do
+it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say,&#8221; said Service, banging a fist on his table,
+&#8220;I&#8217;m th&#8217; sheriff of Menlo County, young woman.
+I ordered him buried.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s it to you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Was Jim Banner there?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jim Banner&#8217;s sick in bed&ndash;&ndash;got th&#8217; cholery
+morbus.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon&#8217;s eyes began to blaze.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bah!&#8221; she snapped, &#8220;th&#8217; time&#8217;s ripe! Come
+on, boys,&#8221; and she whirled from the Court House.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span></p>
+<p>As she ran across the street to where the Finger
+Marks were tied, she came face to face with Kenset
+on Captain.</p>
+<p>Her face was red from brow to throat, her
+voice thick with rage.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You talked o&#8217; law, Mr. Kenset,&#8221; she cried at
+the brown horse&#8217;s shoulder, her eyes upraised to
+his, &#8220;an&#8217; see what law there is in Lost Valley!
+Step Service has buried th&#8217; snow-packer&ndash;&ndash;without
+a by-your-leave from nobody! Th&#8217; man&ndash;&ndash;or
+woman&ndash;&ndash;that kills Courtrey now &#8217;counts for three
+men&ndash;&ndash;Harkness, Last an&#8217; Pete. I&#8217;m on my way
+to th&#8217; Stronghold.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She whirled again to run for the stallion, but
+the forest man leaned down and caught her
+shoulder in a grip of steel.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not now,&#8221; he said in that compelling low
+voice, &#8220;not now. I want to talk to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t want to talk to you!&#8221; she flung
+out, &#8220;I&#8217;m goin&#8217;!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Over her head Conford&#8217;s anxious eyes met
+Kenset&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hold her,&#8221; they begged plainly, &#8220;we can&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And Kenset held her, by physical strength.</p>
+<p>The grey eyes of Billy were on him coldly. The
+boy was hot with anger at the man. He put a
+hand on Kenset&#8217;s arm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let go,&#8221; he said, but Kenset shook him off.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Come out on the plain a little way with me, all
+of you,&#8221; he said, &#8220;this is no place to talk.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon, standing where he had stopped her,
+her breast heaving, her lips apart, seemed
+struggling against an unknown force. She put up
+a hand and tried to dislodge his fingers on her
+shoulder, but could not.</p>
+<p>Presently she wet her lips and looked around
+the street, already filled with watching folk, then
+up at Kenset.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What for?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think I can tell you something,&#8221; he answered
+quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; she said briefly, &#8220;let go an&#8217; I&#8217;ll
+come.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Without a word the man loosed her. She went
+to El Rey and mounted.</p>
+<p>Her riders mounted with her, Billy&#8217;s face
+frowning and set. From the steps of Baston&#8217;s
+store a few cowboys watched. There were no
+Stronghold men in town, for it was too early in
+the day.</p>
+<p>In silence Kenset led out of town at a brisk
+canter. His lips were set, his eyes very grave.</p>
+<p>In the short gallop that followed while they
+cleared the skirts of the town, he did some swift
+thinking, settled some heavy questions for himself.</p>
+<p>He was about to take a decided step, to put
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span>
+himself on record in something that did not concern
+his work in the Valley.</p>
+<p>He was going directly opposite to the teaching
+of his craft. He was about to take sides in this
+thing, when he had laid down for himself rigid
+lines of non-partisanship. His mind was working
+swiftly.</p>
+<p>If he flung himself and his knowledge of the
+outside world and the law into this thing he sunk
+abruptly the thing for which he had come to Lost
+Valley&ndash;&ndash;the middle course, the influence for order
+that he had hoped to establish that he might do
+his work for the Government.</p>
+<p>But he could not help it. At any or all costs
+he must stop this blue-eyed girl from riding north
+to challenge Courtrey on his doorstep.</p>
+<p>The blood congealed about his heart at the
+thought.</p>
+<p>Where the rolling levels came up to the confines
+of the town they rode out far enough to be
+safe from eavesdroppers, halted and faced each
+other.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Miss Last,&#8221; said Kenset gently, &#8220;I&#8217;m a
+stranger to you. I have little or no influence with
+you, but I beg you to listen to me. You say there
+is no help for the conditions existing in Lost Valley.
+That outrage follows outrage. True. I
+grant the thing is appalling. But there is redress.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span>
+There is a law above the sheriff, when it can be
+proven that that officer has refused to do his duty.
+That law is invested in the coroner. Your coroner
+can arrest your sheriff. He can investigate a
+murder&ndash;&ndash;he can issue a warrant and serve it anywhere
+in the State. He can subpoena witnesses.
+Did you know that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon shook her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor you?&#8221; he asked Conford.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I knew somethin&#8217; like that&ndash;&ndash;but what&#8217;s th&#8217;
+use? Banner&#8217;s a brave man, but he&#8217;s got a family.
+An&#8217; he&#8217;s been only one against th&#8217; whole push.
+What could he do when there wasn&#8217;t another man
+in th&#8217; Valley dared to stand behind him? You
+saw what happened to Pete. He struck up Courtrey&#8217;s
+arm when he shot at Tharon one night last
+spring. Th&#8217; same thing&#8217;d happen to Banner if he
+tried to pull off anythin&#8217; like that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A light flamed up in Kenset&#8217;s eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you, Miss Last,&#8221; he said straightly, &#8220;will
+give me your word to do no shooting, something
+like that will be pulled off here, and shortly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked directly at Tharon, and for the first
+time in her life she felt the strength of a gaze
+she couldn&#8217;t meet&ndash;&ndash;not fully.</p>
+<p>But Tharon shook her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sworn,&#8221; she said simply.</p>
+<p>Kenset&#8217;s face lost a bit of colour. Billy, watching,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
+turned grey beneath his tan. He saw something
+which none other did, a thing that darkened
+the heavens all suddenly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then,&#8221; said Kenset quietly, &#8220;we&#8217;ll have to do
+without your promise and go ahead anyway. We&#8217;ll
+ride back to town, demand of Service a proper investigation
+by a coroner&#8217;s jury, and begin at the
+bottom.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon moved uneasily in her saddle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why are you doin&#8217; this?&#8221; she asked. &#8220;Why
+are you mixin&#8217; up in our troubles? Why don&#8217;t
+you go back to your cabin an&#8217; your pictures an&#8217;
+books an&#8217; things, an&#8217; let us work out our own
+affairs?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset lifted a quick hand, dropped it again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;God knows!&#8221; he said. &#8220;Let&#8217;s go.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he wheeled his horse and started for
+Corvan, the others falling into line at his
+side.</p>
+<p>When Kenset, quietly impervious to the veiled
+hostility that met him everywhere, faced Steptoe
+Service and made his request, that dignitary felt
+a chill go down his spine. Like Old Pete he felt
+the man beneath the surface. He met him, however,
+with bluster and refused all reopening of a
+matter which he declared settled with the burial
+of the snow-packer in the sliding ca&ntilde;ons where
+he was found.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; said Kenset shortly, &#8220;you see I
+have witnesses to this,&#8221; and he turned on his heel
+and went out.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, Miss Last,&#8221; he said when they were in
+the wholesome summer sunlight once more, &#8220;if
+you have any friends whom you think would stand
+for the right, send for them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Th&#8217; Vigilantes,&#8221; said the girl, &#8220;we&#8217;ll gather
+them in twenty-four hours.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Vigilantes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Th&#8217; settlers,&#8221; said Conford.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right. Until they are here we&#8217;ll guard
+the mouth of this ca&ntilde;on that leads into the Rockface,
+as I understand it. Now take me to this
+man Banner.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At a low, rambling house in the outskirts of
+Corvan they found Jim Banner, sitting on the
+edge of his bed, undeniably sick from some acute
+attack. His eyes were steady, however, and he
+listened in silence while Kenset talked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mary,&#8221; he said, &#8220;bring me my boots an&#8217;
+guns. I been layin&#8217; for this day ever sence I been
+in office. I wisht Jim Last was here to witness
+it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In two hours Kenset was on his way to the blind
+mouth of the pass that led into the Ca&ntilde;on Country,
+Tharon was shooting back to the Holding
+on El Rey to put things on a watching basis there,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span>
+while Conford and Billy went south and west to
+rouse the Vigilantes.</p>
+<p>With Kenset rode Banner, weak and not quite
+steady in his saddle, but a fighting man notwithstanding.</p>
+<p>All through the golden hours of that noonday
+while he jogged steadily on Captain, Kenset was
+thinking. He had food for thought, indeed. He
+carried a gun at last&ndash;&ndash;he who had ridden the Valley
+unarmed, had meant never to carry one. He
+felt a stir within him of savagery, of excitement.</p>
+<p>He meant to have justice done, to put a hard
+hand on the law of Lost Valley. Murders uninvestigated,
+cattle stolen at will, settlers&#8217; homes
+burned over their heads, their hearths blown up by
+planted powder when they returned from any
+small trip, their horses run off&ndash;&ndash;these things had
+seemed to him preposterous, mere shadows of
+facts. Now they were down to straight points
+before him, tangible, solid. He got them from
+the blue eyes of Tharon Last, the gun woman, and
+he had taken sides! He who had meant to keep
+so far out of the boiling turmoil.</p>
+<p>He camped that night at the base of the Wall
+where the blind door entered, made his bed just
+inside the dead black passage, and watched while
+Banner, weary and still weak, slept in his blankets
+beside him.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span></p>
+<p>This was new work for Kenset, strange work,
+this waiting for men who called themselves the
+Vigilantes&ndash;&ndash;for a slim golden girl who rode and
+swore and pledged herself to blood!</p>
+<p>More than once in the quiet night that followed,
+Kenset wiped a hand across his brow and
+found it moist with sweat.</p>
+<p>What did he mean? Again and again he asked
+himself that question.</p>
+<p>What did he mean by Tharon Last? What was
+this cold fire that burned him when he thought of
+her pulling those sinister blue guns on Courtrey?
+Did he fear to see her kill Courtrey&ndash;&ndash;to see that
+shadowy stain on her hands&ndash;&ndash;or did he fear something
+worse, infinitely worse&ndash;&ndash;to see Courtrey,
+famous gun man, beat her to it!</p>
+<p>He shuddered and sweat in the clear cold of the
+starlit night and searched his bewildered heart.
+He could find no answer save and except the weary
+one that Tharon Last must be holden from her
+sworn course.</p>
+<p>Tharon Last who looked at him with those deep
+blue eyes and spoke so coolly of this promised
+killing! He recalled the earnest frown between
+her brows, the simple directness of her duty as she
+saw it and told it to him.</p>
+<p>Either way&ndash;&ndash;either way&ndash;&ndash;she was lost to him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
+forever&ndash;&ndash;There he caught himself and started all
+over again.</p>
+<p>What was she to him?</p>
+<p>What could she ever be? She with her strange
+soul, <i>her lack of soul</i>!</p>
+<p>What did he want her to be? One moment
+he ached with her loveliness&ndash;&ndash;the next he shuddered
+at her savagery.</p>
+<p>He did not want her to be anything! Why not
+go out to the dim and half-remembered world that
+he had left, the world of lights, padded floors and
+marble steps, leave this impossible land with its
+blood and wrongs? Nay, he could not leave Lost
+Valley. He was as much a part of it as the grim
+Rockface itself, the Vestal&#8217;s Veil eternally shimmering
+in its thousand feet of beauty. Life or
+death, for Kenset, it must be here.</p>
+<p>So he waited and listened and watched the stars
+wheeling in everlasting majesty, and he found his
+hands falling now and again upon the gun-butts at
+his sides!</p>
+<p>Near dawn Banner awoke, refreshed and
+stronger, and made him lie down for a few hours&#8217;
+sleep.</p>
+<p>When he awoke the sun was well up along the
+heavens and Banner was offering him a piece of
+dry bread and some jerky, spiced and smoked and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span>
+as dry and sweet as anything he had ever eaten
+in all his life.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re comin&#8217;,&#8221; said the man, &#8220;thar&#8217;s five
+comin&#8217; from down along th&#8217; Wall at th&#8217; south&ndash;&ndash;that&#8217;ll
+be Jameson, Hill and Thomas, an&#8217; some
+others&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; I see about ten or twelve, near&#8217;s I
+can make out, driftin&#8217; in from up toward th&#8217; Pomo
+settlement. Thar&#8217;s a dust cloud movin&#8217; up from
+th&#8217; Bottle Neck, too. They&#8217;ll be here by one
+o&#8217;clock at th&#8217; furdest.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And they were, a grim, silent group of men,
+determined, watchful, bent on the second step of
+the program to which they had pledged themselves
+that night at Last&#8217;s Holding. Tharon was there,
+too, and with her Bent Smith on Golden.</p>
+<p>It was a goodly number who left their horses
+in charge of Hill and Dixon at the blind mouth
+and entered the long black cut. They climbed in
+low spoken quiet, their voices sounding back upon
+them with an odd dead effect. They went faster
+than Old Pete was wont to travel, for they meant
+to reach the spot of the tragedy before the early
+shadows should begin to sift down from the high
+world above. Tharon went eagerly, her eyes
+dilated.</p>
+<p>Always she had dreamed of the Ca&ntilde;on Country.
+Always she had wondered what it was like.
+When she left the mouth of the black roofed cut
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span>
+and came out into the narrow, rockwalled ca&ntilde;on
+with its painted faces reaching up into the very
+skies, she gasped with amaze. Above her head
+she could see the endless cuts and crosscuts, the
+standing spires and narrow wedgelike walls that
+made a labyrinthian maze.</p>
+<p>Billy, close beside her, as always, watched her
+with a pensive sadness.</p>
+<p>And so the Vigilantes went in and up along the
+lower ways. There were those among them who
+had been here before, who from time to time had
+accompanied the snow-packer on his nightly trips
+just for the curiosity of the thing. These several
+men, among whom were Albright from the Pomo
+settlement&ndash;&ndash;a squawman&ndash;&ndash;took the lead, and Albright,
+keen as a hound on trail, picked up Old
+Pete&#8217;s marks and signs at a running walk.</p>
+<p>And so it was, that, while the sun was still
+shining on the high peaks above and the ca&ntilde;ons
+were filled with a strange pink light reflected from
+the red and yellow faces of the rock, the Vigilantes
+came suddenly to a halt, for Albright had
+stopped.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here&#8217;s where it happened,&#8221; he said, &#8220;there&#8217;s
+a blood-sign.&#8221; And he pointed to the Wall at a
+spot about breast high. A thin dark line, no wider
+than a blade of grass and about as long, spraying
+out to nothing at the upper end, leaned along the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span>
+rock like a native marking. No other eye had
+seen it. Not one in a thousand would have seen
+it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good,&#8221; said Kenset, &#8220;you&#8217;re the man for
+more of this.&#8221;</p>
+<p>They crowded around and examined the telltale
+spray.</p>
+<p>Not one among them but knew it for the stain
+of blood.</p>
+<p>From that they spread out and back to search
+the sliding heaps of dust-like powdery rock-slide
+that lay everywhere along the walls.</p>
+<p>It took Albright five minutes by Kenset&#8217;s watch
+to find the disturbed and clumsily smoothed dump
+which held all that was mortal of the snow-packer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Miss Last,&#8221; said Kenset as the men began to
+dig with the spades brought along for the purpose,
+&#8220;you had best step back a bit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Tharon pushed nearer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is my work,&#8221; she said with dignity. &#8220;I
+started this, I think.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was a pitiful job that Service and those with
+him had done for Old Pete. Rolled head-first
+into a shallow hole&ndash;&ndash;no doubt with jest and laughter&ndash;&ndash;it
+was his booted foot which first came to
+view, sticking grotesquely up through the loose
+slide-stuff.</p>
+<p>It was brief work and grim work that followed,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
+and soon the weazened form, bent and
+stiffened into something hardly human, lay in the
+soft pink light on the ca&ntilde;on&#8217;s floor.</p>
+<p>Jim Banner knelt and examined it carefully and
+minutely, then every man in the group did likewise.
+They found evidence of one simple, staring fact&ndash;&ndash;Old
+Pete had been shot squarely from behind, a
+little to the left.</p>
+<p>The bullet had undoubtedly pierced the heart&ndash;&ndash;a
+great gaping hole in the left centre of the
+breast in front attesting its course.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here,&#8221; said Albright, coming back from a
+short distance down, beneath the spray on the
+wall, &#8220;here&#8217;s where something was taken up from
+th&#8217; floor&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; blood he lost, I make no doubt.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gentlemen,&ndash;&ndash;Miss Last,&#8221; said Kenset, &#8220;I
+move we all move back and leave the ground to
+Albright. There is fine work here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>With one accord the mass moved back, clearing
+a goodly space.</p>
+<p>In the immediate vicinity there was little chance
+of doing anything, for Service&#8217;s bunch, and themselves,
+had trampled over the soft floor until all
+original traces of the murder were blotted out.</p>
+<p>Albright looked around and seemed to hesitate.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Me, alone?&#8221; he asked. &#8220;Gimme Dick
+Compos, there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Done,&#8221; said Kenset.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span></p>
+<p>A tall, silent half-breed stepped forward and
+without another word the two began to scan the
+walls, the floors, the heaps of rotted rock, the
+loose and tumbled boulders, not yet decomposed,
+that lined the cut on both sides.</p>
+<p>They stood in their tracks and looked, and the
+concentration in their eyes was akin to that in the
+eyes of a wild animal, hiding, hard-pressed, and
+looking for a loophole for life.</p>
+<p>The Vigilantes watched them in silence.</p>
+<p>Presently Dick Compos stepped forward,
+leaned down and searched the wall at the left.
+Then he went forward, bent over, scanning each
+inch. He looked above and below, the height of
+a man&#8217;s shoulders, his hips, his knees.</p>
+<p>Then he crept back, stopped at a particular
+upstanding piece of stone, searched it closely&ndash;&ndash;stepped
+in behind.</p>
+<p>When he came out he looked over at Tharon
+Last standing at the head of her people.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Some one went along th&#8217; Wall here,&#8221; he
+waved a slender brown hand at the ca&ntilde;on face.
+&#8220;Three signs&ndash;&ndash;here&ndash;&ndash;here&ndash;&ndash;here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He indicated the heights he had scanned. They
+stepped a bit nearer and looked. Several pairs
+of Valley eyes saw what Dick Compos had seen, a
+sign so fine that few would have called it that&ndash;&ndash;merely
+a brushing, a smoothing of the fine-sandstone
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span>
+surface where a man&#8217;s shoulders, his hips, his
+knees might have pressed had he stood waiting
+there.</p>
+<p>A bit nearer the standing pinnacle of rock, they
+were evident again.</p>
+<p>With one accord they turned and looked down
+the ca&ntilde;on to where that thin line sprayed the face.
+A close shot, such as would be necessary in the
+darkness of the cut. Albright and Compos both
+stepped to the rock and stood looking with those
+narrowed, concentrated eyes.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Albright, looking back across his
+shoulders, moved like a cat and picked up something
+from ten feet away.</p>
+<p>He held it on his palm&ndash;&ndash;an empty shell, such
+as fitted a .44 Smith and Wesson.</p>
+<p>He scanned it minutely, turned it over this way
+and that, looked at it fore and aft.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Firin&#8217; pin&#8217;s nicked,&#8221; he said, &#8220;an&#8217; a leetle off
+centre.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For ten minutes the thing went from hand to
+hand.</p>
+<p>Then Kenset gave it to the coroner.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s your clew, Mr. Banner,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;Now we can begin. Let us be going back to
+Corvan.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And so it was that Old Pete, the snow-packer,
+went back in state to the Golden Cloud, by relays
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span>
+on men&#8217;s shoulders down the sounding passes,
+through the dead cut, by pack-horse across the
+levels, lashed stiffly to the saddle, a pitiful
+burden.</p>
+<p>Tharon Last, riding close after the calm fashion
+of a strong man in the face of tragedy, thought
+pensively of that night in spring when this little
+old man had taken his life in his hands to save her
+own.</p>
+<p>It was a gift he had given her, nothing less, and
+she made up her mind that Old Pete should sleep
+in peace under the pointing pine at Last&#8217;s Holding&ndash;&ndash;and
+that his cross should also stand beside
+those other two in the carved granite.</p>
+<p>Billy, watching, read her mind with the half-tragic
+eyes of love.</p>
+<p>Kenset, seemingly unconscious, but keenly alive
+to everything, was at great loss to do so.</p>
+<p>He hoped, with a surging tenseness, that this
+fateful thing was sliding over into his hands to
+work out, his and Banner&#8217;s. He knew full well
+that he and Banner both were like to be slated for
+an early death, but he did not care. In Corvan,
+night had fallen when the cavalcade passed
+through.</p>
+<p>Bullard of the Golden Cloud had the grace
+to come out and look at the little old man who
+had worked for him so long and faithfully. But
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
+that was all. They carried him home to Last&#8217;s
+and buried him decently at dawn.</p>
+<p>Then the Vigilantes again rode out. At their
+head was Tharon; though both Kenset and Billy
+tried to dissuade her.</p>
+<p>At Corvan, Banner went through the town like
+a wind, asking for the gun of every man he met.
+By noon every .44 had been examined, one shell
+exploded. Not one left the nicked, uneven sign
+of the mysterious hammer which had snapped its
+death into Old Pete&#8217;s heart.</p>
+<p>When the sun was straight overhead and all
+Lost Valley was sweet with the summer haze, the
+Vigilantes, close packed and silent, swung out
+toward the Stronghold.</p>
+<p>It was blue-dusk when they drew up at the
+corrals beside the fortress house. Lounging
+around in cat-like quiet were some thirty men,
+riders, gun men, <i>vaqueros</i>.</p>
+<p>When Banner called for Courtrey there was a
+sound of boots on the board floors, inside, a
+woman&#8217;s pleading voice, and the cattle king came
+swinging out, his hands at his waist, his two guns
+covering the crowd.</p>
+<p>Tall, straight as a lance, his iron-grey head uncovered,
+he was a striking figure of a man. His
+henchmen watched him sharply. At his side clung
+the slim woman, Ellen, her milky face thin and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
+tragic. He shook her loose and faced the newcomers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; he snapped, &#8220;what&#8217;s this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Courtrey,&#8221; said Banner, &#8220;we&#8217;re here in th&#8217;
+name o&#8217; th&#8217; law. We demand t&#8217; see them guns o&#8217;
+yours.&#8221;</p>
+<p>If the knowledge that Jim Banner was a brave
+man needed confirmation, it had it in that speech.
+Few men in the world could have made it, and
+gotten away with it. None in a different setting.
+Courtrey heard it, but he paid little heed to it at
+the moment. His eyes went to the face of Tharon
+Last and drank in its beauty hungrily.</p>
+<p>Presently he shifted his gaze and regarded Kenset
+with a cold light that was evil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who wants &#8217;em?&#8221; he asked drawlingly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We do.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hell! Want <i>Courtrey&#8217;s</i> guns! You&#8217;re modest,
+Jim.</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; what do you want, Tharon?&#8221;</p>
+<p>In spite of the tenseness of the moment the
+voice that had laughed at death and torture in
+Round Valley became melting soft as it addressed
+the girl.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Law!&#8221; said Tharon, &#8220;Law&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; law I promised
+you on Baston&#8217;s porch!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes? An&#8217; how do you think you&#8217;ll get that?
+If I nod my head we&#8217;ll drive this bunch o&#8217; spawn
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
+out o&#8217; here so quick it&#8217;ll make your head swim!
+What do you think you&#8217;re doin&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t <i>think</i>. I <i>know</i> now. Know what we
+can do&ndash;&ndash;what th&#8217; law means.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Courtrey glanced again at Kenset.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Got some imported knowledge, I take it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take it or leave it! Show us them guns!&#8221;
+cried Tharon harshly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&ndash;&ndash;don&#8217;t&ndash;&ndash;think&ndash;&ndash;so,&#8221; said Courtrey, nodding.</p>
+<p>Like a pair of snakes gliding forward, Wylackie
+Bob and the Arizona stranger were suddenly
+in the foreground, hands hanging apparently
+loose and careless, in reality tense as strung
+wires, ready to snap with fire and lead.</p>
+<p>The moment was pregnant. The very air
+seemed charged with danger and death.</p>
+<p>Then, with a strange cry, Tharon Last swung
+sidewise from her saddle, for all the world as if
+she were breaking under the strain, leaned far over
+El Rey&#8217;s shoulder, and the next moment there
+came a shot, snapping in the stillness.</p>
+<p>With an oath and a lurch Courtrey flung backward,
+tossed up his right arm, and fired with his
+left. His ball went high in the air, wild. The
+blood from that tossed right hand spurted over
+Wylackie Bob beside him, the gun it had held
+went hurtling away along the earth.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span></p>
+<p>There was a movement, a surge, the flash of
+guns and one of the settlers tumbled from his
+saddle, poor Thomas of the doubting heart.
+Courtrey&#8217;s men flashed together as one, thundered
+backward to the wide doorstep, pressed together,
+waited. The voice of Kenset rang like a
+clarion.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stop!&#8221; he cried, &#8220;don&#8217;t shoot!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he swung off his horse to leap for that gun.</p>
+<p>But another was before him.</p>
+<p>With a scream of anguish that rang heaven-high,
+Ellen shot forward and snatched it from the
+spot where it had fallen.</p>
+<p>Tall, white as a ghost in the rose-pink light that
+was tinged with purple, she stood, swaying on her
+feet, and faced them.</p>
+<p>And she put the gun to her temple!</p>
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t got nothin&#8217; t&#8217; live for,&#8221; she said clearly
+and pitifully, &#8220;but Courtrey&#8217;s life is worth what
+I got to me. If you don&#8217;t clear out I&#8217;ll pull th&#8217;
+trigger.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She was tragic as death itself. The big blue
+wells of her eyes were black with the spreading
+pupils. Dark circles lay beneath them.</p>
+<p>Her blue-veined hands were so thin the light
+seemed to shine through them.</p>
+<p>Her long white dress clung to her slim form.
+From far back by the corral fence Cleve Whitmore
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
+watched her silently, his hands clenched
+hard.</p>
+<p>Tharon Last looked at her with wide eyes. She
+had forgotten all about this woman in the passionate
+hatred of Courtrey and the desire to pin
+his crimes upon him. Now she wet her lips and
+looked at Ellen long and silently. The pale lips
+were quivering, the long arm shook as it held the
+gun.</p>
+<p>&#8220;God!&#8221; whispered the girl, watching, &#8220;she
+loves him! Like I loved Jim Last! Th&#8217; pain&#8217;s in
+her heart, an&#8217; no mistake!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then, as if something strong within her folded
+its iron arm upon itself, she began to back El
+Rey. &#8220;Back out!&#8221; she called, &#8220;we ain&#8217;t no
+woman-killers!&#8221;</p>
+<p>With one accord, carefully, watching, the Vigilantes
+began to back, counting the seconds,
+expecting each moment to witness the most pitiful
+thing Lost Valley with all its crimes, had ever
+seen.</p>
+<p>Some one lifted the body of Thomas and swung
+it across a horse.</p>
+<p>Back to the corner of the house, around, they
+went, and finally, out in front they turned as one
+man and rode away from the Stronghold&ndash;&ndash;and
+Jim Banner was swearing like a fury, steadily, in
+a high-pitched voice.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Failed!&#8221; he cried between his oaths, &#8220;failed
+in our biggest job! That&#8217;s th&#8217; gun, all right, all
+right, an&#8217; that damned woman beat us to it! Beat
+us to it with her fool&#8217;s courage an&#8217; her sickenin&#8217;
+love! Oh, t&#8217; hell with Courtrey an&#8217; all this Valley!
+I&#8217;m a-goin&#8217; t&#8217; move down th&#8217; Wall, s&#8217;help
+me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Tharon Last forged to his side and gripped
+his arm in her strong fingers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shut up, Jim Banner,&#8221; she said tensely.
+&#8220;You&#8217;ve only begun. That&#8217;s th&#8217; gun, I make no
+doubt, an&#8217; Ellen knew it&ndash;&ndash;but if we&#8217;re worth killin&#8217;
+we&#8217;ll dig into this harder&#8217;n ever. Here&#8217;s poor
+Thomas, makes one more notch on my record.
+I&#8217;m not sayin&#8217; quit! An&#8217; you&#8217;re th&#8217; bravest man
+in Corvan, too!&#8221;</p>
+<p>At Last&#8217;s Holding the Vigilantes stopped for
+rest and food.</p>
+<p>They had been in saddle the better part of
+forty-eight hours.</p>
+<p>Young Paula, Jos&eacute; and Anita set up a steaming
+meal, and they ate like famished men, by relays
+at the big table in the dining room.</p>
+<p>Tharon Last sat quietly at the board&#8217;s head
+throughout the meal, pensive, thinking of Ellen,
+but grimly planning for the future.</p>
+<p>And Billy and Kenset watched her, each with a
+secret pain at his heart.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Lord, Lord,&#8221; said Billy to himself, &#8220;she&#8217;s
+listenin&#8217; when he speaks like she never listened
+to any one before!&#8221;</p>
+<p>In Kenset&#8217;s mind drilled over and over again
+the ceaseless thought &#8220;A hand or a heart&ndash;&ndash;she
+could hit them both with ease. It&#8217;s true, true,&ndash;&ndash;she&#8217;s
+a gun woman! Oh, Tharon, Tharon!&#8221; and
+he did not know he spoke her name beneath his
+breath.</p>
+<p>But other things were crowding forward&ndash;&ndash;he
+was leaning forward telling that circle of grim,
+lean faces, that if they could not handle this thing
+themselves, there were those in the big world of
+below who could&ndash;&ndash;that there were men of the
+Secret Service who could find that gun no matter
+where Courtrey or Ellen hid it, that Lost
+Valley, no matter what its isolation or its history,
+was yet in the U.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;A., and could be
+tamed.</p>
+<p>Then the Vigilantes were gone with jangle of
+spur and bit-chain, and he was the last to go, standing
+by Captain in the dim starlight. Tharon stood
+beside him, and for some unaccountable reason
+the grim purpose of their acquaintance seemed to
+drift away, to leave them together, alone under
+the stars, a man and a maid. Kenset stood for
+a long moment and looked at the faint outline of
+her face. She was still in her riding clothes, her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span>
+head bare with its ribbon half untied in the nape
+of her slender neck.</p>
+<p>The tree-toads were singing off by the springhouse
+and the cattle in the big corrals made the
+low, ceaseless night-sounds common to a herd.</p>
+<p>The riders were gone, the <i>vaqueros</i> were at
+their posts around the resting stock, the low adobe
+house was settling into the quiet of the night.</p>
+<p>Miserably Kenset looked at this slip of a girl.</p>
+<p>She was strange to him, unfathomable. There
+were depths beneath the changing blue eyes which
+appalled him. How would he feel toward her
+when the thing was done&ndash;&ndash;when she had killed
+Courtrey?</p>
+<p>But she must not be allowed to do it. Not
+though it took his life.</p>
+<p>If she was pledged to this thing, he was no less
+pledged to its prevention.</p>
+<p>He felt a sadness within him as he saw the
+soft curve of her cheek, the outline of her tawny
+head.</p>
+<p>With an impulse which he could not govern he
+reached out suddenly and took her hands in his
+and pressed them against his heart. The pounding
+of that heart was noticeable through her hands
+into his.</p>
+<p>But he did not speak&ndash;&ndash;he could not.</p>
+<p>But he had no need. He could have said nothing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
+that would have cleared the situation, would
+have told himself or her what was in that pounding
+heart of his&ndash;&ndash;for to save his life he did not
+know.</p>
+<p>And Tharon frowned in the darkness and drew
+her hands from under those pressing ones.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Kenset,&#8221; she said steadily, &#8220;you&#8217;re
+always tryin&#8217; to make me weak, to break me down
+with words an&#8217; looks an&#8217; touches. These hands
+o&#8217; yours,&ndash;&ndash;<i>damn &#8217;em</i>, they <i>do</i> make me weak!
+Don&#8217;t put &#8217;em on me again!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And with a sudden, sharp savagery she struck
+his hands off his breast, whirled away in the darkness
+and was gone.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IX_SIGNAL_FIRES_IN_THE_VALLEY' id='CHAPTER_IX_SIGNAL_FIRES_IN_THE_VALLEY'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<h3>SIGNAL FIRES IN THE VALLEY</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Kenset, two days later, gave Sam Drake
+a check for five hundred dollars and a
+letter, unpostmarked but sealed with tape
+and wax. Drake, who owned some half-breed
+Ironwoods, rode the best one down the Wall.</p>
+<p>Kenset had cautioned him not to talk before he
+left&ndash;&ndash;he feared Drake&#8217;s propensity for speech.
+But he was the only man in Lost Valley whom he
+felt he could approach.</p>
+<p>With the courier&#8217;s departure he rode back to
+the Holding and told Tharon and Conford what
+he had done.</p>
+<p>&#8220;These men are the best to be had,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;and they will go anywhere on earth for money.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Tharon frowned and struck a fist into a
+soft palm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What you mean?&#8221; she cried, &#8220;by takin&#8217; my
+work out of my hands like this? I won&#8217;t have it!
+I won&#8217;t wait!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What I meant when I caught your bridle that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span>
+day in the glade,&#8221; answered the man, &#8220;to stop
+you from bloodshed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then he went back to his cabin and his interrupted
+work and set himself to wait in patience
+for the return of Drake.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>But in Lost Valley a leaven was rising. It had
+begun insidiously to work with the appearance of
+Kenset in Tharon&#8217;s band at Courtrey&#8217;s doorstep.
+It burst up like a mushroom with a chance remark
+made by Lola of the Golden Cloud&ndash;&ndash;Lola, who
+had seen, since that night in spring when Tharon
+Last stood in the door and promised to &#8220;get&#8221;
+her father&#8217;s killer, that Courtrey was slipping
+from her. A woman like Lola is hard to deceive.</p>
+<p>Much experience had taught her to feel the
+change of winds in the matter of allegiance.</p>
+<p>She knew that surely and swiftly this man had
+gone down the path of unreasoning love, that he
+would give anything he possessed, do anything
+possible, to win for himself this slim mistress of
+Last&#8217;s Holding.</p>
+<p>Therefore she played the one card she held,
+hoping to rouse the bully, and did just the thing
+she was trying to avert.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buck,&#8221; she said, her black head on his
+shoulder, her dark eyes watching covertly his careless
+face, &#8220;the Last girl is lost to every Valley
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
+man. Sooner or later she&#8217;ll leave the country,
+mark my word, with this Forest Service fellow,
+for she&#8217;s in love with him, though she doesn&#8217;t
+know it yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>With a slow movement Courtrey loosed his
+arm about Lola and lifted her from him. His
+eyes were narrowed as he looked into her face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For God&#8217;s sake!&#8221; he said, &#8220;what makes you
+think that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Knowledge,&#8221; said Lola, &#8220;long knowledge of
+women and men.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I thought that,&#8221; said Courtrey slowly, his
+eyes losing sight of her as he seemed to look beyond
+her. &#8220;If&ndash;&ndash;I&ndash;&ndash;thought that&ndash;&ndash;why, hell! If
+that&#8217;s th&#8217; truth&ndash;&ndash;why, it&ndash;&ndash;it&#8217;s th&#8217; lever!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he rose abruptly, though he had just settled
+himself in Lola&#8217;s apartment for a pleasant
+chat, as was his habit whenever he rode in from
+the Stronghold.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lola,&#8221; he said presently, &#8220;I might&#8217;s well
+tell you that I&#8217;m plannin&#8217; to have this girl for mine,&ndash;&ndash;<i>mine</i>,
+you understand, legally, by law. I can&#8217;t
+have her like I&#8217;ve had you. She&#8217;d blow my head
+off th&#8217; first time I stopped holdin&#8217; her hands.&#8221; He
+laughed at the picture he had conjured, then went
+on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; so I feel grateful to you, old girl, for that
+remark. It sets me thinkin&#8217;.&#8221; And he stooped and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span>
+kissed her on the lips. The woman returned the
+kiss, a wonderful caress, slow, soft, alluring, but
+the man did not notice.</p>
+<p>His face was flushed, his eyes studying.</p>
+<p>Then he swung quickly out through the Golden,
+Cloud, and Lola slipped limply down on a couch
+and covered her ashen cheeks with her hands.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Buck!&#8221; she whispered brokenly, &#8220;Oh,
+Buck! Buck!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Courtrey went straight home, still, cold, thinking
+hard. His henchmen left him in solitude after
+the first word or two. They knew him well, and
+that something was brewing.</p>
+<p>At midnight that night he roused Wylackie
+Bob, Black Bart and the man who was known as
+Arizona, and the four of them went out on the
+levels for a secret talk.</p>
+<p>The next day the master of the Stronghold rode
+away on Bolt. As he left, Ellen, standing in the
+doorway like a pale ghost, lifted her tragic eyes
+to his face with the look of a faithful dog.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where you goin&#8217;, Buck?&#8221; she asked timidly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Off,&#8221; said the man shortly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t you goin&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;goin&#8217; to kiss me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He laughed cruelly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not after what I ben a-hearin&#8217;, I ain&#8217;t!&#8221;</p>
+<p>She sprang forward, catching at his knee.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;What&ndash;&ndash;what you ben a-hearin&#8217;? There ain&#8217;t
+nothin&#8217; about me you could a-heard, Buck, dear!
+Nothin&#8217; in this world! I ben true to you as your
+shadow!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Every soul within hearing knew the words for
+the utter and absolute truth, yet Courtrey looked
+at Wylackie Bob, at Arizona, and laughed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Like hell, you have!&#8221; he said, struck the
+Ironwood and was gone around the corner of the
+house with the sound of thunder.</p>
+<p>Ellen wet her lips and looked around like a
+wounded animal.</p>
+<p>Her brother Cleve, saddling up a little way
+apart, cast a long studying glance at Wylackie
+and Arizona. He jerked the cinch so savagely
+that the horse leaped and struck.</p>
+<p>For four days there was absolute dearth at
+the Stronghold.</p>
+<p>Courtrey did not return. Ellen timidly tried to
+find out from the <i>vaqueros</i> where he had gone,
+but they evaded her.</p>
+<p>Then, on the morning of that day, Steptoe Service,
+grinning and important, came to the Stronghold
+and served on Ellen a summons in suit for
+divorce.</p>
+<p>She met him at the door and invited him in,
+timidly and shyly, but he stood on the stone and
+made known his business.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span></p>
+<p>At first she did not understand, was like a child
+told something too deep for its intellect to grasp,
+bewildered.</p>
+<p>Then, when Service made it brutally plain, she
+slipped down along the doorpost like a wilted lily
+and lay long and white on the sand-scrubbed floor.
+Her women, loving her desperately, gathered her
+up and shut the door in the sheriff&#8217;s face.</p>
+<p>They sent for Cleve, and not even the presence
+of Black Bart in the near corral could keep the
+brother from running into the darkened room
+where Ellen lay, too stunned to rally.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Damn him!&#8221; he gritted, falling on his knees
+beside her, &#8220;this&#8217;s what&#8217;s come of it! I ben
+lookin&#8217; for something of its like. Let him go.
+We&#8217;ll leave Lost Valley, Ellen. We&#8217;ll go out an&#8217;
+start another life, begin all over again. We&#8217;re
+both too young to be floored by a man like Courtrey.
+Let him go.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But the woman turned her waxen face to the
+wall and shook her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There ain&#8217;t no life in this world for me without
+Buck,&#8221; she whispered. &#8220;If he don&#8217;t want
+me, I don&#8217;t want myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You dont&#8217; want to hang to him, do you, Sis?&#8221;
+begged the man, &#8220;don&#8217;t want to stay at th&#8217;
+Stronghold after this?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Rather stay here under Buck&#8217;s feet like th&#8217;
+poorest of his dogs than be well-off somewheres
+where I couldn&#8217;t never see him again, never look
+in his face.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;God!&#8221; groaned Cleve, &#8220;you love him like
+that!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Ellen, wearily, &#8220;like that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then by th&#8217; Eternal!&#8221; swore Cleve softly,
+&#8220;here you&#8217;ll stay if it takes all th&#8217; law in th&#8217; United
+States to keep you here. I&#8217;ll file your answer tomorrow&ndash;&ndash;protest
+to th&#8217; last word!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he rode into Corvan, only to find that
+Courtrey and Courtrey&#8217;s influence had been there
+before him, that a cold sense of disaster seemed
+to permeate the town and all those whom he met
+therein.</p>
+<p>He found the &#8220;Court House crowd&#8221; tight-lipped
+and careful.</p>
+<p>And Ben Garland set the day for trial at a
+ridiculously early date, for all the world as if the
+thing had been cut and dried at some secret
+conclave.</p>
+<p>Courtrey was playing his game with a daring
+hand, true to his name and habit.</p>
+<p>Dusk was falling in Lost Valley. The long
+blue shadows had swept out from the Rockface,
+covering first the homesteads under the Wall, then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span>
+the great grazing stretches, then Corvan, then the
+open levels again, then the mouth of Black Coulee
+and lastly sweeping eastward to hush the life at
+Last&#8217;s Holding in that soft, sweet quiet which
+comes with the day&#8217;s work done.</p>
+<p>Out at the corrals Billy and Conford, Jack and
+Bent and Curly, put the finishing touches to the
+routine of precaution which the Holding never
+relaxed, day or night.</p>
+<p>Inside the dusky living room where the bright
+blankets glowed on the walls and the <i>ollas</i> hung
+in the deep window places, Tharon Last sat at
+the little old melodeon and played her nameless
+tunes. She did not look at the yellowed keys. Instead
+her blue eyes, deep and glowing, wandered
+down along the southern slopes and she was lost
+in unconscious dreams. Once again she saw the
+trim figure of the forest man as she had seen him
+come stiffly into her range of vision that day in
+Corvan. She recalled his quiet eyes, dark and
+speaking, the odd way his hair went straight back
+from his forehead. She wondered why she should
+think of him at all.</p>
+<p>He was against her&ndash;&ndash;was a force that played
+directly against all her plans of life, her precepts.
+Moreover, she had told him she feared
+he was soft&ndash;&ndash;like a woman&ndash;&ndash;some women&ndash;&ndash;that
+there was in him a lack of the straight man-courage
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span>
+which was the only standard in Lost
+Valley.</p>
+<p>And yet&ndash;&ndash;she waited on his word, somehow&ndash;&ndash;held
+her hand from her sworn duty for a while,
+waiting&ndash;&ndash;for what?</p>
+<p>Ah, she knew! Deep in the soul of her she
+knew, vaguely and dimly to be sure, but she
+knew that it was for the time when the die should
+be cast&ndash;&ndash;that he might prove himself for what he
+was.</p>
+<p>For some vague reason she knew she would not
+kill Courtrey until this man stood by.</p>
+<p>She wondered what Courtrey meant by this
+strange quiet following the tragic moment at the
+Stronghold steps when the Vigilantes had challenged
+him and ridden away.</p>
+<p>And then, all suddenly, into her dreaming there
+came the sound of a horse&#8217;s hoofs on the sounding-board
+without&ndash;&ndash;slow hoofs, uncertain. For one
+swift second that sound, coming out of the dusk
+with its uncertainty, sent a chill of memory down
+her nerves. So had come El Rey that night in
+spring when he brought Jim Last home to die!</p>
+<p>She rose swiftly and silently and stepped to the
+western door.</p>
+<p>There, in the shadows and the softness of coming
+night, a horse loomed along the green stretch,
+came plodding up to stop and stand before her, a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
+brown horse, with the stirrups of his saddle hung
+on the pommel, his rein tied short up&ndash;&ndash;Captain,
+the good, common friend of Kenset&ndash;&ndash;of the&ndash;&ndash;foothills!</p>
+<p>Tharon felt the blood pour back upon her heart
+and stay there for an awful moment. She put up
+a hand and touched her throat, and to save her
+life she did not know why this sudden sickening
+fear should come upon her.</p>
+<p>She had seen men killed, had known tragedy
+and loss and heartache, but never before had she
+seen the crest of the distant Wall to dance upon
+the pale skyline so. Then she whirled into the
+house and her young voice pealed out a call&ndash;&ndash;Billy,
+Conford, Bent&ndash;&ndash;she drew them to her running
+through the deep house&ndash;&ndash;to point to the silent
+messenger and question them with wide blue eyes
+where fear rose up like a living thing.</p>
+<p>Billy at her shoulder, looked not at Captain,
+but at her.</p>
+<p>A sigh lifted his breast, but he stifled it at birth
+and turned with the others back toward the corrals.
+Tharon, running toward the deep room
+where the Virgin stood in Her everlasting beauty,
+unfastened her soft white dress as she ran. Inside
+she flung herself on her knees before the
+Holy Mother and poured out a trembling
+prayer.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Not that! Oh, Mary, not that! Let it not
+be <i>that</i>!&#8221; she whispered thickly. Then she was
+up, into her riding clothes&ndash;&ndash;was out where the boys
+were hurriedly saddling the Finger Marks. Presently
+she was on El Rey and shooting like a silver
+shaft in the summer dusk down along the green
+levels toward the east. They rode in silence, Conford,
+Bent, Jack, Curly, Billy and herself, and a
+thousand thoughts were boiling miserably in two
+hearts.</p>
+<p>El Rey, Golden, Redbuck, Drumfire, Westwind
+and Sweetheart, they went down along the sounding
+dark plain, a magnificent band. The whole
+earth seemed to resound to the thunder of their
+going, and for once in their lives her beauties
+could not run fast enough for the mistress of
+Last&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>They went like the wind itself, and yet they
+were slow to Tharon.</p>
+<p>Out of the open levels there swung up to meet
+them and to fade into the night, the standing
+willows by the Silver Hollow. The sloping
+stretches began to lift, dotted by the oaks and
+digger-pines for whose sake Kenset had come to
+Lost Valley. They shot through them, up along
+the sharply lifting skirts of the hills, in between
+the guarding pines that formed the gateway to
+the little glade where the singing stream went
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
+down and the cabin stood at the head. Tharon&#8217;s
+throat was tight, as if a hand pressed hard upon
+it. The high tops of the pines seemed to cut the
+sky grotesquely. There was no light at the dim
+log house, no sound in the silent glade. Off to
+the right they heard the low of the little red cow
+which served the forest man with milk.</p>
+<p>They pounded to a sliding stop in the cabin&#8217;s
+yard and Conford called sharply into the silent
+darkness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Kenset! Hello&ndash;&ndash;Kenset!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon held her breath and listened. There
+was no sound except a night bird calling from the
+highest pine-tip.</p>
+<p>Carefully the men dismounted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You stay up, Tharon, dear,&#8221; the foreman
+said quietly, &#8220;until we look around.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But to save her life the girl could not. What
+was this trembling that seized her limbs? Why
+did the stars, come out on the purple sky, shift
+so strangely to her eyes? She slipped off El Rey
+and stood by his shoulder waiting. Conford struck
+a flare and lit a candle, holding it carefully before
+him, shielding it with his palm behind it to throw
+the gleam away from his face, into the cabin.
+The pale light illumined the whole interior, and
+it was empty. The keen eyes of the riders went
+over every inch of space before they entered&ndash;&ndash;along
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span>
+the walls, in the bed, under the tables. Then
+they filed in and Tharon followed, gazing around
+with eyes that ached behind their lids. There on
+the northern wall between the windows, was the
+great spread of the beautiful picture she had
+helped the forest man to hang. There were his
+books on the table&#8217;s edge. She looked twice&ndash;&ndash;the
+last one on the pile at a certain corner was just
+as she had placed it there, a trifle crooked with
+the edge, but neatly in line with those beneath it.
+There was the big chair in which she had waited
+while he made the little meal&ndash;&ndash;there was his desk
+in the ingle nook, his maps upon it. It was
+all so familiar, so filled with his personality, that
+Tharon felt the very power of his dark eyes,
+smiling, grave&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello!&#8221; said Jack Masters suddenly. &#8220;Burt,
+what&#8217;s this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Conford stepped quickly around the table and
+held his candle down.</p>
+<p>Tharon pushed forward and looked over the
+leaning shoulders.</p>
+<p>There on the brown and green grass rug a rich
+dark stain was drying&ndash;&ndash;blood, some three days
+old.</p>
+<p>Then, indeed, did the universe sag and darken
+to the Mistress of Last&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>She put out a hand to steady herself and found
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span>
+it grasped in the strong one of Billy, who stood
+at her shoulder like her shadow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Steady!&#8221; he whispered. &#8220;Steady, Tharon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She drew her trembling fingers across her eyes,
+wet her lips which felt dry as ashes. The same
+ache that had come with Jim Last&#8217;s final smile
+was already in her heart, but intensified a thousand
+times. She felt all suddenly, as if there was nothing
+in Lost Valley worth while, nothing in all the
+world! That drying stain at her feet seemed to
+shut out the sun, moon and stars with its sinister
+darkness. She felt a nausea at the pit of her
+stomach, a need for air in her cramped lungs.</p>
+<p>Strange, she had never known that one could be
+so detached from all familiar things, could seem
+so lost in a sea of stupid agony. Why was it so?
+If this dark blot of blood had come from the veins
+of Billy now, of Conford, or Jack or Curly, her
+own men, would she have lost her grip like this?
+And then she became dully conscious that Billy
+had put her in the big chair by the table and had
+joined the others in their exhaustive search for any
+clew to the tragedy. She saw the moon rising
+over the tops of the pine trees at the glade&#8217;s edge,
+heard the little song of the running stream.</p>
+<p>That was the little stream that Kenset had
+looked for in his ideal spot, this was the home he
+had made for himself, these were the things of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span>
+other life he had known, these soft, dark pictures,
+the books on the tables, the brass things shining
+in the light from the lamp.... She knew that
+she was cold in the summer night, that she was
+staring miserably out of the open door, scarcely
+conscious of the scattered voices of her men,
+searching, searching, hunting, in widening circles
+outside.... Then they came back talking in low
+voices and she roused herself desperately. Her
+limbs were stiff when she rose from the big chair,
+her hands were icy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No use, Tharon,&#8221; said Conford quietly, &#8220;we
+can&#8217;t find a damned thing. If Courtrey&#8217;s bunch
+killed Kenset they made a clean get-away with all
+evidence. That much has th&#8217; new law done in th&#8217;
+Valley&ndash;&ndash;killed th&#8217; insolence of th&#8217; gun man. Let&#8217;s
+go home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was Billy, faithful and still, who helped her&ndash;&ndash;for
+the first time in her life!&ndash;&ndash;to mount a horse.
+She went up on El Rey as if she were old. Then
+they were riding down the smooth floor of the
+little glade, leaving that darkened cabin at its
+head to stand in tragic loneliness.</p>
+<p>She saw the tops of the guarding pines at the
+gateway, rode out between them. The moon was
+up in majesty, and by its light Jack Masters suddenly
+leaned down to look at something, pulled up,
+swept down from his saddle, cowboy fashion,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span>
+hanging by a foot and a hand, and picked up something
+which he examined keenly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look,&#8221; he said quickly, &#8220;th&#8217; beet-man&#8217;s
+badge!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He held out on his palm a small dark object,
+the copper-coloured shield which had shone on
+Kenset&#8217;s breast!</p>
+<p>Its double-tongued fastener was twisted far
+awry, as if it had been wrenched away by violence.</p>
+<p>Conford turned and looked back to the cabin,
+as if he measured the distance.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s been funny work here as sure&#8217;s hell,&#8221;
+he said profoundly.</p>
+<p>Then they rode on, all silent, thinking. It was
+near dawn when they rode up along the sounding-board
+and put in at Last&#8217;s. Billy reached up
+tender arms and took Tharon off El Rey, and
+for the first time she gave herself wearily into
+them as if she were done.</p>
+<p>As she opened the door into her own dusky
+room the pale Virgin, touched by a silver shaft
+of the sinking moon, stood out in startling, ethereal
+beauty, Her meek hands folded on Her breast.
+Tharon Last stumbled forward and sank in a heap
+at Her feet, her arms about the statue&#8217;s knees.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hail&ndash;&ndash;Mary&ndash;&ndash;intercede for&ndash;&ndash;him&ndash;&ndash;&#8221; she
+faltered, and then the shining Virgin, the dim
+mystery of the shadowy room, faded out to leave
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span>
+her for the first time in her strong life, a bit of
+senseless clay.</p>
+<p>When she again opened her eyes the little winds
+of day were fanning her cheeks and old Anita
+was tugging at her shoulders, voluble with fright.</p>
+<p>To the riders of Last&#8217;s the tragedy was nothing
+more than any other that they had known in Lost
+Valley. They went about their work as usual.</p>
+<p>Only Billy was filled with a sickening anguish at
+the knowledge that he was not able to offer one
+smallest saving straw to the girl in the big house&ndash;&ndash;for
+Billy knew.</p>
+<p>All day Tharon sat like a rock in her own room,
+staring with unseeing eyes at the blank whitewashed
+walls. She did not yet know what ailed
+her, why this killing, more than that of poor
+Harkness, should make her sick to her soul&#8217;s
+foundations. Yet it was so. Even the thought of
+her sworn duty was vague before her for a time.
+Then it seemed to come forward out of the mass
+of fleeting memories&ndash;&ndash;Kenset that day at Baston&#8217;s
+steps shapely, trim, halted&ndash;&ndash;Kenset laughing
+over the little meal beside the table where the
+books lay&ndash;&ndash;Kenset grasping her shoulder when
+she whirled to mount El Rey and challenge the
+Stronghold single-handed&ndash;&ndash;to come forward like
+a calming, steadying thing and turn the pain to
+purpose.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span></p>
+<p>There was no one now to hold her back, no
+vital hands to press hers upon a beating heart, to
+make her untrue to her given word!</p>
+<p>Now she could go out, reckless and grim in her
+utter disregard of the outcome, and kill Courtrey
+where he stood. The time had come. There
+should be another cross in the granite beneath the
+pointing pine.</p>
+<p>As if the whirling universe settled back to its
+ordered place the right proportion came back
+to her vision, the breath seemed to lighten her
+holden lungs.</p>
+<p>Once again the girl arose and steadied herself,
+smoothed her tawny hair, looked at her hands to
+find them free from the shaking that had weakened
+them.</p>
+<p>She dressed herself and went out among her
+people, quiet and pale.</p>
+<p>The twilight had fallen and all the western
+part of the Valley was blue with shadow. Only
+on Kenset&#8217;s foothills was the rosy light glowing,
+a tragic, aching light, it seemed to her. She saw
+all the little world of Lost Valley with new eyes,
+sombre eyes, in which there was no sense of its
+beauty. She wondered anxiously how soon she
+could meet Courtrey, and where. And then with
+the suddenness of an ordered play, the question
+was answered for her, for out of the dusk and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span>
+the purple shadows a Pomo rider came on a running
+pony and halted out a stone&#8217;s throw, calling
+for the &#8220;Se&ntilde;orita,&#8221; his hands held up in token of
+friendliness.</p>
+<p>Without a thought of treachery Tharon went
+out to him and took the letter he handed her&ndash;&ndash;swinging
+around for flight as the paper left his
+hand, for the riders of Last&#8217;s were known all up
+and down the land. This dusky messenger took
+no chances he could avoid. He was well down
+along the slope by the time the boys came clanking
+around the house.</p>
+<p>And Tharon, standing in the twilight like a slim
+white ghost, was staring over their heads, her
+lips ashen, the scrawled letter trembling in her
+hands. For this is what she read, straining her
+young eyes in the fading light.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; '>&#8220;Tharon. You must know by now that I mean
+bisness. All this Vigilant bisness ain&#8217;t a-goin&#8217;
+to help things eny. If it hadn&#8217;t of ben that I love
+you, what you think I&#8217;d a-done to that bunch?
+That&#8217;s th&#8217; truth. I ben holdin&#8217; off thinkin&#8217; you&#8217;d
+come to your senses an&#8217; see that Buck Courtrey
+ain&#8217;t to be met with vilence. Now I&#8217;m playin&#8217; my
+trump card&ndash;&ndash;now, tonight.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; '>&#8220;Lola says you love this dude from below.
+That don&#8217;t cut no ice with me. I ain&#8217;t carin&#8217; for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span>
+no love from you at present. All I want is <i>you</i>. I
+can make you love me once I&#8217;ve got you safe at
+th&#8217; Stronghold. I ain&#8217;t never failed with no
+woman yet. An&#8217; I mean to have you, fair means
+or foul.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; '>&#8220;Rather have you fair. So here&#8217;s my last
+word.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; '>&#8220;This Kenset ain&#8217;t dead&ndash;&ndash;yet. I went and
+took him. I&#8217;ve got him safe as hell in the Ca&ntilde;on
+Country. Ain&#8217;t no man in th&#8217; Valley can find
+God&#8217;s Cup but me. He&#8217;s guarded an&#8217; there&#8217;s a
+lookout on th&#8217; peak above th&#8217; Cup that can see
+a signal fire at th&#8217; Stronghold. One fire out by
+my big corral means &#8216;Send him out by False Ridge
+with ten days&#8217; grub.&#8217; Two fires means &#8216;Put a true
+bullet in his head an&#8217; leave him there.&#8217; Now,
+here&#8217;s the word. I&#8217;ve got a case fixed up to divorce
+Ellen, legal. If you&#8217;ll marry me soon&#8217;s I&#8217;m free,
+I&#8217;ll build one fire out by that corral.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; '>&#8220;If you say yes, you build one fire out by th&#8217;
+cottonwoods to th&#8217; left of the Holdin&#8217;. I&#8217;m
+watchin&#8217; an&#8217; will see it at once. You can see for
+yourself I mean bisness, as if you&#8217;ll watch too,
+you&#8217;ll see that one fire here.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1.0em; margin-right:1.0em; text-align:right'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Courtrey.</span>&#8221;<br /></p>
+<p>For a long moment the Mistress of Last&#8217;s stood
+in profound quiet, as if she could not move. She
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span>
+was held in a trance like those dreadful night-dreams
+when one is locked in deadly inertia, helpless.
+The net which had been weaving in Courtrey&#8217;s
+fertile brain was finished, flung, and closing
+in upon her before she knew of its existence. An
+awe of his cleverness, his trickery, gripped her in
+a clutch of ice. The whole fabric of her own
+desires and plans and purposes seemed to crumple
+like the white ash in a dead fire, leaving her nothing.
