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"But it isn't freckles," replied the girl.
Slim looked at his hands and feet. "Maybe it's fat?" he hazarded. "Oh, I know I'm too fat! It beats all how I do keep fat."
Slim looked into his hat and sighed. "Well, I suppose we don't get married this year, do we?"
"No, Slim," said Polly gently.
"Nor any other year to come?" Slim was still hopeful.
"That's the way it looks now."
Slim put on his hat and tried to walk jauntily to the fire, whistling a bit of a tune. The effort was a sad failure. "Here's where I get off.
I'm in sure bad luck. Somebody must have put a copper on me when I was born. I 'low I gotter be movin'."
"You won't hate me, will you, Slim?"
The Sheriff took the girl's hands in his and kissed them. "Hate you?"
he almost shouted. "Why, I couldn't learn to do that; no, siree! Not in a thousand years."
Polly slapped Slim on the back. "I'm glad of that," she cried. "Brace up. You'll get a good wife some day. There's lots of good fish in the sea."
Slim glanced at her ruefully. "I don't feel much like goin' fis.h.i.+n'
jest now. Would you mind tellin' me if I lose out on this deal along of somebody else a-holdin' all the cards?" Slim waited for Polly's answer.
"Why, don't you know?"
"No," he said simply.
"But he told me--"
"Who is it?" he insisted.
"No--if you don't know his name, I won't tell you," decided Polly.
"Mebbe it's jest as well, too," a.s.sented Slim. "I don't think I'd feel any too friendly toward him."
Slim moved toward the wagon. The action was purely involuntary, but it frightened Polly so that she cried aloud.
Slim grasped at once the reason for her fear. "Is the feller in that wagon?" he shouted.
"You wouldn't do him any harm, would you?" cried Polly.
"Is he in that wagon?" Slim repeated angrily.
Polly caught hold of his arm.
"What's he hiding for?" he demanded.
Slim pulled his gun and covered the opening. "Come out, you coward,"
he shouted. Polly caught Slim by the right wrist, so he could not fire.
Bud leaped from the wagon, drawing his gun as he did so. "You sha'n't call me a coward," he shouted to Slim.
Polly ran behind Bud, and, reaching her arms about his waist, held down his hands, depressing the muzzle of his revolver. Slim danced up and down in the excitement with his revolver in his hand. Polly kept calling on both of the men not to shoot.
"Let him alone," shouted Slim excitedly. "Let him alone, Miss Polly.
He's only four-flus.h.i.+n', and I ain't gun shy."
"Now, look a yeah, sonny," he cried to Bud, "if that squirt-gun of yours goes off an' hits me, an' I find it out--well, I reckon I'll have to spank you."
Bud tried to break away from Polly, begging her to "Let go."
The girl laid her hands on his shoulder, gazing pleadingly into his flushed face. "Don't, don't," she cried; "it's all right. Slim knows all about it. He knows I love you, and he wouldn't hurt any one that I love, would you, Slim?"
Polly smiled at the Sheriff, completely disarming him.
Shoving his gun back into the holster, Slim grinned, and said: "I reckon I wouldn't."
"We've been engaged forever so long now, waitin' for Bud to get rich, and now--and now it's come."
Her face radiated her happiness. Bud showed his alarm, motioning her to be silent, but Polly rattled on: "Bud's been saving and saving, 'till he's got over a thousand dollars and--" Slim could not contain his indignation at the deception practised by the boy.
"You derned thief," he shouted. Then he plainly showing his annoyance at his lack of repression.
Bud's hand dropped to his gun. "You--" he began, but Polly stopped him with a gesture, looking from one to the other of the men, dazed and frightened.
"A thief. Bud a thief? What does it mean? Tell me," she gasped.
Turning to Bud, she demanded: "Bud, you heard what he said?"
Dropping his head, fearing to look at either of them, he muttered sullenly: "He lied."
Slim checked his first betrayal of his anger and kept himself well in hand.
"Oh, Slim," pleaded Polly, "say you didn't mean it."
Simply and sadly Slim answered: "I didn't. I reckon as how I'm some jealous, an'--an'--I lied."
His voice dropped, and he turned aside, stepping away from the young couple.
Polly was still in doubt. Slim's actions were so strange. It was not like this big-hearted, brave Sheriff to accuse a man of stealing without being sure of his charges. Then Slim's accusing himself of lying was entirely at variance with his character. "I'm sorry," she said. "Please forgive me. It was all my fault. I didn't know that you--"
Slim held up his hand to silence her.
"Wouldn't you mind leavin' us together a bit," he requested. In answer to Polly's frightened glance, he continued: "There hain't goin' to be no trouble, only me an' him's got a little business to talk over.
Ain't we, Bud? Eh?"
Slim led Polly toward the corral, glancing at Bud over his shoulder with a rea.s.suring smile. "Just you step out yonder a bit and wait," he said to Polly.
"Now, you won't--"