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Title: The Girl from Hollywood
Author: Burroughs, Edgar Rice
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Girl from Hollywood" ***


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Transcriber’s Note


Table of Contents added by Transcriber and placed in the Public Domain.



THE GIRL FROM HOLLYWOOD



[Illustration: The director’s eyes snapped.... “Only a camera man and
myself are here,” he said]



  THE
  GIRL FROM HOLLYWOOD


  BY
  EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS
  AUTHOR OF “TARZON OF THE APES,” “THE
  RETURN OF TARZON,” ETC.


  FRONTISPIECE BY
  P. J. MONAHAN


  NEW YORK
  THE MACAULAY COMPANY



  COPYRIGHT, 1923,
  BY EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS


PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA



CONTENTS


  CHAPTER                  PAGE
       I                      1
      II                      9
     III                     16
      IV                     21
       V                     32
      VI                     46
     VII                     54
    VIII                     58
      IX                     63
       X                     70
      XI                     79
     XII                     88
    XIII                     96
     XIV                    103
      XV                    115
     XVI                    129
    XVII                    145
   XVIII                    151
     XIX                    164
      XX                    168
     XXI                    180
    XXII                    189
   XXIII                    195
    XXIV                    204
     XXV                    211
    XXVI                    218
   XXVII                    226
  XXVIII                    236
    XXIX                    244
     XXX                    249
    XXXI                    254
   XXXII                    264
  XXXIII                    275
   XXXIV                    283
    XXXV                    293
   XXXVI                    304
  XXXVII                    308



THE GIRL FROM HOLLYWOOD



CHAPTER I


The two horses picked their way carefully downward over the loose
shale of the steep hillside. The big bay stallion in the lead sidled
mincingly, tossing his head nervously, and flecking the flannel shirt
of his rider with foam. Behind the man on the stallion a girl rode a
clean-limbed bay of lighter color, whose method of descent, while less
showy, was safer, for he came more slowly, and in the very bad places
he braced his four feet forward and slid down, sometimes almost sitting
upon the ground.

At the base of the hill there was a narrow level strip; then an
eight-foot wash, with steep banks, barred the way to the opposite side
of the cañon, which rose gently to the hills beyond. At the foot of
the descent the man reined in and waited until the girl was safely
down; then he wheeled his mount and trotted toward the wash. Twenty
feet from it he gave the animal its head and a word. The horse broke
into a gallop, took off at the edge of the wash, and cleared it so
effortlessly as almost to give the impression of flying.

Behind the man came the girl, but her horse came at the wash with a
rush--not the slow, steady gallop of the stallion--and at the very
brink he stopped to gather himself. The dry bank caved beneath his
front feet, and into the wash he went, head first.

The man turned and spurred back. The girl looked up from her saddle,
making a wry face.

“No damage?” he asked, an expression of concern upon his face.

“No damage,” the girl replied. “Senator is clumsy enough at jumping,
but no matter what happens he always lights on his feet.”

“Ride down a bit,” said the man. “There’s an easy way out just below.”

She moved off in the direction he indicated, her horse picking his way
among the loose bowlders in the wash bottom.

“Mother says he’s part cat,” she remarked. “I wish he could jump like
the Apache!”

The man stroked the glossy neck of his own mount.

“He never will,” he said. “He’s afraid. The Apache is absolutely
fearless; he’d go anywhere I’d ride him. He’s been mired with me twice,
but he never refuses a wet spot; and that’s a test, I say, of a horse’s
courage.”

They had reached a place where the bank was broken down, and the girl’s
horse scrambled from the wash.

“Maybe he’s like his rider,” suggested the girl, looking at the Apache;
“brave, but reckless.”

“It was worse than reckless,” said the man. “It was asinine. I
shouldn’t have led you over the jump when I know how badly Senator
jumps.”

“And you wouldn’t have, Custer”--she hesitated--“if----”

“If I hadn’t been drinking,” he finished for her. “I know what you were
going to say, Grace; but I think you’re wrong. I never drink enough to
show it. No one ever saw me that way--not so that it was noticeable.”

“It is always noticeable to me and to your mother,” she corrected him
gently. “We always know it, Custer. It shows in little things like what
you did just now. Oh, it isn’t anything, I know, dear; but we who love
you wish you didn’t do it quite so often.”

“It’s funny,” he said, “but I never cared for it until it became a
risky thing to get it. Oh, well, what’s the use? I’ll quit it if you
say so. It hasn’t any hold on me.”

Involuntarily he squared his shoulders--an unconscious tribute to the
strength of his weakness.

Together, their stirrups touching, they rode slowly down the cañon
trail toward the ranch. Often they rode thus, in the restful silence
that is a birthright of comradeship. Neither spoke until after they
reined in their sweating horses beneath the cool shade of the spreading
sycamore that guards the junction of El Camino Largo and the main trail
that winds up Sycamore Cañon.

It was the first day of early spring. The rains were over. The
California hills were green and purple and gold. The new leaves lay
softly fresh on the gaunt boughs of yesterday. A blue jay scolded from
a clump of sumac across the trail.

The girl pointed up into the cloudless sky, where several great birds
circled majestically, rising and falling upon motionless wings.

“The vultures are back,” she said. “I am always glad to see them come
again.”

“Yes,” said the man. “They are bully scavengers, and we don’t have to
pay ’em wages.”

The girl smiled up at him.

“I’m afraid my thoughts were more poetic than practical,” she said. “I
was only thinking that the sky looked less lonely now that they have
come. Why suggest their diet?”

“I know what you mean,” he said. “I like them, too. Maligned as they
are, they are really wonderful birds, and sort of mysterious. Did
you ever stop to think that you never see a very young one or a dead
one? Where do they die? Where do they grow to maturity? I wonder what
they’ve found up there! Let’s ride up. Martin said he saw a new calf up
beyond Jackknife Cañon yesterday. That would be just about under where
they’re circling now.”

They guided their horses around a large, flat slab of rock that some
camper had contrived into a table beneath the sycamore, and started
across the trail toward the opposite side of the cañon. They were in
the middle of the trail when the man drew in and listened.

“Some one is coming,” he said. “Let’s wait and see who it is. I haven’t
sent any one back into the hills to-day.”

“I have an idea,” remarked the girl, “that there is more going on up
there”--she nodded toward the mountains stretching to the south of
them--“than you know about.”

“How is that?” he asked.

“So often recently we have heard horsemen passing the ranch late at
night. If they weren’t going to stop at your place, those who rode up
the trail must have been headed into the high hills; but I’m sure that
those whom we heard coming down weren’t coming from the Rancho del
Ganado.”

“No,” he said, “not late at night--or not often, at any rate.”

The footsteps of a cantering horse drew rapidly closer, and presently
the animal and its rider came into view around a turn in the trail.

“It’s only Allen,” said the girl.

The newcomer reined in at sight of the man and the girl. He was
evidently surprised, and the girl thought that he seemed ill at ease.

“Just givin’ Baldy a work-out,” he explained. “He ain’t been out for
three or four days, an’ you told me to work ’em out if I had time.”

Custer Pennington nodded.

“See any stock back there?”

“No. How’s the Apache to-day--forgin’ as bad as usual?”

Pennington shook his head negatively.

“That fellow shod him yesterday just the way I want him shod. I wish
you’d take a good look at his shoes, Slick, so you can see that he’s
always shod this same way.” His eyes had been traveling over Slick’s
mount, whose heaving sides were covered with lather. “Baldy’s pretty
soft, Slick; I wouldn’t work him too hard all at once. Get him up to it
gradually.”

He turned and rode off with the girl at his side. Slick Allen looked
after them for a moment, and then moved his horse off at a slow walk
toward the ranch. He was a lean, sinewy man, of medium height. He might
have been a cavalryman once. He sat his horse, even at a walk, like
one who has sweated and bled under a drill sergeant in the days of his
youth.

“How do you like him?” the girl asked of Pennington.

“He’s a good horseman, and good horsemen are getting rare these days,”
replied Pennington; “but I don’t know that I’d choose him for a
playmate. Don’t you like him?”

“I’m afraid I don’t. His eyes give me the creeps--they’re like a
fish’s.”

“To tell the truth, Grace, I don’t like him,” said Custer. “He’s one of
those rare birds--a good horseman who doesn’t love horses. I imagine he
won’t last long on the Rancho del Ganado; but we’ve got to give him a
fair shake--he’s only been with us a few weeks.”

They were picking their way toward the summit of a steep hogback. The
man, who led, was seeking carefully for the safest footing, shamed out
of his recent recklessness by the thought of how close the girl had
come to a serious accident through his thoughtlessness. They rode along
the hogback until they could look down into a tiny basin where a small
bunch of cattle was grazing, and then, turning and dipping over the
edge, they dropped slowly toward the animals.

Near the bottom of the slope they came upon a white-faced bull standing
beneath the spreading shade of a live oak. He turned his woolly face
toward them, his red-rimmed eyes observing them dispassionately for
a moment. Then he turned away again and resumed his cud, disdaining
further notice of them.

“That’s the King of Ganado, isn’t it?” asked the girl.

“Looks like him, doesn’t he? But he isn’t. He’s the King’s likeliest
son, and unless I’m mistaken he’s going to give the old fellow a
mighty tough time of it this fall, if the old boy wants to hang on to
the grand championship. We’ve never shown him yet. It’s an idea of
father’s. He’s always wanted to spring a new champion at a great show
and surprise the world. He’s kept this fellow hidden away ever since he
gave the first indication that he was going to be a fine bull. At least
a hundred breeders have visited the herd in the past year, and not one
of them has seen him. Father says he’s the greatest bull that ever
lived, and that his first show is going to be the International.”

“I just know he’ll win,” exclaimed the girl. “Why look at him! Isn’t he
a beauty?”

“Got a back like a billiard table,” commented Custer proudly.

They rode down among the heifers. There were a dozen
beauties--three-year-olds. Hidden to one side, behind a small bush, the
man’s quick eyes discerned a little bundle of red and white.

“There it is, Grace,” he called, and the two rode toward it.

One of the heifers looked fearfully toward them, then at the bush, and
finally walked toward it, lowing plaintively.

“We’re not going to hurt it, little girl,” the man assured her.

As they came closer, there arose a thing of long, wabbly legs, big
joints, and great, dark eyes, its spotless coat of red and white
shining with health and life.

“The cunning thing!” cried the girl. “How I’d like to squeeze it! I
just love ’em, Custer!”

She had slipped from her saddle, and, dropping her reins on the ground,
was approaching the calf.

“Look out for the cow!” cried the man, as he dismounted and moved
forward to the girl’s side, with his arm through the Apache’s reins.
“She hasn’t been up much, and she may be a little wild.”

The calf stood its ground for a moment, and then, with tail erect,
cavorted madly for its mother, behind whom it took refuge.

“I just love ’em! I just love ’em!” repeated the girl.

“You say the same thing about the colts and the little pigs,” the man
reminded her.

“I love ’em all!” she cried, shaking her head, her eyes twinkling.

“You love them because they’re little and helpless, just like babies,”
he said. “Oh, Grace, how you’d love a baby!”

The girl flushed prettily. Quite suddenly he seized her in his arms and
crushed her to him, smothering her with a long kiss. Breathless, she
wriggled partially away, but he still held her in his arms.

“Why won’t you, Grace?” he begged. “There’ll never be anybody else for
me or for you. Father and mother and Eva love you almost as much as I
do, and on your side your mother and Guy have always seemed to take it
as a matter of course that we’d marry. It isn’t the drinking, is it,
dear?”

“No, it’s not that, Custer. Of course I’ll marry you--some day; but not
yet. Why, I haven’t lived yet, Custer! I want to live. I want to do
something outside of the humdrum life that I have always led and the
humdrum life that I shall live as a wife and mother. I want to live a
little, Custer, and then I’ll be ready to settle down. You all tell me
that I am beautiful, and down, away down in the depth of my soul, I
feel that I have talent. If I have, I ought to use the gifts God has
given me.”

She was speaking very seriously, and the man listened patiently and
with respect, for he realized that she was revealing for the first time
a secret yearning that she must have long held locked in her bosom.

“Just what do you want to do, dear?” he asked gently.

“I--oh, it seems silly when I try to put it in words, but in dreams it
is very beautiful and very real.”

“The stage?” he asked.

“It is just like you to understand!” Her smile rewarded him. “Will you
help me? I know mother will object.”

“You want me to help you take all the happiness out of my life?” he
asked.

“It would only be for a little while--just a few years, and then I
would come back to you--after I had made good.”

“You would never come back, Grace, unless you failed,” he said. “If
you succeeded, you would never be contented in any other life or
atmosphere. If you came back a failure, you couldn’t help but carry
a little bitterness always in your heart. It would never be the same
dear, care-free heart that went away so gayly. Here you have a real
part to play in a real drama--not make-believe upon a narrow stage
with painted drops.” He flung out a hand in broad gesture. “Look at
the setting that God has painted here for us to play our parts in--the
parts that He has chosen for us! Your mother played upon the same
stage, and mine. Do you think them failures? And both were beautiful
girls--as beautiful as you.”

“Oh, but you don’t understand, after all, Custer!” she cried. “I
thought you did.”

“I do understand that for your sake I must do my best to persuade you
that you have as full a life before you here as upon the stage. I am
fighting first for your happiness, Grace, and then for mine. If I fail,
then I shall do all that I can to help you realize your ambition. If
you cannot stay because you are convinced that you will be happier
here, then I do not want you to stay.”

“Kiss me,” she demanded suddenly. “I am only thinking of it, anyway, so
let’s not worry until there is something to worry about.”



CHAPTER II


The man bent his lips to hers again, and her arms stole about his neck.
The calf, in the meantime, perhaps disgusted by such absurdities, had
scampered off to try his brand-new legs again, with the result that he
ran into a low bush, turned a somersault, and landed on his back. The
mother, still doubtful of the intentions of the newcomers, to whose
malevolent presence she may have attributed the accident, voiced a
perturbed low; whereupon there broke from the vicinity of the live oak
a deep note, not unlike the rumbling of distant thunder.

The man looked up.

“I think we’ll be going,” he said. “The Emperor has issued an
ultimatum.”

“Or a bull, perhaps,” Grace suggested, as they walked quickly toward
her horse.

“Awful!” he commented, as he assisted her into the saddle.

Then he swung to his own.

The Emperor moved majestically toward them, his nose close to the
ground. Occasionally he stopped, pawing the earth and throwing dust
upon his broad back.

“Doesn’t he look wicked?” cried the girl. “Just look at those eyes!”

“He’s just an old bluffer,” replied the man. “However, I’d rather have
you in the saddle, for you can’t always be sure just what they’ll
do. We must call his bluff, though; it would never do to run from
him--might give him bad habits.”

He rode toward the advancing animal, breaking into a canter as he drew
near the bull, and striking his booted leg with a quirt.

“Hi, there, you old reprobate! Beat it!” he cried.

The bull stood his ground with lowered head and rumbled threats until
the horseman was almost upon him; then he turned quickly aside as the
rider went past.

“That’s better,” remarked Custer, as the girl joined him.

“You’re not a bit afraid of him, are you, Custer? You’re not afraid of
anything.”

“Oh, I wouldn’t say that,” he demurred. “I learned a long time ago that
most encounters consist principally of bluff. Maybe I’ve just grown to
be a good bluffer. Anyhow, I’m a better bluffer than the Emperor. If
the rascal had only known it, he could have run me ragged.”

As they rode up the side of the basin, the man’s eyes moved constantly
from point to point, now noting the condition of the pasture grasses,
or again searching the more distant hills. Presently they alighted upon
a thin, wavering line of brown, which zigzagged down the opposite side
of the basin from a clump of heavy brush that partially hid a small
ravine, and crossed the meadow ahead of them.

“There’s a new trail, Grace, and it don’t belong there. Let’s go and
take a look at it.”

They rode ahead until they reached the trail, at a point where it
crossed the bottom of the basin and started up the side they had been
ascending. The man leaned above his horse’s shoulder and examined the
trampled turf.

“Horses,” he said. “I thought so, and it’s been used a lot this winter.
You can see even now where the animals slipped and floundered after the
heavy rains.”

“But you don’t run horses in this pasture, do you?” asked the girl.

“No; and we haven’t run anything in it since last summer. This is
the only bunch in it, and they were just turned in about a week ago.
Anyway, the horses that made this trail were mostly shod. Now what in
the world is anybody going up there for?” His eyes wandered to the
heavy brush into which the trail disappeared upon the opposite rim of
the basin. “I’ll have to follow that up to-morrow--it’s too late to do
it to-day.”

“We can follow it the other way, toward the ranch,” she suggested.

They found the trail wound up the hillside and crossed the hogback in
heavy brush, which, in many places, had been cut away to allow the
easier passage of a horseman.

“Do you see,” asked Custer, as they drew rein at the summit of the
ridge, “that although the trail crosses here in plain sight of the
ranch house, the brush would absolutely conceal a horseman from the
view of any one at the house? It must run right down into Jackknife
Cañon. Funny none of us have noticed it, for there’s scarcely a week
that that trail isn’t ridden by some of us!”

As they descended into the cañon, they discovered why that end of the
new trail had not been noticed. It ran deep and well marked through the
heavy brush of a gully to a place where the brush commenced to thin,
and there it branched into a dozen dim trails that joined and blended
with the old, well worn cattle paths of the hillside.

“Somebody’s mighty foxy,” observed the man; “but I don’t see what it’s
all about. The days of cattle runners and bandits are over.”

“Just imagine!” exclaimed the girl. “A real mystery in our lazy, old
hills!”

The man rode in silence and in thought. A herd of pure-bred Herefords,
whose value would have ransomed half the crowned heads remaining in
Europe, grazed in the several pastures that ran far back into those
hills; and back there somewhere that trail led, but for what purpose?
No good purpose, he was sure, or it had not been so cleverly hidden.

As they came to the trail which they called the Camino Corto, where it
commenced at the gate leading from the old goat corral, the man jerked
his thumb toward the west along it.

“They must come and go this way,” he said.

“Perhaps they’re the ones mother and I have heard passing at night,”
suggested the girl. “If they are, they come right through your
property, below the house--not this way.”

He opened the gate from the saddle and they passed through, crossing
the _barranco_, and stopping for a moment to look at the pigs and talk
with the herdsman. Then they rode on toward the ranch house, a half
mile farther down the widening cañon. It stood upon the summit of a low
hill, the declining sun transforming its plastered walls, its cupolas,
the sturdy arches of its arcades, into the semblance of a Moorish
castle.

At the foot of the hill they dismounted at the saddle horse stable,
tied their horses, and ascended the long flight of rough concrete steps
toward the house. As they rounded the wild sumac bush at the summit,
they were espied by those sitting in the patio, around three sides of
which the house was built.

“Oh, here they are now!” exclaimed Mrs. Pennington. “We were so afraid
that Grace would ride right on home, Custer. We had just persuaded Mrs.
Evans to stay for dinner. Guy is coming, too.”

“Mother, you here, too?” cried the girl. “How nice and cool it is in
here! It would save a lot of trouble if we brought our things, mother.”

“We are hoping that at least one of you will, very soon,” said Colonel
Pennington, who had risen, and now put an arm affectionately about the
girl’s shoulders.

“That’s what I’ve been telling her again this afternoon,” said Custer;
“but instead she wants to----”

The girl turned toward him with a little frown and shake of her head.

“You’d better run down and tell Allen that we won’t use the horses
until after dinner,” she said.

He grimaced good-naturedly and turned away.

“I’ll have him take Senator home,” he said. “I can drive you and your
mother down in the car, when you leave.”

As he descended the steps that wound among the umbrella trees, taking
on their new foliage, he saw Allen examining the Apache’s shoes. As he
neared them, the horse pulled away from the man, his suddenly lowered
hoof striking Allen’s instep. With an oath the fellow stepped back
and swung a vicious kick to the animal’s belly. Almost simultaneously
a hand fell heavily upon his shoulder. He was jerked roughly back,
whirled about, and sent spinning a dozen feet away, where he stumbled
and fell. As he scrambled to his feet, white with rage, he saw the
younger Pennington before him.

“Go to the office and get your time,” ordered Pennington.

“I’ll get you first, you son of a----”

A hard fist connecting suddenly with his chin put a painful period to
his sentence before it was completed, and stopped his mad rush.

“I’d be more careful of my conversation, Allen, if I were you,” said
Pennington quietly. “Just because you’ve been drinking is no excuse for
_that_. Now go on up to the office, as I told you to.”

He had caught the odor of whisky as he jerked the man past him.

“You goin’ to can me for drinkin’--_you?_” demanded Allen.

“You know what I’m canning you for. You know that’s the one thing that
don’t go on Ganado. You ought to get what you gave the Apache, and
you’d better beat it before I lose my temper and give it to you!”

The man rose slowly to his feet. In his mind he was revolving his
chances of successfully renewing his attack; but presently his judgment
got the better of his desire and his rage. He moved off slowly up the
hill toward the house. A few yards, and he turned.

“I ain’t a goin’ to ferget this, you--you----”

“Be careful!” Pennington admonished.

“Nor you ain’t goin’ to ferget it, neither, you fox-trottin’ dude!”

Allen turned again to the ascent of the steps. Pennington walked to the
Apache and stroked his muzzle.

“Old boy,” he crooned, “there don’t anybody kick you and get away with
it, does there?”

Halfway up, Allen stopped and turned again.

“You think you’re the whole cheese, you Penningtons, don’t you?” he
called back. “With all your money an’ your fine friends! Fine friends,
yah! I can put one of ’em where he belongs any time I want--the darn
bootlegger! That’s what he is. You wait--you’ll see!”

“A-ah, beat it!” sighed Pennington wearily.

Mounting the Apache, he led Grace’s horse along the foot of the hill
toward the smaller ranch house of their neighbor, some half mile
away. Humming a little tune, he unsaddled Senator, turned him into
his corral, saw that there was water in his trough, and emptied a
measure of oats into his manger, for the horse had cooled off since
the afternoon ride. As neither of the Evans ranch hands appeared, he
found a piece of rag and wiped off the Senator’s bit, turned the saddle
blankets wet side up to dry, and then, leaving the stable, crossed the
yard to mount the Apache.

A young man in riding clothes appeared simultaneously from the interior
of the bungalow, which stood a hundred feet away. Crossing the wide
porch, he called to Pennington.

“Hello there, Penn! What you doing?” he demanded.

“Just brought Senator in--Grace is up at the house. You’re coming up
there, too, Guy.”

“Sure, but come in here a second. I’ve got something to show you.”

Pennington crossed the yard and entered the house behind Grace’s
brother, who conducted him to his bedroom. Here young Evans unlocked
a closet, and, after rummaging behind some clothing, emerged with a
bottle, the shape and dimensions of which were once as familiar in the
land of the free as the benign countenance of Lydia E. Pinkham.

“It’s the genuine stuff, Penn, too!” he declared.

Pennington smiled.

“Thanks, old fellow, but I’ve quit,” he said.

“Quit!” exclaimed Evans.

“Yep.”

“But think of it, man--aged eight years in the wood, and bottled
in bond before July 1, 1919. The real thing, and as cheap as
moonshine--only six beans a quart. Can you believe it?”

“I cannot,” admitted Pennington. “Your conversation listens phony.”

“But it’s the truth. You may have quit, but one little snifter of this
won’t hurt you. Here’s this bottle already open--just try it”; and he
proffered the bottle and a glass to the other.

“Well, it’s pretty hard to resist anything that sounds as good as this
does,” remarked Pennington. “I guess one won’t hurt me any.” He poured
himself a drink and took it. “Wonderful!” he ejaculated.

“Here,” said Evans, diving into the closet once more. “I got you a
bottle, too, and we can get more.”

Pennington took the bottle and examined it, almost caressingly.

“Eight years in the wood!” he murmured. “I’ve got to take it, Guy. Must
have something to hand down to posterity.” He drew a bill fold from his
pocket and counted out six dollars.

“Thanks,” said Guy. “You’ll never regret it.”



CHAPTER III


As the two young men climbed the hill to the big house, a few minutes
later, they found the elder Pennington standing at the edge of the
driveway that circled the hill top, looking out toward the wide cañon
and the distant mountains. In the nearer foreground lay the stable
and corrals of the saddle horses, the hen house with its two long
alfalfa runways, and the small dairy barn accommodating the little herd
of Guernseys that supplied milk, cream, and butter for the ranch. A
quarter of a mile beyond, among the trees, was the red-roofed “cabin”
where the unmarried ranch hands ate and slept, near the main corrals
with their barns, outhouses, and sheds.

In a hilly pasture farther up the cañon the black and iron gray of
Percheron brood mares contrasted with the greening hillsides of spring.
Still farther away, the white and red of the lordly figure of the
Emperor stood out boldly upon the summit of the ridge behind Jackknife
Cañon.

The two young men joined the older, and Custer put an arm
affectionately about his father’s shoulders.

“You never tire of it,” said the young man.

“I have been looking at it for twenty-two years, my son,” replied the
elder Pennington, “and each year it has become more wonderful to me.
It never changes, and yet it is never twice alike. See the purple
sage away off there, and the lighter spaces of wild buckwheat, and
here and there among the scrub oak the beautiful pale green of the
manzanita--scintillant jewels in the diadem of the hills! And the
faint haze of the mountains that seem to throw them just a little out
of focus, to make them a perfect background for the beautiful hills
which the Supreme Artist is placing on his canvas to-day. An hour
from now He will paint another masterpiece, and to-night another, and
forever others, with never two alike, nor ever one that mortal man can
duplicate; and all for us, boy, all for us, if we have the hearts and
the souls to see!”

“How you love it!” said the boy.

“Yes, and your mother loves it; and it is our great happiness that you
and Eva love it, too.”

The boy made no reply. He did love it; but his was the heart of youth,
and it yearned for change and for adventure and for what lay beyond the
circling hills and the broad, untroubled valley that spread its level
fields below “the castle on the hill.”

“The girls are dressing for a swim,” said the older man, after a moment
of silence. “Aren’t you boys going in?”

“The girls” included his wife and Mrs. Evans, as well as Grace, for the
colonel insisted that youth was purely a physical and mental attribute,
independent of time. If one could feel and act in accord with the
spirit of youth, one could not be old.

“Are you going in?” asked his son.

“Yes, I was waiting for you two.”

“I think I’ll be excused, sir,” said Guy. “The water is too cold yet. I
tried it yesterday, and nearly froze to death. I’ll come and watch.”

The two Penningtons moved off toward the house, to get into swimming
things, while young Evans wandered down into the water gardens. As he
stood there, idly content in the quiet beauty of the spot, Allen came
down the steps, his check in his hand. At sight of the boy he halted
behind him, an unpleasant expression upon his face.

Evans, suddenly aware that he was not alone, turned and recognized the
man.

“Oh, hello, Allen!” he said.

“Young Pennington just canned me,” said Allen, with no other return of
Evans’s greeting.

“I’m sorry,” said Evans.

“You may be sorrier!” growled Allen, continuing on his way toward the
cabin to get his blankets and clothes.

For a moment Guy stared after the man, a puzzled expression knitting
his brows. Then he slowly flushed, glancing quickly about to see if
any one had overheard the brief conversation between Slick Allen and
himself.

A few minutes later he entered the inclosure west of the house, where
the swimming pool lay. Mrs. Pennington and her guests were already in
the pool, swimming vigorously to keep warm, and a moment later the
colonel and Custer ran from the house and dived in simultaneously.
Though there was twenty-six years’ difference in their ages, it was not
evidenced by any lesser vitality or agility on the part of the older
man.

Colonel Custer Pennington had been born in Virginia fifty years before.
Graduated from the Virginia Military Institute and West Point, he had
taken a commission in the cavalry branch of the service. Campaigning in
Cuba, he had been shot through one lung, and shortly after the close of
the war he was retired for disability, with rank of lieutenant colonel.
In 1900 he had come to California, on the advice of his physician in
the forlorn hope that he might prolong his sufferings a few years more.

For two hundred years the Penningtons had bred fine men, women, and
horses upon the same soil in the State whose very existence was
inextricably interwoven with their own. A Pennington leave Virginia?
Horrors! Perish the thought! But Colonel Custer Pennington had had
to leave it or die, and with a young wife and a two-year-old boy he
couldn’t afford to die. Deep in his heart he meant to recover his
health in distant California and then return to the land of his love;
but his physician had told a mutual friend, who was also Pennington’s
attorney, that “poor old Cus” would almost undoubtedly be dead inside
of a year.

And so Pennington had come West with Mrs. Pennington and little Custer,
Jr., and had found the Rancho del Ganado run down, untenanted, and
for sale. A month of loafing had left him almost ready to die of
stagnation, without any assistance from his poor lungs; and when, in
the course of a drive to another ranch, he had happened to see the
place, and had learned that it was for sale, the germ had been sown.

He judged from the soil and the water that Ganado was not well suited
to raise the type of horse that he knew best, and that he and his
father and his grandfathers before them had bred in Virginia; but he
saw other possibilities. Moreover, he loved the hills and the cañons
from the first; and so he had purchased the ranch, more to have
something that would temporarily occupy his mind until his period of
exile was ended by a return to his native State, or by death, than with
any idea that it would prove a permanent home.

The old Spanish American house had been remodeled and rebuilt. In four
years he had found that Herefords, Berkshires, and Percherons may win
a place in a man’s heart almost equal to that which a thoroughbred
occupies. Then a little daughter had come, and the final seal that
stamps a man’s house as his home was placed upon “the castle on the
hill.”

His lung had healed--he could not tell by any sign it gave that it was
not as good as ever--and still he stayed on in the land of sunshine,
which he had grown to love without realizing its hold upon him.
Gradually he had forgotten to say “when we go back home”; and when at
last a letter came from a younger brother, saying that he wished to buy
the old place in Virginia if the Custer Penningtons did not expect to
return to it, the colonel was compelled to face the issue squarely.

They had held a little family council--the colonel and Julia, his wife,
with seven-year-old Custer and little one-year-old Eva. Eva, sitting in
her mother’s lap, agreed with every one. Custer, Jr., burst into tears
at the very suggestion of leaving dear old Ganado.

“And what do you think about it, Julia?” asked the colonel.

“I love Virginia, dear,” she had replied; “but I think I love
California even more, and I say it without disloyalty to my own State.
It’s a different kind of love.”

“I know what you mean,” said her husband. “Virginia is a mother to us,
California a sweetheart.”

And so they stayed upon the Rancho del Ganado.



