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"You are surely a fine old chap."
Retracing his path through the long succession of farm, jungle, and fields, Seyd repeated it, and as he rode along he saw things in a new light. As he pa.s.sed through one village at sundown the entire population was filing into church, the peons in clean blankets, their women in decent black. The next hamlet was in the throes of a fiesta. Girls in white, garlanded with flaming flowers, were dancing the eternal jig of the country with their brown swains. And these two functions, church and _baile_, marked the bounds of their simple life. A plenty of rice and frijoles, a peso or two for clothing, were all that they asked or needed.
While prospecting in the Sierra Madres Seyd had drawn many a comparison between the happy indolence of the peon and the worry, strain, strife to live up to a standard just beyond income that obtains in American life.
Because the peon had time to think his simple thoughts, listen to bird song and the music of babbling streams, to watch the splendors of sunrise and sunset over purple valleys, Seyd's suffrage had often gone to him. Observing this pastoral life in its tropical setting of palms and jungle, the opinion grew into a strong conviction.
"The old fellow's right!" he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, riding out of the last village into the jungle proper. "We have nothing to give his people, and we'd surely kill all they have."
Though the profusion of foliage which made of the trail one long green tunnel prevented him from seeing it, he was now riding along at the foot of the Barranca wall. Its deep shadow already filled the jungle with a twilight that thickened into night as he rode. But, knowing that whatever her faults of temperament Peace could be trusted to fetch her own stable, he left her to take her own way while he pursued his thoughts. While the siren whistle of beetles, chatter of _chickicuillotes_--wild hens of the jungle--deafened his ears, he tried to bring the crowding impressions of the day into some kind of order--no easy task when a fire-eating old general and a typical Mexican mother had to be reconciled in thought with a young girl who possessed the face of a Celt, eyes of a Spaniard, vivacity of a Frenchwoman, and American intelligence.
Next he fell to speculating upon the causes which had kept her single at an age that, according to Mexican standards, placed her hopelessly upon the shelf, and he found the answer in the gossip of the American station agent on his last trip out to the railroad. "She could have had her cousin Sebastien any time, and there were others around these parts. But once let a high-strung girl like her get a glimpse of the outside world and no common hacendado can ever hope to tie her shoestring. They say she has had other chances--attaches of foreign legations in Mexico City.
But she turned 'em down--I don't know why, unless it's ideals." With a humorous twinkle the agent had added: "Bad things, ideals--always in the way. If you happen to have any in stock give 'em to the first beggar you meet along the road. Hers are keeping San Nicolas and El Quiss from reuniting, but she don't seem to care."
"A fine girl--the man will be lucky that gets her." Seyd now re-expressed the agent's homely verdict. "If it wasn't--" He stopped short, with a savage laugh. "You darned fool! mooning over a girl who would turn up her pretty nose at any gringo, much more one that has forced himself in on her uncle's land. Your business is to get a fortune out of the mine, and do it quick. And even if it wasn't--"
The thought was never finished, for the last few minutes had brought him out into the starlight at the foot of the Barranca wall, and as Peace gathered herself for the scramble upward the jungle lit up with a sudden flash. Before Seyd's ears caught the report he felt his left shoulder clutched, as it were, by a red-hot hand. The next second he was almost thrown by the mule's sudden plunge--fortunately, for otherwise the bullet that came out of a second flash would have smashed through his brain.
"Muzzle-loaders!" In the moment he lay on the mule's neck he divined it from the thick explosion. Then the thought, "It will take them a minute to reload," followed a quick calculation, "They'll catch me again on the first turn."
With him action always sprang of subconscious processes which were quicker than thought, and while he crouched on her neck and Peace took the turn on a scrambling gallop he turned loose with both of his Colts, aiming at the spot from which the flashes had come. And the sequel proved his judgment. This time a single flash announced the bullet which grazed the mule's rump just as she shot into a patch of woodland.
"Reckon I made one of you sick," he interpreted the single shot.
The burning smart of his wound and the treachery of the attack had loosed within him a fury of anger. Reining in, he felt his shoulder. The bullet had plowed a furrow in the flesh of the upper arm, but, muttering "I guess it's bled about all it's going to," he first tied the mule to a tree, then slid the "reloads" into his guns.
It would have been foolish to expose himself in the open trail under the clear starlight. Resisting the savage impulse which urged him to close quarters, he crawled back to the edge of the timber and again turned loose his guns, searching the jungle below with a swinging muzzle. Time and again he did it, thanking his stars whenever he reloaded for the forethought which had caused Billy to slip an extra box of cartridges into the holsters, and not until only one charge was left did he pause to listen.
Whether or no it was the firing that had frightened even the night birds into temporary quiet, not even a twig stirred in the darkness below. He caught only the distant whooping which told that Billy had heard, and as this drew nearer with astonis.h.i.+ng quickness Seyd rose and went back to his mule.
"Coming downhill h.e.l.l for leather!" he muttered. "If I don't hurry he'll break his neck."
CHAPTER VII
One afternoon about a week later Mr. William Thornton was to be seen mixing mortar for the bricks he was laying on the smelter foundation.
Rising almost sheer from the edge of the bench behind him, the Barranca wall shut off the western breeze, and from its face the fierce sunblaze was reflected in quivering waves of heat. Coming out from an early lunch he had noted that the thermometer registered ninety in the shade, and he was now ready to swear that with one more degree he himself would be able to supply all the moisture required for the operation.
While working he cast occasional glances toward the house; and when, the mortar being mixed, he began to lay brick he used the trowel with care lest its clink should awaken Seyd. For though the blood loss from a severed artery had left him quite weak, he had obstinately refused to stop work. To-day he had even balked at the suggestion of a siesta until Billy had lain down himself. As soon as Seyd fell asleep Billy had slipped out, and when he now paused to listen the concern in his look pa.s.sed into sudden attention as the clink of a shod hoof rose up from the trail below.
