Out Of The Depths - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Oh, no, no, I did not mean--I could not pay a penny. I'm utterly dest.i.tute--a--a pauper!" A spasm of bitter despair contorted his handsome face.
Knowles and the girl hastily looked away from him, that they might not see him in his weakness. But he rallied and forced a rather unsteady laugh at himself. "You see, I haven't quite got used to it yet. I've always had money. I never really had to work. Now I must learn to earn a living. It's very good of you, Mr. Knowles, but--there's that veal.
If only you'll let me work out what I owe you."
"You don't owe me a cent for the yearling," gruffly replied the cowman. "Don't know what I could put you at, anyway."
"Might use him to shoo off the rattlers and jackrabbits from in front the mowing machine," suggested Gowan.
"Mr. Ashton can ride," interposed the girl, with a friendliness of tone that brought Gowan to a thin-lipped silence.
"That's something," said Knowles, gazing speculatively at the slim aristocratic figure of the tenderfoot. "You're not built for pitching hay, but like as not you have the makings of a puncher. Ever throw a rope?"
"Never. I shall start practicing the art--at once."
"No, not until you and Kid have had dinner," gayly contradicted the girl. "We've had ours. But Yuki always has something ready. Kid, if you'll show Mr. Ashton where to wash, I'll tell Yuki."
She darted through the open doorway into the house. At a curt nod from Gowan, Ashton followed him around to the far side of the house, leaving Knowles in the act of hastily reloading his pipe. Under a lean-to that covered a door in the side of the house was a barrel of water and a bench with two basins. On a row of pegs above hung a number of towels, all rumpled but none dirty.
Gowan pointed to a box of unused towels, and proceeded to lather and wash himself. Ashton took a towel, and after rinsing out the second washbasin, made as fastidious a toilet as the scant conveniences of the place would permit. There were combs and a fairly good mirror above the soap shelf. Gowan went in by the side door, without waiting for his companion. Ashton presently followed him, having looked in vain for a razor to rid himself of his two days' growth of beard.
The long table told him that he had entered the ranch mess-hall, or rather, dining-room. Though the table was covered with oilcloth and the rough-hewn logs of the outer walls were lime-plastered only in the c.h.i.n.ks, the seats were chairs instead of benches, and between the gay Mexican _serape_ drapes of the clean windows hung several well-done water color landscapes, appropriately framed in unbarked pine. On the oiled deal floor were scattered half a dozen Navajo rugs.
Gowan had taken a seat at one end of the table. As Ashton sat down at the neatly laid place opposite him, a silent, smiling, deft-handed j.a.p came in from the kitchen with a heaping trayful of dishes. For the most part, the food was ordinary ranch fare, but cooked with the skill of a _chef_. The exceptions were the fresh milk and delicious unsalted b.u.t.ter. On most cattle ranches, the milk comes from "tin cows" and the b.u.t.ter from oleomargarine tubs.
The two diners were well along in their meal, eating as earnestly and as taciturnly as the j.a.p served, when Miss Isobel came in with her father. The girl had dressed for the afternoon in a gown of the latest style, whose quiet color and simple lines harmonized perfectly with her surroundings. She smiled impartially at puncher, tenderfoot, and j.a.p.
"Thank you, Yuki. I see you did not keep our hungry hunters waiting.--Mr. Ashton, I have told Daddy about that shooting."
"It's a mighty strange happening. You might tell us the full particulars," said Knowles.
Ashton at once gave a fairly accurate account of the affair. He could hardly exaggerate the peril he had incurred, and the touch of exultance with which he described his defeat of the murderer was quite pardonable in a tenderfoot.
"Strange--mighty strange. Can't understand it," commented the cowman when Ashton had finished his account.
"It sh.o.r.e is, Mr. Knowles," added Gowan. "The only thirty-eight on the ranch is mine. That seems to clear our people."
"Of course! It could not possibly be any of our people!" exclaimed the girl.
"Mr. Ashton thinks it might have been his guide," went on Gowan.
"His guide? What caliber was his rifle?" shrewdly queried the cowman.
"Why, I--really I cannot remember," answered Ashton. "I know it was of a larger bore than mine, but that is all."
"Um-m," considered Knowles. "Looks rather like he's the man. Can't think of anyone else. Trouble is, if he was laying in wait for you, his horse would be fresh. Must have covered a right smart bit of territory by now."
"I'll go out and take a look at his tracks," said Gowan, rising with a readiness that brought a nod of approval from his employer.
"You'll be careful, Kid," cautioned the girl, with a shade of concern in her tone.
"He'll keep his eye open, Chuckie," rea.s.sured her father. "It's the other fellow wants to be careful, if he hasn't already vamoosed. Hey, Kid?"
"I'll get him, if I get the chance," laconically replied Gowan, looking from the girl to Ashton with the characteristic straightening of his lips that marked the tensing of his emotions.
As he left the room Miss Isobel smiled and nodded to Ashton. "You see how friendly he is, in spite of his cold manner to strangers. I thought he had taken a dislike to you, yet you saw how readily he offered to go out after your a.s.sailant."
"More likely it's because he thinks it would discredit us to let such a scoundrel get away," differed her father. "However, he'll leave you alone, Mr. Ashton, if you stay with us as a guest, and will only haze you a bit, if you insist upon joining our force."
"You mean, working for you? I must insist on that," said Ashton, with an eager look at the girl. "If only I can do well enough to be employed right along!"
The cowman grunted, and winked solemnly at his daughter. "Yes, I can understand your feeling that way. How about the winter, though? You mayn't like it over here so well then."
Ashton flushed and laughed at the older man's shrewdness; hesitated, and confessed candidly: "No, I should prefer Denver in winter."
Miss Isobel blushed in adorable payment of his compliment, but thrust back at him: "We bar cowboys in the Sacred Thirty-six."
He winced. Her stroke had pierced into his raw wound.
"Oh!--oh!" she breathlessly exclaimed. "I didn't mean to--Oh, I'm so sorry!"
He dashed the tears from his eyes. "No, you--don't apologize! It's only that I'm--Please don't fancy I'm a baby! You see, when a fellow has always lived high--on top, you know--and then to have everything go out from under him without warning!"
"Keep a stiff upper lip, son," advised Knowles. "You'll pull through all right. It isn't everyone in your fix that would be asking for work."
Ashton laughed a trifle unsteadily. "It's very kind of you to say that, Mr. Knowles. I--I wish a steady position, winter as well as summer."
"How about Denver?" asked Knowles.
"That can wait," replied Ashton. He met the girl's smile of approval, and rallied fully. "Yes, that can wait--and so can I."
Again the girl blushed, but she found a bantering rejoinder: "With you and Kid and Daddy all waiting for me to come home, I suppose I'll have to cut the season short."
"The winters here are like those you read about up at the North Pole," the cowman informed Ashton. "But we get our suns.h.i.+ne back along in the spring."
"Oh, Daddy! you're a poet!" cried his daughter, flinging her arm around his sunburnt neck.
"Wish I were one!" enviously sighed Ashton. The cowman gave him a look that brought him to his feet. "Mr. Knowles," he hastened to ask, "if you'll kindly tell me what my work is to be this afternoon."
The older man's frown relaxed. "Did you come out here from Stockchute?"
"Yes."
"Think you could find your way back?"
"Why, yes; though we wandered all around--But surely, Mr. Knowles, you'll not require me--"
"I want a man to ride over with some letters and fetch the mail. I'll need Gowan for work you can't do. Chuckie was to have gone; but I can't let her now, until we're more sure about that man who shot at you."
"I see."