CHAPTER IV


Work and play were inextricably entangled upon Ganado, the play being
of a nature that fitted them better for their work, while the work,
always in the open and usually from the saddle, they enjoyed fully
as much as the play. While the tired business man of the city was
expending a day’s vitality and nervous energy in an effort to escape
from the turmoil of the mad rush-hour and find a strap from which to
dangle homeward amid the toxic effluvia of the melting pot, Colonel
Pennington plunged and swam in the cold, invigorating waters of his
pool, after a day of labor fully as constructive and profitable as
theirs.

“One more dive!” he called, balancing upon the end of the springboard,
“and then I’m going out. Eva ought to be here by the time we’re
dressed, hadn’t she? I’m about famished.”

“I haven’t heard the train whistle yet, though it must be due,” replied
Mrs. Pennington. “You and Boy make so much noise swimming that we’ll
miss Gabriel’s trump if we happen to be in the pool at the time!”

The colonel, Custer, and Grace Evans dived simultaneously, and, coming
up together, raced for the shallow end, where Mrs. Evans and her
hostess were preparing to leave the pool. The girl, reaching the hand
rail first, arose laughing and triumphant.

“My foot slipped as I dived,” cried the younger Pennington, wiping the
water from his eyes, “or I’d have caught you!”

“No alibis, Boy!” laughed the colonel. “Grace beat you fair and
square.”

“Race you back for a dollar, Grace!” challenged the young man.

“You’re on,” she cried. “One, two, three--go!”

They were off. The colonel, who had preceded them leisurely into the
deep water, swam close to his son as the latter was passing, a yard
in the lead. Simultaneously the young man’s progress ceased. With a
Comanche-like yell he turned upon his father, and the two men grappled
and went down. When they came up, spluttering and laughing, the girl
was climbing out of the pool.

“You win, Grace!” shouted the colonel.

“It’s a frame-up!” cried Custer. “He grabbed me by the ankle!”

“Well, who had a better right?” demanded the girl. “He’s referee.”

“He’s a fine mess for a referee!” grumbled Custer good-naturedly.

“Run along and get your dollar, and pay up like a gentleman,”
admonished his father.

“What do you get out of it? What do you pay him, Grace?”

They were still bantering as they entered the house and sought their
several rooms to dress.

Guy Evans strolled from the walled garden of the swimming pool to the
open arch that broke the long pergola beneath which the driveway ran
along the north side of the house. Here he had an unobstructed view of
the broad valley stretching away to the mountains in the distance.

Down the center of the valley a toy train moved noiselessly. As he
watched it, he saw a puff of white rise from the tiny engine. It rose
and melted in the evening air before the thin, clear sound of the
whistle reached his ears. The train crawled behind the green of trees
and disappeared.

He knew that it had stopped at the station, and that a slender,
girlish figure was alighting, with a smile for the porter and a gay
word for the conductor who had carried her back and forth for years
upon her occasional visits to the city a hundred miles away. Now the
chauffeur was taking her bag and carrying it to the roadster that she
would drive home along the wide, straight boulevard that crossed the
valley--utterly ruining a number of perfectly good speed laws.

Two minutes elapsed, and the train crawled out from behind the trees
and continued its way up the valley--a little black caterpillar with
spots of yellow twinkling along its sides. As twilight deepened, the
lights from ranch houses and villages sprinkled the floor of the
valley. Like jewels scattered from a careless hand, they fell singly
and in little clusters; and then the stars, serenely superior, came
forth to assure the glory of a perfect California night.

The headlights of a motor car turned in at the driveway. Guy went to
the east porch and looked in at the living room door, where some of the
family had already collected.

“Eva’s coming!” he announced.

She had been gone since the day before, but she might have been
returning from a long trip abroad, if every one’s eagerness to greet
her was any criterion. Unlike city dwellers, these people had never
learned to conceal the lovelier emotions of their hearts behind a mask
of assumed indifference. Perhaps the fact that they were not forever
crowded shoulder to shoulder with strangers permitted them an enjoyable
naturalness which the dweller in the wholesale districts of humanity
can never know; for what a man may reveal of his heart among friends
he hides from the unsympathetic eyes of others, though it may be the
noblest of his possessions.

With a rush the car topped the hill, swung up the driveway, and stopped
at the corner of the house. A door flew open, and the girl leaped from
the driver’s seat.

“Hello, everybody!” she cried.

Snatching a kiss from her brother as she passed him, she fairly leaped
upon her mother, hugging, kissing, laughing, dancing, and talking all
at once. Espying her father, she relinquished a disheveled and laughing
mother and dived for him.

“Most adorable pops!” she cried, as he caught her in his arms. “Are you
glad to have your little nuisance back? I’ll bet you’re not. Do you
love me? You won’t when you know how much I’ve spent, but oh, popsy,
I had _such_ a good time! That’s all there was to it, and oh, momsie,
who, who, _who_ do you suppose I met? Oh, you’d never guess--never,
never!”

“Whom did you meet?” asked her mother.

“Yes, little one, _whom_ did you meet?” inquired her brother.

“And he’s perfectly _gorgeous_,” continued the girl, as if there
had been no interruption; “and I danced with him--oh, such _divine_
dancing! Oh, Guy Evans! Why how do you do? I never saw you.”

The young man nodded glumly.

“How are you, Eva?” he said.

“Mrs. Evans is here, too, dear,” her mother reminded her.

The girl curtsied before her mother’s guest, and then threw her arm
about the older woman’s neck.

“Oh, Aunt Mae!” she cried. “I’m _so_ excited; but you should have
_seen_ him, and, momsie, I got the _cutest_ riding hat!” They were
moving toward the living room door, which Guy was holding open. “Guy, I
got you the splendiferousest Christmas present!”

“Help!” cried her brother, collapsing into a porch chair. “Don’t you
know that I have a weak heart? Do your Christmas shopping early--do it
in April! Oh, Lord, can you beat it?” he demanded of the others. “Can
you beat it?”

“I think it was mighty nice of Eva to remember me at all,” said Guy,
thawing perceptibly.

“What is it?” asked Custer. “I’ll bet you got him a pipe.”

“How ever in the world did you guess?” demanded Eva.

Custer rocked from side to side in his chair, laughing.

“What are you laughing at? Idiot!” cried the girl. “How did you guess I
got him a pipe?”

“Because he never smokes anything but cigarettes.”

“You’re horrid!”

He pulled her down onto his lap and kissed her.

“Dear little one!” he cried. Taking her head between his hands, he
shook it. “Hear ’em rattle!”

“But I love a pipe,” stated Guy emphatically. “The trouble is, I never
had a really nice one before.”

“There!” exclaimed the girl triumphantly. “And you know _Sherlock
Holmes_ always smoked a pipe.”

Her brother knitted his brows.

“I don’t quite connect,” he announced.

“Well, if you need a diagram, isn’t Guy an author?” she demanded.

“Not so that any one could notice it--yet,” demurred Evans.

“Well, you’re going to be!” said the girl proudly.

“The light is commencing to dawn,” announced her brother. “_Sherlock
Holmes_, the famous author, who wrote Conan Doyle!”

A blank expression overspread the girl’s face, to be presently expunged
by a slow smile.

“You are perfectly horrid!” she cried. “I’m going in to dapper up a bit
for dinner--don’t wait.”

She danced through the living room and out into the patio toward her
own rooms.

“Rattle, rattle, little brain; rattle, rattle round again,” her brother
called after her. “Can you beat her?” he added, to the others.

“She can’t even be approximated,” laughed the colonel. “In all the
world there is only one of her.”

“And she’s ours, bless her!” said the brother.

The colonel was glancing over the headlines of an afternoon paper that
Eva had brought from the city.

“What’s new?” asked Custer.

“Same old rot,” replied his father. “Murders, divorces, kidnapers,
bootleggers, and they haven’t even the originality to make them
interesting by evolving new methods. Oh, hold on--this isn’t so bad!
‘Two hundred thousand dollars’ worth of stolen whisky landed on coast,’
he read. ‘Prohibition enforcement agents, together with special agents
from the Treasury Department, are working on a unique theory that may
reveal the whereabouts of the fortune in bonded whisky stolen from
a government warehouse in New York a year ago. All that was known
until recently was that the whisky was removed from the warehouse in
trucks in broad daylight, compassing one of the boldest robberies ever
committed in New York. Now, from a source which they refuse to divulge,
the government sleuths have received information which leads them to
believe that the liquid loot was loaded aboard a sailing vessel, and
after a long trip around the Horn, is lying somewhere off the coast of
southern California. That it is being lightered ashore in launches and
transported to some hiding place in the mountains is one theory upon
which the government is working. The whisky is eleven years old, was
bottled in bond three years ago, just before the Eighteenth Amendment
became a harrowing reality. It will go hard with the traffickers in
this particular parcel of wet goods if they are apprehended, since
the theft was directly from a government bonded warehouse, and all
government officials concerned in the search are anxious to make an
example of the guilty parties.’

“Eleven years old!” sighed the colonel. “It makes my mouth water! I’ve
been subsisting on home-made grape wine for over a year. Think of
it--a Pennington! Why, my ancestors must be writhing in their Virginia
graves!”

“On the contrary, they’re probably laughing in their sleeves. They died
before July 1, 1919,” interposed Custer. “Eleven years old--eight years
in the wood,” he mused aloud, shooting a quick glance in the direction
of Guy Evans, who suddenly became deeply interested in a novel lying on
a table beside his chair, notwithstanding the fact that he had read it
six months before and hadn’t liked it. “And it will go hard with the
traffickers, too,” continued young Pennington. “Well, I should hope it
would. They’ll probably hang ’em, the vile miscreants!”

Guy had risen and walked to the doorway opening upon the patio.

“I wonder what is keeping Eva,” he remarked.

“Getting hungry?” asked Mrs. Pennington. “Well, I guess we all are.
Suppose we don’t wait any longer? Eva won’t mind.”

“If I wait much longer,” observed the colonel, “some one will have to
carry me into the dining room.”

As they crossed the library toward the dining room the two young men
walked behind their elders.

“Is your appetite still good?” inquired Custer.

“Shut up!” retorted Evans. “You give me a pain.”

They had finished their soup before Eva joined them, and after the
men were reseated they took up the conversation where it had been
interrupted. As usual, if not always brilliant, it was at least
diversified, for it included many subjects from grand opera to
the budding of English walnuts on the native wild stock, and from
the latest novel to the most practical method of earmarking pigs.
Paintings, poems, plays, pictures, people, horses, and home-brew--each
came in for a share of the discussion, argument, and raillery that ran
round the table.

During a brief moment when she was not engaged in conversation, Guy
seized the opportunity to whisper to Eva, who sat next to him.

“Who was that bird you met in L.A.?” he asked.

“Which one?”

“Which one! How many did you meet?”

“Oodles of them.”

“I mean the one you were ranting about.”

“Which one was I ranting about? I don’t remember.”

“You’re enough to drive anybody to drink, Eva Pennington!” cried the
young man disgustedly.

“Radiant man!” she cooed. “What’s the dapper little idea in that
talented brain--jealous?”

“I want to know who he is,” demanded Guy.

“Who who is?”

“You know perfectly well who I mean--the poor fish you were raving
about before dinner. You said you danced with him. Who is he? That’s
what I want to know.”

“I don’t like the way you talk to me; but if you must know, he was the
most dazzling thing you ever saw. He----”

“I never saw him, and I don’t want to, and I don’t care how dazzling he
is. I only want to know his name.”

“Well, why didn’t you say so in the first place? His name’s Wilson
Crumb.” Her tone was as of one who says: “Behold Alexander the Great!”

“Wilson Crumb! Who’s he?”

“Do you mean to sit there and tell me that you don’t know who Wilson
Crumb is, Guy Evans?” she demanded.

“Never heard of him,” he insisted.

“Never heard of Wilson Crumb, the famous actor-director? Such
ignorance!”

“Did you ever hear of him before this trip to L.A.?” inquired her
brother from across the table. “I never heard you mention him before.”

“Well, maybe I didn’t,” admitted the girl; “but he’s the most dazzling
dancer you ever saw--and such eyes! And maybe he’ll come out to the
ranch and bring his company. He said they were often looking for just
such locations.”

“And I suppose you invited him?” demanded Custer accusingly.

“And why not? I had to be polite, didn’t I?”

“You know perfectly well that father has never permitted such a
thing,” insisted her brother, looking toward the colonel for support.

“He didn’t ask father--he asked me,” returned the girl.

“You see,” said the colonel, “how simply Eva solves every little
problem.”

“But you know, popsy, how perfectly superb it would be to have them
take some pictures right here on our very own ranch, where we could
watch them all day long.”

“Yes,” growled Custer; “watch them wreck the furniture and demolish
the lawns! Why, one bird of a director ran a troop of cavalry over one
of the finest lawns in Hollywood. Then they’ll go up in the hills and
chase the cattle over the top into the ocean. I’ve heard all about
them. I’d never allow one of ’em on the place.”

“Maybe they’re not all inconsiderate and careless,” suggested Mrs.
Pennington.

“You remember there was a company took a few scenes at my place a year
or so ago,” interjected Mrs. Evans. “They were very nice indeed.”

“They were just wonderful,” said Grace Evans. “I hope the colonel lets
them come. It would be piles of fun!”

“You can’t tell anything about them,” volunteered Guy. “I understand
they pick up all sorts of riffraff for extra people--I.W.W.’s and all
sorts of people like that. I’d be afraid.”

He shook his head dubiously.

“The trouble with you two is,” asserted Eva, “that you’re afraid to let
us girls see any nice-looking actors from the city. That’s what’s the
matter with you!”

“Yes, they’re jealous,” agreed Mrs. Pennington, laughing.

“Well,” said Custer, “if there are leading men there are leading
ladies, and from what I’ve seen of them the leading ladies are
better-looking than the leading men. By all means, now that I consider
the matter, let them come. Invite them at once, for a month--wire
them!”

“Silly!” cried his sister. “He may not come here at all. He just
mentioned it casually.”

“And all this tempest in a teapot for nothing,” said the colonel.

Wilson Crumb was forthwith dropped from the conversation and forgotten
by all, even by impressionable little Eva.

As the young people gathered around Mrs. Pennington at the piano in the
living room, Mrs. Evans and Colonel Pennington sat apart, carrying on a
desultory conversation while they listened to the singing.

“We have a new neighbor,” remarked Mrs. Evans, “on the ten-acre orchard
adjoining us on the west.”

“Yes--Mrs. Burke. She has moved in, has she?” inquired the colonel.

“Yesterday. She is a widow from the East--has a daughter in Los
Angeles, I believe.”

“She came to see me about a month ago,” said the colonel, “to ask my
advice about the purchase of the property. She seemed rather a refined,
quiet little body. I must tell Julia--she will want to call on her.”

“I insisted on her taking dinner with us last night,” said Mrs. Evans.
“She seems very frail, and was all worn out. Unpacking and settling is
trying enough for a robust person, and she seems so delicate that I
really don’t see how she stood it all.”

Then the conversation drifted to other topics until the party at the
piano broke up and Eva came dancing over to her father.

“Gorgeous popsy!” she cried, seizing him by an arm. “Just one dance
before bedtime--if you love me, just one!”

Colonel Pennington rose from his chair, laughing.

“I know your one dance, you little fraud--five fox-trots, three
one-steps, and a waltz.”

With his arms about each other they started for the ballroom--really
a big play room, which adjoined the garage. Behind them, laughing and
talking, came the two older women, the two sons, and Grace Evans. They
would dance for an hour and then go to bed, for they rose early and
were in the saddle before sunrise, living their happy, care-free life
far from the strife and squalor of the big cities, and yet with more of
the comforts and luxuries than most city dwellers ever achieve.



CHAPTER V


The bungalow at 1421 Vista del Paso was of the new school of Hollywood
architecture, which appears to be a hysterical effort to combine Queen
Anne, Italian, Swiss chalet, Moorish, Mission, and Martian. Its plaster
walls were of a yellowish rose, the outside woodwork being done in
light blue, while the windows were shaded with striped awnings of
olive and pink. On one side of the entrance rose a green pergola--the
ambitious atrocity that marks the meeting place of landscape gardening
and architecture, and that outrages them both. Culture has found
a virus for the cast iron dogs, deer, and rabbits that ramped in
immobility upon the lawns of yesteryear, but the green pergola is an
incurable disease.

Connecting with the front of the house, a plaster wall continued across
the narrow lot to the property line at one side and from there back
to the alley, partially inclosing a patio--which is Hollywood for
back-yard. An arched gateway opened into the patio from the front. The
gate was of rough redwood boards, and near the top there were three
auger holes arranged in the form of a triangle--this was art. Upon
the yellow-rose plaster above the arch a design of three monkeys was
stenciled in purple--this also was art.

As you wait in the three-foot-square vestibule you notice that the
floor is paved with red brick set in black mortar, and that the Oregon
pine door, with its mahogany stain, would have been beautiful in its
severe simplicity but for the little square of plate glass set in
the upper right hand corner, demonstrating conclusively the daring
originality of the artist architect.

Presently your ring is answered, and the door is opened by a Japanese
“schoolboy” of thirty-five in a white coat. You are ushered directly
into a living room, whereupon you forget all about architects and
art, for the room is really beautiful, even though a trifle heavy in
an Oriental way, with its Chinese rugs, dark hangings, and ponderous,
overstuffed furniture. The Japanese schoolboy, who knows you, closes
the door behind you and then tiptoes silently from the room.

Across from you, on a divan, a woman is lying, her face buried among
pillows. When you cough, she raises her face toward you, and you see
that it is very beautiful, even though the eyes are a bit wide and
staring and the expression somewhat haggard. You see a mass of black
hair surrounding a face of perfect contour. Even the plucked and
penciled brows, the rouged cheeks, and carmined lips cannot hide a
certain dignity and sweetness.

At sight of you she rises, a bit unsteadily, and, smiling with her
lips, extends a slender hand in greeting. The fingers of the hand
tremble and are stained with nicotine. Her eyes do not smile--ever.

“The same as usual?” she asks in a weary voice.

Your throat is very dry. You swallow before you assure her eagerly,
almost feverishly, that her surmise is correct. She leaves the room.
Probably you have not noticed that she is wild-eyed and haggard, or
that her fingers are stained and trembling, for you, too, are wild-eyed
and haggard, and you are trembling worse than she.

Presently she returns. In her left hand is a small glass phial,
containing many little tablets. As she crosses to you, she extends her
right hand with the palm up. It is a slender, delicate hand, yet there
is a look of strength to it, for all its whiteness. You lay a bill in
it, and she hands you the phial. That is all. You leave, and she closes
the Oregon pine door quietly behind you.

As she turns about toward the divan again, she hesitates. Her eyes
wander to a closed door at one side of the room. She takes a half step
toward it, and then draws back, her shoulders against the door. Her
fingers are clenched tightly, the nails sinking into the soft flesh
of her palms; but still her eyes are upon the closed door. They are
staring and wild, like those of a beast at bay. She is trembling from
head to foot.

For a minute she stands there, fighting her grim battle, alone and
without help. Then, as with a last mighty effort, she drags her eyes
from the closed door and glances toward the divan. With unsteady step
she returns to it and throws herself down among the pillows.

Her shoulders move to dry sobs, she clutches the pillows frantically in
her strong fingers, she rolls from side to side, as people do who are
suffering physical torture; but at last she relaxes and lies quiet.

A clock ticks monotonously from the mantel. Its sound fills the whole
room, growing with fiendish intensity to a horrid din that pounds upon
taut, raw nerves. She covers her ears with her palms to shut it out,
but it bores insistently through. She clutches her thick hair with both
hands; her fingers are entangled in it. For a long minute she lies
thus, prone, and then her slippered feet commence to fly up and down as
she kicks her toes in rapid succession into the unresisting divan.

Suddenly she leaps to her feet and rushes toward the mantel.

“Damn you!” she screams, and, seizing the clock, dashes it to pieces
upon the tiled hearth.

Then her eyes leap to the closed door; and now, without any hesitation,
almost defiantly, she crosses the room, opens the door, and disappears
within the bathroom beyond.

Five minutes later the door opens again, and the woman comes back into
the living room. She is humming a gay little tune. Stopping at a table,
she takes a cigarette from a carved wooden box and lights it. Then she
crosses to the baby grand piano in one corner, and commences to play.
Her voice, rich and melodious, rises in a sweet old song of love and
youth and happiness.

Something has mended her shattered nerves. Upon the hearth lies the
shattered clock. It can never be mended.

If you should return now and look at her, you would see that she was
even more beautiful than you had at first suspected. She has put her
hair in order once more, and has arranged her dress. You see now that
her figure is as perfect as her face, and when she crossed to the piano
you could not but note the easy grace of her carriage.

Her name--her professional name--is Gaza de Lure. You may have seen her
in small parts on the screen, and may have wondered why some one did
not star her. Of recent months you have seen her less and less often,
and you have been sorry, for you had learned to admire the sweetness
and purity that were reflected in her every expression and mannerism.
You liked her, too, because she was as beautiful as she was good--for
you knew that she was good just by looking at her in the pictures; but
above all you liked her for her acting, for it was unusually natural
and unaffected, and something told you that here was a born actress who
would some day be famous.

Two years ago she came to Hollywood from a little town in the Middle
West--that is, two years before you looked in upon her at the bungalow
on the Vista del Paso. She was fired by high purpose then. Her child’s
heart, burning with lofty ambition, had set its desire upon a noble
goal. The broken bodies of a thousand other children dotted the road to
the same goal, but she did not see them, or seeing, did not understand.

Stronger, perhaps, than her desire for fame was an unselfish ambition
that centered about the mother whom she had left behind. To that mother
the girl’s success would mean greater comfort and happiness than she
had known since a worthless husband had deserted her shortly after the
baby came--the baby who was now known as Gaza de Lure.

There had been the usual rounds of the studios, the usual
disappointments, followed by more or less regular work as an extra
girl. During this period she had learned many things--of some of which
she had never thought as having any possible bearing upon her chances
for success.

For example, a director had asked her to go with him to Vernon one
evening, for dinner and dancing, and she had refused, for several
reasons--one being her certainty that her mother would disapprove, and
another the fact that the director was a married man. The following day
the girl who had accompanied him was cast for a part which had been
promised to Gaza, and for which Gaza was peculiarly suited. As she was
leaving the lot that day, greatly disappointed, the assistant director
had stopped her.

“Too bad, kid,” he said. “I’m mighty sorry; for I always liked you. If
I can ever help you, I sure will.”

The kindly words brought the tears to her eyes. Here, at least, was one
good man; but he was not in much of a position to help her.

“You’re very kind,” she said; “but I’m afraid there’s nothing you can
do.”

“Don’t be too sure of that,” he answered. “I’ve got enough on that big
stiff so’s he has to do about as I say. The trouble with you is you
ain’t enough of a good fellow. You got to be a good fellow to get on in
pictures. Just step out with me some night, an’ I promise you you’ll
get a job!”

The suddenly widening childish eyes meant nothing to the shallow mind
of the callow little shrimp, whose brain pan would doubtless have burst
under the pressure of a single noble thought. As she turned quickly and
walked away, he laughed aloud. She had not gone back to that studio.

In the months that followed she had had many similar experiences, until
she had become hardened enough to feel the sense of shame and insult
less strongly than at first. She could talk back to them now, and
tell them what she thought of them; but she found that she got fewer
and fewer engagements. There was always enough to feed and clothe her,
and to pay for the little room she rented; but there seemed to be no
future, and that had been all that she cared about.

She would not have minded hard work--she had expected that. Nor did she
fear disappointments and a slow, tedious road; for though she was but
a young girl, she was not without character, and she had a good head
on those trim shoulders of hers. She was unsophisticated, yet mature,
too, for her years; for she had always helped her mother to plan the
conservation of their meager resources.

Many times she had wanted to go back to her mother, but she had stayed
on, because she still had hopes, and because she shrank from the fact
of defeat admitted. How often she cried herself to sleep in those
lonely nights, after days of bitter disillusionment! The great ambition
that had been her joy was now her sorrow. The vain little conceit that
she had woven about her screen name was but a pathetic memory.

She had never told her mother that she had taken the name of Gaza
de Lure, for she had dreamed of the time when it would leap into
national prominence overnight in some wonderful picture, and her
mother, unknowing, would see the film and recognize her. How often
she had pictured the scene in their little theater at home--her
sudden recognition by her mother and their friends--the surprise, the
incredulity, and then the pride and happiness in her mother’s face! How
they would whisper! And after the show they would gather around her
mother, all excitedly talking at the same time.

And then she had met Wilson Crumb. She had had a small part in a
picture in which he played lead, and which he also directed. He had
been very kind to her, very courteous. She had thought him handsome,
notwithstanding a certain weakness in his face; but what had attracted
her most was the uniform courtesy of his attitude toward all the
women of the company. Here at last, she thought, she had found a real
gentleman whom she could trust implicitly; and once again her ambition
lifted its drooping head.

She thought of what another girl had once told her--an older girl, who
had been in pictures for several years.

“They are not all bad, dear,” her friend had said. “There are good and
bad in the picture game, just as there are in any sort of business.
It’s been your rotten luck to run up against a lot of the bad ones.”

The first picture finished, Crumb had cast her for a more important
part in another, and she had made good in both. Before the second
picture was completed, the company that employed Crumb offered her
a five-year contract. It was only for fifty dollars a week; but it
included a clause which automatically increased the salary to one
hundred a week, two hundred and fifty, and then five hundred dollars in
the event that they starred her. She knew that it was to Crumb that she
owed the contract--Crumb had seen to that.

Very gradually, then--so gradually and insidiously that the girl could
never recall just when it had started--Crumb commenced to make love
to her. At first it took only the form of minor attentions--little
courtesies and thoughtful acts; but after a while he spoke of
love--very gently and very tenderly, as any man might have done.

She had never thought of loving him or any other man; so she was
puzzled at first, but she was not offended. He had given her no cause
for offense. When he had first broached the subject, she had asked him
not to speak of it, as she did not think that she loved him, and he had
said that he would wait; but the seed was planted in her mind, and it
came to occupy much of her thoughts.

She realized that she owed to him what little success she had achieved.
She had an assured income that was sufficient for her simple wants,
while permitting her to send something home to her mother every week,
and it was all due to the kindness of Wilson Crumb. He was a successful
director, he was more than a fair actor, he was good-looking, he was
kind, he was a gentleman, and he loved her. What more could any girl
ask?

She thought the matter out very carefully, finally deciding that though
she did not exactly love Wilson Crumb she probably would learn to love
him, and that if he loved her it was in a way her duty to make him
happy, when he had done so much for her happiness. She made up her
mind, therefore, to marry him whenever he asked her; but Crumb did not
ask her to marry him. He continued to make love to her; but the matter
of marriage never seemed to enter the conversation.

Once, when they were out on location, and had had a hard day, ending by
getting thoroughly soaked in a sudden rain, he had followed her to her
room in the little mountain inn where they were stopping.

“You’re cold and wet and tired,” he said. “I want to give you something
that will brace you up.”

He entered the room and closed the door behind him. Then he took
from his pocket a small piece of paper folded into a package about
an inch and three-quarters long by half an inch wide, with one end
tucked ingeniously inside the fold to form a fastening. Opening it, he
revealed a white powder, the minute crystals of which glistened beneath
the light from the electric bulbs.

“It looks just like snow,” she said.

“Sure!” he replied, with a faint smile. “It is snow. Look, I’ll show
you how to take it.”

He divided the powder into halves, took one in the palm of his hand,
and snuffed it into his nostrils.

“There!” he exclaimed. “That’s the way--it will make you feel like a
new woman.”

“But what is it?” she asked. “Won’t it hurt me?”

“It’ll make you feel bully. Try it.”

So she tried it, and it made her “feel bully.” She was no longer tired,
but deliciously exhilarated.

“Whenever you want any, let me know,” he said, as he was leaving the
room. “I usually have some handy.”

“But I’d like to know what it is,” she insisted.

“Aspirin,” he replied. “It makes you feel that way when you snuff it up
your nose.”

After he left, she recovered the little piece of paper from the waste
basket where he had thrown it, her curiosity aroused. She found it a
rather soiled bit of writing paper with a “C” written in lead pencil
upon it.

“‘C,’” she mused. “Why aspirin with a C?”

She thought she would question Wilson about it.

The next day she felt out of sorts and tired, and at noon she asked him
if he had any aspirin with him. He had, and again she felt fine and
full of life. That evening she wanted some more, and Crumb gave it to
her. The next day she wanted it oftener, and by the time they returned
to Hollywood from location she was taking it five or six times a day.
It was then that Crumb asked her to come and live with him at his Vista
del Paso bungalow; but he did not mention marriage.

He was standing with a little paper of the white powder in his hand,
separating half of it for her, and she was waiting impatiently for it.

“Well?” he asked.

“Well, what?”

“Are you coming over to live with me?” he demanded.

“Without being married?” she asked.

She was surprised that the idea no longer seemed horrible. Her eyes and
her mind were on the little white powder that the man held in his hand.

Crumb laughed.

“Quit your kidding,” he said. “You know perfectly well that I can’t
marry you yet. I have a wife in San Francisco.”

She did not know it perfectly well--she did not know it at all; yet
it did not seem to matter so very much. A month ago she would have
caressed a rattlesnake as willingly as she would have permitted a
married man to make love to her; but now she could listen to a plea
from one who wished her to come and live with him, without experiencing
any numbing sense of outraged decency.

Of course, she had no intention of doing what he asked; but really
the matter was of negligible import--the thing in which she was most
concerned was the little white powder. She held out her hand for it,
but he drew it away.

“Answer me first,” he said. “Are you going to be sensible or not?”

“You mean that you won’t give it to me if I won’t come?” she asked.

“That’s precisely what I mean,” he replied. “What do you think I am,
anyway? Do you know what this bundle of ‘C’ stands me? Two fifty, and
you’ve been snuffing about three of ’em a day. What kind of a sucker do
you think I am?”

Her eyes, still upon the white powder, narrowed.

“I’ll come,” she whispered. “Give it to me!”

She went to the bungalow with him that day, and she learned where he
kept the little white powders, hidden in the bathroom. After dinner she
put on her hat and her fur, and took up her vanity case, while Crumb
was busy in another room. Then, opening the front door, she called:

“Good-by!”

Crumb rushed into the living room.

“Where are you going?” he demanded.

“Home,” she replied.

“No, you’re not!” he cried. “You promised to stay here.”

“I promised to come,” she corrected him. “I never promised to stay, and
I never shall until you are divorced and we are married.”

“You’ll come back,” he sneered, “when you want another shot of snow!”

“Oh, I don’t know,” she replied. “I guess I can buy aspirin at any drug
store as well as you.”

Crumb laughed aloud.