+She had been out-witted instead of outfought.
+One more evidence of the man&#8217;s baseness,
+his unscrupulous cunning.</p>
+<p>He played his trump card and it was a winner,
+sweeping the table&ndash;&ndash;for she knew before she
+finished that difficult reading that she would do
+anything in all the world to stop that &#8220;true
+bullet&#8221; in the heart that had pounded beneath her
+open palms.... Knew she would break her
+given word to Jim Last&ndash;&ndash;knew she would forsake
+the Holding&ndash;&ndash;that she would crawl to Courtrey&#8217;s
+feet and kiss his hand, if only he would spare
+Kenset of the foothills, would send him out to
+that vague world of below, never to return!</p>
+<p>She swayed drunkenly on her feet for a time
+that seemed ages long. Then life came back in
+her with a rush. She broke the nightmare dream
+and gasped out a broken command to her faithful
+ones.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Billy!&#8221; she said thickly, &#8220;Oh, Billy! If you
+love me, run! Run an&#8217; build a fire&ndash;&ndash;one fire!&ndash;&ndash;only
+<i>one</i> fire, Billy, dear&ndash;&ndash;out by th&#8217; cottonwoods
+to th&#8217; left&ndash;&ndash;of th&#8217; Holdin&#8217;!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then she went and sat limply down on the step
+at the western door, leaned her head against the
+deep adobe wall, and fell to weeping as if the very
+heart in her would wash itself away in tears.</p>
+<p>And Billy, numb with anguish but true to the
+love he bore her, went swiftly out and set that
+beacon glowing. Its red light flaring against the
+blue darkness of the falling night seemed like a
+bodeful omen of sorrow and disaster, of death
+and failure and despair.</p>
+<p>Tharon on the sill roused herself to watch it
+leap and glow, then turned her deep eyes to where
+she knew the Stronghold lay.</p>
+<p>Presently out upon the distant black curtain of
+the night there flared that other fire, signal of life
+to Kenset somewhere in the Ca&ntilde;on Country&ndash;&ndash;and
+then her lips drew into a thin hard line and she
+straightened her young form stiffly up, put a hand
+hard upon her breast.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A little time, Courtrey!&#8221; she whispered to
+herself, &#8220;Jus&#8217; a little time an&#8217; luck, an&#8217; I&#8217;ll give
+you th&#8217; double-cross or die, damn your soul to
+hell!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Billy, coming softly in along the adobe wall,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span>
+caught the whisper, felt rather than heard its
+meaning, and turned back with the step of a cat.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>An hour later, when all the Holding was quiet
+for the night, drifting to early rest after the day&#8217;s
+hard work, the Mistress of Last&#8217;s, booted, dressed
+in riding clothes, her fair head covered by a sombrero,
+her daddy&#8217;s guns at her hips, crept softly to
+the gate of El Rey&#8217;s own corral. She went like a
+thief, crouching, watching, without a sound, and
+saddled the big stallion in careful softness. She
+led him gently out and around toward the cottonwoods,
+away from the house. When she was well
+away she put foot to stirrup and went up as the
+king leaped for his accustomed flight.</p>
+<p>But Tharon pulled him down. She wanted no
+thunder on the sounding-board tonight. But soft
+as she had been, as careful, there was one at the
+Holding who followed her every act, who went
+for a horse, too, who saddled Drumfire in silence
+and who crept down the sounding-board&ndash;&ndash;Billy
+the faithful. Far down along the plain toward the
+Black Coulee he let the red roan out, so that the
+girl, keen of hearing as of sight, caught the following
+beat of hoofs, stopped, listened, understood
+and reined El Rey up to wait.</p>
+<p>And soon out of the shadows cast by the eastern
+ramparts, where the moon was rising, she saw
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
+the rider coming. A quick mist of tears suffused
+her eyes, a sick feeling gripped her heart.</p>
+<p>Here was another mixed in the sorry tangle!
+She had always known vaguely that Billy was
+one with her, that his heart was the deep heart
+of her friend.</p>
+<p>He was the one she always wanted near her
+in times of stress, it was with him she liked to
+ride in the Big Shadow when the sun went down
+behind the Ca&ntilde;on Country.</p>
+<p>But now she did not want him. She had a
+keen desire to see him safely out of this&ndash;&ndash;this
+which was to be the end, one way or the other,
+of the blood-feud between the Stronghold and
+Last&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>Now as he loped up and stopped abreast of her
+in silence, she reached out a hand and caught his
+in a close clasp.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want you, Billy, dear,&#8221; she said miserably,
+&#8220;not because I don&#8217;t love you, but because I
+ain&#8217;t a-goin&#8217; to see you shot by Courtrey&#8217;s gang.
+This is one time, boy, when I want you to leave
+me alone, to go back without me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The rider shook his head against the stars.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t do it, little girl,&#8221; he said wistfully,
+&#8220;you know I couldn&#8217;t do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t I your mistress, Billy?&#8221; asked Tharon
+sternly. &#8220;Ain&#8217;t I your boss?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure are,&#8221; said the boy with conviction.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t I always been a good boss to you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Best in th&#8217; world. Good as Jim Last.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then,&#8221; said Tharon sharply, &#8220;it&#8217;s up to you
+to take my orders. I order you now&ndash;&ndash;go
+back.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The cowboy leaned down suddenly and kissed
+the hand he held.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m at your shoulder, Tharon, dear,&#8221; he said
+with simple dignity, &#8220;like your shadow. At your
+foot like the dogs that never forsake th&#8217; herds. I
+couldn&#8217;t go back an&#8217; leave you&ndash;&ndash;not though I died
+for it tonight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll say no more about it. I don&#8217;t know
+where you&#8217;re goin&#8217;, but wherever it is, there I&#8217;m
+goin&#8217;, too, an&#8217; on my way. You can tell me or
+not, just as you please, but let&#8217;s go.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a long time Tharon Last sat in the starlight
+and watched the crests of the distant mountains
+fringed with the silver of the moon that was rising
+behind them, and her throat ached with tears.
+All these things that hurt her, these unknown,
+tangled things that she knew dimly meant Life,
+had come to her with the advent of Kenset in
+Lost Valley. She wished passionately for a fleeting
+moment that he had never come, that the old
+swinging, rushing life of the ranges had never
+known his holding influence. Then she felt again
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span>
+the hammering of his heart beneath her palms, and
+nothing mattered in all the world beside.</p>
+<p>It was a thing beyond her ken, something
+ordered by fate. She must go on, blindly as running
+waters, regardless of all that drowned.</p>
+<p>But she loosed her hand from Billy&#8217;s, leaned to
+his shoulder, put her arm about his neck and drew
+his face to hers. Softly, tenderly, she kissed him
+upon the lips, and she did not know that that was
+the cruelest thing she had ever done in all her
+kindly life, did not see the deathly pallor that overspread
+his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to th&#8217; Ca&ntilde;on Country, Billy,&#8221; she
+said simply, &#8220;to find th&#8217; Cup o&#8217; God an&#8217; Kenset.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then she straightened in her saddle and gave
+El Rey the rein.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>It was two of the clock by the starry heavens
+when these two riders entered the blind opening in the
+Rockface and disappeared. El Rey, the
+mighty, tossed his great head and whistled,
+stamped his hoofs in the dead sift of the silencing
+floor. He had never before lost sight of the sky,
+never felt other breath in his nostrils than the
+keen plain&#8217;s wind.</p>
+<p>Now he shook himself and halted, went on
+again, and again halted, to be urged forward by
+Tharon&#8217;s spurred heels in his flanks. Up
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
+through the eerie pass they went without speech,
+for each heart was filled to overflowing with
+thoughts and fears.</p>
+<p>To Billy there was something fateful, bodeful
+in the dead darkness, the stillness. It seemed
+to him as if he left forever behind him the open
+life of the ranges, the gay and careless days of
+riding after Tharon&#8217;s cattle.</p>
+<p>For five years he had lived at Last&#8217;s, under
+master and mistress, content, happy. The half-remembered
+world of below had never called him.
+The light on the table under the swinging lamp
+with Tharon&#8217;s face therein, the murmur of the
+stream through her garden, the whisper of the
+cottonwoods, these had been sufficient. He had,
+subconsciously, thanked his Maker for these
+things, had served them with a whole heart. They
+had been his all, his life. Now the cottonwoods
+seemed far away, remote, the life of the deep
+ranch house a thing of long ago. All these things
+had given way to something that sapped the sunlight
+from the air, the very blueness from the
+vaulted skies, something that had come with the
+quiet man of the pine-tree badge. So Billy sighed
+in the darkness and sat easily on Drumfire,
+his slim left hand fidgeting with the swinging
+rein.</p>
+<p>And Tharon was lost, too, in a maze of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span>
+thoughts. She sat straight as a lance, tense, alive,
+keen, staring into the narrow bore of the high
+ceiled cut, thinking feverishly. Was Kenset
+really alive? Had Courtrey been square with her?
+Or was he even now lying stiff and stark somewhere
+in the high cuts, his dark eyes dull with
+death, that beating heart forever stilled? She
+caught her breath with a whistling sigh, felt her
+head swim at the picture. If he was&ndash;&ndash;<i>if</i>&ndash;&ndash;<i>he</i>&ndash;&ndash;<i>was</i>&ndash;&ndash;!
+She fingered the big guns at her hip and
+savagery took hold of her. Courtrey&#8217;s left wrist
+to match his right. Then some pretty work about
+him to make him wait&ndash;&ndash;then a shot through his
+stomach&ndash;&ndash;he would spit blood and reel, but he
+wouldn&#8217;t die&ndash;&ndash;the butcher!&ndash;&ndash;for a little while,
+and she would taunt him with Harkness&ndash;&ndash;and Jim.
+Last shot in the back&ndash;&ndash;with Old Pete&ndash;&ndash;and with&ndash;&ndash;with
+Kenset&ndash;&ndash;the one man&ndash;&ndash;Oh, the one man in
+all the world whose quiet smile was unforgettable,
+whose vital hands were upon hers now, like ghost-hands,
+would always be upon hers if she lived to
+be old like Anita or died at dawn today! And
+Kenset had counseled her to peace! To keep
+the stain of blood from her own hands! She
+laughed aloud, suddenly, a ghastly sound that
+made cold chills go down her rider&#8217;s spine, for
+it was the mad laughter of the blood-lust! Billy
+knew that Jim Last in his best moments was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
+never so coldly a killer as his daughter was tonight.</p>
+<p>So they traversed the roofed cut and came out
+into the starlight of the first ca&ntilde;on. Up this they
+went in single file. They passed the place where
+Albright had found the dark spray on the ca&ntilde;on
+wall, the standing rock where the gun with the
+untrue firing pin had kicked away its shell. A
+little farther on was the disturbed and trampled
+heap of slide which had held Old Pete&#8217;s body. In
+silence they rode on, the horses&#8217; hoofs striking a
+million echoes from the reverberating crosscuts.</p>
+<p>The moon was shining above, but here there
+was only a sifted light, a ghostly radiance of
+starlight and painted walls. Tharon, riding ahead,
+went unerringly forward as if she traveled the
+open ways of the Valley floor. She turned from
+the main ca&ntilde;on toward the left and passed the
+mouth of Old Pete&#8217;s snow-bed. Between this and
+that standing spire and pinnacle she went, with a
+strong certainty that presently stirred Billy to
+speech.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tharon, dear,&#8221; he said gently, &#8220;hadn&#8217;t we
+better leave a mark or two along this-a-way?
+Ain&#8217;t you got no landmarks?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can if you want,&#8221; the girl said briefly, &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t need landmarks.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Then how you know the way? There ain&#8217;t
+no one knows th&#8217; Ca&ntilde;on Country&ndash;&ndash;but Courtrey.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know it,&#8221; she said simply but with
+profound conviction. &#8220;I&#8217;m <i>feelin&#8217;</i> it, Billy. I
+know I&#8217;m goin&#8217; straight to th&#8217; Cup o&#8217; God. I&#8217;m
+blind as a bat, it seems, yet goin&#8217; straight.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She lifted a hand and crossed herself.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Goin&#8217; straight&ndash;&ndash;Mary willin&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; I&#8217;ll come
+back straight. It lies up there an&#8217; to th&#8217; left
+again.&#8221; She made a wide gesture that swept up
+and out, embracing the towering walls, the half-seen
+peaks against the stars.</p>
+<p>Billy shut his lips and said no more.</p>
+<p>Up there lay False Ridge, the sinister, dropping
+spine that came down from the uplands outside
+where the real great world began, and lured
+those who traveled down it to crumbling precipice
+and yawning pit, to sliding slope and slant that,
+once ridden down, could never be scaled again,
+according to the weird stories that were told of
+it.</p>
+<p>But if Tharon went to the Ca&ntilde;ons, there lay
+his trail, too. If she went down False Ridge to
+death in the pits and waterless cuts, he asked no
+better lot than to follow&ndash;&ndash;the faithful dog at her
+foot, the shadow at her shoulder.</p>
+<p>And so it was that dawn crept up the blue-velvet
+of the night sky and sent its steel-blue light
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span>
+deep in the painted splits, and they rode unerringly
+forward up the sounding passes.</p>
+<p>When the light increased enough to show the
+way they came abruptly to the spot where it was
+necessary to leave the horses. The floor of the
+ca&ntilde;on up which they were traveling lifted sharply
+in one huge step, breast-high to a man.</p>
+<p>Tharon in the lead halted and looked for a
+moment all up and down the wondrous maze of
+pale, tall openings that encompassed them all
+round.</p>
+<p>She turned in her saddle and looked back the
+way they had come. There was darker shadow,
+going downward, but here and there those pale
+mouths gaped, long ribbons of space dropping
+from the heights above down to their level.</p>
+<p>Up any one a man might turn and lose himself
+completely, for they in turn were cut and ribboned
+with other mouths, leaving spires and walls and
+faces a thousand-fold on every hand.</p>
+<p>Tharon, even in the tensity and preoccupation
+of the hour, drew in her breath and the pupils of
+her blue eyes spread.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Th&#8217; Ca&ntilde;on Country!&#8221; she said softly, &#8220;I
+always knew it would be like this&ndash;&ndash;too great to tell
+about! I knew it would hold somethin&#8217; for me&ndash;&ndash;always
+knew it&ndash;&ndash;either life an&#8217; its best&ndash;&ndash;or death.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span></p>
+<p>There was a simple grandeur about the earnest
+words, and Billy, his face grey in the steely light,
+felt the heart in his breast thrill with their portent.</p>
+<p>No matter what the Ca&ntilde;ons held for her&ndash;&ndash;either
+that glorious fulfillment of life, or the
+simple austerity of death&ndash;&ndash;he would have a part
+in it, would have served her to the last, true to the
+love he bore her, true to himself.</p>
+<p>And nothing&ndash;&ndash;nothing under God&#8217;s heaven,
+save death itself&ndash;&ndash;could ever wipe out the memory
+of that kiss, given from the depths of her loving
+heart, the sign-manuel of her undying affection
+and friendship, the one and only touch of her inviolate
+red lips that he had ever known the
+Mistress of Last&#8217;s to give to any man, save Jim
+Last himself.</p>
+<p>He wiped a hand across his forehead, damp
+with more than the night cold, and dismounted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll leave th&#8217; horses here,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
+an extra rope to string across an&#8217; make a small
+corral.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He did not add that he would fasten this slim
+barrier lightly, so that a horse that really wanted
+to break out&ndash;&ndash;in the frantic madness of thirst,
+say,&ndash;&ndash;might do so.</p>
+<p>Then he set about his task&ndash;&ndash;but Tharon stood
+with strained eyes looking up&ndash;&ndash;and up&ndash;&ndash;and ever
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span>
+up to the dimly appearing, looming spine of False
+Ridge.</p>
+<p>Over there, she knew in her heart, lay the
+hidden Cup o&#8217; God, with its secret, the secret
+that meant all the world to her.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_X_THE_UNTRUE_FIRING_PIN' id='CHAPTER_X_THE_UNTRUE_FIRING_PIN'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<h3>THE UNTRUE FIRING PIN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Tharon turned back and looked long at El
+Rey. She wondered if she would ever see
+the great silver-blue stallion again, ever
+feel the wind singing by her cheeks, ever hear the
+thunder of his running on the hollow ranges. She
+saw the stain of Jim Last&#8217;s blood on the big
+studded saddle and a pain like death stabbed her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll get him,&#8221; she had promised on that tragic
+day, &#8220;so help me God!&#8221; and had made the sign
+of the Cross.</p>
+<p>What did she now?</p>
+<p>Cast away all certainty of that fulfilment because
+a man&ndash;&ndash;a man almost a stranger&ndash;&ndash;lay somewhere
+in the Ca&ntilde;on Country, crawled somewhere
+along False Ridge, perhaps, wounded and sick
+with fever.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, hurry!&#8221; she whispered as Billy made
+secure his last light knot in the rope gateway
+across the cut and came to join her.</p>
+<p>She scrambled up the bench in the ca&ntilde;on floor,
+gained her feet and went forward at a rush.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Steady, Tharon,&#8221; warned the rider, &#8220;you
+ain&#8217;t used to climbin&#8217;. Save your wind.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was true advice. Long before the sun was
+high overhead and day was broad in the painted
+cracks she had begun to heed it. As she swung
+up the ever lifting floors, threaded this way and
+that between the thin intercepting walls that towered
+hundreds of feet straight up, she cast her
+wide eyes up in wonder. Always she had watched
+the Ca&ntilde;on Country from her western door, always
+it had held her with a binding lure.</p>
+<p>There was that about its mystery, its austere
+majesty, that had thrilled her heart from babyhood.
+She had pictured it a thousand times and
+always it had looked just so&ndash;&ndash;pink and grey and
+saffron, pale and misty with light when the sun
+was high, blue and wonderful and black as the
+luminary lowered, leaving the quick shadows.</p>
+<p>Hour after hour they climbed, mostly in silence,
+speaking now and then some necessary word of
+caution, of assent. This way and that Tharon
+turned, but always moving upward in the same
+direction. From time to time Billy dropped a
+shred of the red kerchief about his neck, touched
+the soft walls with the handle of the knife he carried.
+This left a mark plain as a trail to his
+trained eyes.</p>
+<p>At noon they halted for a little rest. From
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
+Tharon&#8217;s saddle Billy had taken the flask of water,
+the tightly rolled bundle of bread and meat in its
+meal-sack. They ate sparingly of this, drank more
+sparingly of the water. Billy wondered miserably
+how soon this last might become more precious
+than fine gold to him, as he thought of the
+waterless pockets of the blind and sliding country.</p>
+<p>Long before she had rested sufficiently Tharon
+was up and ready to go. Ever her eager eyes
+were on the heights above. Ever they turned to
+the left of the steady line she set herself through
+and above the winding passes. From time to
+time Billy looked back. There was not a sign by
+which one might tell which way he had come if
+the last mark he made was around the first corner.
+Hundreds and thousands of spires and faces towered
+about them. It was a mystic maze of dead
+stone, cut and weathered by the elements.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No wonder!&#8221; he told himself, &#8220;that the
+Indians call it the Enchanted Land!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll reach False Ridge tomorrow, Billy,&#8221;
+Tharon told him confidently, &#8220;an&#8217; over it lies
+God&#8217;s Cup. There&#8217;s water there&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; Kenset.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What makes you think so?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. Just feel. He&#8217;s there&ndash;&ndash;alive
+or&ndash;&ndash;&#8221; a half sob clutched at her voice&ndash;&ndash;&#8220;or dead.
+But he&#8217;s there.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;ll be some one with him if he&#8217;s alive,
+most likely.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; said Tharon briefly.</p>
+<p>All the afternoon they traveled, sometimes
+touching with outstretched hands the faces on
+either side of them, again walking upward
+through majestic halls, solemn and beautiful.
+Everything about them was beautiful, the height,
+the sheer, straight walls, the myriad little blue
+shadows of tiny projections on their faces. Night
+came so early in the pits that long before they
+wished they were compelled to camp. In a blind
+pocket, walled like a room and round as an apple,
+they stopped, and Billy spread down the blanket
+he had taken from Drumfire&#8217;s back. This was
+their only preparation. They had nothing to do,
+no fire to build, no water to bring.</p>
+<p>Tharon, scarcely conscious of the many miles
+she had traveled since the previous night, sat
+down upon the blanket, gathered her knees in her
+arms and stared at the vague blue phantoms of
+cliffs through the tall straight mouth that led into
+this sheltered pocket.</p>
+<p>Outside the winds were drawing up the ca&ntilde;ons.
+All day they had walked in this wind. It drew
+constantly up and down the cuts, this way and that,
+like contrary currents that met and fought each
+other, swung in together, went a little way in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span>
+peace, to again split and surge away through other
+channels. The echoes were alive with every sound,
+both of their own making and that of the wind&#8217;s.
+A constant sighing droned through the depths, a
+mournful, whispering sound that sent the shivers
+down Tharon&#8217;s spine, made her think sadly of all
+the tragedies she had ever known.</p>
+<p>Billy, lying full length beside her, his hands
+beneath his head, looked up to the narrow blue
+spot of sky so far away, and thought his own
+thoughts, and they were not wholly sad.</p>
+<p>They fell to talking, softly, in low tones, as if
+in all the mysterious solitude there might be one
+to hear, and it was mostly speech of long ago&ndash;&ndash;when
+Billy had first come into Lost Valley.</p>
+<p>After a long and quiet hour the man insisted
+that she should sleep&ndash;&ndash;that after the hard day and
+in view of the coming hard morrow, she needed
+rest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;m not tired, Billy,&#8221; Tharon protested,
+&#8220;no more&#8217;n as if I&#8217;d been ridin&#8217; all day after th&#8217;
+cattle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Billy shook his head and hollowed a little
+place in the soft slide stuff at the Wall&#8217;s foot. In
+this he spread the blanket, folding it half back.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lie down,&#8221; he commanded, &#8220;an&#8217; you&#8217;ll be
+asleep so quick you won&#8217;t know when it happens.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tharon slipped off her daddy&#8217;s belt and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
+stretched her slim young form in the hollow, which
+fitted it like a cradle. Not for nothing had Billy
+slept out many a night with nothing save the earth
+and stars for bed and blanket. The hollow was
+craftily deepened at hip and shoulder, making a
+restful couch. As she settled herself therein he
+lapped the loose half of the blanket over her and
+tucked it in. Then he took his hat, folded it
+sharply and placed it under the tawny head.</p>
+<p>In its place he would fain have laid his heart.</p>
+<p>His fingers, settling the improvised pillow,
+tangled themselves wistfully in the sun-bright hair,
+and the boy groaned aloud.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the matter, Billy, dear?&#8221; asked
+Tharon anxiously, but Billy laughed lightly, a thin
+sound in the mighty caverns.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothing in God&#8217;s world, Tharon,&#8221; he lied.
+&#8220;Now go to sleep.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he walked away to the tall mouth and sat
+down with his back against one of the walls. From
+his pocket he took papers and tobacco and proceeded
+to roll himself a cigarette.... Dawn
+showed the narrow doorway strewn with their
+butts, as leaves strew mountain trails in
+autumn.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Things were ready to happen in Lost Valley&ndash;&ndash;several
+things.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></p>
+<p>At the Golden Cloud, Lola looked across the
+level stretches toward the Stronghold with tragic
+dark eyes, and smiled at a dozen men whom she
+scarcely saw. Settlers from all up and down the
+Wall drifted into Corvan and out again, intent,
+silent, watchful. <i>Vaqueros</i> and riders from the
+Stronghold also came and went, as intent, as silent.
+They passed each other with hostile eyes and trigger
+fingers were unusually limber. The air was
+pregnant with change.</p>
+<p>Buck Courtrey was conspicuous by his absence.</p>
+<p>He was not seen in the town, neither was he at
+the Stronghold.</p>
+<p>There were soft whispers afloat that he was
+with the Pomos up under the Rockface at the
+north.</p>
+<p>And at the Stronghold, poor Ellen, whiter than
+ever, more like a broken lily drooping on its stem,
+trembled and waited for a day that was set
+soon&ndash;&ndash;too terribly soon!&ndash;&ndash;the day, farcically
+appointed, for the suit for divorce against
+her.</p>
+<p>Word of this was abroad through all the Valley.
+Underground speculation was rife as to which
+of the two women whom Courtrey favoured, Lola
+or Tharon, was responsible. Some said one, some
+the other. But Lola knew.</p>
+<p>Then came the day itself&ndash;&ndash;a golden summer
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span>
+day as sweet and bright as that one years ago when
+Courtrey had married Ellen&ndash;&ndash;at this same pine
+building where the laughable legal farces were
+enacted now.</p>
+<p>Pale as a new moon Ellen rode in across the
+rolling stretches on one of the Ironwoods, with
+Cleve beside her. She was spiritless, silent. Cleve
+was silent, too, though for a far different reason.
+There was a frown between his brows, a glitter
+in his narrowed eyes. He was thinking of the
+only man in Corvan whom he had been able to
+persuade to present Ellen&#8217;s protest&ndash;&ndash;Dick Burtree,
+one-time lawyer and man of parts in the outside,
+now a puffed and threadbare vagabond,
+whose paramount idea was whiskey and more
+whiskey. But Burtree could talk. Over his
+mottled and shapeless lips could, on occasion, pour
+a stream of pure oratory silver as the Vestal&#8217;s
+Veil.</p>
+<p>When he was drunk he feared neither man nor
+devil, and he could speak best so. Therefore Cleve
+had given him enough money in advance to put him
+in trim.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What you think Buck&#8217;ll say about me,
+Cleve?&#8221; Ellen asked anxiously. &#8220;What&#8217;s he
+mean to accuse me of?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Any dirty thing he can trump up, Sis,&#8221; said
+Cleve gravely, &#8220;he&#8217;s a-goin&#8217; to make it a nasty
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span>
+mess&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; I wish to God you&#8217;d jest ride on down
+th&#8217; Wall with me an&#8217; never even look back.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He leaned from his saddle and took the blue-veined
+hand in his. There was an unspeakable
+tenderness in his eyes as he regarded his sister.
+&#8220;What you say, Ellen? There&#8217;s life below, an&#8217;
+work an&#8217; other men. You&#8217;ll marry again, sometime&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Ellen shook her head with its maize-gold
+crown.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nary other man, Cleve,&#8221; she said gently.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m all Buck&#8217;s woman.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So they rode on toward the town, and Cleve
+knew that his last faint hope was dead.</p>
+<p>In the town itself there was a stir. Courtrey
+was there, and Wylackie Bob, and Black Bart and
+Arizona, a bunch of dark, evil men in all surety.</p>
+<p>The Ironwoods were in evidence everywhere,
+but strange to say, there were no Finger Marks.
+Not a man from the Holding was in town.</p>
+<p>When Cleve and Ellen, alone together, rode in,
+it lacked yet a half hour of the time set for trial.
+There was no place to go but Baston&#8217;s, so they
+dismounted at the hitch-rack. Ellen, swaying on
+her feet, looked all around with her big pale eyes,
+and when she saw Courtrey some distance away
+she put a hand to her heart as simply as a hurt
+child. She was a pitiful creature in her long
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span>
+white dress, for she had ridden in on an old sidesaddle,
+and she shook out the crumpled folds in
+a wistful attempt to look proper. On her head
+was the inevitable sunbonnet of slats and calico.</p>
+<p>As she went up the steps of the store with Cleve,
+Lola of the Golden Cloud, blazing like a comet
+in her red-and-black came face to face with her
+purposely. What was in Lola&#8217;s head none would
+ever know, but she wanted to see Courtrey&#8217;s wife.</p>
+<p>As they met they stopped dead still, these two
+women who loved one man, and the look that
+passed between them was electric, deep, revealing.
+They stood so long staring into each other&#8217;s eyes
+that Cleve, frowning, plucked Ellen by the sleeve
+and made to push forward.</p>
+<p>But as suddenly as a flash of light Lola reached
+out her two hands and caught Ellen&#8217;s in a tight
+clasp that only women know, the swift, clinging
+clasp of the secret fellowship of those who suffer.</p>
+<p>For one tense moment she held them, while
+Ellen swayed forward for all the world as if she
+would sink in upon the deep full breast of this
+wanton whom she had hated! Then the spell
+broke, they fell apart with a rush, Lola swung out
+and went down the steps, while Ellen obediently
+followed Cleve into Baston&#8217;s store, where she sat
+on a nail keg and waited in a dull lethargy. Outside
+Courtrey, who had witnessed the thing from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
+across the street, slapped his thigh and laughed
+uproariously.</p>
+<p>It was a funny sight to him. But Lola&#8217;s beautiful
+black eyes blazed across at him with a light
+that none had ever seen before in their inscrutable
+depths.</p>
+<p>Then the hour struck, and all Corvan, it seemed
+to Cleve, strung out toward the Court House.
+This was to be in open court&ndash;&ndash;a spectacle. From
+somewhere in the adobe outskirts of the town came
+Ellen&#8217;s serving women, most of them, whom Cleve
+had sent in early in the day. They fell in with her
+and so, with only the brother who had never failed
+her and these dusky women of the silent tongues
+to back her, Ellen Courtrey went to her crucifixion
+as truly as though she had been one of the two
+thieves on Golgotha.</p>
+<p>At the sight of Courtrey across the big bare
+room she went whiter than she was, if such a
+thing were possible, and slid weakly into the chair
+placed for her.</p>
+<p>Then the thing proceeded&ndash;&ndash;swiftly, lightly, with
+smiles on the faces of the crowd.</p>
+<p>Old Ben Garland on the judge&#8217;s bench,
+was furtive, scared, nervous, fiddling with his
+papers and clearing his throat from time to
+time.</p>
+<p>The county clerk at his table made a great
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
+deal out of the ceremony of swearing in the witnesses&ndash;&ndash;Wylackie
+Bob, Black Bart, Arizona and
+one young Wylackie Indian woman who worked
+at the Stronghold. Cleve put up only the serving
+women whom he had sent in, some seven of them,
+every one of whom loved their mistress with the
+faithful fidelity of a dog. These women knew
+Ellen Courtrey as not even the master of the
+Stronghold himself knew her. They knew her in
+her idle hours, at her small tasks, at her bedside,
+in the loving solicitude she displayed for all of
+them&ndash;&ndash;and they knew her on her knees in prayer,
+for Ellen had a strange and simple religion, half
+Catholic and half Pomo paganism.</p>
+<p>In the straight-backed chair they gave her Ellen
+sat like a statue, sweet and still, a thing so obviously
+good that it seemed even Courtrey himself
+must weaken to behold her. But not Courtrey.
+He was on fire with the vision of Tharon Last on
+the Cup Rim&#8217;s floor, shaking her fist toward him
+in challenge&ndash;&ndash;at Baston&#8217;s steps calling him a murderer
+and worse&ndash;&ndash;at her western door, striking
+him from her with the strength of a man. He saw
+the signal fire flaring across the darkened Valley&ndash;&ndash;and
+nothing on earth or in Heaven could have
+softened him to the woman who bound him away
+from this fighting girl, this gun woman whom he
+was breaking to him slowly but surely. He visioned
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+her in Ellen&#8217;s room at the Stronghold&ndash;&ndash;and
+the breath came fast in his throat.</p>
+<p>And Ellen?</p>
+<p>Ah, Ellen was thinking of the long past day
+when this man had found her in the barren rocklands
+and taken her with the high hand of a lover.
+She, too, drifted away from the chilling courtroom
+with its judge and its petty officials.... And then
+all suddenly she knew that men were talking&ndash;&ndash;and
+about her. She heard the drone of question
+and answer&ndash;&ndash;the rambling statements of the
+stranger, Arizona, accusing her of strange things&ndash;&ndash;of
+asking him to take her on rides in Courtrey&#8217;s
+absence&ndash;&ndash;of swinging with him nights in the hammock
+by the watering trough!</p>
+<p>She sat and listened with parted lips and large
+innocent eyes fixed on the man in wonder. Cleve
+Whitmore clenched his hands until the nails cut
+deep, but he held his tongue and controlled his
+face. Only the blazing blue eyes spoke. She
+knew that Black Bart tried to tell something, that
+he made some mistake or other and had to begin
+all over again. There was a long and tedious time
+in here when she looked away out the window to
+where the prairie grass was blowing in the little
+winds and the shadows of clouds drifted across
+the green expanse.... She was numb and far
+away with misery. She did not care for anything
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
+in all this world. It seemed as if she was detached,
+aloof, dead already in body as she was in
+soul.... And then she heard the drawling voice
+of Wylackie Bob&ndash;&ndash;and he was saying something
+unspeakable&ndash;&ndash;about her! She listened like one in
+a trance&ndash;&ndash;then she struggled up from her chair
+with tragic long arms extended, and the cry that
+rang from her lips was piteous.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buck!&#8221; it pealed across the stillness of the
+crowded room, &#8220;Buck!&ndash;&ndash;it ain&#8217;t so! Never in
+this world, Buck! I ben true to you as your
+shadow! Before God, it ain&#8217;t true!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a stir throughout the crowd, a breath
+that was audible. There were many of the Vigilantes
+there&ndash;&ndash;a goodly number, all wondering
+where Tharon Last was, where Kenset was, where
+were the riders from Last&#8217;s. They had expected,
+what they did not know&ndash;&ndash;something, at any rate,
+for this seemed somehow a test, a turning point.
+But there was nothing. They stirred and waited,
+like a great force heaving in its bed, blind, sluggish,
+but wakening.</p>
+<p>And Ellen, chilled by Courtrey&#8217;s sneering face,
+the cold disapproval of Ben Garland&#8217;s striking
+mallet, sank back in her chair and covered her
+face with her shaking hands.... She heard
+some more awful things&ndash;&ndash;then the voice of Dick
+Burtree beginning soft, low, silver like running
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span>
+waters. She heard it tell of that far away day of
+her marriage&ndash;&ndash;of the years that followed&ndash;&ndash;of
+Courtrey&#8217;s love for her&ndash;&ndash;of her own gentleness,
+her beauty, &#8220;like the tender sunlight of spring
+on the snow and the golden sands&#8221;&ndash;&ndash;of her service,
+her loyalty, her love that had &#8220;never faltered
+nor intruded&#8221; that &#8220;patient obedience to
+her master had but strengthened and made perfect.&#8221;
+Of the pitiful thing that her life had been
+this man made a wondrous thing, all sweet with
+twilights and haloed with service.</p>
+<p>He talked until the courtroom was still as death
+and the Indian women behind her were rocking
+in unison of grief. Then she heard questions
+again and the gutteral soft voices of her women
+answering&ndash;&ndash;with love and devotion in every halting
+word. Once again the crowd in the room
+stirred&ndash;&ndash;and Courtrey&#8217;s narrow eyes went over it
+in that cold, promising glance.</p>
+<p>For once in his life Courtrey, the bully, felt a
+premonitory chill down his spine&ndash;&ndash;because for the
+first time that promising glance of his failed of its
+effect! Only here and there along the rows of
+faces did one cower. There were faces, many
+faces, that looked back at him with steady eyes
+and tight lips.... Verily it was time he conquered
+the riding, shooting, beautiful she-devil
+who had made this thing possible! The sooner he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
+got Tharon Last away from this bunch of spawn
+the better. Then he would sweep in with all his
+old swift methods, only sharper ones this time,
+and &#8220;clean&#8221; them all. When he got through it
+would be a different man&#8217;s Valley, make no mistake
+about that!</p>
+<p>Here Ellen looked straight into his eyes and
+both were conscious of the shock. Ellen wilted
+and Courtrey frowned and struck a fist against
+the railing near him.... He looked up and met
+the hesitating eyes of Ben Garland on the bench
+and his own hardened down to pin points.</p>
+<p>The farce was finished save for the Judge&#8217;s
+decision&ndash;&ndash;Dick Burtree was slumped in his chair,
+dead drunk and asleep. Wylackie Bob was lighting
+a cigarette in his brown fingers, a smile on his
+evil mouth, his slow, black eyes covering the slim
+white form of Ellen in a speculative way, as if he
+dreamed of making true his blasphemous lies.
+Ellen was sweet as a flower in her open-lipped
+beauty, her panting despair. Wylackie did not
+notice the slim man beside her whose lips were so
+tight that they were a mere line across his face.
+No one at the Stronghold noticed Cleve much.</p>
+<p>Then Ben Garland was speaking, and Ellen
+gathered her dim wits enough to make out that
+he was saying strange things&ndash;&ndash;awful things&ndash;&ndash;that
+had to do with Courtrey&#8217;s freedom.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span></p>
+<p>Then she knew&ndash;&ndash;swaying and groping with her
+blue-veined hands&ndash;&ndash;that the thing was done&ndash;&ndash;that
+she was no longer a wife. That she would never
+again sleep in the bend of Courtrey&#8217;s arm as she
+had slept in those golden days of long ago&ndash;&ndash;that
+she was an outcast, blackened beyond all hope by
+the damning and unchoice words of Wylackie Bob....
+Then the world faded out for Ellen in merciful
+blackness.</p>
+<p>The petty officials rose with laughter and clanking
+of boots on the board floors&ndash;&ndash;the crowd filed
+out in a striking silence. Never before had a
+crowd in Lost Valley gone out from a courtroom
+in that strange and bodeful silence.</p>
+<p>The sight of Ellen lying white and limp across
+Cleve Whitmore&#8217;s shoulder like a sack of grain,
+as he passed out with the moving mass, had an
+odd effect. It was partly the white dress that did
+it&ndash;&ndash;and the time was ripe.</p>
+<p>Courtrey and his gang were toward the fore&ndash;&ndash;first
+out. They spread off to one side with jest
+and quip, with flash of bottle and slap on shoulder.
+The populace thinned a bit from the steps....
+And then suddenly as a pistol shot Cleve Whitmore&#8217;s
+voice rang out like a clarion.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wylackie!&#8221; it pealed across the subdued
+noises, &#8220;You &ndash;&ndash;&ndash; &ndash;&ndash;&ndash; &ndash;&ndash;&ndash; hell hound.
+<i>Turn round!</i>&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></p>
+<p>There was death in it.</p>
+<p>The gun man whirled, drawing like lightning.
+In the Court House door, Cleve Whitmore with his
+sister&#8217;s limp form on his shoulder, beat him to it.</p>
+<p>He had drawn as he called. Before the words
+were off his lips he pulled the trigger and shot
+Wylackie through the heart.</p>
+<p>As his henchman fell Courtrey&#8217;s good hand
+flashed to his hip, but Dixon of the Vigilantes,
+shot out an arm and knocked him forward from
+behind.</p>
+<p>For the second time Courtrey had missed a life
+because a brave heart dared him. Old Pete had
+paid the price for that trick. Dixon had no
+thought of it.</p>
+<p>And in one moment the chance was past, for a
+sound began to roar from that silent crowd which
+had poured from the courtroom&ndash;&ndash;the deep, bloodcurdling
+sound of the mob forming, inarticulate,
+uncertain.</p>
+<p>For the first time in his life Courtrey felt real
+fear grip him.</p>
+<p>He had killed and stolen and wronged among
+these people and gotten away with it. He had
+never feared them. They had been silent. Now
+with the first deep rumble from the concrete throat
+of Lost Valley he got his first instinctive thrill of
+disaster.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span></p>
+<p>He stood for a moment in utter silence. Then
+he flung up his hands, snapped out an order,
+whirled on his heel and went swiftly to the near
+rack where stood Bolt and the rest of the Ironwoods.
+Like a set of puppets on strings his men
+drew after him&ndash;&ndash;and they left Wylackie Bob
+where he fell.</p>
+<p>In a matter of seconds the whole Stronghold
+gang was mounted and clattering down the street&ndash;&ndash;out
+of the town toward the open range.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>And the killer on the Court House steps?</p>
+<p>He stood where he was and looked with blazing
+eyes over the motley crowd beneath him.
+Steptoe Service made a step toward him, looked
+round, wet his lips and thought better of it.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>And then, in another second, the crowd was a
+mob and the mob was the Vigilantes. Some one
+took Ellen from Cleve&#8217;s shoulder with careful
+hands and carried her away. Then some one
+reached down and picked him up bodily. Another
+joined, and they set him on their shoulders, lifting
+him high. The inarticulate mob cry swelled and
+deepened and rose to a different sound&ndash;&ndash;a shout
+that gathered volume and roared out across the
+spaces where Courtrey rode with a menace, a
+portent.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span></p>
+<p>With one accord the mob started on a journey
+around Corvan.</p>
+<p>White as Ellen, Cleve Whitmore rode that triumphant
+journey, his eyes still blazing, his lips
+tight. The town went wild. Public feeling came
+out on every hand. Daring took the weak,
+hope took the oppressed, and they called Courtrey&#8217;s
+reign right there. For three uproarious
+hours the bar-tenders could not wipe off their
+bars.</p>
+<p>A new regime was ushered in&ndash;&ndash;and she who
+had been its sponsor was not there to see it.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>When the hour of Change was striking for Corvan
+and all Lost Valley, Tharon Last, who had set
+it to strike, was scaling False Ridge in the Ca&ntilde;on
+Country. Grim, ash-pale with effort, her blue
+eyes shining, she climbed the Secret Way that
+few had ever found.</p>
+<p>How she had come to it through the tortuous
+cuts and passes was a marvel of homing instinct&ndash;&ndash;the
+heart that homed to its object. It had seemed
+to her all along this strange, tense journey, that
+she had had no will of her own, that she had held
+her breath and shut her eyes, as it were, and gone
+forward in obedience to some strange thing within
+that said, &#8220;turn here,&#8221; &#8220;go thus.&#8221; Billy following
+behind, watched her with tight lips and a secret
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
+wonder. As she had told him she would &#8220;go
+straight, Mary willing,&#8221; so she had gone straight&ndash;&ndash;and
+it seemed, truly, as if it were right that
+she should, no matter how his heart ached to see
+this thing.</p>
+<p>Verily there was something supernatural about
+it all, something uncanny.</p>
+<p>If it had been he, Billy, whom Tharon loved,
+and had he lain, wounded in the Cup o&#8217; God,
+would the girl have been given this blind instinct
+for direction? Would she have gone as unerringly
+to the Secret Way?</p>
+<p>Nay&ndash;&ndash;there must be something in the old saying
+that, for every heart in the world there was its
+true mate.</p>
+<p>Tharon had found hers in Kenset.</p>
+<p>But where would he ever find his? The boy
+shook his fair head hopelessly at the sliding floors.
+For all perfection there must be sacrifice. He was
+the sacrifice for Tharon&#8217;s perfection&ndash;&ndash;a willing
+one, so help him!</p>
+<p>That they had found the Secret Way across
+False Ridge was perfectly plain, for here in the
+living rock before them were marks, the first
+marks they had found in the Ca&ntilde;ons. Thin, small
+crosses, cut in the stone of the walls, began to lead
+upward from the last liftings cut straight up the
+Rockface of False Ridge itself. It seemed, to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span>
+look at the dim traces, that no living thing without
+wings could scale that steep and forbidding cliff,
+but when they tried to climb, they found that each
+step had been set with artful cunning. The set
+of steps followed the form of a &#8220;switchback,&#8221;
+working from right to left, and always rising a
+little. False Ridge itself, a towering, mighty
+spine, came down in a swiftly dropping ridge from
+somewhere in the high upper country at the west
+of all the ca&ntilde;ons. It was known to lead deceptively
+down among the cuts and passes, as if it
+went straight down to the lower levels, and to end
+abruptly in a precipice that none could descend or
+climb. On all its rugged sides there were treacherous
+slopes which looked hard enough to support
+a man, but which, once stepped on, gave sickeningly
+away to slide and slither for a hundred feet
+straight down to some abrupt edge, where they
+fell in dusty cataracts to blind basins and walled
+cups below.</p>
+<p>In these blind cups were many skeletons of deer
+and other animals that had ventured down from
+the upper world, never to return. Somewhere up
+here must be the bones of Ca&ntilde;on Jim.</p>
+<p>But the Secret Way was safe. Under every
+carefully worked out step there was solid stone,
+for every handhold there was a firm stake set.
+These stakes were old for the most part, but
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span>
+here and there had been set in a new one&ndash;&ndash;Courtrey&#8217;s
+work, they made no doubt, for Courtrey was
+said to know the Ca&ntilde;ons. It took Tharon and
+Billy two hours to make the climb, stopping from
+time to time to rest. At such times the boy
+stood close and took her hand. It was grim work
+looking down the sheer face, and one might well
+be excused for holding a hand for steadiness. And
+it would soon be the time for no more touches of
+this girl&#8217;s fair self for Billy.</p>
+<p>And so, climbing steadily and in comparative
+silence, these two, whose hearts were strong, came
+at last to the top of False Ridge&ndash;&ndash;a thin knife-blade
+of stone&ndash;&ndash;and looked abruptly and suddenly
+down on the other side.</p>
+<p>With a little gasp Tharon put a hand to her
+throat, for there, an unbelievably short distance
+down, lay the Cup o&#8217; God, without a doubt. A
+small, round glade of living green, watered by a
+whispering stream that lost itself the Lord knew
+where, it lay like a tiny gem in the pink stone setting.
+Trees stood in utter quiet about its edges,
+for there was here no slightest breath of air. Lush
+grass carpeted its level floor. And there, almost
+directly under the marked way leading down,
+lay a tiny camp&ndash;&ndash;the ashes of a dead fire, a
+gun against a tree, and&ndash;&ndash;here Tharon leaned far
+out and looked as if her very spirit would penetrate
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span>
+the distance&ndash;&ndash;a blanket spread on the level
+earth, on which there lay the body of a man!</p>
+<p>It was a trim body, they could see from where
+they stood, clad in dark garments of olive drab
+that hugged the lean limbs close.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Kenset!&#8221; whispered Tharon with paling lips.
+&#8220;Kenset of th&#8217; foothills,&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;he&ndash;&ndash;looks,&#8221; she
+wet those ashy lips, &#8220;he&ndash;&ndash;looks like he is dead.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Without another word she set her feet in the
+precarious way and went down so fast that Billy&#8217;s
+heart rose in his throat and choked him, and for
+the first time since he could remember, he called
+fervently upon his Maker with honest reverence.
+He thought at every slip and scramble that she
+must fall and go hurtling down the Rockface.</p>
+<p>But that uncanny instinct which had brought
+her this far was at her command still. She went
+down faster than it seemed possible for anything
+to go, and before the rider was able to catch up
+she had leaped to the grassy floor, and was running
+forward toward that still form on the
+blanket.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Kenset!&#8221; she cried like a bugle, &#8220;Kenset!
+Kenset! Oh,&ndash;&ndash;David!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And then it was that the quiet form stirred,
+rolled over on its side, lifted itself on an elbow&ndash;&ndash;and
+held out two arms that wavered grotesquely,
+but were eloquent of love&#8217;s power and its need.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span></p>
+<p>And the Mistress of Last&#8217;s flung herself on her
+knees, gathered up this strange man as if he had
+been a child, pressed him hard against her breast,
+and kissed him as we kiss our dead. She pushed
+his face from her and looked into it as if she
+would see his very soul, the tears running on her
+white cheeks, her lips working soundlessly.</p>
+<p>This was love! This agony&ndash;&ndash;this ecstasy&ndash;&ndash;this
+sublime forgetting of all the world beside&ndash;&ndash;this
+reward after struggle.</p>
+<p>Billy stood for a second at the foot of the Wall,
+and the nails cut in his palms. Then he whirled
+and went fast as he could walk toward the first
+trees that presented themselves&ndash;&ndash;and he could not
+see where he was going for the bleak grey mist
+that swam in his eyes.</p>
+<p>This was love! This dreary colour of the
+golden sunlight of noon in the high country&ndash;&ndash;this
+dumb ache that locked his throat&ndash;&ndash;this high courage
+that brought him serving love&#8217;s object to the
+bitter-sweet end. How long he stood there he did
+not know. His heart was dead, like the weathered
+stone country about him. He knew that he heard
+Tharon&#8217;s voice after a while, that golden voice
+which had been the bells of Last&#8217;s, in rapid question
+and answer&ndash;&ndash;and Kenset&#8217;s voice, too, weak
+and slow, but filled with joy unspeakable. It was
+lilting and soft, a lover&#8217;s voice, a victor&#8217;s voice,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span>
+and presently he caught a few of the broken words
+that passed between them&ndash;&ndash;&#8220;Clean! Clean! Oh,
+Tharon, darling&ndash;&ndash;there is no blood on these dear
+hands! Tell me you did not kill Courtrey!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He heard Tharon answer in the negative.</p>
+<p>And then all the world fell about him, it seemed,
+for a gun cracked from the trees beyond him and
+a wasp stung his cheek.</p>
+<p>In one instant the sunlight became brilliant
+again, the joy came back in the day. Here was
+something more to do for Tharon, a new task at
+hand when he had thought his tasks were all but
+done.</p>
+<p>He whirled, looked, drew his six-gun and began
+firing at the man who stood in plain sight just
+where he had stepped into the Cup from the mouth
+of a little blind cut where the stream went out in
+noise and lost itself.</p>
+<p>This was a big man, sinister and cold and dark,
+a half-breed Pomo of Courtrey&#8217;s gang, a still-hunter
+who did a lot of the dirty work which the
+others refused. Billy had seen him before, knew
+his record.</p>
+<p>Now they two stood face to face and fired at
+each other swiftly, coolly. He saw the half-breed
+stagger once, knew that he had touched him somewhere.
+And then a sound cut into the snapping of
+the shots, a sound that was like nothing he had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span>
+ever heard in all his life before, a sound as savage
+as the roar of a she-bear whose cub is killed before
+her eyes. As he flung away his empty gun and
+snatched the other, he moved enough to bring into
+his range of vision Tharon Last, standing over
+Kenset, her mouth open in that savage cry.</p>
+<p>Then before he could draw and fire again he
+saw the prettiest piece of work he had ever witnessed.
+He saw the gun woman crouch and stoop,
+saw her hands flash in Jim Last&#8217;s famous backhand
+flip, saw the red flame spurt from her hips,
+and the Pomo half-breed flung up his hands and
+fell in a heap, his face in the grass. He did not
+move. Only a long ripple passed over his body.
+He was still as the ageless rocks, as much a part
+of eternity. For a moment Billy stood, the gun
+hanging in his hand. Then he knew that Tharon
+was coming toward him&ndash;&ndash;that her hands were on
+his shoulders&ndash;&ndash;her deep eyes piercing his with a
+look that meant more to him than all the earth
+beside. It was the fierce, mother-look of changeless
+affection, the companion to that savage cry.
+She held him in a pinching grip, and made sure
+that he was unhurt, save for that scratch on the
+cheek.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he had killed you, Billy,&#8221; she said tensely,
+&#8220;I&#8217;d a-gone a-muck an&#8217; shot up th&#8217; whole of Lost
+Valley.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span></p>
+<p>And the boy knew in his heart she spoke the
+solemn truth.</p>
+<p>He slipped his hands down her arms and
+caught her fingers tightly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stained!&#8221; his heart whispered to itself in
+stifling exhilaration, &#8220;in spite of all&ndash;&ndash;her first
+killin&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; for me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then he could bear her face no more, and
+turned to look at Kenset. Half off the edge of his
+blanket the forest man lay with his face buried
+in his hands, and beside him lay another gun, the
+smoke still curling from its muzzle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;By God!&#8221; said the rider, softly, &#8220;what&#8217;s
+this?&#8221; and he ran forward to pick up the weapon.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Three of us!&#8221; he said aloud, &#8220;pepperin&#8217; him
+at once! Kenset, where did you get this gun?&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Kenset did not speak. His shoulders
+trembled, his dark head was bowed to the earth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Answer me,&#8221; said Billy, &#8220;for as sure&#8217;s I live,
+this here&#8217;s Buck Courtrey&#8217;s favourite gun&ndash;&ndash;the
+gun with the untrue firin&#8217; pin. Look here.&#8221; And
+he held it toward Tharon who leaned near to look.
+True enough.</p>
+<p>In the right side of the plunger there was a
+small, shining nick, as if, at some previous time,
+a tiny chink had been broken out of it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I found it where I saw Courtrey hide it that
+night they brought me here,&#8221; said Kenset in a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
+muffled voice. &#8220;I crawled when the Pomo was
+out in the Ca&ntilde;ons after meat.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; you used it&ndash;&ndash;at last. I see. Not till th&#8217;
+last.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Kenset miserably, &#8220;not till the
+last.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Slowly Tharon knelt down beside him and put a
+tender arm across his shoulders. Her face was
+shining&ndash;&ndash;like Billy&#8217;s heart.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Kenset,&#8221; she said softly, &#8220;I told you
+once that I was afraid you was soft&ndash;&ndash;like a woman&ndash;&ndash;that
+you wouldn&#8217;t shoot if you had a gun. An&#8217;
+you said, &#8216;You&#8217;re right. I wouldn&#8217;t. Not until
+th&#8217; last extremity.&#8217;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What was this last extremity? Tell me. Why
+did you shoot when you knew right well I&#8217;d get
+him myself?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To beat you to it!&#8221; cried the man with sudden
+passion, &#8220;to take the stain myself!&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a long moment the girl knelt there beside
+him and gazed unseeingly at the inscrutable calm
+of the silent country. Something in the depths
+of her blue eyes was changing&ndash;&ndash;deepening, growing
+in subtle beauty, as if the universe was suddenly
+become perfect, as if there was nowhere a
+flaw.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s only one kind of man, after all, Mr.
+Kenset,&#8221; she said at last with a sweet dignity,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span>
+&#8220;th&#8217; man who is true an&#8217; honest to th&#8217; best there
+is in him, accordin&#8217; to his lights. That&#8217;s my kind
+of man.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Then she rose, and it was as if a light of activity
+burned up in her. She became practical on the
+instant.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad you brought th&#8217; thin rope, Billy,&#8221; she
+said, &#8220;it&#8217;s longer&#8217;n mine. An&#8217; th&#8217; little axe, too.
+We&#8217;ll need &#8217;em all to get him up an&#8217; down False
+Ridge. An&#8217; we must get busy right pronto. Th&#8217;
+Pomo killer we&#8217;ll leave where he is. The Ca&ntilde;on
+Country will make him a silent grave.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XI_FINGER_MARK_AND_IRONWOOD_AT_LAST' id='CHAPTER_XI_FINGER_MARK_AND_IRONWOOD_AT_LAST'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<h3>FINGER MARK AND IRONWOOD AT LAST</h3>
+</div>
+<p>It was another noon in Lost Valley. The
+summer sun sailed the azure skies in majesty.
+Little soft winds from the south wimpled the
+grass of the rolling ranges, shook all the leaves
+of the poplars. Down the face of the Wall the
+Vestal&#8217;s Veil shimmered and shone like a million
+miles of lace.</p>
+<p>At Corvan wild excitement ruled. Swift things
+had come upon them, things that staggered the
+tight-lipped community, even though it was used to
+speed and tragedy. For one thing, Ellen, pale,
+sweet flower, had hanged herself in the gaudy
+apartment of Lola behind the Golden Cloud
+where the dance-hall woman had peremptorily
+brought her when they took her off Cleve Whitmore&#8217;s
+shoulder. She left a little note for Courtrey,
+a pathetic short scrawl, which simply reiterated
+that she had &#8220;ben true to him as his
+shadow,&#8221; and that if he did no longer want her,
+she did not want herself.</p>
+<p>At that pitiful end to a guiltless life, Lola, who
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span>
+knew innocence and sin, sat down on the only carpeted
+floor in Corvan and wept. When she finished,
+she was done with Corvan and Lost Valley,
+ready to move on as she had moved through an
+eventful life.</p>
+<p>For another thing, two strange men had ridden
+up the Wall from the Bottle Neck a few days
+back, and they had put through some mysterious
+doings.</p>
+<p>This day at noon these two strangers were riding
+down on Corvan from up the Pomo way,
+while from the Stronghold, Buck Courtrey&#8217;s men
+were thundering in with the cattle king at their
+head. He was grim and silent, black with gathering
+rage. His news-veins tapped the Valley, he
+knew a deal that others tried to hide, and he was
+coming in to reach a savage hand once more toward
+that supremacy which he knew full well to
+be slipping from him.</p>
+<p>And from the blind mouth in the Rockface at
+the west where the roofed cut led to the mystery
+and the grandeur of the Ca&ntilde;on Country, a strange
+procession came slowly out to crawl across the
+green expanse&ndash;&ndash;a woman on a silver horse, a
+rider on a red roan who sat behind the saddle
+and bore in his arms a man whose heavy head
+lolled upon his shoulder in all but mortal weakness.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span></p>
+<p>Thus Fate, who had for so long played with
+life and death in Lost Valley, tiring of the play,
+drew in the strings of the puppets and set the
+stage for the last act.</p>
+<p>As Tharon and Billy crept up to Baston&#8217;s store
+and stopped at the steps, a dozen eager men leaped
+forward to their help.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Easy!&#8221; warned the girl. &#8220;He&#8217;s ben hurt
+a long time, an&#8217; he&#8217;s had an awful trip. There&#8217;s
+fever in him, an&#8217; th&#8217; wound in his shoulder opened
+a bit with th&#8217; haulin&#8217;. Lay him down on th&#8217;
+porch a while to rest.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Kenset opened his dark eyes with the old
+quiet smile and looked at her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m worth a dozen dead men yet, Miss Last,&#8221;
+he said.</p>
+<p>As he lay, a trim, long figure in his semi-military
+garments, on the edge of the porch, the populace
+of Corvan streamed in from the outskirts and
+gathered in the open street. Whispers and comments
+were rife among them, a new courage was
+noticeable everywhere. The Vigilantes were
+present, many of them.</p>
+<p>Question and answer passed swiftly and quietly
+back and forth between Dixon, Jameson, Hill and
+Tharon. In a few pregnant moments she knew
+what had happened in Corvan&ndash;&ndash;they knew the
+secret of False Ridge and the Cup o&#8217; God.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; now these strangers from below&ndash;&ndash;they
+ben a-actin&#8217; awful queer, ain&#8217;t a-feared o&#8217; nothin&#8217;
+an&#8217; they ben goin&#8217; all over like a couple o&#8217; hounds.
+One of &#8217;em&#8217;s got on a badge of some sort,&#8221; said
+Jameson, &#8220;didn&#8217;t mean t&#8217; show it, I allow, but
+Hill, here, seen it by chanct&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kenset raised himself quickly on an elbow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;By all that&#8217;s lucky!&#8221; he said softly, excitedly.