Five minutes pa.s.sed before he heard it again, and in the mean time his actions bespoke an intelligent appreciation of the needs of the case.
Picking up a Winchester which leaned against a tree, he crouched behind his bricks, and while training it on the point where the trail emerged on the bench a ferocious scowl overshadowed his sunburn.
"If we played it your way I'd brown you the second your nose shows," he muttered as the hoofbeats grew louder. "Thank your musty old saints that we don't. Ah! Eh? Well!"
The interjections respectively fitted the wolf hound, her young mistress, and the _mozo_, as they appeared in the order named. As only Billy's head showed over the bricks, and both were on the same color scheme, he was practically invisible; and, reining up her beast, the girl allowed her curious gaze to wander around the bench from the gaping hole where the drift ran into the vein over the adobe hut and foundation--just missing Billy's head--to the blue-green piles of copper ore.
"So this is the _mina_!" Her tone denoted disappointment. "Good heavens!
Tomas, is this the wealth the gringos seek? What an ado over a pile of stones! I should think Don Luis would be thankful to have them carted away."
She had spoken in Spanish, but when, having shed his a.r.s.enal under cover of the bricks, Billy rose and came forward, she addressed him in English. "Mr. Thornton, is it not? We have brought the papers from the administrador--at least, Tomas has. I am playing truant. Though it is only fifteen miles from here to San Nicolas, this is the first time that I have seen the place. Where is Mr. Seyd?"
Now than Billy, was there never a young man more naturally chivalrous.
Usually a locomotive could not have dragged from him a single word calculated to shock or offend a girl. But in his confusion at finding an expected enemy changed into a charming friend he let slip the naked truth. "He was shot--returning from your place."
"Senor! He--he is not--dead?"
There was no mistaking her concern. Sorry for his abruptness, Billy plunged to rea.s.sure her. "No! no! Only wounded."
"Is he--much hurt?"
It occurred to Billy that a flesh wound was, after all, rather a small price for such solicitude. But where a touch of jealousy might have caused another to make light of Seyd's wound, his natural unselfishness made him paint it in darker colors. "The bullet cut an artery, and he's pretty weak from loss of blood. Yet he won't lay off. I had to trick him into a siesta to-day. I'll go call him."
But she raised a protesting hand. "No! no! Let him sleep. You can give him the papers. Tell him when he awakes that he will hear from us again."
With a smile which caused Billy additional regret for his lack of wounds she rode off at a pace which filled him with anxiety for her neck. Until he caught a glimpse of her, foreshortened to a dot on the trail far below, he stood watching. Then, muttering "I'll bet Seyd will raise Cain when he awakes," he went back to his work.
Nor was he mistaken, for when Seyd came out, yawning and stretching, an hour or so later, the last vestige of sleep was burned up by the sudden flash of his eyes. "You darned chump! Do we have visitors so often that you let me sleep on like a rotten log?"
Neither was he appeased by Billy's answer, delivered with an irritating grin: "Why should she wish to see you when I was around? A pallid wretch who has to make three tries to cast a shadow!"
"He has, has he?" Seyd growled. "Well, I'm solid enough to punch your fat head."
The atmosphere having thus been cleared, he commented: "Went off to tell the General, eh? I wonder how he'll take it?"
"Shouldn't imagine he'd shed any tears--unless at their poor shooting.
Well, we'll see!"
And see they did, for as they sat at lunch on the second day thereafter a yell followed by the crack of a whip brought them out just in time to see Caliban, the charcoal-burner, and the peon rice-huller coming on a shuffling run ahead of Tomas. The b.l.o.o.d.y bandages which bound the head of one and the leg of the other testified to Seyd's shooting, just as their glazed eyes and painful pantings told of the merciless run ahead of the _mozo_. It required only the hempen halter which each wore around his neck to complete the picture of misery.
"These be they that attacked you, senor?" While the rice-huller squirmed under a sudden cut of his whip the _mozo_ went on: "This son of a devil was found nursing a wound in his hut, and he told on the other. Don Luis sends them with his compliments to be hanged at your leisure. If it please you to have it done now--there is an excellent tree."
Too surprised to answer, Seyd and Billy stood staring at each other until, taking silence for consent, the _mozo_ began to herd his charges toward the said tree. "Here!" Seyd called him back. "This is kind of Don Luis, and you will please convey to him our thanks. It is very thoughtful of you to pick out such a fine tree, but, while we are sure that they would look very nice upon it, it is not the habit with our people to hang save for a killing, and I, as you see, am alive."
The _mozo's_ dark brows rose to the eaves of his hair. "But of what use, senor, to hang _after_ the killing? Will the death of the murderer bring the murdered to life? But hang him in good season and you will have no murder. And this is a good tree, low, with strong, wide branches ordained for the purpose. See you! One throw of the rope, a pull, a knot--'tis done, easily as drinking, and they are out of your way."
It was good logic; but, while admitting it, Seyd still pleaded his foolish national custom.
Though his bent brows still protested against such squeamishness, the _mozo_ politely submitted. "_Bueno!_ it is for you to say. I leave them at your will to cure or kill."
"Now, what shall we do?" Seyd consulted Billy. "If we send them back the old Don will surely hang them."
"Well, what if he does? I'm sure that I don't care a whoop--" He paused, then suddenly exclaimed: "Are we crazy? Here we have been chasing labor all over the valley, and now that it is offered us free we turn up noses. Keep them, you bet! Put it into Spanish as quickly as you can."
Smiling, the _mozo_ nodded comprehension. "As you say, senor, a live slave is better than a dead thief. They are at your orders to kill by rope or work."