“You little fool, you!” he cried derisively. “Aspirin! Why, it’s
cocaine you’re snuffing, and you’re snuffing about three grains of it a
day!”

For an instant a look of horror filled her widened eyes.

“You beast!” she cried. “You unspeakable beast!”

Slamming the door behind her, she almost ran down the narrow walk
and disappeared in the shadows of the palm trees that bordered the
ill-lighted street.

The man did not follow her. He only stood there laughing, for he knew
that she would come back. Craftily he had enmeshed her. It had taken
months, and never had quarry been more wary or difficult to trap. A
single false step earlier in the game would have frightened her away
forever; but he had made no false step. He was very proud of himself,
was Wilson Crumb, for he was convinced that he had done a very clever
bit of work.

Rubbing his hands together, he walked toward the bathroom--he would
take a shot of snow; but when he opened the receptacle, he found it
empty.

“The little devil!” he ejaculated.

Frantically he rummaged through the medicine cabinet, but in vain. Then
he hastened into the living room, seized his hat, and bolted for the
street.

Almost immediately he realized the futility of search. He did not know
where the girl lived. She had never told him. He did not know it, but
she had never told any one. The studio had a post-office box number
to which it could address communications to Gaza de Lure; the mother
addressed the girl by her own name at the house where she had roomed
since coming to Hollywood. The woman who rented her the room did not
know her screen name. All she knew about her was that she seemed a
quiet, refined girl who paid her room rent promptly in advance every
week, and who was always home at night, except when on location.

Crumb returned to the bungalow, searched the bathroom twice more, and
went to bed. For hours he lay awake, tossing restlessly.

“The little devil!” he muttered, over and over. “Fifty dollars’ worth
of cocaine--the little devil!”

The next day Gaza was at the studio, ready for work, when Crumb put
in his belated appearance. He was nervous and irritable. Almost
immediately he called her aside and demanded an accounting; but when
they were face to face, and she told him that she was through with him,
he realized that her hold upon him was stronger than he had supposed.
He could not give her up. He was ready to promise anything, and he
would demand nothing in return, only that she would be with him as much
as possible. Her nights should be her own--she could go home then. And
so the arrangement was consummated, and Gaza de Lure spent the days
when she was not working at the bungalow on the Vista del Paso.

Crumb saw that she was cast for small parts that required but little
of her time at the studio, yet raised no question at the office as to
her salary of fifty dollars a week. Twice the girl asked why he did not
star her, and both times he told her that he would--for a price; but
the price was one that she would not pay. After a time the drugs which
she now used habitually deadened her ambition, so that she no longer
cared. She still managed to send a little money home, but not so much
as formerly.

As the months passed, Crumb’s relations with the source of the supply
of their narcotic became so familiar that he could obtain considerable
quantities at a reduced rate, and the plan of peddling the drug
occurred to him. Gaza was induced to do her share, and so it came about
that the better class “hypes” of Hollywood found it both safe and easy
to obtain their supplies from the bungalow on the Vista del Paso.
Cocaine, heroin, and morphine passed continually through the girl’s
hands, and she came to know many of the addicts, though she seldom had
further intercourse with them than was necessary to the transaction of
the business that brought them to the bungalow.

From one, a woman, she learned how to use morphine, dissolving the
white powder in the bowl of a spoon by passing a lighted match beneath,
and then drawing the liquid through a tiny piece of cotton into a
hypodermic syringe and injecting it beneath the skin. Once she had
experienced the sensation of well-being it induced, she fell an easy
victim to this more potent drug.

One evening Crumb brought home with him a stranger whom he had known
in San Francisco--a man whom he introduced as Allen. From that evening
the fortunes of Gaza de Lure improved. Allen had just returned from the
Orient as a member of the crew of a freighter, and he had succeeded
in smuggling in a considerable quantity of opium. In his efforts to
dispose of it he had made the acquaintance of others in the same line
of business, and had joined forces with them. His partners could
command a more or less steady supply of morphine, and cocaine from
Mexico, while Allen undertook to keep up their stock of opium, and to
arrange a market for their drugs in Los Angeles.

If Crumb could handle it all, Allen agreed to furnish morphine at fifty
dollars an ounce--Gaza to do the actual peddling. The girl agreed on
one condition--that half the profits should be hers. After that she had
been able to send home more money than ever before, and at the same
time to have all the morphine she wanted at a low price. She began to
put money in the bank, made a first payment on a small orchard about a
hundred miles from Los Angeles, and sent for her mother.

The day before you called on her in the “art” bungalow at 1421 Vista
del Paso she had put her mother on a train bound for her new home, with
the promise that the daughter would visit her “as soon as we finish
this picture.” It had required all the girl’s remaining will power to
hide her shame from those eager mother eyes; but she had managed to do
it, though it had left her almost a wreck by the time the train pulled
out of the station.

To Crumb she had said nothing about her mother. This was a part of her
life that was too sacred to be revealed to the man whom she now loathed
even as she loathed the filthy habit he had tricked her into; but she
could no more give up the one than the other.

There had been a time when she had fought against the domination of
these twin curses that had been visited upon her, but that time was
over. She knew now that she would never give up morphine--that she
could not if she wanted to, and that she did not want to. The little
bindles of cocaine, morphine, and heroin that she wrapped so deftly
with those slender fingers and marked “C,” “M,” or “H,” according to
their contents, were parts of her life now. The sallow, trembling
creatures who came for them, or to whom she sometimes delivered them,
and who paid her two dollars and a half a bindle, were also parts of
her life. Crumb, too, was a part of her life. She hated the bindles,
she hated the sallow, trembling people, she hated Crumb; but still she
clung to them, for how else was she to get the drug without which she
could not live?



CHAPTER VI


It was May. The rainy season was definitely over. A few April showers
had concluded it. The Ganado hills showed their most brilliant greens.
The March pigs were almost ready to wean. White-faced calves and black
colts and gray colts surveyed this beautiful world through soft, dark
eyes, and were filled with the joy of living as they ran beside their
gentle mothers. A stallion neighed from the stable corral, and from the
ridge behind Jackknife Cañon the Emperor of Ganado answered him.

A girl and a man sat in the soft grass beneath the shade of a live
oak upon the edge of a low bluff in the pasture where the brood mares
grazed with their colts. Their horses were tied to another tree near
by. The girl held a bunch of yellow violets in her hand, and gazed
dreamily down the broad cañon toward the valley. The man sat a little
behind her and gazed at the girl. For a long time neither spoke.

“You cannot be persuaded to give it up, Grace?” he asked at last.

She shook her head.

“I should never be happy until I had tried it,” she replied.

“Of course,” he said, “I know how you feel about it. I feel the same
way. I want to get away--away from the deadly stagnation and sameness
of this life; but I am going to try to stick it out for father’s sake,
and I wish that you loved me enough to stick it out for mine. I believe
that together we could get enough happiness out of life here to make
up for what we are denied of real living, such as only a big city can
offer. Then, when father is gone, we could go and live in the city--in
any city that we wanted to live in--Los Angeles, Chicago, New York,
London, Paris--anywhere.”

“It isn’t that I don’t love you enough, Custer,” said the girl. “I love
you too much to want you to marry just a little farmer girl. When I
come to you, I want you to be proud of me. Don’t talk about the time
when your father will have gone. It seems wicked. He would not want you
to stay if he knew how you felt about it.”

“You do not know,” he replied. “Ever since I was a little boy he has
counted on this--on my staying on and working with him. He wants us all
to be together always. When Eva marries, he will build her a home on
Ganado. You have already helped with the plan for ours. You know it is
his dream, but you cannot know how much it means to him. It would not
kill him if his dream was spoiled, but it would take so much happiness
out of his life that I cannot bring myself to do it. It is not a matter
of money, but of sentiment and love. If Ganado were wiped off the face
of the earth to-morrow, we would still have all the money that we need;
but he would never be happy again, for his whole life is bound up in
the ranch and the dream that he has built around it. It is peculiar,
too, that such a man as he should be so ruled by sentiment. You know
how practical he is, and sometimes hard--yet I have seen the tears come
to his eyes when he spoke of his love for Ganado.”

“I know,” she said, and they were silent again for a time. “You are
a good son, Custer,” she said presently. “I wouldn’t have you any
different. I am not so good a daughter. Mother does not want me to go.
It is going to make her very unhappy, and yet I am going. The man who
loves me does not want me to go. It is going to make him very unhappy,
and yet I am going. It seems very selfish; but, oh, Custer, I cannot
help but feel that I am right! It seems to me that I have a duty to
perform, and that this is the only way I can perform it. Perhaps I am
not only silly, but sometimes I feel that I am called by a higher power
to give myself for a little time to the world, that the world may be
happier and, I hope, a little better. You know I have always felt that
the stage was one of the greatest powers for good in all the world, and
now I believe that some day the screen will be an even greater power
for good. It is with the conviction that I may help toward this end
that I am so eager to go. You will be very glad and very happy when I
come back, that I did not listen to your arguments.”

“I hope you are right, Grace,” Custer Pennington said.

       *       *       *       *       *

On a rustic seat beneath the new leaves of an umbrella tree a girl
and a boy sat beside the upper lily pond on the south side of the
hill below the ranch house. The girl held a spray of Japanese quince
blossoms in her hand, and gazed dreamily at the water splashing lazily
over the rocks into the pond. The boy sat beside her and gazed at the
girl. For a long time neither spoke.

“Won’t you please say yes?” whispered the boy presently.

“How perfectly, terribly silly you are!” she replied.

“I am not silly,” he said. “I am twenty, and you are almost eighteen.
It’s time that we were marrying and settling down.”

“On what?” she demanded.

“Well, we won’t need much at first. We can live at home with mother,”
he explained, “until I sell a few stories.”

“How perfectly gorgeristic!” she cried.

“Don’t make fun of me! You wouldn’t if you loved me,” he pouted.

“I _do_ love you, silly! But whatever in the world put the dapper
little idea into your head that I wanted to be supported by my
mother-in-law?”

“Mother-in-law!” protested the boy. “You ought to be ashamed to speak
disrespectfully of my mother.”

“You quaint child!” exclaimed the girl, laughing gayly. “Just as
if I would speak disrespectfully of Aunt Mae, when I love her so
splendiferously! Isn’t she going to be my mother-in-law?”

The boy’s gloom vanished magically.

“There!” he cried. “We’re engaged! You’ve said it yourself. You’ve
proposed, and I accept you. Yes, sure--she’s going to be your
mother-in-law!”

Eva flushed.

“I never said anything of the kind. How perfectly idiotical!”

“But you did say it. You proposed to me. I’m going to announce the
engagement--‘Mrs. Mae Evans announces the engagement of her son, Guy
Thackeray, to Miss Eva Pennington.’”

“Funeral notice later,” snapped the girl, glaring at him.

“Aw, come, now, you needn’t get mad at me. I was only fooling; but
wouldn’t it be great, Ev? We could always be together then, and I could
write and you could--could----”

“Wash dishes,” she suggested.

The light died from his eyes, and he dropped them sadly to the ground.

“I’m sorry I’m poor,” he said. “I didn’t think you cared about that,
though.”

She laid a brown hand gently over his.

“You know I don’t care,” she said. “I am a catty old thing. I’d just
love it if we had a little place all our very own--just a teeny, weeny
bungalow. I’d help you with your work, and keep hens, and have a little
garden with onions and radishes and everything, and we wouldn’t have
to buy anything from the grocery store, and a bank account, and one
sow; and when we drove into the city people would say, ‘There goes Guy
Thackeray Evans, the famous author, but I wonder where his wife got
that hat!’”

“Oh, Ev!” he cried laughing. “You never can be serious more than two
seconds, can you?”

“Why should I be?” she inquired. “And anyway, I was. It really would
be elegantiferous if we had a little place of our own; but my husband
has got to be able to support me, Guy. He’d lose his self-respect if he
didn’t; and then, if he lost his, how could I respect him? You’ve got
to have respect on both sides, or you can’t have love and happiness.”

His face grew stern with determination.

“I’ll get the money,” he said; but he did not look at her. “But now
that Grace is going away, mother will be all alone if I leave, too.
Couldn’t we live with her for a while?”

“Papa and mama have always said that it was the worst thing a young
married couple could do,” she replied. “We could live near her, and see
her every day; but I don’t think we should all live together. Really,
though, do you think Grace is going? It seems just too awful.”

“I am afraid she is,” he replied sadly. “Mother is all broken up about
it; but she tries not to let Grace know.”

“I can’t understand it,” said the girl. “It seems to me a selfish thing
to do, and yet Grace has always been so sweet and generous. No matter
how much I wanted to go, I don’t believe I could bring myself to do it,
knowing how terribly it would hurt papa. Just think, Guy--it is the
first break, except for the short time we were away at school, since we
have been born. We have all lived here always, it seems, your family
and mine, like one big family; but after Grace goes it will be the
beginning of the end. It will never be the same again.”

There was a note of seriousness and sadness in her voice that sounded
not at all like Eva Pennington. The boy shook his head.

“It is too bad,” he said; “but Grace is so sure she is right--so
positive that she has a great future before her, and that we shall all
be so proud of her--that sometimes I am convinced myself.”

“I hope she is right,” said the girl, and then, with a return to her
joyous self: “Oh, wouldn’t it be spiffy if she really does become
famous! I can see just how puffed up we shall all be when we read the
reviews of her pictures, like this--‘Miss Grace Evans, the famous star,
has quite outdone her past successes in the latest picture, in which
she is ably supported by such well known actors as Thomas Meighan,
Wallace Reid, Gloria Swanson, and Mary Pickford.’”

“Why slight Douglas Fairbanks and Charlie Chaplin?” suggested Guy.

The girl rose.

“Come on!” she said. “Let’s have a look at the pools--it isn’t a
perfect day unless I’ve seen fish in every pool. Do you remember how we
used to watch and watch and watch for the fish in the lower pools, and
run as fast as we could to be the first up to the house to tell if we
saw them, and how many?”

“And do you remember the little turtles, and how wild they got?” he put
in. “Sometimes we wouldn’t see them for weeks, and then we’d get just
a glimpse, so that we knew they were still there. Then, after a while,
we never saw them again, and how we used to wonder and speculate as to
what had become of them!”

“And do you remember the big water snake we found in the upper pool,
and how Cus used to lie in wait for him with his little twenty-two?”

“Cus was always the hunter. How we used to trudge after him up and down
those steep hills there in the cow pasture, while he hunted ground
squirrels, and how mad he’d get if we made any noise! Gee, Ev, those
were the good old days!”

“And how we used to fight, and what a nuisance Cus thought me; but he
always asked me to go along, just the same. He’s a wonderful brother,
Guy!”

“He’s a wonderful man, Ev,” replied the boy. “You don’t half know how
wonderful he is. He’s always thinking of some one else. Right now I’ll
bet he’s eating his heart out because Grace is going away; and he can’t
go, just because he’s thinking more of some one’s else happiness than
his own.”

“What do you mean?” she asked.

“He wants to go to the city. He wants to get into some business there;
but he won’t go, because he knows your father wants him here.”

“Do you really think that?”

“I know it,” he said.

They walked on in silence along the winding pathways among the
flower-bordered pools, to stop at last beside the lower one. This
had originally been a shallow wading pool for the children when they
were small, but it was now given over to water hyacinth and brilliant
fantails.

“There!” said the girl, presently. “I have seen fish in each pool.”

“And you can go to bed with a clear conscience to-night,” he laughed.

To the west of the lower pool there were no trees to obstruct their
view of the hills that rolled down from the mountains to form the
western wall of the cañon in which the ranch buildings and cultivated
fields lay. As the two stood there, hand in hand, the boy’s eyes
wandered lovingly over the soft, undulating lines of these lower hills,
with their parklike beauty of greensward dotted with wild walnut
trees. As he looked he saw, for a brief moment, the figure of a man on
horseback passing over the hollow of a saddle before disappearing upon
the southern side.

Small though the distant figure was, and visible but for a moment, the
boy recognized the military carriage of the rider. He glanced quickly
at the girl to note if she had seen, but it was evident that she had
not.

“Well, Ev,” he said, “I guess I’ll be toddling.”

“So early?” she demanded.

“You see I’ve got to get busy, if I’m going to get the price of that
teeny, weeny bungalow,” he explained. “Now that we’re engaged, you
might kiss me good-by--eh?”

“We’re not engaged, and I’ll not kiss you good-by or good anything
else. I don’t believe in people kissing until they’re married.”

“Then why are you always raving about the wonderful kisses Antonio
Moreno, or Milton Sills, or some other poor prune, gives the heroine at
the end of the last reel?” he demanded.

“Oh, that’s different,” she explained. “Anyway, they’re just going to
get married. When we are just going to get married I’ll let you kiss
me--once a week, _maybe_.”

“Thanks!” he cried.

A moment later he swung into the saddle, and with a wave of his hand
cantered off up the cañon.

“Now what,” said the girl to herself, “is he going up there for? He
can’t make any money back there in the hills. He ought to be headed
straight for home and his typewriter!”



CHAPTER VII


Across the rustic bridge, and once behind the sycamores at the lower
end of the cow pasture, Guy Evans let his horse out into a rapid
gallop. A few minutes later he overtook a horseman who was moving at a
slow walk farther up the cañon. At the sound of the pounding hoofbeats
behind him, the latter turned in his saddle, reined about and stopped.
The boy rode up and drew in his blowing mount beside the other.

“Hello, Allen!” he said.

The man nodded.

“What’s eatin’ you?” he inquired.

“I’ve been thinking over that proposition of yours,” explained Evans.

“Yes?”

“Yes, I’ve been thinking maybe I might swing it; but are you sure it’s
safe. How do I know you won’t double-cross me?”

“You don’t know,” replied the other. “All you know is that I got enough
on you to send you to San Quentin. You wouldn’t get nothin’ worse if
you handled the rest of it, an’ you stand to clean up between twelve
and fifteen thousand bucks on the deal. You needn’t worry about me
double-crossin’ you. What good would it do me? I ain’t got nothin’
against you, kid. If you don’t double-cross me I won’t double-cross
you; but look out for that cracker-fed dude your sister’s goin’ to
hitch to. If he ever butts in on this I’ll croak him an’ send you to
San Quentin, if I swing for it. Do you get me?”

Evans nodded.

“I’ll go in on it,” he said, “because I need the money; but don’t you
bother Custer Pennington--get that straight. I’d go to San Quentin and
I’d swing myself before I’d stand for that. Another thing, and then
we’ll drop that line of chatter--you couldn’t send me to San Quentin
or anywhere else. I bought a few bottles of hootch from you, and there
isn’t any judge or jury going to send me to San Quentin for that.”

“You don’t know what you done,” said Allen, with a grin. “There’s a
thousand cases of bonded whisky hid back there in the hills, an’ you
engineered the whole deal at this end. Maybe you didn’t have nothin’ to
do with stealin’ it from a government bonded warehouse in New York; but
you must’a’ knowed all about it, an’ it was you that hired me and the
other three to smuggle it off the ship and into the hills.”

Evans was staring at the man in wide-eyed incredulity.

“How do you get that way?” he asked derisively.

“They’s four of us to swear to it,” said Allen; “an’ how many you got
to swear you didn’t do it?”

“Why, it’s a rotten frame-up!” exclaimed Evans.

“Sure it’s a frame-up,” agreed Allen; “but we won’t use it if you
behave yourself properly.”

Evans looked at the man for a long minute--dislike and contempt
unconcealed upon his face.

“I guess,” he said presently, “that I don’t need any twelve thousand
dollars that bad, Allen. We’ll call this thing off, as far as I am
concerned. I’m through, right now. Good-by!”

He wheeled his horse to ride away.

“Hold on there, young feller!” said Allen. “Not so quick! You may think
you’re through, but you’re not. We need you, and, anyway, you know too
damned much for your health. You’re goin’ through with this. We got
some other junk up there that there’s more profit in than what there is
in booze, and it’s easier to handle. We know where to get rid of it;
but the booze we can’t handle as easy as you can, and so you’re goin’
to handle it.”

“Who says I am?”

“_I_ do,” returned Allen, with an ugly snarl. “You’ll handle it, or
I’ll do just what I said I’d do, and I’ll do it _pronto_. How’d you
like your mother and that Pennington girl to hear all I’d have to say?”

The boy sat with scowling, thoughtful brows for a long minute. From
beneath a live oak, on the summit of a low bluff, a man discovered
them. He had been sitting there talking with a girl. Suddenly he looked
up.

“Why, there’s Guy,” he said. “Who’s that with--why, it’s that fellow
Allen! What’s he doing up here?” He rose to his feet. “You stay here a
minute, Grace. I’m going down to see what that fellow wants. I can’t
understand Guy.”

He untied the Apache and mounted, while below, just beyond the pasture
fence, the boy turned sullenly toward Allen.

“I’ll go through with it this once,” he said. “You’ll bring it down on
burros at night?”

The other nodded affirmatively.

“Where do you want it?” he asked.

“Bring it to the west side of the old hay barn--the one that stands on
our west line. When will you come?”

“To-day’s Tuesday. We’ll bring the first lot Friday night, about twelve
o’clock; and after that every Friday the same time. You be ready to
settle every Friday for what you’ve sold during the week--_sabe?_”

“Yes,” replied Evans. “That’s all, then”; and he turned and rode back
toward the rancho.

Allen was continuing on his way toward the hills when his attention
was again attracted by the sound of hoofbeats. Looking to his left, he
saw a horseman approaching from inside the pasture. He recognized both
horse and rider at once, but kept sullenly on his way.

Pennington rode up to the opposite side of the fence along which ran
the trail that Allen followed.

“What are you doing here, Allen?” he asked in a not unkindly tone.

“Mindin’ my own business, like you better,” retorted the ex-stableman.

“You have no business back here on Ganado,” said Pennington. “You’ll
have to get off the property.”

“The hell I will!” exclaimed Allen.

At the same time he made a quick movement with his right hand; but
Pennington made a quicker.

“That kind of stuff don’t go here, Allen,” said the younger man,
covering the other with a forty-five. “Now turn around and get off the
place, and don’t come on it again. I don’t want any trouble with you.”

Without a word, Allen reined his horse about and rode down the cañon;
but there was murder in his heart. Pennington watched him until he was
out of revolver range, and then turned and rode back to Grace Evans.



CHAPTER VIII


Beneath the cool shadows of the north porch the master of Ganado,
booted and spurred, rested after a long ride in the hot sun, sipping
a long, cool glass of peach brandy and orange juice, and talking with
his wife. A broad barley field lay below them, stretching to the State
highway half a mile to the north. The yellowing heads of the grain
stood motionless beneath the blazing sun. Inside the myriad kernels the
milk was changing into dough. It would not be long now, barring fogs,
before that gorgeous pageant of prosperity would be falling in serried
columns into the maw of the binder.

“We’re going to have a bully crop of barley this year, Julia,” remarked
the colonel, fishing a small piece of ice from his glass. “Do you know,
I’m beginning to believe this is better than a mint julep!”

“Heavens, Custer--whisper it!” admonished his wife. “Just suppose
the shades of some of your ancestors, or mine, should overhear such
sacrilege!”

The colonel chuckled.

“Is it old age, or has this sunny land made me effeminate?” he queried.
“It’s quite a far cry from an old-fashioned mint julep to this
home-made wine and orange juice. You can’t call it brandy--it hasn’t
enough of what the boys call ‘kick’ to be entitled to that honor; but I
like it. Yes, sir, that’s bully barley--there isn’t any better in the
foothills!”

“The oats look good, too,” said Mrs. Pennington. “I haven’t noticed the
slightest sign of rust.”

“That’s the result of the boy’s trip to Texas last summer,” said
the colonel proudly. “Went down there himself and selected all the
seed--didn’t take anybody’s word for it. Genuine Texas rustproof oats
was what he went for and what he got. I don’t know what I’d do without
him, Julia. It’s wonderful to see one’s dreams come true! I’ve been
dreaming for years of the time when my boy and I would work together
and make Ganado even more wonderful than it ever was before; and now my
dream’s a reality. It’s great, I tell you--it’s great! Is there another
glass of this Ganado elixir in that pitcher, Julia?”

They were silent then for a few minutes, the colonel sipping his
“elixir,” and Mrs. Pennington, with her book face down upon her lap,
gazing out across the barley and the broad valley and the distant
hills--into the future, perhaps, or back into the past.

It had been an ideal life that they had led here--a life of love and
sunshine and happiness. There had been nothing to vex her soul as she
reveled in the delight of her babies, watching them grow into sturdy
children and then develop into clean young manhood and womanhood. But
growing with the passing years had been the dread of that day when the
first break would come, as come she knew it must.

She knew the dream that her husband had built, and that with it he had
purposely blinded his eyes and dulled his ears to the truth which the
mother heart would have been glad to deny, but could not. Some day one
of the children would go away, and then the other. It was only right
and just that it should be so, for as they two had built their own home
and their own lives and their little family circle, so their children
must do even as they.

It was going to be hard on them both, much harder on the father,
because of that dream that had become an obsession. Mrs. Pennington
feared that it might break his spirit, for it would leave him nothing
to plan for and hope for as he had planned and hoped for this during
the twenty-two years that they had spent upon Ganado.

Now that Grace was going to the city, how could they hope to keep
their boy content upon the ranch? She knew he loved the old place, but
he was entitled to see the world and to make his own place in it--not
merely to slide spinelessly into the niche that another had prepared
for him.

“I am worried about the boy,” she said presently.

“How? In what way?” he asked.

“He will be very blue and lonely after Grace goes,” she said.

“Don’t talk to me about it!” cried the colonel, banging his glass down
upon the table and rising to his feet. “It makes me mad just to think
of it. I can’t understand how Grace can want to leave this beautiful
world to live in a damned city! She’s crazy! What’s her mother thinking
about, to let her go?”

“You must remember, dear,” said his wife soothingly, “that every one
is not so much in love with the country as you, and that these young
people have their own careers to carve in the way they think best. It
would not be right to try to force them to live the way we like to
live.”

“Damned foolishness, that’s what it is!” he blustered. “An actress!
What does she know about acting?”

“She is beautiful, cultured, and intelligent. There is no reason why
she should not succeed and make a great name for herself. Why shouldn’t
she be ambitious, dear? We should encourage her, now that she has
determined to go. It would help her, for she loves us all--she loves
you as a daughter might, for you have been like a father to her ever
since Mr. Evans died.”

“Oh, pshaw, Julia!” the colonel exclaimed. “I love Grace--you know I
do. I suppose it’s because I love her that I feel so about this. Maybe
I’m jealous of the city, to think that it has weaned her away from us.
I don’t mean all I say, sometimes; but really I am broken up at the
thought of her going. It seems to me that it may be just the beginning
of the end of the beautiful life that we have all led here for so many
years.”

“Have you ever thought that some day our own children may want to go?”
she asked.

“I won’t think about it!” he exploded.

“I hope you won’t have to,” she said; “but it’s going to be pretty hard
on the boy after Grace goes.”

“Do you think he’ll want to go?” the colonel asked. His voice sounded
suddenly strange and pleading, and there was a suggestion of pain and
fear in his eyes that she had never seen there before in all the years
that she had known him. “Do you think he’ll want to go?” he repeated in
a voice that no longer sounded like his own.

“Stranger things have happened,” she replied, forcing a smile, “than a
young man wanting to go out into the world and win his spurs!”

“Let’s not talk about it, Julia,” the colonel said presently. “You are
right, but I don’t want to think about it. When it comes will be time
enough to meet it. If my boy wants to go, he shall go--and he shall
never know how deeply his father is hurt!”

“There they are now,” said Mrs. Pennington. “I hear them in the patio.
Children!” she called. “Here we are on the north porch!”

They came through the house together, brother and sister, their arms
about each other.

“Cus says I am too young to get married,” exclaimed the girl.

“Married!” ejaculated the colonel. “You and Guy talking of getting
married? What are you going to live on, child?”

“On that hill back there.”

She jerked her thumb in a direction that was broadly south by west.

“That will give them two things to live on,” suggested the boy,
grinning.

“What do you mean--two things?” demanded the girl.

“The hill and father,” her brother replied, dodging.

She pursued him, and he ran behind his mother’s chair; but at last she
caught him, and, seizing his collar, pretended to chastise him, until
he picked her up bodily from the floor and kissed her.

“Pity the poor goof she ensnares!” pleaded Custer, addressing his
parents. “He will have three avenues of escape--being beaten to death,
starved to death, or talked to death.”

Eva clapped a hand over his mouth.

“Now listen to me,” she cried. “Guy and I are going to build a teeny,
weeny bungalow on that hill, all by ourselves, with a white tile splash
board in the kitchen, and one of those broom closets that turn into an
ironing board, and a very low, overhanging roof, almost flat, and a
shower, and a great big living room where we can take the rugs up and
dance, and a spiffy little garden in the back yard, and chickens, and
Chinese rugs, and he is going to have a study all to himself where he
writes his stories, an----”

At last she had to stop and join in the laughter.

“I think you are all mean,” she added. “You always laugh at me!”

“With you, little jabberer,” corrected the colonel; “for you were made
to be laughed with and kissed.”

“Then kiss me,” she exclaimed, and sprang into his lap, at the imminent
risk of deluging them both with “elixir”--a risk which the colonel,
through long experience of this little daughter of his, was able to
minimize by holding the glass at arm’s length as she dived for him.

“And when are you going to be married?” he asked.

“Oh, not for ages and ages!” she cried.

“But are you and Guy engaged?”

“Of course not!”

“Then why in the world all this talk about getting married?” he
inquired, his eyes twinkling.

“Well, can’t I talk?” she demanded.

“Talk? I’ll say she can!” exclaimed her brother.



CHAPTER IX


Two weeks later Grace Evans left for Hollywood and fame. She would
permit no one to accompany her, saying that she wanted to feel that
from the moment she left home she had made her own way, unassisted,
toward her goal.

Hers was the selfish egotism that is often to be found in otherwise
generous natures. She had never learned the sweetness and beauty of
sharing--of sharing her ambitions, her successes, and her failures,
too, with those who loved her. If she won to fame, the glory would be
hers; nor did it once occur to her that she might have shared that
pride and pleasure with others by accepting their help and advice. If
she failed, they would not have even the sad sweetness of sharing her
disappointment.

Over two homes there hovered that evening a pall of gloom that no
effort seemed able to dispel. In the ranch house on Ganado they made
a brave effort at cheerfulness on Custer Pennington’s account. They
did not dance that evening, as was their custom, nor could they find
pleasure in the printed page when they tried to read. Bridge proved
equally impossible.