+&#8220;Burn-Harris and O&#8217;Hallan! My Secret Service
+men!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>And it was even so, for by the end of another
+hour the two strangers came riding in and were
+brought forward to the steps where Kenset lay,
+to clasp his hand and greet him with all the
+pleasure of previous acquaintance.</p>
+<p>Then they requested that a space be cleared to
+the end of ear-shot and together with Kenset,
+Tharon, Billy, and all the Vigilantes, they held a
+long and earnest colloquy.</p>
+<p>At its end Kenset&#8217;s eyes were deep and troubled,
+but Tharon&#8217;s were beginning to glow with the old
+fire that all the Holding knew, the leaping flame
+that rose and died and rose again, exciting to the
+beholder, promising, threatening, unfathomable.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, it&#8217;s a cinch!&#8221; said O&#8217;Hallan, &#8220;a dead
+moral cinch! Don&#8217;t see how it&#8217;s held on like it has.
+Couldn&#8217;t have in any other place in the good old
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span>
+U.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;A. but this God forsaken hole! Well named,
+Lost Valley! Why, we&#8217;ve found enough evidence
+already to convict a dozen men! Your Courtrey&#8217;s
+the man that planned a dozen murders, I can see
+that, and he&#8217;s pulled off a lot of them himself.
+The people are talking now, rumbling from one
+end of the Valley to the other. We&#8217;ve had to hold
+up our hands to ward them off lately. Your Vigilantes
+here have opened up since we got them
+together and showed some of them your letter.
+You were wise to tell us to go ahead if you were
+not here&ndash;&ndash;what did you look for?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just about what I got,&#8221; said Kenset smiling,
+&#8220;and I wanted things to be pushed through anyway.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&ndash;&ndash;they&#8217;re pushing,&#8221; said Burn-Harris.
+&#8220;Your little old sheriff has had the fear-of-the-Lord
+put into him somewhat. He&#8217;s shaking in
+his boots about the snow-packer. There&#8217;s only
+one thing lacking to make our grip close down on
+Courtrey, and that&#8217;s vital&ndash;&ndash;the gun with the untrue
+firing pin you speak about in your instructions.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not lackin&#8217;,&#8221; said Tharon grimly, &#8220;we&#8217;ve
+got it, Mister.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Secret Service man whirled to her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have?&#8221; he cried, &#8220;then show me your
+man!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span></p>
+<p>But Tharon stood for a long moment looking
+off across the rolling green stretches, toward the
+north where a moving dot was drawing down&ndash;&ndash;the
+riders from the Stronghold.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This,&#8221; she said at last, tapping the gun which
+Billy handed over, &#8220;this, then, is proof&ndash;&ndash;is proof
+in law?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If it&#8217;s the true gun that fits the shell which
+Mr. Kenset left for us here at Baston&#8217;s&ndash;&ndash;yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then,&#8221; said Burn-Harris, &#8220;a little time and
+your man&#8217;s ours as sure&#8217;s the sun shines. Why,
+this is a hot-bed of crime&ndash;&ndash;there&#8217;s enough work
+here to keep a whole force busy for months.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Tharon Last did not heed his words. Her
+mind had leaped away from the present back to
+that day in spring when Jim Last came home to
+die. She heard again his last command, &#8220;Th&#8217;
+best gun woman in Lost Valley,&#8221; heard her own
+voice promising to his dulling ears, &#8220;I&#8217;ll get him,
+so help me, God!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And this was the end. Strangers were waiting
+to fulfill that promise, to take her work out of her
+hands. She absently watched the moving dot take
+form and sharply string out into a line of riding
+men. These strangers with their hidden signs of
+authority would bring to his just desserts Buck
+Courtrey, the man who had instigated the killing
+of poor Harkness, who had personally shot her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span>
+daddy in the back! For them, then, she had made
+her crosses of promise in the granite under the
+pointing pine.</p>
+<p>They who had no right in Lost Valley would
+settle its blood scores, would pay her debts!</p>
+<p>She frowned and the fingers of her right hand
+fiddled at the gun-butt at her hip.</p>
+<p>For what had she striven all these many
+months? For what had she perfected herself in
+Jim Last&#8217;s art?</p>
+<p>A little white line drew in about her lips, the
+flame in her blue eyes leaped and flickered. The
+tawny brows gathered into a puckered frown.</p>
+<p>Billy, watching, moved restlessly on his booted
+feet. He it was who saw&ndash;&ndash;who feared. He
+touched her wrist with timid fingers and she
+flashed him a swift glance that half melted to a
+smile. Then she forgot him and all the rest&ndash;&ndash;for
+the Ironwoods were thundering in from the
+outside levels, were coming into town.</p>
+<p>Ahead rode Courtrey, big, black, keen, his wide
+hat swept back on his iron-grey hair, an imposing
+presence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here&#8217;s your man!&#8221; said Kenset softly, rising
+excitedly on his elbow. &#8220;He&#8217;s coming! And
+God grant that there is no bloodshed!&#8221;</p>
+<p>All of Corvan, so long meek and quiet under
+Courtrey&#8217;s foot, moved dramatically back to give
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span>
+him room to come thundering down to his accounting.</p>
+<p>In a few seconds he would be encompassed by
+his enemies.</p>
+<p>And then, on the tick of fate, that universally
+unknown factor, a woman&#8217;s heart, flung its last
+pawn in the balance.</p>
+<p>Lola, gleaming like a bird of paradise in her gay
+habiliments, leaning forward from the further
+steps of Baston&#8217;s store where she had slipped up
+unnoticed, cupped her white hands to her scarlet
+mouth, and sent out a cry like a clarion.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buck!&#8221; she called, bell-like, clear, far-reaching&ndash;&ndash;&#8220;Buck!
+Turn back! They&#8217;ve called your
+turn! It&#8217;s all up for you! Go! Go&ndash;&ndash;down&ndash;&ndash;the
+Wall! And&ndash;&ndash;God bless you&ndash;&ndash;Buck! Good-bye!&#8221;</p>
+<p>For one awful moment the great red Ironwood,
+Bolt, flung up his head and slid forward on his
+haunches, ploughing up the earth in a cloud.</p>
+<p>Then, while the half-stunned crowd gaped in
+silence, he gathered himself, straightened, whirled,
+shook his giant frame and leaped clear of the
+ground in a spectacular turn. The man on his
+back snatched off his hat and shook it defiantly at
+the town&ndash;&ndash;the people&ndash;&ndash;the very Valley that he
+had ruled so long. It was a dramatic gesture&ndash;&ndash;daring,
+scorning, renouncing. Then, without a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span>
+word to his henchmen, a single look of farewell,
+Buck Courtrey struck the Ironwood, and was gone
+back along the little street.</p>
+<p>His men whirled after him, but strange turn of
+destiny, they swung directly north away from him,
+for he was turning south at the town&#8217;s edge.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For the&ndash;&ndash;Wall!&#8221; breathed Lola, her face like
+milk, one hand on her glittering breast. &#8220;He&ndash;&ndash;goes&ndash;&ndash;for
+below!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then all the watchers knew the same.</p>
+<p>The master of the Stronghold, having played
+for Lost Valley and for a woman and lost them
+both&ndash;&ndash;was done with both.</p>
+<p>He leaned on the Ironwood&#8217;s mighty neck and
+went south toward the Bottle Neck.</p>
+<p>All eyes were upon him&ndash;&ndash;all, that is, save the
+earnest grey ones of Billy Brent. They were
+fixed in anguish on the face of Tharon Last beside
+him&ndash;&ndash;Tharon Last, who shoved the gun-butts hard
+down in the holsters at her hips, who whirled on
+her booted heel, who cleared the space between
+her and El Rey in three cat-like leaps.</p>
+<p>As she went up the stallion rose with her, came
+down with a pounding of iron-shod hoofs,
+dropped his huge hips in the first leap&ndash;&ndash;and was
+away.</p>
+<p>Corvan saw the silver horse shoot out from its
+midst and woke from its lethargy.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Th&#8217; race!</i>&#8221; some one cried, high and shrill,
+&#8220;<i>th&#8217; race at last!</i>&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two strangers saw it, and their lips fell
+open with amaze.</p>
+<p>Kenset from his low porch saw it&ndash;&ndash;and dropped
+his face on his arms.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lord God!&#8221; he groaned, &#8220;it&#8217;s come! I
+couldn&#8217;t hold her! I might have known! I might
+have known! She&#8217;s Valley bred&ndash;&ndash;she <i>is</i> the Valley!
+I&ndash;&ndash;and all I stand for&ndash;&ndash;chaff in the wind!
+Nothing could hold her now! Aye&ndash;&ndash;nothing could
+hold her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>True at last to herself&ndash;&ndash;true to Harkness&ndash;&ndash;true
+to Jim Last&ndash;&ndash;true to the Vigilantes and to the
+Valley she loved, Tharon flung the sombrero from
+her bright head, settled her feet in the stirrups,
+slid the rein on El Rey&#8217;s neck, leaned down above
+him and began to call in his ears.</p>
+<p>No need of that cry.</p>
+<p>El Rey heeded nothing that she might say. She
+was not his master&ndash;&ndash;never had been. He had had
+but one, the big, stern man whose sharp word had
+been his law&ndash;&ndash;the one who had ever had his best,
+his love and his speed.</p>
+<p>What was it now that rode in his saddle&ndash;&ndash;the
+saddle with the long dark stain?</p>
+<p>Assuredly it was not the slim girl-thing with the
+golden voice!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span></p>
+<p>El Rey had ever looked through, beyond her.</p>
+<p>Nay, it was something bigger, stronger,
+sterner&ndash;&ndash;who shall say? Perhaps the spirit of
+that master whom he had served, whom he had
+brought faithfully home that night in spring, for
+whom he had looked and listened all these weary
+months! There was something, indeed&ndash;&ndash;for El
+Rey, the great, lay down to earth and ran without
+the need of guidance. He set the long red horse
+out there on the green plain before him like a
+beacon and put the mighty machinery of his massive
+body into motion. Bolt was a rival worthy of
+his best&ndash;&ndash;Bolt, the king of the Ironwoods, huge,
+spirited, fast as the wind and wild as fire. El
+Rey&#8217;s silver ears lay back along his neck, the mane
+above them was like a cloud, his long tail streamed
+behind him like a comet&ndash;&ndash;and forgotten was his
+singlefooting. He ran, his great limbs gathering
+and spreading beneath him&ndash;&ndash;gathering and
+spreading&ndash;&ndash;with the regularity, of clock-work.</p>
+<p>Tharon&#8217;s blue eyes were narrow as her father&#8217;s,
+the little lines about them stood out. She rode
+low, like a limpet clinging, and her mind was on
+the two ahead&ndash;&ndash;the man and the great bay horse.</p>
+<p>As she felt the wind sing by her cheeks, sting
+the tears beneath her lids, she shut her lips tighter
+and hugged the pommel closer.</p>
+<p>The green carpet went by beneath her like a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span>
+blur. The thunder of El Rey&#8217;s beating hoofs
+was like the sound of the cataracts when the ca&ntilde;ons
+shot their freshets from the Rockface.</p>
+<p>The note of his speed was rising&ndash;&ndash;rising&ndash;&ndash;rising.
+The blood began to pound in her temples
+with pride and exultation.</p>
+<p>She saw the distance narrowing just the smallest
+bit between her and Courtrey. Just the smallest
+trifle, indeed, but <i>narrowing</i>.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He ain&#8217;t a-puttin&#8217; Bolt down to his best,&#8221;
+she told herself tensely, &#8220;I know what he can do.&#8221;
+And she remembered that ride from the mouth
+of Black Coulee to the pine-guarded glade&ndash;&ndash;and
+Kenset. At that thought she pressed her lips
+tighter.</p>
+<p>No thought of Kenset must come to her now&ndash;&ndash;to
+weaken her with memory of those pressing, vital
+hands of his above his pounding heart.</p>
+<p>No&ndash;&ndash;she was herself again&ndash;&ndash;Tharon Last, Jim
+Last&#8217;s girl, the gun woman of Lost Valley&ndash;&ndash;and
+yonder went her father&#8217;s killer.</p>
+<p>She leaned down and called again in El Rey&#8217;s
+ear.</p>
+<p>No slightest spurt of speed rewarded her&ndash;&ndash;nothing
+but the rising note. Then she saw that
+the distance was widening&ndash;&ndash;just a tiny bit.</p>
+<p>Truly it was widening. Courtrey, looking back,
+had caught the sun on her golden hair, on her face
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289' name='page_289'></a>289</span>
+as white as milk. He saw that her hands were at
+her hips&ndash;&ndash;loosely set back at her hips&ndash;&ndash;and what
+thought he might have had of mercy at her hands&ndash;&ndash;what
+wild vision he might have seen of speech
+with her&ndash;&ndash;of parley&ndash;&ndash;of persuasion&ndash;&ndash;was dead.</p>
+<p>He leaned down and struck the Ironwood with
+his open hand.</p>
+<p>Bolt, the beautiful, leaped in answer. A little
+more&ndash;&ndash;slowly&ndash;&ndash;the distance between pursuer and
+pursued widened. Then&ndash;&ndash;Tharon blinked the
+mist from her eyes to make sure&ndash;&ndash;the gain was
+lost. Slowly, steadily, El Rey closed up the extra
+width. Then for a time there was no change.
+The open plain resounded to the roar of hoofs,
+the wind sang by like taut strings struck. The
+earth was still that racing green blur beneath.</p>
+<p>And still the electric note of rising speed
+hummed softly higher.</p>
+<p>If Jim Last rode his silver stallion to the goal
+of vengeance he must surely have been satisfied.
+The great shoulders worked like pistons, the whole
+massive body was level as the flowing floor beneath,
+the steel-thewed limbs reached and doubled&ndash;&ndash;reached
+and doubled&ndash;&ndash;with wonderful power
+and precision.</p>
+<p>And then at last Tharon knew&ndash;&ndash;knew that El
+Rey was gaining, slowly, steadily, surely. The
+splendid bay horse was running magnificently, but
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290' name='page_290'></a>290</span>
+El Rey ran like a super-horse. His silver head
+was straight as a level, his ears laid back, his nostrils
+wide and flaring, red as blood, his big eyes
+glowed with the wildness of savage flight.</p>
+<p>The great king was mad with speed!</p>
+<p>Jim Last&#8217;s girl was mad also&ndash;&ndash;mad with the
+lust of conquest, of revenge.</p>
+<p>She rose a little from the stallion&#8217;s whipping
+mane, and her blue eyes burned on the man ahead.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I said I&#8217;d get you, Buck Courtrey!&#8221; she muttered,
+&#8220;that some day I&#8217;d run th&#8217; Ironwoods off
+their feet&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217; heart out of their master!</p>
+<p>&#8220;Run, damn you&ndash;&ndash;for it&#8217;s your last ride!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then she dropped forward again and watched
+the distance closing down.</p>
+<p>Nearer&ndash;&ndash;nearer&ndash;&ndash;nearer!</p>
+<p>The note rose another notch.</p>
+<p>Never in his life had El Rey run as he ran now.
+Always he had had reserves. He had them now.
+The bottom of his power was not reached.</p>
+<p>Bolt was doing his best. Once he threw up his
+head and foam flew on the wind&ndash;&ndash;red foam that
+shot back and whipped on Tharon&#8217;s hand, a wet
+pink stain, thinned and faded.</p>
+<p>At that sight an exultant cry, savage, inhuman,
+ugly, burst from her throat.</p>
+<p>She was within long gunshot now&ndash;&ndash;was closing
+her fingers lightly on the blue gun-butts&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span></p>
+<p>Courtrey heard that cry.</p>
+<p>He rose in his saddle&ndash;&ndash;turned&ndash;&ndash;flashed up his
+hand and fired. Quick as the motion of the gun
+man was, Tharon Last was quicker. She dropped
+over El Rey&#8217;s shoulder like a cat, firing as she
+went.</p>
+<p>Courtrey&#8217;s bullet clipped the cantle of the big
+saddle an inch above her flattened leg across it.
+Hers did something else&ndash;&ndash;what she had dreamed
+of. It struck that other wrist of Courtrey&#8217;s, the
+left&ndash;&ndash;and sent his six-gun tumbling.</p>
+<p>Once again she yelled as she came back in her
+saddle.</p>
+<p>And El Rey was closing&ndash;&ndash;closing up the gap
+between.</p>
+<p>Once again Tharon raised her guns to shoot&ndash;&ndash;both,
+this time, as her daddy had taught her.
+This was the pinnacle of her life, her skill, her
+training.</p>
+<p>Never again would she live a moment like it.
+She laughed and crouched for the final act.</p>
+<p>But a sudden coldness went over her from head
+to foot, sent the hot blood shaking down her
+spine.</p>
+<p>What was Courtrey doing?</p>
+<p>He rode straight up at last, like an Indian
+showing, and his bleeding left hand swung at his
+side. With the other he had swept off his wide
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span>
+hat, so that his handsome iron-grey head was bare
+to the summer sun. His keen hawk face was
+lifted. He made a spectacular figure&ndash;&ndash;like a warrior,
+unarmed, waiting his end with courage.</p>
+<p><i>Unarmed!</i></p>
+<p>That it was which struck Tharon like a hand
+across her face. The gun he had used with his
+left hand was his only one! He had carried but
+one since that night at the Stronghold when she
+had first marked him.</p>
+<p>She should have known! Word of this had
+been about Corvan and the Valley.</p>
+<p>And so she had Buck Courtrey at her mercy.
+She could close the lessening gap and kill him in
+his saddle&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>But the icy blood still seemed to trickle down her
+back.</p>
+<p>She&ndash;&ndash;and Jim Last&ndash;&ndash;they had always fought in
+fair-and-open. They were no murderers....
+They did not strike in the dark&ndash;&ndash;shoot a man from
+ambush&ndash;&ndash;nor kill a man unarmed.... And Kenset&ndash;&ndash;Kenset
+of the foothills&ndash;&ndash;what had he said
+about the stain of blood&ndash;&ndash;blood-guilt&ndash;&ndash;clean
+hands&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>The girl caught her breath with a choking sob.</p>
+<p>The game was up.</p>
+<p>Neither Jim Last&ndash;&ndash;nor Kenset&ndash;&ndash;nor she&ndash;&ndash;would
+shoot a man unarmed.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span></p>
+<p>And Courtrey was riding toward the Bottle
+Neck.</p>
+<p>He would go down the Wall to freedom.</p>
+<p>And the crosses in Jim Last&#8217;s granite&ndash;&ndash;they
+would be forever unredeemed, a shame, a sadness,
+a living accusation!</p>
+<p>Nay&ndash;&ndash;not that! Not that!</p>
+<p>She had promised&ndash;&ndash;and the Law was waiting&ndash;&ndash;the
+big Law of below.</p>
+<p>She was Jim Last&#8217;s daughter still.</p>
+<p>She leaned closer to El Rey&#8217;s neck&ndash;&ndash;held
+her two guns ready&ndash;&ndash;and rode with the very
+wind.</p>
+<p>She was near now&ndash;&ndash;she could see Courtrey&#8217;s
+face, waxen white but fearless, his dark eyes
+turned back toward her in a sort of desperate admiration....
+Courtrey loved strength and courage
+and all things wild and fierce. She could
+see Bolt&#8217;s staring eyeballs, his open mouth, gasping
+and piteous. One more moment&ndash;&ndash;another&ndash;&ndash;yet
+one more&ndash;&ndash;then she rose in her stirrups and
+fired straight at the broad bay temple, shining and
+black with sweat!</p>
+<p>The great gallant Ironwood went down in a
+huge arc&ndash;&ndash;first his beautiful head, then the sinking
+arch of his neck, then the shoulders that had
+worked so wondrously. He rolled on his back
+like a hoop, his iron-shod hoofs spinning for one
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span>
+spectacular moment in the air. Then he lay at
+sudden ease, his still fluttering nose pointing directly
+back the way he had come.</p>
+<p>With the first catching stumble of the true forefeet,
+the man on his back had shot out of the
+saddle and far ahead. He landed twenty feet
+away and squarely on his head and shoulders. Like
+Bolt, Courtrey&#8217;s body turned a complete somersault&ndash;&ndash;and
+lay still, at sudden peace.</p>
+<p>Tharon Last and El Rey went on like an arrow&ndash;&ndash;they
+could not stop.</p>
+<p>When at last she did draw the great king down
+she was far and away from the spot. She turned
+her head, panting and dizzy, and looked back....
+She could see the prone red heap that was
+Bolt&ndash;&ndash;a little way beyond that other, lesser, darker
+heap....</p>
+<p>For a long time she sat on El Rey&#8217;s heaving
+back and stared unseeingly at the green earth
+where the short grasses quivered in the little wind.</p>
+<p>There was a deathly white line about her lips,
+but her eyes blazed with the fire that had characterized
+them from birth, the flickering, unfathomable
+flame that came and went.</p>
+<p>Then, presently, new lines came in her young
+face, unstable lines that quivered and worked, and
+all the good green earth danced grotesquely before
+her vision, for a wall of tears shut out the world.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span>
+... She laid her head down on El Rey&#8217;s cloudy
+mane&ndash;&ndash;and wept.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>It was early dawn at Last&#8217;s Holding. The sun
+was not yet up behind the eastern ramparts. The
+cottonwoods whispered in the dawn-wind, the
+spring beneath the milk-house talked and murmured.
+Out in the big corrals the cattle were
+beginning to stir and bawl.</p>
+<p>In the kitchen old Anita and young Paula had
+breakfast waiting for the men.</p>
+<p>Deep in that dim south room where the pale
+Virgin kept watch and ward, Kenset of the foothills
+slept in healing peace.</p>
+<p>And at the step of the western door, Billy stood
+by Golden&ndash;&ndash;Golden the beautiful, who ranked next
+to El Rey himself&ndash;&ndash;and his face was lifted to
+Tharon who drooped against the lintel with her
+forehead on her arm.</p>
+<p>The boy held her hand clasped in both of
+his own, and there was a yearning tenderness
+in his soft voice when he spoke, a pride and joy
+ineffable that glowed above the pain that was
+never to leave him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It ain&#8217;t that I love you less, Tharon, dear,&#8221;
+he said gently, &#8220;that I must go. Not that, little
+girl. I&#8217;ll love you till I die&ndash;&ndash;that I know in dead
+certainty. But I can&#8217;t stay here&ndash;&ndash;not where I&#8217;ll
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span>
+have to see you givin&#8217; all your sweet self to another
+man. A good man, too, Tharon&ndash;&ndash;I think there
+ain&#8217;t a better one in th&#8217; land&ndash;&ndash;but&ndash;&ndash;well,&ndash;&ndash;I can&#8217;t&ndash;&ndash;that&#8217;s
+all. I can&#8217;t thank you for all you&#8217;ve done
+for me sence you was a little mite of a girl&ndash;&ndash;five
+years back,&#8221;&ndash;&ndash;his voice broke a bit, but he controlled
+it, &#8220;nor for th&#8217; joy you&#8217;ve given me&ndash;&ndash;th&#8217;
+rides together&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; th&#8217; jokes an&#8217; playin&#8217;&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>He paused a moment, unhappily, and the mistress
+of Last&#8217;s drooped more heavily against the
+old adobe wall.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor for Golden here,&#8221; went on the rider,
+&#8220;we&#8217;ll be pals as long as we both live&ndash;&ndash;nor fer-fer&ndash;&ndash;&#8221;
+he stopped again, hesitated, looked yearningly
+at the quivering cheek against the curving
+arm, and went on to the finish.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor fer that one kiss, Tharon&ndash;&ndash;it&#8217;s my one
+treasure for life, so help me, God&ndash;&ndash;that you give
+me that night. An&#8217; over all I want to thank you
+fer&ndash;&ndash;fer&ndash;&ndash;killin&#8217; th&#8217; Pomo half-breed in th&#8217; Cup
+o&#8217; God&ndash;&ndash;<i>fer you done that trick fer me</i>! Th&#8217; one
+stain on your dear hands&ndash;&ndash;fer me&ndash;&ndash;the <i>only</i> one,
+fer Fate killed Courtrey, not you. His neck was
+clean broke when they picked him up.... That
+memory will keep me alive, will save th&#8217; beauty
+of th&#8217; stars at night fer me, will make th&#8217; rest
+worth livin&#8217;.... That one kiss.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He stopped again and stood for a long time
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span>
+looking at her as if he would fix forever in his
+memory the beauty of her, the fire, the spirit, the
+elusive quality that was Tharon Last herself.</p>
+<p>Then he sighed and smiled and gently shook
+the hand he held.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come&ndash;&ndash;tell me good-bye, Tharon, dear,&#8221; he
+said softly.</p>
+<p>For answer the mistress of Last&#8217;s once again
+reached out her arms and drew his head to her
+heart&ndash;&ndash;once more pressed her lips upon his own.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, Billy,&#8221; she said with a sound of tears in
+her voice, &#8220;Kenset&#8217;s th&#8217; one man&ndash;&ndash;that&#8217;s true, an&#8217;
+I&#8217;m helpless before th&#8217; fact&ndash;&ndash;but there&#8217;ll never be
+another can take your place in my heart&ndash;&ndash;there&#8217;ll
+never be no one to ride with me in th&#8217; Big Shadow
+in just th&#8217; same way, Billy&ndash;&ndash;to hold my hand as
+we come home to Last&#8217;s with that same sweet, honest
+friendship, that don&#8217;t need words! I&#8217;ve got
+my life-love, but I&#8217;ve lost my life-friend&ndash;&ndash;an&#8217; my
+heart&#8217;s sore&ndash;&ndash;sore with pain!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The rider lifted his face and it was glorified in
+the first rays of the sun that was rising over the
+eastern mountains. His gayly studded belt and
+riding cuffs, his spurs and the vanity of silver on
+his wide hat caught the glow and sparkled brightly.
+Joy became paramount over sadness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you fret, Tharon,&#8221; he said, still in that
+soft voice, &#8220;I&#8217;m always at your shoulder in spirit&ndash;&ndash;in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span>
+body, too, if you ever want me or need me.
+So long.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he kissed both the hands he held, dropped
+them, turned and mounted Golden, waved a hand
+to all the Holding, and putting the horse to a run,
+went down the sounding-board as if he dared not
+look back.</p>
+<p>Until horse and rider were a tiny speck on the
+living green&ndash;&ndash;until they passed the Silver Hollow
+and the mouth of Black Coulee, Tharon Last stood
+in the western door and watched them with dim
+blue eyes.</p>
+<p>Ail the wide expanse of Lost Valley was still
+and sweet with dawn, smiling as if with a new
+and wondrous peace, the Vestal&#8217;s Veil shimmered
+on the Rockface, the distant peaks above the
+Ca&ntilde;on Country cut the skies.</p>
+<p>She scanned the little world about and felt this
+peace press down upon her soul&ndash;&ndash;as if the questions
+all were answered, the duty done.</p>
+<p>Never in all her life before had Last&#8217;s Holding
+seemed to her so secure and settled, so sweet and
+to be desired....</p>
+<p>Within it lay her destiny&ndash;&ndash;the man in the cool
+south room.</p>
+<p>Without in the great Valley lay a future.</p>
+<p>Love was with her&ndash;&ndash;friendship would be with
+her always in memory, one glowing with its vital
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299' name='page_299'></a>299</span>
+presence, the other softened and doubly sweet with
+the sorrow of absence.</p>
+<p>She raised her hand and made the sign of the
+Cross between herself and that disappearing
+speck, then she turned and followed old Anita
+carrying gruels to that dim south room.</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;'>THE END</p>
+
+<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: ppg0522 -->
+<!-- timestamp: Sat May 23 08:54:30 -0600 2009 -->
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Tharon of Lost Valley, by Vingie E. Roe
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THARON OF LOST VALLEY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 28956-h.htm or 28956-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/9/5/28956/
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/28956-h/images/illus-038.jpg b/28956-h/images/illus-038.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..62819df
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h/images/illus-038.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956-h/images/illus-097.jpg b/28956-h/images/illus-097.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e74b684
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h/images/illus-097.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956-h/images/illus-104.jpg b/28956-h/images/illus-104.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9b62388
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h/images/illus-104.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956-h/images/illus-130.jpg b/28956-h/images/illus-130.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8a0bdbd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h/images/illus-130.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956-h/images/illus-159.jpg b/28956-h/images/illus-159.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b172aa4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h/images/illus-159.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956-h/images/illus-emb.jpg b/28956-h/images/illus-emb.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e957bcc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h/images/illus-emb.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956-h/images/illus-fpc.jpg b/28956-h/images/illus-fpc.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d42ae86
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956-h/images/illus-fpc.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/28956.txt b/28956.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..42ed16b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8336 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tharon of Lost Valley, by Vingie E. Roe
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Tharon of Lost Valley
+
+Author: Vingie E. Roe
+
+Illustrator: Frank Tenney Johnson
+
+Release Date: May 24, 2009 [EBook #28956]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THARON OF LOST VALLEY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: AS EL REY ROSE ON HIS HIND FEET WHIRLING, THAT UNWAVERING
+MUZZLE WHIRLED ALSO TO KEEP IN LINE]
+
+
+
+
+THARON OF LOST VALLEY
+
+BY VINGIE E. ROE
+
+Author of "The Maid of the Whispering Hills,"
+"The Heart of Night Wind," etc.
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRANK TENNEY JOHNSON
+
+NEW YORK
+
+DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
+
+1919
+
+
+
+
+Copyright, 1919
+
+By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. The Gun Man's Heritage 1
+ II. The Horses of the Finger Marks 29
+ III. The Man in Uniform 52
+ IV. Unbroken Bread 76
+ V. The Working of the Law 102
+ VI. El Rey and Bolt 128
+ VII. The Shot in the Canons 157
+ VIII. White Ellen 187
+ IX. Signal Fires in the Valley 214
+ X. The Untrue Firing Pin 247
+ XI. Finger Mark and Ironwood at Last 277
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ As El Rey rose on his hind feet whirling, that
+ unwavering muzzle whirled also to keep in line _Frontispiece_
+
+ Near them sat a rider on a buckskin horse 38
+
+ She talked with Conford who rode beside her and
+ now and then she smiled 104
+
+ In fact Courtrey, burning with the new desire
+ that was beginning to obsess him, was working
+ out a new design 131
+
+
+
+
+THARON OF LOST VALLEY
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE GUN MAN'S HERITAGE
+
+
+Lost Valley lay like a sparkling jewel, fashioned in perfection, cast
+in the breast of the illimitable mountain country--and forever after
+forgotten of God.
+
+A tiny world, arrogantly unconscious of any other, it lived its own
+life, went its own ways, had its own conceptions of law--and they were
+based upon primeval instincts.
+
+Cattle by the thousand head ran on its level ranges, riders jogged
+along its trail-less expanses, their broad hats pulled over their
+eyes, their six-guns at their hips. Corvan, its one town, ran its
+nightly games, lined its familiar streets with swinging-doored
+saloons.
+
+Toward the west the Canon Country loomed behind its sharp-faced
+cliffs, on the east the rolling ranges, dotted with oak and
+digger-pine, went gradually up to the feet of the stupendous peaks
+that cut the sapphire skies.
+
+Lost indeed, it was a paradise, a perfect place of peace but for its
+humans. Through it ran the Broken Bend, coming in from the high and
+jumbled rocklands at the north, going out along the sheer cliffs at
+the south.
+
+Out of its ideal loneliness there were but two known ways, and both
+were worth a man's best effort. Down the river one might drive a band
+of cattle, bring in a loaded pack train, single file against the wall.
+That was a twelve days' trip. Up through the defiles at the west a man
+on foot might make it out, provided he knew each inch of the Secret
+Way that scaled False Ridge.
+
+It was spring, the time of greening ranges and the coming of new
+calves. Soft winds dipped and wantoned with Lost Valley, in the Canon
+Country shy flowers, waxen, heavy-headed on thin stems, clung to the
+rugged walls.
+
+All day the sun had shone, mild as a lover, coaxing, promising. The
+very wine of life was a-pulse in the air.
+
+All day Tharon Last had sung about her work scouring the boards of the
+kitchen floor until they were soft and white as flax, helping old
+Anita with the dinner for the men, seeing about the number of new
+palings for the garden. She had swept every inch of the deep adobe
+house, had fixed over the arrangement of Indian baskets on the mantel,
+had filled all the lamps with coal-oil. She was very careful with the
+lamps, trimming the wicks to smokeless perfection, for oil was scarce
+and precious in Lost Valley, as were all outside products, since they
+must come in at long intervals and in small quantities. And as she
+worked she sang, wild, wordless melodies in a natural voice as rich as
+a harp. That voice of Tharon's was one of the wonders of Lost Valley.
+Many a rider went by that way on the chance that he might catch its
+golden music adrift on the breeze, her father's men came up at night
+to hear its martial stir, its tenderness, for the voice was the girl,
+and Tharon was an unknown quantity, sometimes all melting sweetness,
+sometimes fire that flashed and was still.
+
+So on this day she sang, since she was happy. Why, she did not know.
+Perhaps it was because of the six new puppies in the milk-house,
+rolling in awkward fatness against their shepherd mother, whose soft
+eyes beamed up at the girl in beautiful pride. Perhaps it was because
+of the springtime in the air.
+
+At any rate she worked with all the will and pleasure of youth in a
+congenial task, and the roses of health bloomed in her cheeks. The
+sun itself shone in her tawny hair where the curls made waves and
+ripples, the blue skies of Lost Valley were faithfully reflected in
+her eyes.
+
+Her skin was soft-golden, the enchanting skin of some half-blonds
+which can never be duplicated by all the arts of earth, and her full
+mouth was scarlet as pomegranates.
+
+Sometimes old Anita who had raised her, would stop and look at her in
+wonder, so beautiful was she to old and faithful eyes.
+
+And not alone to Anita was she entirely lovely.
+
+There was not a full grown man in Lost Valley who would not go many a
+mile to look upon her--with varying desires. Few voiced their
+longings, however, for Jim Last was notorious with his guns and could
+protect his daughter. He had protected her for twenty years, come full
+summer, and he asked no odds of any. His eyes were like Tharon's--blue
+and changing, with odd little lines that crinkled about them at the
+corners, elongating them in appearance. He was a big man, vital and
+quiet. The girl took her stature from him. Her flashes of fire came
+from her mother, of whom she knew little and of whom Jim Last said
+nothing. Once as a child she had asked him, after the manner of
+children, about this mother of dim memories, and his eyes had hazed
+with a look of suffering that scared her, he had struck his palm upon
+a table, and said only:
+
+"She was an angel straight out of Heaven. Don't ask me again."
+
+So Tharon had not asked again, though she had wondered much.
+
+Sometimes old Anita, become garrulous with age, mumbled in the
+twilight when the rose and the lavendar lights swept down the eastern
+ramparts and across the rolling range lands, and the girl gleaned
+scattered pictures of a gentle and lovely creature who had come with
+her father out of a mystic country somewhere "below."
+
+"Below" meant down the river and beyond, an unnamable region.
+
+In the big living room there was one relic of this mysterious mother,
+a tiny melodeon, its rosewood case a trifle marred by unknown
+hardships, its ivory keys yellow with age. It had two small pedals and
+two slender sticks which fitted therein and pushed the bellows up and
+down when one trampled upon them. And to Tharon this little old
+instrument was wealth of the Indies. The low piping of its reedy notes
+made an accompaniment of surpassing sweetness when she sat before it
+and sang her wordless melodies. And just as she found music in her
+throat without conscious effort, so she found it in her fingers, deep,
+resonant chords for her running minors, thin, trickling streams of
+lightness for her own slow notes.
+
+The sun had turned to the west in its majestic course and Tharon, the
+noon work over, drew up the spindle-legged stool and sat down to play
+to herself and Anita. The old woman, half Mexic, half Indian, drowsed
+in a low chair by the eastern window, her toil-hard hands clasped in
+her lap, a black _reboso_ over her head, though the day was warm as
+summer. A kitten frisked in the sunlight at the open door, wild ducks,
+long domesticated, squalled raucously down the yards, some cattle
+slept in the huge corrals and the little world of Last's Holding was
+at peace. It seemed that only the girl idling over the yellowed keys,
+was awake.
+
+For a long and happy hour Tharon sat so, sometimes opening her pretty
+throat in ambitious flights of sound, again humming lowly--and that
+was enchanting, as if one sang lullabies to flaxen heads on
+shoulders.
+
+And it did enchant one--a man who stood for the better part of that
+hour at the edge of the deep window in the adobe wall and watched the
+singer.
+
+He was a splendid figure of a man, tall, broad, muscular, built for
+strength and endurance. His face was unduly lined, even for his age,
+which was near fifty, but the eyes under the arched black brows were
+vital as a hawk's. He wore the customary garments of the Lost Valley
+men, broad sombrero, flannel shirt, corduroys and cowboy boots,
+stitched and decorated above their high heels. At his hips hung two
+guns, spurs clinked when he stepped unguardedly. He rarely stepped
+that way, however.
+
+When presently the girl at the melodeon ceased and drew the lid over
+the keys with reverent fingers, he moved silently back a pace or two
+along the wall. Then he waited. As he had anticipated, she came to the
+door to look upon the budding world, and for another moment he watched
+her with a strange expression. Then he swung forward and let the spurs
+rattle. Tharon flashed to face him like a startled animal.
+
+"Hello, Tharon," he said and smiled. The girl stared at him with quick
+insolence.
+
+"Howdy," she said coldly.
+
+He came close to the doorway, put one hand on the facing, the other on
+his hip and leaned near. She drew back. He reached out suddenly and
+gripped her wrist in fingers that bit like steel.
+
+"Pretty," he said, while his dark eyes narrowed.
+
+Tharon flung her whole young strength against his grip with a
+twisting wrench and came free. The quick, tremendous effort left her
+calm. And she did not retreat a step.
+
+"Hell," said the man admiringly, "little wildcat!"
+
+"What you want?" she asked sharply.
+
+"You," he answered swiftly.
+
+"Buck Courtrey," she said, "you might own an' run Lost Valley--all but
+one outfit. You ain't never run Last nor put your dirty hand on th'
+Holdin'. An' that ain't all. You never will. If you ever touch me
+again, I'll tell Dad Jim an' he'll kill you. I'd a-told him before
+when you met me that day on the range, only I didn't want his honest
+hands smutted up with such as you. He's had his killin's before--but
+they was always in fair-an'-open. You he'd give no quarter--if he knew
+what you ben askin' me."
+
+The man's eyes narrowed evilly. They became calculating.
+
+"Tell him," he said.
+
+"Eh?"
+
+"Tell him."
+
+"You want to feed th' buzzards?" the girl asked with an insulting peal
+of laughter.
+
+"Not yet--but I'll remember that speech some day."
+
+"Remember an' be damned," said Tharon. "Now kindly take your dirty
+carcass off Last's Holding--back to your wife."
+
+The fire was flashing a little in her blue eyes as she spoke, and she
+half turned to enter the house.
+
+As she did so, Courtrey flung out an arm and caught her about the
+shoulders. He drew her against him with the motion and kissed her
+square on the lips. For a second his narrowed eyes were drunken.
+
+As he loosed her Tharon gasped like a swimmer sinking.
+
+She put up a hand and drew it across her mouth, which was pale as
+ashes with sudden rage.
+
+"Now," she said, "I'll tell him."
+
+"Do," said Courtrey, and swung away around the wall of the house.
+
+There were no more artless songs that day at Last's Holding. Anita was
+awake and peering with dim eyes when Tharon came in from the door
+sill.
+
+"_Mi querida_," she asked, "what happened?"
+
+"Nothing," said the girl, "it's time to begin supper. Th' boys'll soon
+be comin' in."
+
+"_Si, si_," said Anita, "I'll ask Jose to cut the fresh beef--it has
+hung long enough in the cooling house."
+
+Supper at Last's was a lively affair. At the long tables in the
+eating room the riders gathered, lean, tanned men, young mostly, all
+alert, quick-eyed, swift in judgment. Their days were full and earnest
+enough, running Last's cattle on the Lost Valley ranges. The evenings
+were their own, and they made the most of them. The big house was free
+to them, and they made it home, smoking, playing cards on the living
+room table under the hanging lamp, mulling over the work of the day,
+and begging Tharon to sing to them, sometimes with the instrument,
+sometimes sitting in the deep east window, when the moon shone, and
+then they turned out the light and listened in adoring rapture.
+
+For Last's girl was the rose of the Valley, the one absolutely
+unattainable woman, and they worshipped her accordingly.
+
+Not that she was aloof. Far from it. In her deep heart the whole bunch
+of boys had a place; singly and collectively. They were her private
+property, and she would have been inordinately jealous of any one of
+them had he slipped allegiance.
+
+As the purple and crimson veils began to drape the eastern ramparts
+where the forests thickened and swept up the slopes, these riders
+began to come in across the range, driving the herds before them.
+Running cattle in Lost Valley was no child's play. Any small bunch of
+cows left out at night was not there by dawn. Eternal vigilance was
+the price of safety, and then they were not always safe. Witness poor
+Harkness, a year ago shot in the back and left to die alone--his band
+run off in daylight.
+
+They had found him too late, pitifully propped against a stone, the
+cigarette, he had tried to light to comfort him, dead in his nerveless
+hand. Tharon had wept and wept for Harkness, for he had been a good
+comrade, open-hearted and merry. And deep in her soul she harboured
+dim longings for justice on his murderer--revenge, if you will.
+
+Tonight she thought of him, somehow, as she went about the supper work
+along with Anita and Jose and pretty dark Paula. She stood a moment on
+the broad stone at the kitchen door, a dish of butter from the
+springhouse under the poplars in her hand, and watched Billy Brent and
+Curly bring in a bunch from up Long Meadow way. She thought how bright
+the spotted cattle looked, how lithe and graceful the men, and then
+her eyes lighted as they always did when she beheld the horses of
+Last's Holding--the horses of the Finger Marks.
+
+Billy rode Redbuck, Curly Drumfire, and they were princes of a royal
+blood, albeit Nature's strain alone. Slim, spirited, wiry, eager
+heads up, manes flying, bright hoofs flashing in the late sunlight,
+they came home to Last's after a long day's work, fresh as when they
+went out at dawn.
+
+"Nothin' ever floors them," Tharon said aloud to herself. "Wonderful
+creatures."
+
+She set the butter down on the rock at her feet, cupped her hands
+about her lips and sent out a keen, clear call, two notes, one rising,
+one falling. It had a livening, compelling quality.
+
+Instantly Drumfire flung up his head and answered it with a ringing
+whistle, though he did not lose a stride in the flying curve he was
+performing to head a stubborn yearling that refused in stiff-tailed
+arrogance to go into the corrals.
+
+The girl smiled and, stooping, picked up her dish and entered.
+
+It was late before the last straggler was in from the range. The boys
+washed at the big sink on the porch, and were ready for the hearty
+fare that steamed in the lamp-lighted room. For the last hour Tharon
+had been watching the eastern slopes for her father.
+
+"He's ridin' late, Anita," she said anxiously as the men trooped in
+with the usual jest and laughter.
+
+"He went far, no doubt, _Corazon,"_ said old Anita comfortably. "He
+goes so fast on El Rey that time as well as distance flies beneath the
+shining hoofs."
+
+Anita was like her people, mystic and soft-spoken.
+
+"True," said the girl gently, "I forget, El Rey is mighty. He went
+very far I make no doubt. We'll hear him comin' soon."
+
+Then she poured steaming coffee in the cups about the table, smiling
+down in the eyes upturned to hers. Billy, Curly, Bent Smith, Jack
+Masters and Conford, the foreman, they all had a love-look for her,
+and the girl felt it like a circling guerdon. She was grateful for the
+sense of security that seemed to emanate from her father's riders, a
+bit wistful withal, as if, for the first time in her life, she needed
+something more than she had always had.
+
+"Which way did Dad go, Billy?" she asked, "north or south?"
+
+"North," said Billy, "he rode th' Cup Rim range today."
+
+When the meal, a trifle silent in deference to Tharon's silence, was
+done, the men rose awkwardly. They stood a moment, looking about,
+undecided.
+
+Conford picked them up with his eyes and nodded out. He felt that just
+maybe the girl would rather be alone. But Tharon stopped the
+reluctant egress.
+
+"Don't go, boys," she said, "come on in th' room. There's no moon
+tonight." But she did not play on the melodeon. Instead she sat in the
+deep window that looked over the rolling uplands and was quiet,
+listening.
+
+"Turn out th' light, Bent," she said, "somehow I feel like shadows
+tonight."
+
+So they sat about in the great room, black with the darkness of the
+soft spring night, and like the true worshippers they were, they did
+not speak. Only the red butts of their cigarettes glowed and faded, to
+glow again and again fade out. Tharon sat curled in the window, her
+graceful limbs drawn up to her chin, her eyes half closed, her keen
+ears open like a forest creature's. She was listening for the marked
+rhythm of the great El Rey, the clap-clap, clap-clap of the king of
+Last's Holding as he singlefooted down the hollow slopes of the
+lifting eastern range.
+
+And as she waited she thought of many things. Odd little happenings of
+her childhood came back to her--the time she had caught her father
+killing the winter's beef, had wept in hysterical pity and forbidden
+him to finish.
+
+They had had no meat those long months following--and she had so tired
+of beans, that she had never been able to eat them since. She smiled
+in the dusk as she recalled Jim Last's life-long indulgence of her.
+
+And the time she had wanted to make her own knee-short dresses as long
+as Anita's, to sweep the floors, with fringe upon them and stripes of
+bright print.
+
+She had worn them so--at twelve--until she found that they hindered
+the free use of her young limbs in mounting a horse, free-foot and
+bareback. Then, once again the memory of her father's face when she
+questioned him concerning her mother.
+
+"Boys," she said suddenly, smiling to herself, "did you ever know a
+man like my dad?"
+
+There was a movement among the lounging riders, a shifting of
+position, a striking of cigarette ash.
+
+"No, sir," said Billy promptly, "there hain't another man's good with
+a gun as him, not anywhere's in Lost Valley. Not even Buck Courtrey
+himself. I'd back Jim Last against him, even, in fair-draw. Why?"
+
+"Oh, nothin'," said the girl, "only--listen--Glory!" she added slipping
+down from the window to stand quietly in the gloom, "that's him now! I
+was wishin' hard he'd come. Say--listen----Why,--there's somethin'
+gone wrong with El Rey's feet! 1--2----3, 4, 5, 6----1--2--Boys--he's
+breakin'! Th' king ain't singlefootin' right, for th' first time
+since Jim Last put a halter on him! Come--come quick!"
+
+Ordinarily Tharon was a bit slow in her movements, as the very
+graceful often are. Now she was across the room to the western door
+before a man had moved. They joined her there and she stood at
+attention, one hand at her breast, the breath held still in her
+throat. The light, shining through from the eating room beyond, made a
+halo of her tawny hair. Silently the riders grouped about her and
+listened.
+
+Sure enough. Down along the range that rang as some open stretches do,
+there came the clip-clap of a hurrying horse, only now the hoof beats
+were regular for a little space, to break, halt, start on, and again
+ring true in the beautiful syncopation of the born singlefooter. The
+king was coming home, but, alas! not as he had ever come before, in
+full flight, proud and powerful. He held his speed and sacrificed his
+certainty to the man who clung desperately to the saddle horn and
+swayed in wide arcs, so that he must shift continually to keep under
+him.
+
+Into the dim glow of light at the open door came El Rey at last, great
+blue-silver stallion, his big eyes shining like phosphorus, his
+nostrils wide with horror of the pungent crimson wash that painted his
+right shoulder.
+
+He stopped at the door-stone, his duty done.
+
+"Dad!" screamed Tharon, shrill as a bugle, for Jim Last, white and
+dull as a moon in fog, let go his desperate hold on the pommel and
+slid, deadweight, into the reaching arms that circled him.
+
+They carried him into the living room. Before they had him safely on
+the wide couch where the Indian blankets glowed, Tharon, trembling but
+efficient, had lighted the hanging lamp above the table.
+
+Then she pushed the men aside and knelt beside him.
+
+"Dad," she said clearly, "Jim! Jim Last!"
+
+But the gaining of his goal had been too much. For a moment the
+flickering light in him died down to ashes. Tharon, her face as white
+as his own, waited in a man-like quiet. She held his stiffened hands
+and her eyes burned upon his features. With a deadly knowledge she was
+printing them indelibly upon her heart.
+
+Presently Jim Last sighed and opened his eyes. They sought hers and he
+smiled, a tender lighting from within. He fumbled for the buckle of
+his gun-belt. The girl unclasped it and pulled it free. She noticed
+that both guns were in their holsters.
+
+"Put it on," whispered the master of Last's Holding.
+
+Without a question Tharon stood up and buckled the belt about her
+slender waist.
+
+Her father raising himself with difficulty on an elbow, wet his lips.
+
+"Tharon, my girl," he said, "show your dad th' backhand flip."
+
+Strange play, this, when every second counted, but Last's daughter
+obeyed him to the letter.
+
+She stepped clear by the table, stood at attention a second, and, with
+a peculiar outward whirl, lightning-quick, of her two wrists, had him
+covered with the big blue guns.
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Good as I learned ye," he whispered, "make it better."
+
+"I will," promised Tharon swiftly.
+
+The man closed his eyes, swayed, recovered as Conford caught him, and
+brightened again.
+
+"Now th' under-sling."
+
+Again she obeyed, replacing the weapons, standing that second
+at attention, and flipping them from the holsters so quickly
+that the eye could scarcely catch the motion. Both draws were
+peculiar--and peculiarly Last's own. "Good girl," he said with
+a husk grown suddenly in his voice, "take--three hours--a day.
+I want t' leave you th' best gun-handler in Lost Valley--because,
+my girl--you'll--have--to--to--pro----"
+
+He ceased, wilting forward in Conford's arms.
+
+Then he opened his eyes again for one last smile at the daughter he
+had loved above all things on earth, save and except the memory of the
+woman who had given her to him.
+
+For once in her life Tharon did not wait his finished speech. She saw
+the Hand reach out of the shadows and flung herself upon his breast
+where the blood still seeped and fairly forced the last flutter of
+life to brighten in him. She kissed his rugged cheek.
+
+"Who, Dad," she called into his dulling senses, "tell me who? I'll get
+him, so help me God!" and she loosed one hand to cross herself, as old
+Anita had taught her.
+
+But the promise was late. None knew whether or not Jim Last heard it,
+for before the last word was done the breath had ceased in his
+throat.
+
+Another twilight came down upon Lost Valley. The wide ranges lay dim
+and mysterious, grey and pink and lavendar, as if the hand of a
+Master Painter had coloured them, as indeed it had. The Rockface at
+the west was black with shadow for all its rugged miles, the eastern
+uplands were bathed and aglow with purplish crimson light.
+
+In Corvan lights twinkled all up and down the one main street. Horses
+were tied at the hitch-racks and among them were the Ironwoods
+from Courtrey's Stronghold, beautiful big creatures, blood-bay,
+black-pointed, noticeable in any bunch. There were no Finger Marks,
+however, the blue roans, red roans and buckskins with the four
+black stripes on the outside of the knee, as if one had slapped them
+with a tarred hand, which hailed from Last's. There were horses
+from all up and down the Valley. Cow ponies and half-breeds of the
+Ironwood stock which Courtrey would not keep at the Stronghold but was
+too close to kill, shouldered pintos from the Indian settlements,
+big, half-wild horses from over the mountains at the North. Inside
+the brightly lighted saloons men passed back and forth, drank neat
+liquor at the worn bars, played at the green felt and canvas
+covered tables. At one, The Golden Cloud, more pretentious than the
+rest, there foregathered the leading spirits of the Valley. Here
+Courtrey came and played and drank, his henchmen with him. He was in
+high mettle this night. Always a contained man, slow to laughter
+and to speech, he seemed to have unbent more than usual, to respond
+to the human nature about him. He was not playing steadily as was
+his wont. He took a turn at poker with three men from the south of
+the Valley where the river ran out of the Bottle Neck, won a hand
+or two, threw down the cards and swung away to talk a moment with
+this one, listen a moment where those two spoke of hushed matters.
+Always when he came near he was accorded deference. There was
+nothing sacred from Courtrey of the Stronghold, seated like a feudal
+place at the north head of Lost Valley, no conversation so private
+that he could not come in on it if he chose.
+
+For Courtrey was the king of the country, undisputed sovereign, the
+best gun man north of the Rio Grand and south of the Line, if one
+excepted Jim Last. With him tonight were Black Bart, tall, swarthy,
+gimlet-eyed, a helf-breed Mexican, and Wylackie Bob his right-hand
+man. Without these two he seldom moved. They were both able
+lieutenants, experts with firearms. A formidable trio, the three went
+where and when they listed, and few disputed their right-of-way.
+
+Courtrey, a smile in his dark eyes, the wide black hat at an angle on
+his iron-grey hair, leaned against the high bar and scanned the
+crowded room where the riders played and laughed and swore with
+abandon.
+
+"Heard anything more about Canon Jim?" he asked Bullard, the
+proprietor of The Golden Cloud, "ain't come in yet?"
+
+Bullard shook his head.
+
+"No--nor he won't, according to my notion. Think he mistook th' False
+Ridge drop. Ain't no man could make it up again without th' hammer
+spike an' rope."
+
+"H'm--don't know. Don't know," mused Courtrey. "I've always thought it
+could be done. There ought to be a way on th' other side, seems
+like."
+
+"Well, _ought_ an' _is_ is two diff'rent things, Buck," grinned
+Bullard.
+
+"Sure," nodded the king, "sure. An' yet--"
+
+"Hello, Buck."
+
+A soft hand touched Courtrey's shoulder with a subtle caress. He
+wheeled on the instant, ready, alert. Then he smiled and reaching up,
+took the hand and held it openly.
+
+"Hello, Lola," he said, "how goes it?"
+
+The newcomer was a woman, full, rounded, dark, and she was past-master
+of men--as witness the slow glance that she turned interestedly out
+over the teeming room, even while the pulse in the wrist in Courtrey's
+clasp leaped like a racer. She was a perfect specimen of a certain
+type, beautiful after a resplendent fashion, full of eye and lip,
+confident, calm. She was brilliantly clad in crimson and black, and
+rings of value shone on her ivory-like hands.
+
+Lola of the Golden Cloud was known all over Lost Valley. Men who had
+no women worshipped her--and some who had, also. At the Stronghold at
+the Valley's head there was a woman who hated her, though she had
+never set eyes on her--Courtrey's wife.
+
+If Lola knew this she had never mentioned it, wise creature that she
+was. Proud of her beauty and her power she had reigned at The Golden
+Cloud in supreme indifference, even to her men themselves, it seemed,
+though hidden undercurrents ran strong in her. Which way they tended
+many a reckless buck of Lost Valley would have given much to know,
+among them Courtrey himself.
+
+Now she pulled her hand away from him and sauntered over to a table
+where five men sat playing, laid it upon the shoulder of one of them,
+leaned down and looked at the cards in his hand.
+
+The man, a tall stripling in a silver-studded belt, looked up,
+flattered.
+
+Courtrey by the bar watched her, still smiling. Then he turned back
+to Bullard and went on with his conversation.
+
+Over by the wall a man on a raised dais began to tune an ancient
+fiddle.
+
+Two more women came in from somewhere at the back, a big blooming girl
+by the name of Sadie, and a small red-head, tragically faded, with
+soft brown eyes that should never have looked upon Bullard's. Two men
+rose and took them as the tune, an old-fashioned waltz, began to
+ripple under the fingers of the fiddler, who was a born musician, and
+the four swung down between the tables and the bar. The Golden Cloud
+was in full swing, running free for the night, though the soft
+twilight was scarcely faded from the beautiful country without.
+
+Slip--step, slip--step--went the dancing feet to the accompaniment of
+rattling spurs. These men were lithe and active, able to dance with
+amazing grace in chaps and the full accoutrement of the rider. They
+even wore their broad brimmed hats.
+
+Why should they not, since none objected?
+
+Bullard, solid, stocky, red-faced, leaned on his bar and watched the
+busy room with pleased eyes.
+
+He did not hear a voice which called his name, once or twice, among
+the jumble of sounds. Presently an odd figure came round the end of
+the bar from a door that opened there into the mysterious back
+regions of the place and elbowed in to face him.
+
+This was a little old man, weazened and bent, his unkempt head thrust
+forward from hunched shoulders. He dragged two grain sacks behind him,
+and he was so grotesquely bow-legged that the first sight of him
+always provoked laughter. This was old Pete the snow-packer, bound on
+his nightly trip to the hills. Outside his burros waited, their
+pack-saddles empty.
+
+By dawn they would come down from the world's rim, the grain sacks
+bulging with hard-packed snow for the cooling of Bullard's liquor.
+
+"Dick," he said when he faced his employer, "here 'tis time t' start
+an' there ain't a damned bit o' grub put up fer me! Ef ye don't make
+that pig-tailed Chink pay 'tention t' my wants, I quit! I quit, I tell
+ye!"
+
+And he emphasized his vehement protest by whirling the bags over his
+head and flailing them upon the floor.
+
+A roar of laughter greeted him, which brought dim tears of indignation
+to his old eyes.
+
+"Ye don't care a damn!" he whimpered in impotent rage. "Jes' 'cause
+it's me. Ef 'twas yer ol' Chink, now--if 'twas him, th' ol'
+he-pigtail, ye'd----"
+
+"Hold on, Pete," said Bullard, slapping an indulgent hand on the
+grotesque shoulder, "You go tell Wan Lee that if he don't put up th'
+best lunch in camp for you, an' _muy pronto_ at that, I'll come in an'
+skin him alive. Tell him----"
+
+But Bullard was never to finish that sentence.
+
+There was a sound of running horses stopping square at the rack
+without, the rattle of chains, the creak of saddles.
+
+Booted feet struck the boards of the porch, and almost upon the
+instant the great iron door of The Golden Cloud swung inward.
+
+The dancers stopped in their stride, the players laid down their
+cards, the noise of the room ceased with the suddenness that
+characterized the time and place, for Lost Valley was quick upon the
+trigger, tragedy often swept in upon hilarity.