Finally Custer rose, announcing that he was going to bed. Kissing them
all good night, as had been the custom since childhood, he went to his
room, and tears came to the mother’s eyes as she noted the droop in the
broad shoulders as he walked from the room.

The girl came then and knelt beside her, taking the older woman’s hand
in hers and caressing it.

“I feel so sorry for Cus,” she said. “I believe that none of us realize
how hard he is taking this. He told me yesterday that it was going to
be just the same as if Grace was dead, for he knew she would never be
satisfied here again, whether she succeeded or failed. I think he has
definitely given up all hope of their being married.”

“Oh, no, dear, I am sure he is wrong,” said her mother. “The engagement
has not been broken. In fact Grace told me only a few days ago that
she hoped her success would come quickly, so that she and Custer might
be married the sooner. The dear girl wants us to be proud of our new
daughter.”

“My God!” ejaculated the colonel, throwing his book down and rising to
pace the floor. “Proud of her! Weren’t we already proud of her? Will
being an actress make her any dearer to us? Of all the damn fool ideas!”

“Custer! Custer! You mustn’t swear so before Eva,” reproved Mrs.
Pennington.

“Swear?” he demanded. “Who in hell is swearing?”

A merry peal of laughter broke from the girl, nor could her mother
refrain from smiling.

“It isn’t swearing when popsy says it,” cried the girl. “My gracious,
I’ve heard it all my life, and you always say the same thing to him,
as if I’d never heard a single little cuss word. Anyway, I’m going to
bed now, popsy, so that you won’t contaminate me. According to momsy’s
theory she should curse like a pirate by this time, after twenty-five
years of it!”

She kissed them, leaving them alone in the little family sitting room.

“I hope the boy won’t take it too hard,” said the colonel after a
silence.

“I am afraid he has been drinking a little too much lately,” said the
mother. “I only hope his loneliness for Grace won’t encourage it.”

“I hadn’t noticed it,” said the colonel.

“He never shows it much,” she replied. “An outsider would not know that
he had been drinking at all when I can see that he has had more than he
should.”

“Don’t worry about that, dear,” said the colonel. “A Pennington never
drinks more than a gentleman should. His father and his grandsires, on
both sides, always drank, but there has never been a drunkard in either
family. I wouldn’t give two cents for him if he couldn’t take a man’s
drink like a man; but he’ll never go too far. My boy couldn’t!”

The pride and affection in the words brought the tears to the mother’s
eyes. She wondered if there had ever been father and son like these
before--each with such implicit confidence in the honor, the integrity,
and the manly strength of the other. _His boy_ couldn’t go wrong!

Custer Pennington entered his room, lighted a reading lamp beside
a deep, wide-armed chair, selected a book from a rack, and settled
himself comfortably for an hour of pleasure and inspiration. But he did
not open the book. Instead, he sat staring blindly at the opposite wall.

Directly in front of him hung a water color of the Apache, done by
Eva, and given to him the previous Christmas; a framed enlargement of
a photograph of a prize Hereford bull; a pair of rusty Spanish spurs;
and a frame of ribbons won by the Apache at various horse shows.
Custer saw none of these, but only a gloomy vista of dreary years
stretching through the dead monotony of endless ranch days that were
all alike--years that he must travel alone.

She would never come back, and why should she? In the city, in that new
life, she would meet men of the world--men of broader culture than his,
men of wealth--and she would be sought after. They would have more to
offer her than he, and sooner or later she would realize it. He could
not expect to hold her.

Custer laid aside his book.

“What’s the use?” he asked himself.

Rising, he went to the closet and brought out a bottle. He had not
intended drinking. On the contrary, he had determined very definitely
not to drink that night; but again he asked himself the old question
which, under certain circumstances of life and certain conditions of
seeming hopelessness, appears unanswerable:

“What is the use?”

It is a foolish question, a meaningless question, a dangerous question.
What is the use of what? Of combating fate--of declining to do the
thing we ought not to do--of doing the thing we should do? It is not
even a satisfactory means of self-justification; but amid the ruins of
his dreams it was sufficient excuse for Custer Pennington’s surrender
to the craving of an appetite which was daily becoming stronger.

The next morning he did not ride before breakfast with the other
members of the family, nor, in fact, did he breakfast until long after
they.

       *       *       *       *       *

On the evening of the day of Grace’s departure Mrs. Evans retired
early, complaining of a headache. Guy Evans sought to interest himself
in various magazines, but he was restless and too ill at ease to remain
long absorbed. At frequent intervals he consulted his watch, and as
the evening wore on he made numerous trips to his room, where he had
recourse to a bottle like the one with which Custer Pennington was
similarly engaged.

It was Friday--the second Friday since Guy had entered into an
agreement with Allen; and as midnight approached his nervousness
increased.

Young Evans, while scarcely to be classed as a strong character, was
more impulsive than weak, nor was he in any sense of the word vicious.
While he knew that he was breaking the law, he would have been terribly
shocked at the merest suggestion that his acts placed upon him the
brand of criminality. Like many another, he considered the Volstead
Act the work of an organized and meddlesome minority, rather than the
real will of the people. There was, in his opinion, no immorality in
circumventing the Eighteenth Amendment whenever and wherever possible.

The only fly in the ointment was the fact that the liquor in which he
was at present trafficking had been stolen; but he attempted to square
this with his conscience by the oft reiterated thought that he did
not know it to be stolen goods--they couldn’t prove that he knew it.
However, the fly remained. It must have been one of those extremely
obnoxious, buzzy flies, if one might judge by the boy’s increasing
nervousness.

Time and again, during that long evening, he mentally reiterated his
determination that once this venture was concluded, he would never
embark upon another of a similar nature. The several thousand dollars
which it would net him would make it possible for him to marry Eva and
settle down to a serious and uninterrupted effort at writing--the one
vocation for which he believed himself best fitted by inclination and
preparation; but never again, he assured himself repeatedly, would he
allow himself to be cajoled or threatened into such an agreement.

He disliked and feared Allen, whom he now knew to be a totally
unscrupulous man, and his introduction, the preceding Friday, to the
confederates who had brought down the first consignment of whisky
from the mountains had left him fairly frozen with apprehension as he
considered the type of ruffians with whom he was associated. During the
intervening week he had been unable to concentrate his mind upon his
story writing even to the extent of a single word of new material. He
had worried and brooded, and he had drunk more than usual.

As he sat waiting for the arrival of the second consignment, he
pictured the little cavalcade winding downward along hidden trails
through the chaparral of dark, mountain ravines. His nervousness
increased as he realized the risk of discovery some time during the
six months that it would take to move the contraband to the edge of
the valley in this way--thirty-six cases at a time, packed out on six
burros.

He had little fear of the failure of his plan for hiding the liquor in
the old hay barn and moving it out again the following day. For three
years there had been stored in one end of the barn some fifty tons of
baled melilotus. It had been sown as a cover crop by a former foreman,
and allowed to grow to such proportions as to render the plowing of it
under a practical impossibility. As hay it was in little or no demand,
but there was a possibility of a hay shortage that year. It was against
this possibility that Evans had had it baled and stored away in the
barn, where it had lain ever since, awaiting an offer that would at
least cover the cost of growing, harvesting, and baling. A hard day’s
work had so rearranged the bales as to form a hidden chamber in the
center of the pile, ingress to which could readily be had by removing a
couple of bales near the floor.

A little after eleven o’clock Guy left the house and made his way to
the barn, where he paced nervously to and fro in the dark interior. He
hoped that the men would come early and get the thing over, for it was
this part of the operation that seemed most fraught with danger.

The disposal of the liquor was effected by daylight, and the very
boldness and simplicity of the scheme seemed to assure its safety. A
large motor truck--such trucks are constantly seen upon the roads of
southern California, loaded with farm and orchard products and bound
cityward--drove up to the hay barn on the morning after the receipt of
the contraband. It backed into the interior, and half an hour later
it emerged with a small load of baled melilotus. That there were
thirty-six cases of bonded whisky concealed by the innocent-looking
bales of melilotus Mr. Volstead himself could not have guessed; but
such was the case.

Where it went to after it left his hands Guy Evans did not know or want
to know. The man who bought it from him owned and drove the truck. He
paid Evans six dollars a quart in currency, and drove away, taking,
besides the load on the floor of the truck, a much heavier burden from
the mind of the young man.

The whisky was in Guy’s possession for less than twelve hours a week;
but during those twelve hours he earned the commission of a dollar
a bottle that Allen allowed him, for his great fear was that sooner
or later some one would discover and follow the six burros as they
came down to the barn. There were often campers in the hills. During
the deer season, if they did not have it all removed by that time,
they would be almost certain of discovery, since every courageous
ribbon-counter clerk in Los Angeles hied valiantly to the mountains
with a high-powered rifle, to track the ferocious deer to its lair.

At a quarter past twelve Evans heard the sounds for which he had been
so expectantly waiting. He opened a small door in the end of the hay
barn, through which there filed in silence six burdened burros, led by
one swarthy Mexican and followed by another. Quietly the men unpacked
the burros and stored the thirty-six cases in the chamber beneath the
hay. Inside this same chamber, by the light of a flash lamp, Evans
counted out to one of them the proceeds from the sale of the previous
week. The whole transaction consumed less than half an hour, and was
carried on with the exchange of less than a dozen words. As silently as
they had come the men departed, with their burros, into the darkness
toward the hills, and young Evans made his way to his room and to bed.



CHAPTER X


As the weeks passed, the routine of ranch life weighed more and more
heavily on Custer Pennington. The dull monotony of it took the zest
from the things that he had formerly regarded as the pleasures of
existence. The buoyant Apache no longer had power to thrill. The long
rides were but obnoxious duties to be performed. The hills had lost
their beauty.

Custer attributed his despondency to an unkind face that had thwarted
his ambitions. He thought that he hated Ganado; and he thought, too--he
honestly thought--that freedom to battle for success in the heart of
some great city would bring happiness and content. For all that, he
performed his duties and bore himself as cheerfully as ever before the
other members of his family, though his mother and sister saw that
when he thought he was alone and unobserved he often sat with drooping
shoulders, staring at the ground, in an attitude of dejection which
their love could scarce misinterpret.

The frequent letters that came from Grace during her first days in
Hollywood had breathed a spirit of hopefulness and enthusiasm that
might have proven contagious, but for the fact that he saw in her
success a longer and probably a permanent separation. If she should be
speedily discouraged, she might return to the foothills and put the
idea of a career forever from her mind; but if she received even the
slightest encouragement, Custer was confident that nothing could wean
her from her ambition. He was the more sure of this because in his own
mind he could picture no inducement sufficiently powerful to attract
any one to return to the humdrum existence of the ranch. Better be a
failure in the midst of life, he put it to himself, than a success in
the unpeopled spaces of its outer edge.

Ensuing weeks brought fewer letters, and there was less of enthusiasm,
though hope was still unquenched. She had not yet met the right people,
Grace said, and there was a general depression in the entire picture
industry. Universal had a new manager, and there was no guessing
what his policy would be; Goldwyn had laid off half their force;
Robertson-Cole had shut down. She was sure, though, that things would
brighten up later, and that she would have her chance. Would they
please tell her how Senator was, and give him her love, and kiss the
Apache for her? There was just a note, perhaps, of homesickness in some
of her letters; and gradually they became fewer and shorter.

The little gatherings of the neighbors at Ganado continued. Other young
people of the valley and the foothills came and danced, or swam, or
played tennis. Their elders came, too, equally enjoying the hospitality
of the Penningtons; and among these was the new owner of the little
orchard beyond the Evans ranch.

The Penningtons had found Mrs. Burke a quiet woman of refined tastes,
and the possessor a quiet humor that made her always a welcome
addition to the family circle. That she had known more of sorrow
than of happiness was evidenced in many ways, but that she had risen
above the petty selfishness of grief was strikingly apparent in her
thoughtfulness for others, her quick sympathy, and the kindliness of
her humor. Whatever ills fate had brought her, they had not left her
soured.

As she came oftener, and came to know the Penningtons better, she
depended more and more on the colonel for advice in matters pertaining
to her orchard and her finances. Of personal matters she never spoke.
They knew that she had a daughter living in Los Angeles; but of the
girl they knew nothing, for deep in the heart of Mrs. George Burke, who
had been born Charity Cooper, was a strain of Puritanism that could
not look with aught but horror upon the stage and its naughty little
sister, the screen--though in her letters to that loved daughter there
was no suggestion of the pain that the fond heart held because of the
career the girl had chosen.

Charity Cooper’s youth had been so surrounded by restrictions that at
eighteen she was as unsophisticated as a child of twelve. As a result,
she had easily succumbed to the blandishments of an unscrupulous young
Irish adventurer, who had thought that her fine family connections
indicated wealth. When he learned the contrary, shortly after their
marriage, he promptly deserted her, nor had she seen or heard aught of
him since. Of him she never spoke, and of course the Penningtons never
questioned her.

At thirty-nine Mrs. George Burke still retained much of the frail
and delicate beauty that had been hers in girlhood. The effort of
moving from her old home and settling the new, followed by the
responsibilities of the unfamiliar and highly technical activities of
orange culture, had drawn heavily upon her always inadequate vitality.
As the Penningtons became better acquainted with her, they began to
feel real concern as to her physical condition; and this concern was
not lessened by the knowledge that she had been giving the matter
serious thought, as was evidenced by her request that the colonel would
permit her to name him as executor of her estate in a will that she was
making.

While life upon Ganado took its peaceful way, outwardly unruffled, the
girl whose image was in the hearts of them all strove valiantly in the
face of recurring disappointment toward the high goal upon which her
eyes were set.

If she could only have a chance! How often that half prayer, half cry
of anguish, was in the silent voicing of her thoughts! If she could
only have a chance!

In the weeks of tramping from studio to studio she had learned much.
For one thing, she had come to know the ruthlessness of a certain type
of man that must and will some day be driven from the industry--that
is, in fact, even now being driven out, though slowly, by the stress of
public opinion and by the example of the men of finer character who are
gradually making a higher code of ethics for the studios.

She had learned even more from the scores of chance acquaintances who,
through repeated meetings in the outer offices of casting directors,
had become almost friends. Indeed, when she found herself facing the
actuality of one of the more repulsive phases of studio procedure, it
appeared more in the guise of habitude through the many references to
it that she had heard from the lips of her more experienced fellows.

She was interviewing, for the dozenth time, the casting director of the
K. K. S. Studio, who had come to know her by sight, and perhaps to feel
a little compassion for her--though there are those who will tell you
that casting directors, having no hearts, can never experience so human
an emotion as compassion.

“I’m sorry, Miss Evans,” he said; “but I haven’t a thing for you
to-day.” As she turned away, he raised his hand. “Wait!” he said. “Mr.
Crumb is casting his new picture himself. He’s out on the lot now. Go
out and see him--he might be able to use you.”

The girl thanked him and made her way from the office building in
search of Crumb. She stepped over light cables and picked her way
across stages that were littered with the heterogeneous jumble of
countless interior sets. She dodged the assistants of a frantic
technical director who was attempting to transform an African water
hole into a Roman bath in an hour and forty-five minutes. She bumped
against a heavy shipping crate, through the iron-barred end of which
a savage lioness growled and struck at her. Finally she discovered a
single individual who seemed to have nothing to do and who therefore
might be approached with a query as to where Mr. Crumb might be found.
This resplendent idler directed her to an Algerian street set behind
the stages, and as he spoke she recognized him as the leading male
star of the organization, the highest salaried person on the lot.

A few minutes later she found the man she sought. She had never seen
Wilson Crumb before, and her first impression was a pleasant one, for
he was courteous and affable. She told him that she had been to the
casting director, and that he had said that Mr. Crumb might be able to
use her. As she spoke, the man watched her intently, his eyes running
quickly over her figure without suggestion of offense.

“What experience have you had?” he asked.

“Just a few times as an extra,” she replied.

He shook his head.

“I am afraid I can’t use you,” he said; “unless”--he hesitated--“unless
you would care to work in the semi-nude, which would necessitate making
a test--in the nude.”

He waited for her reply. Grace Evans gulped. She could feel a scarlet
flush mounting rapidly until it suffused her entire face. She could not
understand why it was necessary to try her out in any less garmenture
than would pass the censors; but then that is something which no one
can understand.

Here, possibly, was her opportunity. She had read in the papers that
Wilson Crumb was preparing to make the greatest picture of his career.
She thought of her constant prayer for a chance. Here was a chance,
and yet she hesitated. The brutal, useless condition he had imposed
outraged every instinct of decency and refinement inherent in her,
just as it has outraged the same characteristics in countless other
girls--just as it is doing in other studios in all parts of the country
every day.

“Is that absolutely essential?” she asked.

“Quite so,” he replied.

Still she hesitated. Her chance! If she let it pass, she might as well
pack up and return home. What a little thing to do, after all, when
one really considered it! It was purely professional. There would be
nothing personal in it, if she could only succeed in overcoming her
self-consciousness; but _could_ she do it?

Again she thought of home. A hundred times, of late, she had wished
that she was back there; but she did not want to go back a failure. It
was that which decided her.

“Very well,” she said; “but there will not be many there will there?”

“Only a camera man and myself,” he replied. “If it is convenient, I can
arrange it immediately.”

Two hours later Grace Evans left the K. K. S. lot. She was to start
work on the morrow at fifty dollars a week for the full period of the
picture. Wilson Crumb had told her that she had a wonderful future, and
that she was fortunate to have fallen in with a director who could make
a great star of her. As she went, she left behind all her self-respect
and part of her natural modesty.

Wilson Crumb, watching her go, rubbed the ball of his right thumb to
and fro across the back of his left hand, and smiled.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Apache danced along the wagon trail that led back into the hills.
He tugged at the bit and tossed his head impatiently, flecking his
rider’s shirt with foam. He lifted his feet high and twisted and
wriggled like an eel. He wanted to be off, and he wondered what had
come over his old pal that there were no more swift, gay gallops, and
that washes were crossed sedately by way of their gravelly bottoms,
instead of being taken with a flying leap.

Presently he cocked an eye ahead, as if in search of something. A
moment later he leaped suddenly sidewise, snorting in apparent terror.

“You old fool!” said Pennington affectionately.

The horse had shied at a large white bowlder lying beside the wagon
trail. For nearly three years he had shied at it religiously every
time he had passed it. Long before they reached it he always looked
ahead to see if it was still there, and he would have been terribly
disappointed had it been missing. The man always knew that the horse
was going to shy--he would have been disappointed if the Apache had
not played this little game of make-believe. To carry the game to
its conclusion, the rider should gather him and force him snorting
and trembling, right up to the bowlder, talking to him coaxingly and
stroking his arched neck, but at the same time not neglecting to press
the spurs against his glossy sides if he hesitated.

The Apache loved it. He loved the power that was his as exemplified by
the quick, wide leap aside, and he loved the power of the man to force
his nose to the bowlder--the power that gave him such confidence in his
rider that he would go wherever he was asked to go; but to-day he was
disappointed. His pal did not force him to the bowlder. Instead, Custer
Pennington merely reined him into the trail again beyond it and rode on
up Jackknife Cañon.

Custer was looking over the pasture. It was late July. The hills were
no longer green, except where their sides and summits were clothed with
chaparral. The lower hills were browning beneath the hot summer sun,
but they were still beautiful, dotted as they were with walnut and live
oak.

As Pennington rode, he recalled the last time he had ridden through
Jackknife with Grace. She had been gone two months now--it seemed as
many years. She no longer wrote often, and when she did write her
letters were short and unsatisfying. He recalled all the incidents of
that last ride, and they reminded him again of the new-made trail they
had discovered, and of his oft repeated intention of following it to
see where it led. He had never had the time--he did not have the time
to-day. The heifers with their calves were still in this pasture. He
counted them, examined the condition of the feed, and rode back to the
house.

It was Friday. From the hill beyond Jackknife a man had watched
through binoculars his every move. Three other men had been waiting
below the watcher along the new-made trail. It was well for Pennington
that he had not chosen that day to investigate.

After he had turned back toward the ranch, the man with the binoculars
descended to the others.

“It was young Pennington,” he said. The speaker was Allen. “I was
thinking that it would be a fool trick to kill him, unless we have to.
I have a better scheme. Listen--if he ever learns anything that he
shouldn’t know, this is what you are to do, if I am away.”

Very carefully and in great detail he elaborated his plan.

“Do you understand?” he asked.

They did, and they grinned.

The following night, after the Penningtons had dined, a ranch hand came
up from Mrs. Burke’s to tell them that their new neighbor was quite
ill, and that the woman who did her housework wanted Mrs. Pennington to
come down at once as she was worried about her mistress.

“We will be right down,” said Colonel Pennington.

They found Mrs. Burke breathing with difficulty, and the colonel
immediately telephoned for a local doctor. After the physician had
examined her, he came to them in the living room.

“You had better send for Jones, of Los Angeles,” he said. “It is her
heart. I can do nothing. I doubt if he can; but he is a specialist.
And,” he added, “if she has any near relatives, I think I should notify
them--at once.”

The housekeeper had joined them, and was wiping tears from her face
with her apron.

“She has a daughter in Los Angeles,” said the colonel; “but we do not
know her address.”

“She wrote her to-day, just before this spell,” said the housekeeper.
“The letter hasn’t been mailed yet--here it is.”

She picked it up from the center table and handed it to the colonel.

“Miss Shannon Burke, 1580 Panizo Circle, Hollywood,” he read. “I will
take the responsibility of wiring both Miss Burke and Dr. Jones. Can
you get a good nurse locally?”

The doctor could, and so it was arranged.



CHAPTER XI


Gaza de Lure was sitting at the piano when Crumb arrived at the
bungalow at 1421 Vista del Paso at a little after six in the evening
of the last Saturday in July. The smoke from a half burned cigarette
lying on the ebony case was rising in a thin, indolent column above the
masses of her black hair. Her fingers idled through a dreamy waltz.

Crumb gave her a surly nod as he closed the door behind him. He was
tired and cross after a hard day at the studio. The girl, knowing that
he would be all right presently, merely returned his nod and continued
playing. He went immediately to his room, and a moment later she heard
him enter the bathroom through another doorway.

Half an hour later he emerged, shaved, spruce, and smiling. A tiny
powder had effected a transformation, just as she had known that it
would. He came and leaned across the piano, close to her. She was very
beautiful. It seemed to the man that she grew more beautiful and more
desirable each day. The fact that she had been unattainable had fed the
fires of his desire, transforming infatuation into as near a thing to
love as a man of his type can ever feel.

“Well, little girl!” he cried gayly. “I have good news for you.”

She smiled a crooked little smile and shook her head.

“The only good news that I can think of would be that the government
had established a comfortable home for superannuated hop-heads, where
they would be furnished, without cost, with all the snow they could
use.”

The effects of her last shot were wearing off. He laughed
good-naturedly.

“Really,” he insisted; “on the level, I’ve got the best news you’ve
heard in moons.”

“Well?” she asked wearily.

“Old Battle-Ax has got her divorce,” he announced, referring thus
affectionately to his wife.

“Well,” said the girl, “that’s good news--for her--if it’s true.”

Crumb frowned.

“It’s good news for you,” he said. “It means that I can marry you now.”

The girl leaned back on the piano bench and laughed aloud. It was not a
pleasant laugh. She laughed until the tears rolled down her cheeks.

“What is there funny about that?” growled the man. “It would mean a lot
to you--respectability, for one thing, and success, for another. The
day you become Mrs. Wilson Crumb I’ll star you in the greatest picture
that was ever made.”

“Respectability!” she sneered. “Your name would make me respectable,
would it? It would be the insult added to all the injury you have done
me. And as for starring--poof!” She snapped her fingers. “I have but
one ambition, thanks to you, you dirty hound, and that is snow!” She
leaned toward him, her two clenched fists almost shaking in his face.
“Give me all the snow I need,” she cried, “and the rest of them may
have their fame and their laurels!”

He thought he saw his chance then. Turning away with a shrug, he walked
to the fireplace and lighted a cigarette.

“Oh, very well!” he said. “If you feel that way about it, all right;
but”--he turned suddenly upon her--“you’ll have to get out of here and
stay out--do you understand? From this day on you can only enter this
house as Mrs. Wilson Crumb, and you can rustle your own dope if you
don’t come back--understand?”

She looked at him through narrowed lids. She reminded him of a tigress
about to spring, and he backed away.

“Listen to me,” she commanded in slow, level tones. “In the first
place, you’re lying to me about your wife getting her divorce. I’d have
guessed as much if I hadn’t known, for a hop-head can’t tell the truth;
but I do know. You got a letter from your attorney to-day telling you
that your wife still insists not only that she never will divorce you,
but that she will never allow you a divorce.”

“You mean to say that you opened one of my letters?” he demanded
angrily.

“Sure I opened it! I open ’em all--I steam ’em open. What do you
expect,” she almost screamed, “from the thing you have made of me? Do
you expect honor and self-respect, or any other virtue, in a hype?”

“You get out of here!” he cried. “You get out now--this minute!”

She rose from the bench and came and stood quite close to him.

“You’ll see that I get all the snow I want, if I go?” she asked.

He laughed nastily.

“You don’t ever get another bindle,” he replied.

“Wait!” she admonished. “I wasn’t through with what I started to say a
minute ago. You’ve been hitting it long enough, Wilson, to know what
one of our kind will do to get it. You know that either you or I would
sacrifice soul and body if there was no other way. We would lie, or
steal, or--murder! Do you get that, Wilson--_murder_? There is just
one thing that I won’t do, but that one thing is not murder, Wilson.
Listen!” She lifted her face close to his and looked him straight in
the eyes. “If you ever try to take it away from me, or keep it from me,
Wilson, I shall kill you.”

Her tone was cold and unemotional, and because of that, perhaps, the
threat seemed very real. The man paled.

“Aw, come!” he cried. “What’s the use of our scrapping? I was only
kidding, anyway. Run along and take a shot--it’ll make you feel better.”

“Yes,” she said, “I need one; but don’t get it into your head that
_I_ was kidding. I wasn’t. I’d just as lief kill you as not--the only
trouble is that killing’s too damned good for you, Wilson!”

She walked toward the bathroom door.

“Oh, by the way,” she said, pausing, “Allen called up this afternoon.
He’s in town, and will be up after dinner. He wants his money.”

She entered the bathroom and closed the door. Crumb lighted another
cigarette and threw himself into an easy chair, where he sat scowling
at a temple dog on a Chinese rug.

The Japanese “schoolboy” opened a door and announced dinner, and a
moment later Gaza joined Crumb in the little dining room. They both
smoked throughout the meal, which they scarcely tasted. The girl was
vivacious and apparently happy. She seemed to have forgotten the recent
scene in the living room. She asked questions about the new picture.

“We’re going to commence shooting Monday,” he told her. Momentarily he
waxed almost enthusiastic. “I’m going to have trouble with that boob
author, though,” he said. “If they’d kick him off the lot, and give me
a little more money, I’d make ’em the greatest picture ever screened!”

Then he relapsed into brooding silence.

“What’s the matter?” she asked. “Worrying about Allen?”

“Not exactly,” he said. “I’ll stall him off again.”

“He isn’t going to be easy to stall this time,” she observed, “if I
gathered the correct idea from his line of talk over the phone to-day.
I can’t see what you’ve done with all the coin, Wilson.”

“You got yours, didn’t you?” he growled.

“Sure, I got mine,” she answered, “and it’s nothing to me what you did
with Allen’s share; but I’m here to tell you that you’ve pulled a boner
if you’ve double-crossed him. I’m not much of a character reader, as
proved by my erstwhile belief that you were a high-minded gentleman;
but it strikes me the veriest boob could see that that man Allen is a
bad actor. You’d better look out for him.”

“I ain’t afraid of him,” blustered Crumb.

“No, of course you’re not,” she agreed sarcastically. “You’re a regular
little lion-hearted Reginald, Wilson--that’s what you are!”

The doorbell rang.

“There he is now,” said the girl.

Crumb paled.

“What makes you think he’s a bad man?” he asked.

“Look at his face--look at his eyes,” she admonished. “Hard? He’s got a
face like a brick-bat.”

They rose from the table and entered the living room as the Japanese
opened the front door. The caller was Slick Allen. Crumb rushed forward
and greeted him effusively.

“Hello, old man!” he cried. “I’m mighty glad to see you. Miss de Lure
told me that you had phoned. Can’t tell you how delighted I am!”

Allen nodded to the girl, tossed his cap upon a bench near the door,
and crossed to the center of the room.

“Won’t you sit down, Mr. Allen?” she suggested.

“I ain’t got much time,” he said, lowering himself into a chair. “I
come up here, Crumb, to get some money.” His cold, fishy eyes looked
straight into Crumb’s. “I come to get all the money there is comin’ to
me. It’s a trifle over ten thousand dollars, as I figure it.”

“Yes,” said Crumb; “that’s about it.”

“An’ I don’t want no stallin’ this time, either,” concluded Allen.

“Stalling!” exclaimed Crumb in a hurt tone. “Who’s been stalling?”

“You have.”

“Oh, my dear man!” cried Crumb deprecatingly. “You know that in matters
of this kind one must be circumspect. There were reasons in the past
why it would have been unsafe to transfer so large an amount to you.
It might easily have been traced. I was being watched--a fellow even
shadowed me to the teller’s window in my bank one day. You see how it
is? Neither of us can take chances.”

“That’s all right, too,” said Allen; “but I’ve been taking chances
right along, and I ain’t been taking them for my health. I been taking
them for the coin, and I want that coin--I want it _pronto_!”

“You can most certainly have it,” said Crumb.

“All right!” replied Allen, extending a palm. “Fork it over.”

“My dear fellow, you don’t think that I have it here, do you?” demanded
Crumb. “You don’t think I keep such an amount as that in my home, I
hope!”

“Where is it?”

“In the bank, of course.”

“Gimme a check.”

“You must be crazy! Suppose either of us was suspected; that check
would link us up fine. It would be as bad for you as for me. Nothing
doing! I’ll get the cash when the bank opens on Monday. That’s the very
best I can do. If you’d written and let me know you were coming, I
could have had it for you.”

Allen eyed him for a long minute.

“Very well,” he said, at last. “I’ll wait till noon Monday.”

Crumb breathed an inward sigh of profound relief.

“If you’re at the bank Monday morning, at half past ten, you’ll get the
money,” he said. “How’s the other stuff going? Sorry I couldn’t handle
that, but it’s too bulky.”

“The hootch? It’s goin’ fine,” replied Allen. “Got a young high-blood
at the edge of the valley handlin’ it--fellow by the name of Evans. He
moves thirty-six cases a week. The kid’s got a good head on him--worked
the whole scheme out himself. Sells the whole batch every week, for
cash, to a guy with a big truck. They cover it with hay, and this
guy hauls it right into the city in broad daylight, unloads it in a
warehouse he’s rented, slips each case into a carton labeled somebody
or other’s soap, and delivers it a case at a time to a bunch of drug
stores. This second guy used to be a drug salesman, and he’s personally
acquainted with every grafter in the business.”

As he talked, Allen had been studying the girl’s face. She had noticed
it before; but she was used to having men stare at her, and thought
little of it. Finally he addressed her.

“Do you know, Miss de Lure,” he said, “there’s something mighty
familiar about your face? I noticed it the first time I came here, and
I been studyin’ over it since. It seems like I’d known you somewhere
else, or some one you look a lot like; but I can’t quite get it
straight in my head. I can’t make out where it was, or when, or if it
was you or some one else. I’ll get it some day, though.”

“I don’t know,” she replied. “I’m sure I never saw you before you came
here with Mr. Crumb the first time.”

“Well, I don’t know, either,” replied Allen, scratching his head; “but
it’s mighty funny.” He rose. “I’ll be goin’,” he said. “See you Monday
at the bank--ten thirty sharp, Crumb!”

“Sure, ten thirty sharp,” repeated Crumb, rising. “Oh, say, Allen,
will you do me a favor? I promised a fellow I’d bring him a bindle of
M to-night, and if you’ll hand it to him it’ll save me the trip. It’s
right on your way to the car line. You’ll find him in the alley back of
the Hollywood Drug Store, just west of Cuyhenga on the south side of
Hollywood Boulevard.”

“Sure, glad to accommodate,” said Allen; “but how’ll I know him?”

“He’ll be standin’ there, and you walk up and ask him the time. If he
tells you, and then asks if you can change a five, you’ll know he’s
the guy all right. Then you hand him these two ones and a fifty-cent
piece, and he hands you a five-dollar bill. That’s all there is to it.
Inside these two ones I’ll wrap a bindle of M. You can give me the five
Monday morning when I see you.”

“Slip me the junk,” said Allen.

The girl had risen, and was putting on her coat and hat.

“Where are you going--home so early?” asked Crumb.

“Yes,” she replied. “I’m tired, and I want to write a letter.”

“I thought you lived here,” said Allen.

“I’m here nearly all day, but I go home nights,” replied the girl.

Slick Allen looked puzzled as he left the bungalow.

“Goin’ my way?” he asked of the girl, as they reached the sidewalk.

“No,” she replied. “I go in the opposite direction. Good night!”

“Good night!” said Allen, and turned toward Hollywood Boulevard.

Inside the bungalow Crumb was signaling central for a connection.

“Give me the police station on Cuyhenga, near Hollywood,” he said. “I
haven’t time to look up the number. Quick--it’s important!”

There was a moment’s silence and then:

“Hello! What is this? Listen! If you want to get a hop-head with the
goods on him--right in the act of peddling--send a dick to the back of
the Hollywood Drug Store, and have him wait there until a guy comes up
and asks what time it is. Then have the dick tell him and say, ‘Can
you change a five?’ That’s the cue for the guy to slip him a bindle of
morphine rolled up in a couple of one-dollar bills. If you don’t send a
dummy, he’ll know what to do next--and you’d better get him there in a
hurry. What? No--oh, just a friend--just a friend.”

Wilson Crumb hung up the receiver. There was a grin on his face as he
turned away from the instrument.

“It’s too bad, Allen, but I’m afraid you won’t be at the bank at half
past ten on Monday morning!” he said.



CHAPTER XII


As Gaza de Lure entered the house in which she roomed, her landlady
came hastily from the living room.

“Is that you, Miss Burke?” she asked. “Here is a telegram that came for
you just a few minutes ago. I do hope it’s not bad news!”

The girl took the yellow envelope and tore it open. She read the
message through very quickly and then again slowly, her brows puckered
into a little frown, as if she could not quite understand the meaning
of the words she read.

“Your mother ill,” the telegram said. “Possibly not serious--doctor
thinks best you come--will meet you morning train.” It was signed
“Custer Pennington.”

“I do hope it’s not bad news,” repeated the landlady.

“My mother is ill. They have sent for me,” said the girl. “I wonder if
you would be good enough to call up the S. P. and ask the first train I
can get that stops at Ganado, while I run upstairs and pack my bag?”

“You poor little dear!” exclaimed the landlady. “I’m so sorry! I’ll
call right away, and then I’ll come up and help you.”

A few minutes later she came up to say that the first train left at
nine o’clock in the morning. She offered to help pack; but the girl
said there was nothing that she could not do herself.

“I must go out first for a few minutes,” Gaza told her. “Then I will
come back and finish packing the few things that it will be necessary
to take.”

When the landlady had left, the girl stood staring dully at the black
traveling bag that she had brought from the closet and placed on her
bed; but she did not see the bag or the few pieces of lingerie that she
had taken from her dresser drawers. She saw only the sweet face of her
mother, and the dear smile that had always shone there to soothe each
childish trouble--the smile that had lighted the girl’s dark days, even
after she had left home.

For a long time she stood there thinking--trying to realize what
it would mean to her if the worst should come. It could make no
difference, she realized, except that it might perhaps save her mother
from a still greater sorrow. It was the girl who was dead, though
the mother did not guess it; she had been dead for many months. This
hollow, shaking husk was not Shannon Burke--it was not the thing that
the mother had loved. It was almost a sacrilege to take it up there
into the clean country and flaunt it in the face of so sacred a thing
as mother love.

The girl stepped quickly to a writing desk, and, drawing a key from
her vanity case, unlocked it. She took from it a case containing a
hypodermic syringe and a few small phials; then she crossed the hall to
the bathroom. When she came back, she looked rested and less nervous.
She returned the things to the desk, locked it, and ran downstairs.

“I will be back in a few minutes,” she called to the landlady. “I shall
have to arrange a few things to-night with a friend.”

She went directly to the Vista del Paso bungalow. Crumb was surprised
and not a little startled as he heard her key in the door. He had a
sudden vision of Allen returning, and he went white; but when he saw
who it was he was no less surprised, for the girl had never before
returned after leaving for the night.

“My gracious!” he exclaimed. “Look who’s here!”

She did not return his smile.

“I found a telegram at home,” she said, “that necessitates my going
away for a few days. I came over to tell you, and to get a little snow
to last me until I come back. Where I am going they don’t have it, I
imagine.”

He looked at her through narrowed, suspicious lids.

“You’re going to quit me!” he cried accusingly. “That’s why you went
out with Allen! You can’t get away with it. I’ll never let you go. Do
you hear me? I’ll never let you go!”

“Don’t be a fool, Wilson,” she replied. “My mother is ill, and I have
been sent for.”

“Your mother? You never told me you had a mother.”

“But I have, though I don’t care to talk about her to you. She needs
me, and I am going.”

He was still suspicious.

“Are you telling me the truth? Will you come back?”

“You know I’ll come back,” she said. “I shall have to,” she added with
a weary sigh.

“Yes, you’ll have to. You can’t get along without it. You’ll come back
all right--I’ll see to that!”

“What do you mean?” she asked.

“How much snow you got home?” he demanded.

“You know I keep scarcely any there. I forgot my case to-day--left it
in my desk, so I had a little there--a couple of shots, maybe.”

“Very well,” he said. “I’ll give you enough to last a week--then you’ll
have to come home.”

“You say you’ll give me enough to last a week?” the girl repeated
questioningly. “I’ll take what I want--it’s as much mine as yours!”

“But you don’t get any more than I’m going to give you. I won’t
have you gone more than a week. I can’t live without you--don’t you
understand? I believe you have a wooden heart, or none at all!”

“Oh,” she said, yawning, “you can get some other poor fool to peddle it
for you if I don’t come back; but I’m coming, never fear. You’re as bad
as the snow--I hate you both, but I can’t live without either of you. I
don’t feel like quarreling, Wilson. Give me the stuff--enough to last a
week, for I’ll be home before that.”

He went to the bathroom and made a little package up for her.

“Here!” he said, returning to the living room. “That ought to last you
a week.”

She took it and slipped it into her case.

“Well, good-by,” she said, turning toward the door.

“Aren’t you going to kiss me good-by?” he asked.

“Have I ever kissed you, since I learned that you had a wife?” she
asked.

“No,” he admitted; “but you might kiss me good-by now, when you’re
going away for a whole week.”.

“Nothing doing, Wilson!” she said with a negative shake of the head.
“I’d as lief kiss a Gila monster!”

He made a wry face.

“You’re sure candid,” he said.

She shrugged her shoulders in a gesture of indifference and moved
toward the door.

“I can’t make you out, Gaza,” he said. “I used to think you loved me,
and the Lord knows I certainly love you! You are the only woman I ever
really loved. A year ago I believe you would have married me, but now
you won’t even let me kiss you. Sometimes I think there is some one
else. If I thought you loved another man, I’d--I’d----”

“No, you wouldn’t. You were going to say that you’d kill me, but you
wouldn’t. You haven’t the nerve of a rabbit. You needn’t worry--there
isn’t any other man, and there never will be. After knowing you I
could never respect any man, much less love one of ’em. You’re all
alike--rotten! And let me tell you something--I never did love you. I
liked you at first, before I knew the hideous thing that you had done
to me. I would have married you, and I would have made you a good wife,
too--you know that. I wish I could believe that you do love me. I know
of nothing, Wilson, that would give me more pleasure than to _know_
that you loved me madly; but of course you’re not capable of loving
anything madly, except yourself.”

“I do love you, Gaza,” he said seriously. “I love you so that I would
rather die than live without you.”

She cocked her head on one side and eyed him quizzically.

“I hope you do,” she told him; “for if it’s the truth, I can repay you
some measure of the suffering you have caused me. I can be around where
you can never get a chance to forget me, or to forget the fact that you
want me, but can never have me. You’ll see me every day, and every day
you will suffer vain regrets for the happiness that might have been
yours, if you had been a decent, honorable man; but you are not decent,
you are not honorable, you are not even a man!”

He tried to laugh derisively, but she saw the slow red creep to his
face and knew that she had scored.

“I hope you’ll feel better when you come back from your mother’s,” he
said. “You haven’t been very good company lately. Oh, by the way, where
did you say you are going?”

“I didn’t say,” she replied.

“Won’t you give me your address?” he demanded.

“No.”

“But suppose something happens? Suppose I want to get word to you?”
Crumb insisted.

“You’ll have to wait until I get back,” she told him.

“I don’t see why you can’t tell me where you’re going,” he grumbled.

“Because there is a part of my life that you and your sort have never
entered,” she replied. “I would as lief take a physical leper to my
mother as a moral one. I cannot even discuss her with you without a
feeling that I have besmirched her.”

On her face was an expression of unspeakable disgust as she passed
through the doorway of the bungalow and closed the door behind her.
Wilson Crumb simulated a shudder.

“I sure was a damn fool,” he mused. “Gaza would have made the greatest
emotional actress the screen has ever known, if I’d given her a
chance. I guessed her wrong and played her wrong. She’s not like any
woman I ever saw before. I should have made her a great success and won
her gratitude--that’s the way I ought to have played her. Oh, well,
what’s the difference? She’ll come back!”

He rose and went to the bathroom, snuffed half a grain of cocaine,
and then collected all the narcotics hidden there and every vestige
of contributary evidence of their use by the inmates of the bungalow.
Dragging a small table into his bedroom closet, he mounted and opened a
trap leading into the air space between the ceiling and the roof. Into
this he clambered, carrying the drugs with him.

They were wrapped in a long, thin package, to which a light, strong
cord was attached. With this cord he lowered the package into the space
between the sheathing and the inner wall, fastening the end of the cord
to a nail driven into one of the studs at arm’s length below the wall
plate.

“There!” he thought, as he clambered back into the closet. “It’ll take
some dick to uncover that junk!”

Hidden between plaster and sheathing of the little bungalow was a
fortune in narcotics. Only a small fraction of their stock had the
two peddlers kept in the bathroom, and Crumb had now removed that, in
case Allen should guess that he had been betrayed by his confederate
and direct the police to the bungalow, or the police themselves should
trace his call and make an investigation on their own account. He
realized that he had taken a great risk; but his stratagem had saved
him from the deadly menace of Allen’s vengeance, at least for the
present. The fact that there must ultimately be an accounting with
the man he put out of his mind. It would be time enough to meet that
contingency when it arose.

As a matter of fact, the police came to the bungalow that very evening;
but through no clew obtained from Allen, who, while he had suspicions
that were tantamount to conviction, chose to await the time when he
might wreak his revenge in his own way. The desk sergeant had traced
the call to Crumb, and after the arrest had been made a couple of
detective sergeants called upon him. They were quiet, pleasant-spoken
men, with an ingratiating way that might have deceived the possessor of
a less suspicious brain than Crumb’s.

“The lieutenant sent us over to thank you for that tip,” said the
spokesman. “We got him all right, with the junk on him.”

Not for nothing was Wilson Crumb a talented actor. None there was who
could better have registered polite and uninterested incomprehension.

“I am afraid,” he said, “that I don’t quite get you. What tip? What are
you talking about?”

“You called up the station, Mr. Crumb. We had central trace the call.
There is no use----”

Crumb interrupted him with a gesture. He didn’t want the officer to go
so far that it might embarrass him to retract.

“Ah!” he exclaimed, a light of understanding illuminating his face. “I
believe I have it. What was the message? I think I can explain it.”

“We think you can, too,” agreed the sergeant, “seein’ you phoned the
message.”

“No, but I didn’t,” said Crumb, “although I guess it may have come over
my phone all right. I’ll tell you what I know about it. A car drove
up a little while after dinner, and a man came to the door. He was a
stranger. He asked if I had a phone, and if he could use it. He said
he wanted to phone an important and confidential message to his wife.
He emphasized the ‘confidential,’ and there was nothing for me to do
but go in the other room until he was through. He was only a minute or
two talking, and then he called me. He wanted to pay for the use of
the phone. I didn’t hear what he said over the phone, but I guess that
explains the matter. I’ll be careful next time a stranger wants to use
my phone.”

“I would,” said the sergeant dryly. “Would you know him if you saw him
again?”

“I sure would,” said Crumb.

They rose to go.

“Nice little place you have here,” remarked one of them, looking around.

“Yes,” said Crumb, “it is very comfortable. Wouldn’t you like to look
it over?”

“No,” replied the officer. “Not now--maybe some other time.”

Crumb grinned after he had closed the door behind them.

“I wonder,” he mused, “if that was a threat or a prophecy!”

A week later Slick Allen was sentenced to a year in the county jail for
having morphine in his possession.



CHAPTER XIII


As Shannon Burke alighted from the Southern Pacific train at Ganado,
the following morning, a large, middle-aged man in riding clothes
approached her.

“Is this Miss Burke?” he asked. “I am Colonel Pennington.”

She noted that his face was grave, and it frightened her.

“Tell me about my mother,” she said. “How is she?”

He put an arm about the girl’s shoulders.

“Come,” he said. “Mrs. Pennington is waiting over at the car.”

Her question was answered. Numb with dread and suffering, she crossed
the station platform with him, the kindly, protecting arm still about
her. Beside a closed car a woman was standing. As they approached, she
came forward, put her arms about the girl, and kissed her.

Seated in the tonneau between the colonel and Mrs. Pennington, the girl
sought to steady herself. She had taken no morphine since the night
before, for she had wanted to come to her mother “clean,” as she would
have expressed it. She realized now that it was a mistake, for she had
the sensation of shattered nerves on the verge of collapse. Mastering
all her resources, she fought for self-control with an effort that was
almost physically noticeable.

“Tell me about it,” she said at length in a low voice.

“It was very sudden,” said the colonel. “It was a heart attack.
Everything that possibly could be done in so short a time was done.
Nothing would have changed the outcome, however. We had Dr. Jones of
Los Angeles down--he motored down and arrived here about half an hour
before the end. He told us that he could have done nothing.”

They were silent for a while as the fast car rolled over the smooth
road toward the hills ahead. Presently it slowed down, turned in
between orange trees, and stopped before a tiny bungalow a hundred
yards from the highway.

“We thought you would want to come here first of all, dear,” said Mrs.
Pennington. “Afterward we are going to take you home with us.”

They accompanied her to the tiny living room, where they introduced
her to the housekeeper, and to the nurse, who had remained at Colonel
Pennington’s request. Then they opened the door of a sunny bedroom,
and, closing it after her as she entered left her alone with her dead.

Beyond the thin panels they could hear her sobbing; but when she
emerged fifteen minutes later, though her eyes were red, she was not
crying. They thought then that she had marvelous self-control; but
could they have known the hideous battle that she was fighting against
grief and the insistent craving for morphine, and the raw, taut nerves
that would give her no peace, and the shattered will that begged only
to be allowed to sleep--could they have known all this, they would have
realized that they were witnessing a miracle.

They led her back to the car, where she sat with wide eyes staring
straight ahead. She wanted to scream, to tear her clothing, to do
anything but sit there quiet and rigid. The short drive to Ganado
seemed to the half mad girl to occupy hours. She saw nothing, not even
the quiet, restful ranch house as the car swung up the hill and stopped
at the north entrance. In her mind’s eye was nothing but the face of
her dead mother and the little black case in her traveling bag.

The colonel helped her from the car and a sweet-faced young girl came
and put her arms about her and kissed her, as Mrs. Pennington had
done at the station. In a dazed sort of way Shannon understood that
they were telling her the girl’s name--that she was a daughter of the
Penningtons. The girl accompanied the visitor to the rooms she was to
occupy.

Shannon wished to be alone--she wanted to get at the black case in the
traveling bag. Why didn’t the girl go away? She wanted to take her by
the shoulders and throw her out of the room; yet outwardly she was calm
and self-possessed.

Very carefully she turned toward the girl. It required a supreme effort
not to tremble, and to keep her voice from rising to a scream.

“Please,” she said, “I should like to be alone.”

“I understand,” said the girl, and left the room, closing the door
behind her.

Shannon crept stealthily to the door and turned the key in the lock.
Then she wheeled and almost fell upon the traveling bag in her
eagerness to get the small black case within it. She was trembling
from head to foot, her eyes were wide and staring, and she mumbled to
herself as she prepared the white powder and drew the liquid into the
syringe.

Momentarily, however, she gathered herself together. For a few
seconds she stood looking at the glass and metal instrument in her
fingers--beyond it she saw her mother’s face.

“I don’t want to do it,” she sobbed. “I don’t want to do it, mother!”
Her lower lip quivered, and tears came. “My God, I can’t help it!”
Almost viciously she plunged the needle beneath her skin. “I didn’t
want to do it to-day, of all days, with you lying over there all
alone--dead!”

She threw herself across the bed and broke into uncontrolled sobbing;
but her nerves were relaxed, and the expression of her grief was
normal. Finally she sobbed herself to sleep, for she had not slept at
all the night before.

It was afternoon when she awoke, and again she felt the craving for a
narcotic. This time she did not fight it. She had lost the battle--why
renew it? She bathed and dressed and took another shot before leaving
her rooms--a guest suite on the second floor. She descended the stairs,
which opened directly into the patio, and almost ran against a tall,
broad-shouldered young man in flannel shirt and riding breeches, with
boots and spurs. He stepped quickly back.

“Miss Burke, I believe?” he inquired. “I am Custer Pennington.”

“Oh, it was you who wired me,” she said.

“No--that was my father.”

“I am afraid I did not thank him for all his kindness. I must have
seemed very ungrateful.”

“Oh, no, indeed, Miss Burke,” he said, with a quick smile of sympathy.
“We all understand, perfectly--you have suffered a severe nervous
shock. We just want to help you all we can, and we are sorry that there
is so little we can do.”

“I think you have done a great deal, already, for a stranger.”

“Not a stranger exactly,” he hastened to assure her. “We were all so
fond of your mother that we feel that her daughter can scarcely be
considered a stranger. She was a very lovable woman, Miss Burke--a very
fine woman.”

Shannon felt tears in her eyes, and turned them away quickly. Very
gently he touched her arm.

“Mother heard you moving about in your rooms, and she has gone over to
the kitchen to make some tea for you. If you will come with me, I’ll
show you to the breakfast room. She’ll have it ready in a jiffy.”

She followed him through the living room and the library to the dining
room, beyond which a small breakfast room looked out toward the
peaceful hills. Young Pennington opened a door leading from the dining
room to the butler’s pantry, and called to his mother.

“Miss Burke is down,” he said.

The girl turned immediately from the breakfast room and entered the
butler’s pantry.

“Can’t I help, Mrs. Pennington? I don’t want you to go to any trouble
for me. You have all been so good already!”

Mrs. Pennington laughed.

“Bless your heart, dear, it’s no trouble. The water is boiling, and
Hannah has made some toast. We were just waiting to ask if you prefer
green tea or black.”

“Green, if you please,” said Shannon, coming into the kitchen.

Custer had followed her, and was leaning against the door frame.

“This is Hannah, Miss Burke,” said Mrs. Pennington.

“I am so glad to know you, Hannah,” said the girl. “I hope you won’t
think me a terrible nuisance.”

“Hannah’s a brick,” interposed the young man. “You can muss around her
kitchen all you want, and she never gets mad.”

“I’m sure she doesn’t,” agreed Shannon; “but people who are late to
meals _are_ a nuisance, and I promise that I shan’t be again. I fell
asleep.”

“You may change your mind about being late to meals when you learn the
hour we breakfast,” laughed Custer.

“No--I shall be on time.”

“You shall stay in bed just as late as you please,” said Mrs.
Pennington. “You mustn’t think of getting up when we do. You need all
the rest you can get.”

They seemed to take it for granted that Shannon was going to stay
with them, instead of going to the little bungalow that had been her
mother’s--the truest type of hospitality, because, requiring no oral
acceptance, it suggested no obligation.

“But I cannot impose on you so much,” she said. “After dinner I must go
down to--to----”

Mrs. Pennington did not permit her to finish.

“No, dear,” she said, quietly but definitely. “You are to stay here
with us until you return to the city. Colonel Pennington has arranged
with the nurse to remain with your mother’s housekeeper until after the
funeral. Please let us have our way. It will be so much easier for you,
and it will let us feel that we have been able to do something for you.”

Shannon could not have refused if she had wished to, but she did not
wish to. In the quiet ranch house, surrounded by these strong, kindly
people, she found a restfulness and a feeling of security that she had
not believed she was ever to experience again. She had these thoughts
when, under the influence of morphine, her nerves were quieted and her
brain clear. After the effects had worn off, she became restless and
irritable. She thought of Crumb then, and of the bungalow on the Vista
del Paso, with its purple monkeys stenciled over the patio gate. She
wanted to be back where she could be free to do as she pleased--free to
sink again into the most degrading and abject slavery that human vice
has ever devised.

On the first night, after she had gone to her rooms, the Penningtons,
gathered in the little family living room, discussed her, as people are
wont to discuss a stranger beneath their roof.

“Isn’t she radiant?” demanded Eva. “She’s the most beautifulest
creature I ever saw!”

“She looks much as her mother must have looked at the same age,”
commented the colonel. “There is a marked family resemblance.”

“She _is_ beautiful,” agreed Mrs. Pennington; “but I venture to say
that she is looking her worst right now. She doesn’t appear at all
well, to me. Her complexion is very sallow, and sometimes there is
the strangest expression in her eyes--almost wild. The nervous shock
of her mother’s death must have been very severe; but she bears up
wonderfully, at that, and she is so sweet and appreciative!”

“I sized her up over there in the kitchen to-day,” said Custer. “She’s
the real article. I can always tell by the way people treat a servant
whether they are real people or only counterfeit. She was as sweet and
natural to Hannah as she is to mother.”

“I noticed that,” said his mother. “It is one of the hall marks of good
breeding; but we could scarcely expect anything else of Mrs. Burke’s
daughter. I know she must be a fine character.”

In the room above them Shannon Burke, with trembling hands and staring
eyes, was inserting a slender needle beneath the skin above her hip. In
the movies one does not disfigure one’s arms or legs.



CHAPTER XIV


The day of the funeral had come and gone. It had been a very hard one
for Shannon. She had determined that on this day, at least, she would
not touch the little hypodermic syringe. She owed that much respect
to the memory of her mother. And she had fought--God, how she had
fought!--with screaming nerves that would not be quiet, with trembling
muscles, and with a brain that held but a single thought--morphine,
morphine, morphine!

She tried to shut the idea from her mind. She tried to concentrate her
thoughts upon the real anguish of her heart. She tried to keep before
her a vision of her mother; but her hideous, resistless vice crowded
all else from her brain, and the result was that on the way back from
the cemetery she collapsed into screaming, incoherent hysteria.

They carried her to her room--Custer Pennington carried her, his father
and mother following. When the men had left, Mrs. Pennington and Eva
undressed her and comforted her and put her to bed; but she still
screamed and sobbed--frightful, racking sobs, without tears. She was
trying to tell them to go away. How she hated them! If they would only
go away and leave her! But she could not voice the words she sought to
scream at them, and so they stayed and ministered to her as best they
could. After a while she lost consciousness, and they thought that she
was asleep and left her.

Perhaps she did sleep, for later, when she opened her eyes, she lay
very quiet, and felt rested and almost normal. She knew, though, that
she was not entirely awake--that when full wakefulness came the terror
would return unless she quickly had recourse to the little needle.

In that brief moment of restfulness she thought quickly and clearly
and very fully of what had just happened. She had never had such
an experience before. Perhaps she had never fully realized the
frightful hold the drug had upon her. She had known that she could
not stop--or, at least, she had said that she knew; but whether she
had any conception of the pitiful state to which enforced abstinence
would reduce her is to be doubted. Now she knew, and she was terribly
frightened.

“I must cut it down,” she said to herself. “I must have been hitting it
up a little too strong. When I get home, I’ll let up gradually until I
can manage with three or four shots a day.”

When she came down to dinner that night, they were all surprised to
see her, for they had thought her still asleep. Particularly were they
surprised to see no indications of her recent breakdown. How could they
know that she had just taken enough morphine to have killed any one of
them? She seemed normal and composed, and she tried to infuse a little
gayety into her conversation, for she realized that her grief was not
theirs. She knew that their kind hearts shared something of her sorrow,
but it was selfish to impose her own sadness upon them.

She had been thinking very seriously, had Shannon Burke. The attack of
hysteria had jarred her loose, temporarily at least, from the selfish
rut that her habit and her hateful life with Crumb had worn for her.
She recalled every emotion of the ordeal through which she had passed,
even to the thoughts of hate that she had held for those two sweet
women at the table with her. How could she have hated them? She hated
herself for the thought.

She compared herself with them, and a dull flush mounted to her cheek.
She was not fit to remain under the same roof with them, and here she
was sitting at their table, a respected guest! What if they should
learn of the thing she was? The thought terrified her; and yet she
talked on, oftentimes gayly, joining with them in the laughter that was
a part of every meal.

She really saw them, that night, as they were. It was the first time
that her grief and her selfish vice had permitted her to study them.
It was her first understanding glimpse of a family life that was as
beautiful as her own life was ugly.

As she compared herself with the women, she compared Crumb with these
two men. They might have vices--they were strong men, and few strong
men are without vices, she knew--but she was sure they were the vices
of strong men, which, by comparison with those of Wilson Crumb, would
become virtues. What a pitiful creature Crumb seemed beside these two,
with his insignificant mentality and his petty egotism!

Suddenly it came to her, almost as a shock, that she had to leave this
beautiful place and go back to the sordid life that she shared with
Crumb. Her spirit revolted, but she knew that it must be. She did not
belong here--her vice must ever bar her from such men and women as
these. The memory of them would haunt her always, making her punishment
the more poignant to the day of her death.

That evening she and Colonel Pennington discussed her plans for the
future. She had asked him about disposing of the orchard--how she
should proceed, and what she might ask for it.

“I should advise you to hold it,” he said. “It is going to increase in
value tremendously in the next few years. You can easily get some one
to work it for you on shares. If you don’t want to live on it, Custer
and I will be glad to keep an eye on it and see that it is properly
cared for; but why don’t you stay here? You could really make a very
excellent living from it. Besides, Miss Burke, here in the country you
can really _live_. You city people don’t know what life is.”

“There!” said Eva. “Popsy has started. If he had his way, we’d all
have to move to the city to escape the maddening crowd. He’d move the
maddening crowd into the country!”

“It may be that Shannon doesn’t care for the country,” suggested Mrs.
Pennington. “There _are_ such foolish people,” she added, laughing.

“Oh, I would love the country!” exclaimed Shannon.

“Then why don’t you stay?” urged the colonel.

“I had never thought of it,” she said hesitatingly.

It was indeed a new idea. Of course it was an absolute impossibility,
but it was a very pleasant thing to contemplate.

“Possibly Miss Burke has ties in the city that she would not care to
break,” suggested Custer, noting her hesitation.

Ties in the city! Shackles of iron, rather, she thought bitterly; but,
oh, it was such a nice thought! To live here, to see these people
daily, perhaps be one of them, to be like them--ah, that would be
heaven!

“Yes,” she said, “I have ties in the city. I could not remain here, I
am afraid, much as I should like to. I--I think I had better sell.”

“Rubbish!” exclaimed the colonel. “You’ll not sell. You are going to
stay here with us until you are thoroughly rested, and then you won’t
want to sell.”

“I wish that I might,” she said; “but----”

“But nothing!” interrupted the colonel. “You are not well, and I shan’t
permit you to leave until those cheeks are the color of Eva’s.”

He spoke to her as he might have spoken to one of his children. She
had never known a father, and it was the first time that any man had
talked to her in just that way. It brought the tears to her eyes--tears
of happiness, for every woman wants to feel that she belongs to some
man--a father, a brother, or a husband--who loves her well enough to
order her about for her own good.

“I shall have to think it over,” she said. “It means so much to me to
have you all want me to stay! Please don’t think that I don’t want to;
but--but--there are so many things to consider, and I want to stay so
very, very much!”

“All right,” said the colonel. “It’s decided--you stay. Now run off to
bed, for you’re going to ride with us in the morning, and that means
that you’ll have to be up at half past five.”

“But I can’t ride,” she said. “I don’t know how, and I have nothing to
wear.”

“Eva’ll fit you out, and as for not knowing how to ride, you can’t
learn any younger. Why, I’ve taught half the children in the foothills
to ride a horse, and a lot of the grown-ups. What I can’t teach you Cus
and Eva can. You’re going to start in to-morrow, my little girl, and
learn how to live. Nobody who has simply survived the counterfeit life
of the city knows anything about living. You wait--we’ll show you!”

She smiled up into his face.