+
+In the opening stood Tharon Last, her blue eyes black and sparkling,
+her tawny skin cream white, her lips tight-set and pale. She wore a
+plain dark dress that buttoned up the front, and at her hips there
+hung her father's famous guns. Her two hands rested on their butts.
+
+Behind her head against the starlight there was the dim suggestion of
+massed sombreros.
+
+For a moment she stood so in breathless silence, scanning the room.
+
+Then her glance came to rest on the face of Buck Courtrey.
+
+"Men," she said clearly, "we buried Jim Last today. El Rey brought him
+home last night--finished. You all know he was a gun man--th' best in
+these parts. It was no gun man that killed him, in fair-an'-open, for
+he was shot in th' back. It was a skunk, a coyote, a son-of-th'-devil,
+an' I'm goin' to kill him."
+
+At the last word there was a lightning movement at the bar as
+Courtrey's hand flashed at his hip, a flash of fire, a shot that went
+high and lodged in the deep beam above the door, for the weazened form
+of the snow-packer had leaped up against him in the same instant.
+
+The girl had not moved. Her hands still rested on the guns in their
+holsters. Now a grim smile curled her mouth, but her eyes did not
+laugh.
+
+"I'm a-goin' t' kill him," she said quietly, still in that clear
+voice, "but I'll do it accordin' to th' law Jim Last laid down to me
+all my life--in certainty. I know--but I'll prove. We hain't no
+assassins, Jim Last an' me. Some day I'll draw--an' my father's killer
+must beat me to it."
+
+Without another word Tharon backed out on the porch, the door swung to
+at the pull of an unseen hand on the iron strap by the hinge.
+
+There was again the rattle and creak, the whirl of hoofs, and in the
+breathless stillness that lasted for a few seconds, there came to the
+strained ears in the Golden Cloud the clip-clap of a singlefooter as
+the great El Rey led out of town.
+
+Then Buck Courtrey, flushed and unsmiling, sent his coldly narrowed
+eyes over the crowded room, man by man. Laughter came, a trifle
+cracked and forced, cards slapped on the tables, chairs creaked as the
+players drew up again, the dancers swung into step as the fiddle took
+up its interrupted strain.
+
+Only Lola, over by the door, looked for a pregnant moment at
+Courtrey's face, and shut her lips in a hard, straight line.
+
+Then, lastly, the cold eyes of the king came down to rest upon the
+weazened figure of the snow-packer busily engaged in rolling up his
+sacks for departure. If the strange old creature knew and felt their
+promise, he gave no sign as he trundled himself outdoors on his bandy
+legs.
+
+"Skunks," said Old Pete, as he fumbled with his straps about the
+patient burros, "are plumb pizen t' pure flesh."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HORSES OF THE FINGER MARKS
+
+
+At Last's Holding a change had taken place. The sun of spring still
+shone as brightly, the work of the place went on as usual. The riders
+went at dawn and came at dusk, their herds lowing across the rolling
+green spaces, the days were as busy as they had ever been, but it
+seemed as if Last's waited for something that would never happen, for
+some one who would never come. Conford, quiet, forceful, businesslike,
+carried on the work without a ripple. To a casual eye all things were
+as they had been. But to the keen eyes in the tanned faces of Last's
+riders the change was appallingly apparent. They saw it creep day by
+day into their lives, felt it in the very atmosphere, and it was grim
+and promising.
+
+Old Anita felt it and watched with dim and wistful eyes. Pretty young
+Paula from the Pomo Indian settlement far to the north of the Valley
+under the Rockface felt it and was more silent, cat-like of step than
+ever. Jose, always full of laughter at his outside work, was sobered.
+
+For this change was not material, but spiritual, and it had to do with
+Tharon, who was now the mistress of Last's.
+
+She no longer sang her wordless songs, no longer played for hours on
+the little old melodeon by the western door. Something had gone from
+the brightness of her face, a shadow had come instead. She was just as
+swift and gentle in her care for all the things of every day, as
+efficient and painstaking, but she did not laugh, and the tiny lines
+that had characterized her father's blue eyes, began to show
+distinctly about her own.
+
+They began to take on the look of great distances, as if she gazed
+far.
+
+And for exactly three hours each day there could be heard the
+monotonous bark-bark-bark of the big guns Jim Last had given her in
+his final hour. To Billy Brent there was something terrible in this.
+Bred to violence and the quick disasters of the country as he was, he
+could not reconcile this grim practice with Tharon Last, the sane and
+loving girl who could not bear the sight of suffering.
+
+"I tell you, Curly," he complained to his friend of nights when they
+came in and lounged in the soft dusk by the bunk-house, "it's
+unnatural. Not that I don't pay full respect to Jim Last's memory,
+an' him th' best man in all this hell-bent Valley, but it ain't right
+an' natural fer no woman t' do what she's doin'. Ain't she Jim Last's
+own daughter already with th' guns? Sure. Can drive a nail nigh as far
+as he could. Quick as Wylackie Bob on th' draw an' as certain, now.
+Then why must she keep it up?"
+
+Curly, more silent in his ways but given to thought, studied the stars
+that rode the darkening heavens and shook his head.
+
+"Let her alone," he said once, "it was Last's command, an' he knew
+what he was about even if he was toppin' th' rise of the Big Divide.
+
+"He said 'you'll have to pro--'--you rec'lect? He meant _protect_ an'
+unless I miss my guess, Billy, he'd have added '_yourself_' if th'
+hand of Ol' Man Death hadn't stopped his words. Somethin' happened out
+there in th' Cup Rim that day when Last got his that had to do with
+Tharon, an' he knew she'd be in danger. Let her alone."
+
+So Billy let her alone, as did the rest. She went her ways, saw to the
+garden and made the butter in the cool springhouse, and sat in the
+window seat in the twilights. She liked to have the men come in as
+usual, but the talk these times was desultory, failing and brightening
+with forced topics, to fail again and drop into silence while the dim
+red lights of the smokers glowed in the shadows.
+
+Time and again she stirred and sighed, and they knew that once again
+she waited for Jim Last, listened for the clip-clap of El Rey coming
+home along the sounding ranges.
+
+Once, on a night when there was no moon and the tree-toads sang in the
+cottonwoods by the spring, the girl, sitting so in the familiar
+window, suddenly dropped her head on her knees and sobbed sharply in
+the silence.
+
+"Never again!" she said thickly from the folds of her denim skirt,
+"I'll never see him comin' home again!"
+
+The riders stirred. Sympathy ached in their hearts, but not a man had
+speech to comfort her. It was Billy, the impulsive, who reached a hand
+to her shoulder and gripped it hard. Tharon reached up and touched the
+hand in gratitude.
+
+It was about this time, when the master of Last's Holding had lain a
+month beneath the staring mound under the pine tree out to the east
+where they had buried Harkness, that Jose finished a work of art. For
+many days he had laboured secretly in a calf-shed out behind the small
+corrals, and in his slim dark fingers there was beauty unleashed.
+Finest carving he knew, since his forbears, peons across the Border,
+had spent their lives upon the beams of the Missions. None had taught
+Jose. It was in his blood. Therefore, from a block of the hard grey
+stone of the region, which was almost like granite, he fashioned a
+cross, as tall as Tharon herself, struck it out freehand and true, and
+set upon its austere face fine tracery of vines and Jim Last's name.
+He took into the secret Billy and Curly, since these two he was sure
+of, and together they hauled the huge thing out and set it up.
+
+When Tharon, looking to the east with dawn, as was her habit, beheld
+this silent tribute to the man she had so loved, she leaned her
+forehead against the deep window-case and wept from the depths.
+
+Then she went out to see it and with a knife she set her own mark
+thereon--a tiny cross scratched in the headpiece, another in the arm
+that stretched toward all that was mortal of poor Harkness.
+
+"Two," she said, dry-eyed, while the glorious dawn shot up to bathe
+the world in glory, "full pay for you both."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+El Rey, stamping in his own corral, lifted his beautiful head, scanned
+the wide reaches that spread away in living green, and tossing up his
+muzzle, sent out on the silence a ringing call. He cocked his silver
+ears and listened. No clear-cut human whistle answered him. Once more
+he called and listened.
+
+Then he lowered his head and stepped along the fence. His great body,
+shining like blue satin with a silver frost upon it, gave and lifted
+with every step. The pastern joints above his striped hoofs were
+resilient as pliant springs. The muscles rippled in his shoulders, the
+blue-white cascade of his silver tail flowed to his heels, his mane
+was like a cloud upon the arch of his neck. He was strength and beauty
+incarnate, a monster machine of living might.
+
+Unrest was upon him. Life had become stagnant, a tasteless thing. He
+was keen for the open stretches, honing to be gone down the wind. He
+fretted and ate out his heart for the freedom of the range. Old Anita,
+passing at some work or other, stopped and gazed at him for a
+compassionate moment.
+
+"You, too, _grande caballo_," she said, "there is naught but grief at
+Last's Holding. _Tharone querida_" she called into the house, "come
+here."
+
+Tharon came and stood in the kitchen door.
+
+"What, Anita?" she asked gently.
+
+"El Rey," answered the old woman, "he calls and calls and none come to
+him. He, too, needs help, _Corazon_. Why not take him for a run along
+the plain? It will help you both."
+
+For a long time the girl stood, considering.
+
+"I have not cared to ride lately, Anita," she said, "but you are
+right. El Rey should not be left to fret."
+
+She stepped back in the house, then came out, and she had added
+nothing to her attire save her daddy's belt and guns. Without these
+she never left the Holding now.
+
+Bareheaded, slender, she was a thing of beauty, and there was a quiet
+command about her which subdued the great El Rey himself, the proudest
+horse in all the Valley, outside of Courtrey's Ironwoods, Bolt and
+Arrow.
+
+Between these three horses there was much comment and discussion,
+though they had never been tested out together.
+
+She found a bridle on a corral post, a strong affair of rawhide,
+heavily ornamented with silver, its bit a Spanish spade. Without this
+she could not hold the stallion, and he was no pet to come at her
+caressing call of the double notes.
+
+Only Jim Last himself had ever tamed El Rey to do his bidding by word
+of mouth. The horse had had one master. He would never have another.
+
+Even now, when Tharon bridled him and opened the big gate, promising
+him his long-desired flight, he seemed not to see her, his beautiful
+big eyes looked through, beyond her, as if he sought another. There
+was some one for whom he waited, listened.
+
+From a block of wood set in the yard the girl gathered the rein tight
+in her hand, balanced a moment, and leaped up astride the shining
+back.
+
+With a snort like a pistol shot El Rey flung up his great head, leaped
+into the air and was gone. Around the corner of the adobe house he
+went, out across the trampled yard, and away along the open to the
+south, running level and free. With the first sink-and-lift Tharon had
+slipped back a full span. Now she wound her fingers in the white cloud
+of mane that flailed her face and edged up, inch by inch. When her
+knees were well up on the huge shoulders that worked beneath them
+powerfully, she gathered the reins, one in each hand, leaned down
+along the outstretched neck and let the great king run. The wind sang
+by her ears in a rising whine, the green prairie was a flowing sea
+beneath her, the thunder of the pounding hoofs was stupendous music.
+Tharon shut her eyes and rode, and for the first time since Jim Last's
+death a sense of joy rose in her like a tide.
+
+She had ridden El Rey before, many times. She had felt him sail
+beneath her down the open prairies and always it was so, as if the
+earth slid by, as if the note of the wind lifted minute by minute. She
+had wondered often about this--how long it would continue to rise with
+El Rey's rising speed, how long before he would reach a maximum above
+which he could not go, a place where the singing note would remain
+fixed.
+
+She had never known him reach that point. Always he could go faster.
+Always he had reserves.
+
+Far out ahead she saw a bunch of cattle feeding. They were lazily
+circling in a wide arc, content under the beaming sun. Near them sat a
+rider on a buckskin horse, Bent Smith on Golden. This Golden was one
+of the prides of Last's Holding. Bigger than Drumfire or Redbuck, he
+ranked next to El Rey himself in speed, for his slim legs, slapped
+smartly with the distinguishing finger marks on the outside of the
+knee, were long and shapely, his back short-coupled and strong, his
+withers low, his narrow hips high. Tharon bore hard on El Rey's bit,
+leaned her body to the left, and they swung in toward Bent and Golden
+in a beautiful sweeping curve that brought the cowboy up in his
+stirrups with his hat a-wave above him.
+
+"Good girl!" he yelled with leaping gladness as the superb pair shot
+by. "Good girl! Go to it!"
+
+Tharon loosed a hand long enough to wave back and was gone, on down
+the sloping land toward the country of the Black Coulee, her dark
+skirts fluttering at her knees, the two heavy guns pounding her thighs
+at every jump.
+
+It was a long time before El Rey came down from his sweeping flight.
+
+He had been too long holden in cramping bars. The free winds and the
+rolling earth filled him with a sort of madness. He ran with joy and
+the surety of unbounded power.
+
+The rider, left far behind, watched them anxiously for a time, thought
+of following, glanced at his cattle, remembered the gun man's heritage
+and turned to his business.
+
+The sun was well down over the western Rockface when Tharon and El Rey
+came back to Last's Holding. The riders were bringing in the cattle,
+dust was rising in clouds above the moving masses. From the ranch
+house came the savory smells of cooking.
+
+[Illustration: NEAR THEM SAT A RIDER ON A BUCKSKIN HORSE]
+
+The stallion was limber as a willow. He tossed his handsome head and
+his eyes were bright as stars set in his silver face. Life was at high
+tide in him, flowing magnificently. Tharon, her cheeks whipped into
+pulsing colour by the wind and the bounding speed, her tawny mane
+loosed from its bands and flying in a cloud behind her, smoothed back
+from her face, looked wild as an Indian. As she drew up and sat
+watching the work of the evening, she smiled for the first time in
+many days, and Jack Masters, passing, felt his heart leap with
+gladness.
+
+When the mistress of Last's was sad, so were her people.
+
+When the last big corral gate had swung to and the boys turned in to
+unsaddle, she touched El Rey with a toe and went over among them.
+
+"Line up the horses, boys," she said, "I want to see them all together
+once more. Somethin' came back in me today--somethin' I been missing
+for a long time. I'll be myself again."
+
+Billy turned Redbuck to face her, dropped his rein. Curly rode up on
+Drumfire. These two were red roans, dead matches. Bent brought Golden
+and stood him alongside. From far at the back of the corral they
+called Conford and Jack, who came wondering, the former on Sweetheart,
+true sister of El Rey, almost as big, almost as fast, almost as
+beautiful.
+
+Silver-blue roan, silver-pointed, slim, graceful, springy, she had not
+a single dark spot on her except the sharp black bars of the finger
+marks outside her knees.
+
+"You darlin'!" said Tharon as she wheeled in line.
+
+Then came Jack on Westwind, and he was another buckskin, paler than
+Golden, most marvelously pointed in pure chestnut brown. His finger
+marks were brown instead of black--the only horse at the Holding so
+distinguished, for no matter of what shade or colour, in all the
+others these peculiar marks were jet black. Five splendid creatures
+they stood and pounded the ringing earth, tossed their heads and
+waited, though they had all been far that day and it was feeding
+time.
+
+Out in the horse corrals there were many more of their breed, slim,
+wiry horses, toughened and hardened by long hours and daily work, but
+these were the flower of Last's, the prized favourites.
+
+For a long time Tharon sat and watched them, noting their perfect
+condition, their glistening skins, their shining hoofs, many of which
+were striped, another characteristic.
+
+"I don't believe," she said at last, "that there's a bunch of horses
+in Lost Valley to come nigh 'em. Ironwoods or anything else--I'd back
+th' Finger Marks."
+
+"So would we," said Conford quietly, "though we've seen th' Ironwoods
+run--a little."
+
+"That's th' word, Burt," said Curly, "a little. Who of us has ever
+seen Courtrey let Bolt run like he wanted to? Not a darned one. I've
+seen that big bay devil pull till th' blood dripped from his mouth."
+
+"Sure," put in Masters, "I've seen that, too--but I was lyin' up on
+th' Cup Rim oncet, watchin' a couple mavericks fer funny work, an'
+Courtrey an' Wylackie Bob come along down that way on Bolt an'
+Arrow--an' they wasn't a-holdin' them then. Lord, Lord, how they was
+goin'! Two long red streaks as level as your hand, an' I swear my
+heart came up in my throat to see 'em, an' I almost hollered. It was
+pretty work--pretty work, an' no mistake."
+
+Tharon looked over at him.
+
+"Fast as El Rey, Jack?"
+
+"Who could tell?" said the man. "I know it was some speed, an' that is
+all."
+
+The girl struck a hand on the king's shoulder so passionately that he
+jumped and snorted.
+
+"Some day," she said tensely, "El Rey will run th' Ironwoods off their
+feet--an' I'll run th' heart out of their master, damn him! Put th'
+horses out. It's supper time."
+
+She threw her right limb over the stallion's neck swiftly and with
+lithe grace, and slid abruptly to the ground.
+
+As she did so there came the sound of hoofs on the hard earth at the
+corner of the house, and a stranger came sharply into sight.
+
+He drew up and nodded. Conford, just turning away, turned quickly back
+and came forward.
+
+"Howdy," he said.
+
+The man, tall, lean, dark, returned the salute with another nod.
+
+He was covered with dust, as if he had ridden far and been a long time
+coming. His clothes were much the worse for wear, but they were mostly
+leather, which takes wear standing, as it were. The wide hat pulled
+low over his piercing dark eyes, was ornamented with a vanity of
+silver.
+
+The riding cuffs at his wrists were studded profusely with the same
+metal, as was the wide belt that spanned his narrow waist.
+
+He wore a three days' beard, and a black moustache dropped its long
+points to the edge of his jaw. Black hair showed beneath the hat. He
+was a remarkable figure, even in Lost Valley, and he commanded
+attention.
+
+He carried the customary two guns of the country, and he bestrode a
+horse that was as noticeable as himself.
+
+This horse was no denizen of Lost Valley. It was an utter alien. Its
+colour was a dingy black, as if it had recently been through fire, its
+coat rough and unkempt. Its long head was heavy and slug-like, its
+nose of the type known among horsemen as Roman. It was roughly built,
+raw-boned and angular, and of so stupendous a size that the man atop,
+who was six foot tall himself, seemed small by comparison.
+
+However, for all its ugliness, it possessed a seeming of vast power, a
+suggestion of great strength.
+
+The stranger looked the group over with his keen, hard eyes, and spoke
+in a slow drawl.
+
+"I reckon," he said, "I'm a-ridin' th' wrong trail. I hain't expected
+hyar."
+
+And turning abruptly, without another word, he jogged away around the
+house and started down the long slope already greying with the coming
+night.
+
+The foreman and the five punchers clamped over to the corner of the
+kitchen and watched him in speculative silence. Tharon came along and
+stood by Billy, her hand on the boy's arm. To Billy that sober touch
+confused the distances, set the strange rider dancing on the slope.
+
+"H'm," said Conford, his grey eyes narrow, "come from far an's goin'
+somewheres. I'll watch that duck. He looks like he's a record man to
+me."
+
+At supper there was much speculation about the stranger.
+
+"I'll lay a month's pay he come from Texas," said Billy, casting a
+side glance at his pal Curly, "them long lankys usually do. An'
+somehow it shows in their eyes, sort o' fierce an'--"
+
+"Billy," said Tharon severely, "if I was Curly I'd take a fall out of
+you. He can do it, _you_ know that an' _I_ know it."
+
+"Thanks, Miss Tharon," said Curly in his soft Southern drawl, "if you
+feel that-a-way about it, w'y, I don't care what _no_ little
+yellow-headed whipper-snapper from up Wyomin' way says to th'
+contrary."
+
+Billy was a bit abashed, but he stubbornly supported his contention
+that the stranger was a bad-man from Texas.
+
+"Plenty bad-men right here in Lost Valley," said the girl quietly,
+"an' th' breed ain't dyin' out as I can see. Th' settlers need a new
+leader--now that Jim Last's gone." And she fell to playing absently
+with her fork upon the cloth.
+
+The boys changed the subject hurriedly.
+
+"I found a dead brandin' fire in th' Cup Rim yesterday, Burt," said
+Masters, "quite a scrabbled space around it. Looked like some one'd
+branded several calves."
+
+"Don't doubt it," said the foreman. "Careful as we are there's always
+likely to be stragglers. An' to be a straggler's to be a goner in
+this man's land."
+
+"Unless he belongs t' Last's," said the irrepressible Billy. "I'll lay
+that fer every calf branded by Courtrey's gang we'll get back two."
+
+"Billy," said Tharon again, "Jim Last wasn't a thief. Neither will his
+people be thieves. For every calf branded by Courtrey, _one calf_
+wearin' th' J. L.--an' one calf only. We don't steal, but we won't
+lose."
+
+"You bet your boots an' spurs throwed in, we won't," said the boy
+fervently.
+
+As they rose from the table with all the racket of out-door men there
+came once more the sound of a horse's hoofs on the hard earth
+outside.
+
+Last's Holding was a vast sounding-board. No one on horseback could
+come near without advertising his arrival far ahead.
+
+This time it was no stranger. Tharon went to the western door to bid
+him 'light.
+
+It was John Dement from down at the Rolling Cove. He was a thin, worn
+man, who looked ten years beyond his forty, his face wrinkled by the
+constant fret and worry of the constant loser.
+
+Tonight he was strung up like a wire. His voice shook when he returned
+the hearty greetings that met him.
+
+"Boys," he said abruptly, "an' Tharon--I come t' tell ye all
+good-bye."
+
+"Good-bye! John, what you mean?"
+
+Tharon went forward and put a hand on his arm. Her blue eyes searched
+his face.
+
+The man stood by his horse and struck a tragic fist in a hard palm.
+
+"That's it. I give up. I'm done. I'm goin' down the wall come day--me
+an' my woman an' th' two boys. Got our duffle ready packed, an' Lord
+knows, it ain't enough t' heft th' horses. After five year!"
+
+There was the sound of the hopeless tears of masculine failure in the
+man's tragic voice. His fingers twisted his flabby hat.
+
+"Hold up," said Conford, pushing nearer, "straighten out a bit,
+Dement. Now, tell us what's up."
+
+"Th' last head--th' last hoof--run off last night as we was comin' in
+with 'em a leetle mite late. Had ben up Black Coulee way, an' it got
+dark on us. Just as we got abreast o' th' mouth of th' Coulee, where
+th' poplars grow, three men come a-boilin' out. They was on fast
+horses--o' course--an' right into th' bunch they went, hell-bent.
+Stampeded the hull lot. You know my bunch'd got down t' about a
+hundred head--don't know what I ben a-hangin' on fer, only a man
+hates t' give up an' own hisself beat out. An' my woman--she's a
+fighter.
+
+"She kep' standin' at my back like, oh, like--well, she kep' a-sayin'
+'We'll win out yet, John, you see. Right'll win ev'ry time.' You see
+we are just ready to get th' patent on our land. She couldn't give
+that up, seems like. All this time gone an' nothin' gained. So we ben
+a-hangin' on when things went from bad to worse. Th' herd's been
+a-goin' down an' down. Calves with their tongues slit so's they'd lose
+their mothers--fed up in some coulee by hand an' branded. Knowed 'em
+by my own colour cattle, w'ich I drove in here five year ago--th'
+yellers.
+
+"Mothers killed outright an' th' calves branded. Oh, I know it
+all--but what could I do? Kep' gettin' poorer an' poorer. Couldn't
+afford enough riders t' protect 'em. Then couldn't afford any an'
+tried t' make it go as th' boys got older. Courtrey, damn him, wants
+me offen that piece o' land a-fore th' patent's granted. Him with his
+twenty thousan' acres of Lost Valley now! An' how'd he get it? False
+entry, that's what! How many men's come in here, took up land, 'sold
+out' to Courtrey an' went? Or didn't go. A lot of 'em _didn't go_. We
+all know that. An' who dares to speak in a whisper about it? Th' men
+that did wouldn't go--never--nowheres."
+
+There was the bitterness of utter defeat and hatred in the shaking
+voice. The tree-toads, beginning their nightly chorus from the wet
+places below the cottonwoods, emphasized the dreariness of the
+recital, the ancient hopelessness of the weak beneath the heel of the
+oppressor.
+
+Dement ceased speaking and stood in silhouette against the last
+yellow-and-black of the dead sunset. The protruding apple in his
+hawk-like throat worked up and down grotesquely.
+
+For a long moment there was utter silence.
+
+Then he began again.
+
+"I knowed I wasn't welcome in th' Valley when I hadn't ben here more'n
+six months. Th' first leetle string o' fence I put up fer corrals went
+down, mysterious, as fast as I could fix it. Th' woman's garden was
+broke open an' trampled to dust by cattle, drove in. Winter ketched us
+with mighty leetle t' eat in th' way o' truck. Next year she guarded
+it herself some nights, sleepin' by day, an' oncet she took a shot at
+some one that come prowlin' around. They let her fence alone after
+that, but what'd they do outside? Killed all th' hogs we had one night
+an' piled 'em in a heap in th' front door yard! That was hint enough,
+but I kep' a-thinkin' that ef we behaved decent like, an' minded our
+own business we sartainly must win out. We did," he added grimly after
+a little pause, "like hell. An' how many others of th' settlers has
+gone through th' like? We ain't no tin gods ourselves, I own, but we
+got t' fight fire with fire. Only I ain't got no more light-wood," he
+finished quaintly, "I got to quit."
+
+There was another silence while the tree-toads sang. Then the man held
+out his hand, hardened and warped with the unceasing toil of those
+tragic years.
+
+"Good-bye, Tharon," he said, "I wisht Jim Last was here. With him gone
+Lost Valley's in Courtrey's hand an' no mistake. He was th' only man
+dared face him an' hold his own. Last's was th' only head th' weaker
+faction had, its master their only leader. While he lived we had some
+show, us leetle fellers. Now there ain't no leader. Th' ranchers'll go
+out fast now. It'll be a one-man valley."
+
+In the soft darkness Tharon took the extended hand, held it a moment
+and laid her other one upon it.
+
+"John Dement," she quietly said, "I want you to go home an' bar your
+house for fight. Fix up your fences, unpack your duffle. In the
+morning my riders will drive down to your place a hundred head o'
+cattle. You put your brand on em. There's goin' to be no one-man
+doin's in Lost Valley yet awhile--not while Jim Last's daughter
+lives. See," she dropped his hand and pointed to the east where the
+tall pine lifted to the stars, "out yonder there's a cross at Jim
+Last's grave--an' there's my mark on it. Th' settlers have a leader
+still--an' I name myself that leader. I'm set against Courtrey, now
+an' forever. I mean to fight him t' th' last inch o' ground in Lost
+Valley, th' last word o' law, th' last drop o' blood, both his an'
+mine. You go down among 'em--th' settlers--an' take 'em that word from
+me. Tell 'em Jim Last's daughter stands facin' Courtrey, an' she'll
+need at her back t' fight him every man in Lost Valley that ain't a
+coward."
+
+When the settler had gone, incoherent and half-incredulous, Conford
+drew a long breath and looked at his mistress in the dusk.
+
+"Tharon, dear," he said so gently that his words were like a caress
+"you're jest a-breakin' your riders' hearts. You're heapin' anxiety on
+us mountain-high. Now what on earth'll we do?"
+
+Young Billy Brent pushed near and slapped a hand against a doubled
+fist. His eyes were sparkling like harbour lights, his voice was like
+the sound of running fire.
+
+"Do?" he cried. "Do? We'll stand behind her so tight they can't see
+daylight through, an' we'll fight with an' for her every inch o' that
+way, every word o' that law, every drop o' that blood! Who says
+Last's ain't on th' map in Lost Valley?" Tharon smiled and touched him
+again.
+
+"Billy," she said softly, "you're after my own heart. Now get to bed.
+I want t' think."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE MAN IN UNIFORM
+
+
+Spring was warming swiftly into summer. Where the gently sloping
+ranges went up in waves and swells toward the uplands at the east, the
+bright new green had turned to a darker shade. The tiny purple and
+white flowers had disappeared to give place to sturdier ones of
+crimson and gold. The veil of water that fell sharply down the face of
+the Wall for a thousand feet at the Valley's southern end had thinned
+to sheerest gauze. In the Canon Country the snow had disappeared from
+most of the high points. Red, black, yellow, the great face of the
+encircling Wall stood in everlasting majesty, looking down upon the
+level cup of Lost Valley. The unspeakable upheaval of peaks and crags,
+of canyons and splits and unfathomable depths, was almost a sealed book
+to the denizens of the Valley. There were those who knew False Ridge.
+
+There were those who said they knew more. Many a man had adventured
+therein, and few had returned to tell of their adventures. Canon Jim
+had not returned. Not that he was a loss to the community, or that
+they mourned him, but his absence pointed again to the formidable
+secretive power of the Canon Country.
+
+Tharon Last, standing in her western door, could look across the
+Valley's deceptive miles and see the huge black seams and fissures
+that rent the grim face. These splits and canyons were peculiar in that
+none came down to the Valley's floor, their yawning doorways being, in
+every instance, set from two hundred to five hundred feet up the
+Wall.
+
+Often the girl watched them in the changing lights and her active mind
+formed many a conjecture concerning them.
+
+"Some day," she told young Paula, "I'll go into the Canon Country and
+see it for myself."
+
+"Saints forbid, Senorita!" said Paula, who had no love for the
+mysterious, and who was more Mexic than Porno, "there are demons and
+devils there!"
+
+"Yes, I doubt not, Paula," said Tharon grimly. "They say Courtrey
+knows th' Canons, an' when he's there, it's peopled, an' no mistake!
+
+"But it must be beautiful--beautiful! Why--there's a thousand feet of
+crevasse on every hand, I know, steps an' benches an' weathered faces
+that no man can climb. They say there's bright waters that tumble
+down like th' Vestal's Veil and sink into holes without an outlet.
+Just go away in the rock. There's strange flowers an' stunted trees.
+An' they tell of th' Cup of God, a hidden glade so beautiful that th'
+eye of man has never seen its like. All my life it's called me, th'
+Canon Country.
+
+"Don't you believe, Paula, that there's somethin' there for me? Some
+reason why I know I must some day go into its heart an' give myself up
+to it for a time? If I was free," she finished with a sigh, "if I was
+my own woman, wholly, I'd go soon. There's rest an' peace up there, I
+know--and a place to think of Jim Last without such bitterness that my
+heart turns t' gall."
+
+She shook her bright head against the doorpost and shut her soft lips
+into a straight line.
+
+"Nope," she finished sadly, "I ain't my own woman yet."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Tharon," said Billy Brent this day, clanking around the corner of the
+adobe house, his leather chaps flapping with every step, his yellow
+hair curling boyishly under his hat-brim. "Tharon, I got bad news for
+you."
+
+There was genuine distress in his grey eyes.
+
+"Yes?" asked the mistress of Last's, straightening up.
+
+"Yes, sir, an' I hate like hell t' tell it."
+
+"Out with it, Billy. What's wrong?"
+
+"Somebody's dynamited th' Crystal Spring in th' Cup Rim."
+
+"_What?_"
+
+The word was in italics. Its one syllable told all one might care to
+know of the importance of Billy's news.
+
+"Yes. Opened her up fer two square yards. Spread th' lovely old
+Crystal all over th' range. An' she's gone, as sure's shootin'.
+Nothin' but a lot o' wet an' dryin' mud to show for her."
+
+Tharon drew a long breath.
+
+"Courtrey's beginnin'," she said. "He's heard th' word I sent th'
+settlers. He's goin' t' use th' tactics now with Last's that he's used
+with every poor devil he wanted to run out of th' Valley, th' tactics
+he darsent use while Jim Last lived. Well--go send Conford to me,
+Billy."
+
+The girl sat down in the doorway and gazed sombrely out over the
+summer land.
+
+When her foreman came and stood before her, a slim, efficient figure,
+dark-faced and quiet, she had already made up her mind.
+
+"Burt," she said swiftly, "drive th' cattle down from th' Cup Rim
+right away. We'll run those two bunches under Blue Pine an' Nick Bob
+out toward th' Black Coulee. Tell 'em t' keep close t' th' others. I
+trust th' Indians, but there ain't no Indian livin' can meet
+Courtrey's white renegades in courage an' wits. Then we'll start right
+in an' dig a well th' first well ever dug on th' open range in this
+man's land."
+
+"Good Lord, Tharon!" said Conford, "A well!"
+
+"Yes. Th' livin' water holes have been th' pride of th' Valley, I
+know, but we'll fix this well of ours so's even Courtrey will respect
+it."
+
+There was a grim note in the golden voice.
+
+"How?" asked Conford uneasily.
+
+"Dig it first," said Tharon, "then I'll tell you."
+
+What the mistress said, went. Therefore, the next morning saw a
+disgusted bunch of cowboys and Indian _vaqueros_ setting to with a
+will at a spot much nearer the Holding than the Crystal had been, and
+it took a much shorter time to reach water in a good gravel bed than
+any one had dreamed.
+
+In three days the thing was done and Conford presented himself,
+smiling.
+
+"Now, Miss Secrecy," he said, "come on with th' mystery."
+
+Tharon went in to the big desk which Jim Last had used and which was
+now her own, and returned with a square white slab of pine,
+elaborately smoothed and finished by Jose.
+
+"Read that," she said, and held it up, face out.
+
+Printed neatly upon its shining surface, in the jet-black ink that old
+Anita made from the berries of a certain bush which grew at the foot
+of the cliffs across the Valley, were these words:
+
+"This well is planted. I hope it blows up the first thief who tries to
+destroy it. Tharon Last."
+
+Conford took the slab, scratched his head, holding his hat between
+thumb and finger, read it over, read it again, smiled, and then looked
+up.
+
+"Might work," he said, "an' you're givin' out your stand an' knowledge
+broadcast, ain't you?"
+
+"Certainly am," said Tharon briefly. "I said I'd fight, an' I want th'
+whole Valley t' know it."
+
+"It does," said Conford with conviction. "I heard in Corvan yesterday
+that John Dement has rode th' range continuous since he finished
+brandin' his new herd to tell th' settlers about it."
+
+"Good," said Tharon, "couldn't be better. There's got to be a change
+in Lost Valley sooner or later. Might as well be sooner."
+
+And with that thought the girl let her quick mind sweep out to take in
+the future. She sent Conford off to post her placard and herself went
+rummaging among the possibilities which her defy had placed before
+her. She knew that Courtrey would be coldly furious. He had lived his
+life as suited him, had taken what and where he listed, by fair means
+or foul, and though every soul in the Valley knew him and his methods,
+none had spoken the convicting word. It was the pen-stroke at the end
+of the death-warrant to do so.
+
+She knew that the faction of the settlers hated him and his with a
+vitriolic passion, that they were in the minority, that they were no
+tin gods themselves, and that they were being beaten out, one by one.
+
+Year by year Courtrey had added to his vast acreage, and it was a
+matter of common knowledge how he had done it. He was rich, powerful,
+bullying, a man whose self-aggrandizement knew no limit, whose merest
+whim was his law, whose will must not be thwarted. Year by year his
+_vaqueros_ drove down the Wall herds of fat cattle, their brands
+blurred, insolently raw and careless. Many a hapless man had stood and
+seen his own stock go by in Courtrey's band and dared not open his
+mouth. In fact Courtrey had been known to stop and chat with such a
+one, smiling his evil smile and enjoying the helpless chagrin of his
+victim.
+
+"Insolent ruffian!" muttered Tharon this day, frowning above her
+daddy's pipes on the desk top. "He's goin' t' get one run for his
+money from now till one of us is whipped. It may be me, but I'll
+leave my mark on him, so help me!
+
+"Straight killin's too good for him. I want to smash him first."
+
+"Tharon, mi _Corazon_," said Anita, stopping soft-foot beside her, "it
+is bad for one to talk so, to himself. The Evil One works on the mind
+that way."
+
+Tharon laughed.
+
+"Perhaps, Anita," she said shortly, "it is with the Evil One I have t'
+do, an' no mistake."
+
+The old woman crossed herself and went away, her wrinkled face dim
+with care. And Tharon dressed herself neatly, put a ribbon on her
+hair, set her wide hat carefully on her head, buckled on her heavy
+gun-belt, and went to the corral for El Rey. Her daddy's saddle was
+her own now, a huge affair carved and ornamented, profusely studded
+with silver.
+
+Along the right side below the pommel ran a darker stain, Jim Last's
+blood, set before his daughter like a star.
+
+She mounted the silver stallion and went away down along the summer
+land, a shaft of light shooting through the green of the ranges.
+
+Far over to her left she could see her cattle, beautiful bunches
+spread like figures in a tapestry. The figures of her riders were
+small dots on the outskirts.
+
+El Rey, always hard on the bit, always strong-headed, wanted to run
+and she swung loose her rein and let him go. But run as he might,
+there was always in his speed that rising note, that seeming of
+reserve power.
+
+She passed the head of Black Coulee, swung out across the edge of
+Rolling Cove, thundered down to the ford of the Broken Bend. Here she
+let the stallion drink, deep draughts that would have slowed a lesser
+horse. El Rey went up the bank beyond the ford like a charging engine,
+squared away and stretched out to finish his run. He was within three
+miles of Corvan, set like a stone in a smooth green surface, before he
+came down and lifted his shoulders into his gait. With the first rock
+and swing of the singlefoot, Tharon smiled and settled herself more
+comfortably in the saddle. This was joy to her, this beautiful
+syncopation, this poetic marked time that reeled off the miles beneath
+her and would scarcely have shaken a pebble from her hat-brim.
+
+As she struck the outskirts of the little town the unmistakable sound
+of El Rey's iron-shod hoofs brought heads into doors, children at the
+house corners to look upon her. She came down the main street at a
+smart clip, to bring up with a slide at the hitch-rail before
+Baston's store where the monthly mail was handled. There were horses
+tied there, and among them she saw what caused her to look twice with
+a narrowing of her keen eyes--a huge, raw-boned, black, rusty and
+slug-headed, among the Ironwood bays from Courtrey's Stronghold.
+
+"H'm," she told herself quietly, "so there's where he was expected."
+
+She tied El Rey to himself, far from the rest, for she knew his
+imperious temper and that trouble would ensue if he was near strange
+horses.
+
+Then she went into Baston's with her meal-sack on her arm. This
+meal-sack was a part of her accoutrement, a regular carry-all for such
+small purchases as she must take home--a roll of print for Paula, some
+tobacco for the men, a dozen spools of the linen thread which was so
+much prized among the women of Lost Valley.
+
+As she stepped in the open door her quick glance went over the big
+room with a comprehensiveness which catalogued its inmates accurately
+and instinctively. Courtrey was not there, though his great bay, Bolt,
+stood outside. However, Wylackie Bob was there. This man, sitting at a
+canvas covered table in a corner, idly fingering a pack of cards, was
+not one to be passed over easily. He was notorious.
+
+Tall, slow of action, sleepy-eyed, he was treacherous as a snake, as
+swift to move when necessary. He had been known to sit as he was now,
+idly playing, to leap up, crouch, draw and kill a man, and be down
+again at his place, idly playing, before the breath was done in his
+victim.
+
+He was a past-master of his gun, and unlike most men of the time and
+place, he carried only one.
+
+He was a quarter-blood Wylackie Indian. Near him sat the stranger who
+had ridden the slug-head black into Lost Valley. They both looked up
+as the girl entered and regarded her with smiles.
+
+Tharon did not look at them again. She saw, however, that they were
+together, of one interest. There were two or three of the settlers in
+the store, Jameson from over under the Rockface at the south, Hill
+from farther up, Thomas from Rolling Cove. She spoke to these men
+quietly and noticed with an inward thrill the eagerness with which
+they responded.
+
+There was an electric something between them which told her that her
+promise had, indeed, gone up and down the country, that in a subtle,
+unheralded manner she stood in Jim Last's place, a head, a leader.
+
+She made her purchases without undue speech, got two letters in her
+father's name--and these brought a smarting under her eyelids--tied up
+her sack and went out without so much as a glance at the two men in
+the corner. Laughter followed her, however, which set the red blood of
+anger pulsing in her cheeks.
+
+At the end of the store porch she came face to face with Courtrey and
+Steptoe Service, the sheriff of Menlo county. She swung to one side to
+descend the rough steps, vouchsafing them no word or look, but Service
+blocked her way. She raised her eyes and looked him full in the face,
+scanning his coarse red features coolly.
+
+"Well?" she said sharply.
+
+"What's this I hear, Tharon?" asked Service, "about you a-makin'
+threats?"
+
+"What have you heard?" she wanted to know.
+
+"W'y, that you're a-makin' threats."
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Well?"
+
+The sheriff flushed darker.
+
+"Look here, young woman,"--he raised his voice suddenly and on the
+instant there was a sound of boots on the store floor and the
+settlers, the two men in the corner, Baston and two clerks came
+crowding out to hear, "you look a-here--don't you know it's a-gin th'
+law for any one t' make a threat like you done, open an' above board,
+in th' Golden Cloud th' other night?"
+
+Tharon shifted the meal-sack higher on her left arm. Courtrey's eyes
+went down to her right hand and stayed there.
+
+The girl's upper lip lifted from her teeth in a sneer that was the
+acme of insult. The fire was beginning to play in her blue eyes.
+
+"Law?" she said. "My God! Law!"
+
+"Yes, _law_! you young hussy, an' don't you fergit that I represent
+it."
+
+The girl threw down the sack and flashed both hands on the gun-butts.
+Courtrey, watching, was half-a-second behind her and stopped with his
+hands hovering.
+
+"Not much, Courtrey," she said, "you fast gun man! You're too slow.
+An' this ain't your game, anyway, not face t' face. You're all right
+on a dark night--_an' from behind_. Fine! But you're a coward. You're
+what I called you before--an assassin."
+
+She was pale as ashes, her eyes narrowed to blazing slits. Jim Last,
+gun man, was in her like those composite pictures which show the
+shadow in the substance. There was a gasp from the store porch where
+Thomas stood with a shaking hand covering his lips. Baston was stuck
+against his wall like a leech, rigid. These men knew that she tempted
+death.
+
+Not a man in Lost Valley could have done it and gotten away with it.
+
+Tharon knew it, too, but she did not care.
+
+"An' now you know what you are, Courtrey. I'll tell th' same to you,
+Step Service. Law! In Lost Valley? Yes, Courtrey's law! Th' law of th'
+gun alone--th' law of thieves--th' law of murderers. An' you stand for
+that, you bet! What were you before you took th' oath of office? Tell
+me that! Th' man who killed old Mike McCrea an' took his cattle down
+th' Wall! Th' whole Valley knows it--but we've never dared to say it
+before!"
+
+The porch was lined with people now. Soft-footed Indians and Mexican
+_vaqueros_, sprung from nowhere, cowboys, ranchers, women, they came
+silently up and listened.
+
+The sheriff's red face was the colour of liver, purple and mottled
+with bursting rage. His fingers worked at his sides. He set his lips,
+and his small eyes never left the girl's face.
+
+Tharon, crouched a bit, her feet apart, her elbows crooked above her
+hips, her fingers curled on her gun-butts with nice precision, wet her
+own pale lips and continued:
+
+"An' who put you in office? That laugh of an office! Who? Why,
+Courtrey--th' biggest thief, th' coldest murderer in th' country! _He_
+put you there! An' what are you good for? My daddy was shot--_in th'
+back_--an' did you make one inquiry into the murder? Come out to
+Last's, even to find a clew? Not you! There's only one sheriff in this
+Valley--one bit o' law that will avenge his death--an' that's _me_!
+Now, you two fine gentlemen--I'm goin'. There's my hand! I throw th'
+cards on th' table! Shoot me in the back if you've got th' nerve. Come
+out in th' open an' fight! _But you better be quick about it!_"
+
+With that she backed slowly along the porch, keeping them in view.
+
+"Get away behind me," she called. There was a path opened instantly,
+the sound of shuffling feet. Along the porch she went, step by step,
+stopping every moment or so to keep close hold on her advantage, every
+nerve strained, every one of her faculties at the top of its power.
+
+She felt for the step with her foot, went down, backed through the
+crowd, brought them all in the range of the guns which she flashed out
+now and held upon them.
+
+She was ashy pale, a flaming, vibrant thing. Not a man there but knew
+she was more dangerous at the moment than cool Jim Last had ever been,
+for she radiated hatred of her father's killer in every bitter
+glance. She had none for whom to be cautious. She was the last of her
+blood. She was efficient, and she knew it.
+
+Courtrey knew it, and felt the sweat start on his skin.
+
+Service knew it, and hated her for it.
+
+As the girl backed clear there came into her vision a strange
+figure--the straight, trim figure of a man who stood stiffly at
+attention, where her imperious words had caught him.
+
+He wore a uniform of semi-military style, leather leggings, a flannel
+shirt of butternut and a smart, tan, broad-brimmed hat.
+
+He, too, came in the range of the travelling guns and waited their
+pleasure.
+
+Tharon reached El Rey. She stuck her right-hand weapon in its holster,
+loosed the rein, flung it over the stallion's head, stepped around his
+shoulder and mounted deftly and swiftly from the wrong side. It was a
+pretty trick of horsemanship and showed up her adroitness. As El Rey
+rose on his hind feet, whirling, that unwavering muzzle whirled also,
+to keep in line. The king struck into his gait and his rider, facing
+backward, swung away down the narrow street. Until she was well out of
+range the tension held.
+
+Then Steptoe Service struck a fist into a palm and began to swear in
+a fury, but Courtrey laughed, one of his rare, short bursts of mirth
+that were more bodeful than oaths.
+
+He turned on his heel and strode back the way he had come.
+
+The stranger in the uniform walked forward, went up the steps, crossed
+the porch, and, stooping, picked up the meal-sack which Tharon had
+dropped.
+
+"Will some one kindly tell me who the young lady is and where she
+lives?" he asked gravely.
+
+Baston, unglued from the wall, spoke up with his usual pompous
+eagerness.
+
+"Tharon, from Last's Holdin'," he said.
+
+"Thanks," and the man wrapped the sack into a small bundle and tied it
+with its own string.
+
+He stuck it under one arm and taking out a short brown pipe, proceeded
+to fill and light it.
+
+Courtrey, halted a few rods away, eyed him sharply.
+
+As he turned, rolling his match to death in his fingers, the sun
+struck mellowly upon something on his breast, a small, dark copper
+shield which bore strange heraldry.
+
+At the sight Courtrey's eyes sought Service's and held them for a
+swift, questioning moment.
+
+Strangers in Lost Valley were contraband.
+
+The three settlers looked covertly at each other, drifted apart, got
+their horses and presently left town by different ways.
+
+Three hours later these men met by common consent at the head of
+Rolling Cove and talked long and earnestly of the happening. They knew
+that Courtrey would never take silently that bitter arraignment, that
+something would transpire swiftly to show his resentment, to prove his
+absolute power over Lost Valley.
+
+"'Tain't Tharon that'll suffer, even ef he did try t' shoot her that
+night in th' Golden Cloud, because Courtrey wants her himself," said
+Jameson quietly, "th' whole country knows that. There was only one man
+who didn't know it, an' that was Jim Last himself. No, he won't monkey
+with th' Holdin' yet, not to any great extent. It'll be us little
+fellers, us others who he knows would stan' behind her. Some of us'll
+lose somethin' soon, an' don't you forget it."
+
+"If we do," said Hill passionately, "it's time t' show our hand. We've
+been hounded long enough. Th' men from Last's will be with us, we can
+gamble on that."
+
+"Yes," said Thomas, "but it'll be war. Open war. There'll be killin's
+then."
+
+Jameson, a quiet man with deep eyes, made a wide gesture.
+
+"What if there is?" he asked, "might's well be done in th' open as in
+th' dark an' unseen. Might better be! I move we ride th' Valley an'
+ask th' settlers to band together, under Last's, an' give our
+ultimatum t' Courtrey on th' heels of this. What say you?"
+
+"I say yes," said Hill swiftly. Thomas, of less stern stuff, wavered.
+
+"Well, let's wait awhile. Let's don't be too quick. Courtrey now, he's
+mighty quick an' hot. They ain't no tellin'----"
+
+"All right," said Jameson promptly, "suit yourself--we ain't
+a-pressin' no man into this."
+
+"Why, now, I'm fer it, boys--that is, I'm believin' it's got t' be
+done, only I counsels time."
+
+"No time," cried Hill, "we ben counselin' time an' quiet an' not doin'
+anything to stir 'em up, an' what d' we get? Cattle stole every
+spring, waterholes taken an' fenced fer Courtrey's stock right on th'
+open range, hogs drove off, fences tore down, like pore old John
+Dement's an' some of us left t' rot every year in some coulee. We done
+waited a sight too long. Courtrey thinks he owns Lost Valley, an' he
+comes near doin' it, what with his hired killers, Wylackie an' Black
+Bart an' this new gun man that's just come in. I heered today he's
+from Arizona, an' imported article."
+
+Jameson turned to him and held out his hand.
+
+"I'm goin' to ride tomorrow," he said.
+
+Hill grasped the extended hand and looked hard in the other's eyes.
+
+"Me, too," he said.
+
+Thomas, still of the timid, doubting heart, watched them with a hand
+over his mouth to hide its shaking.
+
+Without a word the others turned their horses and rode away in
+different directions. As they went farther from him in the wash of the
+late light the uncertain hand came down with a jerk. Fear was in his
+eyes, the deep, quaking fear of the man poor in courage, but he beat
+it down.
+
+"Boys!" he cried in a panic, "don't leave me out! For God's sake,
+don't think I ain't willin'! I'll be out come day tomorrow!"
+
+The others both stopped and turned in their saddles.
+
+"Glad to hear ye come through, Thomas," called Jameson, "you ride
+south along th' Rockface. You'll go over Black Coulee way, won't ye,
+Dan?"
+
+"I will," said Hill.
+
+"Good. I'll go north."
+
+There was a quiet grimness in the few words, for he who rode north on
+such an errand tempted fate.
+
+Then the three separated, and there was only the silence and the red
+light of the dying day at the head of Rolling Cove.
+
+That same evening Tharon Last sat in her western doorway and watched
+the sun go down in majesty over the weathered peaks and ridges of the
+Canon Country.
+
+Billy Brent lounged on the hard earth beside the step, his fair head
+shining in the afterglow, his grey eyes upon the girl's face in a sort
+of idol-worship.
+
+The curve of her cheek, golden with tan and red with the hue of youth,
+was more to him than all the sunsets the world had ever seen.
+
+A deep light shone in his young eyes which, had the girl been wise,
+she might have seen. But Tharon was as elemental as the kitten chasing
+a moth out by the pansy bed, and could look in a man's face with the
+unconscious eyes of a child.
+
+Now she watched the pageant of the dying day in a rapt delight.
+
+"Billy," she said presently, "I've often wondered if there's another
+place in all the world as lovely as our Valley. Jim Last told me once
+that there were places so much bigger out below, that we wouldn't be a
+patchin' to them. Don't seem like there could be."
+
+She lifted her slim body up along the doorpost and looked long and
+earnestly all up and down the wonderful stretch of country that lay
+along the Wall from north to south. She could see the tiny dots that
+went for the different homesteads, scattered here and there. Up at the
+head there lay, hard against the frowning hills, the squat, wide blur
+that was Courtrey's Stronghold. Her lips compressed at sight of it.
+
+"Nope," she said, shaking her head, "I don't believe he meant it. He
+used to tease me a lot, you know. It's an awful big valley, an' no
+mistake."
+
+The rider, who had drifted up along the Wall five years before, looked
+down at the playing kitten and smiled with a lean crinkling of his
+cheeks.
+
+"It's a sure-enough big place, Tharon," he said gravely, "an' it's
+lovely as Eden."
+
+"Huh?" said Tharon, "where's that, Billy?"
+
+The boy sobered and looked up into her blue eyes.
+
+"Why, Tharon," he whispered, "that's where th' heart is."
+
+For a moment she regarded him. Then she smiled.
+
+"Billy," she said severely, "you're stringin' your boss. I'm sure
+goin' to fire you, some day, like I ben a-threatenin'."
+
+"Do--an' hire me over!"
+
+"Nope."
+
+The girl shut her pretty lips and the man's hand crept softly up and
+touched her wrist where it lay against her knee.
+
+"All right," he said airily, "gimme my time. I quit."
+
+There was an odd note in his voice, as if under the play there was a
+purpose. For a second Tharon held her breath.
+
+"What you mean, Billy?" she asked so sharply that the boy jumped.
+
+Then he laughed, still in that light fashion.
+
+"What I said," he affirmed doggedly.
+
+But the mistress of Last's took a clutch on his hand that was
+authority in force and leaned down to look anxiously in his face.
+
+"Why, Billy," she said with a quiver in her voice, "Last's couldn't
+run without you, boy. An' what's more, I thought all th' riders of th'
+Holdin' would stand by th' place."
+
+Billy, fully sobered, straightened up and held hard to that clutching
+hand. The red light of the sunset flushed his cheeks, but it never set
+the glow that was in his eyes.
+
+"Don't you know yet, Tharon," he said quietly, "when I'm a-jokin' with
+you? I'd stand by Last's an' you to my last breath. Don't you know
+that?"
+
+For a long moment Tharon regarded him gravely.
+
+"Yes, I do," she said, "but somehow I don't like to have you talk
+that-a-way, Billy. Don't do it no more."
+
+"All right," promised the rider, "if you say so, Boss. Only don't talk
+about firin' me, then. I'm very sensitive."
+
+And he looked away with smiling eyes to where the deep black shadows
+fell prone into the Valley from the forbidding face of the great
+Wall.
+
+Only the towering peaks were alight with crimson and gold, which
+haloed their bulk in majestic mystery.
+
+Night was coming fast across Lost Valley, while the tree-toads out by
+the springhouse set up their nightly chorus.
+
+"It's Eden," thought the man, "as sure's th' world, made an' forgot
+with all its trimmin's--innocence an' sweetness an' plenty, an' th'
+silence of perfect peace, not to overlook th' last unnecessary evil,
+th' livin' presence of his majesty, th' devil."
+
+Then the light died wholly and there came the disturbing sound of
+boots on the ringing stones. The rest of the riders were coming in to
+claim their share of Billy's Eden.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+UNBROKEN BREAD
+
+
+Jameson, Hill and Thomas were as good as their word. During the week
+that followed the spectacular denouncement of Courtrey and Service at
+Baston's store, they went quietly to every settler in the Valley and
+declared themselves. In almost every instance they met with eager
+pledges of approval. They knew, every man of them, that this slow
+banding together for resistance against Courtrey and his power meant
+open war. For years they had suffered indignities and hardship without
+protest. While Jim Last lived they had had a sort of leader, an
+example, though they had feared to follow in his lead too strongly.
+
+They had copied his methods of guarding possessions, of corraling
+every cattle-brute at night, of keeping every horse under bars. Last
+had looked Courtrey in the face. The rest dared not.
+
+Now with Last gone, they felt the lack, as if a bastion had been
+razed, leaving them in the open. Secrecy in Lost Valley had been
+brought to a work of art. They could hold their tongues.
+
+But with the new knowledge Tharon Last took on a light, a halo.
+
+Men spoke in whispers about her daring. They felt it themselves.
+
+Word of her lightning quickness with her daddy's guns, of her
+accuracy, went softly all about and about, garbled and accentuated.
+They said she could shoot the studs from the sides of a man's belt and
+never touch him. They said she could drive a nail farther than the
+ordinary man could see. They said she could draw so swiftly that the
+motion of the hands was lost.
+
+A slow excitement took the faction of the settlers.
+
+But out at Last's Holding a grave anxiety sat upon Tharon's riders.
+Conford knew--and Billy knew--and Curly knew more about Courtrey's
+intent than some of the others. Young Paula, half asleep in the deep
+recesses of the house, had witnessed that furious encounter by the
+western door on the soft spring day when Jim Last had come home to die
+at dusk. She knew that the look in Courtrey's eyes had been
+covetousness--and she had told Jose. Jose, loyal and sensible, had
+told the boys. So now there was always one or more of them on duty
+near the mistress of Last's on one pretext or another. To Tharon, who
+knew more than all of them put together, this was funny.
+
+It stirred the small mirth there was in her these days, and often she
+sent them away, to have them turn up at the most unexpected times and
+places.
+
+"You boys!" she would say whimsically, "you think Courtrey's goin' to
+cart me off livin'?"
+
+"That's just what we are afraid of, Tharon," answered Conford gravely
+once, "we know it'd not be _livin'_."
+
+And Tharon had looked away toward Jose's cross, and frowned.
+
+"No," she said, "an' it won't be any way, _livin'_ or dead."
+
+One night toward the end of that week a strange cavalcade wound up
+along the levels, past the head of Black Coulee, forded the Broken
+Bend in silence save for the stroke of hoof and iron shoe on stone,
+and went toward Last's. There were thirty men, riding close, and they
+had nothing to say in the darkness.
+
+At the Holding Tharon Last waited them on her western doorstep.
+
+As they rode in along the sounding-board the muffled ringing of the
+hoofs seemed to the girl as the call of clarions. The heart in her
+breast leaped with a strange thrill, a gladness. She felt as if her
+father's spirit stood behind her waiting the first step toward the
+fulfillment of her promise.
+
+The riders stopped in the soft darkness. There was no moon and the
+very winds seemed to have hushed their whispers in the cottonwoods.
+
+"Tharon," said the man who rode in the lead, and she recognized the
+voice of Jameson from the southern end of the Valley, "we've come."
+
+That was all. A simple declaration, awaiting her disposal.
+
+Conford, not half approving, his heart heavy with foreboding, stood at
+his mistress' shoulder and waited, too.
+
+For a long moment there was no sound save the eternal tree-toads at
+their concert. Then the girl spoke, and it seemed to those shadowy
+listeners that they heard again the voice of Jim Last, sane,
+commanding, full of courage and conviction.
+
+"I'm glad," said Tharon simply, "th' time has come when Lost Valley
+has got t' stand or fall forever. Courtrey's gettin' stronger every
+day, more careless an' open. He's been content to steal a bunch of
+cattle here, another there, a little at a time. Now he's takin' them
+by th' herds, like John Dement's last month. He's got a wife, an' from
+what I've always heard, she's a sight too good fer him. But he wants
+more--he wants _me_. He's offered me th' last insult, an' as Jim
+Last's daughter I'm a-goin' to even up my score with him, an' it's got
+three counts. You've all got scores against him."