“I suppose I shall have to mind you,” she said. “I imagine every one
does.”

Seated in an easy chair in her bedroom, she stared at the opposite
wall. The craving that she was seldom without was growing in intensity,
for she had been without morphine since before dinner. She got up,
unlocked her bag, and took out the little black case. She opened it,
and counted the powders remaining. She had used half her supply--she
could stay but three or four days longer at the outside; and the
colonel wanted her to stay until her cheeks were like Eva’s!

She rose and looked in the mirror. How sallow she was! Something--she
did not know what--had kept her from using rouge here. During the first
days of her grief she had not even thought of it, and then, after that
evening at dinner, she knew that she could not use it here. It was a
make-believe, a sham, which didn’t harmonize with these people or the
life they led--a clean, real life, in which any form of insincerity
had no place. She knew that they were broad people, both cultured and
traveled, and so she could not understand why it was that she felt that
the harmless vanity of rouge might be distasteful to them. Indeed,
she guessed that it would not. It was something fine in herself, long
suppressed, seeking expression.

It was this same thing, perhaps, that had caused her to refuse a
cigarette that Custer had offered her after dinner. The act indicated
that they were accustomed to having women smoke there, as women nearly
everywhere smoke to-day; but she had refused, and she was glad she
had, for she noticed that neither Mrs. Pennington nor Eva smoked. Such
women didn’t have to smoke to be attractive to men. She had smoked in
her room several times, for that habit, too, had a strong hold on her;
but she had worked assiduously to remove the telltale stains from her
fingers.

“I wonder,” she mused, looking at the black case, “if I could get
through the night without you! It would give me a few more hours here
if I could--a few more hours of life before I go back to _that_!”

Until midnight she fought her battle--a losing battle--tossing and
turning in her bed; but she did her best before she gave up in
defeat--no, not quite defeat; let us call it compromise, for the dose
she took was only half as much as she ordinarily allowed herself. The
three-hour fight and the half dose meant a partial victory, for it
gained for her, she estimated, an additional six hours.

At a quarter before six she was awakened by a knock on her door. It was
already light, and she awoke with mingled surprise that she had slept
so well and vague forebodings of the next hour or two, for she was
unaccustomed to horses and a little afraid of them.

“Who is it?” she asked, as the knock was repeated.

“Eva. I’ve brought your riding things.”

Shannon rose and opened the door. She was going to take the things from
the girl, but the latter bounced into the room, fresh and laughing.

“Come on!” she cried. “I’ll help you. Just pile your hair up anyhow--it
doesn’t matter--this hat’ll cover it. I think these breeches will
fit you--we are just about the same size; but I don’t know about the
boots--they may be a little large. I didn’t bring any spurs--papa won’t
let any one wear spurs until they ride fairly well. You’ll have to win
your spurs, you see! It’s a beautiful morning--just spiffy! Run in
and wash up a bit. I’ll arrange everything, and you’ll be in ’em in a
jiffy.”

She seized Shannon around the waist and danced off toward the bathroom.

“Don’t be long,” she admonished, as she returned to the dressing room,
from where she laid down a barrage of conversation before the bathroom.

Shannon washed quickly. She was excited at the prospect of the ride.
That and the laughing, talking girl in the adjoining room gave her
no time to think. Her mind was fully occupied and her nerves were
stimulated. For the moment she forgot about morphine, and then it was
too late, for Eva had her by the hand and she was being led, almost at
a run, down the stairs, through the patio, and out over the edge of the
hill down toward the stable.

At first the full-foliaged umbrella trees through which the walk wound
concealed the stable and corrals at the foot of the hill, but presently
they broke upon her view, and she saw the horses saddled and waiting,
and the other members of the family. The colonel and Mrs. Pennington
were already mounted. Custer and a stableman held two horses, while
the fifth was tied to a ring in the stable wall. It was a pretty
picture--the pawing horses, with arched necks, eager to be away; the
happy, laughing people in their picturesque and unconventional riding
clothes; the new day upon the nearer hills; the haze upon the farther
mountains.

“Fine!” cried the colonel, as he saw her coming. “Really never thought
you’d do it! I’ll wager this is the earliest you have been up in
many a day. ‘Barbarous hour’--that’s what you’re saying. Why, when
my cousin was on here from New York, he was really shocked--said
it wasn’t decent. Come along--we’re late this morning. You’ll ride
Baldy--Custer’ll help you up.”

She stepped to the mounting block as the young man led the dancing
Baldy close beside it.

“Ever ridden much?” he asked.

“Never in my life.”

“Take the reins in your left hand--so. Like this--left-hand rein coming
in under your little finger, the other between your first and second
fingers, and the bight out between your first finger and thumb-- there,
that’s it. Face your horse, put your left hand on the horn, and your
right hand on the cantle--this is the cantle back here. That’s the
ticket. Now put your left foot in the stirrup and stand erect--no,
don’t lean forward over the saddle--good! swing your right leg, knee
bent, over the cantle, at the same time lifting your right hand. When
you come down, ease yourself into the saddle by closing on the horse
with your knees--that takes the jar off both of you. Ride with a light
rein. If you want him to slow down or stop, pull him in--don’t jerk.”

He was holding Baldy close to the bit as he helped her and explained.
He saw that her right foot found the stirrup, and that she had the
reins properly gathered, and then he released the animal. Immediately
Baldy began to curvet, raising both fore feet simultaneously, and, as
they were coming down, raising his hind feet together, so that all four
were off the ground at once.

Shannon was terrified. Why had they put her on a bucking horse? They
knew she couldn’t ride. It was cruel!

But she sat there with tight-pressed lips and uttered no sound. She
recalled every word that Custer had said to her, and she did not jerk,
though some almost irresistible power urged her to. She just pulled,
and as she pulled she glanced about to see if they were rushing to her
rescue. Great was her surprise when she discovered that no one was
paying much attention to her or to the mad actions of her terrifying
mount.

Suddenly it dawned upon her that she had neither fallen off nor come
near falling off. She had not even lost a stirrup. As a matter of fact,
the motion was not even uncomfortable. It was enjoyable, and she was
in about as much danger of being thrown as she would have been from a
rocking chair as violently self-agitated. She laughed then, and in the
instant all fear left her.

She saw Eva mount from the ground, and noted that the stableman was
not even permitted to hold her restive horse, much less to assist her
in any other way. Custer swung to the saddle with the ease of long
habitude. The colonel reined to her side.

“We’ll let them go ahead,” he said, “and I’ll give you your first
lesson. Then I’ll turn you over to Custer--he and Eva can put on the
finishing touches.”

“He wants to see that you’re started right,” called the younger man,
laughing.

“Popsy just wants to add another feather to his cap,” said Eva. “Some
day he’ll ‘point with pride’ and say, ‘Look at her ride! I gave her her
first lesson.’”

“Here come Mrs. Evans and Guy!”

As Mrs. Pennington spoke, they saw two horses rounding the foot of the
hill at a brisk canter, their riders waving a cheery long-distance
greeting.

That first morning ride with the Penningtons and their friends was an
event in the life of Shannon Burke that assumed the proportions of
adventure. The novelty, the thrill, the excitement, filled her every
moment. The dancing horse beneath her seemed to impart to her a full
measure of its buoyant life. The gay laughter of her companions, the
easy fellowship of young and old, the generous sympathy that made her
one of them, gave her but another glimpse of the possibilities for
happiness that requires no artificial stimulus.

She loved the hills. She loved the little trail winding through the
leafy tunnel of a cool barranco. She loved the thrill of the shelving
hillside where the trail clung precariously in its ascent toward some
low summit. She tingled with the new life and a new joy as they broke
into a gallop along a grassy ridge.

Custer, in the lead, reined in, raising his hand in signal for them all
to stop.

“Look, Miss Burke,” he said, pointing toward a near hillside. “There’s
a coyote. Thought maybe you’d never seen one on his native heath.”

“Shoot it! Shoot it!” cried Eva. “You poor boob, why don’t you shoot
it?”

“Baldy’s gun shy,” he explained.

“Oh!” said Eva. “Yes, of course--I forgot.”

“One of the things you do best,” returned Custer loftily.

“I was just going to say that you were not a boob at all, but now I
won’t!”

Shannon watched the gray, wolfish animal turn and trot off dejectedly
until it disappeared among the brush; but she was not thinking of the
coyote. She was considering the thoughtfulness of a man who could
remember to forego a fair shot at a wild animal because one of the
horses in his party was gun shy, and was ridden by a woman unaccustomed
to riding. She wondered if this was an index to young Pennington’s
character--so different from the men she had known. It bespoke a
general attitude toward women with which she was unfamiliar--a
protective instinct that was chiefly noticeable in the average city man
by its absence.

Interspersed with snatches of conversation and intervening silences
were occasional admonitions directed at her by the colonel, instructing
her to keep her feet parallel to the horse’s sides, not to lean
forward, to keep her elbows down and her left forearm horizontal.

“I never knew there was so much to riding!” she exclaimed, laughingly.
“I thought you just got on a horse and rode, and that was all there was
to it.”

“That _is_ all there is to it to most of the people you see riding
rented horses around Los Angeles,” Colonel Pennington told her. “It
is all there can ever be to the great majority of people anywhere.
Horsemanship is inherent in some; by others it can never be acquired.
It is an art.”

“Like dancing,” suggested Eva.

“And thinking,” said Custer. “Lots of people can go through the motions
of riding, or dancing, or thinking, without ever achieving any one of
them.”

“I can’t even go through the motions of riding,” said Shannon ruefully.

“All you need is practice,” said the colonel. “I can tell a born rider
in half an hour, even if he’s never been on a horse before in his life.
You’re one.”

“I’m afraid you’re making fun of me. The saddle keeps coming up and
hitting me, and I never see any of you move from yours.”

Guy Evans was riding close to her.

“No, he’s not making fun of you,” he whispered, leaning closer to
Shannon. “The colonel has paid you one of the greatest compliments in
his power to bestow. He always judges people first by their morals and
then by their horsemanship; but if they are good horsemen, he can make
generous allowance for minor lapses in their morals.”

They both laughed.

“He’s a dear, isn’t he?” said the girl.

“He and Custer are the finest men I ever knew,” replied the boy eagerly.

That ride ended in a rushing gallop along a quarter mile of straight
road leading to the stables, where they dismounted, flushed,
breathless, and laughing. As they walked up the winding concrete walk
toward the house, Shannon Burke was tired, lame, and happy. She had
adventured into a new world and found it good.

“Come into my room and wash,” said Eva, as they entered the patio.
“We’re late for breakfast now, and we all like to sit down together.”

For just an instant, and for the first time that morning, Shannon
thought of the hypodermic needle in its black case upstairs. She
hesitated, and then resolutely turned into Eva’s room.



CHAPTER XV


During the hour following breakfast that morning, while Shannon was
alone in her rooms, the craving returned. The thought of it turned her
sick when she felt it coming. She had been occupying herself making
her bed and tidying the room, as she had done each morning since her
arrival; but when that was done, her thoughts reverted by habit to the
desire that had so fatally mastered her.

While she was riding, she had had no opportunity to think of anything
but the thrill of the new adventure. At breakfast she had been very
hungry, for the first time in many months; and this new appetite for
food, and the gay conversation of the breakfast table, had given her
nerves no chance to assert their craving. Now that she was alone and
unoccupied, the terrible thing clutched at her again.

Once again she fought the fight that she had fought so many times of
late--the fight that she knew she was ordained to lose before she
started fighting. She longed to win it so earnestly that her defeat was
the more pitiable. She was eager to prolong this new-found happiness to
the uttermost limit. Though she knew that it must end when her supply
of morphine was gone, she was determined to gain a few hours each day,
in order that she might add at least another happy day to her life.
Again she took but half her ordinary allowance; but with what anguished
humiliation she performed the hated and repulsive act. Always had she
loathed the habit, but never had it seemed nearly so disgusting as when
performed amid these cleanly and beautiful surroundings, under the same
roof with such people as the Penningtons.

There crept into her mind a thought that had found its way there
more than once before during the past two years--the thought of
self-destruction. She put it away from her; but in the depth of her
soul she knew that never before had it taken so strong a hold upon her.
Her mother, her only tie, was gone, and no one would care. She had
looked into heaven and found that it was not for her. She had no future
except to return to the hideous existence of the Hollywood bungalow and
her lonely boarding house, and to the hated Crumb.

It was then that Eva Pennington called her.

“I am going to walk up to the Berkshires,” she said. “Come along with
me!”

“The Berkshires!” exclaimed Shannon. “I thought they were in New
England.”

She was descending the stairs toward Eva, who stood at the foot,
holding open the door that led into the patio. She welcomed the
interruption that had broken in upon her morbid thoughts. The sight of
the winsome figure smiling up at her dispelled them as the light of the
sun sweeps away miasmatic vapors.

“In New England?” repeated Eva. Her brows puckered, and then suddenly
she broke into a merry laugh. “I meant pigs, not hills!”

Shannon laughed, too. How many times she had laughed that day--and it
was yet far from noon. Close as was the memory of her mother’s death,
she could laugh here with no consciousness of irreverence--rather,
perhaps, with the conviction that she was best serving the ideals that
had been dear to that mother by giving and accepting happiness when
opportunity offered it.

“I’m only sorry it’s not the hills,” she said; “for that would mean
walking, walking, walking--doing something in the open, away from
people who live in cities and who can find no pleasures outside four
walls.”

Shannon’s manner was tense, her voice had suddenly become serious. The
younger girl looked up at her with an expression of mild surprise.

“My gracious!” cried Eva. “You’re getting almost as bad as popsy, and
you’ve been here only half a week; but how radiant, if you really love
it!”

“I do love it, dear, though I didn’t mean to be quite so tragic; but
the thought that I shall have to go away and can never enjoy it again
_is_ tragic.”

“I hope you won’t have to go,” said Eva simply, slipping an arm about
the other’s waist. “We all hope that you won’t have to.”

They walked down the hill, past the saddle horse barn, and along the
graveled road that led to the upper end of the ranch. The summer sun
beat hotly upon them, making each old sycamore and oak and walnut a
delightful oasis of refreshing shade. In a field at their left two
mowers were clicking merrily through lush alfalfa. At their right,
beyond the pasture fence, gentle Guernseys lay in the shade of a
wide-spreading sycamore, a part of the pastoral allegory of content
that was the Rancho del Ganado; and over all were the blue California
sky and the glorious sun.

“Isn’t it wonderful?” breathed Shannon, half to herself. “It makes one
feel that there cannot be a care or sorrow in all the world!”

They soon reached the pens and houses where sleek, black Berkshires
dozed in every shaded spot. Then they wandered farther up the cañon,
into the pasture where the great brood sows sprawled beneath the
sycamores, or wallowed in a concrete pool shaded by overhanging boughs.
Eva stooped now and then to stroke a long, deep side.

“How clean they are!” exclaimed Shannon. “I thought pigs were dirty.”

“They are when they are kept in dirty places--the same as people.”

“They don’t smell badly; even the pens didn’t smell of pig. All I
noticed was a heavy, sweet odor. What was it--something they feed them?”

Eva laughed.

“It was the pigs themselves. The more you know pigs, the better you
love ’em. They’re radiant creatures!”

“You dear! You love everything, don’t you?”

“Pretty nearly everything, except prunes and washing dishes.”

They swung up then through the orange grove, and along the upper road
back toward the house. It was noon and lunch time when they arrived.
Shannon was hot and tired and dusty and delighted as she opened the
door at the foot of the stairs that led up to her rooms above.

There she paused. The old, gripping desire had seized her. She had not
once felt it since she had passed through that door more than two hours
before. For a moment she hesitated, and then, fearfully, she turned
toward Eva.

“May I clean up in your room?” she asked.

There was a strange note of appeal in Shannon’s voice that the other
girl did not understand.

“Why, certainly,” she said; “but is there anything the matter? You are
not ill?”

“Just a little tired.”

“There! I should never have walked you so far. I’m so sorry!”

“I want to be tired. I want to do it again this afternoon--all
afternoon. I don’t want to stop until I am ready to drop!” Then, seeing
the surprise in Eva’s expression, she added: “You see, I shall be here
such a short time that I want to crowd every single moment full of
pleasant memories.”

Shannon thought that she had never eaten so much before as she had that
morning at breakfast; but at luncheon she more than duplicated her
past performance. There was cold chicken--delicious Rhode Island Reds
raised on the ranch; there was a salad of home-grown tomatoes--firm,
deep red beauties--and lettuce from the garden; Hannah’s bread, with
butter fresh from the churn, and tall, cool pitchers filled with rich
Guernsey milk; and then a piece of Hannah’s famous apple pie, with
cream so thick that it would scarce pour.

“My!” Shannon exclaimed at last. “I have seen the pigs and I have
become one.”

“And I see something, dear,” said Mrs. Pennington, smiling.

“What?”

“Some color in your cheeks.”

“Not _really_?” she cried, delighted.

“Yes, really.”

“And it’s mighty becoming,” offered the colonel. “Nothing like a brown
skin and rosy cheeks for beauty. That’s the way God meant girls to
be, or He wouldn’t have given ’em delicate skins and hung the sun up
there to beautify ’em. Here He’s gone to a lot of trouble to fit up
the whole world as a beauty parlor, and what do women do? They go and
find some stuffy little shop poked away where the sun never reaches
it, and pay some other woman, who knows nothing about art, to paint a
mean imitation of a complexion on their poor skins. They wouldn’t think
of hanging a chromo in their living rooms; but they wear one on their
faces, when the greatest Artist of them all is ready and willing to
paint a masterpiece there for nothing!”

“What a dapper little thought!” exclaimed Eva. “Popsy should have been
a poet.”

“Or an ad writer for a cosmetic manufacturer,” suggested Custer. “Oh,
by the way, not changing the subject or anything, but did you hear
about Slick Allen?”

No, they had not. Shannon pricked up her ears, metaphorically. What did
these people know of Slick Allen?

“He’s just been sent up in L. A. for having narcotics in his
possession. Got a year in the county jail.”

“I guess he was a bad one,” commented the colonel; “but he never struck
me as being a drug addict.”

“Nor me; but I guess you can’t always tell them,” said Custer.

“It must be a terrible habit,” said Mrs. Pennington.

“It’s about as low as any one can sink,” said Custer.

“I hear that there’s been a great increase in it since prohibition,”
remarked the colonel. “Personally, I’d have more respect for a whisky
drunkard than for a drug addict; or perhaps I should better say that
I’d feel less disrespect. A police official told me not long ago, at
a dinner in town, that if drug-taking continues to increase as it has
recently, it will constitute a national menace by comparison with which
the whisky evil will seem paltry.”

Shannon Burke was glad when they rose from the table, putting an end to
the conversation. She had plumbed the uttermost depths of humiliation.
She had felt herself go hot and cold in shame and fear. At first her
one thought had been to get away--to find some excuse for leaving the
Penningtons at once. If they knew the truth, what would they think
of her? Not because of her habit alone, but because she had imposed
upon their hospitality in the guise of decency, knowing that she was
unclean, and practicing her horrid vice beneath their very roof;
associating with their daughter and bringing them all in contact with
her moral leprosy.

She was hastening to her room to pack. She knew there was an evening
train for the city, and while she packed she could be framing some
plausible excuse for leaving thus abruptly.

Custer Pennington called to her.

“Miss Burke!”

She turned, her hand upon the knob of the door to the upstairs suite.

“I’m going to ride over the back ranch this afternoon. Eva showed you
the Berkshires this morning; now I want to show you the Herefords. I
told the stableman to saddle Baldy for you. Will half an hour be too
soon?”

He was standing in the north arcade of the patio, a few yards from her,
waiting for her reply. How fine and straight and clean he was! If fate
had been less unkind, she might have been worthy of the friendship of
such a man as he.

Worthy? Was she unworthy, then? She had been just as fine and clean as
Custer Pennington until a beast had tricked her into shame. She had not
knowingly embraced a vice. It had already claimed her before she knew
it for what it was. Must she then forego all hope of happiness because
of a wrong of which she herself was innocent?

She wanted to go with Custer. Another day would make no difference,
for the Penningtons would never know. How could they? By what chance
might they ever connect Shannon Burke with Gaza de Lure? She well knew
that her screen days were over, and there was no slightest likelihood
that any of these people would be introduced into the bungalow on the
Vista del Paso. Who could begrudge her just this little afternoon of
happiness before she went back to Crumb?

“Don’t tell me you don’t want to come,” cried Custer. “I won’t take no
for an answer!”

“Oh, but I do want to come--ever so much! I’ll be down in just a
minute. Why wait half an hour?”

She was in her room no more than five minutes, and during that time she
sought bravely to efface all thought of the little black case; but with
diabolic pertinacity it constantly obtruded itself, and with it came
the gnawing hunger of nerves starving for a narcotic.

“I won’t!” she cried, stamping her foot. “I won’t! I won’t!”

If only she could get away from the room before she succumbed to the
mounting temptation, she was sure that she could fight it off for the
rest of the afternoon. She had gained that much, at least; but she must
keep occupied, constantly occupied, where she could not have access to
it or see the black case in which she kept the morphine.

She triumphed by running away from it. She almost hurled herself down
the stairs and into the patio. Custer Pennington was not there. She
must find him before the craving dragged her back to the rooms above.
Already she could feel her will weakening. It was the old, old story
that she knew so well.

“What’s the use?” the voice of the tempter asked. “Just a little one!
It will make you feel so much better. What’s the use?”

She turned toward the door again; she had her hand upon the knob, and
then she swung back and called him.

“Mr. Pennington!”

If he did not hear, she knew that she would go up into her rooms
defeated.

“Coming!” he answered from beyond the arched entrance of the patio, and
then he stepped into view.

She almost ran to him.

“Was I very long?” she asked. “Did I keep you waiting?”

“Why, you’ve scarcely been gone any time at all,” he replied.

“Let’s hurry,” she said breathlessly. “I don’t want to miss any of it!”

He wondered why she should be so much excited at the prospect of a ride
into the hills, but it pleased him that she was, and it flattered him a
little, too. He began to be a little enthusiastic over the trip, which
he had planned only as part of the generous policy of the family to
keep Shannon occupied, so that she might not brood too sorrowfully over
her loss.

And Shannon was pleased because of her victory. She was too honest at
heart to attempt to deceive herself into thinking that it was any great
triumph; but even to have been strong enough to have run away from the
enemy was something. She did not hope that it augured any permanent
victory for the future, for she did not believe that such a thing was
possible. She knew that scarce three in a hundred slaves of morphine
definitely cast off their bonds this side of the grave, and she had
gone too far to be one of the three. If she could keep going forever as
she had that day, she might do it; but that, of course, was impossible.
There must be hours when she would be alone with nothing to do but
think, think, think, and what would she think about? Always the same
things--the little white powder and the peace and rest that it would
give her.

Custer watched her as she mounted, holding Baldy beside the block for
her, and again he was pleased to note that she did not neglect a single
detail of the instructions he had given her.

“Some girl, this!” the young man soliloquized mentally.

He knew she must be at least a little lame and sore after the morning
ride, but though he watched her face he saw no sign of it registered
there.

“Game!”

He was going to like her. Stirrup to stirrup, they rode slowly up
the lane toward the cañon road. Her form was perfect. She seemed to
recall everything his father had told her, and she sat easily, with no
stiffness.

“Don’t you want to ride faster?” she asked. “You needn’t poke along on
my account.”

“It’s too hot,” he replied; but the real reason was that he knew she
was probably suffering, even at a walk.

For a long time they rode in silence, the girl taking in every beauty
of meadow, ravine, and hill, that she might store them all away for
the days when they would be only memories. The sun beat down upon them
fiercely, for it was an early August day, and there was no relieving
breeze; but she enjoyed it. It was all so different from any day in
her past, and so much happier than anything in the last two years, or
anything she could expect in the future.

Custer Pennington, never a talkative man, was always glad of a
companionship that could endure long silences. Grace had been like
that with him. They could be together for hours with scarce a dozen
words exchanged; and yet both could talk well when they had anything
to say. It was the knowledge that conversation was not essential to
perfect understanding and comradeship that had rendered their intimacy
delightful.

The riders had entered the hills and were winding up Jackknife Cañon
before either spoke.

“If you tire,” he said, “or if it gets too hot, we’ll turn back. Please
don’t hesitate to tell me.”

“It’s heavenly!” she said.

“Possibly a few degrees too hot for heaven,” he suggested; “but it’s
always cool under the live oaks. Any time you want to rest we’ll stop
for a bit.”

“Which are the live oaks?” she asked.

He pointed to one.

“Why are they called _live_ oaks?”

“They’re evergreen--I suppose that’s the reason. Here’s a big old
fellow--shall we stop?”

“And get off?”

“If you wish.”

“Do you think I could get on again?”

Pennington laughed.

“I’ll get you up all right. Still feel a little lame?”

“Who said I was lame?” she demanded.

“I know you must be, but you’re mighty game!”

“I was when I started, but not any more. I seem to have limbered up.
Let’s try it. I want to see if I can get on from the ground, as Eva
does. What are you smiling at? That’s the second time in the last few
seconds.”

“Was I smiling? I didn’t know it. I didn’t mean to.”

“What did I do?”

“You didn’t do anything--it was something you said. You won’t mind,
will you, as long as you are learning to ride a horse, if I teach you
the correct terminology at the same time?”

“Why, of course not! What did I say? Was it very awful?”

“Oh, no; but it always amuses me when I hear it. It’s about getting on
and off. You get on or off a street car, but you mount or dismount if
you’re riding a horse.”

“But I don’t!” she exclaimed, laughing. “Falling on and off would suit
my method better.”

“No, you mount very nicely. Now watch, and I’ll show you how to
dismount. Put your left hand on the horn; throw your right leg over
the cantle, immediately grasping the cantle with the right hand; stand
erect in the left stirrup, legs straight and heels together--you see,
I’m facing right across the horse. Now support the weight of the body
with your arms, like this; remove the left foot from the stirrup and
drop to the ground, alighting evenly on both feet. That’s the correct
form and a good plan to follow while you’re learning to ride. Afterward
one gets to swing off almost any old way.”

“I thought one always _dismounted_,” she suggested, “from a horse!”

Her eyes twinkled. He laughed.

“I’ll have to be careful, won’t I? You scored that time!”

“Now watch me,” she said.

“Splendid!” he exclaimed, as she dropped lightly to the ground.

They led their horses beneath the spreading tree and sat down with
their backs to the huge bole.

“How cool it is here!” remarked the girl. “I can feel a breeze, though
I hadn’t noticed one before.”

“There always is a breeze beneath the oaks. I think they make their
own. I read somewhere that an oak evaporates about one hundred and
eighty gallons of water every day. That ought to make a considerable
change of temperature beneath the tree on a hot day like this, and in
that way it must start a circulation of air about it.”

“How interesting! How much there is to know in the world, and how
little of it most of us know! A tree is a tree, a flower is a flower,
and the hills are the hills--that much knowledge of them satisfies
nearly all of us. The how and the why of them we never consider; but I
should like to know more. We should know all about things that are so
beautiful--don’t you think so?”

“Yes,” he said. “In ranching we do learn a lot that city people don’t
need to know--about how things grow, and what some plants take out of
the soil, and what others put into it. It’s part of our business to
know these things, not only that we may judge the food value of certain
crops, but also to keep our soil in condition to grow good crops every
year.”

He told her how the tree beneath which they sat drew water and various
salts from the soil, and how the leaves extracted carbon dioxide from
the air, taking it in through myriads of minute mouths on the under
sides of the leaves, and how the leaves manufactured starch and the sap
carried it to every growing part of the tree, from deepest root to the
tip of loftiest twig.

The girl listened, absorbed. As she listened she watched the man’s
face, earnest and intelligent, and mentally she could not but compare
him and his conversation with the men she had known in the city, and
their conversation. They had talked to her as if she was a mental
cipher, incapable of understanding or appreciating anything worth
while--small talk, that subverter of the ancient art of conversation.
In a brief half hour Custer Pennington had taught her things that
would help to make the world a little more interesting and a little
more beautiful; for she could never look upon a tree again as just
a tree--it would be for her a living, breathing, almost a sentient
creature.

She tried to recall what she had learned from two years’ association
with Wilson Crumb, and the only thing she could think of was that Crumb
had taught her to snuff cocaine.

After a while they started on again, and the girl surprised the man by
mounting easily from the ground. She was very much pleased with her
achievement, laughing happily at his word of approval.

They rode on until they found the Herefords. They counted them as they
searched through the large pasture that ran back into the hills; and
when the full number had been accounted for, they turned toward home.
As he had told her about the trees, Custer told her also about the
beautiful white-faced cattle, of their origin in the English county
whose name they bear, and of their unequaled value as beef animals. He
pointed out various prize winners as they passed them.

“There you are, smiling again,” she said accusingly, as they followed
the trail homeward. “What have I done now?”

“You haven’t done anything but be very patient all afternoon. I was
smiling at the idea of how thrilling the afternoon must have been for a
city girl, accustomed, I suppose, to a constant round of pleasure and
excitement!”

“I have never known a happier afternoon,” she said.

“I wonder if you really mean that?”

“Honestly!”

“I am glad,” he said; “for sometimes I get terribly tired of it here,
and I think it always does me good to have an outsider enthuse a
little. It brings me a realization of the things we have here that city
people can’t have, and makes me a little more contented.”

“You couldn’t be discontented! Why, there are just thousands and
thousands of people in the city who would give everything to change
places with you! We don’t all live in the city because we want to. You
are fortunate that you don’t have to.”

“Do you think so?”

“I know it.”

“But it seems such a narrow life here! I ought to be doing a man’s work
among men, where it will count.”

“You _are_ doing a man’s work here and living a man’s life, and what
you do here _does_ count. Suppose you were making stoves, or selling
automobiles or bonds, in the city. Would any such work count for more
than all this--the wonderful swine and cattle and horses that you are
raising? Your father has built a great business, and you are helping
him to make it greater. Could you do anything in the city of which you
could be half so proud? No, but in the city you might find a thousand
things to do of which you might be terribly ashamed. If I were a man,
I’d like your chance!”

“You’re not consistent. You have the same chance, but you tell us that
you are going back to the city. You have your grove here, and a home
and a good living, and yet you want to return to the city you inveigh
against.”

“I do _not_ want to,” she declared.

“I hope you don’t, then,” Custer said simply.

They reached the house in time for a swim before dinner; but after
dinner, when they started for the ballroom to dance, Shannon threw up
her hands in surrender.

“I give up!” she cried laughingly. “I tried to be game to the finish,
and I want ever so much to come and dance; but I don’t believe I could
even walk as far as the ballroom, much less dance after I got there.
Why, I doubt whether I’ll be able to get upstairs without crawling!”

“You poor child!” exclaimed Mrs. Pennington. “We’ve nearly killed you,
I know. We are all so used to the long rides and walking and swimming
and dancing that we don’t realize how they tire unaccustomed muscles.
You go right to bed, my dear, and don’t think of getting up for
breakfast.”

“Oh, but I want to get up and ride, if I may, and if Eva will wake me.”

“She’s got the real stuff in her,” commented the colonel, after Shannon
had bid them good night and gone to her rooms.

“I’ll say she has,” agreed Custer. “She’s a peach of a girl!”

“She’s simply divine,” added Eva.

In her room, Shannon could barely get into bed before she was asleep.



CHAPTER XVI


It was four o’clock the following morning before she awoke. The craving
awoke with her. It seized her mercilessly; yet even as she gave in to
it, she had the satisfaction of knowing that she had gone without the
little white powders longer this time than since she had first started
to use them. She took but a third of her normal dose.

When Eva knocked at half past five, Shannon rose and dressed in frantic
haste, that she might escape a return of the desire. She did not escape
it entirely, but she was able to resist it until she was dressed and
out of reach of the little black case.

That day she went with Custer and Eva and Guy to the country club,
returning only in time for a swim before dinner; and again she fought
off the craving while she was dressing for dinner. After dinner they
danced, and once more she was so physically tired when she reached
her rooms that she could think of nothing but sleep. The day of golf
had kept her fully occupied in the hot sun, and in such good company
her mind had been pleasantly occupied, too, so that she had not been
troubled by her old enemy.

Again it was early morning before she was forced to fight the
implacable foe. She fought valiantly this time, but she lost.

And so it went, day after day, as she dragged out her dwindling supply
and prolonged the happy hours of her all too brief respite from the
degradation of the life to which she knew she must soon return. Each
day it was harder to think of going back--of leaving these people, whom
she had come to love as she loved their lives and their surroundings,
and taking her place again in the stifling and degraded atmosphere
of the Vista del Paso bungalow. They were so good to her, and had so
wholly taken her into their family life, that she felt as one of them.
They shared everything with her. There was not a day that she did not
ride with Custer out among the brown hills. She knew that she was going
to miss these rides--that she was going to miss the man, too. He had
treated her as a man would like other men to treat his sister, with a
respect and deference that she had never met with in the City of Angels.

Three weeks had passed. She had drawn out the week’s supply that Crumb
had doled out to her to this length, and there was even enough for
another week, to such small quantities had she reduced the doses, and
to such lengths had she increased the intervals between them. She had
gone two whole days without it; yet she did not once think that she
could give it up entirely, for when the craving came in full force she
was still powerless to withstand it, and she knew that she would always
be so.

Without realizing it, she was building up a reserve force of health
that was to be her strongest ally in the battle to come. The sallowness
had left her; her cheeks were tanned and ruddy; her eyes sparkled with
the old fire, and were no longer wild and staring. She could ride and
walk and swim and dance with the best of them. She found interest in
the work of her orchard, where she went almost daily to talk with the
caretaker, to question him and to learn all that she could of citrus
culture. She even learned to drive the light tractor and steer it in
and out about the trees without barking them.

Every day that she was there she went to the sunny bedroom in the
bungalow--the bedroom that had been her mother’s--and knelt beside the
bed and poured forth her heart in blind faith that her mother heard.
She did not grieve, for she held that sublime faith in the hereafter
which many profess and few possess--the faith which taught her that
her mother was happier than she had ever been before. Her sorrow had
been in her own loss, and this she fought down as selfishness. She
realized that her greatest anguish lay in vain regrets; and such
thoughts she sought to stifle, knowing their uselessness.

Sometimes she prayed there--prayed for strength to cast off the bonds
of her servitude. Ineffectual prayers she knew them to be, for the only
power that could free her had lain within herself, and that power the
drug had undermined and permanently weakened. Her will had degenerated
to impotent wishes.

And now the time had come when she must definitely set a date for her
departure. She had determined to retain the orchard, not alone because
she had seen that it would prove profitable, but because it would
always constitute a link between her and the people whom she had come
to love. No matter what the future held, she could always feel that a
part of her remained here, where she would that all of her might be;
but she knew that she must go, and she determined to tell them on the
following day that she would return to the city within the week.

It was going to be hard to announce her decision, for she was not blind
to the fact that they had grown fond of her, and that her presence
meant much to Eva, who, since Grace’s departure, had greatly missed
the companionship of a girl near her own age. Mrs. Pennington and the
colonel had been a mother and father to her, and Custer a big brother
and a most charming companion.

She passed that night without recourse to the white powders, for she
must be frugal of them if they were to last through the week. The next
morning she rode with the Penningtons and the Evanses as usual. She
would tell them at breakfast.

When she came to the table she found a pair of silver spurs beside her
plate, and when she looked about in astonishment they were all smiling.

“For me?” she cried.

“From the Penningtons,” said the colonel. “You’ve won ’em, my dear. You
ride like a trooper already.”

The girl choked, and the tears came to her eyes.

“You are all so lovely to me!” she said. Walking around the table to
the colonel, she put her arms about his neck, and, standing on tiptoe,
kissed his cheek. “How can I ever thank you?”

“You don’t have to, child. The spurs are nothing.”

“They are everything to me. They are a badge of honor that--that--I
don’t deserve!”

“But you do deserve them. You wouldn’t have got them if you hadn’t. We
might have given you something else--a vanity case or a book, perhaps;
but no one gets spurs from the Penningtons who does not _belong_.”

After that she simply couldn’t tell them then that she was going
away. She would wait until to-morrow; but she laid her plans without
reference to the hand of fate.

That afternoon, immediately after luncheon, they were all seated in
the patio, lazily discussing the chief topic of thought--the heat.
It was one of those sultry days that are really unusual in southern
California. The heat was absolutely oppressive, and even beneath the
canvas canopy that shaded the patio there was little relief.

“I don’t know why we sit here,” said Custer. “It’s cooler in the house.
This is the hottest place on the ranch a day like this!”

“Wouldn’t it be nice under one of those oaks up the cañon?” suggested
Shannon.

He looked at her and smiled.

“Phew! It’s too hot even to think of getting there.”

“_That_ from a Pennington!” she cried in mock astonishment and reproach.

“Do you mean to say that you’d ride up there through this heat?” he
demanded.

“Of course I would. I haven’t christened my new spurs yet.”

“I’m game, then, if you are,” Custer announced.

She jumped to her feet.

“Come on, then! Who else is going?”

Shannon looked around at them questioningly. Mrs. Pennington shook her
head, smiling.

“Not I. Before breakfast is enough for me in the summer time.”

“I have to dictate some letters,” said the colonel.

“And I suppose little Eva has to stay at home and powder her nose,”
suggested Custer, grinning at his sister.

“Little Eva is going to drive over to Ganado with Guy Thackeray Evans,
the famous author,” said the girl. “He expects an express package--his
story’s coming back again. Horrid, stupid old editors! They don’t know
a real story when they see one. I’m in it--Guy put me in. You all ought
to read it--oh, it’s simply radiant! I’m _Hortense_--tall and willowy
and very dignified----” Eva made a grimace.

“Yes, that’s you, unmistakably,” said Custer. “Tall and willowy and
very dignified--Guy’s some hot baby at character delineation!”

Eva ignored the interruption.

“I swoon when the villain enters my room and carries me off. Then the
hero--he’s _Bruce Bellinghame_, tall and slender, with curly hair----”

“Is he very dignified, too?”

“And then the hero pursues and rescues me just as the villain is going
to hurl me off a cliff--oh, it’s gorgeristic!”

“It must be,” commented Custer.

“You’re horrid,” said Eva. “You ought to have been an editor.”

“Tall and slender, with curly hair,” gibed Custer. “Or was it tall and
curly, with slender hair? Come on, Shannon! I see where we are the only
real sports in the family.”

“Hot sports is what you’re going to be!” Eva called after them.

“The only real sports in the family--in the family!” The words thrilled
her. They had taken her in--they had made her a part of their life. It
was wonderful. Oh, God, if it could only last forever!

It was very hot. The dust rose from the shuffling feet of their horses.
Even the Apache shuffled to-day. His head was low, and he did not
dance. The dust settled on sweating neck and flank, and filled the eyes
of the riders.

“Lovely day for a ride,” commented Custer.

“But think how nice it will be under the oak,” she reminded him.

“I’m trying to.”

Suddenly he raised his head as his wandering eyes sighted a slender
column of smoke rising from behind the ridge beyond Jackknife Cañon. He
reined in the Apache.

“Fire!” he said to the girl. “Wait here. I’ll notify the boys, and
then we’ll ride on ahead and have a look at it. It may not amount to
anything.”

He wheeled about and was off at a run--the heat and the dust forgotten.
She watched him go, erect in the saddle, swinging easily with every
motion of his mount--a part of the horse. In less than five minutes he
was back.

“Come on!” he cried.

She swung Baldy in beside the Apache, and they were off. The loose
stones clattered from the iron hoofs, the dust rose far behind them
now, and they had forgotten the heat. A short cut crossed a narrow wash
that meant a jump.

“Grab the horn!” he cried to her. “Give him his head!”

They went over almost stirrup to stirrup, and he smiled broadly, for
she had not grabbed the horn. She had taken the jump like a veteran.

She thrilled with the excitement of the pace. The horses flattened
out--their backs seemed to vibrate in a constant plane--it was like
flying. The hot wind blew in her face and choked her; but she laughed
and wanted to shout aloud and swing a hat.

More slowly they climbed the side of Jackknife, and just beyond the
ridge they saw the flames leaping in a narrow ravine below them.
Fortunately there was no wind--no more than what the fire itself was
making; but it was burning fiercely in thick brush.

“There isn’t a thing to do,” he told her, “till the boys come with the
teams and plows and shovels. It’s in a mean place--too steep to plow,
and heavy brush; but we’ve got to stop it!”

Presently the “boys”--a wagon full of them--came with four horses, two
walking plows, shovels, a barrel of water, and burlap sacks. They were
of all ages, from eighteen to seventy. Some of them had been twenty
years on the ranch, and had fought many a fire. They did not have to be
told what to bring or what to do with what they brought.

The wagon had to be left in Jackknife Cañon. The horses dragged the
plows to the ridge, and the men carried the shovels and wet burlaps
and buckets of water from the barrel. Custer dismounted and turned the
Apache over to an old man to hold.

“Plow down the east side of the ravine. Try to get all the way around
the south side of the fire and then back again,” he directed the two
men with one of the teams. “I’ll take the other, with Jake, and we’ll
try to cut her off across the top here!”

“You can’t do it, Cus,” said one of the older men. “It’s too steep.”

“We’ve got to try it,” said Pennington. “Otherwise we’d have to go back
so far that it would get away from us on the east side before we made
the circle. Jake, you choke the plow handles--I’ll drive!”

Jake was a short, stocky, red-headed boy of twenty, with shoulders like
a bull. He grinned good-naturedly.

“I’ll choke the tar out of ’em!” he said.

“The rest of you shovel and beat like hell!” ordered Custer.

Shannon watched him as he took the reins and started the team forward,
slowly, quietly. There was no yelling. They were horsemen, these men
of Ganado. The great Percherons moved ponderously forward. The plow
point bit deep into the earth, but the huge beasts walked on as if
dragging an empty wagon.

When the girl saw where Custer was guiding them she held her breath.
No, she must be mistaken! He would turn them up toward the ridge.
He could not be thinking of trying to drive them across the steep,
shelving side of the ravine!

But he was. They slipped and caught themselves. Directly below them the
burning brush had become a fiery furnace. If ever they failed to catch
themselves, nothing could save them from that hell of heat.

Jake, clinging to the plow handles, stumbled and slid, but the plow
steadied him, and the furrow saved his footing a dozen times in as many
yards. Custer, driving, walked just below the plow. How he kept the
team going was a miracle to the girl.

The steep sides of the ravine seemed almost perpendicular in places,
with footing fit only for a goat. How those heavy horses clung there
was beyond her. Only implicit confidence in these men of Ganado, who
had handled them from the time they were foaled, and great courage,
could account for it.

What splendid animals they were! The crackling of burning brush, the
roaring of the flames, the almost unbearable heat that swept up to
them from below, must have been terrifying; and yet only by occasional
nervous side glances and uppricked ears did they acknowledge their
instinctive fear of fire.

At first it had seemed to Shannon a mad thing to attempt, but as she
watched and realized what Custer sought to accomplish, she understood
the wisdom of it. If he could check the flames here with a couple of
furrows, he might gain time to stop its eastward progress to the broad
pastures filled with the tinder-dry grasses and brush of late August.

Already some of the men were working with shovels, just above the
furrow that the plow was running, clearing away the brush and throwing
it back. Shannon watched these men, and there was not a shirker among
them. They worked between the fierce heat of the sun and the fierce
heat of the fire, each one of them as if he owned the ranch. It was
fine proof of loyalty; and she saw an indication of the reason for it
in Custer’s act when he turned the Apache over to the oldest man, in
order that the veteran might not be called upon to do work beyond his
strength, while young Pennington himself undertook a dangerous and
difficult part in the battle.

The sight thrilled her; and beside this picture she saw Wilson Crumb
directing a Western scene, sending mounted men over a steep cliff,
while he sat in safety beside the camera man, hurling taunts and
insults at the poor devils who risked their lives for five dollars a
day. He had killed one horse that time and sent two men to hospital,
badly injured--and the next day he had bragged about it!

Now they were across the ravine and moving along the east side on safer
footing. Shannon realized the tension that had been upon her nerves
when reaction followed the lessening of the strain--she felt limp and
fagged.

The smoke hid them from her occasionally, as it rose in cloudlike
puffs. Then there would be a break in it, and she would see the black
coats of the Percherons and the figures of the sweating men. They
rounded well down the east side of the ravine and then turned back
again; for the other team, with easier going, would soon be up on that
side to join its furrow with theirs. They were running the second
furrow just above the first, and this time the work seemed safer, for
the horses had the first furrow below them should they slip--a ridge of
loose earth that would give them footing.

They were more than halfway back when it happened. The off horse must
have stepped upon a loose stone, so suddenly did he lurch to the left,
striking the shoulder of his mate just as the latter had planted his
left forefoot. The ton of weight hurled against the shoulder of the
near horse threw him downward against the furrow. He tried to catch
himself on his right foot, crossed his forelegs, stumbled over the
ridge of newly turned earth, and rolled down the hill, dragging his
mate and the plow after him toward the burning brush below.

Jake at the plow handles and Custer on the lines tried to check the
horses’ fall, but both were jerked from their hands, and the two
Percherons rolled over and over into the burning brush. A groan of
dismay went up from the men. It was with difficulty that Shannon
stifled a scream; and then her heart stood still as she saw Custer
Pennington leap deliberately down the hillside, drawing the long, heavy
trail-cutting knife that he always wore on the belt with his gun.

The horses were struggling and floundering to gain their feet. One of
them was screaming with pain. The girl wanted to cover her eyes with
her palms to shut out the heart-rending sight, but she could not take
them from the figure of the man.

She saw that the upper horse was so entangled with the harness and the
plow that he could not rise, and that he was holding the other down.
Then she saw the man leap into the midst of the struggling, terrified
mass of horseflesh, seeking to cut the beasts loose from the tangled
traces and the plow. It seemed impossible that he could escape the
flying hoofs or the tongued flames that licked upward as if in hungry
greed to seize this new prey.

As Shannon watched, a great light awoke within her, suddenly revealing
the unsuspected existence of a wondrous thing that had come into her
life--a thing which a moment later dragged her from her saddle and sent
her stumbling down the hill into the burning ravine, to the side of
Custer Pennington.

He had cut one horse free, seized its headstall, dragged it to its
feet, and then started it scrambling up the hill. As he was returning
to the other, the animal struggled up, crazed with terror and pain,
and bolted after its mate. Pennington was directly in its path on the
steep hillside. He tried to leap aside, but the horse struck him with
its shoulder, hurling him to the ground, and before he could stop his
fall he was at the edge of the burning brush, stunned and helpless.

Every man of them who saw the accident leaped down the hillside to save
him from the flames; but quick as they were, Shannon Burke was first to
his side, vainly endeavoring to drag him to safety. An instant later
strong hands seized both Custer and Shannon and helped them up the
steep acclivity, for Pennington had already regained consciousness, and
it was not necessary to carry him.

Custer was badly burned, but his first thought was for the girl, and
his next, when he found she was uninjured, for the horses. They had
run for only a short distance and were standing on the ridge above
Jackknife, where one of the men had caught them. One was burned about
the neck and shoulder; the other had a bad cut above the hock, where he
had struck the plow point in his struggles.

“Take them in and take care of those wounds, Jake,” said Pennington,
after examining them. “You go along,” he told another of the men, “and
bring out Dick and Dave. I don’t like to risk them in this work, but
none of the colts are steady enough for this.”

Then he turned to Shannon.

“Why did you go down into that?” he asked. “You shouldn’t have done
it--with all the men here.”

“I couldn’t help it,” she said. “I thought you were going to be killed.”

Custer looked at her searchingly for a moment.

“It was a very brave thing to do,” he said, “and a very foolish thing.
You might have been badly burned.”

“Never mind that,” she said. “_You_ have been badly burned, and you
must go to the house at once. Do you think you can ride?”

He laughed.

“I’m all right,” he said. “I’ve got to stay here and fight this fire.”

“You are not going to do anything of the kind.” She turned and called
to the man who held Pennington’s horse. “Please bring the Apache over
here,” she said. “These men can fight the fire without you,” she told
Custer. “You are going right back with me. You’ve never seen any one
badly burned, or you’d know how necessary it is to take care of your
burns at once.”

He was not accustomed to being ordered about, and it amused him. Grace
would never have thought of questioning his judgment in this or any
other matter; but this girl’s attitude implied that she considered his
judgment faulty and his decisions of no consequence. She evidently had
the courage of her convictions, for she caught up her own horse and
rode over to the men, who had resumed their work, to tell them that
Custer was too badly burned to remain with them.

“I told him that he must go back to the house and have his burns
dressed; but he doesn’t want to. Maybe he would pay more attention to
you, if you told him.”

“Sure, we’ll tell him,” cried one of them. “Here comes Colonel
Pennington now. He’ll make him go, if it’s necessary.”

Colonel Pennington reined in a dripping horse beside his son, and
Shannon rode over to them. Custer was telling him about the accident to
the team.

“Burned, was he?” exclaimed the colonel. “Why damn it, man, _you’re_
burned!”

“It’s nothing,” replied the younger man.

“It _is_ something, colonel,” cried Shannon. “Please make him go back
to the house. He won’t pay any attention to me, and he ought to be
cared for right away. He should have a doctor just as quickly as we can
get one.”

“Can you ride?” snapped the colonel at Custer.

“Of course I can ride!”

“Then get out of here and take care of yourself. Will you go with him,
Shannon? Have them call Dr. Baldwin.”

His rough manner did not conceal the father’s concern, or his deep love
for his boy. That he could be as gentle as a woman was evidenced, when
he dismounted, in the way that he helped Custer to his saddle.

“Take care of him, my dear,” he said to Shannon. “I’ll stay here and
help the boys. Ask Mrs. Pennington to send the car out with some iced
water or lemonade for them. Take care of yourself, boy!” he called
after them as they rode away.

As the horses moved slowly along the dusty trail, Shannon, riding a
pace behind the man, watched his profile for signs of pain, that she
knew he must be suffering. Once, when he winced, she almost gave a
little cry, as if it had been she who was tortured. They were riding
very close, and she laid her hand gently upon his right arm, in
sympathy.

“I am so sorry!” she said. “I know it must pain you terribly.”

He turned to her with a smile on his face, now white and drawn.

“It does hurt a little now,” he said.

“And you did it to save those two dumb brutes. I think it was
magnificent, Custer!”

He looked at her in mild surprise.

“What was there magnificent about it? It was my duty. My father has
always taught me that the ownership of animals entails certain moral
obligations which no honorable man can ignore--that it isn’t sufficient
merely to own them, and feed them, and house them; but to serve and
protect them, even if it entailed sacrifices to do so.”

“I don’t believe he meant that you should give your life for them,” she
said.

“No, of course not; but I am not giving my life.”

“You might have.”

“I really didn’t think there would be any danger to me,” he said.
“I guess I didn’t think anything about it. I saw those two beautiful
animals, who had been working there for me so bravely, helpless at the
edge of that fire, and I couldn’t have helped doing what I did under
any circumstances. You don’t know, Shannon, how we Penningtons love our
horses. It’s been bred in the bone for generations. Perhaps it’s silly;
but we don’t think so.”

“Neither do I. It’s fine.”

By the time they reached the house she could see that the man was
suffering excruciating pain. The stableman had gone to help the fire
fighters, as had every able-bodied man on the ranch, so that she had to
help Custer from the Apache. After tying the two horses at the stable,
she put an arm about him and assisted him up the long flight of steps
to the house. There Mrs. Pennington and Hannah came at her call and
took him to his room, while she ran to the office to telephone for the
doctor.

When she returned, they had Custer undressed and in bed, and were
giving such first aid as they could. She stood in the doorway for a
moment, watching him, as he fought to hide the agony he was enduring.
He rolled his head slowly from side to side, as his mother and Hannah
worked over him; but he stifled even a faint moan, though Shannon knew
that his tortured body must be goading him to screams. He opened his
eyes and saw her, and tried to smile.

Mrs. Pennington turned then and discovered her.

“Please let me do something, Mrs. Pennington, if there is anything I
can do.”

“I guess we can’t do much until the doctor comes. If we only had
something to quiet the pain until then!”

If they only had something to quiet the pain. The horror of it! She had
something that would quiet the pain; but at what a frightful cost to
herself must she divulge it! They would know, then, the sordid story
of her vice. There could be no other explanation of her having such an
outfit in her possession. How they would loathe her! To see disgust
in the eyes of these friends, whose good opinion was her one cherished
longing, seemed a punishment too great to bear.

And then there was the realization of that new force that had entered
her life with the knowledge that she loved Custer Pennington. It was a
hopeless love, she knew; but she might at least have had the happiness
of knowing that he respected her. Was she to be spared nothing? Was her
sin to deprive her of even the respect of the man whom she loved?

She saw him lying there, and saw the muscles of his jaws tensing as
he battled to conceal his pain; and then she turned and ran up the
stairway to her rooms. She did not hesitate again, but went directly to
her bag, unlocked it, and took out the little black case. Carefully she
dissolved a little of the white powder--a fraction of what she could
have taken without danger of serious results, but enough to allay his
suffering until the doctor came. She knew that this was the end--that
she might not remain under that roof another night.

She drew the liquid through the needle into the glass barrel of the
syringe, wrapped it in her handkerchief, and descended the stairs. She
felt as if she moved in a dream. She felt that she was not Shannon
Burke at all, but another whom Shannon Burke watched with pitying eyes;
for it did not seem possible that she could enter that room and before
his eyes and Mrs. Pennington’s and Hannah’s reveal the thing that she
carried in her handkerchief.

Ah, the pity of it! To realize her first love, and in the same hour to
slay the respect of its object with her own hand! Yet she entered the
room with a brave step, fearlessly. Had he not risked his life for the
two dumb brutes he loved? Could she be less courageous? Perhaps though,
she was braver, for she was knowingly surrendering what was dearer to
her than life.

Mrs. Pennington turned toward her as she entered.

“He has fainted,” she said. “My poor boy!”

Tears stood in his mother’s eyes.

“He is not suffering, then?” asked Shannon, trembling.

“Not now. For his sake, I hope he won’t recover consciousness until
after the doctor comes.”

Shannon Burke staggered and would have fallen had she not grasped the
frame of the door.

It was not long before the doctor came, and then she went back up the
stairs to her rooms, still trembling. She took the filled hypodermic
syringe from her handkerchief and looked at it. Then she carried it
into the bathroom.

“You can never tempt me again,” she said aloud, as she emptied its
contents into the lavatory. “Oh, dear God, I love him!”



CHAPTER XVII


That night Shannon insisted upon taking her turn at Custer’s bedside,
and she was so determined that they could not refuse her. He was still
suffering, but not so acutely. The doctor had left morphine, with
explicit directions for its administration should it be required. The
burns, while numerous, and reaching from his left ankle to his cheek,
were superficial, and, though painful, not necessarily dangerous.

He slept but little, and when he was awake he wanted to talk. He told
her about Grace. It was his first confidence--a sweetly sad one--for he
was a reticent man concerning those things that were nearest his heart
and consequently the most sacred to him. He had not heard from Grace
for some time, and her mother had had but one letter--a letter that had
not sounded like Grace at all. They were anxious about her.

“I wish she would come home!” he said wistfully. “You would like her,
Shannon. We could have such bully times together! I think I would
be content here if Grace were back; but without her it seems very
different, and very lonely. You know we have always been together, all
of us, since we were children--Grace, Eva, Guy, and I; and now that you
are here it would be all the better, for you are just like us. You seem
like us, at least--as if you had always lived here, too.”

“It’s nice to have you say that; but I haven’t always been here, and,
really, you know I don’t _belong_.”

“But you do belong!”

“And I’m going away again pretty soon. I must go back to the city.”

“Please don’t go back,” he begged. “You don’t really have to, do you?”

“I had intended telling you all this morning; but after the spurs, I
couldn’t.”

“Do you _really_ have to go?” Custer insisted.

“I don’t have to, but I think I ought to. Do you want me to
stay--honestly?”

“Honest Injun!” he said, smiling.

“Maybe I will.”

He reached over with his right hand and took hers.

“Oh, will you?” he exclaimed. “You don’t know how much we want you--all
of us.”

It was precisely what he might have done or said to Eva in boyish
affection and comradeship.

“I’m going to stay,” she announced. “I’ve made up my mind. As soon as
you are well I’m going to move down to my own place and really learn to
work it. I’d love it!”

“And I’ll come down and help you with what little I know about oranges.
Father will, too. We don’t know much--citrus growing is a little out of
our line, though we have a small orchard here; but we’ll give you the
best we’ve got. And it’ll be fine for Eva--she loves you. She cried the
other day--the last time you mentioned in earnest that you might not
stay.”

“She’s a dear!”

“She is all of that,” he said. “We have always had our fights--I
suppose all brothers and sisters do--and we kid one another a lot; but
there never was a sister like Eva. Just let any one else say anything
against me! They’d have a fight on their hands right there, if Eva was
around. And sunshine! The old place seems like a morgue every time she
goes away.”

“She worships you, Custer.”

“She’s a brick!”

He could have voiced no higher praise.

He asked about the fire, and especially about the horses. He was
delighted when she told him that a man had just come down to say that
the fire was practically out, and the colonel was coming in shortly;
and that the veterinary had been there and found the team not seriously
injured.

“I think that fire was incendiary,” he said; “but now that Slick Allen
is in jail, I don’t know who would set it.”

“Who is Slick Allen,” she asked, “and why should he want to set fire to
Ganado?”

He told her, and she was silent for a while, thinking about Allen and
the last time she had seen him. She wondered what he would do when he
got out of jail. She would hate to be in Wilson Crumb’s boots then, for
she guessed that Allen was a hard character.

While she was thinking of Allen, Custer mentioned Guy Evans. Instantly
there came to her mind, for the first time since that last evening at
the Vista del Paso bungalow, Crumb’s conversation with Allen and the
latter’s account of the disposition of the stolen whisky. His very
words returned to her.

“Got a young high-blood at the edge of the valley handling it--a fellow
by the name of Evans.”

She had not connected Allen or that conversation or the Evans he had
mentioned with these people; but now she knew that it was Guy Evans
who was disposing of the stolen liquor. She wondered if Allen would
return to this part of the country after he was released from jail. If
he did, and saw her, he would be sure to recognize her, for he must
have had her features impressed upon his memory by the fact that she so
resembled some one he had known.

If he recognized her, would be expose her? She did not doubt but that
he would. The chances were that he would attempt to blackmail her; but,
worst of all, he might tell Crumb where she was. That was the thing
she dreaded most--seeing Wilson Crumb again, or having him discover
her whereabouts; for she knew that he would leave no stone unturned,
and hesitate to stoop to no dishonorable act, to get her back again.
She shuddered when she thought of him--a man whose love, even, was a
dishonorable and dishonoring thing.

Then she turned her eyes to the face of the man lying there on the bed
beside which she sat. He would never love her; but her love for him had
already ennobled her.

If the people of her old life did not discover her hiding place, she
could remain here on her little grove, near Ganada, and see Custer
often--nearly every day. He would not guess her love--no one would
guess it; but she should be happy just to be near him. Even if Grace
returned, it would make no difference--even if Grace and Custer were
married. Shannon knew that he was not for her--no honorable man was
for her, after what she had been--but there was no moral law to be
transgressed by her secret love for him.

She felt no jealousy for Grace. He belonged to Grace, and even had she
thought she might win him she would not have attempted it, for she had
always held in contempt those who infringed selfishly upon settled
affections. It would be hard for her, of course, when Grace returned;
but she was determined to like her, even to love her. She would be
untrue to this new love that had transfigured her should she fail to
love what _he_ loved.

Custer moved restlessly. Again he was giving evidence of suffering. She
laid a cool palm upon his forehead, and stroked it. He opened his eyes
and smiled up at her.

“It’s bully of you to sit with me,” he said; “but you ought to be in
bed. You’ve had a pretty hard day, and you’re not as used to it as we
are.”

“I am not tired,” she said, “and I should like to stay--if you would
like to have me.”

He took her hand from his forehead and kissed it.

“Of course I like to have you here, Shannon--you’re just like a sister.
It’s funny, isn’t it, that we should all feel that way about you, when
we’ve only known you a few weeks? It must have been because of the way
you fitted in. You belonged right from the start--you were just like
us.”

She turned her head away suddenly, casting her eyes upon the floor and
biting her lip to keep back the tears.

“What’s the matter?” he asked.

“I am not like you, Custer; but I have tried hard to be.”

“Why aren’t you like us?” he demanded.

“I--why, I--couldn’t ride a horse,” she explained lamely.