+
+Here there were murmurs through the silent group.
+
+"Th' next outrage from Courtrey, on any one of us, gets all of us
+together. For every cattle-brute run off by Courtrey's band, we'll
+take back one in open day, all of us ridin'. We'll have to shoot, but
+I'm ready. Are you?"
+
+Every man answered on the instant.
+
+"Then," said the girl tensely, "get down an' sign."
+
+There was a rattle of stirrups and bits, a creak of leather as thirty
+men swung off their horses.
+
+Tharon stepped back in the lighted room. Her men stood there against
+the walls. The settlers came diffidently in across the sill, lean,
+poor men for the most part, their strained eyes and furrowed faces
+showing the effect of hardships. Not a man there but had seen himself
+despoiled, had swallowed the bitter dose in helplessness.
+
+Most of them were married and had families. Some of them had killings
+to their record. Many of them were none too upright.
+
+Jameson was a good man, and so was Dan Hill. Thomas was merely weak.
+Buford was a gun man who had protected his own much better than the
+rest. McIntyre was like him. One by one they came forward as Tharon
+called them by name, and leaning down, put their names or their marks
+to a sheet of paper which bore these few simple lines:
+
+"We, the signers named below, do solemnly promise and pledge ourselves
+to stand together, through all consequences of this act, for the
+protection of our lives and property. For every piece of property
+taken from any one of us, we shall go together and take back it, or
+its worth, from whoever took it. For every person killed in any way,
+but fair-and-open, we promise to hang the murderer."
+
+Billy had drafted the document. Tharon, whom Jim Last had taught her
+letters, read it aloud. The names of Last's Holding headed it. The
+thirty names and marks--and of the latter there were many--stretched
+to the bottom of the sheet.
+
+When it was done the girl folded it solemnly and put it away in the
+depths of the big desk. Old Anita, watching from the shadows of the
+eating room beyond, put her _reboso_ over her head and rocked in
+silent grief. She had seen tragic things before.
+
+Then these lean and quiet men filed out, mounted the waiting horses
+and went away in the darkness, mysterious figures against the stars.
+
+That night Tharon Last sat late by the deep window in her own room at
+the south of the ranch house. It was a huge old room, high walled and
+sombre. There were bright blankets hung like pictures on the walls,
+baskets marvelously woven of grass and rushes, thick mats on the floor
+made in like manner and of a tough, long-fibred grass that grew down
+in a swale beyond the Black Coulee, while in one corner there shone
+pale in the darkness the one great treasure of that unknown mother, an
+almost life-size statue of the Holy Virgin.
+
+Of this beautiful thing Tharon had stood in awe from babyhood.
+
+A half fearful reverence bowed her before it on those rare times when
+Anita, throwing back to her Mexic ancestors, worshipped with vague
+rites at its feet.
+
+Always its waxen hands bore offerings, silent tribute from the girl's
+still nature. Sometimes these were the prairie flowers, little wild
+things, sweet and fragile. Sometimes they were sprays of the water
+vines that grew by the wonderful spring of the Holding.
+
+Again they were strings of bright beads, looped and falling in
+glistening cascades over the tarnished gilt robes of the Virgin.
+
+Under the deep window there was a wide couch, piled high with a narrow
+mattress of wild goose feathers and covered with a crimson blanket.
+Here the girl sat with her arms on the sill and looked out into the
+darkness that covered the Valley. She thought of the thirty men who
+had signed her paper, riding far and by in the sounding basin,
+returning to their uncertain homes. She thought of her father asleep
+under his peaceful cross, of young Harkness beside him.
+
+She thought of Courtrey and Service and Wylackie Bob, of Black Bart
+and the stranger from Arizona. They were a hard bunch to tackle.
+
+They had the Valley under their thumbs to do with as they pleased,
+like the veriest Roman potentate of old. Her daddy had told her once,
+when she was small and lonely of winter nights, strange old tales of
+rulers and their helpless subjects. Jim Last could talk when he
+needed, though he was a man of conserved speech.
+
+Yes, Courtrey was like a king in Lost Valley, absolute. She thought of
+the many crimes done and laid to his door since she could remember, of
+countless cattle run off, of horses stolen and shamelessly ridden in
+grinning defiance of any who might dare to identify them, of Cap Hart
+killed on the Stronghold's range and left to rot under the open skies,
+a warning like those birds of prey that are shot and hung to scare
+their kind. Her soft lips drew themselves into a hard line, very like
+Jim Last's, and the heart in her ratified its treaty with the thirty
+men.
+
+She had none to mourn her, she thought a trifle sadly--well Anita and
+Paula, of course, and there were her riders. Billy would grieve--he'd
+kill some one if she were killed--and Conford and Jack.
+
+A warm glow pervaded her being. Yes, she had folks, even if she was
+the last of her blood.
+
+But she didn't intend to be killed. She was right, and she had
+listened enough to Anita to believe with a superstitious certainty,
+that right was invulnerable. For instance, if she and Courtrey should
+draw at the same second, she believed absolutely, that because she was
+in the right, her bullet would travel a bit the swifter, her aim be
+truer. She felt in her heart with a profound conviction that some day
+she would kill Courtrey. She thought of his wife, Ellen, a pale flower
+of a woman, white as milk, with hair the colour of unripe maize, and
+wondered if she loved the man who made her life hell, so the Valley
+whispered. Tharon wondered how it would seem to love a man, as women
+who were wives must love their men--if the agony of loss to Ellen
+could be as acute and terrifying as hers had been ever since that soft
+night in spring when her best friend, Jim Last, had come home on El
+Rey.
+
+She thought of the grey look on his face, of the pinched line at his
+nostrils' base, and the tears came miserably under her lids, she laid
+her head on the cloth mat that covered the wide window ledge and wept
+like any child for a time. Then she wiped her face with her hands,
+sighed, and fell again to thinking.
+
+An hour later as she rose to make ready for bed, she thought she
+caught a faint sound out where the little rock-bordered paths ran in
+what she was pleased to call her garden, since a few hardy flowers
+grew by the spring's trickle, and she held her breath to listen. It
+was nothing, however, she thought, and turned into the deep room.
+
+Only the tree-toads, long since silent, knew that a cigarette,
+carefully shielded in a palm, glowed in the darkness.
+
+Two days after this a visitor came to Last's. From far down they saw
+him coming, in the mid-morning while the work of the house went
+forward. Paula, bringing a pan of milk from the springhouse spied him
+first and stopped to satisfy her young eyes with the unwonted
+appearance of him. She looked long, and hurried in to tell her
+mistress.
+
+"Senorita," she said excitedly, "see who comes! A stranger who has
+different clothes from any other. He rides not like Lost Valley men,
+either, being too stiff and straight. Come, see."
+
+And Tharon, busy about the kitchen in her starched print dress,
+dropped everything at once to run with Paula to the western door of
+the living room that they might look south.
+
+"_Muchachas_ both," complained old Anita, "the milk is spilled and the
+_pan dulce_ burns in the oven! Tch, tch!"
+
+But the young creatures in the west door cared naught for her
+grumbling.
+
+"Who can it be, to come so, Senorita?" wondered Paula, her brown cheek
+beside her mistress, "is he not handsome!"
+
+"For mercy sake, Paula," chided Tharon laughing, "I believe you'd look
+for beauty in th' ol' Nick himself if he rode up. But I've seen this
+man before."
+
+"Where? When?"
+
+"In town that day I met Courtrey an' Service. I remember seen' him
+come into line as I backed out--he was standin' between th' racks an'
+th' porch, somewhere." And she narrowed her eyes and studied the rider
+as he came jogging up across the range.
+
+"H'm," she said presently, "he does ride funny. I bet he ain't rode
+range much in _his_ life. Stiff as a ramrod, an' no mistake."
+
+Then with an unconscious grace and poise that set well upon her as the
+mistress of Last's, Tharon moved into the open door and waited.
+
+As the stranger came closer both girls subjected him to a frank and
+careful scrutiny that in any other place than Lost Valley would have
+been rudeness itself.
+
+Here it catalogued the stranger, set the style of his welcome.
+
+It left him stripped of surprise, outwardly, before he was within
+speaking distance.
+
+It told the observers that he was young, of some twenty-six or seven,
+that his face, the first point taken in with lightning swiftness--was
+different from most faces they had ever seen, that it was open,
+smiling, easy, that he was straight as a ramrod, indeed, that he rode
+as if he feared nothing in the earth or the heavens, that he carried
+no gun, that he wore the peculiar uniform that Tharon had noticed
+before, and that there was something on his breast, a dark shield of
+some sort which made them think of Steptoe Service and his disgraced
+sheriff's star. This thought brought a frown to Tharon's brows, and it
+was there to greet the stranger when he rode up to the step and
+halted, his smart tan hat in his hand. The morning sun burned warmly
+down on his dark hair, which was brushed straight back from his
+forehead in a way unknown in those parts. His dark eyes, slow and deep
+but somehow merry, took in the pretty picture in the door.
+
+"Miss Last?" he asked in a low voice.
+
+"Yes," said Tharon promptly and waited.
+
+Every one waited in Lost Valley for a stranger to make known his
+business. Paula drew back behind her mistress.
+
+The man sat still on his horse and waited, too. The silence became
+profound. The hens cackling about the barns intruded sharply.
+
+"Well," he said presently, "I am a stranger, and I came to see you."
+
+The girl in the doorway felt a hot surge of discomfort flare over her
+for the first time in her life for such a reason.
+
+There was something in the low voice that implied a lack, accused her
+of something. She resented it instantly.
+
+"If that is so," she said slowly, "light."
+
+The man laughed delightedly, and swung quickly down, dropping his
+rein. Tharon noticed that. That much was natural. He held his hat
+against his breast with one hand and came forward with the same
+quickness, holding out the other. Tharon was not used to shaking
+hands with strange men. She gave her hand diffidently, because he so
+evidently expected it, and took it away swiftly.
+
+"My name," he said, "is Kenset--David Kenset, and I am from
+Washington, D. C."
+
+He might as well have said Timbuctoo. Tharon Last knew little outside
+her own environment. Words and names that had to do with unknown
+places were vague things to her.
+
+"Yes?" she answered politely, "I make no doubt you've come far. Come
+in. Dinner'll soon be ready," and she moved back from the door with a
+smile that covered her pitiful ignorance as with a garment of gold.
+When Tharon smiled like that she was wholly adorable, and the man knew
+it at once.
+
+Why she had so quickly invited him in before he had fully declared
+himself, she did not know, unless it was because of that lack in her
+which his first words had implied.
+
+Old Anita, whose manners were the simple and perfect ones of the
+Mexican coupled to a kindly heart, had taught her how to comport.
+
+Her easy and constant association with the riders and _vaqueros_ had
+dulled her somewhat, but she could be royal on occasion.
+
+Now she simply stepped back in the deep cool room where the _ollas_
+swung in the windows, smiled--and she was changed entirely from the
+girl of a few moments before.
+
+The man came in, laid his hat on the flat top of the melodeon, walked
+over to a chair and sat down. There was an ease about him, a
+taking-for-granted, that amazed Tharon beyond words.
+
+Then he looked frankly at her and began to talk as if he had known her
+always.
+
+"I've come to live in Lost Valley, Miss Last," he said, "for a long
+while, I think. Wish me luck."
+
+"Come here to live?" said Tharon, "a settler? Goin' to homestead?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"No."
+
+A quick suspicion seized her. Perhaps Washington was like Arizona, a
+place from which they imported gun men. Only this man wore no gun, and
+he had not a look of prowess. No. This man was different.
+
+"Then what you goin' to do?" she asked as frankly as a child.
+
+"First," he said, "I'm going up where the pines grow yonder and build
+myself a house," and he waved a hand toward the east where the ranges
+rolled up to the thickening fringes of the forest that marched back
+into the ramparts of the trail-less hills.
+
+"I want to find an ideal spot, a glade where the pines stand round the
+edges, with a spring of living water running down, and where I can
+look down and over the magnificent reaches of Lost Valley. I shall
+make me a home, and then I shall work."
+
+"Ride?" asked the girl succinctly.
+
+"Ride? Of course, that will be a great part of that work."
+
+"Who for?"
+
+He looked at her sharply.
+
+"Who for?"
+
+"Yes. What outfit?"
+
+There was a hard quality in her voice. If he had come in to ride for
+Courtrey, why he must know at once that Last's was no friend of his,
+now or ever.
+
+He caught the drift of her thought in part.
+
+"For no outfit, Miss Last," he said with a gentle dignity. "I am in
+the employ of the United States Government."
+
+A swift change came over Tharon's face.
+
+Government!
+
+That was no word to conjure by in Lost Valley. Steptoe Service prated
+of Gov'ment. It was a farce, a synonym for juggled duty, a word to
+suggest the one-man law of the place, for even Courtrey, who made the
+sheriffs--and unmade them--did it under the grandiloquent name of
+Government. She looked at him keenly, and there was a sudden hardening
+in her young eyes.
+
+"Then I reckon, Mister," she said coolly, "that you an' me can't be
+friends."
+
+"What?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Are you in earnest?"
+
+"Certainly am," said Tharon. "I ain't on good terms at present with
+anything that has t' do with law."
+
+David Kenset leaned forward and looked into her face with his deep,
+compelling eyes.
+
+"I guessed as much from my first knowledge of you the other day," he
+answered, "but we are on unfamiliar ground. You have a wrong
+conception of Government, a perverted idea of law and what it stands
+for."
+
+"All right, Mister," said the girl rising. "We won't argy. I asked you
+t' dinner, but I take it back. I ask ye t' forgive me my manners, but
+th' sooner we part th' better. Then we won't be a-hurtin' each other's
+feelin's. I'm fer law, too, but it ain't your kind, an' we ain't
+likely to agree."
+
+She picked up his hat from where it lay on the melodeon and fingered
+it a bit, smiling at him in the ingenuous manner that was utterly
+disarming.
+
+A slow dark flush spread over the man's face. He laughed, however, and
+in reaching for the hat, caught two of her fingers, whether purposely
+or not, Tharon could not tell.
+
+"Admirable hospitality in the last frontier," he said. "But perhaps I
+should not have expected anything different."
+
+"You make me ashamed," said Tharon straightly, "but Last's ain't
+takin' chances these days. You may belong to Government, an' you may
+belong to Courtrey, an' I'm against 'em both."
+
+She walked with him to the door, stepped out, as if with some thought
+to soften her unprecedented treatment of the stranger under her roof.
+She noted the trim figure of him in its peculiar garb, the proud
+carriage, the even and easy comportment under insult.
+
+From his saddle he untied a package wrapped in paper.
+
+"Will you please take this?" he asked lightly, holding it out. "Just
+on general principles."
+
+But she shook her head.
+
+"I can't take no favours from you when I've just took stand against
+you, can I?" she asked in turn.
+
+"Well, of all the ridiculous----"
+
+The man laughed again shortly, tossed the package on the step,
+mounted, whirled and rode away without a backward glance.
+
+Tharon stood frowning where he left her until the brown horse and its
+rider were well down along the levels toward Black Coulee.
+
+Then a sigh at her shoulder recalled her and she turned to see the
+wistful dark face of Paula gazing raptly in the same direction.
+
+"He was so handsome, Senorita," said the girl, "to be so hardly dealt
+with."
+
+"Paula," said the mistress bitingly, "will you remember who you're
+talkin' to? Do you want to go back to th' Pomos under th' Rockface?"
+
+"Saints forbid!" cried Paula instantly.
+
+"Then keep your sighs for Jose an' mind your manners. Pick up that
+bundle."
+
+Swiftly and obediently the girl did as she was told, unrolling the
+wrapper from the package.
+
+She brought to light the meal-sack which Tharon had dropped that day
+on Baston's porch.
+
+A slow flush stained Tharon's cheeks at the sight, and she went
+abruptly into the house.
+
+When the riders came in at night she told them in detail about the
+whole affair, for Last's and its men were one, their interests the
+same.
+
+They held counsel around the long table in the dining room under the
+hanging lamp, and Conford at her right was spokesman for the rest.
+
+"He's somethin' official, all right, I make no doubt, Tharon," he said
+when he had listened attentively, "but what or who I don't know. I
+heard from Dixon about him comin' into Corvan that day, an' that he
+had rode far. No one knows his business, or what he's in Lost Valley
+for. He's some mysterious."
+
+"He's goin' to stay, so he told me," went on the girl, "goin' to build
+a house up where the pines begin an' means to ride. But how'll he
+live? What an' who will he ride for? He said for Government."
+
+"What's he mean by that?"
+
+"Search me."
+
+"Wasn't there nothin' about him different? Nothin' you could judge him
+by?" asked Billy.
+
+"Yes, there was. He wore somethin' on his breast, a sign, a dull-like
+thing with words an' letters on it."
+
+"So?" said Conford quickly, "what was it like, Tharon? Can't you
+describe it?"
+
+"Can with a pencil," said Tharon, rising. "Come on in."
+
+She went swiftly to the big desk in the other room and rummaged among
+its drawers for paper and pencil. These things were precious in Lost
+Valley.
+
+Jim Last had had great stacks of paper, neat, glazed sheets with faint
+lines upon them, made somewhere in that mysterious "below" and brought
+in by pack train. It was on one of these, with the distinctive words
+"Last's Holding" printed at the top, that the thirty men had signed
+themselves into the new law of the Valley.
+
+To Tharon these sheets had always been magic, invested with grave
+dignity.
+
+Anything done upon them was of import, irrevocable.
+
+Thus had Jim Last inscribed the semi-yearly letters that went down the
+Wall with the cattle, or for supplies.
+
+Now she spread a shining pad under the light, sat down in her father's
+chair and began, carefully and minutely to reproduce the badge that
+meant authority of a sort, yet was not a sheriff's star.
+
+The riders, clustered at her shoulder, watched the thing take shape
+and form. At the end of twenty painstaking minutes Tharon straightened
+and looked up in the interested faces.
+
+"There," she said, "an' its dull copper colour!"
+
+And this was the shield with its unknown heraldry which Conford took
+up and studied carefully for a long time.
+
+"'Forest Service,'" he read aloud, "'Department of Agriculture.' Well,
+so far as I can see, it ain't so terrifyin'. That last means raisin'
+things, like beets an' turnips an' so on, an' as for th' forest part,
+why, if he stays up in his 'fringe o' pines' I guess we ain't got no
+call to kick. Don't you worry, Tharon, about this new bird."
+
+"I'm a darned sight more worried about that other one, th' Arizona
+beauty which Courtrey's got in."
+
+"Forget th' gun man, Burt," said Billy, "this feller's a heap more
+interestin' to me, for I've got a hunch he's a poet. Now who on this
+footstool but a poet would come ridin' into Lost Valley with his badge
+o' beets an' his line o' talk about 'fringes o' pines' an' 'runnin'
+streams,' to quote Tharon?"
+
+"Even poets are human, you young limb," drawled Curly in his soft
+voice, "an' I'm sorry for him if he starts your 'interest,' so to
+speak. He'll need all his poetic vision t' survive."
+
+"I hope, Billy," said Tharon severely, and with lofty inconsistency,
+"that you'll remember your manners an' not start anything. Last's is
+in for trouble enough without any side issues."
+
+"True," said the boy instantly, "I'll promise to leave th' poet
+alone."
+
+Then the talk fell about the new well that had taken the place of the
+old Crystal and which was proving a huge success.
+
+"Can't draw her dry," said Bent Smith, "pulled all of three hours with
+Nick Bob an' Blue Pine yesterday an' never even riled her.
+
+"She's good as th' Gold Pool or th' Silver Hollow now."
+
+"You're some range man t' make any such a comparison," said Curly with
+conviction, "there ain't no artificial water-well extent that can hold
+a candle t' th' real livin' springs of a cattle country, when they're
+such bubblin', shinin' beauties as th' Springs of Last's."
+
+"You're right, Curly," said Tharon quietly from under the light,
+"there's nothin' like them. They must be th' blessin's of God, an' no
+mistake. They're th' stars at night, an' th' winds an' th' sunshine.
+They're th' lovers of th' horses, th' treasure of th' masters. I love
+my springs."
+
+"So do th' herds," put in Jack Masters. "They'll come fast at night
+now because they can smell th' water far off, an' it's gettin' pretty
+dry on th' range."
+
+"Yes," sighed Tharon, "it's summer now, an' Jim Last died in spring. A
+whole season gone."
+
+A whole season had gone, indeed, since that tragic night.
+
+Last's Holding had missed its master at each turn and point. A
+thousand times did Conford, the foreman, catch himself in the act of
+going to the big room to find him at his desk, a big, vital force,
+intent on the accounts of the ranch, a thousand times did he long for
+his keen insight. The _vaqueros_ missed him and his open hand.
+
+The very dogs at the steps missed him, and so did El Rey, waiting in
+his corral for the step that did not come, the strong hand on his
+bit.
+
+And how much his daughter missed him only the stars and the pale
+Virgin knew.
+
+For the next few days following the short, awkward visit of the
+stranger Tharon felt a prickle of uneasiness under her skin at every
+thought of it. There was something in the memory that confused and
+distressed her, a feeling of failure, of a lack in her that put her in
+a bad light to herself.
+
+She knew that, instinctively, she had been protecting her own, that
+since Last's had stepped out in the light against Courtrey she must
+take no chance. But should she have taken back the common courtesy of
+the offered meal? Would it not have been better to let him stay and
+meet Conford who would have been in at noon?
+
+She vexed herself a while with these questions, and then dismissed
+them with her cool good sense.
+
+"It's done," she told herself, "an' can't be helped. An' yet, there
+was somethin' about him, somethin' that made me think of Jim Last
+himself--somethin' in his quiet eyes--as if they had both come from
+somewhere outside Lost Valley where they grow different men. It was
+a--bigness, a softness. I don't know."
+
+And with that last wistful thought she forgot all about the incident
+and the man, for the prediction of Jameson that dusk at the head of
+Rolling Cove became reality.
+
+Dixon, who lived north along the Wall near the Pomo settlement, lost
+ten head of steers, all white and deeply earmarked, unmistakable
+cattle that could not be disguised.
+
+Courtrey was resenting the vague something in the air that was
+crystallizing into resistance about him.
+
+Word of the stealing ran about the Valley like a grass fire, more
+boldly than usual.
+
+It came to Last's in eighteen hours, brought by a horseman who had
+carried it to many a lonely homestead.
+
+Tharon received it with a thrill of joy.
+
+"Good enough," she said, "no use wasting time."
+
+And she sent out a call for the thirty men.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WORKING OF THE LAW
+
+
+It was a clear, bright morning in early summer. All up and down Lost
+Valley the little winds wimpled the grass where the cattle grazed, and
+brought the scent of flowers. In the thin, clear atmosphere points and
+landmarks stood out with wonderful boldness.
+
+The homesteads set in the endless green like tiny gems, the stupendous
+face of the Wall, stretching from north to south and sheer as a plumb
+line for a thousand feet, was fretted with a myriad of tiny seams and
+crevasses not ordinarily visible.
+
+Far up at the Valley's head against the huge uplift of the jumbled and
+barren rocklands the scattered squat buildings of the Stronghold
+brooded like a monster.
+
+Spread out on the velvet slopes below lay the herds that belonged to
+it, sleek fat cattle, guarded carelessly by a few lazy and desultory
+riders. Courtrey was too secure in his insolent might to take those
+rigid and untiring precautions which were the only price of safety to
+the lesser men of the community. Toward the south where the Valley
+narrowed to the Bottle Neck and the Broken Bend went out, there
+shimmered and shone like a silver ribbon hung down the cliff the thin,
+long shower of Vestal's Veil fall.
+
+The roar of it could be heard for miles like the constant and
+incessant wail of winds in time-worn canyons.
+
+Along the floor of the Cup Rim range, sunken and hidden from the upper
+levels, there rode a compact group of horsemen. They went abreast, in
+column of fours, and they were armed to the teeth, a bristling
+presentation. All in all there were forty-two of them and at their
+head rode Tharon on El Rey, a slim and gallant young figure.
+
+Her bright hair, tied with a scarlet ribbon, shone under her wide hat
+like an aureole. She talked with Conford who rode beside her, and now
+and then she smiled, for all the world as if she went to some young
+folks' gathering, instead of to the first uncertain issue of blind mob
+law against outlaws.
+
+But if she felt a lightness of excitement in her heart it was more
+than actuated by the grim and quiet band that followed.
+
+They knew--and she knew, also--that what they did this day, in the
+open sunlight, meant savage strife and bloodshed for some as sure as
+death.
+
+For two hours they rode across the sunken range where the cottonwoods
+and aspens made a lovely and mottled shade, to reach at last the sharp
+ascent to the uplands above. When they topped the rim and started
+forward, the huge herds of Courtrey lay spread before them, bright as
+paint on the living green. Two thousand cattle grazed there in peace
+and plenty. Here and there a rider sat his horse in idleness. At the
+first sight of the solidly formed mass coming out of the Cup Rim on to
+the levels, these riders straightened in their saddles and rode in
+closer to their charges.
+
+The eyes of the newcomers went over the bright pattern of the grazing
+cattle. A motley bunch they were, red, black and white, with here and
+there descendants of the yellows which none but John Dement had ever
+owned in Lost Valley. Dement, riding near the head of the line saw
+this and muttered in his beard.
+
+"Thar's some o' mine," he said pointing, "th' very ones that was
+stampeded. I'd know 'em in hell."
+
+[Illustration: SHE TALKED WITH CONFORD WHO RODE BESIDE HER AND NOW AND
+THEN SHE SMILED]
+
+With the nearing of the line of horsemen a rider detached himself from
+the right of the herd and went sailing away across the levels toward
+the distant Stronghold.
+
+Quick as a flash Tharon Last lifted the rifle that lay ready on her
+pommel and sent a shot whining toward him.
+
+"Just to show we mean business," she muttered to herself.
+
+The cowboy caught the warning and drew his running horse up to slide
+ten feet on its haunches.
+
+He had meant to warn his boss, but a chance was one thing, certainty
+another.
+
+"Dixon--Dement," called Tharon rising in her stirrups, "when we get to
+work you pick out as near as you can, cattle that look like yours, an'
+th' same amount--not a head more."
+
+Then they swung forward at a run and swept down along the left flank
+of the herd. Here a rider raised his arm and fired point blank at the
+leaders. One-two-three his six-gun counted. He was a lean youngster,
+scarce more than a boy, a wild admirer of Courtrey, and he stood his
+defence with a sturdy gallantry that was worthy of a better cause.
+
+"Damn you!" he yelled, standing in his stirrups, "what's this?"
+
+"Law!" pealed the high voice of Tharon as El Rey thundered down toward
+him. Then Buford, riding midway of the sweeping line, fired and the
+boy dropped his gun, swayed and clung to his saddle horn as his horse
+bolted and tore off at a tangent to the right, away from the herd.
+
+"God!" cried the girl hoarsely, "I wish we didn't have to! Did you
+kill him?"
+
+"No," called Buford sharply, "broke his arm."
+
+Tharon, to whom the high blue vault had seemed suddenly to swing in
+strange circles, shut her teeth with a click.
+
+Abreast of the cattle she swerved El Rey aside, drew her guns and
+waited.
+
+In among the grazing cattle, many of which had raised startled heads
+to eye the intruders, went the men. They worked swiftly and deftly.
+They knew that they were in plain sight of the Stronghold and expected
+every moment to see Courtrey and a dozen riders come boiling out.
+Those cowboys who had been in charge of the herd, sat where they were,
+without a move. Out of the bright mass the settlers cut first the ten
+head of steers, as nearly as possible all white, to take the place of
+Dixon's band. Thomas and Black stood guard over them. Then they went
+back and took out yellows and yellow-spotted to the number of one
+hundred. It was fast work, the fastest ever done on the Lost Valley
+ranges, and every nerve was strained like a singing wire.
+
+Under the dust cloud raised by the plunging hoofs, the whirling
+horses, the workers kept as close together as possible.
+
+They rounded up the cut-outs, bunched them together compactly and
+swinging into a half circle, drove them rapidly back toward the
+oak-fringed edge of the Cup Rim. They passed close to where the slim
+boy stood by his horse, trying to wind the big red kerchief from his
+neck about his right arm from which the blood ran in a bright stream.
+Tharon swung out of her course and shot toward him.
+
+"Here," she cried swiftly, "let me tie it."
+
+"To hell with you," said the lad bitterly, raising blazing eyes to her
+face. "You've made me false t' Courtrey. I'd die first."
+
+"Die, then!" she flung back, "an' tell your master that th' law is
+workin' in this Valley at last!"
+
+As the last rider of the cavalcade went down over the slanting edge of
+the Cup Rim there came the sound of quick shots snapping in the
+distance and the belated sight of riders streaming down from the
+Stronghold hurried the descent.
+
+They had reached the level floor of the sunken range and spread out
+upon it for better travelling before Courtrey and his men, some ten or
+fifteen riders, appeared on the upper crest.
+
+The settlers stopped instantly at a call from Conford, drew together
+behind the cattle, turned and faced them. They were too far away for
+speech, out of rifle range, but the still, grim defiance of that
+compact front halted the outlaw cattle king and his followers.
+
+For the first time in all his years of rising power in Lost Valley
+Courtrey felt a challenge. For the first time he knew that a tide was
+banking in full force against him. A red rage flushed up under his
+dark skin, and he raised a silent fist and shook it at the blue
+heavens.
+
+The grim watchers below knew that gesture, significant, majestic,
+boded ill to them.
+
+But Tharon Last, muttering to herself in the hatred that possessed her
+of late at sight of Courtrey, raised her own doubled fist and shook it
+high toward him, an answer, an acceptance of that challenge.
+
+Then they calmly turned and drove the recovered cattle down along the
+sloping levels at a fast trot.
+
+The die was struck. Lost Valley was no longer a stamping-ground for
+wrong and oppression. It had gone to war.
+
+That night the white and yellow herd bedded at the Holding, _vaqueros_
+rode about it all night long, quietly, softly under the stars. The
+settlers walked about, smoking, or sat silently in the darkened
+living room. At midnight Tharon and young Paula made huge pots of
+coffee which they dispensed along with crullers.
+
+By dawn the cattle were well on their way, still safeguarded by the
+band of men, down toward the homesteads where they belonged.
+
+During that night of unlighted silence plans had been perfected in low
+voices, a name chosen for the band itself. They would call themselves
+the Vigilantes, as many another organization had called itself in the
+desperate straits that made its existence imperative.
+
+By sundown the hundred head had been driven, hot and tired, into John
+Dement's corrals, the ten white steers were bedded by Black's Spring
+over toward the Wall. They had farther to go and would not reach
+Dixon's until the morning.
+
+And with each band there was a group of determined men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Word of this exploit ran all over the Valley in a matter of hours. To
+each faction it had a deep significance.
+
+But speech concerning it was sparse as it had ever been anent the
+doings of Courtrey. A man's tongue was a prisoner to his common sense
+those days.
+
+To Tharon Last, busy at her tasks about the Holding, it was a vital
+matter. She felt a strong surge, an uplift within her. She had begun
+the task she had set herself and solemn joy pervaded her being.
+
+But of all those whom it affected there was none to whom it meant what
+it did to Courtrey himself. In him it set loose something which burned
+in him like a consuming fire. Where he had thought of Tharon Last
+before with a certain intent, now he thought of her in a sort of
+madness. He was a king himself, in a manner, an eagle, a prowler of
+great spaces, a rule-or-ruin force. Down there on the sloping floor of
+the Cup Rim had been a fit mate for him in the slim girl who had
+shaken her fist back at him in strong defiance.
+
+He felt his blood leap hot at the thought of her. She was built of
+fighting stuff. No pale willy-nilly, like some he knew who wept whole
+fountains daily. No--neither was she like Lola of the Golden Cloud,
+past-master of men because she had belonged to many.
+
+Courtrey, who had run life's gamut himself, thought of Tharon Last's
+straight young purity with growing desire.
+
+It began to obsess him with a mania. His temper, bad at all times,
+became worse. Ellen, the veriest slave through her devotion to him,
+found her life at the Stronghold almost unbearable.
+
+She was a white woman, like a lily, with transparent flesh where the
+blue veins showed. Her pale blue eyes, like the painted eyes of a
+china doll, were red with constant tears under their corn-silk lashes.
+The pale gold hair on her temples was often damp with the sweat that
+comes with agony of soul.
+
+"It jes' seems I can't live another minute, Cleve," she would tell her
+brother who lived at the Stronghold, "seems like I don't want to. Th'
+very sunlight looks sad t' me, an' I hate th' tree-toads that are
+singin' eternal down in th' runnel."
+
+This brother, her only relative, would stir uneasily at such times and
+the fire that shot from his eyes, light, too, under the same corn-silk
+lashes, was a rare thing. Nothing but this had ever set it burning. He
+was a slight man, narrow-chested and thin. They had been from run-down
+stock, these two, a strain that seemed indigenous to the Valley,
+without other memories. Their name was Whitmore, and they had lived
+all their lives in a poor cove up beyond the Valley's head where the
+barren rocklands came down out of the skies. There had been, besides
+themselves, only the father and mother, worn-out workers, who had
+died at last, leaving the brother and sister to live as best they
+might in the solitudes.
+
+Here Courtrey had found them, both in their teens, and he had promptly
+taken them both along with their scant affairs. It was about the only
+thing to his credit that he had married Ellen, hard and fast enough,
+with the offices of a bona fide justice, a matter which he had
+regretted often enough in the years that followed.
+
+It was this knowledge which set the light burning in Cleve's eyes.
+
+He knew how Ellen loved Courtrey.
+
+He knew also that Lola of the Golden Cloud had made the cattle king
+step lively for over a year. He saw the daily growing impatience with
+which Courtrey regarded his marriage.
+
+He resented with every ounce of the repressed spirit there was in him
+the girl's poor standing at the Stronghold.
+
+Black Bart and Wylackie Bob treated her with no more consideration
+than any of the Indian serving women. They swore and drank before her
+with an abandon that made the young man's nails cut deep in his palms
+at times, the blood mount high in his white cheeks.
+
+And Ellen drooped like a lily on a broken stem, brooded over her
+husband's absences, and hated the name of Lola, used openly to her as
+a cruel joke.
+
+The Stronghold was a huge place. The house was like the majority of
+the habitations of the region, built of adobe and able to stand siege
+against a regiment. It was shaded by cottonwoods and spruces, flanked
+by corrals and barns and sheds until the place resembled a small
+town.
+
+Cleve Whitmore rode for Courtrey but his heart was not in Courtrey's
+game. He was slim and sullen, dissatisfied, slow of speech,
+repressed.
+
+He worked early and late and thought a lot.
+
+Courtrey, who kept close count of the favours he did for others,
+considered Cleve deep in his debt and paid him a niggardly wage. So it
+was, that when the newly organized Vigilantes under Tharon Last came
+out in broad day and took back their own from Courtrey's herds, there
+was one at the Stronghold who laughed quietly to himself in sympathy
+with the defy.
+
+"Good enough," he told the wide sky and the silence as he rode herd
+under the beetling rocklands, "hope t' God some one gits him good an'
+plenty."
+
+But Courtrey was hard to get. His aides and lieutenants were picked
+men. He was like a king in his domain.
+
+But if strife and ferment seethed under the calm surface in Lost
+Valley, its surges died before they reached the rolling slopes where
+the forests came down to the eastern plains. Up among the pines and
+oaks, the ridges and the age-worn, tumbled rocks David Kenset had
+found his ideal spot, his glade where the pines stood guard and a
+talking stream ran down. High on the wooded slopes he had set his
+mark, begun that home of which he had told Tharon. From Corvan he had
+hired three men, a teamster by the name of Drake and his two sons, and
+together they had felled and dressed trees enough for a cabin, laid
+them up with clay brought five miles on mule-back, roofed the
+structure with shakes made on the spot with a froe, and the result was
+pleasing, indeed, to this man straight from the far eastern cities.
+
+The cabin faced southwest, set at an angle to command the circled
+glade, the dropping slopes, the distant range lands, the wooded line
+of the Broken Bend, and farther off the levels and slants of the
+gently undulating Valley, with the mighty Rockface of the Wall rising
+like a mystery beyond. Kenset cut all trees at the west and south of
+the glade, thus forming a splendid doorway into his retreat, through
+which all this shone in, like those wonderful etched landscapes one
+sometimes sees in tiny toys that fit the narrowed eye.
+
+Before the cabin was finished, Starret, who ran the regular
+pack-train, brought in a string of trunks and boxes which caused much
+curious comment in Corvan. These came up, after much delay, to be
+dumped in the door yard of the house in the glade, and Kenset felt as
+if the gateway to the outside world might close and he care very
+little.
+
+Here was the wilderness, in all verity, here was work, that greatest
+of boons, here were health and plenty and the hazard of outlawry, that
+he was beginning to dimly sense under the calmly flowing currents of
+Lost Valley.
+
+And here was Romance, as witness the slim girl who had backed out from
+a group of men that first day of his coming--backed out with her guns
+upon them, himself included, and mounted a silver stallion, whose like
+he had not known existed. In fact, Kenset had thought he knew horses,
+but he stood in open-mouthed wonder before the horses of Lost
+Valley--the magnificent Ironwood bays of Courtrey's, with their
+wonderful long manes and tails that shone like a lady's hair, the
+Finger Marks which he had seen once or twice, and marvelled at.
+
+With the opening of the boxes the cabin in the glade took on a look of
+home, of individuality. A big dark rug, woven of strong cord in green
+and brown, came out and went down on the rough floor, leather runners
+were flung on the two tables, a student lamp of nickel, a pair of old
+candlesticks in hammered brass, added their touch of gleam and shine
+to table and shelf-above-the-hearth, college pennants, in all the
+colours of the rainbow, were hung about the walls between four fine
+prints in sepia, gay cushions, much the worse for wear, landed in the
+handsome chairs, and lastly, but far from being least, three long
+shelves beneath the northern windows were filled to the last inch with
+books.
+
+When all these things had been put in place Kenset stood back and
+surveyed the room with a smile in his dark eyes.
+
+"Some spot," he said aloud, "some spot!"
+
+On the small table that was to do duty as a desk in the corner between
+the southwest window and the fireplace he stacked neatly a mass of
+literature, all marked with the same peculiar shield of the pine trees
+and the big U. S. that shone always on his breast.
+
+To the Drakes these things were of quick interest, but they asked no
+questions.
+
+When the last thing had been done to the cabin they set to work and
+built a smaller cabin for the good brown horse which Kenset had bought
+far down to the south and west in the Coast Country, for Sam Drake
+told him that Lost Valley locked its doors to all the world in winter.
+He would house his only friend as he housed himself.
+
+When the Drakes, father and sons, were gone back down to Corvan for
+good, Kenset stretched himself, physically and mentally, and began his
+life in the last frontier.
+
+He began to be out from dawn to dark riding the ridges, exploring the
+wooded slopes, the boldly upsweeping breasts of the nameless
+mountains, making friends with the rugged land. It was a beautiful
+country, hushed and silent, save for the soft song of the pines, the
+laughter of streams that ran to the Valley, cold as snow and clear as
+wind. Strange flowers nodded on tall stems in glade and opening,
+peeped from the flat earth by stone and moss-bed. Few birds were here,
+though squirrels were plentiful.
+
+Sometimes he saw a horseman sitting on some slant watching him
+intently. These invariably rode rapidly away on being discovered, not
+troubling to return his salute of a hand waved high above him.
+
+"Funny tribe," he told himself, half puzzled, half irritated, "their
+manners seem to be peculiarly their own. As witness the offered meal
+so calmly 'taken back' by the young highway-woman of Last's
+Holding."
+
+That had rankled. Sane as Kenset was, as cool and self-contained, he
+could not repress a cold prickle of resentment at that memory.
+
+He had gone to the Holding in such good faith, actuated by a lively
+desire to see Tharon again after that one amazing meeting at Baston's
+steps, and he had been so readily received at first, so coolly turned
+out at last. But he had not forgotten the look in the girl's blue
+eyes, nor the disarming smile which had seemed to make it reasonable.
+
+She merely did not hold with law, and wanted him to have no false
+impressions. This incident furnished him with more food for thought
+than he was aware of in those first long days when he rode the silent
+forest.
+
+What was Tharon Last, anyway? What did she mean by those words of hers
+about his law and hers? That they were not the same sort of law--that
+he and she would not agree?
+
+They could not be friends, she had said.
+
+Well, Kenset was not so sure of that. There was something about this
+girl of the guns that sent a thrill tingling in his blood already,
+made him recall each expression of her speaking face, each line of her
+lean young figure.
+
+He did not go near Last's again, though his business took him far and
+by in the Valley, for the big maps, hung on a rack beyond his
+fireplace, covered full half the ranges thereof and stretched away
+into the mysterious and illimitable forests that went up and away into
+the eastern mountains.
+
+It was as if some fateful Power at Washington had set down a careless
+finger on a map of the U.\S.\A., and said to Kenset, "Here is your
+country," without knowledge or interest. Sometimes he wondered if
+there was another forest in the land as utterly lost as this, as
+little known.
+
+But with this wonder came a thrill. He had read romances of the great
+West in his youth and felt a vague regret that he had not lived in the
+rollicking days of '49. Now as he rode his new domain he smiled to
+himself and thought that out of a modern college he had been set back
+half a century. Here was the rule of might, if he was not mistaken.
+Here was romance in its most vital and appealing form. Yes, he felt
+himself lucky.
+
+So he took up his life and his duties with a vim. He rode early and
+late, took notes and gathered data for his first reports, and set up
+for himself in Lost Valley a spreading antagonism.
+
+If he rode herd on the range lands, the timber sections, there were
+those who rode herd on him. Not a movement of his that was not
+reported faithfully to Courtrey, not a coming or going that was not
+watched from start to finish.
+
+And the cattle king narrowed his eyes and listened to his lieutenants
+with growing disapproval.
+
+"Took up land, think?" he asked Wylackie Bob. "Homesteadin'?"
+
+Wylackie shook his head.
+
+"Ain't goin' accordin' to entry," he said, "no more'n th' cabin. Don't
+see no signs of tillin'. He ain't fencin', nor goin' to fence, as near
+as I can find out."
+
+"Cattle?"
+
+"No. Nor horses."
+
+"Hogs, then?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Damn it! maybe it's sheep!" and the red flush rose in the bully's
+dark cheeks.
+
+"Don't think so. Seems like he's after somethin', but what it is I
+can't make out."
+
+But it was not long before the Stronghold solved the mystery, for
+Kenset rode boldly in one day and introduced himself.
+
+It was mid-afternoon, for the cabin in the glade lay a long way from
+the Valley's head, and the whole big place lay silent as death in the
+summer sun.
+
+The Indian serving women were off in the depths somewhere, the few
+_vaqueros_ left at home were out about the spreading corrals, and all
+the men that counted at the ranch had ridden into Corvan early in the
+day.
+
+Only Ellen, pale as a flower, her sweet mouth drooping, sat listlessly
+on the hard beaten earth at the eastern side of the squat house where
+the spruce trees grew, her hands folded in her lap, a sunbonnet
+covering the golden mass of her hair.
+
+At the sound of his horse's hoofs on the stone-flagged yard Kenset saw
+her start, half rise, fling a startled look at him and then sink back,
+as if even the advent of a stranger was of slight import in the heavy
+current of her dull life.
+
+He came in close, drew up, and, with his hat in his hand, sat smiling
+down at her. To Kenset it was more natural to smile than not to.
+
+The girl, for she was scarce more, looked up at him and he saw at
+once, even under the disfiguring headgear, that here was a breaking
+heart laid open for all eyes. The very droop and tremble of the lips
+were proof.
+
+"Mrs. Courtrey?" he asked gently.
+
+At the words, the smile, the unusual courtesy of the removed hat,
+Ellen rose from her chair, a tall, slim wisp of a woman, whose
+blue-veined hands were almost transparent.
+
+"Yes," she said, and waited.
+
+That little waiting, calm, unruffled, made him think sharply of
+Tharon Last who had waited also for his accounting for himself.
+
+"I am Kenset," he said, "of over in the foothills. Is your husband at
+home?"
+
+"No," said Ellen, "he's gone in t' Corvan."
+
+There was a world of meaning in the inflection.
+
+"Yes? Now that's too bad. It's taken me a long time to come and I
+particularly wished to see him. Do you mind if I wait?"
+
+"Why, no," said Ellen a bit reluctantly, "no, sir, I guess not."
+
+Kenset swung off the brown horse and dropped the rein.
+
+"Tired, Captain?" he asked whimsically, rubbing the sweaty mane, while
+the animal drew a long whistling breath and in turn rubbed the sticky
+brow band on its forehead on Kenset's arm.
+
+"Looks like he's thirsty," said Ellen presently. "There's a trough
+round yonder at th' back," and she waved a long hand.
+
+Kenset led Captain around back where a living spring sang and gurgled
+into a section of tree, deeply hollowed and covered with moss.
+
+When he came back to the shade the woman had brought from some near
+place a second chair, and he dropped gratefully into it, weary from
+his long ride.
+
+He laid his hat on the earth beside him and smoothed the sleek, dark
+hair back from his forehead.
+
+Ellen sat still and watched him with a steady gaze.
+
+She was finding him strange. She looked at his olive drab garments, at
+the trim leather leggings that encased his lower limbs, at his smooth
+hands, at his face, and lastly at the dark shield on his breast.
+
+"Law?" she asked succinctly.
+
+"Well," smiled Kenset, "after a fashion."
+
+She moved uneasily in her chair, and the man had a sudden feeling of
+pity for her.
+
+"Not as you mean, Mrs. Courtrey," he hastened. "I am in the United
+States Forest Service, if you know what that is."
+
+"No," said Ellen, "I don't know."
+
+"It is simply a service for the conservation of the timber of this
+country," he explained gently, but he saw that he was not making it
+clear.
+
+"The saving of the trees," he went on, "the care of the forests."
+
+"Oh," she said, relieved.
+
+"We look after the ranges, protect the woods from fire, and so on."
+
+"Look after th' ranges? How?"
+
+"Regulate grazing, grant permits."
+
+"Permits?"
+
+"Yes." And seeing that at last he had caught her interest, Kenset
+talked quietly for an hour and told her more than he had vouchsafed
+any other in Lost Valley about his work.
+
+Gradually, however, he fell to talking to amuse her, for he saw the
+emptiness behind the big blue eyes, the aching void which there was
+nothing to fill, neither love nor hope.
+
+As the sun sank lower toward the west Ellen took off the atrocity of
+calico and starch, and he saw with wonder the amazing beauty of her
+ropes of hair.
+
+When he ceased talking the silence became profound, for she had
+nothing to say and speech did not come easy to her anyway. He did not
+know that at the windows and behind the door-jambs of the deep old
+house were clustered almost a dozen dusky women and children, drawn
+from all over the place and listening in utter silence.
+
+Unconsciously he had drifted back to his life in the outside world,
+encouraged by the absorbing interest of the pale eyes that never left
+his face. He told Ellen of boat races on the Hudson, of theatres on
+Broadway, of college pranks and frolics, ranged over half the
+continent in little story and snatch of description.
+
+Neither one noticed how the shadows were lengthening, nor that the
+sun had dropped in majesty behind the mighty Wall.
+
+It took the sound of running horses, many of them coming up along the
+slopes, to bring Kenset back to the present with a snap, to make the
+woman reach swiftly for the bonnet and clap it on her head.
+
+"Mrs. Courtrey," said Kenset hurriedly, "this has been the first real
+talk I have had with any of my neighbours, and I want to thank you for
+it."
+
+"Oh," quavered the woman, "I don't know as I'd ought to a-let you
+stayed! Mebby I'd oughtn't. But--but seems like you bein' so
+different, an' I not seein' no one, come day in day out, w'y I--I--"
+
+"Sure," he returned quickly, understanding. "You did just right. I
+wanted to stay."
+
+Then he rose to his feet and there came the thunder of the horses, the
+noise of men stopping from a run, dismounting.
+
+Ellen rose and he followed her around the corner of the house to the
+door yard.
+
+As they waited, Courtrey, clad in dark leather chaps, his guns
+swinging, came toward them. At sight of Kenset he stopped short and an
+oath rolled from his lips. The kerchief at his neck was turned
+knot-back and hung like a glob of crimson blood upon his breast.
+
+Under his hat, set at an angle, his dark hair fluffed strangely.
+
+He was a splendid figure of a man, broad shouldered, slim hipped.
+
+Now he looked hard at the stranger and a slow grin lifted his upper
+lip.
+
+"What's this?" he said, and there was a light suspicion of thickness
+in his voice, "my wife got com-ny?"
+
+Kenset heard the woman catch her breath, and the feeling of pity that
+had taken him at first for her intensified.
+
+"No, Mr. Courtrey," he said advancing, "but you have," and he held out
+his hand. "I'm Kenset, from the foothills."
+
+Courtrey, not four feet from him, did not look at the hand. Instead
+the glittering eyes under the hat-brim looked steadily into his with
+an expression that only one man in a hundred could have interpreted.
+
+That one man, however, stood by the watering trough, his hand on the
+neck of a drinking horse--Cleve Whitmore who watched Courtrey without
+blinking.
+
+For a moment Kenset stood so, his hand extended, waiting. Then the
+colour rose in his face and he drew back the hand, raised it,
+scrutinized it smilingly, and put it quietly on his hip.
+
+Still smiling he raised his eyes again to Courtrey's face.
+
+"Courtrey," he said, this time without the Mr., "I've come to Lost
+Valley to _stay_. I had hoped to be friends with all my neighbours. It
+would have made my work easier. However, with or without, I stay."
+
+And he picked up his hat, set it on his head, walked over to the brown
+horse, flung up the rein, mounted and rode out of the Stronghold in
+utter silence.
+
+His face was flaming, the blood of outraged dignity and deep anger
+beat in his temples like a drum. As he rode farther away he heard the
+embarrassing silence broken by the hoarse shouts of laughter of half
+drunken men.
+
+"Go to it," he said aloud, clinching his fists on his saddle horn,
+"this is part of my duty. The Big Chief was right when he said, 'If
+you help the Service to tame Lost Valley you've got your work cut
+out.' It's a man-size job. I mustn't doubt my ability."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+EL REY AND BOLT
+
+
+Tharon Last and all her followers held themselves in readiness for
+anything in the days that followed the taking of the herds from
+Courtrey's range.
+
+They locked their doors at night, stood double guard at corral and
+stable. Mothers scattered throughout Lost Valley gathered in their
+little ones and watched the slopes and levels when their men were
+out.
+
+But a strange quietness seemed to settle down upon them. That for
+which they waited did not materialize. Courtrey and his gun men rode
+into Corvan and up and down the Valley on mysterious missions which
+were as unsettling as open depredations, but nothing happened. In
+fact, Courtrey, burning with the new desire that was beginning to
+obsess him, was working out a new design.
+
+He began to draw away from Lola. His triweekly visits to the Golden
+Cloud dropped off a bit. He took to drifting about from saloon to
+saloon, to being less pronounced in his frequenting of one or two
+places.
+
+His cold eyes, however, set in their narrow slits beneath the heavy
+brows, picked out every settler that he met and promised vague things
+for the future. He knew to a man who had ridden up from Last's that
+day, and he meant that not one should escape full payment--some time.
+Now he thought of the girl who had defied him and he waited with
+leaping pulse. The memory of that kiss, taken by violence at her
+western door, was with him night and day. She stood for right and the
+dignity of order. He meant, for a time, to play her hand.
+
+Therefore the settlers waited, and held their breath while they did
+so.
+
+And Courtrey took to riding much more alone, to watching the slopes
+and stretches with a hand at his hat-brim, shading his keen eyes. He
+looked far and wide in the golden summer land for the sight of a
+silver horse cutting down the wind with a slim girl in saddle.
+
+But Tharon was busy at the Holding and El Rey stamped and whistled in
+his paddock. The mistress knew that she had set stern tides flowing in
+the Valley, that sooner or later they were due to sweep away the peace
+and quiet that pervaded the cottonwoods and the singing springs. She
+knew that Courtrey waited, but she made the most of that waiting.
+
+Conford and Billy and the rest of the riders made strong bolts for all
+the doors of the house, reinforced the fences that held the herds at
+night, put trick locks on all the gates.
+
+But the time came when the close retreat became irksome to the girl,
+and she went from room to room in an uneasiness that was foreign to
+her calm and happy nature. She read over and over the two or three old
+books that had been at the Holding since she could remember, made new
+covers for the tables in the living room, kept the hands of the Virgin
+full of fresh offerings. But these things staled.
+
+She began to long for the distances, the open spaces, the feel of the
+swooping stallion under her sailing down the wind. Courtrey or no
+Courtrey, she could not fight it down. So, on a golden day when all
+the boys were out with the herds and only the Indian _vaqueros_ left
+in charge by Conford were at the stables, she flung the big saddle
+with its silver studs and its sombre stain on El Rey, mounted and went
+out and away like the wind itself. Not since the day of the raid on
+Courtrey's stolen herds had she been on El Rey's back and the first
+long leap and drop of the great horse beneath her set the lights to
+sparkling in her eyes, the blood to burning in her golden cheeks. She
+lay low on his neck and let him run, and her heart leaped up with
+lightness as it ever did when she rode in these thundering bursts.
+
+[Illustration: IN FACT COURTREY, BURNING WITH THE NEW DESIRE THAT WAS
+BEGINNING TO OBSESS HIM, WAS WORKING OUT A NEW DESIGN]
+
+There was no other horse in Lost Valley like the great king! Neither
+Redbuck nor Golden nor Drumfire! Neither Sweetheart nor Westwind! No,
+nor any Ironwood Bay that came down from Courtrey's Stronghold, Bolt
+and Arrow not excepted.
+
+Tharon laughed and stroked the king's neck, thewed like steel beneath
+her hands. She had no fear of Courtrey and his hired killers. Sooner
+or later the issue would come, of course. Then she would kill the man
+as she had promised Jim Last, without a thought.
+
+Nay, she thought of Ellen, fragile white flower, of whom she had
+heard.
+
+A softening came about her young mouth at thought of her, a shadow
+flickered in her blue eyes for a moment. Then it was gone and she
+laughed, a whooping gale of joy, there alone in the green stretches
+between the earth and sky, with the note of El Rey's speed steadily
+rising in her ears.
+
+It beat in her very heart, that singing note. She loved the king as
+she loved nothing else on earth, save only the memory of her father.
+
+She went south toward the Black Coulee and she thanked her stars that
+her riders were grazing the herds north toward the Cup Rim. Here there
+was none to say her nay, to urge her with loving solicitude to go
+back.
+
+The miles sped backward and she scarce noted their travel. She drew
+the king down a bit, slowed him from the swooping run, set him into
+the wonderful rock-and-away of the singlefoot and retied the ribbon on
+her hair. She wore no hat this day and the tawny cloud of her hair
+fluffed back from her forehead, straining at its bands, its loose ends
+standing up like fairy stuff all over her head. So, with her two arms
+held high above her and the reins in her teeth, she rode down by the
+mouth of Black Coulee--and up from the depths of the rugged wash that
+split the plain for seven miles there came across her path a man on a
+great bay horse.
+
+Courtrey on Bolt! She knew the beautiful animal even so far away. It
+did not need the challenging toss of El Rey's head, the piercing
+scream that rang from his open mouth across the silence, nor the
+sudden lunge and strain against the bit.
+
+That was Bolt, the mighty, and no mistake. None but Arrow carried his
+splendid head so regally, _none_ other bore so huge a cloud of mane on
+his arching neck, so long a tail that spread like a fan between his
+knees and almost swept the ground.
+
+So, Courtrey came out of the Coulee to meet her! He would, maybe,
+force the issue. But Tharon was not ready for that. What was plain
+killing? No, she wanted more than that. She wanted to see him scourged
+and beaten, humiliated and robbed as he had robbed Lost Valley.
+
+So she turned El Rey, though it took the whole strength of her young
+arms, and headed him back the way they had come. With the first turn
+and straightening leap her heart thumped hard against her ribs.
+
+There, between her and the Holding, far distant, there were two
+riders--and they rode bay horses, both!
+
+She made no doubt that they were Wylackie Bob and Black Bart, on Arrow
+and Slingshot.
+
+A sudden mist of fear came across her eyes. A tightening caught her
+throat. She looked around the illimitable spaces that stretched away
+on all sides. There was nothing in all the spreading plains but the
+three riders, sprung from nowhere, it seemed, and herself.
+
+Courtrey came rapidly up toward her, swinging a bit to the west. The
+others, set somewhat apart to right and left, bore down upon her. It
+looked very much as if they meant to ride her down to the Black
+Coulee.
+
+Once in its sheltering deep wash she would be helpless, cut off from
+escape. The Black Coulee went back into the eastern hills, lost itself
+up in the rugged and torturous clefts and chasms that cut the unknown
+ramparts, dark with forest and mysterious.
+
+No! Not the Black Coulee and Courtrey to take her prisoner!
+
+She looked this way and that. Then she saw that toward her right she
+had some margin. There was space there to swing away from the man in
+front who came like the wind itself toward her. She caught the seeming
+of great speed and her heart leaped again.
+
+She recalled the day she had asked Jack Masters if Bolt could run like
+El Rey.
+
+"How do I know?" he had answered. "I know it was speed, an' that is
+all." True enough. It was Bolt, coming like his namesake, down along
+the sloping stretches.
+
+But a great wave of exultation swept over her. She rose in her
+stirrups, shook an insulting hand above her, dropped on El Rey's neck,
+swerved him east and swept away toward the lifting skirts of the
+wooded hills. She heard a yell behind her, glanced back and saw that
+the three Ironwoods were sweeping behind her, closing in together. It
+was to be a race at last!
+
+At last the whispered comparisons that had stirred under the speech of
+the Valley concerning the Ironwoods and the Finger Marks was to have
+justification. For the first and only time, in her knowledge, they
+were to run.
+
+"All right!" cried Tharon aloud. "Come on, you bastards! It's the king
+you come against an' Jim Last's blood! You'll never put a hand on
+either."
+
+She struck her heels into El Rey's flanks, leaned over her pommel,
+wished she was on the king's bare back, reached her hands far out
+along the reins and began to call in his ear.
+
+"Yeeoo! Yeeoo! Yeeoo!" she cried, a high, exciting note that keened in
+the singing wind. And El Rey, ever keen to run for no reason, finding
+himself called upon, stretched out his great body, dropped low to
+earth and began to run. The wind cut by Tharon's face like a knife in
+the first few leaps.
+
+It shut her eyes in a dozen. She rode and laughed with a half sob in
+her throat. The thunder of the king's iron-shod hoofs was in her ears
+like the roar of the spring freshets when the empty canyons poured
+their temporary torrents down the Rockface into the Valley.
+
+She knew he was running as she had never ridden before. She had never
+called upon him before. It was like being adrift upon the wind. She
+heard the note of his speed rising in her ears. It was as it had ever
+been, save that it was a higher note, thinner, sharper. There was
+scarce a sense of touch beneath her, a lack of jar, of vibration, so
+evenly and smoothly did the shining hoofs take the grassy plain.
+
+Tears were in her eyes. Laughter was on her lips. This was speed
+indeed! She had a sick longing that Jim Last might see his two loved
+ones go!
+
+Then she gathered herself to turn her head across her leaning shoulder
+and look back.
+
+As her eyes swept into focus behind, the laughter slipped off her lips
+as if wiped by an invisible hand.
+
+There, the same distance away as when they started, rode Courtrey!
+
+No farther away!
+
+Bolt, shining in the sun, was keeping pace with El Rey!
+
+Farther back--a little farther back--was Arrow, running magnificently,
+too.
+
+A greater distance behind the two came Slingshot.
+
+Tharon was frightened. Not for herself. Not for the intent of the men
+who came after her. Not for gun-fire, nor for capture.
+
+She was afraid for the king! Afraid that Bolt could hold that
+wonderful pace! Then a surging rage rose and sickened her.
+
+She leaned down again and called once more into the stallion's ear and
+once more the note rose a notch. She felt that great pulsing seeming
+of reserve. Always when she called there was the answer. The plain
+swam beneath her like a blur. The thunder of the king's hoofs was a
+single note also.
+
+Then Tharon raised her eyes and saw that she had left the open land
+behind. The mountains were rising swiftly before, she was sweeping up
+their skirts. Trees flew by. She heard the singing of waters. The
+forests seemed to come down out of the skies to meet her, dark,
+forbidding.
+
+She felt a sense of disaster, of helplessness. Where was she going,
+she and El Rey, with her enemies behind and coming fast? What was to
+be the end of the race? And then, all suddenly, the woods seemed to
+fall away on either side, a gateway to open up before her. A lovely
+open glade spread into the heart of the forest and the great king
+thundered in between the guarding pines. Like a silver flame he shot
+up the sloping floor, slowed, changed and came to stop before a cabin
+that sat securely at the glade's head.
+
+With the crashing pound of El Rey's ploughing hoofs upon the very
+stones at the step, a man came quickly from the interior of the cabin
+and stepped out, his hand lifted.
+
+Tharon Last, her hair beating on her shoulders, her face pale as
+ashes, her breast heaving, looked back toward the opening in the
+trees, and saw Courtrey swing in a wide arc and circle past to
+disappear toward the north.
+
+After him swept his two lieutenants, to fade swiftly from sight behind
+the shielding forest.
+
+A grim expression spread over the face of the man at the step as he,
+too, beheld the end of the vital play.
+
+Then he looked up at the girl on the silver stallion and his dark eyes
+were alight.
+
+"What's this?" he asked abruptly.
+
+Then Tharon seemed to become conscious of him for the first time.
+
+She looked down at him and the black pupils were spread across the
+azure of her eyes, making them strangely exciting in their straight
+glance.
+
+"This," she said, panting, "is some of the law of Lost Valley.
+Courtrey's law. That is the man I'm goin' to kill some day."
+
+Kenset felt the blood flow back upon his heart, an icy flood. The
+words were simple, sincere, unconscious of dramatic effect. They were
+as final as death itself, and he dropped his eyes unconsciously to the
+two guns at her hips. He wondered why she had ridden without a shot
+this time.
+
+He found his lips suddenly dry and moistened them before he spoke.
+
+"Why?" he asked, and his voice sounded strange to him.
+
+"Because," said Tharon simply, "because he kissed me--once--an' shot
+my daddy--in th' back, th' hound!"
+
+"God!" said Kenset
+
+For a moment there was silence while a bird called sharply from a pine
+top and the voice of the little stream became subtly audible.
+
+It seemed to the man that all his values of life had suddenly become
+shifted, changed. The commonplace had become the unreal, the unlikely
+the familiar.
+
+Guns and threats and racing horses with a woman for prize became on
+the moment natural events in this hidden setting.
+
+And what a woman she was! He looked up in her face again and saw there
+sweetness and strength, and grim purpose beyond his conception. He
+knew that her words were downright, and that they meant no more to her
+than duty to be done, a conscience cleared of debt. He glanced at the
+hand lying so quietly on the pommel and thought of it as stained with
+blood. At the fancy he frowned and mentally shook himself.
+
+Then, with an impulse wholly beyond his command, he reached up and
+laid his own hand over that one on the pommel.
+
+"Miss Last," he said gravely, "I have no words to express what I feel
+this moment about Lost Valley and its people. Will you get down and
+let me show you my house, here in my glade?"
+
+Tharon sat quietly for a moment and looked down at him. She did not
+remove her hand from under his, neither did she seem to be conscious
+of it.
+
+"Why should I?" she asked presently, "you don't owe me anything. I
+sent you away from my house. I wouldn't have come here if I'd known
+where I was goin'. It was a chance."
+
+"Granted. And yet I want you to come across my threshold, to sit in my
+big chair. Will you come?"
+
+Never in her life had the girl heard so low a voice. It was soft and
+gentle, yet full of a vibrant quality that belied its softness. The
+man himself was unlike Lost Valley men. He wore the olive drab
+trousers of the semi-military uniform, the leather leggings, a tan
+leather belt and a soft woolen shirt of the same drab color. It lay
+open at the throat, and the base of his strong neck was white as a
+woman's. The dark eyes upturned to hers were deep and winning. The
+dark beard showed through his sharply shaven cheeks where the red
+blood pulsed, like dusky shadows.
+
+A strange man, surely.
+
+Tharon wondered what made him so different from other men she had
+known. There was Billy who had come into Lost Valley from somewhere
+"below," and Conford, and Curly. Jack Masters had been born in the
+Valley. So had Bent Smith. These men were her men, like herself and
+Jim Last. This man was from "below," too, yet he was unlike.
+
+While she studied him he met her glance with the same grave look.
+
+Presently, without a word, she swung herself from the saddle, dropped
+El Rey's rein, and stepped around his shoulder.
+
+"All right," she said briefly, "but I won't stay any longer than I let
+you stay."
+
+For the first time Kenset laughed.
+
+"Twenty minutes, then," he said, "I don't think you let me exceed that
+limit."
+
+He led the way to the door, stepped back and let her enter. As she did
+so she passed close to him and caught the scent of him, the clean
+soft smell of shaving soap, blended with the aroma of good tobacco.
+
+That, too, was different.
+
+Inside the cabin there was a sense of comfort, of brightness. The long
+pennants, like captured rainbows, tacked to the rough walls, the soft
+toned prints, the gay cushions, all these lent an air of permanence,
+of home, that she had never before seen in a man's cabin. She stood
+and looked all around with that same half-insolent stare which had
+greeted Kenset at the Holding that memorable day.
+
+Then she went slowly forward and sat down in the big chair by the
+table.
+
+The man stood in her presence for a moment, thereby giving a subtle
+effect of deference which was not wholly lost upon Tharon, though she
+would have been at a loss to define it.
+
+Then, he, too, sat down on the edge of the table desk in the corner,
+and with folded arms waited while she finished her scrutiny of the
+interior.
+
+"I am proud of my home, Miss Last," he said presently. "What do you
+think of it?"
+
+"I think," said Tharon slowly, "that it looks like there's a woman
+somewhere."
+
+This time Kenset laughed in earnest, a ringing peal that startled El
+Rey at the doorstep, and made him clink his bit-chains.
+
+"There is," said the man, "assuredly."
+
+Tharon turned her head and looked quickly over her shoulder.
+
+"Where?" she asked in surprise.
+
+"There in my big chair."
+
+"Oh--I meant a woman livin' here, th' woman who owns the pretties."
+
+And she waved a hand at the gay furnishings.
+
+"No," said Kenset, "these are all my own pretties. I have books, as
+you see, and my maps and several more pictures to put up, not to
+mention some Mexican pottery that I brought from Ciudad Juarez, and my
+chiefest treasure, a tapestry from France. That last I can't decide
+upon. I have two splendid spaces--over there between the northern
+windows, facing the door, and yonder at the end. Perhaps you will be
+good enough to help me choose."
+
+There was a boyish eagerness in his voice.
+
+"Will you? After a while, I mean, when you have rested from your
+ride."
+
+"Rested?"
+
+Tharon looked at him in wonder. That ride had been like wine to her, a
+stimulant, a thing that sent the blood pounding in her veins.
+
+Over the excitement had fallen a subtle shade, however, a hush, with
+the sight of Bolt so close behind El Rey. If it had not been for that
+grave thing she would have felt like a wound-up spring, intent with
+energy, filled with action. She was always so when El Rey ran beneath
+her. And this stranger spoke of rest! Tharon Last could ride all day
+without a thought of rest.
+
+"Sure," she said, "I'll help you if I can. But what's this thing?"
+
+"A sort of picture," replied Kenset quickly, "a picture woven in
+cloth. But first, if you'll be so kind, I want you to break bread with
+me. You said we would not be friends. I'm not so sure of that. There
+is nothing like a man's bread and salt for the refutation of logic."
+
+He slipped off the desk with a lithe rippling of his body, but Tharon
+was first on her feet.
+
+"You mean stay to supper?" she asked decisively. "No, I can't do that.
+I took back a meal from you. That stan's between."
+
+"Why, you funny girl," said Kenset, "nothing stands between. And I
+don't mean supper, exactly, either. Please sit down."
+
+Tharon stood, considering. She turned the matter over in her mind.
+
+She had taken this man's house by storm. It had, indeed, given her
+refuge. If it had not been for the glade in the pines, she wondered
+where she would be now--driven deep into Black Coulee, she made no
+doubt, a prisoner to Courtrey.
+
+"All right," she said abruptly, "I'll stay. But you must be quick. Th'
+time is goin' fast."
+
+Kenset went swiftly across the cabin to that part which served as
+kitchen, and took from a curtain-covered set of shelves, a shiny
+nickel object on spindly legs, which he brought and placed near Tharon
+on the table.
+
+He struck a match and presently a clean blue flame grew up beneath
+it.
+
+He lifted the lid and filled the small pot, thereby exposed, with
+water from the bucket on a bench. Then he delved in one of the big
+trunks against the farther wall and brought out a little tin of cakes,
+such as one could buy in any city of the world.
+
+All this was absorbing to the girl in the big chair, who watched with
+grave eyes. And Kenset kept up a running stream of gay talk all the
+time. He wanted to make her at ease, to cover the thought of the
+strain between them, and how much he wanted to drive from his own mind
+the knowledge that this sweet and wholesome creature was a potential
+murderer, he did not know. From a can he measured chocolate. From a
+pan somewhere outdoors he brought milk. Sugar he added carefully as a
+woman, and presently he spread between them on the table a small
+repast that was strange to this girl of the wilderness.
+
+He watched her with appraising eyes and saw that there was in her no
+consciousness of the unusual. She might have sat at meat in the big
+room of the Holding for all the flutter there was in her.
+
+He told her somewhat of himself, of his life in the East, but he was
+careful not to ask about Lost Valley, to make mention of the
+circumstances that had brought her to his door. And so an hour passed
+as if it had been a bagatelle. The afternoon was waning when Tharon
+rose swiftly and abruptly terminated this first visit inside his home
+of any Lost Valley denizen.
+
+"Bring out your picture," she said decisively, "I'll help you hang it,
+an' then I must go home."
+
+So Kenset dived once more into the mysterious recesses of the trunk
+and this time brought out a thing of rare beauty and value, a large
+tapestry, some four by six feet in size, a wonderful thing of soft and
+deathless hues, of cunning distances, of Greek figures and leaning
+trees, of sea-line so faint as to be almost lost in the misty skies.
+
+"Oh!" said Tharon Last with an intake of her breath, "Oh, where do
+they make such things?"
+
+"Far on the other side of the world," said Kenset gently, pleased
+with the wonder in her wide eyes, the evident and quick realization of
+beauty.
+
+She whirled from it and glanced quickly at the two spaces on the
+rugged walls.
+
+"There," she said, pointing to the broad expanse between the northern
+windows, "hang it there."
+
+"Done," said Kenset, and went promptly for a hammer.
+
+When the huge thick mat was securely stretched in place, Tharon
+helping to hold it while he pounded in the broad-topped tacks, Kenset
+stepped back and wondered how he had ever for a moment considered
+hanging it in any other spot. The tempered light from the door came in
+upon it, bringing out each enchanted charm, each tender vista.
+
+"Wonderful!" he said to himself, "I never knew how lovely it was amid
+conventional surroundings!"
+
+"Huh?" asked Tharon.
+
+The man laughed in spite of himself and turned his eyes to hers, to
+lose his quick amusement in the earnest blue depths that seemed to
+question him at every angle.
+
+"I mean that it looks better here in my cabin than it ever did on city
+walls."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well--I don't know. Contrast, perhaps."
+
+Tharon stood a moment thinking.
+
+"Perhaps," she answered slowly, "yes, perhaps. I guess that's why you
+seem so diff'rent to me. Jim Last used to say that was why th' Valley
+was so soft-like an' lovely, contrasted by th' Rockface."
+
+"Do I seem different to you?" asked Kenset quickly. "How?"
+
+"Yes. I don't know how. You seem soft, like a woman--some women--an'
+I'm afraid----"
+
+She stopped suddenly, abruptly halted in her naive speech, as if she
+had come face to face with something she had not meant to meet.
+
+"Afraid?" probed the man gravely, "go on. You are afraid--of what?"
+
+"No," said Tharon, "I won't say it"
+
+"Please do. I want to know."
+
+"Then," answered the girl straightly, after the honest and downright
+fashion of all her dealings, "I'm afraid you are--are too soft. You
+don't pack a gun. I'm afraid you wouldn't use it if you did."
+
+There was a certain finality about the short speech, as if she had put
+the last word of condemnation to his estate.
+
+Kenset looked down at his hands, spread them out a bit.
+
+"You're right," he said shortly, though his voice was still gentle. "I
+don't. And I wouldn't. Not until the last extremity."
+
+"An' what would that be?" she asked.
+
+"I don't just know, Miss Last," he answered smiling and raising his
+eyes once more to hers, "it would have to be--the _last_ extremity, I
+know.
+
+"The hands of all my forbears have been clean, so far as I know. I
+have a deep horror of that imaginary stain which human blood seems to
+leave on the hands of the killer. Blood guilt."
+
+"You call it that? My daddy had his killin's, but they were all in
+fair-an'-open. _I_ called him a _man_."
+
+There was a ringing quality in her voice, a depth and resonance that
+spoke of war and heroes. The fire that all the Holding knew was
+suddenly in her eyes, flashing and flaming. Kenset caught it, and a
+thrill shot through him.
+
+"Granted," he said quickly. "But is there only _one_ type of man?"
+
+"For me," said Tharon, "yes."
+
+"I'm sorry," said he, and for the life of him he did not know why.
+
+"So'm I," said Tharon honestly.
+
+They looked at each other for a pregnant moment, while a silence fell
+on the cabin and they could hear the singing water running down the
+slopes.
+
+Then the girl stooped and rearranged the cushion in the big chair,
+laid a book more neatly on top of another at the table's edge.
+
+"Th' time is up," she said, "I must be goin'."
+
+She straightened her shoulders and looked at him again.
+
+"I thank you for th' meal," she said, "an' some day I'll return it--in
+some manner. I don't know yet just what you're here for, nor if you're
+Courtrey's man or not--------"
+
+"Good Lord!" ejaculated Kenset, but she went on.
+
+"I won't shake hands with you, for whilst I ain't done no killin' yet,
+I'm sworn--an' Jim Last's hands was red--they would be to such as
+you--an' down to th' last drop o' blood, th' last beat o' my heart,
+I'm Jim Last's girl--th' best gun man in Lost Valley, if I do say
+so."
+
+And she swung quickly to the door.
+
+Kenset followed her. He longed for words, but found none.
+
+There was a sudden tragic seeming in the very air, a change from the
+pleasant commonplace to the tense and unexpected. It was always so in
+these strange meetings with the people of Lost Valley, it seemed, as
+if he was never to find his way among them, the sane and quiet course
+that he must travel.
+
+As they reached the step at the door sill El Rey stamped and whinnied
+a shrill blast. In through the gateway between the pines there came a
+rider on a running horse, Billy on Golden who ploughed to a stop
+before them, his grey eyes troubled.
+
+"Hello, Billy," said Tharon. "How's this?"
+
+"Been lookin' for you," said the boy. "We saw Courtrey an' his
+ruffians ridin' up east--watched 'em with th' glass, an' Anita said
+you rode south. Thought you might have met 'em."
+
+"I didn't meet 'em, so to speak," she said, smiling, "though if I'd
+been on anythin' but El Rey I would. They tried to drive me into Black
+Coulee."
+
+"Hell!" said Billy softly.
+
+Then the Mistress of Last's remembered her manners.
+
+"Billy," she said, "I make you acquainted with Kenset of th'
+foothills. I rode in here just in time to shake th' Stronghold
+bunch."
+
+The two men spoke, reached to shake each other's hands, and took a
+long survey that was mutual. As the two pairs of eyes met, a wall
+seemed to rear itself between them, a mist, a curtain, something
+intangible, but there.
+
+They looked across the woman's shoulder, and from that moment she was
+to stand between, though what there could be in common between the man
+in the U. S. service and the common rider from Last's was not
+apparent. El Rey was eager for flight and by the time Tharon's foot
+was in the stirrup he was up on his hind feet, fore feet beating the
+air, silver mane like a flying cloud. The girl rose with him
+gracefully, threw her leg across the saddle, waved a hand to Kenset in
+the door, and in another moment they were gone away down the grassy
+slope, out through the opening, had stretched away along the
+oak-dotted plain, swung toward the north, and were out of sight.
+
+The forest man turned away from the doorway, stood a moment looking
+over the cabin where the late light was making golden patterns on the
+green and brown rug, sighed and reached for his pipe.
+
+Somehow all the spirit seem to have gone from the summer day. The long
+twilight was setting in.
+
+"She wouldn't shake hands," he muttered to himself, "and what she said
+was true as death. She's _sworn_--and it is a solemn oath to her. God
+help the man who killed her daddy!"
+
+Then once more he sighed, unconsciously.
+
+"And Lord God help her!" he finished very gravely, "she is so
+sweet--so wild and spirited and sweet."
+
+Tharon and Billy let the horses run. Golden was a racer himself,
+though he could not hold a candle to the silver king, and the two
+young creatures atop were free as the summer winds, as buoyant and
+filled with joy of being. So they shot down along the levels, Tharon
+holding El Rey up a bit, though it was a man-size job to do so, and
+Billy's rein swinging loose on Golden's neck. They passed the last of
+the scattered oaks, came out to the green stretches. The sun was
+swinging like a copper ball above the Wall at the west. Down through
+the canyons the light came in long red shafts that cut through the
+cobalt shadows like sharp lances of fire and reached half across Lost
+Valley. All the western part of the Valley lay in that blue-black
+shadow. They could see Corvan set like a dull gem in the wide green
+country, the scattered ranches, miles apart.
+
+They swung down to the west a bit, for Tharon said she wanted to go by
+the Gold Pool and see how it was holding out.
+
+"Fine," said Billy, "she's deep as she ever was at this time of year,
+an' cold as snow."
+
+Where one tall cottonwood stood like a sentinel in the widespread
+landscape they drew rein and dismounted. Here a huge boulder cropped
+from the plain and under its protecting bulk there lay as lovely a
+spring as one would care to see, deep and golden as its name implied,
+above its swirling sands, for the waters were in constant turmoil as
+they pressed up from below.
+
+The girl lay flat at its edge and with her face to the crystal
+surface, drank long and deeply.
+
+As she looked up with a smile, Billy Brent felt the heart in him
+contract with a sudden ache.
+
+Her fresh face, its cheeks whipped pink under their tan by the winds,
+its blue eyes sparkling, its wet red lips parted over the white teeth,
+hurt him with a downright pain.
+
+"Oh, Tharon," he said with an accent that was all-revealing, "Oh,
+Tharon, dear!"
+
+The girl scrambled to her feet and looked at him in surprise.
+
+"Billy," she said sharply, "what's th' matter with you? Are you
+sick?"
+
+"Yes," said the boy with conviction, "I am. Let's go home."
+
+"Sick, how?" she pressed, with the born tyranny of the loving woman,
+"have you got that pain in your stomach again?"
+
+Billy laughed in spite of himself, and the romantic ache was
+shattered.
+
+"For the love of Pete!" he complained, "don't you ever forget that?
+You know I've never et an ounce of Anita's puddin's since. No, I
+think," he finished judiciously as he mounted Golden, "that I've
+caught somethin', Tharon--caught somethin' from that feller of th'
+red-beet badge. Leastways I've felt it ever sence I left th'
+clearin'."
+
+And as they swung away from the spring toward the Holding, far ahead
+under its cottonwoods, he let out the young horse for another
+stretch.
+
+"Bet Golden can beat El Rey up home," he said over his shoulder.
+
+"Beat th' king?" cried Tharon aghast, "you're foolin', Billy, an' I
+don't want to run nohow. I've run enough this day."
+
+So the rider held up again and together they paced slowly up through
+the gathering twilight where long blue shadows were reaching out to
+touch them from the western Wall and the golden shafts were turning to
+crimson, were lifting as the sun sank, were travelling up and up along
+the eastern mountains toward the pale skies. Soon they rode in purple
+dusk while the whole upper world was bathed in crimson and lavender
+light and Lost Valley lay deep in the earth's heart, a sinister spot,
+secret and dark.
+
+"Sometimes, Billy," said Tharon softly, "I like to ride like this, in
+th' big shadows--an' then I like to have some one with me that I know,
+some one like you, some one who will understand when I don't talk, an'
+who is always there beside me. It's a wonderful feelin'--but somehow,
+it's soft, too--mebby too soft--like--like--like a woman who's just a
+woman."
+
+The boy swallowed once, miserably.
+
+"Always, Tharon," he said huskily, "always--when you want me--or need
+me--I'll be there, beside you. An' you don't need to even speak a word
+to me. I'm like th' dogs--there whether you call or not."
+
+"I know," said the girl, and reaching over she caught the rider's
+hand, brown beneath its vanity of studded leather cuff, and gave it a
+little tender pressure.
+
+Billy set his teeth to keep from crushing her fingers, and together
+they rode slowly up along the sounding slopes to the beautiful
+security and comfort of Last's Holding.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE SHOT IN THE CANONS
+
+
+Kenset of the foothills was very busy. Between study of his maps and
+the endless riding of their claimed areas he was out from dawn till
+dark.
+
+He found, indeed, that none but he, of late years, had ridden those
+sloping forest covered skirts. Some one, sometime, must have done so,
+else the maps themselves would not have been, but what marks they must
+have left were either gone through the erosion of the elements or been
+wantonly destroyed.
+
+He fancied the former had been the case, for he saw no signs of
+destruction, and the very curiosity of the denizens of the Valley
+precluded familiarity with forest work.
+
+So he laid out for himself the labour of a dozen men and went at it
+with a vim that kept him at high tension. Therefore he had little time
+to think of Tharon Last and the strange life in Lost Valley. Only
+when he rode between given points, unintent on the land around, did he
+give up to his speculations. At such times his mind invariably went
+back to that first day at Baston's steps and he saw her again as he
+had seen her then, tense, stooping, her elbows bent above the guns at
+her hips, coming backward along the porch, feeling for the steps with
+her foot.
+
+Always he saw the ashen whiteness of her cheeks beneath her blowing
+hair.
+
+Always he frowned at the memory and always he felt a thrill go down
+his nerves. What was she, anyway, this wild, sweet creature of the
+wilderness who held herself aloof from his friendship, and said that
+she was "sworn?"
+
+Kenset, sane, quiet, peace loving, shook himself mentally and tried
+not to think of her. But day after day he came down along the edges of
+the scattered woods where the cattle grazed--on the forest lands--and
+looked over to where the Holding lay like a greener spot on the green
+stretches.
+
+He thought of her, living in this feudal hold, mistress of her riders,
+her cattle, and her wonderful racing horses of the Finger Marks,
+sweet, fair, wholesome--with the six-guns at her slender hips!
+
+If only he, Kenset, could take those weapons from her clinging hands,
+could wipe out of her young heart the calm intent to kill!
+
+It was preposterous! It was awful!
+
+Bred to another life, another law, another type of woman, he could not
+reconcile this girl of Lost Valley with anything he knew.
+
+He went over in his mind again and again the serene calmness of her in
+his cabin that day of the race with Courtrey, and shook his head in
+puzzlement.
+
+But why should he trouble himself about her at all?
+
+He had come here in his Government's service to reclaim its forest, to
+look after its interest.
+
+Why should he bother with the moral code of Lost Valley?
+
+But reason as he might, the face of Tharon Last came back to haunt
+him, waking or asleep.
+
+He knew that it troubled him and was, in a way, ashamed. So he worked
+hard at his tasks, relocated boundaries, marked them with a peculiar
+blaze in convenient trees which looked something like this:
+
+and set up monuments with odd and undecipherable hieroglyphics upon
+them.
+
+And with each blaze, each mark and monument and sign, he drew closer
+in about him the net of suspicion and disapproval which was weaving in
+Lost Valley, for there was not one but ran the gamut of close
+inspection and speculation by Courtrey's men, by the settlers who came
+many miles over from the western side of the Valley for the purpose,
+and by Tharon's riders.
+
+Low mutters of disapproval growled in the Valley.
+
+Who was this upstart, anyway, to come setting signs and marks in the
+land that had been theirs from time immemorial? What mattered the
+little copper-coloured badge on his breast? What mattered it that he
+was beginning to send out word of his desire to work with and for the
+cattlemen of Lost Valley, the settlers, the homesteaders?
+
+What was this matter of "grazing permits" of which he had spoken at
+the Stronghold?
+
+Permits?
+
+They had grazed their cattle where and when they chose--and
+could--from their earliest memory.
+
+They asked no leave from Government.
+
+When Kenset rode into Corvan he was treated with exaggerated politeness
+by those with whom he had to deal, with utter unconsciousness by all
+the rest. To cattleman and settler alike he was as if he had not been.
+
+None spoke to him in the few broad streets, none asked him to a bar to
+drink.
+
+Serene, quiet, soft spoken, he came and went about his business, and
+sneers followed him covertly.
+
+It was not long after Tharon's visit to the cabin in the glade, that
+Kenset, riding alone along the twilight land, passed close to the
+mouth of Black Coulee one day at dusk. He rode loosely, slouching
+sidewise in his saddle, for he had been to Corvan for his monthly mail
+and a few supplies tied in a bag behind his saddle, and he carried his
+broad hat in his hand.
+
+The little cool wind that blew in from the narrow gorge of the Bottle
+Neck and spread out like an invisible fan, breathed on his face with a
+grateful touch. The day had been hot, for the summer was opening
+beautifully, and he had ridden Captain far. Therefore he jogged and
+rested, his arms hanging listlessly at his sides, his thoughts two
+thousand miles away.
+
+At the mouth of Black Coulee where the sinister split of the deep wash
+came up to the level, there grew a fringe of wild poplar trees. They
+were beautiful things, tall and straight and thickly covered with a
+million shiny leaves that whirled and rustled softly in the wind,
+showing all their soft white silver sides when the breeze came up from
+the south as it did this day. There was water in Black Coulee, many
+small springs, not deep enough nor steady enough to count for water in
+a range country, but sufficient to keep the poplars growing on the rim
+of the great wash, to stand them thick on the caving sides. Whole
+benches of earth with their trees upon them slipped down these sides
+from time to time, making of the Coulee a mysterious labyrinth of
+thickets and shelves, of winding ways and secret places.
+
+Kenset had heard a few wild stories about Black Coulee. Sam Drake had
+talked a bit more than most men of Lost Valley would have talked, and
+he had listened idly.
+
+Now as he rode up along the levels and neared the dark mouth of the
+cut he studied it with appraising eyes. It was sinister enough, in all
+truth, a deep, dark place behind its veil of poplars, secretive,
+hushed.
+
+The red light that dyed Lost Valley so wondrously at the hour of the
+sun's sharp decline above the peaks and ridges of the Canon Country
+was awash in all the great sunken cup, save at the west under the
+Rockface where the shadows were already dark.
+
+Kenset drank in the beauty of the scene with smiling eyes. Already a
+love for this hidden paradise had grown wonderfully in his heart. He
+felt as if he had never lived before, as if he had never known
+beauty.
+
+And so, dreaming a little of other scenes, smiling to himself, he
+jogged along on Captain and was nearly past the frowning mouth of the
+Coulee, when there came the sharp snap of a rifle in the stillness,
+and Captain changed his feet, sagged and quivered, then caught himself
+and leaped ahead. For one amazed moment Kenset thought the horse was
+hit. Then, as he straightened in his saddle and dropped his hand to
+catch up his hanging rein, he looked quickly down. Where he was
+accustomed to the smooth feel of the pommel beneath his palm there was
+a sharp raw edge. A splinter of wood stood up and a small flare of
+leather hung to one side.
+
+A bullet, singing out of Black Coulee, had carried away part of the
+pommel.
+
+Kenset shut his lips in a new line, gathered up his rein and drew the
+horse down to a walk with an iron hand.
+
+Slowly, without a backward glance, he rode on across the darkening
+levels. He was no fool.
+
+He knew he had had his warning.
+
+Very well. He would give back his acceptance of that warning.
+
+He had said to Courtrey that night at the Stronghold that he had come
+to stay.
+
+No bunch of lawless bullies were going to scare him out.
+
+No other shot followed. He had not expected one.
+
+For a time after that he went about his work as usual. Nothing
+happened; he had no outward sign of the distaste with which he was
+regarded by all factions alike, it seemed.
+
+He met Courtrey face to face in Corvan one day and spoke to him
+civilly, but Courtrey did not speak. Wylackie Bob did, however--a
+sneering salutation that was a covert insult. Kenset touched his hat
+with dignity and passed on.
+
+"Of all th' tenderfeet!" said Baston, watching the small by-play. "I
+b'lieve you could spit on him, boys."
+
+"I don't," spoke up Old Pete, shuffling by on his bandy legs,
+"sometimes that quiet, soft-spoken kind rises--an' then hell's to pay
+in their veecinity."
+
+But Wylackie looked at the weazened snow-packer with his snake-like
+eyes and snapped out a warning.
+
+"Some folks takes sides too quick, sometimes."
+
+But Old Pete went on about his business. He knew, as did all the
+Valley, that a price was on his head with Courtrey's band for the
+daring leap which had saved the life of Tharon Last that day in
+spring.
+
+Sooner or later that price would be paid, but Old Pete was true
+western stuff. He had lived his life, had had his day, and he was full
+of pride at the turn of fate which had made him a hero in a way at the
+end.
+
+All the Valley stood off and admired Jim Last's daughter.
+
+Pete basked in the reflected light. And Tharon herself had taken his
+gnarled old hand one day in Baston's store and called him a
+thoroughbred.
+
+Folks in Lost Valley were chary of words, conservative to the last
+degree. That simple word, the handclasp, the look in the clear blue
+eyes, had been his eulogy.
+
+It was whispered about, as was every smallest happening, and came to
+the ears of Courtrey himself, who had promised those vague things for
+the future on the fateful night. But Courtrey was playing a waiting
+game. He was obsessed with the image of Tharon. Sooner or later he
+meant to have her, to install her at the Valley's head. He had always
+had what he wanted. Therefore, he expected to have this girl with the
+challenging eyes, the maddening mouth, like crimson sumac.
+
+Ellen?
+
+Already he was setting in motion a thing that was to take care of
+Ellen.
+
+The thing in hand now was to placate Tharon, the mistress of Last's,
+to play the overwhelming lover.
+
+Courtrey knew better than to go near the Holding. Bully that he was he
+yet had sense enough to know that no fear of him dwelt in the huge old
+house under the cottonwoods. If Tharon herself did not shoot him,
+one--or all--of her riders would. The day of the armed band riding
+down to take her was, if not past, passing fast. He recalled the look
+of the settlers--poor spawn that he hated--whirling their solid column
+behind her to face him that day from the Cup Rim's floor.
+
+No. Courtrey meant to have the girl some day--to hold in his arms that
+ached for her loveliness, the strong, resistant young body of her--to
+sate his thief's mouth with kisses. But he would call her to him of
+her own will, would taste the savage triumph of seeing her come suing
+for his mercy.
+
+If Tharon meant to break Courtrey, he meant no less to break her.
+
+Outlawry--mob law--they were pitted against each other.
+
+And, lifting its head dimly through the smother of hatred, of wrong,
+of repression and reprisal, another law was struggling toward the
+light in Lost Valley--the sane, quiet law of right and equality,
+typified by the smiling, dark-eyed man of the cabin in the forest
+glade.
+
+Courtrey sent word to Tharon--an illy spelled letter, mailed at
+Baston's--that he had meant nothing by that race above the Black
+Coulee, except another kiss. There was Courtrey's daring in the
+affronting words.
+
+She sent the letter back to him--riding in on El Key alone--with the
+outline of a gun traced across it.
+
+"Th' little wildcat!" grinned the man, "she's sure spunky!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once again Tharon met Kenset in the days that followed. Riding by the
+Silver Hollow she stopped one breathless afternoon, drank of the
+snow-cold waters, shared them with El Rey, dropped the rein over the
+stallion's head and flung herself full length on the earth beside the
+spring. A clump of willow trees grew here, for every spring in Lost
+Valley had its lone sentinels to call its presence across the
+stretching miles. As the girl lay flat on her back with her hands
+beneath her head, she looked up into the blue heart of the arching
+skies where the fleecy white clouds sailed, and a sense of sweetness
+and peace came down upon her like a garment.
+
+"You're sure some lovely spot, Lost Valley," she said aloud, "an' no
+mistake. I know, more'n ever as th' days go by that Jim Last was only
+jokin' when he told me of those other places out below, big as you,
+lovely as you. It just ain't possible. Is it, El Rey, old boy?"
+
+And she moved a booted foot to the king's striped hoof and tapped it
+smartly.
+
+El Rey, always aloof, always touchy, never sure of temper, jumped and
+snorted. The girl laughed and crossed her feet and fell to speculating
+idly about the world that lay beyond Lost Valley. Little she knew of
+it. Only the brief words of her father from time to time, the
+reluctant speech of Last's riders, for the master of the Holding had
+laid down the law concerning this.
+
+His daughter was of the Valley, content. He meant her to be so always.
+The man who had instilled into her young mind a discontent with her
+environment, a longing for the "flesh-pots" of the world as he had
+styled it once, would have had short shrift at Last's. He would have
+received his time and "gone packing" swiftly.
+
+And Tharon was content.
+
+Barring the loneliness that had come with Jim Last's death, she was
+well content.
+
+So she lay by the willows and hummed a sliding tune, a soft, sweet
+thing of minors and high notes falling, like rippling waters, and
+lazily watched the high white clouds sail by.
+
+And as she lay she became conscious of something else in the drowsing
+land beside herself and her horse. She felt it first, this presence--a
+thin, dim vibration that sang in the earth beneath her. It stopped the
+wordless song on her lips, stilled the breath in her throat, set every
+nerve in her to listening, as it were.
+
+Presently she sat up and felt quickly for the gun-butts in their
+scabbards. Then she parted the willows and looked out over the rolling
+slopes and levels. True enough. A horseman was coming in from the
+west, making for the Silver Hollow, but Tharon smiled and her fingers
+relaxed on the gun. This man rode straight--like a lance, she
+thought--and his mount was brown, a good-enough common horse, but no
+steed of Lost Valley.
+
+Captain lacked the fire, the ramping keenness of the Ironwoods, the
+spirit and dash of the Finger Marks. For a long time the girl in the
+willows watched them. Then as they came near she rose and caught El
+Rey's bridle.
+
+He was no gentleman, this big blue-silver king. He was savage and wild
+and imperious. He hated other horses with a quick hatred sometimes and
+had been known to wreak this sudden rage upon them in sickening fury.
+
+So Tharon held him with a strong brown hand wrapped in the chain below
+the Spanish spade bit in his mouth. She stood beside him, waiting, a
+slim, golden creature, tawny of hair and blue of eye, and the great
+horse towered above her mightily, his silver mane blowing up above his
+arching neck in the little wind that came from the south.
+
+They made a picture that Kenset never forgot, as he swung round the
+willows and faced them.
+
+El Rey screamed and pounded with his striped hoofs, but Tharon jerked
+him down with no gentle hand.
+
+"Be still, you bully!" she said sharply.
+
+"Why, Miss Last!" cried the forest man, "I'm so glad to meet you!"
+
+There was the genuine delight of a boy in his voice, and Tharon caught
+the note. The sweet, disarming smile parted her lips and she was all
+girl at the moment, artless, innocent, unstained by the shadow of
+lawlessness and crime that seemed to ever hang above her in Kenset's
+thoughts.
+
+"Are you?"
+
+"I certainly am."
+
+He swung down, gave Captain a drink at the edge of the spring farthest
+from El Rey, dropped the rein when he had finished, and swung around
+to face the girl. He took off his wide hat and wiped his forehead with
+a square of linen finer than anything of its kind she had ever seen.
+
+Then he stood for a moment looking straight into her eyes with his
+smiling dark ones. It seemed to Tharon that this man was always
+smiling.
+
+"This is your spring, isn't it?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. The Silver Hollow. Th' Gold Pool is farther south toward th'
+Black Coulee. There was another one, fine as this, perhaps a better
+one, up on th' Cup Rim Range, but Courtrey blew her up, damn him! She
+was called th' Crystal." Kenset caught his breath, mentally, all but
+physically, and put up a hand to cover his lips.
+
+This _was_ another type of woman from any he had ever met, in truth.
+
+The oath, rolling roundly over her full red lips, was as unconscious
+as the long breath that lifted her breast at the memory of that
+outrage.
+
+"We replaced her with a well--an' it's a corker. Mebby better than
+th' old Crystal, though she was a lovely thing. As clear as--as ice
+that's frozen hard without a ripple of white. You know that kind?"
+
+"Yes," said Kenset gravely.
+
+"Well," sighed Tharon, "she's gone, an' there ain't no use cryin' over
+spilt milk. What you ben a-doin' sence I helped you hang th'
+picture?"
+
+"Won't you sit down?" Kenset stepped aside. "It is uncomfortable to
+stand through a visit--and I mean to have a long talk-fest with you,
+if you will be so kind."
+
+Tharon flung herself down at the spring's edge, eased the right gun
+from under her hip, leaned on her elbow and prepared to listen.
+
+"Fire away," she said.
+
+Kenset laughed.
+
+"For goodness' sake!" he ejaculated, "I said visit. That takes two.
+What have you been doing?"
+
+"Well, everythin', mostly. Made a new shirt for Billy, for one thing.
+An' I showed Courtrey th' picture o' this."
+
+She patted the blue gun that lay half in her lap, its worn scabbard
+black against her brown skirt.
+
+Kenset sobered at once. As ever when he let his mind dwell on that
+dark shadow which sat so lightly on this girl, he had no feeling for
+mirth.
+
+A very real chill went down his spine and he looked intently into her
+eyes.
+
+"How?" he asked, "what did you do?"
+
+But Tharon shook her head.
+
+"Nothin' you'd understand," she said quietly.
+
+"I can show you something you will understand," he said, and reached
+for Captain's bridle. He pulled the horse around and pointed to the
+saddle horn.
+
+"See that?"
+
+She looked up quickly. With the sure instinct of a dweller in a gun
+man's land she knew the meaning of the splintered wood of the pommel,
+the torn and ragged leather that had covered it.
+
+"Hell!" she said softly, "where did you get that?"
+
+"At the mouth of Black Coulee, at dusk a week ago."
+
+For a long moment Tharon studied the saddle. Then her gaze dimmed,
+lengthened, went beyond into infinitude. The pupils of her eyes drew
+down to tiny points of black against the brilliant blue.
+
+At last she turned and held out a hand, rising from her elbow.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Mister," she said quaintly, "fer that day at the
+Holdin' an' th' meal I offered an' took, an' fer my words. I know now
+that you are--that you were--straight. I don't yet know what you may
+mean in Lost Valley with your talk of Government, but I do know you
+ain't a Courtrey man."
+
+Kenset took the hand. It was firm and shapely and vibrant with the
+young life there was in her. He laid his other one over it and held it
+in a close clasp for a moment.
+
+"I mean only right," he said, "sanity and law and decency. I think I
+have a big problem to handle here--aside from my work on the forest--a
+problem I must solve before I can be effective in that work--and I am
+more sincerely glad than I can say that my friend, the outlaw, took
+that warning shot at me. It ruined a perfectly good saddle, but it has
+made one point clear to you. I am no Courtrey man, and that's a solemn
+fact."
+
+"An' I ain't ashamed to say I'm glad, too," said Tharon.
+
+So, with the sun shining in the cloud-flecked heavens and the little
+winds blowing up from the south to ruffle the hair at the girl's
+temples, these two sat by the Silver Hollow and talked of a thousand
+things, after the manner of the young, for Kenset found himself
+reverting to the things of youth in the light of Tharon's grave
+simplicity.
+
+They looked into each other's eyes and found there strange depths and
+lights. They were aliens, strangers, groping dimly for a common
+ground, and finding little, though presently they fell once more upon
+the law in Lost Valley and earnestness deepened into gravity.
+
+"Miss Last," said Kenset, thrilling at his daring, "why must this law
+dwell in these?" and he reached a hand to tap the gun on her lap.
+
+"Why? That very question'd show your ignorance to any Lost Valley man.
+Because it's all there is. You've seen Courtrey. You've seen Steptoe
+Service. Can't you judge from them?"
+
+"Surely, so far as they two go. A bad man and a bad sheriff. But they
+are not all the officers of this County. Where and who is your
+Superior Judge?"
+
+"Poor ol' Ben Garland. Weaker'n skim milk. Scared to say his soul's
+his own."
+
+There was infinite scorn in her voice.
+
+"No, it's Steptoe Service, or nothin'."
+
+Kenset thought a moment.
+
+"Who's the Coroner?" he asked presently.
+
+"Jim Banner," she answered quickly, "as straight a man as ever lived.
+Brave, too. He's been shot at more'n once fer takin' exception to some
+raw piece o' work in this Valley, fer pokin' his nose in, so to speak.
+Jim Last used to say he was th' only _man_ at the Seat, which is
+Corvan, you know, of course."
+
+"District Attorney?"
+
+"Tom Nord. Keen as a razor an' married to Courtrey's sister. Now do
+you see why this is th' law?" She, too, tapped the gun.
+
+Kenset frowned and looked down along the green range. He thought of
+the unpainted pine building in Corvan which was the Court House. A
+strange personnel, truly, to invest it with authortity!
+
+"I see," he said briefly, "but there must be some way out. This is not
+the right way, the way that must come and last."
+
+Tharon's lips drew into the thin line that made them like her
+father's. "It's th' law that's here," she said and there was an
+instant coldness in her voice, "an' it's th' law that'll last until
+Courtrey or I go down."
+
+The man, watching, saw that thinning of the lips, the hardening of all
+the young lines of her face. He knew he had blundered. Talk was cheap.
+It was action that counted in Lost Valley.
+
+With a quick motion he reached over and caught the girl's hand and
+drew it to him, covering it with both of his.
+
+Her eyes followed, came to rest on his face, cool, appraising,
+waiting.
+
+She was, in all that had counted in his life, crude, untutored,
+basic.
+
+Yet that calm look made his impulsive action seem unpardonable in the
+next second. However a warm surge of feeling shot through him with the
+quiet resting of that firm brown hand between his own, and he held it
+tighter. Kenset had thought he was sophisticated, that little or
+nothing could stir him deeply--not since Ethel Van Riper had gone to
+Europe as the bride of the old Count of Easthaven. That had been four
+years back. He had been pretty young then, but the young feel deeply.
+
+Now he held a gun woman's hand in the thin shade of a willow clump in
+the heart of Lost Valley--and the blood surged in his ears, the levels
+and slopes danced before his vision.
+
+"Miss Tharon," he said, for the first time using her given name, "I
+beg your pardon. You are strong, simple, serene. You know your land
+and its ways. I am an alien, an interloper--but I can't bear to think
+of you as waiting for the time to kill a man--or to be killed in the
+killing. It sickens me."
+
+Tharon snatched her hand from his and leaped to her feet.
+
+"Don't talk like that!" she cried passionately, "I don't like to hear
+it! I thought you were a real man, maybe, but you're not! You--you're
+a woman! A soft woman--I hate th' breed!"
+
+Her face was flushed, for what reason Kenset, stunned by her vehement
+words, could not tell. She flung the rein up and followed it, leaping
+to saddle like a man.
+
+"I tol' you we couldn't be friends!" she cried, her eyes blazing with
+sudden fire, "there ain't no manner of use a-tryin'."
+
+Kenset, springing forward, caught El Rey's bit. The stallion reared
+and struck, but he held him down.
+
+"There is use, Tharon," he panted. "It's vital! Since that day on
+Baston's steps, when you backed out past me I have had you in my
+mind--my thoughts by day and night--there is use, and I'll keep your
+hands from blood--Courtrey's or any other--if it takes my life--so
+help me God!"
+
+The girl leaned down and her blue eyes blazed in his face.
+
+"An' make me false to th' crosses on Jim Last's stone?" she cried.
+"No--not you or anybody else--could do that trick! Let go!"
+
+The next moment she had whirled out from the flickering shade of the
+willows and was gone around toward the north--there was only the sound
+of hoofs ringing on the earth. Kenset, left alone where the Silver
+Hollow bubbled softly above its snowy sands, passed a trembling hand
+across his eyes and stood as in a trance.
+
+What did it mean? What had he promised? What vital emotion had gripped
+him that his usually quiet tongue had rushed into that torrential
+speech that dealt with life and death? What was Tharon Last to him?
+
+A figure of the old West! A romantic gun woman with her weapons on her
+hips! A rider of wild horses!
+
+Slowly, as if he had gained an added weight of years, he reined
+Captain and swung himself up. He rode east from the spring toward the
+lacy and far-reaching skirts of the forest, and for the first time he
+saw the rolling country with tragic eyes.
+
+It held deep issues--life and death and the passing or continuing of
+regimes and and dynasties--but it was a wondrous country, and, come
+good or bad, it had become his own. He swung around in his saddle and
+looked far back across the Valley. He saw the golden light on its
+uncounted acres, the shadow falling at the foot of the great Rockface,
+the mighty Wall itself with the silver ribbon of the Vestal's Veil
+falling straight down from the upper rim, the distant town, looking
+always like a dull gem in a dark setting, and a thrill shot to his
+heart.
+
+Yes, if he lived to do his work in the hidden Valley--if he was shot
+this night on his own doorstep, it was his country.
+
+He who was alien in every way, was yet native.
+
+Something in the depths of him came down as from far distant racial
+haunts and was at home.
+
+So he rode slowly up among the scattered oaks with his hands folded on
+the mutilated pommel, and he knew that his lines were definitely
+cast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tharon Last rode into the Holding and dismounted in unwonted silence.
+
+There was a frown between her brows, an unusual thing. She turned the
+stallion into his corral, dragged off the big saddle to hang it on its
+peg, flung the studded bridle on a post.
+
+The men were not in yet. Far toward the north beyond the big corrals
+she could see the cattle grazing toward home. A surge of savage joy in
+her possessions flooded over her. These things were her own. They were
+what Jim Last had worked for all his life.
+
+Not one hoof or hide should Courtrey take without swift reprisal.
+
+Not one inch should he push her from her avowed purpose--not though
+all the strangers in the world came to Lost Valley and prated of
+blood-guilt.
+
+But for some vague reason which she could not have analyzed had she
+wished, she went to the paled-in garden where the silver waters
+trickled and searched among the few flowers growing there for some
+blossom, sweeter, tenderer, more mild and timid than usual for the
+pale hands of the Virgin in the deep south room.
+
+With the posy in her fingers she slipped quietly to her sanctuary and
+knelt before the statue, pensive, frowning, vaguely stirred. She
+whispered the prayers that Anita had taught her, but she found with a
+start that the words were meaningless, that she was saying them
+mechanically.
+
+Her mind had been at the Silver Hollow, seeing again the forest man's
+dark eyes, so grave, so quiet, so deep--her right hand was conscious
+as it had never been in all her life before. She heard a strange man's
+condemning voice, felt the warmth of his hands pressed upon hers.
+
+The mistress of Last's shook herself, both mentally and physically,
+and set herself to resay her prayers.
+
+When she came out to the life and bustle of the ranch house the cattle
+were streaming into the far corrals under their dust, the riders were
+shouting, young Paula sang in the kitchen, and Anita passed back and
+forth about the evening meal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a slim moon in the west above the Canon Country. The skies
+were softly alight, high and vaulted, deep and mysterious and sweet.
+
+World-silence, profound as eternity, hung tangibly above Lost Valley
+and the Wall, the eastern ramparts of the shelving mountains, the
+rocklands at the north. There was little sound in all this sleeping
+wilderness.
+
+Bird life was rare. The waters that fell at seasons from the open
+mouths of the canyons half way up the Rockface were dried. Down in the
+Valley itself there could be seen the lights of Corvan which never
+went out from dusk to dawn. Far to the north a black blot might have
+been visible with a fuller moon--Courtrey's herds bedded on the range,
+the only stock in the Valley so privileged.
+
+Along the foot of the Rockface in the early evening a tiny procession
+had crawled, three burros, their pack-saddles empty save for a couple
+of sacks tied across each, and a weazened form that followed them--Old
+Pete, the snow-packer, bound on his nightly journey to the Canon
+Country for the bags of snow for the cooling of the Golden Cloud's
+refreshments.
+
+He was a little old man, grotesque and misshapen, yet he followed
+briskly after the burros, which were the fastest travelers of their
+kind in the land. He rolled on his bandy legs and kept the little
+animals on a constant trot with the wisp of stick he carried and the
+deep, harsh cries that heralded his coming for a mile ahead and sent
+the echoes reverberating between the canyon walls. A little north of
+Corvan he had followed the Rockface close for a distance, then
+suddenly turned back on his tracks and disappeared, burros and all.
+This was the invisible entrance to the Canon Country, a narrow mouth
+that opened sidewise into the very breast of the thousand-foot Wall
+and led back along a thin sheet of rock that stood between the gorge
+and the Valley. The floor of this cut or canyon, which was so narrow
+that the laden burros had a "narrow squeak" to pass, as Pete said,
+lifted sharply. It rose smoothly underfoot in the pitch darkness, for
+the cut was roofed in the living rock five hundred feet above, and
+climbed for a mile. It was a dead, flat place, without sound, for the
+footsteps of the burros and the man fell dully on the soft and sliding
+floor, and it seemed to have no acoustic properties.
+
+At the end of the mile this snake-like split in the solid rock came
+suddenly out into a broader, more steeply pitched canyon whose walls
+went straight up to the open skies above. Here there were heaps and
+piles and long slides of dead stone, weathered and powdered, that had
+fallen from time to time from the parent walls. This in turn led up
+and on to other breaks and splits and cuts, all open, all lifting to
+the upper world, and all as blind and dangerous to follow as any
+deathtrap that old Dame Nature ever devised. Here, at any crosscut,
+any debouching canyon, a man might turn to his undoing, might travel on
+and up and never reach those beckoning heights, seen clearly from some
+blind pocket he had wandered into, might never find his way back to
+the original canyon among the continuous cuts that met and crossed and
+passed each other among the towering points and sheets.
+
+But Old Pete knew where he was going. Not for nothing had he threaded
+these passages for fifteen years. He knew the Canon Country for the
+lower part better than any man in the Valley, if Courtrey be
+excepted.
+
+So this night he climbed and shouted to his burros and thought no more
+of the sounding splits, for here the echoes raved, than he would have
+thought of the open plains below.
+
+He passed on and up to where a certain cut lay full, year after year,
+of packed and hardened snow. For fifteen years Old Pete had visited
+this cut, a deeper drop into the nether world of rock, and cut his
+supplies from its surface. Every season he took what he needed,
+leaving a widening circle at the edge from which he worked, where the
+cut he traveled passed the mouth of the pent canyon, and every year the
+snows, sifting from high above, leveled it again. There was no known
+outlet for this glacier-like pack, no sliding chance, yet it was
+always on a certain level--each summer seeming to lose just what it
+gained in winter. It lay level at the mouth of the passing cut, was
+never filled higher.
+
+Starting at dusk from Corvan, Pete reached his destination around two
+o'clock, filled his sacks, tied them on his mules and started down,
+coming out of the Rockface in time to meet the dawn that quivered on
+the eastern ramparts.
+
+But this night Old Pete, sturdy, fearless, unarmed, was not to see the
+accustomed pageant of the rising sun, the fleeing veils of shadows
+shifting on the Valley floor that he had watched with silent joy for
+all these years.
+
+This night he was well down along his backward way, shouting in the
+darkness, for the slim moon had dropped down behind the lofty peaks
+above, when all the echoes in the world, it seemed, let loose in the
+canyons and all the weight of the universe itself came pressing hard
+upon his dauntless heart with the crack of a gun.
+
+"Th' price!" whispered Old Pete as he fell sprawling on his face, "fer
+pure flesh!" With which cryptic word he bade farewell to the sounding
+passes, the tenets of manhood as he conceived them, the valour, and
+the grumbling at life in general.
+
+The little burros, placid and faithful, went on and saw the pageant of
+the dawn from the hidden gateway in the Wall, crept down the Rockface,
+single file, and at their accustomed hour stood at their accustomed
+place before the Golden Cloud.
+
+It was Wan Lee, Old Pete's _bete noir_, who found them there and ran
+shouting through the crowd of belated players in the saloon's big
+room, his pig-tail flying, his almond eyes popping, to upset a table
+and batter on his master's door and scream that the "bullos" were
+here, "allesame lone," and that there was blood all spattered on the
+hind one's rump!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WHITE ELLEN
+
+
+So old Pete, the snow-packer, had paid the price of gallantry. The
+bullet he had averted from Tharon Last's young head that day in the
+Golden Cloud but sheathed itself to wait for him. All the Valley knew
+it. Not a soul beneath the Rockface but knew beyond a shadow of a
+doubt who, or whose agents, had followed Pete that night to the Canon
+Country. Whispers went flying about as usual, and as usual nothing
+happened.
+
+When the news of this came to Last's Holding the mistress sat down at
+the big desk in the living room, laid her tawny head on her arms and
+wept.
+
+There was in her a new softness, a new feeling of misery--as if one
+had wantonly killed a rollicking puppy before her eyes. Those tears
+were Old Pete's requiem. She dried them quickly, however, and set
+another notch to her score with Courtrey.
+
+It was then that the waiting game ceased abruptly.
+
+Tharon, riding on El Rey, went in to Corvan. She tied the horse at
+the Court House steps and went boldly in to the sheriff's office.
+
+Behind her were Billy, like her shadow, and the sane and quiet
+Conford.
+
+Steptoe Service, fat and important, was busy at his desk. His spurs
+lay on a table, his wide hat beside them. The star of his office shone
+on his suspender strap.
+
+"Step Service," said the girl straightly, "when are you goin' to look
+into this here murder?"
+
+Service swung round and shot an ugly look at her from his small eyes.
+
+"Have already done so," he said, "ben out an' saw to th' buryin'!"
+
+Tharon gasped.
+
+"Buried him already? How dared you do it?"
+
+"Say," said Service, banging a fist on his table, "I'm th' sheriff of
+Menlo County, young woman. I ordered him buried."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"What's it to you?"
+
+"Was Jim Banner there?"
+
+"Jim Banner's sick in bed--got th' cholery morbus."
+
+Tharon's eyes began to blaze.
+
+"Bah!" she snapped, "th' time's ripe! Come on, boys," and she whirled
+from the Court House.
+
+As she ran across the street to where the Finger Marks were tied, she
+came face to face with Kenset on Captain.
+
+Her face was red from brow to throat, her voice thick with rage.
+
+"You talked o' law, Mr. Kenset," she cried at the brown horse's
+shoulder, her eyes upraised to his, "an' see what law there is in
+Lost Valley! Step Service has buried th' snow-packer--without a
+by-your-leave from nobody! Th' man--or woman--that kills Courtrey
+now 'counts for three men--Harkness, Last an' Pete. I'm on my way
+to th' Stronghold."
+
+She whirled again to run for the stallion, but the forest man leaned
+down and caught her shoulder in a grip of steel.
+
+"Not now," he said in that compelling low voice, "not now. I want to
+talk to you."
+
+"But I don't want to talk to you!" she flung out, "I'm goin'!"
+
+Over her head Conford's anxious eyes met Kenset's.
+
+"Hold her," they begged plainly, "we can't."
+
+And Kenset held her, by physical strength.
+
+The grey eyes of Billy were on him coldly. The boy was hot with anger
+at the man. He put a hand on Kenset's arm.
+
+"Let go," he said, but Kenset shook him off.
+
+"Come out on the plain a little way with me, all of you," he said,
+"this is no place to talk."
+
+Tharon, standing where he had stopped her, her breast heaving, her
+lips apart, seemed struggling against an unknown force. She put up a
+hand and tried to dislodge his fingers on her shoulder, but could
+not.
+
+Presently she wet her lips and looked around the street, already
+filled with watching folk, then up at Kenset.
+
+"What for?" she asked.
+
+"I think I can tell you something," he answered quietly.
+
+"All right," she said briefly, "let go an' I'll come."
+
+Without a word the man loosed her. She went to El Rey and mounted.
+
+Her riders mounted with her, Billy's face frowning and set. From the
+steps of Baston's store a few cowboys watched. There were no
+Stronghold men in town, for it was too early in the day.
+
+In silence Kenset led out of town at a brisk canter. His lips were
+set, his eyes very grave.
+
+In the short gallop that followed while they cleared the skirts of the
+town, he did some swift thinking, settled some heavy questions for
+himself.
+
+He was about to take a decided step, to put himself on record in
+something that did not concern his work in the Valley.
+
+He was going directly opposite to the teaching of his craft. He was
+about to take sides in this thing, when he had laid down for himself
+rigid lines of non-partisanship. His mind was working swiftly.
+
+If he flung himself and his knowledge of the outside world and the law
+into this thing he sunk abruptly the thing for which he had come to
+Lost Valley--the middle course, the influence for order that he had
+hoped to establish that he might do his work for the Government.
+
+But he could not help it. At any or all costs he must stop this
+blue-eyed girl from riding north to challenge Courtrey on his
+doorstep.
+
+The blood congealed about his heart at the thought.
+
+Where the rolling levels came up to the confines of the town they rode
+out far enough to be safe from eavesdroppers, halted and faced each
+other.
+
+"Miss Last," said Kenset gently, "I'm a stranger to you. I have little
+or no influence with you, but I beg you to listen to me. You say there
+is no help for the conditions existing in Lost Valley. That outrage
+follows outrage. True. I grant the thing is appalling. But there is
+redress. There is a law above the sheriff, when it can be proven that
+that officer has refused to do his duty. That law is invested in the
+coroner. Your coroner can arrest your sheriff. He can investigate a
+murder--he can issue a warrant and serve it anywhere in the State. He
+can subpoena witnesses. Did you know that?"
+
+Tharon shook her head.
+
+"Nor you?" he asked Conford.
+
+"I knew somethin' like that--but what's th' use? Banner's a brave man,
+but he's got a family. An' he's been only one against th' whole push.
+What could he do when there wasn't another man in th' Valley dared to
+stand behind him? You saw what happened to Pete. He struck up
+Courtrey's arm when he shot at Tharon one night last spring. Th' same
+thing'd happen to Banner if he tried to pull off anythin' like that."
+
+A light flamed up in Kenset's eyes.
+
+"If you, Miss Last," he said straightly, "will give me your word to do
+no shooting, something like that will be pulled off here, and
+shortly."
+
+He looked directly at Tharon, and for the first time in her life she
+felt the strength of a gaze she couldn't meet--not fully.
+
+But Tharon shook her head.
+
+"I'm sworn," she said simply.
+
+Kenset's face lost a bit of colour. Billy, watching, turned grey
+beneath his tan. He saw something which none other did, a thing that
+darkened the heavens all suddenly.
+
+"Then," said Kenset quietly, "we'll have to do without your promise
+and go ahead anyway. We'll ride back to town, demand of Service a
+proper investigation by a coroner's jury, and begin at the bottom."
+
+Tharon moved uneasily in her saddle.
+
+"Why are you doin' this?" she asked. "Why are you mixin' up in our
+troubles? Why don't you go back to your cabin an' your pictures an'
+books an' things, an' let us work out our own affairs?"
+
+Kenset lifted a quick hand, dropped it again.
+
+"God knows!" he said. "Let's go."
+
+And he wheeled his horse and started for Corvan, the others falling
+into line at his side.
+
+When Kenset, quietly impervious to the veiled hostility that met him
+everywhere, faced Steptoe Service and made his request, that dignitary
+felt a chill go down his spine. Like Old Pete he felt the man beneath
+the surface. He met him, however, with bluster and refused all
+reopening of a matter which he declared settled with the burial of the
+snow-packer in the sliding canyons where he was found.
+
+"Very well," said Kenset shortly, "you see I have witnesses to this,"
+and he turned on his heel and went out.
+
+"Now, Miss Last," he said when they were in the wholesome summer
+sunlight once more, "if you have any friends whom you think would
+stand for the right, send for them."
+
+"Th' Vigilantes," said the girl, "we'll gather them in twenty-four
+hours."
+
+"The Vigilantes?"
+
+"Th' settlers," said Conford.
+
+"All right. Until they are here we'll guard the mouth of this canyon
+that leads into the Rockface, as I understand it. Now take me to this
+man Banner."
+
+At a low, rambling house in the outskirts of Corvan they found Jim
+Banner, sitting on the edge of his bed, undeniably sick from some
+acute attack. His eyes were steady, however, and he listened in
+silence while Kenset talked.
+
+"Mary," he said, "bring me my boots an' guns. I been layin' for this
+day ever sence I been in office. I wisht Jim Last was here to witness
+it."
+
+In two hours Kenset was on his way to the blind mouth of the pass that
+led into the Canon Country, Tharon was shooting back to the Holding on
+El Rey to put things on a watching basis there, while Conford and
+Billy went south and west to rouse the Vigilantes.
+
+With Kenset rode Banner, weak and not quite steady in his saddle, but
+a fighting man notwithstanding.
+
+All through the golden hours of that noonday while he jogged steadily
+on Captain, Kenset was thinking. He had food for thought, indeed. He
+carried a gun at last--he who had ridden the Valley unarmed, had meant
+never to carry one. He felt a stir within him of savagery, of
+excitement.
+
+He meant to have justice done, to put a hard hand on the law of Lost
+Valley. Murders uninvestigated, cattle stolen at will, settlers' homes
+burned over their heads, their hearths blown up by planted powder when
+they returned from any small trip, their horses run off--these things
+had seemed to him preposterous, mere shadows of facts. Now they were
+down to straight points before him, tangible, solid. He got them from
+the blue eyes of Tharon Last, the gun woman, and he had taken sides!
+He who had meant to keep so far out of the boiling turmoil.
+
+He camped that night at the base of the Wall where the blind door
+entered, made his bed just inside the dead black passage, and watched
+while Banner, weary and still weak, slept in his blankets beside
+him.
+
+This was new work for Kenset, strange work, this waiting for men who
+called themselves the Vigilantes--for a slim golden girl who rode and
+swore and pledged herself to blood!
+
+More than once in the quiet night that followed, Kenset wiped a hand
+across his brow and found it moist with sweat.
+
+What did he mean? Again and again he asked himself that question.
+
+What did he mean by Tharon Last? What was this cold fire that burned
+him when he thought of her pulling those sinister blue guns on
+Courtrey? Did he fear to see her kill Courtrey--to see that shadowy
+stain on her hands--or did he fear something worse, infinitely
+worse--to see Courtrey, famous gun man, beat her to it!
+
+He shuddered and sweat in the clear cold of the starlit night and
+searched his bewildered heart. He could find no answer save and except
+the weary one that Tharon Last must be holden from her sworn course.
+
+Tharon Last who looked at him with those deep blue eyes and spoke so
+coolly of this promised killing! He recalled the earnest frown between
+her brows, the simple directness of her duty as she saw it and told it
+to him.
+
+Either way--either way--she was lost to him forever--There he caught
+himself and started all over again.
+
+What was she to him?
+
+What could she ever be? She with her strange soul, _her lack of
+soul_!
+
+What did he want her to be? One moment he ached with her loveliness--the
+next he shuddered at her savagery.
+
+He did not want her to be anything! Why not go out to the dim and
+half-remembered world that he had left, the world of lights, padded
+floors and marble steps, leave this impossible land with its blood and
+wrongs? Nay, he could not leave Lost Valley. He was as much a part of
+it as the grim Rockface itself, the Vestal's Veil eternally shimmering
+in its thousand feet of beauty. Life or death, for Kenset, it must be
+here.
+
+So he waited and listened and watched the stars wheeling in
+everlasting majesty, and he found his hands falling now and again upon
+the gun-butts at his sides!
+
+Near dawn Banner awoke, refreshed and stronger, and made him lie down
+for a few hours' sleep.
+
+When he awoke the sun was well up along the heavens and Banner was
+offering him a piece of dry bread and some jerky, spiced and smoked
+and as dry and sweet as anything he had ever eaten in all his life.
+
+"They're comin'," said the man, "thar's five comin' from down along
+th' Wall at th' south--that'll be Jameson, Hill and Thomas, an' some
+others--an' I see about ten or twelve, near's I can make out, driftin'
+in from up toward th' Pomo settlement. Thar's a dust cloud movin' up
+from th' Bottle Neck, too. They'll be here by one o'clock at th'
+furdest."
+
+And they were, a grim, silent group of men, determined, watchful, bent
+on the second step of the program to which they had pledged themselves
+that night at Last's Holding. Tharon was there, too, and with her Bent
+Smith on Golden.
+
+It was a goodly number who left their horses in charge of Hill and
+Dixon at the blind mouth and entered the long black cut. They climbed
+in low spoken quiet, their voices sounding back upon them with an odd
+dead effect. They went faster than Old Pete was wont to travel, for
+they meant to reach the spot of the tragedy before the early shadows
+should begin to sift down from the high world above. Tharon went
+eagerly, her eyes dilated.
+
+Always she had dreamed of the Canon Country. Always she had wondered
+what it was like. When she left the mouth of the black roofed cut and
+came out into the narrow, rockwalled canyon with its painted faces
+reaching up into the very skies, she gasped with amaze. Above her head
+she could see the endless cuts and crosscuts, the standing spires and
+narrow wedgelike walls that made a labyrinthian maze.
+
+Billy, close beside her, as always, watched her with a pensive
+sadness.
+
+And so the Vigilantes went in and up along the lower ways. There were
+those among them who had been here before, who from time to time had
+accompanied the snow-packer on his nightly trips just for the
+curiosity of the thing. These several men, among whom were Albright
+from the Pomo settlement--a squawman--took the lead, and Albright,
+keen as a hound on trail, picked up Old Pete's marks and signs at a
+running walk.
+
+And so it was, that, while the sun was still shining on the high peaks
+above and the canyons were filled with a strange pink light reflected
+from the red and yellow faces of the rock, the Vigilantes came
+suddenly to a halt, for Albright had stopped.
+
+"Here's where it happened," he said, "there's a blood-sign." And he
+pointed to the Wall at a spot about breast high. A thin dark line, no
+wider than a blade of grass and about as long, spraying out to nothing
+at the upper end, leaned along the rock like a native marking. No
+other eye had seen it. Not one in a thousand would have seen it.
+
+"Good," said Kenset, "you're the man for more of this."
+
+They crowded around and examined the telltale spray.
+
+Not one among them but knew it for the stain of blood.
+
+From that they spread out and back to search the sliding heaps of
+dust-like powdery rock-slide that lay everywhere along the walls.
+
+It took Albright five minutes by Kenset's watch to find the disturbed
+and clumsily smoothed dump which held all that was mortal of the
+snow-packer.
+
+"Miss Last," said Kenset as the men began to dig with the spades
+brought along for the purpose, "you had best step back a bit."
+
+But Tharon pushed nearer.
+
+"This is my work," she said with dignity. "I started this, I think."
+
+It was a pitiful job that Service and those with him had done for Old
+Pete. Rolled head-first into a shallow hole--no doubt with jest and
+laughter--it was his booted foot which first came to view, sticking
+grotesquely up through the loose slide-stuff.
+
+It was brief work and grim work that followed, and soon the weazened
+form, bent and stiffened into something hardly human, lay in the soft
+pink light on the canyon's floor.
+
+Jim Banner knelt and examined it carefully and minutely, then every
+man in the group did likewise. They found evidence of one simple,
+staring fact--Old Pete had been shot squarely from behind, a little to
+the left.
+
+The bullet had undoubtedly pierced the heart--a great gaping hole in
+the left centre of the breast in front attesting its course.
+
+"Here," said Albright, coming back from a short distance down, beneath
+the spray on the wall, "here's where something was taken up from th'
+floor--th' blood he lost, I make no doubt."
+
+"Gentlemen,--Miss Last," said Kenset, "I move we all move back and
+leave the ground to Albright. There is fine work here."
+
+With one accord the mass moved back, clearing a goodly space.
+
+In the immediate vicinity there was little chance of doing anything,
+for Service's bunch, and themselves, had trampled over the soft floor
+until all original traces of the murder were blotted out.
+
+Albright looked around and seemed to hesitate.
+
+"Me, alone?" he asked. "Gimme Dick Compos, there."
+
+"Done," said Kenset.
+
+A tall, silent half-breed stepped forward and without another word the
+two began to scan the walls, the floors, the heaps of rotted rock, the
+loose and tumbled boulders, not yet decomposed, that lined the cut on
+both sides.
+
+They stood in their tracks and looked, and the concentration in their
+eyes was akin to that in the eyes of a wild animal, hiding,
+hard-pressed, and looking for a loophole for life.
+
+The Vigilantes watched them in silence.
+
+Presently Dick Compos stepped forward, leaned down and searched the
+wall at the left. Then he went forward, bent over, scanning each inch.
+He looked above and below, the height of a man's shoulders, his hips,
+his knees.
+
+Then he crept back, stopped at a particular upstanding piece of stone,
+searched it closely--stepped in behind.
+
+When he came out he looked over at Tharon Last standing at the head of
+her people.
+
+"Some one went along th' Wall here," he waved a slender brown hand at
+the canyon face. "Three signs--here--here--here."
+
+He indicated the heights he had scanned. They stepped a bit nearer and
+looked. Several pairs of Valley eyes saw what Dick Compos had seen, a
+sign so fine that few would have called it that--merely a brushing, a
+smoothing of the fine-sandstone surface where a man's shoulders, his
+hips, his knees might have pressed had he stood waiting there.
+
+A bit nearer the standing pinnacle of rock, they were evident again.
+
+With one accord they turned and looked down the canyon to where that
+thin line sprayed the face. A close shot, such as would be necessary
+in the darkness of the cut. Albright and Compos both stepped to the
+rock and stood looking with those narrowed, concentrated eyes.
+
+Suddenly Albright, looking back across his shoulders, moved like a cat
+and picked up something from ten feet away.
+
+He held it on his palm--an empty shell, such as fitted a .44 Smith and
+Wesson.
+
+He scanned it minutely, turned it over this way and that, looked at it
+fore and aft.
+
+"Firin' pin's nicked," he said, "an' a leetle off centre."
+
+For ten minutes the thing went from hand to hand.
+
+Then Kenset gave it to the coroner.
+
+"There's your clew, Mr. Banner," he said. "Now we can begin. Let us be
+going back to Corvan."
+
+And so it was that Old Pete, the snow-packer, went back in state to
+the Golden Cloud, by relays on men's shoulders down the sounding
+passes, through the dead cut, by pack-horse across the levels, lashed
+stiffly to the saddle, a pitiful burden.
+
+Tharon Last, riding close after the calm fashion of a strong man in
+the face of tragedy, thought pensively of that night in spring when
+this little old man had taken his life in his hands to save her own.
+
+It was a gift he had given her, nothing less, and she made up her mind
+that Old Pete should sleep in peace under the pointing pine at Last's
+Holding--and that his cross should also stand beside those other two
+in the carved granite.
+
+Billy, watching, read her mind with the half-tragic eyes of love.
+
+Kenset, seemingly unconscious, but keenly alive to everything, was at
+great loss to do so.
+
+He hoped, with a surging tenseness, that this fateful thing was
+sliding over into his hands to work out, his and Banner's. He knew
+full well that he and Banner both were like to be slated for an early
+death, but he did not care. In Corvan, night had fallen when the
+cavalcade passed through.
+
+Bullard of the Golden Cloud had the grace to come out and look at the
+little old man who had worked for him so long and faithfully. But
+that was all. They carried him home to Last's and buried him decently
+at dawn.
+
+Then the Vigilantes again rode out. At their head was Tharon; though
+both Kenset and Billy tried to dissuade her.
+
+At Corvan, Banner went through the town like a wind, asking for the
+gun of every man he met. By noon every .44 had been examined, one
+shell exploded. Not one left the nicked, uneven sign of the mysterious
+hammer which had snapped its death into Old Pete's heart.
+
+When the sun was straight overhead and all Lost Valley was sweet with
+the summer haze, the Vigilantes, close packed and silent, swung out
+toward the Stronghold.
+
+It was blue-dusk when they drew up at the corrals beside the fortress
+house. Lounging around in cat-like quiet were some thirty men, riders,
+gun men, _vaqueros_.
+
+When Banner called for Courtrey there was a sound of boots on the
+board floors, inside, a woman's pleading voice, and the cattle king
+came swinging out, his hands at his waist, his two guns covering the
+crowd.
+
+Tall, straight as a lance, his iron-grey head uncovered, he was a
+striking figure of a man. His henchmen watched him sharply. At his
+side clung the slim woman, Ellen, her milky face thin and tragic. He
+shook her loose and faced the newcomers.
+
+"Well?" he snapped, "what's this?"
+
+"Courtrey," said Banner, "we're here in th' name o' th' law. We demand
+t' see them guns o' yours."
+
+If the knowledge that Jim Banner was a brave man needed confirmation,
+it had it in that speech. Few men in the world could have made it, and
+gotten away with it. None in a different setting. Courtrey heard it,
+but he paid little heed to it at the moment. His eyes went to the face
+of Tharon Last and drank in its beauty hungrily.
+
+Presently he shifted his gaze and regarded Kenset with a cold light
+that was evil.
+
+"Who wants 'em?" he asked drawlingly.
+
+"We do."
+
+"Hell! Want _Courtrey's_ guns! You're modest, Jim.
+
+"An' what do you want, Tharon?"
+
+In spite of the tenseness of the moment the voice that had laughed at
+death and torture in Round Valley became melting soft as it addressed
+the girl.
+
+"Law!" said Tharon, "Law--th' law I promised you on Baston's porch!"
+
+"Yes? An' how do you think you'll get that? If I nod my head we'll
+drive this bunch o' spawn out o' here so quick it'll make your head
+swim! What do you think you're doin'?"
+
+"I don't _think_. I _know_ now. Know what we can do--what th' law
+means."
+
+Courtrey glanced again at Kenset.
+
+"Got some imported knowledge, I take it."
+
+"Take it or leave it! Show us them guns!" cried Tharon harshly.
+
+"I--don't--think--so," said Courtrey, nodding.
+
+Like a pair of snakes gliding forward, Wylackie Bob and the Arizona
+stranger were suddenly in the foreground, hands hanging apparently
+loose and careless, in reality tense as strung wires, ready to snap
+with fire and lead.
+
+The moment was pregnant. The very air seemed charged with danger and
+death.
+
+Then, with a strange cry, Tharon Last swung sidewise from her saddle,
+for all the world as if she were breaking under the strain, leaned far
+over El Rey's shoulder, and the next moment there came a shot,
+snapping in the stillness.
+
+With an oath and a lurch Courtrey flung backward, tossed up his right
+arm, and fired with his left. His ball went high in the air, wild. The
+blood from that tossed right hand spurted over Wylackie Bob beside
+him, the gun it had held went hurtling away along the earth.
+
+There was a movement, a surge, the flash of guns and one of the
+settlers tumbled from his saddle, poor Thomas of the doubting heart.
+Courtrey's men flashed together as one, thundered backward to the wide
+doorstep, pressed together, waited. The voice of Kenset rang like a
+clarion.
+
+"Stop!" he cried, "don't shoot!"
+
+And he swung off his horse to leap for that gun.
+
+But another was before him.
+
+With a scream of anguish that rang heaven-high, Ellen shot forward and
+snatched it from the spot where it had fallen.
+
+Tall, white as a ghost in the rose-pink light that was tinged with
+purple, she stood, swaying on her feet, and faced them.
+
+And she put the gun to her temple!
+
+"I ain't got nothin' t' live for," she said clearly and pitifully,
+"but Courtrey's life is worth what I got to me. If you don't clear out
+I'll pull th' trigger."
+
+She was tragic as death itself. The big blue wells of her eyes were
+black with the spreading pupils. Dark circles lay beneath them.
+
+Her blue-veined hands were so thin the light seemed to shine through
+them.
+
+Her long white dress clung to her slim form. From far back by the
+corral fence Cleve Whitmore watched her silently, his hands clenched
+hard.
+
+Tharon Last looked at her with wide eyes. She had forgotten all about
+this woman in the passionate hatred of Courtrey and the desire to pin
+his crimes upon him. Now she wet her lips and looked at Ellen long and
+silently. The pale lips were quivering, the long arm shook as it held
+the gun.
+
+"God!" whispered the girl, watching, "she loves him! Like I loved Jim
+Last! Th' pain's in her heart, an' no mistake!"
+
+Then, as if something strong within her folded its iron arm upon
+itself, she began to back El Rey. "Back out!" she called, "we ain't no
+woman-killers!"
+
+With one accord, carefully, watching, the Vigilantes began to back,
+counting the seconds, expecting each moment to witness the most
+pitiful thing Lost Valley with all its crimes, had ever seen.
+
+Some one lifted the body of Thomas and swung it across a horse.
+
+Back to the corner of the house, around, they went, and finally, out
+in front they turned as one man and rode away from the Stronghold--and
+Jim Banner was swearing like a fury, steadily, in a high-pitched
+voice.
+
+"Failed!" he cried between his oaths, "failed in our biggest job!
+That's th' gun, all right, all right, an' that damned woman beat us to
+it! Beat us to it with her fool's courage an' her sickenin' love! Oh,
+t' hell with Courtrey an' all this Valley! I'm a-goin' t' move down
+th' Wall, s'help me!"
+
+But Tharon Last forged to his side and gripped his arm in her strong
+fingers.
+
+"Shut up, Jim Banner," she said tensely. "You've only begun. That's
+th' gun, I make no doubt, an' Ellen knew it--but if we're worth
+killin' we'll dig into this harder'n ever. Here's poor Thomas, makes
+one more notch on my record. I'm not sayin' quit! An' you're th'
+bravest man in Corvan, too!"
+
+At Last's Holding the Vigilantes stopped for rest and food.
+
+They had been in saddle the better part of forty-eight hours.
+
+Young Paula, Jose and Anita set up a steaming meal, and they ate like
+famished men, by relays at the big table in the dining room.
+
+Tharon Last sat quietly at the board's head throughout the meal,
+pensive, thinking of Ellen, but grimly planning for the future.
+
+And Billy and Kenset watched her, each with a secret pain at his
+heart.
+
+"Lord, Lord," said Billy to himself, "she's listenin' when he speaks
+like she never listened to any one before!"
+
+In Kenset's mind drilled over and over again the ceaseless thought "A
+hand or a heart--she could hit them both with ease. It's true,
+true,--she's a gun woman! Oh, Tharon, Tharon!" and he did not know he
+spoke her name beneath his breath.
+
+But other things were crowding forward--he was leaning forward telling
+that circle of grim, lean faces, that if they could not handle this
+thing themselves, there were those in the big world of below who
+could--that there were men of the Secret Service who could find that
+gun no matter where Courtrey or Ellen hid it, that Lost Valley, no
+matter what its isolation or its history, was yet in the U. S. A., and
+could be tamed.
+
+Then the Vigilantes were gone with jangle of spur and bit-chain, and
+he was the last to go, standing by Captain in the dim starlight.
+Tharon stood beside him, and for some unaccountable reason the grim
+purpose of their acquaintance seemed to drift away, to leave them
+together, alone under the stars, a man and a maid. Kenset stood for a
+long moment and looked at the faint outline of her face. She was still
+in her riding clothes, her head bare with its ribbon half untied in
+the nape of her slender neck.
+
+The tree-toads were singing off by the springhouse and the cattle in
+the big corrals made the low, ceaseless night-sounds common to a
+herd.
+
+The riders were gone, the _vaqueros_ were at their posts around the
+resting stock, the low adobe house was settling into the quiet of the
+night.
+
+Miserably Kenset looked at this slip of a girl.
+
+She was strange to him, unfathomable. There were depths beneath the
+changing blue eyes which appalled him. How would he feel toward her
+when the thing was done--when she had killed Courtrey?
+
+But she must not be allowed to do it. Not though it took his life.
+
+If she was pledged to this thing, he was no less pledged to its
+prevention.
+
+He felt a sadness within him as he saw the soft curve of her cheek,
+the outline of her tawny head.
+
+With an impulse which he could not govern he reached out suddenly and
+took her hands in his and pressed them against his heart. The pounding
+of that heart was noticeable through her hands into his.
+
+But he did not speak--he could not.
+
+But he had no need. He could have said nothing that would have
+cleared the situation, would have told himself or her what was in that
+pounding heart of his--for to save his life he did not know.
+
+And Tharon frowned in the darkness and drew her hands from under those
+pressing ones.
+
+"Mr. Kenset," she said steadily, "you're always tryin' to make me
+weak, to break me down with words an' looks an' touches. These hands
+o' yours,--_damn 'em_, they _do_ make me weak! Don't put 'em on me
+again!"
+
+And with a sudden, sharp savagery she struck his hands off his breast,
+whirled away in the darkness and was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+SIGNAL FIRES IN THE VALLEY
+
+
+Kenset, two days later, gave Sam Drake a check for five hundred
+dollars and a letter, unpostmarked but sealed with tape and wax.
+Drake, who owned some half-breed Ironwoods, rode the best one down the
+Wall.
+
+Kenset had cautioned him not to talk before he left--he feared Drake's
+propensity for speech. But he was the only man in Lost Valley whom he
+felt he could approach.
+
+With the courier's departure he rode back to the Holding and told
+Tharon and Conford what he had done.
+
+"These men are the best to be had," he said, "and they will go
+anywhere on earth for money."
+
+But Tharon frowned and struck a fist into a soft palm.
+
+"What you mean?" she cried, "by takin' my work out of my hands like
+this? I won't have it! I won't wait!"
+
+"What I meant when I caught your bridle that day in the glade,"
+answered the man, "to stop you from bloodshed."
+
+Then he went back to his cabin and his interrupted work and set
+himself to wait in patience for the return of Drake.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But in Lost Valley a leaven was rising. It had begun insidiously to
+work with the appearance of Kenset in Tharon's band at Courtrey's
+doorstep. It burst up like a mushroom with a chance remark made by
+Lola of the Golden Cloud--Lola, who had seen, since that night in
+spring when Tharon Last stood in the door and promised to "get" her
+father's killer, that Courtrey was slipping from her. A woman like
+Lola is hard to deceive.
+
+Much experience had taught her to feel the change of winds in the
+matter of allegiance.
+
+She knew that surely and swiftly this man had gone down the path of
+unreasoning love, that he would give anything he possessed, do
+anything possible, to win for himself this slim mistress of Last's
+Holding.
+
+Therefore she played the one card she held, hoping to rouse the bully,
+and did just the thing she was trying to avert.
+
+"Buck," she said, her black head on his shoulder, her dark eyes
+watching covertly his careless face, "the Last girl is lost to every
+Valley man. Sooner or later she'll leave the country, mark my word,
+with this Forest Service fellow, for she's in love with him, though
+she doesn't know it yet."
+
+With a slow movement Courtrey loosed his arm about Lola and lifted her
+from him. His eyes were narrowed as he looked into her face.
+
+"For God's sake!" he said, "what makes you think that?"
+
+"Knowledge," said Lola, "long knowledge of women and men."
+
+"If I thought that," said Courtrey slowly, his eyes losing sight of
+her as he seemed to look beyond her. "If--I--thought that--why, hell!
+If that's th' truth--why, it--it's th' lever!"
+
+And he rose abruptly, though he had just settled himself in Lola's
+apartment for a pleasant chat, as was his habit whenever he rode in
+from the Stronghold.
+
+"Lola," he said presently, "I might's well tell you that I'm plannin'
+to have this girl for mine,--_mine_, you understand, legally, by law.
+I can't have her like I've had you. She'd blow my head off th' first
+time I stopped holdin' her hands." He laughed at the picture he had
+conjured, then went on.
+
+"An' so I feel grateful to you, old girl, for that remark. It sets me
+thinkin'." And he stooped and kissed her on the lips. The woman
+returned the kiss, a wonderful caress, slow, soft, alluring, but the
+man did not notice.
+
+His face was flushed, his eyes studying.
+
+Then he swung quickly out through the Golden, Cloud, and Lola slipped
+limply down on a couch and covered her ashen cheeks with her hands.
+
+"Oh, Buck!" she whispered brokenly, "Oh, Buck! Buck!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Courtrey went straight home, still, cold, thinking hard. His henchmen
+left him in solitude after the first word or two. They knew him well,
+and that something was brewing.
+
+At midnight that night he roused Wylackie Bob, Black Bart and the man
+who was known as Arizona, and the four of them went out on the levels
+for a secret talk.
+
+The next day the master of the Stronghold rode away on Bolt. As he
+left, Ellen, standing in the doorway like a pale ghost, lifted her
+tragic eyes to his face with the look of a faithful dog.
+
+"Where you goin', Buck?" she asked timidly.
+
+"Off," said the man shortly.
+
+"Ain't you goin'--goin' to kiss me?"
+
+He laughed cruelly.
+
+"Not after what I ben a-hearin', I ain't!"
+
+She sprang forward, catching at his knee.
+
+"What--what you ben a-hearin'? There ain't nothin' about me you could
+a-heard, Buck, dear! Nothin' in this world! I ben true to you as your
+shadow!"
+
+Every soul within hearing knew the words for the utter and absolute
+truth, yet Courtrey looked at Wylackie Bob, at Arizona, and laughed.
+
+"Like hell, you have!" he said, struck the Ironwood and was gone
+around the corner of the house with the sound of thunder.
+
+Ellen wet her lips and looked around like a wounded animal.
+
+Her brother Cleve, saddling up a little way apart, cast a long
+studying glance at Wylackie and Arizona. He jerked the cinch so
+savagely that the horse leaped and struck.
+
+For four days there was absolute dearth at the Stronghold.
+
+Courtrey did not return. Ellen timidly tried to find out from the
+_vaqueros_ where he had gone, but they evaded her.
+
+Then, on the morning of that day, Steptoe Service, grinning and
+important, came to the Stronghold and served on Ellen a summons in
+suit for divorce.
+
+She met him at the door and invited him in, timidly and shyly, but he
+stood on the stone and made known his business.
+
+At first she did not understand, was like a child told something too
+deep for its intellect to grasp, bewildered.
+
+Then, when Service made it brutally plain, she slipped down along
+the doorpost like a wilted lily and lay long and white on the
+sand-scrubbed floor. Her women, loving her desperately, gathered her
+up and shut the door in the sheriff's face.
+
+They sent for Cleve, and not even the presence of Black Bart in the
+near corral could keep the brother from running into the darkened room
+where Ellen lay, too stunned to rally.
+
+"Damn him!" he gritted, falling on his knees beside her, "this's
+what's come of it! I ben lookin' for something of its like. Let him
+go. We'll leave Lost Valley, Ellen. We'll go out an' start another
+life, begin all over again. We're both too young to be floored by a
+man like Courtrey. Let him go."
+
+But the woman turned her waxen face to the wall and shook her head.
+
+"There ain't no life in this world for me without Buck," she
+whispered. "If he don't want me, I don't want myself."
+
+"You dont' want to hang to him, do you, Sis?" begged the man, "don't
+want to stay at th' Stronghold after this?"
+
+"Rather stay here under Buck's feet like th' poorest of his dogs than
+be well-off somewheres where I couldn't never see him again, never
+look in his face."
+
+"God!" groaned Cleve, "you love him like that!"
+
+"Yes," said Ellen, wearily, "like that."
+
+"Then by th' Eternal!" swore Cleve softly, "here you'll stay if it
+takes all th' law in th' United States to keep you here. I'll file
+your answer tomorrow--protest to th' last word!"
+
+And he rode into Corvan, only to find that Courtrey and Courtrey's
+influence had been there before him, that a cold sense of disaster
+seemed to permeate the town and all those whom he met therein.
+
+He found the "Court House crowd" tight-lipped and careful.
+
+And Ben Garland set the day for trial at a ridiculously early date,
+for all the world as if the thing had been cut and dried at some
+secret conclave.
+
+Courtrey was playing his game with a daring hand, true to his name and
+habit.
+
+Dusk was falling in Lost Valley. The long blue shadows had swept out
+from the Rockface, covering first the homesteads under the Wall, then
+the great grazing stretches, then Corvan, then the open levels again,
+then the mouth of Black Coulee and lastly sweeping eastward to hush
+the life at Last's Holding in that soft, sweet quiet which comes with
+the day's work done.
+
+Out at the corrals Billy and Conford, Jack and Bent and Curly, put the
+finishing touches to the routine of precaution which the Holding never
+relaxed, day or night.
+
+Inside the dusky living room where the bright blankets glowed on the
+walls and the _ollas_ hung in the deep window places, Tharon Last sat
+at the little old melodeon and played her nameless tunes. She did not
+look at the yellowed keys. Instead her blue eyes, deep and glowing,
+wandered down along the southern slopes and she was lost in
+unconscious dreams. Once again she saw the trim figure of the forest
+man as she had seen him come stiffly into her range of vision that day
+in Corvan. She recalled his quiet eyes, dark and speaking, the odd way
+his hair went straight back from his forehead. She wondered why she
+should think of him at all.
+
+He was against her--was a force that played directly against all her
+plans of life, her precepts. Moreover, she had told him she feared he
+was soft--like a woman--some women--that there was in him a lack of
+the straight man-courage which was the only standard in Lost Valley.
+
+And yet--she waited on his word, somehow--held her hand from her sworn
+duty for a while, waiting--for what?
+
+Ah, she knew! Deep in the soul of her she knew, vaguely and dimly to
+be sure, but she knew that it was for the time when the die should be
+cast--that he might prove himself for what he was.
+
+For some vague reason she knew she would not kill Courtrey until this
+man stood by.
+
+She wondered what Courtrey meant by this strange quiet following the
+tragic moment at the Stronghold steps when the Vigilantes had
+challenged him and ridden away.
+
+And then, all suddenly, into her dreaming there came the sound of a
+horse's hoofs on the sounding-board without--slow hoofs, uncertain.
+For one swift second that sound, coming out of the dusk with its
+uncertainty, sent a chill of memory down her nerves. So had come El
+Rey that night in spring when he brought Jim Last home to die!
+
+She rose swiftly and silently and stepped to the western door.
+
+There, in the shadows and the softness of coming night, a horse loomed
+along the green stretch, came plodding up to stop and stand before
+her, a brown horse, with the stirrups of his saddle hung on the
+pommel, his rein tied short up--Captain, the good, common friend of
+Kenset--of the--foothills!
+
+Tharon felt the blood pour back upon her heart and stay there for an
+awful moment. She put up a hand and touched her throat, and to save
+her life she did not know why this sudden sickening fear should come
+upon her.
+
+She had seen men killed, had known tragedy and loss and heartache, but
+never before had she seen the crest of the distant Wall to dance upon
+the pale skyline so. Then she whirled into the house and her young
+voice pealed out a call--Billy, Conford, Bent--she drew them to her
+running through the deep house--to point to the silent messenger and
+question them with wide blue eyes where fear rose up like a living
+thing.
+
+Billy at her shoulder, looked not at Captain, but at her.
+
+A sigh lifted his breast, but he stifled it at birth and turned with
+the others back toward the corrals. Tharon, running toward the deep
+room where the Virgin stood in Her everlasting beauty, unfastened her
+soft white dress as she ran. Inside she flung herself on her knees
+before the Holy Mother and poured out a trembling prayer.
+
+"Not that! Oh, Mary, not that! Let it not be _that_!" she whispered
+thickly. Then she was up, into her riding clothes--was out where the
+boys were hurriedly saddling the Finger Marks. Presently she was on El
+Rey and shooting like a silver shaft in the summer dusk down along the
+green levels toward the east. They rode in silence, Conford, Bent,
+Jack, Curly, Billy and herself, and a thousand thoughts were boiling
+miserably in two hearts.
+
+El Rey, Golden, Redbuck, Drumfire, Westwind and Sweetheart, they went
+down along the sounding dark plain, a magnificent band. The whole
+earth seemed to resound to the thunder of their going, and for once in
+their lives her beauties could not run fast enough for the mistress of
+Last's.
+
+They went like the wind itself, and yet they were slow to Tharon.
+
+Out of the open levels there swung up to meet them and to fade into
+the night, the standing willows by the Silver Hollow. The sloping
+stretches began to lift, dotted by the oaks and digger-pines for whose
+sake Kenset had come to Lost Valley. They shot through them, up along
+the sharply lifting skirts of the hills, in between the guarding pines
+that formed the gateway to the little glade where the singing stream
+went down and the cabin stood at the head. Tharon's throat was tight,
+as if a hand pressed hard upon it. The high tops of the pines seemed
+to cut the sky grotesquely. There was no light at the dim log house,
+no sound in the silent glade. Off to the right they heard the low of
+the little red cow which served the forest man with milk.
+
+They pounded to a sliding stop in the cabin's yard and Conford called
+sharply into the silent darkness.
+
+"Kenset! Hello--Kenset!"
+
+Tharon held her breath and listened. There was no sound except a night
+bird calling from the highest pine-tip.
+
+Carefully the men dismounted.
+
+"You stay up, Tharon, dear," the foreman said quietly, "until we look
+around."
+
+But to save her life the girl could not. What was this trembling that
+seized her limbs? Why did the stars, come out on the purple sky, shift
+so strangely to her eyes? She slipped off El Rey and stood by his
+shoulder waiting. Conford struck a flare and lit a candle, holding it
+carefully before him, shielding it with his palm behind it to throw
+the gleam away from his face, into the cabin. The pale light illumined
+the whole interior, and it was empty. The keen eyes of the riders went
+over every inch of space before they entered--along the walls, in the
+bed, under the tables. Then they filed in and Tharon followed, gazing
+around with eyes that ached behind their lids. There on the northern
+wall between the windows, was the great spread of the beautiful
+picture she had helped the forest man to hang. There were his books on
+the table's edge. She looked twice--the last one on the pile at a
+certain corner was just as she had placed it there, a trifle crooked
+with the edge, but neatly in line with those beneath it. There was the
+big chair in which she had waited while he made the little meal--there
+was his desk in the ingle nook, his maps upon it. It was all so
+familiar, so filled with his personality, that Tharon felt the very
+power of his dark eyes, smiling, grave----
+
+"Hello!" said Jack Masters suddenly. "Burt, what's this?"
+
+Conford stepped quickly around the table and held his candle down.
+
+Tharon pushed forward and looked over the leaning shoulders.
+
+There on the brown and green grass rug a rich dark stain was
+drying--blood, some three days old.
+
+Then, indeed, did the universe sag and darken to the Mistress of
+Last's.
+
+She put out a hand to steady herself and found it grasped in the
+strong one of Billy, who stood at her shoulder like her shadow.
+
+"Steady!" he whispered. "Steady, Tharon."
+
+She drew her trembling fingers across her eyes, wet her lips which
+felt dry as ashes. The same ache that had come with Jim Last's final
+smile was already in her heart, but intensified a thousand times. She
+felt all suddenly, as if there was nothing in Lost Valley worth while,
+nothing in all the world! That drying stain at her feet seemed to shut
+out the sun, moon and stars with its sinister darkness. She felt a
+nausea at the pit of her stomach, a need for air in her cramped
+lungs.
+
+Strange, she had never known that one could be so detached from all
+familiar things, could seem so lost in a sea of stupid agony. Why was
+it so? If this dark blot of blood had come from the veins of Billy
+now, of Conford, or Jack or Curly, her own men, would she have lost
+her grip like this? And then she became dully conscious that Billy had
+put her in the big chair by the table and had joined the others in
+their exhaustive search for any clew to the tragedy. She saw the moon
+rising over the tops of the pine trees at the glade's edge, heard the
+little song of the running stream.
+
+That was the little stream that Kenset had looked for in his ideal
+spot, this was the home he had made for himself, these were the things
+of the other life he had known, these soft, dark pictures, the books
+on the tables, the brass things shining in the light from the lamp....
+She knew that she was cold in the summer night, that she was staring
+miserably out of the open door, scarcely conscious of the scattered
+voices of her men, searching, searching, hunting, in widening circles
+outside.... Then they came back talking in low voices and she roused
+herself desperately. Her limbs were stiff when she rose from the big
+chair, her hands were icy.
+
+"No use, Tharon," said Conford quietly, "we can't find a damned thing.
+If Courtrey's bunch killed Kenset they made a clean get-away with all
+evidence. That much has th' new law done in th' Valley--killed th'
+insolence of th' gun man. Let's go home."
+
+It was Billy, faithful and still, who helped her--for the first time
+in her life!--to mount a horse. She went up on El Rey as if she
+were old. Then they were riding down the smooth floor of the little
+glade, leaving that darkened cabin at its head to stand in tragic
+loneliness.
+
+She saw the tops of the guarding pines at the gateway, rode out
+between them. The moon was up in majesty, and by its light Jack
+Masters suddenly leaned down to look at something, pulled up, swept
+down from his saddle, cowboy fashion, hanging by a foot and a hand,
+and picked up something which he examined keenly.
+
+"Look," he said quickly, "th' beet-man's badge!"
+
+He held out on his palm a small dark object, the copper-coloured
+shield which had shone on Kenset's breast!
+
+Its double-tongued fastener was twisted far awry, as if it had been
+wrenched away by violence.
+
+Conford turned and looked back to the cabin, as if he measured the
+distance.
+
+"There's been funny work here as sure's hell," he said profoundly.
+
+Then they rode on, all silent, thinking. It was near dawn when they
+rode up along the sounding-board and put in at Last's. Billy reached
+up tender arms and took Tharon off El Rey, and for the first time she
+gave herself wearily into them as if she were done.
+
+As she opened the door into her own dusky room the pale Virgin,
+touched by a silver shaft of the sinking moon, stood out in startling,
+ethereal beauty, Her meek hands folded on Her breast. Tharon Last
+stumbled forward and sank in a heap at Her feet, her arms about the
+statue's knees.
+
+"Hail--Mary--intercede for--him--" she faltered, and then the shining
+Virgin, the dim mystery of the shadowy room, faded out to leave her
+for the first time in her strong life, a bit of senseless clay.
+
+When she again opened her eyes the little winds of day were fanning
+her cheeks and old Anita was tugging at her shoulders, voluble with
+fright.
+
+To the riders of Last's the tragedy was nothing more than any other
+that they had known in Lost Valley. They went about their work as
+usual.
+
+Only Billy was filled with a sickening anguish at the knowledge that
+he was not able to offer one smallest saving straw to the girl in the
+big house--for Billy knew.
+
+All day Tharon sat like a rock in her own room, staring with unseeing
+eyes at the blank whitewashed walls. She did not yet know what ailed
+her, why this killing, more than that of poor Harkness, should make
+her sick to her soul's foundations. Yet it was so. Even the thought of
+her sworn duty was vague before her for a time. Then it seemed to come
+forward out of the mass of fleeting memories--Kenset that day at
+Baston's steps shapely, trim, halted--Kenset laughing over the little
+meal beside the table where the books lay--Kenset grasping her
+shoulder when she whirled to mount El Rey and challenge the Stronghold
+single-handed--to come forward like a calming, steadying thing and
+turn the pain to purpose.
+
+There was no one now to hold her back, no vital hands to press hers
+upon a beating heart, to make her untrue to her given word!
+
+Now she could go out, reckless and grim in her utter disregard of the
+outcome, and kill Courtrey where he stood. The time had come. There
+should be another cross in the granite beneath the pointing pine.
+
+As if the whirling universe settled back to its ordered place the
+right proportion came back to her vision, the breath seemed to lighten
+her holden lungs.
+
+Once again the girl arose and steadied herself, smoothed her tawny
+hair, looked at her hands to find them free from the shaking that had
+weakened them.
+
+She dressed herself and went out among her people, quiet and pale.
+
+The twilight had fallen and all the western part of the Valley was
+blue with shadow. Only on Kenset's foothills was the rosy light
+glowing, a tragic, aching light, it seemed to her. She saw all the
+little world of Lost Valley with new eyes, sombre eyes, in which there
+was no sense of its beauty. She wondered anxiously how soon she could
+meet Courtrey, and where. And then with the suddenness of an ordered
+play, the question was answered for her, for out of the dusk and the
+purple shadows a Pomo rider came on a running pony and halted out a
+stone's throw, calling for the "Senorita," his hands held up in token
+of friendliness.
+
+Without a thought of treachery Tharon went out to him and took the
+letter he handed her--swinging around for flight as the paper left his
+hand, for the riders of Last's were known all up and down the land.
+This dusky messenger took no chances he could avoid. He was well down
+along the slope by the time the boys came clanking around the house.
+
+And Tharon, standing in the twilight like a slim white ghost, was
+staring over their heads, her lips ashen, the scrawled letter
+trembling in her hands. For this is what she read, straining her young
+eyes in the fading light.
+
+ "Tharon. You must know by now that I mean bisness. All this
+ Vigilant bisness ain't a-goin' to help things eny. If it hadn't of
+ ben that I love you, what you think I'd a-done to that bunch?
+ That's th' truth. I ben holdin' off thinkin' you'd come to your
+ senses an' see that Buck Courtrey ain't to be met with vilence.
+ Now I'm playin' my trump card--now, tonight.
+
+ "Lola says you love this dude from below. That don't cut no ice
+ with me. I ain't carin' for no love from you at present. All I
+ want is _you_. I can make you love me once I've got you safe at
+ th' Stronghold. I ain't never failed with no woman yet. An' I mean
+ to have you, fair means or foul.
+
+ "Rather have you fair. So here's my last word.
+
+ "This Kenset ain't dead--yet. I went and took him. I've got him
+ safe as hell in the Canon Country. Ain't no man in th' Valley can
+ find God's Cup but me. He's guarded an' there's a lookout on th'
+ peak above th' Cup that can see a signal fire at th' Stronghold.
+ One fire out by my big corral means 'Send him out by False Ridge
+ with ten days' grub.' Two fires means 'Put a true bullet in his
+ head an' leave him there.' Now, here's the word. I've got a case
+ fixed up to divorce Ellen, legal. If you'll marry me soon's I'm
+ free, I'll build one fire out by that corral.
+
+ "If you say yes, you build one fire out by th' cottonwoods to th'
+ left of the Holdin'. I'm watchin' an' will see it at once. You can
+ see for yourself I mean bisness, as if you'll watch too, you'll
+ see that one fire here.
+
+ COURTREY."
+
+For a long moment the Mistress of Last's stood in profound quiet, as
+if she could not move. She was held in a trance like those dreadful
+night-dreams when one is locked in deadly inertia, helpless. The net
+which had been weaving in Courtrey's fertile brain was finished,
+flung, and closing in upon her before she knew of its existence. An
+awe of his cleverness, his trickery, gripped her in a clutch of ice.
+The whole fabric of her own desires and plans and purposes seemed to
+crumple like the white ash in a dead fire, leaving her nothing. She
+had been out-witted instead of outfought. One more evidence of the
+man's baseness, his unscrupulous cunning.
+
+He played his trump card and it was a winner, sweeping the table--for
+she knew before she finished that difficult reading that she would do
+anything in all the world to stop that "true bullet" in the heart that
+had pounded beneath her open palms.... Knew she would break her given
+word to Jim Last--knew she would forsake the Holding--that she would
+crawl to Courtrey's feet and kiss his hand, if only he would spare
+Kenset of the foothills, would send him out to that vague world of
+below, never to return!
+
+She swayed drunkenly on her feet for a time that seemed ages long.
+Then life came back in her with a rush. She broke the nightmare dream
+and gasped out a broken command to her faithful ones.
+
+"Billy!" she said thickly, "Oh, Billy! If you love me, run! Run an'
+build a fire--one fire!--only _one_ fire, Billy, dear--out by th'
+cottonwoods to th' left--of th' Holdin'!"
+
+Then she went and sat limply down on the step at the western door,
+leaned her head against the deep adobe wall, and fell to weeping as if
+the very heart in her would wash itself away in tears.
+
+And Billy, numb with anguish but true to the love he bore her, went
+swiftly out and set that beacon glowing. Its red light flaring against
+the blue darkness of the falling night seemed like a bodeful omen of
+sorrow and disaster, of death and failure and despair.
+
+Tharon on the sill roused herself to watch it leap and glow, then
+turned her deep eyes to where she knew the Stronghold lay.
+
+Presently out upon the distant black curtain of the night there flared
+that other fire, signal of life to Kenset somewhere in the Canon
+Country--and then her lips drew into a thin hard line and she
+straightened her young form stiffly up, put a hand hard upon her
+breast.
+
+"A little time, Courtrey!" she whispered to herself, "Jus' a little
+time an' luck, an' I'll give you th' double-cross or die, damn your
+soul to hell!"
+
+Billy, coming softly in along the adobe wall, caught the whisper,
+felt rather than heard its meaning, and turned back with the step of a
+cat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An hour later, when all the Holding was quiet for the night, drifting
+to early rest after the day's hard work, the Mistress of Last's,
+booted, dressed in riding clothes, her fair head covered by a
+sombrero, her daddy's guns at her hips, crept softly to the gate of El
+Rey's own corral. She went like a thief, crouching, watching, without
+a sound, and saddled the big stallion in careful softness. She led him
+gently out and around toward the cottonwoods, away from the house.
+When she was well away she put foot to stirrup and went up as the king
+leaped for his accustomed flight.
+
+But Tharon pulled him down. She wanted no thunder on the sounding-board
+tonight. But soft as she had been, as careful, there was one at the
+Holding who followed her every act, who went for a horse, too, who
+saddled Drumfire in silence and who crept down the sounding-board--Billy
+the faithful. Far down along the plain toward the Black Coulee he let
+the red roan out, so that the girl, keen of hearing as of sight, caught
+the following beat of hoofs, stopped, listened, understood and reined El
+Rey up to wait.
+
+And soon out of the shadows cast by the eastern ramparts, where the
+moon was rising, she saw the rider coming. A quick mist of tears
+suffused her eyes, a sick feeling gripped her heart.
+
+Here was another mixed in the sorry tangle! She had always known
+vaguely that Billy was one with her, that his heart was the deep heart
+of her friend.
+
+He was the one she always wanted near her in times of stress, it was
+with him she liked to ride in the Big Shadow when the sun went down
+behind the Canon Country.
+
+But now she did not want him. She had a keen desire to see him safely
+out of this--this which was to be the end, one way or the other, of
+the blood-feud between the Stronghold and Last's.
+
+Now as he loped up and stopped abreast of her in silence, she reached
+out a hand and caught his in a close clasp.
+
+"I don't want you, Billy, dear," she said miserably, "not because I
+don't love you, but because I ain't a-goin' to see you shot by
+Courtrey's gang. This is one time, boy, when I want you to leave me
+alone, to go back without me."
+
+The rider shook his head against the stars.
+
+"Couldn't do it, little girl," he said wistfully, "you know I couldn't
+do it."
+
+"Ain't I your mistress, Billy?" asked Tharon sternly. "Ain't I your
+boss?"
+
+"Sure are," said the boy with conviction.
+
+"Ain't I always been a good boss to you?"
+
+"Best in th' world. Good as Jim Last."
+
+"Then," said Tharon sharply, "it's up to you to take my orders. I
+order you now--go back."
+
+The cowboy leaned down suddenly and kissed the hand he held.
+
+"I'm at your shoulder, Tharon, dear," he said with simple dignity,
+"like your shadow. At your foot like the dogs that never forsake th'
+herds. I couldn't go back an' leave you--not though I died for it
+tonight.
+
+"We'll say no more about it. I don't know where you're goin', but
+wherever it is, there I'm goin', too, an' on my way. You can tell me
+or not, just as you please, but let's go."
+
+For a long time Tharon Last sat in the starlight and watched the
+crests of the distant mountains fringed with the silver of the moon
+that was rising behind them, and her throat ached with tears. All
+these things that hurt her, these unknown, tangled things that she
+knew dimly meant Life, had come to her with the advent of Kenset in
+Lost Valley. She wished passionately for a fleeting moment that he had
+never come, that the old swinging, rushing life of the ranges had
+never known his holding influence. Then she felt again the hammering
+of his heart beneath her palms, and nothing mattered in all the world
+beside.
+
+It was a thing beyond her ken, something ordered by fate. She must go
+on, blindly as running waters, regardless of all that drowned.
+
+But she loosed her hand from Billy's, leaned to his shoulder, put her
+arm about his neck and drew his face to hers. Softly, tenderly, she
+kissed him upon the lips, and she did not know that that was the
+cruelest thing she had ever done in all her kindly life, did not see
+the deathly pallor that overspread his face.
+
+"I'm goin' to th' Canon Country, Billy," she said simply, "to find th'
+Cup o' God an' Kenset."
+
+Then she straightened in her saddle and gave El Rey the rein.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was two of the clock by the starry heavens when these two riders
+entered the blind opening in the Rockface and disappeared. El Rey, the
+mighty, tossed his great head and whistled, stamped his hoofs in the
+dead sift of the silencing floor. He had never before lost sight of
+the sky, never felt other breath in his nostrils than the keen plain's
+wind.
+
+Now he shook himself and halted, went on again, and again halted, to
+be urged forward by Tharon's spurred heels in his flanks. Up through
+the eerie pass they went without speech, for each heart was filled to
+overflowing with thoughts and fears.
+
+To Billy there was something fateful, bodeful in the dead darkness,
+the stillness. It seemed to him as if he left forever behind him the
+open life of the ranges, the gay and careless days of riding after
+Tharon's cattle.
+
+For five years he had lived at Last's, under master and mistress,
+content, happy. The half-remembered world of below had never called
+him. The light on the table under the swinging lamp with Tharon's face
+therein, the murmur of the stream through her garden, the whisper of
+the cottonwoods, these had been sufficient. He had, subconsciously,
+thanked his Maker for these things, had served them with a whole
+heart. They had been his all, his life. Now the cottonwoods seemed far
+away, remote, the life of the deep ranch house a thing of long ago.
+All these things had given way to something that sapped the sunlight
+from the air, the very blueness from the vaulted skies, something that
+had come with the quiet man of the pine-tree badge. So Billy sighed in
+the darkness and sat easily on Drumfire, his slim left hand fidgeting
+with the swinging rein.
+
+And Tharon was lost, too, in a maze of thoughts. She sat straight
+as a lance, tense, alive, keen, staring into the narrow bore of the high
+ceiled cut, thinking feverishly. Was Kenset really alive? Had
+Courtrey been square with her? Or was he even now lying stiff and
+stark somewhere in the high cuts, his dark eyes dull with death, that
+beating heart forever stilled? She caught her breath with a whistling
+sigh, felt her head swim at the picture. If he was--_if_--_he_--_was_--!
+She fingered the big guns at her hip and savagery took hold of her.
+Courtrey's left wrist to match his right. Then some pretty work about
+him to make him wait--then a shot through his stomach--he would spit
+blood and reel, but he wouldn't die--the butcher!--for a little while,
+and she would taunt him with Harkness--and Jim. Last shot in the
+back--with Old Pete--and with--with Kenset--the one man--Oh, the one
+man in all the world whose quiet smile was unforgettable, whose vital
+hands were upon hers now, like ghost-hands, would always be upon hers
+if she lived to be old like Anita or died at dawn today! And Kenset
+had counseled her to peace! To keep the stain of blood from her own
+hands! She laughed aloud, suddenly, a ghastly sound that made cold
+chills go down her rider's spine, for it was the mad laughter of the
+blood-lust! Billy knew that Jim Last in his best moments was never
+so coldly a killer as his daughter was tonight.
+
+So they traversed the roofed cut and came out into the starlight of
+the first canyon. Up this they went in single file. They passed the
+place where Albright had found the dark spray on the canyon wall, the
+standing rock where the gun with the untrue firing pin had kicked away
+its shell. A little farther on was the disturbed and trampled heap of
+slide which had held Old Pete's body. In silence they rode on, the
+horses' hoofs striking a million echoes from the reverberating
+crosscuts.
+
+The moon was shining above, but here there was only a sifted light, a
+ghostly radiance of starlight and painted walls. Tharon, riding ahead,
+went unerringly forward as if she traveled the open ways of the Valley
+floor. She turned from the main canyon toward the left and passed the
+mouth of Old Pete's snow-bed. Between this and that standing spire and
+pinnacle she went, with a strong certainty that presently stirred
+Billy to speech.
+
+"Tharon, dear," he said gently, "hadn't we better leave a mark or two
+along this-a-way? Ain't you got no landmarks?"
+
+"Can if you want," the girl said briefly, "I don't need landmarks."
+
+"Then how you know the way? There ain't no one knows th' Canon
+Country--but Courtrey."
+
+"I don't know it," she said simply but with profound conviction. "I'm
+_feelin'_ it, Billy. I know I'm goin' straight to th' Cup o' God. I'm
+blind as a bat, it seems, yet goin' straight."
+
+She lifted a hand and crossed herself.
+
+"Goin' straight--Mary willin'--an' I'll come back straight. It lies up
+there an' to th' left again." She made a wide gesture that swept up
+and out, embracing the towering walls, the half-seen peaks against the
+stars.
+
+Billy shut his lips and said no more.
+
+Up there lay False Ridge, the sinister, dropping spine that came down
+from the uplands outside where the real great world began, and lured
+those who traveled down it to crumbling precipice and yawning pit, to
+sliding slope and slant that, once ridden down, could never be scaled
+again, according to the weird stories that were told of it.
+
+But if Tharon went to the Canons, there lay his trail, too. If she
+went down False Ridge to death in the pits and waterless cuts, he
+asked no better lot than to follow--the faithful dog at her foot, the
+shadow at her shoulder.
+
+And so it was that dawn crept up the blue-velvet of the night sky and
+sent its steel-blue light deep in the painted splits, and they rode
+unerringly forward up the sounding passes.
+
+When the light increased enough to show the way they came abruptly to
+the spot where it was necessary to leave the horses. The floor of the
+canyon up which they were traveling lifted sharply in one huge step,
+breast-high to a man.
+
+Tharon in the lead halted and looked for a moment all up and down the
+wondrous maze of pale, tall openings that encompassed them all round.
+
+She turned in her saddle and looked back the way they had come. There
+was darker shadow, going downward, but here and there those pale
+mouths gaped, long ribbons of space dropping from the heights above
+down to their level.
+
+Up any one a man might turn and lose himself completely, for they in
+turn were cut and ribboned with other mouths, leaving spires and walls
+and faces a thousand-fold on every hand.
+
+Tharon, even in the tensity and preoccupation of the hour, drew in her
+breath and the pupils of her blue eyes spread.
+
+"Th' Canon Country!" she said softly, "I always knew it would be like
+this--too great to tell about! I knew it would hold somethin' for
+me--always knew it--either life an' its best--or death."
+
+There was a simple grandeur about the earnest words, and Billy, his
+face grey in the steely light, felt the heart in his breast thrill
+with their portent.
+
+No matter what the Canons held for her--either that glorious
+fulfillment of life, or the simple austerity of death--he would have a
+part in it, would have served her to the last, true to the love he
+bore her, true to himself.
+
+And nothing--nothing under God's heaven, save death itself--could ever
+wipe out the memory of that kiss, given from the depths of her loving
+heart, the sign-manuel of her undying affection and friendship, the
+one and only touch of her inviolate red lips that he had ever known
+the Mistress of Last's to give to any man, save Jim Last himself.
+
+He wiped a hand across his forehead, damp with more than the night
+cold, and dismounted.
+
+"We'll leave th' horses here," he said. "I've an extra rope to string
+across an' make a small corral."
+
+He did not add that he would fasten this slim barrier lightly, so that
+a horse that really wanted to break out--in the frantic madness of
+thirst, say,--might do so.
+
+Then he set about his task--but Tharon stood with strained eyes
+looking up--and up--and ever up to the dimly appearing, looming spine
+of False Ridge.
+
+Over there, she knew in her heart, lay the hidden Cup o' God, with its
+secret, the secret that meant all the world to her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE UNTRUE FIRING PIN
+
+
+Tharon turned back and looked long at El Rey. She wondered if she
+would ever see the great silver-blue stallion again, ever feel the
+wind singing by her cheeks, ever hear the thunder of his running on
+the hollow ranges. She saw the stain of Jim Last's blood on the big
+studded saddle and a pain like death stabbed her.
+
+"I'll get him," she had promised on that tragic day, "so help me God!"
+and had made the sign of the Cross.
+
+What did she now?
+
+Cast away all certainty of that fulfilment because a man--a man almost
+a stranger--lay somewhere in the Canon Country, crawled somewhere
+along False Ridge, perhaps, wounded and sick with fever.
+
+"Oh, hurry!" she whispered as Billy made secure his last light knot in
+the rope gateway across the cut and came to join her.
+
+She scrambled up the bench in the canyon floor, gained her feet and
+went forward at a rush.
+
+"Steady, Tharon," warned the rider, "you ain't used to climbin'. Save
+your wind."
+
+It was true advice. Long before the sun was high overhead and day was
+broad in the painted cracks she had begun to heed it. As she swung up
+the ever lifting floors, threaded this way and that between the thin
+intercepting walls that towered hundreds of feet straight up, she cast
+her wide eyes up in wonder. Always she had watched the Canon Country
+from her western door, always it had held her with a binding lure.
+
+There was that about its mystery, its austere majesty, that had
+thrilled her heart from babyhood. She had pictured it a thousand times
+and always it had looked just so--pink and grey and saffron, pale and
+misty with light when the sun was high, blue and wonderful and black
+as the luminary lowered, leaving the quick shadows.
+
+Hour after hour they climbed, mostly in silence, speaking now and then
+some necessary word of caution, of assent. This way and that Tharon
+turned, but always moving upward in the same direction. From time to
+time Billy dropped a shred of the red kerchief about his neck, touched
+the soft walls with the handle of the knife he carried. This left a
+mark plain as a trail to his trained eyes.
+
+At noon they halted for a little rest. From Tharon's saddle Billy had
+taken the flask of water, the tightly rolled bundle of bread and meat
+in its meal-sack. They ate sparingly of this, drank more sparingly of
+the water. Billy wondered miserably how soon this last might become
+more precious than fine gold to him, as he thought of the waterless
+pockets of the blind and sliding country.
+
+Long before she had rested sufficiently Tharon was up and ready to go.
+Ever her eager eyes were on the heights above. Ever they turned to the
+left of the steady line she set herself through and above the winding
+passes. From time to time Billy looked back. There was not a sign by
+which one might tell which way he had come if the last mark he made
+was around the first corner. Hundreds and thousands of spires and
+faces towered about them. It was a mystic maze of dead stone, cut and
+weathered by the elements.
+
+"No wonder!" he told himself, "that the Indians call it the Enchanted
+Land!"
+
+"We'll reach False Ridge tomorrow, Billy," Tharon told him confidently,
+"an' over it lies God's Cup. There's water there--an' Kenset."
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"I don't know. Just feel. He's there--alive or--" a half sob clutched
+at her voice--"or dead. But he's there."
+
+"There'll be some one with him if he's alive, most likely."
+
+"Sure," said Tharon briefly.
+
+All the afternoon they traveled, sometimes touching with outstretched
+hands the faces on either side of them, again walking upward through
+majestic halls, solemn and beautiful. Everything about them was
+beautiful, the height, the sheer, straight walls, the myriad little
+blue shadows of tiny projections on their faces. Night came so early
+in the pits that long before they wished they were compelled to camp.
+In a blind pocket, walled like a room and round as an apple, they
+stopped, and Billy spread down the blanket he had taken from
+Drumfire's back. This was their only preparation. They had nothing to
+do, no fire to build, no water to bring.
+
+Tharon, scarcely conscious of the many miles she had traveled since
+the previous night, sat down upon the blanket, gathered her knees in
+her arms and stared at the vague blue phantoms of cliffs through the
+tall straight mouth that led into this sheltered pocket.
+
+Outside the winds were drawing up the canyons. All day they had walked
+in this wind. It drew constantly up and down the cuts, this way and
+that, like contrary currents that met and fought each other, swung in
+together, went a little way in peace, to again split and surge away
+through other channels. The echoes were alive with every sound, both
+of their own making and that of the wind's. A constant sighing droned
+through the depths, a mournful, whispering sound that sent the shivers
+down Tharon's spine, made her think sadly of all the tragedies she had
+ever known.
+
+Billy, lying full length beside her, his hands beneath his head,
+looked up to the narrow blue spot of sky so far away, and thought his
+own thoughts, and they were not wholly sad.
+
+They fell to talking, softly, in low tones, as if in all the
+mysterious solitude there might be one to hear, and it was mostly
+speech of long ago--when Billy had first come into Lost Valley.
+
+After a long and quiet hour the man insisted that she should
+sleep--that after the hard day and in view of the coming hard morrow,
+she needed rest.
+
+"But I'm not tired, Billy," Tharon protested, "no more'n as if I'd
+been ridin' all day after th' cattle."
+
+But Billy shook his head and hollowed a little place in the soft slide
+stuff at the Wall's foot. In this he spread the blanket, folding it
+half back.
+
+"Lie down," he commanded, "an' you'll be asleep so quick you won't
+know when it happens."
+
+Tharon slipped off her daddy's belt and stretched her slim young form
+in the hollow, which fitted it like a cradle. Not for nothing had
+Billy slept out many a night with nothing save the earth and stars for
+bed and blanket. The hollow was craftily deepened at hip and shoulder,
+making a restful couch. As she settled herself therein he lapped the
+loose half of the blanket over her and tucked it in. Then he took his
+hat, folded it sharply and placed it under the tawny head.
+
+In its place he would fain have laid his heart.
+
+His fingers, settling the improvised pillow, tangled themselves
+wistfully in the sun-bright hair, and the boy groaned aloud.
+
+"What's the matter, Billy, dear?" asked Tharon anxiously, but Billy
+laughed lightly, a thin sound in the mighty caverns.
+
+"Nothing in God's world, Tharon," he lied. "Now go to sleep."
+
+And he walked away to the tall mouth and sat down with his back
+against one of the walls. From his pocket he took papers and tobacco
+and proceeded to roll himself a cigarette.... Dawn showed the narrow
+doorway strewn with their butts, as leaves strew mountain trails in
+autumn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Things were ready to happen in Lost Valley--several things.
+
+At the Golden Cloud, Lola looked across the level stretches toward the
+Stronghold with tragic dark eyes, and smiled at a dozen men whom she
+scarcely saw. Settlers from all up and down the Wall drifted into
+Corvan and out again, intent, silent, watchful. _Vaqueros_ and riders
+from the Stronghold also came and went, as intent, as silent. They
+passed each other with hostile eyes and trigger fingers were unusually
+limber. The air was pregnant with change.
+
+Buck Courtrey was conspicuous by his absence.
+
+He was not seen in the town, neither was he at the Stronghold.
+
+There were soft whispers afloat that he was with the Pomos up under
+the Rockface at the north.
+
+And at the Stronghold, poor Ellen, whiter than ever, more like a
+broken lily drooping on its stem, trembled and waited for a day that
+was set soon--too terribly soon!--the day, farcically appointed, for
+the suit for divorce against her.
+
+Word of this was abroad through all the Valley. Underground
+speculation was rife as to which of the two women whom Courtrey
+favoured, Lola or Tharon, was responsible. Some said one, some the
+other. But Lola knew.
+
+Then came the day itself--a golden summer day as sweet and bright as
+that one years ago when Courtrey had married Ellen--at this same pine
+building where the laughable legal farces were enacted now.
+
+Pale as a new moon Ellen rode in across the rolling stretches on one
+of the Ironwoods, with Cleve beside her. She was spiritless, silent.
+Cleve was silent, too, though for a far different reason. There was a
+frown between his brows, a glitter in his narrowed eyes. He was
+thinking of the only man in Corvan whom he had been able to persuade
+to present Ellen's protest--Dick Burtree, one-time lawyer and man of
+parts in the outside, now a puffed and threadbare vagabond, whose
+paramount idea was whiskey and more whiskey. But Burtree could talk.
+Over his mottled and shapeless lips could, on occasion, pour a stream
+of pure oratory silver as the Vestal's Veil.
+
+When he was drunk he feared neither man nor devil, and he could speak
+best so. Therefore Cleve had given him enough money in advance to put
+him in trim.
+
+"What you think Buck'll say about me, Cleve?" Ellen asked anxiously.
+"What's he mean to accuse me of?"
+
+"Any dirty thing he can trump up, Sis," said Cleve gravely, "he's
+a-goin' to make it a nasty mess--an' I wish to God you'd jest ride on
+down th' Wall with me an' never even look back."
+
+He leaned from his saddle and took the blue-veined hand in his. There
+was an unspeakable tenderness in his eyes as he regarded his sister.
+"What you say, Ellen? There's life below, an' work an' other men.
+You'll marry again, sometime----"
+
+But Ellen shook her head with its maize-gold crown.
+
+"Nary other man, Cleve," she said gently. "I'm all Buck's woman."
+
+So they rode on toward the town, and Cleve knew that his last faint
+hope was dead.
+
+In the town itself there was a stir. Courtrey was there, and Wylackie
+Bob, and Black Bart and Arizona, a bunch of dark, evil men in all
+surety.
+
+The Ironwoods were in evidence everywhere, but strange to say, there
+were no Finger Marks. Not a man from the Holding was in town.
+
+When Cleve and Ellen, alone together, rode in, it lacked yet a half
+hour of the time set for trial. There was no place to go but Baston's,
+so they dismounted at the hitch-rack. Ellen, swaying on her feet,
+looked all around with her big pale eyes, and when she saw Courtrey
+some distance away she put a hand to her heart as simply as a hurt
+child. She was a pitiful creature in her long white dress, for she
+had ridden in on an old sidesaddle, and she shook out the crumpled
+folds in a wistful attempt to look proper. On her head was the
+inevitable sunbonnet of slats and calico.
+
+As she went up the steps of the store with Cleve, Lola of the Golden
+Cloud, blazing like a comet in her red-and-black came face to face
+with her purposely. What was in Lola's head none would ever know, but
+she wanted to see Courtrey's wife.
+
+As they met they stopped dead still, these two women who loved one
+man, and the look that passed between them was electric, deep,
+revealing. They stood so long staring into each other's eyes that
+Cleve, frowning, plucked Ellen by the sleeve and made to push
+forward.
+
+But as suddenly as a flash of light Lola reached out her two hands and
+caught Ellen's in a tight clasp that only women know, the swift,
+clinging clasp of the secret fellowship of those who suffer.
+
+For one tense moment she held them, while Ellen swayed forward for all
+the world as if she would sink in upon the deep full breast of this
+wanton whom she had hated! Then the spell broke, they fell apart with
+a rush, Lola swung out and went down the steps, while Ellen obediently
+followed Cleve into Baston's store, where she sat on a nail keg and
+waited in a dull lethargy. Outside Courtrey, who had witnessed the
+thing from across the street, slapped his thigh and laughed
+uproariously.
+
+It was a funny sight to him. But Lola's beautiful black eyes blazed
+across at him with a light that none had ever seen before in their
+inscrutable depths.
+
+Then the hour struck, and all Corvan, it seemed to Cleve, strung out
+toward the Court House. This was to be in open court--a spectacle.
+From somewhere in the adobe outskirts of the town came Ellen's serving
+women, most of them, whom Cleve had sent in early in the day. They
+fell in with her and so, with only the brother who had never failed
+her and these dusky women of the silent tongues to back her, Ellen
+Courtrey went to her crucifixion as truly as though she had been one
+of the two thieves on Golgotha.
+
+At the sight of Courtrey across the big bare room she went whiter than
+she was, if such a thing were possible, and slid weakly into the chair
+placed for her.
+
+Then the thing proceeded--swiftly, lightly, with smiles on the faces
+of the crowd.
+
+Old Ben Garland on the judge's bench, was furtive, scared, nervous,
+fiddling with his papers and clearing his throat from time to time.
+
+The county clerk at his table made a great deal out of the ceremony
+of swearing in the witnesses--Wylackie Bob, Black Bart, Arizona and
+one young Wylackie Indian woman who worked at the Stronghold. Cleve
+put up only the serving women whom he had sent in, some seven of them,
+every one of whom loved their mistress with the faithful fidelity of a
+dog. These women knew Ellen Courtrey as not even the master of the
+Stronghold himself knew her. They knew her in her idle hours, at her
+small tasks, at her bedside, in the loving solicitude she displayed
+for all of them--and they knew her on her knees in prayer, for Ellen
+had a strange and simple religion, half Catholic and half Pomo
+paganism.
+
+In the straight-backed chair they gave her Ellen sat like a statue,
+sweet and still, a thing so obviously good that it seemed even
+Courtrey himself must weaken to behold her. But not Courtrey. He was
+on fire with the vision of Tharon Last on the Cup Rim's floor, shaking
+her fist toward him in challenge--at Baston's steps calling him a
+murderer and worse--at her western door, striking him from her with
+the strength of a man. He saw the signal fire flaring across the
+darkened Valley--and nothing on earth or in Heaven could have softened
+him to the woman who bound him away from this fighting girl, this gun
+woman whom he was breaking to him slowly but surely. He visioned her
+in Ellen's room at the Stronghold--and the breath came fast in his
+throat.
+
+And Ellen?
+
+Ah, Ellen was thinking of the long past day when this man had found
+her in the barren rocklands and taken her with the high hand of a
+lover. She, too, drifted away from the chilling courtroom with its
+judge and its petty officials.... And then all suddenly she knew that
+men were talking--and about her. She heard the drone of question and
+answer--the rambling statements of the stranger, Arizona, accusing her
+of strange things--of asking him to take her on rides in Courtrey's
+absence--of swinging with him nights in the hammock by the watering
+trough!
+
+She sat and listened with parted lips and large innocent eyes fixed on
+the man in wonder. Cleve Whitmore clenched his hands until the nails
+cut deep, but he held his tongue and controlled his face. Only the
+blazing blue eyes spoke. She knew that Black Bart tried to tell
+something, that he made some mistake or other and had to begin all
+over again. There was a long and tedious time in here when she looked
+away out the window to where the prairie grass was blowing in the
+little winds and the shadows of clouds drifted across the green
+expanse.... She was numb and far away with misery. She did not care
+for anything in all this world. It seemed as if she was detached,
+aloof, dead already in body as she was in soul.... And then she heard
+the drawling voice of Wylackie Bob--and he was saying something
+unspeakable--about her! She listened like one in a trance--then she
+struggled up from her chair with tragic long arms extended, and the
+cry that rang from her lips was piteous.
+
+"Buck!" it pealed across the stillness of the crowded room, "Buck!--it
+ain't so! Never in this world, Buck! I ben true to you as your shadow!
+Before God, it ain't true!"
+
+There was a stir throughout the crowd, a breath that was audible.
+There were many of the Vigilantes there--a goodly number, all
+wondering where Tharon Last was, where Kenset was, where were
+the riders from Last's. They had expected, what they did not
+know--something, at any rate, for this seemed somehow a test, a
+turning point. But there was nothing. They stirred and waited,
+like a great force heaving in its bed, blind, sluggish, but
+wakening.
+
+And Ellen, chilled by Courtrey's sneering face, the cold disapproval
+of Ben Garland's striking mallet, sank back in her chair and covered
+her face with her shaking hands.... She heard some more awful
+things--then the voice of Dick Burtree beginning soft, low, silver
+like running waters. She heard it tell of that far away day of her
+marriage--of the years that followed--of Courtrey's love for her--of
+her own gentleness, her beauty, "like the tender sunlight of spring on
+the snow and the golden sands"--of her service, her loyalty, her love
+that had "never faltered nor intruded" that "patient obedience to her
+master had but strengthened and made perfect." Of the pitiful thing
+that her life had been this man made a wondrous thing, all sweet with
+twilights and haloed with service.
+
+He talked until the courtroom was still as death and the Indian women
+behind her were rocking in unison of grief. Then she heard questions
+again and the gutteral soft voices of her women answering--with love
+and devotion in every halting word. Once again the crowd in the room
+stirred--and Courtrey's narrow eyes went over it in that cold,
+promising glance.
+
+For once in his life Courtrey, the bully, felt a premonitory chill
+down his spine--because for the first time that promising glance of
+his failed of its effect! Only here and there along the rows of faces
+did one cower. There were faces, many faces, that looked back at him
+with steady eyes and tight lips.... Verily it was time he conquered
+the riding, shooting, beautiful she-devil who had made this thing
+possible! The sooner he got Tharon Last away from this bunch of spawn
+the better. Then he would sweep in with all his old swift methods,
+only sharper ones this time, and "clean" them all. When he got through
+it would be a different man's Valley, make no mistake about that!
+
+Here Ellen looked straight into his eyes and both were conscious of
+the shock. Ellen wilted and Courtrey frowned and struck a fist against
+the railing near him.... He looked up and met the hesitating eyes of
+Ben Garland on the bench and his own hardened down to pin points.
+
+The farce was finished save for the Judge's decision--Dick Burtree was
+slumped in his chair, dead drunk and asleep. Wylackie Bob was lighting
+a cigarette in his brown fingers, a smile on his evil mouth, his slow,
+black eyes covering the slim white form of Ellen in a speculative way,
+as if he dreamed of making true his blasphemous lies. Ellen was sweet
+as a flower in her open-lipped beauty, her panting despair. Wylackie
+did not notice the slim man beside her whose lips were so tight that
+they were a mere line across his face. No one at the Stronghold
+noticed Cleve much.
+
+Then Ben Garland was speaking, and Ellen gathered her dim wits enough
+to make out that he was saying strange things--awful things--that had
+to do with Courtrey's freedom.
+
+Then she knew--swaying and groping with her blue-veined hands--that
+the thing was done--that she was no longer a wife. That she would
+never again sleep in the bend of Courtrey's arm as she had slept in
+those golden days of long ago--that she was an outcast, blackened
+beyond all hope by the damning and unchoice words of Wylackie Bob....
+Then the world faded out for Ellen in merciful blackness.
+
+The petty officials rose with laughter and clanking of boots on the
+board floors--the crowd filed out in a striking silence. Never before
+had a crowd in Lost Valley gone out from a courtroom in that strange
+and bodeful silence.
+
+The sight of Ellen lying white and limp across Cleve Whitmore's
+shoulder like a sack of grain, as he passed out with the moving mass,
+had an odd effect. It was partly the white dress that did it--and the
+time was ripe.
+
+Courtrey and his gang were toward the fore--first out. They spread off
+to one side with jest and quip, with flash of bottle and slap on
+shoulder. The populace thinned a bit from the steps.... And then
+suddenly as a pistol shot Cleve Whitmore's voice rang out like a
+clarion.
+
+"Wylackie!" it pealed across the subdued noises, "You ---- ---- ----
+hell hound. _Turn round!_"
+
+There was death in it.
+
+The gun man whirled, drawing like lightning. In the Court House door,
+Cleve Whitmore with his sister's limp form on his shoulder, beat him
+to it.
+
+He had drawn as he called. Before the words were off his lips he
+pulled the trigger and shot Wylackie through the heart.
+
+As his henchman fell Courtrey's good hand flashed to his hip, but
+Dixon of the Vigilantes, shot out an arm and knocked him forward from
+behind.
+
+For the second time Courtrey had missed a life because a brave heart
+dared him. Old Pete had paid the price for that trick. Dixon had no
+thought of it.
+
+And in one moment the chance was past, for a sound began to roar from
+that silent crowd which had poured from the courtroom--the deep,
+bloodcurdling sound of the mob forming, inarticulate, uncertain.
+
+For the first time in his life Courtrey felt real fear grip him.
+
+He had killed and stolen and wronged among these people and gotten
+away with it. He had never feared them. They had been silent. Now with
+the first deep rumble from the concrete throat of Lost Valley he got
+his first instinctive thrill of disaster.
+
+He stood for a moment in utter silence. Then he flung up his hands,
+snapped out an order, whirled on his heel and went swiftly to the near
+rack where stood Bolt and the rest of the Ironwoods. Like a set of
+puppets on strings his men drew after him--and they left Wylackie Bob
+where he fell.
+
+In a matter of seconds the whole Stronghold gang was mounted and
+clattering down the street--out of the town toward the open range.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And the killer on the Court House steps?
+
+He stood where he was and looked with blazing eyes over the motley
+crowd beneath him. Steptoe Service made a step toward him, looked
+round, wet his lips and thought better of it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then, in another second, the crowd was a mob and the mob was the
+Vigilantes. Some one took Ellen from Cleve's shoulder with careful
+hands and carried her away. Then some one reached down and picked him
+up bodily. Another joined, and they set him on their shoulders,
+lifting him high. The inarticulate mob cry swelled and deepened and
+rose to a different sound--a shout that gathered volume and roared out
+across the spaces where Courtrey rode with a menace, a portent.
+
+With one accord the mob started on a journey around Corvan.
+
+White as Ellen, Cleve Whitmore rode that triumphant journey, his eyes
+still blazing, his lips tight. The town went wild. Public feeling came
+out on every hand. Daring took the weak, hope took the oppressed, and
+they called Courtrey's reign right there. For three uproarious hours
+the bar-tenders could not wipe off their bars.
+
+A new regime was ushered in--and she who had been its sponsor was not
+there to see it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When the hour of Change was striking for Corvan and all Lost Valley,
+Tharon Last, who had set it to strike, was scaling False Ridge in the
+Canon Country. Grim, ash-pale with effort, her blue eyes shining, she
+climbed the Secret Way that few had ever found.
+
+How she had come to it through the tortuous cuts and passes was a
+marvel of homing instinct--the heart that homed to its object. It had
+seemed to her all along this strange, tense journey, that she had had
+no will of her own, that she had held her breath and shut her eyes, as
+it were, and gone forward in obedience to some strange thing within
+that said, "turn here," "go thus." Billy following behind, watched her
+with tight lips and a secret wonder. As she had told him she would
+"go straight, Mary willing," so she had gone straight--and it seemed,
+truly, as if it were right that she should, no matter how his heart
+ached to see this thing.
+
+Verily there was something supernatural about it all, something
+uncanny.
+
+If it had been he, Billy, whom Tharon loved, and had he lain, wounded
+in the Cup o' God, would the girl have been given this blind instinct
+for direction? Would she have gone as unerringly to the Secret Way?
+
+Nay--there must be something in the old saying that, for every heart
+in the world there was its true mate.
+
+Tharon had found hers in Kenset.
+
+But where would he ever find his? The boy shook his fair head
+hopelessly at the sliding floors. For all perfection there must be
+sacrifice. He was the sacrifice for Tharon's perfection--a willing
+one, so help him!
+
+That they had found the Secret Way across False Ridge was perfectly
+plain, for here in the living rock before them were marks, the first
+marks they had found in the Canons. Thin, small crosses, cut in the
+stone of the walls, began to lead upward from the last liftings cut
+straight up the Rockface of False Ridge itself. It seemed, to look at
+the dim traces, that no living thing without wings could scale that
+steep and forbidding cliff, but when they tried to climb, they found
+that each step had been set with artful cunning. The set of steps
+followed the form of a "switchback," working from right to left, and
+always rising a little. False Ridge itself, a towering, mighty spine,
+came down in a swiftly dropping ridge from somewhere in the high upper
+country at the west of all the canyons. It was known to lead
+deceptively down among the cuts and passes, as if it went straight
+down to the lower levels, and to end abruptly in a precipice that none
+could descend or climb. On all its rugged sides there were treacherous
+slopes which looked hard enough to support a man, but which, once
+stepped on, gave sickeningly away to slide and slither for a hundred
+feet straight down to some abrupt edge, where they fell in dusty
+cataracts to blind basins and walled cups below.
+
+In these blind cups were many skeletons of deer and other animals that
+had ventured down from the upper world, never to return. Somewhere up
+here must be the bones of Canon Jim.
+
+But the Secret Way was safe. Under every carefully worked out step
+there was solid stone, for every handhold there was a firm stake set.
+These stakes were old for the most part, but here and there had been
+set in a new one--Courtrey's work, they made no doubt, for Courtrey
+was said to know the Canons. It took Tharon and Billy two hours to
+make the climb, stopping from time to time to rest. At such times the
+boy stood close and took her hand. It was grim work looking down the
+sheer face, and one might well be excused for holding a hand for
+steadiness. And it would soon be the time for no more touches of this
+girl's fair self for Billy.
+
+And so, climbing steadily and in comparative silence, these two, whose
+hearts were strong, came at last to the top of False Ridge--a thin
+knife-blade of stone--and looked abruptly and suddenly down on the
+other side.
+
+With a little gasp Tharon put a hand to her throat, for there, an
+unbelievably short distance down, lay the Cup o' God, without a doubt.
+A small, round glade of living green, watered by a whispering stream
+that lost itself the Lord knew where, it lay like a tiny gem in the
+pink stone setting. Trees stood in utter quiet about its edges, for
+there was here no slightest breath of air. Lush grass carpeted its
+level floor. And there, almost directly under the marked way leading
+down, lay a tiny camp--the ashes of a dead fire, a gun against a tree,
+and--here Tharon leaned far out and looked as if her very spirit would
+penetrate the distance--a blanket spread on the level earth, on which
+there lay the body of a man!
+
+It was a trim body, they could see from where they stood, clad in dark
+garments of olive drab that hugged the lean limbs close.
+
+"Kenset!" whispered Tharon with paling lips. "Kenset of th'
+foothills,--an'--he--looks," she wet those ashy lips, "he--looks like
+he is dead."
+
+Without another word she set her feet in the precarious way and went
+down so fast that Billy's heart rose in his throat and choked him, and
+for the first time since he could remember, he called fervently upon
+his Maker with honest reverence. He thought at every slip and scramble
+that she must fall and go hurtling down the Rockface.
+
+But that uncanny instinct which had brought her this far was at her
+command still. She went down faster than it seemed possible for
+anything to go, and before the rider was able to catch up she had
+leaped to the grassy floor, and was running forward toward that still
+form on the blanket.
+
+"Kenset!" she cried like a bugle, "Kenset! Kenset! Oh,--David!"
+
+And then it was that the quiet form stirred, rolled over on its side,
+lifted itself on an elbow--and held out two arms that wavered
+grotesquely, but were eloquent of love's power and its need.
+
+And the Mistress of Last's flung herself on her knees, gathered up
+this strange man as if he had been a child, pressed him hard against
+her breast, and kissed him as we kiss our dead. She pushed his face
+from her and looked into it as if she would see his very soul, the
+tears running on her white cheeks, her lips working soundlessly.
+
+This was love! This agony--this ecstasy--this sublime forgetting of
+all the world beside--this reward after struggle.
+
+Billy stood for a second at the foot of the Wall, and the nails cut in
+his palms. Then he whirled and went fast as he could walk toward the
+first trees that presented themselves--and he could not see where he
+was going for the bleak grey mist that swam in his eyes.
+
+This was love! This dreary colour of the golden sunlight of noon in
+the high country--this dumb ache that locked his throat--this high
+courage that brought him serving love's object to the bitter-sweet
+end. How long he stood there he did not know. His heart was dead, like
+the weathered stone country about him. He knew that he heard Tharon's
+voice after a while, that golden voice which had been the bells of
+Last's, in rapid question and answer--and Kenset's voice, too, weak
+and slow, but filled with joy unspeakable. It was lilting and soft, a
+lover's voice, a victor's voice, and presently he caught a few of the
+broken words that passed between them--"Clean! Clean! Oh, Tharon,
+darling--there is no blood on these dear hands! Tell me you did not
+kill Courtrey!"
+
+He heard Tharon answer in the negative.
+
+And then all the world fell about him, it seemed, for a gun cracked
+from the trees beyond him and a wasp stung his cheek.
+
+In one instant the sunlight became brilliant again, the joy came back
+in the day. Here was something more to do for Tharon, a new task at
+hand when he had thought his tasks were all but done.
+
+He whirled, looked, drew his six-gun and began firing at the man who
+stood in plain sight just where he had stepped into the Cup from the
+mouth of a little blind cut where the stream went out in noise and
+lost itself.
+
+This was a big man, sinister and cold and dark, a half-breed Pomo of
+Courtrey's gang, a still-hunter who did a lot of the dirty work which
+the others refused. Billy had seen him before, knew his record.
+
+Now they two stood face to face and fired at each other swiftly,
+coolly. He saw the half-breed stagger once, knew that he had touched
+him somewhere. And then a sound cut into the snapping of the shots, a
+sound that was like nothing he had ever heard in all his life before,
+a sound as savage as the roar of a she-bear whose cub is killed before
+her eyes. As he flung away his empty gun and snatched the other, he
+moved enough to bring into his range of vision Tharon Last, standing
+over Kenset, her mouth open in that savage cry.
+
+Then before he could draw and fire again he saw the prettiest piece of
+work he had ever witnessed. He saw the gun woman crouch and stoop, saw
+her hands flash in Jim Last's famous backhand flip, saw the red flame
+spurt from her hips, and the Pomo half-breed flung up his hands and
+fell in a heap, his face in the grass. He did not move. Only a long
+ripple passed over his body. He was still as the ageless rocks, as
+much a part of eternity. For a moment Billy stood, the gun hanging in
+his hand. Then he knew that Tharon was coming toward him--that her
+hands were on his shoulders--her deep eyes piercing his with a look
+that meant more to him than all the earth beside. It was the fierce,
+mother-look of changeless affection, the companion to that savage cry.
+She held him in a pinching grip, and made sure that he was unhurt,
+save for that scratch on the cheek.
+
+"If he had killed you, Billy," she said tensely, "I'd a-gone a-muck
+an' shot up th' whole of Lost Valley."
+
+And the boy knew in his heart she spoke the solemn truth.
+
+He slipped his hands down her arms and caught her fingers tightly.
+
+"Stained!" his heart whispered to itself in stifling exhilaration, "in
+spite of all--her first killin'--an' for me!"
+
+Then he could bear her face no more, and turned to look at Kenset.
+Half off the edge of his blanket the forest man lay with his face
+buried in his hands, and beside him lay another gun, the smoke still
+curling from its muzzle.
+
+"By God!" said the rider, softly, "what's this?" and he ran forward to
+pick up the weapon.
+
+"Three of us!" he said aloud, "pepperin' him at once! Kenset, where
+did you get this gun?"
+
+But Kenset did not speak. His shoulders trembled, his dark head was
+bowed to the earth.
+
+"Answer me," said Billy, "for as sure's I live, this here's Buck
+Courtrey's favourite gun--the gun with the untrue firin' pin. Look
+here." And he held it toward Tharon who leaned near to look. True
+enough.
+
+In the right side of the plunger there was a small, shining nick, as
+if, at some previous time, a tiny chink had been broken out of it.
+
+"I found it where I saw Courtrey hide it that night they brought me
+here," said Kenset in a muffled voice. "I crawled when the Pomo was
+out in the Canons after meat."
+
+"An' you used it--at last. I see. Not till th' last."
+
+"No," said Kenset miserably, "not till the last."
+
+Slowly Tharon knelt down beside him and put a tender arm across his
+shoulders. Her face was shining--like Billy's heart.
+
+"Mr. Kenset," she said softly, "I told you once that I was afraid you
+was soft--like a woman--that you wouldn't shoot if you had a gun. An'
+you said, 'You're right. I wouldn't. Not until th' last extremity.'
+
+"What was this last extremity? Tell me. Why did you shoot when you
+knew right well I'd get him myself?"
+
+"To beat you to it!" cried the man with sudden passion, "to take the
+stain myself!"
+
+For a long moment the girl knelt there beside him and gazed unseeingly
+at the inscrutable calm of the silent country. Something in the depths
+of her blue eyes was changing--deepening, growing in subtle beauty, as
+if the universe was suddenly become perfect, as if there was nowhere a
+flaw.
+
+"There's only one kind of man, after all, Mr. Kenset," she said at
+last with a sweet dignity, "th' man who is true an' honest to th'
+best there is in him, accordin' to his lights. That's my kind of
+man."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then she rose, and it was as if a light of activity burned up in her.
+She became practical on the instant.
+
+"I'm glad you brought th' thin rope, Billy," she said, "it's longer'n
+mine. An' th' little axe, too. We'll need 'em all to get him up an'
+down False Ridge. An' we must get busy right pronto. Th' Pomo killer
+we'll leave where he is. The Canon Country will make him a silent
+grave."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+FINGER MARK AND IRONWOOD AT LAST
+
+
+It was another noon in Lost Valley. The summer sun sailed the azure
+skies in majesty. Little soft winds from the south wimpled the grass
+of the rolling ranges, shook all the leaves of the poplars. Down the
+face of the Wall the Vestal's Veil shimmered and shone like a million
+miles of lace.
+
+At Corvan wild excitement ruled. Swift things had come upon them,
+things that staggered the tight-lipped community, even though it was
+used to speed and tragedy. For one thing, Ellen, pale, sweet flower,
+had hanged herself in the gaudy apartment of Lola behind the Golden
+Cloud where the dance-hall woman had peremptorily brought her when
+they took her off Cleve Whitmore's shoulder. She left a little note
+for Courtrey, a pathetic short scrawl, which simply reiterated that
+she had "ben true to him as his shadow," and that if he did no longer
+want her, she did not want herself.
+
+At that pitiful end to a guiltless life, Lola, who knew innocence and
+sin, sat down on the only carpeted floor in Corvan and wept. When she
+finished, she was done with Corvan and Lost Valley, ready to move on
+as she had moved through an eventful life.
+
+For another thing, two strange men had ridden up the Wall from the
+Bottle Neck a few days back, and they had put through some mysterious
+doings.
+
+This day at noon these two strangers were riding down on Corvan from
+up the Pomo way, while from the Stronghold, Buck Courtrey's men were
+thundering in with the cattle king at their head. He was grim and
+silent, black with gathering rage. His news-veins tapped the Valley,
+he knew a deal that others tried to hide, and he was coming in to
+reach a savage hand once more toward that supremacy which he knew full
+well to be slipping from him.
+
+And from the blind mouth in the Rockface at the west where the roofed
+cut led to the mystery and the grandeur of the Canon Country, a
+strange procession came slowly out to crawl across the green
+expanse--a woman on a silver horse, a rider on a red roan who sat
+behind the saddle and bore in his arms a man whose heavy head lolled
+upon his shoulder in all but mortal weakness.
+
+Thus Fate, who had for so long played with life and death in Lost
+Valley, tiring of the play, drew in the strings of the puppets and set
+the stage for the last act.
+
+As Tharon and Billy crept up to Baston's store and stopped at the
+steps, a dozen eager men leaped forward to their help.
+
+"Easy!" warned the girl. "He's ben hurt a long time, an' he's had an
+awful trip. There's fever in him, an' th' wound in his shoulder opened
+a bit with th' haulin'. Lay him down on th' porch a while to rest."
+
+But Kenset opened his dark eyes with the old quiet smile and looked at
+her.
+
+"I'm worth a dozen dead men yet, Miss Last," he said.
+
+As he lay, a trim, long figure in his semi-military garments, on the
+edge of the porch, the populace of Corvan streamed in from the
+outskirts and gathered in the open street. Whispers and comments were
+rife among them, a new courage was noticeable everywhere. The
+Vigilantes were present, many of them.
+
+Question and answer passed swiftly and quietly back and forth between
+Dixon, Jameson, Hill and Tharon. In a few pregnant moments she knew
+what had happened in Corvan--they knew the secret of False Ridge and
+the Cup o' God.
+
+"An' now these strangers from below--they ben a-actin' awful queer,
+ain't a-feared o' nothin' an' they ben goin' all over like a couple o'
+hounds. One of 'em's got on a badge of some sort," said Jameson,
+"didn't mean t' show it, I allow, but Hill, here, seen it by
+chanct----"
+
+Kenset raised himself quickly on an elbow.
+
+"By all that's lucky!" he said softly, excitedly. "Burn-Harris and
+O'Hallan! My Secret Service men!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And it was even so, for by the end of another hour the two strangers
+came riding in and were brought forward to the steps where Kenset lay,
+to clasp his hand and greet him with all the pleasure of previous
+acquaintance.
+
+Then they requested that a space be cleared to the end of ear-shot and
+together with Kenset, Tharon, Billy, and all the Vigilantes, they held
+a long and earnest colloquy.
+
+At its end Kenset's eyes were deep and troubled, but Tharon's were
+beginning to glow with the old fire that all the Holding knew, the
+leaping flame that rose and died and rose again, exciting to the
+beholder, promising, threatening, unfathomable.
+
+"Why, it's a cinch!" said O'Hallan, "a dead moral cinch! Don't see how
+it's held on like it has. Couldn't have in any other place in the good
+old U. S. A. but this God forsaken hole! Well named, Lost Valley!
+Why, we've found enough evidence already to convict a dozen men! Your
+Courtrey's the man that planned a dozen murders, I can see that, and
+he's pulled off a lot of them himself. The people are talking now,
+rumbling from one end of the Valley to the other. We've had to hold up
+our hands to ward them off lately. Your Vigilantes here have opened up
+since we got them together and showed some of them your letter. You
+were wise to tell us to go ahead if you were not here--what did you
+look for?"
+
+"Just about what I got," said Kenset smiling, "and I wanted things to
+be pushed through anyway."
+
+"Well,--they're pushing," said Burn-Harris. "Your little old sheriff
+has had the fear-of-the-Lord put into him somewhat. He's shaking in
+his boots about the snow-packer. There's only one thing lacking to
+make our grip close down on Courtrey, and that's vital--the gun with
+the untrue firing pin you speak about in your instructions."
+
+"Not lackin'," said Tharon grimly, "we've got it, Mister."
+
+The Secret Service man whirled to her.
+
+"You have?" he cried, "then show me your man!"
+
+But Tharon stood for a long moment looking off across the rolling
+green stretches, toward the north where a moving dot was drawing
+down--the riders from the Stronghold.
+
+"This," she said at last, tapping the gun which Billy handed over,
+"this, then, is proof--is proof in law?"
+
+"If it's the true gun that fits the shell which Mr. Kenset left for us
+here at Baston's--yes."
+
+"Then," said Burn-Harris, "a little time and your man's ours as sure's
+the sun shines. Why, this is a hot-bed of crime--there's enough work
+here to keep a whole force busy for months."
+
+But Tharon Last did not heed his words. Her mind had leaped away from
+the present back to that day in spring when Jim Last came home to die.
+She heard again his last command, "Th' best gun woman in Lost Valley,"
+heard her own voice promising to his dulling ears, "I'll get him, so
+help me, God!"
+
+And this was the end. Strangers were waiting to fulfill that promise,
+to take her work out of her hands. She absently watched the moving dot
+take form and sharply string out into a line of riding men. These
+strangers with their hidden signs of authority would bring to his just
+desserts Buck Courtrey, the man who had instigated the killing of poor
+Harkness, who had personally shot her daddy in the back! For them,
+then, she had made her crosses of promise in the granite under the
+pointing pine.
+
+They who had no right in Lost Valley would settle its blood scores,
+would pay her debts!
+
+She frowned and the fingers of her right hand fiddled at the gun-butt
+at her hip.
+
+For what had she striven all these many months? For what had she
+perfected herself in Jim Last's art?
+
+A little white line drew in about her lips, the flame in her blue eyes
+leaped and flickered. The tawny brows gathered into a puckered frown.
+
+Billy, watching, moved restlessly on his booted feet. He it was who
+saw--who feared. He touched her wrist with timid fingers and she
+flashed him a swift glance that half melted to a smile. Then she
+forgot him and all the rest--for the Ironwoods were thundering in from
+the outside levels, were coming into town.
+
+Ahead rode Courtrey, big, black, keen, his wide hat swept back on his
+iron-grey hair, an imposing presence.
+
+"Here's your man!" said Kenset softly, rising excitedly on his elbow.
+"He's coming! And God grant that there is no bloodshed!"
+
+All of Corvan, so long meek and quiet under Courtrey's foot, moved
+dramatically back to give him room to come thundering down to his
+accounting.
+
+In a few seconds he would be encompassed by his enemies.
+
+And then, on the tick of fate, that universally unknown factor, a
+woman's heart, flung its last pawn in the balance.
+
+Lola, gleaming like a bird of paradise in her gay habiliments, leaning
+forward from the further steps of Baston's store where she had slipped
+up unnoticed, cupped her white hands to her scarlet mouth, and sent
+out a cry like a clarion.
+
+"Buck!" she called, bell-like, clear, far-reaching--"Buck! Turn back!
+They've called your turn! It's all up for you! Go! Go--down--the Wall!
+And--God bless you--Buck! Good-bye!"
+
+For one awful moment the great red Ironwood, Bolt, flung up his head
+and slid forward on his haunches, ploughing up the earth in a cloud.
+
+Then, while the half-stunned crowd gaped in silence, he gathered
+himself, straightened, whirled, shook his giant frame and leaped clear
+of the ground in a spectacular turn. The man on his back snatched off
+his hat and shook it defiantly at the town--the people--the very
+Valley that he had ruled so long. It was a dramatic gesture--daring,
+scorning, renouncing. Then, without a word to his henchmen, a single
+look of farewell, Buck Courtrey struck the Ironwood, and was gone back
+along the little street.
+
+His men whirled after him, but strange turn of destiny, they swung
+directly north away from him, for he was turning south at the town's
+edge.
+
+"For the--Wall!" breathed Lola, her face like milk, one hand on her
+glittering breast. "He--goes--for below!"
+
+Then all the watchers knew the same.
+
+The master of the Stronghold, having played for Lost Valley and for a
+woman and lost them both--was done with both.
+
+He leaned on the Ironwood's mighty neck and went south toward the
+Bottle Neck.
+
+All eyes were upon him--all, that is, save the earnest grey ones of
+Billy Brent. They were fixed in anguish on the face of Tharon Last
+beside him--Tharon Last, who shoved the gun-butts hard down in the
+holsters at her hips, who whirled on her booted heel, who cleared the
+space between her and El Rey in three cat-like leaps.
+
+As she went up the stallion rose with her, came down with a pounding
+of iron-shod hoofs, dropped his huge hips in the first leap--and was
+away.
+
+Corvan saw the silver horse shoot out from its midst and woke from its
+lethargy.
+
+"_Th' race!_" some one cried, high and shrill, "_th' race at last!_"
+
+The two strangers saw it, and their lips fell open with amaze.
+
+Kenset from his low porch saw it--and dropped his face on his arms.
+
+"Lord God!" he groaned, "it's come! I couldn't hold her! I might have
+known! I might have known! She's Valley bred--she _is_ the Valley!
+I--and all I stand for--chaff in the wind! Nothing could hold her now!
+Aye--nothing could hold her."
+
+True at last to herself--true to Harkness--true to Jim Last--true to
+the Vigilantes and to the Valley she loved, Tharon flung the sombrero
+from her bright head, settled her feet in the stirrups, slid the rein
+on El Rey's neck, leaned down above him and began to call in his
+ears.
+
+No need of that cry.
+
+El Rey heeded nothing that she might say. She was not his master--never
+had been. He had had but one, the big, stern man whose sharp word
+had been his law--the one who had ever had his best, his love and his
+speed.
+
+What was it now that rode in his saddle--the saddle with the long dark
+stain?
+
+Assuredly it was not the slim girl-thing with the golden voice!
+
+El Rey had ever looked through, beyond her.
+
+Nay, it was something bigger, stronger, sterner--who shall say?
+Perhaps the spirit of that master whom he had served, whom he had
+brought faithfully home that night in spring, for whom he had looked
+and listened all these weary months! There was something, indeed--for
+El Rey, the great, lay down to earth and ran without the need of
+guidance. He set the long red horse out there on the green plain
+before him like a beacon and put the mighty machinery of his massive
+body into motion. Bolt was a rival worthy of his best--Bolt, the king
+of the Ironwoods, huge, spirited, fast as the wind and wild as fire.
+El Rey's silver ears lay back along his neck, the mane above them was
+like a cloud, his long tail streamed behind him like a comet--and
+forgotten was his singlefooting. He ran, his great limbs gathering and
+spreading beneath him--gathering and spreading--with the regularity,
+of clock-work.
+
+Tharon's blue eyes were narrow as her father's, the little lines about
+them stood out. She rode low, like a limpet clinging, and her mind was
+on the two ahead--the man and the great bay horse.
+
+As she felt the wind sing by her cheeks, sting the tears beneath her
+lids, she shut her lips tighter and hugged the pommel closer.
+
+The green carpet went by beneath her like a blur. The thunder of El
+Rey's beating hoofs was like the sound of the cataracts when the
+canyons shot their freshets from the Rockface.
+
+The note of his speed was rising--rising--rising. The blood began to
+pound in her temples with pride and exultation.
+
+She saw the distance narrowing just the smallest bit between her and
+Courtrey. Just the smallest trifle, indeed, but _narrowing_.
+
+"He ain't a-puttin' Bolt down to his best," she told herself tensely,
+"I know what he can do." And she remembered that ride from the mouth
+of Black Coulee to the pine-guarded glade--and Kenset. At that thought
+she pressed her lips tighter.
+
+No thought of Kenset must come to her now--to weaken her with memory
+of those pressing, vital hands of his above his pounding heart.
+
+No--she was herself again--Tharon Last, Jim Last's girl, the gun woman
+of Lost Valley--and yonder went her father's killer.
+
+She leaned down and called again in El Rey's ear.
+
+No slightest spurt of speed rewarded her--nothing but the rising note.
+Then she saw that the distance was widening--just a tiny bit.
+
+Truly it was widening. Courtrey, looking back, had caught the sun on
+her golden hair, on her face as white as milk. He saw that her hands
+were at her hips--loosely set back at her hips--and what thought he
+might have had of mercy at her hands--what wild vision he might have
+seen of speech with her--of parley--of persuasion--was dead.
+
+He leaned down and struck the Ironwood with his open hand.
+
+Bolt, the beautiful, leaped in answer. A little more--slowly--the
+distance between pursuer and pursued widened. Then--Tharon blinked the
+mist from her eyes to make sure--the gain was lost. Slowly, steadily,
+El Rey closed up the extra width. Then for a time there was no change.
+The open plain resounded to the roar of hoofs, the wind sang by like
+taut strings struck. The earth was still that racing green blur
+beneath.
+
+And still the electric note of rising speed hummed softly higher.
+
+If Jim Last rode his silver stallion to the goal of vengeance he must
+surely have been satisfied. The great shoulders worked like pistons,
+the whole massive body was level as the flowing floor beneath, the
+steel-thewed limbs reached and doubled--reached and doubled--with
+wonderful power and precision.
+
+And then at last Tharon knew--knew that El Rey was gaining, slowly,
+steadily, surely. The splendid bay horse was running magnificently,
+but El Rey ran like a super-horse. His silver head was straight as a
+level, his ears laid back, his nostrils wide and flaring, red as
+blood, his big eyes glowed with the wildness of savage flight.
+
+The great king was mad with speed!
+
+Jim Last's girl was mad also--mad with the lust of conquest, of
+revenge.
+
+She rose a little from the stallion's whipping mane, and her blue eyes
+burned on the man ahead.
+
+"I said I'd get you, Buck Courtrey!" she muttered, "that some day I'd
+run th' Ironwoods off their feet--th' heart out of their master!
+
+"Run, damn you--for it's your last ride!"
+
+Then she dropped forward again and watched the distance closing down.
+
+Nearer--nearer--nearer!
+
+The note rose another notch.
+
+Never in his life had El Rey run as he ran now. Always he had had
+reserves. He had them now. The bottom of his power was not reached.
+
+Bolt was doing his best. Once he threw up his head and foam flew on
+the wind--red foam that shot back and whipped on Tharon's hand, a wet
+pink stain, thinned and faded.
+
+At that sight an exultant cry, savage, inhuman, ugly, burst from her
+throat.
+
+She was within long gunshot now--was closing her fingers lightly on
+the blue gun-butts----.
+
+Courtrey heard that cry.
+
+He rose in his saddle--turned--flashed up his hand and fired. Quick as
+the motion of the gun man was, Tharon Last was quicker. She dropped
+over El Rey's shoulder like a cat, firing as she went.
+
+Courtrey's bullet clipped the cantle of the big saddle an inch above
+her flattened leg across it. Hers did something else--what she had
+dreamed of. It struck that other wrist of Courtrey's, the left--and
+sent his six-gun tumbling.
+
+Once again she yelled as she came back in her saddle.
+
+And El Rey was closing--closing up the gap between.
+
+Once again Tharon raised her guns to shoot--both, this time, as her
+daddy had taught her. This was the pinnacle of her life, her skill,
+her training.
+
+Never again would she live a moment like it. She laughed and crouched
+for the final act.
+
+But a sudden coldness went over her from head to foot, sent the hot
+blood shaking down her spine.
+
+What was Courtrey doing?
+
+He rode straight up at last, like an Indian showing, and his bleeding
+left hand swung at his side. With the other he had swept off his wide
+hat, so that his handsome iron-grey head was bare to the summer sun.
+His keen hawk face was lifted. He made a spectacular figure--like a
+warrior, unarmed, waiting his end with courage.
+
+_Unarmed!_
+
+That it was which struck Tharon like a hand across her face. The gun
+he had used with his left hand was his only one! He had carried but
+one since that night at the Stronghold when she had first marked him.
+
+She should have known! Word of this had been about Corvan and the
+Valley.
+
+And so she had Buck Courtrey at her mercy. She could close the
+lessening gap and kill him in his saddle----
+
+But the icy blood still seemed to trickle down her back.
+
+She--and Jim Last--they had always fought in fair-and-open. They
+were no murderers.... They did not strike in the dark--shoot a man from
+ambush--nor kill a man unarmed.... And Kenset--Kenset of the
+foothills--what had he said about the stain of blood--blood-guilt--clean
+hands----
+
+The girl caught her breath with a choking sob.
+
+The game was up.
+
+Neither Jim Last--nor Kenset--nor she--would shoot a man unarmed.
+
+And Courtrey was riding toward the Bottle Neck.
+
+He would go down the Wall to freedom.
+
+And the crosses in Jim Last's granite--they would be forever
+unredeemed, a shame, a sadness, a living accusation!
+
+Nay--not that! Not that!
+
+She had promised--and the Law was waiting--the big Law of below.
+
+She was Jim Last's daughter still.
+
+She leaned closer to El Rey's neck--held her two guns ready--and rode
+with the very wind.
+
+She was near now--she could see Courtrey's face, waxen white but
+fearless, his dark eyes turned back toward her in a sort of desperate
+admiration.... Courtrey loved strength and courage and all things wild
+and fierce. She could see Bolt's staring eyeballs, his open mouth,
+gasping and piteous. One more moment--another--yet one more--then she
+rose in her stirrups and fired straight at the broad bay temple,
+shining and black with sweat!
+
+The great gallant Ironwood went down in a huge arc--first his
+beautiful head, then the sinking arch of his neck, then the shoulders
+that had worked so wondrously. He rolled on his back like a hoop, his
+iron-shod hoofs spinning for one spectacular moment in the air. Then
+he lay at sudden ease, his still fluttering nose pointing directly
+back the way he had come.
+
+With the first catching stumble of the true forefeet, the man on his
+back had shot out of the saddle and far ahead. He landed twenty feet
+away and squarely on his head and shoulders. Like Bolt, Courtrey's
+body turned a complete somersault--and lay still, at sudden peace.
+
+Tharon Last and El Rey went on like an arrow--they could not stop.
+
+When at last she did draw the great king down she was far and away
+from the spot. She turned her head, panting and dizzy, and looked
+back.... She could see the prone red heap that was Bolt--a little way
+beyond that other, lesser, darker heap....
+
+For a long time she sat on El Rey's heaving back and stared unseeingly
+at the green earth where the short grasses quivered in the little
+wind.
+
+There was a deathly white line about her lips, but her eyes blazed
+with the fire that had characterized them from birth, the flickering,
+unfathomable flame that came and went.
+
+Then, presently, new lines came in her young face, unstable lines that
+quivered and worked, and all the good green earth danced grotesquely
+before her vision, for a wall of tears shut out the world. ... She
+laid her head down on El Rey's cloudy mane--and wept.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was early dawn at Last's Holding. The sun was not yet up behind the
+eastern ramparts. The cottonwoods whispered in the dawn-wind, the
+spring beneath the milk-house talked and murmured. Out in the big
+corrals the cattle were beginning to stir and bawl.
+
+In the kitchen old Anita and young Paula had breakfast waiting for the
+men.
+
+Deep in that dim south room where the pale Virgin kept watch and ward,
+Kenset of the foothills slept in healing peace.
+
+And at the step of the western door, Billy stood by Golden--Golden the
+beautiful, who ranked next to El Rey himself--and his face was lifted
+to Tharon who drooped against the lintel with her forehead on her
+arm.
+
+The boy held her hand clasped in both of his own, and there was a
+yearning tenderness in his soft voice when he spoke, a pride and joy
+ineffable that glowed above the pain that was never to leave him.
+
+"It ain't that I love you less, Tharon, dear," he said gently, "that I
+must go. Not that, little girl. I'll love you till I die--that I know
+in dead certainty. But I can't stay here--not where I'll have to see
+you givin' all your sweet self to another man. A good man, too,
+Tharon--I think there ain't a better one in th' land--but--well,--I
+can't--that's all. I can't thank you for all you've done for me sence
+you was a little mite of a girl--five years back,"--his voice broke a
+bit, but he controlled it, "nor for th' joy you've given me--th' rides
+together--an' th' jokes an' playin'----"
+
+He paused a moment, unhappily, and the mistress of Last's drooped more
+heavily against the old adobe wall.
+
+"Nor for Golden here," went on the rider, "we'll be pals as long as we
+both live--nor fer-fer--" he stopped again, hesitated, looked
+yearningly at the quivering cheek against the curving arm, and went on
+to the finish.
+
+"Nor fer that one kiss, Tharon--it's my one treasure for life, so help
+me, God--that you give me that night. An' over all I want to thank you
+fer--fer--killin' th' Pomo half-breed in th' Cup o' God--_fer you done
+that trick fer me_! Th' one stain on your dear hands--fer me--the
+_only_ one, fer Fate killed Courtrey, not you. His neck was clean
+broke when they picked him up.... That memory will keep me alive, will
+save th' beauty of th' stars at night fer me, will make th' rest worth
+livin'.... That one kiss."
+
+He stopped again and stood for a long time looking at her as if he
+would fix forever in his memory the beauty of her, the fire, the
+spirit, the elusive quality that was Tharon Last herself.
+
+Then he sighed and smiled and gently shook the hand he held.
+
+"Come--tell me good-bye, Tharon, dear," he said softly.
+
+For answer the mistress of Last's once again reached out her arms and
+drew his head to her heart--once more pressed her lips upon his own.
+
+"Oh, Billy," she said with a sound of tears in her voice, "Kenset's
+th' one man--that's true, an' I'm helpless before th' fact--but
+there'll never be another can take your place in my heart--there'll
+never be no one to ride with me in th' Big Shadow in just th' same
+way, Billy--to hold my hand as we come home to Last's with that same
+sweet, honest friendship, that don't need words! I've got my
+life-love, but I've lost my life-friend--an' my heart's sore--sore
+with pain!"
+
+The rider lifted his face and it was glorified in the first rays of
+the sun that was rising over the eastern mountains. His gayly studded
+belt and riding cuffs, his spurs and the vanity of silver on his wide
+hat caught the glow and sparkled brightly. Joy became paramount over
+sadness.
+
+"Don't you fret, Tharon," he said, still in that soft voice, "I'm
+always at your shoulder in spirit--in body, too, if you ever want me
+or need me. So long."
+
+And he kissed both the hands he held, dropped them, turned and mounted
+Golden, waved a hand to all the Holding, and putting the horse to a
+run, went down the sounding-board as if he dared not look back.
+
+Until horse and rider were a tiny speck on the living green--until
+they passed the Silver Hollow and the mouth of Black Coulee, Tharon
+Last stood in the western door and watched them with dim blue eyes.
+
+Ail the wide expanse of Lost Valley was still and sweet with dawn,
+smiling as if with a new and wondrous peace, the Vestal's Veil
+shimmered on the Rockface, the distant peaks above the Canon Country
+cut the skies.
+
+She scanned the little world about and felt this peace press down upon
+her soul--as if the questions all were answered, the duty done.
+
+Never in all her life before had Last's Holding seemed to her so
+secure and settled, so sweet and to be desired....
+
+Within it lay her destiny--the man in the cool south room.
+
+Without in the great Valley lay a future.
+
+Love was with her--friendship would be with her always in memory, one
+glowing with its vital presence, the other softened and doubly sweet
+with the sorrow of absence.
+
+She raised her hand and made the sign of the Cross between herself and
+that disappearing speck, then she turned and followed old Anita
+carrying gruels to that dim south room.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Tharon of Lost Valley, by Vingie E. Roe
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THARON OF LOST VALLEY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 28956.txt or 28956.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/9/5/28956/
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/28956.zip b/28956.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c3be462
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28956.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a508f30
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #28956 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/28956)