“Don’t make me laugh, please; my face is burned,” he pleaded in mock
irony. “Do you think that’s all we know, or think of, or possess--our
horsemanship? We have hearts, and minds, such as they are--and souls,
I hope. It was of these things that I was thinking. I was thinking,
too, that we Penningtons demand a higher standard in women than is
customary nowadays. We are a little old-fashioned, I guess. We want the
blood of our horses and the minds of our women pure. Here is a case
in point--I can tell you, because you don’t know the girl and never
will. She was the daughter of a friend of Cousin William--our New York
cousin. She was spending the winter in Pasadena, and we had her out
here on Cousin William’s account. She was a pippin of a looker, and I
suppose she was all right morally; but she didn’t have a clean mind. I
discovered it about the first time I talked with her alone; and then
Eva asked me a question about something that she couldn’t have known
about at all except through this girl. I didn’t know what to do. She
was a girl, and so I couldn’t talk about her to any one, not even my
father or mother; but I didn’t want her around Eva. I wondered if I was
just a narrow prig, and if, after all, there was nothing that any one
need take exception to in the girl. I got to analyzing the thing, and
I came to the conclusion that I would be ashamed of mother and Eva if
they talked or thought along such lines. Consequently, it wasn’t right
to expose Eva to that influence. That was what I decided, and I don’t
just _think_ I was right--I _know_ I was.”

“And what did you do?” Shannon asked in a very small voice.

“I did what under any other circumstances would have been unpardonable.
I went to the girl and asked her to make some excuse that would
terminate her visit. It was a very hard thing to do; but I would do
more than that--I would sacrifice my most cherished friendship--for
Eva.”

“And the girl--did you tell her why you asked her to go?”

“I didn’t want to, but she insisted, and I told her.”

“Did she understand?”

“She did not.”

They were silent for some time.

“Do you think I did wrong?” he asked.

“No. There is mental virtue as well as physical. It is as much your
duty to protect your sister’s mind as to protect her body.”

“I knew you’d think as I do about it; but let me tell you it was an
awful jolt to the cherished Pennington hospitality. I hope I never have
to do it again!”

“I hope you never do.”

He commenced to show increasing signs of suffering, presently, and then
he asked for morphine.

“I don’t want to take it unless I have to,” he explained.

“No,” she said, “do not take it unless you have to.”

She prepared and administered it, but she felt no desire for it
herself. Then Eva came to relieve her, and she bade them good night
and went up to bed. She awoke about four o’clock in the morning, and
immediately thought of the little black case; but she only smiled,
turned over, and went back to sleep again.



CHAPTER XVIII


It was several weeks before Custer could ride again, and in the
meantime Shannon had gone down to her own place to live. She came up
every day on Baldy, who had been loaned to her until Custer should be
able to select a horse for her. She insisted that she would own nothing
but a Morgan, and that she wanted one of the Apache’s brothers.

“You’ll have to wait, then, until I can break one for you,” Custer told
her. “There are a couple of four-year-olds that are saddle-broke and
bridle-wise in a way; but I wouldn’t want you to ride either of them
until they’ve had the finishing touches. I want to ride them enough to
learn their faults, if they have any. In the meantime you just keep
Baldy down there and use him. How’s ranching? You look as if it agreed
with you. Nobody’d know you for the same girl. You look like an Indian,
and how your cheeks have filled out!”

The girl smiled happily.

“I never knew before what it was to live,” she said. “I have never
been sickly; but on the other hand I never _felt_ health before, to
know it was a tangible, enjoyable possession that one experienced and
was conscious of every moment. People fill themselves with medicines,
or drugs, or liquors, to induce temporarily a poor imitation of what
they might enjoy constantly if they only would. A man who thinks that a
drink is the only thing that can make one feel like shouting and waving
one’s hat should throw a leg over one of your Morgans before breakfast
one of these cool September mornings, and give him his head and let him
go. Oh, _boy_!” she cried. “_There’s_ intoxication for you!”

Her cheeks were flushed, her eyes dancing. She was a picture of life
and health and happiness; and Custer’s eyes were sparkling, too.

“Gee!” he exclaimed. “You’re a regular Pennington!”

“I wish I were!” the girl thought to herself. “You honor me,” was what
she said aloud.

Custer laughed.

“That sounded rotten, didn’t it? But you know what I meant--it’s nice
to have people whom we like like the same things we do. It doesn’t
necessarily mean that we think our likes are the best in the world. I
didn’t mean to be egotistical.”

Eva had just entered the patio.

“Listen to him, the radiant child!” she exclaimed. “Do you know,
Shannon, that dear little brother just hates himself!”

She walked over and perched on his knee and kissed him.

“Yes,” said Custer, “brother hates himself. He spends hours powdering
his nose. Mother found a lip stick and an eyebrow pencil, or whatever
you call it, in his dressing table recently; and when he goes to L. A.
he has his eyebrows plucked.”

Eva jumped from his knee and stamped her foot.

“I _never_ had my eyebrows plucked!” she cried. “They’re naturally this
way.”

“Why the excitement, little one? Did I say you did have them plucked?”

“Well, you tried to make Shannon think so. I got the lip stick and
the other things so that if we have any amateur theatricals this
winter I’ll have them. Do you know, I think I’ll go on the stage or
the screen--wouldn’t it be splishous, though?--‘Miss Eva Pennington
is starring in the new and popular success based on the story by Guy
Thackeray Evans, the eminent author!’”

“Eminent! He isn’t even imminent,” said Custer.

“Oh, Eva!” cried Shannon, genuine concern in her tone. “Surely you
wouldn’t _think_ of the screen, would you? You’re not serious?”

“Oh, yes,” said Custer. “She’s serious--serious is her middle name.
To-morrow she will want to be a painter, and day after to-morrow the
world’s most celebrated harpist. Eva is nothing if not serious, while
her tenacity of purpose is absolutely inspiring. Why, once, for one
whole day, she wanted to do the same thing.”

Eva was laughing with her brother and Shannon.

“If she were just like every one else, you wouldn’t love your little
sister any more,” she said, running her fingers through his hair.
“Honestly, ever since I met Wilson Crumb, I have thought I should like
to be a movie star.”

“Wilson Crumb!” exclaimed Shannon. “What do _you_ know of Wilson Crumb?”

“Oh, I’ve met him,” said Eva airily. “Don’t you envy me?”

“What do you know about him, Shannon?” asked Custer. “Your tone
indicated that you may have heard something about him that wasn’t
complimentary.”

“No--I don’t know him. It’s only what I’ve heard. I don’t think you’d
like him.” Shannon almost shuddered at the thought of this dear child
even so much as knowing Wilson Crumb. “Oh, Eva!” she cried impulsively.
“You mustn’t even think of going into pictures. I lived in Los Angeles
long enough to learn that the life is oftentimes a hard one, filled
with disappointment, disillusionment, and regrets--principally regrets.”

“And Grace is there now,” said Custer in a low voice, a worried look in
his eyes.

“Can’t you persuade her to return?”

He shook his head.

“It wouldn’t be fair,” he said. “She is trying to succeed, and we ought
to encourage her. It is probably hard enough for her at best, without
all of us suggesting antagonism to her ambition by constantly urging
her to abandon it, so we try to keep our letters cheerful.”

“Have you been to see her since she left? No, I know you haven’t. If I
were you, I’d run down to L. A. It might mean a lot to her, Custer; it
might mean more than you can guess.”

The girl spoke from a full measure of bitter experience. She realized
what it might have meant to her had there been some man like this to
come to her when she had needed the strong arm of a clean love to drag
her from the verge of the mire. She would have gone away with such a
man--gone back home, and thanked God for the opportunity. If Grace
loved Custer, and was encountering the malign forces that had arisen
from their own corruption to claw at Shannon’s skirts, she would come
back with him.

On the other hand, should conditions be what they ought to be, and
what they are in some studios, Custer would return with a report that
would lift a load from the hearts of all of them, while it left Grace
encouraged and inspired by the active support of those most dear to
her. What it would mean to Shannon, in either event, the girl did not
consider. Her soul was above jealousy. She was prompted only by a
desire to save another from the anguish she had endured, and to bring
happiness to the man she loved.

“You really think I ought to go?” Custer asked. “You know she has
insisted that none of us should come. She said she wanted to do it all
on her own, without any help. Grace is not only very ambitious, but
very proud. I’m afraid she might not like it.”

“I wouldn’t care what she liked,” said Shannon. “Either you or Guy
should run down there and see her. You are the two men most vitally
interested in her. No girl should be left alone long in Hollywood
without some one to whom she can look for the right sort of guidance
and--and--protection.”

“I believe I’ll do it,” said Custer. “I can’t get away right now; but
I’ll run down there before I go on to Chicago with the show herds for
the International.”

It was shortly after this that Custer began to ride again, and Shannon
usually rode with him. Unconsciously he had come to depend upon her
companionship more and more. He had been drinking less on account of
it, for it had broken a habit which he had been forming since Grace’s
departure--that of carrying a flask with him on his lonely rides
through the hills.

As a small boy, it had been Custer’s duty, as well as his pleasure, to
“ride fence.” He had continued the custom long after it might have been
assigned to an employee, not only because it had meant long, pleasant
hours in the saddle with Grace, but also to get first-hand knowledge of
the condition of the pastures and the herds, as well as of the fences.
During his enforced idleness, while recovering from his burns, the duty
had devolved upon Jake.

On the first day that Custer took up the work again, Jake had called
his attention to a matter that had long been a subject of discussion
and conjecture on the part of the employees.

“There’s something funny goin’ on back in them hills,” said Jake. “I’ve
seen fresh signs every week of horses and burros comin’ and goin’.
Sometimes they trail through El Camino Largo and again through Corto,
an’ they’ve even been down through the old goat corral once, plumb
through the ranch, an’ out the west gate. But what I can’t tell for sure
is whether they come in an’ go out, or go out an’ come in. Whoever does
it is foxy. Their two trails never cross, an’ they must be made within
a few hours of each other, for I’m not Injun enough to tell which is
freshest--the one comin’ to Ganado or the one goin’ out. An’ then they
muss it up by draggin’ brush, so it’s hard to tell how many they be of
’em. It’s got me.”

“They head for Jackknife, don’t they?” asked Custer.

“Sometimes, an’ sometimes they go straight up Sycamore, an’ again they
head in or out of half a dozen different little barrancos comin’ down
from the east; but sooner or later I lose ’em--can’t never follow ’em
no place in particular. Looks like as if they split up.”

“Maybe it’s only greasers from the valley coming up after firewood at
night.”

“Mebbe,” said Jake; “but that don’t sound reasonable.”

“I know it doesn’t; but I can’t figure out what else it can be. I found
a trail up above Jackknife last spring, and maybe that had something to
do with it. I’ve sure got to follow that up. The trouble has been that
it doesn’t lead where the stock ever goes, and I haven’t had time to
look into it. Do you think they come up here regularly?”

“We got it doped out that it’s always Friday nights. I see the tracks
Saturday mornings, and some of the boys say they’ve heard ’em along
around midnight a couple of times.”

“What gates do they go out by?”

“They use all four of ’em at different times.”

“H-m! Padlock all the gates to-morrow. This is Thursday. Then we’ll see
what happens.”

They did see, for on the following Saturday, when Custer rode fence, he
found it cut close by one of the padlocked gates--the gate that opened
into the mouth of Horse Camp Cañon. Shannon was with him, and she was
much excited at this evidence of mystery so close at home.

“What in the world do you suppose they can be doing?” she asked.

“I don’t know; but it’s something they shouldn’t be doing, or they
wouldn’t go to so much pains to cover their tracks. They evidently
passed in and out at this point, but they’ve brushed out their tracks
on both sides, so that you can’t tell which way they went last. Look
here! On both sides of the fence the trail splits. It’s hard to say
which was made first, and where they passed through the fence. One
track must have been on top of the other, but they’ve brushed it out.”

He had dismounted, and was on his knees, examining the spoor beyond the
fence.

“I believe,” he said presently, “that the fresher trail is the one
going toward the hills, although the other one is heavier. Here’s a
rabbit track that lies on top of the track of a horse’s hoof pointed
toward the valley, and over here a few yards the same rabbit track
is obliterated by the track of horses and burros coming up from the
valley. The rabbit must have come across here after they went down,
stepping on top of their tracks, and when they came up again they
crossed on top of his. That’s pretty plain, isn’t it?”

“Yes; but the tracks going down are much plainer than those going up.
Wouldn’t that indicate that they were fresher?”

“That’s what I thought until I saw this evidence introduced by Brer
Rabbit--and it’s conclusive, too. Let’s look along here a little
farther. I have an idea that I have an idea.”

“One of Eva’s ‘dapper little ideas,’ perhaps!”

He bent close above first one trail and then another, following them
down toward the valley. Shannon walked beside him, leading Baldy.
Sometimes, as they knelt above the evidence imprinted in the dusty
soil, their shoulders touched. The contact thrilled the girl with sweet
delight, and the fact that it left him cold did not sadden her. She
knew that he was not for her. It was enough that she might be near him
and love him. She did not want him to love her--that would have been
the final tragedy of her life.

For the most part the trail was obliterated by brush, which seemed to
have been dragged behind the last horse; but here and there was the
imprint of the hoof of a horse, or, again, of a burro, so that the
story that Custer pieced out was reasonably clear--as far as it went.

“I think I’ve got a line on it,” he said presently. “Two men rode along
here on horses. One horse was shod, the other was not. One rider went
ahead, the other brought up the rear, and between them were several
burros. Going down, the burros carried heavy loads; coming back, they
carried nothing.”

“How do you know all that?” she asked rather incredulously.

“I don’t _know_ it, but it seems the most logical deduction from these
tracks. It is easy to tell the horse tracks from those of the burros,
and to tell that there were at least two horses, because it is plain
that a shod horse and an unshod horse passed along here. That one
horse--the one with shoes--went first is evident from the fact that
you always see the imprints of burro hoofs, or the hoofs of an unshod
horse, or both superimposed on his. That the other horse brought up
the rear is equally plain from the fact that no other tracks lie on
top of his. Now, if you will look close, and compare several of these
horse tracks, you will notice that there is little or no difference
in the appearance of those leading into the valley and those leading
out; but you can see that the burro tracks leading down are more deeply
imprinted than those leading up. To me that means that those burros
carried heavy loads down and came back light. How does it sound?”

“It’s wonderful!” she exclaimed. “It is all that I can do to see that
anything has been along here.”

“It’s not wonderful,” he replied. “An experienced tracker would tell
you how many horses there were, how many burros, how many hours had
elapsed since they came down out of the hills, how many since they
returned, and the names of the grandmothers of both riders.”

Shannon laughed.

“I’m glad you’re not an experienced tracker, then,” she said, “for
now I can believe what you have told me. And I still think it very
wonderful, and very delightful, too, to be able to read stories--true
stories--in the trampled dust where men and animals have passed.”

“There is nothing very remarkable about it. Just look at the Apache’s
hoofprints, for instance. See how the hind differ from the fore.”

Custer pointed to them as he spoke, calling attention to the fact that
the Apache’s hind shoes were squared off at the toe.

“And now compare them with Baldy’s,” he said. “See how different the
two hoofprints are. Once you know them, you could never confuse one
with the other. But the part of the story that would interest me most
I can’t read--who they are, what they were packing out of the hills on
these burros, where they came from, and where they went. Let’s follow
down and see where they went in the valley. The trail must pass right
by the Evanses’ hay barn.”

The Evanses’ hay barn! A great light illuminated Shannon’s memory.
Allen had said, that last night at the bungalow, that the contraband
whisky was hauled away on a truck, that it was concealed beneath hay,
and that a young man named Evans handled it.

What was she to do? She dared not reveal this knowledge to Custer,
because she could not explain how she came into possession of it. Nor,
for the same reason, could she warn Guy Evans, had she thought that
necessary--which she was sure it was not, since Custer would not expose
him. She concluded that all she could do was to let events take their
own course.

She followed Custer as he traced the partially obliterated tracks
through a field of barley stubble. A hundred yards west of the hay
barn the trail entered a macadam road at right angles, and there it
disappeared. There was no telling whether the little caravan had turned
east or west, for it left no spoor upon the hard surface of the paved
road.

“Well, _Watson_!” said Custer, turning to her with a grin. “What do you
make of this?”

“Nothing.”

“Nothing? _Watson_, I am surprised. Neither do I.” He turned his
horse back toward the cut fence. “There’s no use looking any farther
in this direction. I don’t know that it’s even worth while following
the trail back into the hills, for the chances are that they have it
well covered. What I’ll do is to lay for them next Friday night. Maybe
they’re not up to any mischief, but it looks suspicious; and if they
are, I’d rather catch them here with the goods than follow them up into
the hills, where about all I’d accomplish would probably be to warn
them that they were being watched. I’m sorry now I had those gates
locked, for it will have put them on their guard. We’ll just fix up
this fence, and then we’ll ride about and take all the locks off.”

On the way home, an hour later, he asked Shannon not to say anything
about their discovery or his plan to watch for the mysterious pack
train the following Friday.

“It would only excite the folks needlessly,” he explained. “The chances
are that there’ll be some simple explanation when I meet up with these
people. As I told Jake, they may be greasers who work all the week and
come up here at night for firewood. Still more likely, it’s people who
don’t know they can get permission to gather deadwood for the asking,
and think they are stealing it. Putting themselves to a lot of trouble
for nothing, I’ll say!”

“You’ll not wait for them alone?” she asked, for she knew what he
did not--that they were probably unscrupulous rascals who would not
hesitate to commit any crime if they thought themselves in danger of
discovery.

“Why not?” he asked. “I only want to ask them what they are doing on
Ganado, and why they cut our fence.”

“Please don’t!” she begged. “You don’t know who they are or what they
have been doing. They might be very desperate men, for all we know.”

“All right,” he agreed. “I’ll take Jake with me.”

“Why don’t you get Guy to go along, too?” she suggested, for she knew
that he would be safer if Guy knew of his intention, since then there
would be little likelihood of his meeting the men.

“No,” he replied. “Guy would have to have a big camp fire, an easy
chair, and a package of cigarettes if he was going to sit up that late
out in the hills. Jake’s the best for that sort of work.”

“Guy isn’t a bit like you, is he?” she asked. “He’s lived right here
and led the same sort of life, and yet he doesn’t seem to be a part of
it, as you are.”

“Guy’s a dreamer, and he likes to be comfortable all the time,” laughed
Custer. “They’re all that way a little. Mr. Evans was, so father says.
He died while we were all kids. Mrs. Evans likes to take it easy, too,
and even Grace wasn’t much on roughing it, though she could stand more
than the others. None of them seemed to take to it the way you do. I
never saw any one else but a Pennington such a glutton for a saddle
and the outdoors as you are. I don’t like ’em any the less for it,” he
hastened to add. “It’s just the way people are, I guess. The taste for
such things is inherited. The Evanses, up to this generation, all came
from the city; the Penningtons all from the country. Father thinks that
horsemen, if not the descendants of a distinct race, at least spring
from some common ancestors who inhabited great plains and were the
original stock raisers of the human race. He thinks they mingled with
the hill and mountain people, who also became horsemen through them;
but that the forest tribes and the maritime races were separate and
distinct. It was the last who built the cities, which the horsemen came
in from the plains and conquered.”

“But perhaps Guy would like the adventure of it,” she insisted. “It
might give him material for a story. I’m going to ask him.”

“Please don’t. The less said about it the better, for if it’s talked
about it may get to the men I want to catch. Word travels fast in the
country. Just as we don’t know who these men are or what they are
doing, neither do we know but what some of them may be on friendly
terms with our employees, or the Evanses, or yours.”

The girl made no reply.

“You won’t mention it to him, please?” Custer insisted.

“Not if you don’t wish it,” she said.

They were silent for a time, each absorbed in his or her own thoughts.
The girl was seeking to formulate some plan that would prevent a
meeting between Custer and Allen’s confederates, who she was sure
were the owners of the mysterious pack train; while the man indulged
in futile conjectures as to their identity and the purpose of their
nocturnal expeditions.

“That trail above Jackknife Cañon is the key to the whole business,” he
declared presently. “I’ll just lay low until after next Friday night,
so as not to arouse their suspicions, and then, no matter what I find
out, I’ll ride that trail to its finish, if it takes me clear to the
ocean!”

They had reached the fork in the road, one branch of which led down to
Shannon’s bungalow, the other to the Ganado saddle-horse stables.

“I thought you were coming up to lunch,” said Custer, as Shannon reined
her horse into the west road.

“Not to-day,” she said. “I’ll come to dinner, if I may, though.”

“We all miss you when you’re not there,” he said.

“How nice! Now I’ll surely come.”

“And this afternoon--will you ride with me again?”

“I’m going to be very busy this afternoon,” she replied.

His face dropped, and then, almost immediately, he laughed.

“I hadn’t realized how much of your time I have been demanding. Why,
you ride with me every day, and now when you want an afternoon off I
start moping. I’m afraid you’ve spoiled me; but you mustn’t let me be a
nuisance.”

“I ride with you because I like to,” she replied. “I should miss our
rides terribly if anything should occur to prevent them.”

“Let’s hope nothing will prevent them. I’m afraid I’d be lost without
you now, Shannon. You can never know what it has meant to me to have
you here. I was sort of going to pot after Grace left--blue and
discouraged and discontented; and I was drinking too much. I don’t
mind telling you, because I know you’ll understand--you seem to
understand everything. Having you to ride with and talk to pulled me
together. I owe you a lot, so don’t let me impose on your friendship
and your patience. Any time you want an afternoon off,” he concluded,
laughing, “don’t be afraid to ask for it--I’ll see that you get it with
full pay!”

“I don’t _want_ any afternoons off, because I enjoy the rides as much
as you, and they have meant even more to me. I intend to see that
nothing prevents them, if I can.”

She was touched and pleased with Custer’s sudden burst of confidence,
and thankful for whatever had betrayed him into one of those rare
revelations of his heart. She wanted to be necessary to him, in the
sweet and unemotional way of friendship, so that they might be together
without embarrassment or constraint.

They had been standing at the fork, talking, and now, as she started
Baldy again in the direction of her own place, Custer reined the Apache
to accompany her.

“You needn’t come down with me,” she said. “It’s nearly lunch time now,
and it would only make you late.”

“But I want to.”

“No!” She shook her head. “You go right home.”

“Please!”

“This is my afternoon off,” she reminded him, “and I’d really rather
you wouldn’t.”

“All right! I’ll drive down in the car early, and we’ll have a swim
before dinner.”

“Not too early--I’ll telephone you when I’m ready. Good-by!”

He waved his hat as she cantered off, and then sat the Apache for a
moment, watching her. How well she rode! What grace and ease in every
motion of that supple body! He shook his head.

“Some girl, Shannon!” he mused aloud as he wheeled the Apache and rode
toward the stables.



CHAPTER XIX


Shannon Burke did not ride to her home after she left Custer. She
turned toward the west at the road above the Evans place, continued on
to the mouth of Horse Camp Cañon, and entered the hills. For two miles
she followed the cañon trail to El Camino Largo, and there, turning
to the left, she followed this other trail east to Sycamore Cañon.
Whatever her mission, it was evident that she did not wish it known
to others. Had she not wished to conceal it, she might have ridden
directly up Sycamore Cañon from Ganado with a saving of several miles.

Crossing Sycamore, she climbed the low hills skirting its eastern
side. There was no trail here, and the brush was thick and oftentimes
so dense that she was forced to make numerous detours to find a way
upward; but at last she rode out upon the western rim of the basin
meadow above Jackknife. Thence she picked her way down to more level
ground, and, putting spurs to Baldy, galloped east, her eyes constantly
scanning the ground just ahead of her.

Presently she found what she sought--a trail running north and south
across the basin. She turned Baldy into it, and headed him south toward
the mountains. She was nervous and inwardly terrified, and a dozen
times she would have turned back had she not been urged on by a power
infinitely more potent than self-interest.

Personally, she had all to lose by the venture and naught to gain. The
element of physical danger she knew to be far from inconsiderable,
while it appalled her to contemplate the after effects, in the
not inconceivable contingency of the discovery of her act by the
Penningtons. Yet she urged Baldy steadily onward, though she felt her
flesh creep as the trail entered a narrow barranco at the southern
extremity of the meadow and wound upward through dense chaparral, which
shut off her range of vision in all directions for more than a few feet.

At the upper end of the barranco the trail turned back and ascended a
steep hillside, running diagonally upward through heavy brush--without
which, she realized, the trail would have appeared an almost impossible
one, since it clung to a nearly perpendicular cliff. The brush lent a
suggestion of safety that was more apparent than real, and at the same
time it hid the sheer descent below.

Baldy, digging his toes into the loose earth, scrambled upward,
stepping over gnarled roots and an occasional bowlder, and finding,
almost miraculously, the least precarious footing. There were times
when the girl shut her eyes tightly and sat with tensed muscles, her
knees pressing her horse’s sides until her muscles ached. At last the
doughty Morgan topped the summit of the hogback, and Shannon drew a
deep breath of relief--which was alloyed, however, by the realization
that in returning she must ride down this frightful trail, which now,
as if by magic, disappeared.

The hogback was water-washed and gravel-strewn, and as hard-baked
beneath the summer’s sun as a macadam road. To Shannon’s unaccustomed
eyes it gave no clew as to the direction of the trail. She rode up and
down in both directions until finally she discovered what appeared to
be a trail leading downward into another barranco upon the opposite
side of the ridge. The descent seemed less terrifying than that which
she had just negotiated, and as it was the only indication of a trail
that she could find, she determined to investigate it.

Baldy, descending carefully, suddenly paused and with uppricked ears
emitted a shrill neigh. So sudden and so startling was the sound that
Shannon’s heart all but stood still, gripped by the cold fingers of
terror. And then from below came an answering neigh.

She had found what she sought, but the fear that rode her all but sent
her panic-stricken in retreat. It was only the fact that she could not
turn Baldy upon that narrow trail that gave her sufficient pause to
gain mastery over the chaos of her nerves and drive them again into the
fold of reason. It required a supreme effort of will to urge her horse
onward again, down into that mysterious ravine, where she knew there
might lurk for her a thing more terrible than death. That she did it
bespoke the greatness of the love that inspired her courage.

The ravine below her was both shallower and wider than that upon the
opposite side of the ridge, so that it presented the appearance of a
tiny basin. From her vantage point she looked out across the tops of
spreading oaks to the brush-covered hillside that bounded the basin on
the south; but what lay below, what the greenery of the trees concealed
from her sight, she could only surmise.

She knew that the Penningtons kept no horses here, so she guessed that
the animal that had answered Baldy’s neigh belonged to the men she
sought. Slowly she rode downward. What would her reception be? If her
conclusions as to the identity of the men camped below were correct,
she could imagine them shooting first and investigating later. The idea
was not a pleasant one, but nothing could deter her now.

After what seemed a long time she rode out among splendid old oaks,
in view of a soiled tent and a picket line where three horses and a
half dozen burros were tethered. Nowhere was there sign of the actual
presence of men, yet she had an uncanny feeling that they were there,
and that from some place of concealment they were watching her.

She sat quietly upon her horse for a moment, waiting. Then, no one
appearing, she called aloud.

“Hello, there! I want to speak with you.”

Her voice sounded strange and uncanny in her ears.

For what seemed a long time there was no other sound than the gently
moving leaves about her, the birds, and the heavy breathing of Baldy.
Then, from the brush behind her, came another voice. It came from the
direction of the trail down which she had ridden. She realized that she
must have passed within a few feet of the man who now spoke.

“What do you want?”

“I have come to warn you. You are being watched.”

“You mean you are not alone? There are others with you? Then tell them
to go away, for we have our rifles. We have done nothing. We’re tending
our bees--they’re just below the ridge above our camp.”

“There is no one with me. I do not mean that others are watching you
now, but that others know that you come down out of the hills with
something each Friday night, and they want to find out what it is you
bring.”

There was a rustling in the brush behind her, and she turned to see
a man emerge, carrying a rifle ready in his hands. He was a Mexican,
swarthy and ill-favored, his face pitted by smallpox.

Almost immediately two other men stepped from the brush at other points
about the camp. The three walked to where Shannon sat upon her mount.
All were armed, and all were Mexicans.

“What do you know about what we bring out of the hills? Should we not
bring our honey out?” asked the pock-marked one.

“I know what you bring out,” she said. “I am not going to expose you. I
am here to warn you.”

“Why?”

“I know Allen.”

Immediately their attitude changed.

“You have seen Allen? You bring a message from him?”

“I have not seen him. I bring no message from him; but for reasons of
my own I have come to warn you not to bring down another load next
Friday night.”



CHAPTER XX


The pock-marked Mexican stepped close to Shannon and took hold of her
bridle reins.

“You think,” he said in broken English, “we are damn fool? If you do
not come from Allen, you come for no good to us. You tell us the truth,
damn quick, or you never go back to tell where you find us and bring
policemen here!”

His tone was ugly and his manner threatening.

There was no harm in telling these men the truth, though it was
doubtful whether they would believe her. She realized that she was in a
predicament from which it might not be easy to extricate herself. She
had told them that she was alone, and if they suspected her motives
they might easily do away with her. She knew how lightly the criminal
Mexican esteems life--especially the life of the hated gringo.

“I have come to warn you because a friend of mine is going to watch for
you next Friday night. He does not know who you are, or what you bring
out of the hills. I do, and so I know that rather than be caught you
might kill him, and I do not want him killed. That is all.”

“How do you know what we bring out of the hills?”

“Allen told me.”

“Allen told you? I do not believe you. Do you know where Allen is?”

“He is in jail in Los Angeles. I heard him telling a man in Los Angeles
last July.”

“Who is the friend of yours that is going to watch for us?”

“Mr. Pennington.”

“You have told him about us?”

“I have told you that he knows nothing about you. All he knows is that
some one comes down with burros from the hills, and that they cut his
fence last Friday night. He wants to catch you and find out what you
are doing.”

“Why have you not told him?”

She hesitated.

“That can make no difference,” she said presently.

“It makes a difference to us. I told you to tell the truth, or----”

The Mexican raised his rifle that she might guess the rest.

“I did not want to have to explain how I knew about you. I did not want
Mr. Pennington to know that I knew such men as Allen.”

“How did you know Allen?”

“That has nothing to do with it at all. I have warned you so that you
can take steps to avoid discovery and capture. I shall tell no one else
about you. Now let me go.”

She gathered Baldy and tried to rein him about, but the man clung to
her bridle.

“Not so much of a hurry, _señorita_! Unless I know how Allen told you
so much, I cannot believe that he told you anything. The police have
many ways of learning things--sometimes they use women. If you are a
friend to Allen, all right. It you are not, you know too damn much for
to be very good for your health. You had better tell me all the truth,
or you shall not ride away from here--ever!”

“Very well,” she said. “I met Allen in a house in Hollywood where he
sold his ‘snow,’ and I heard him telling the man there how you disposed
of the whisky that was stolen in New York, brought here to the coast in
a ship, and hidden in the mountains.”

“What is the name of the man in whose house you met Allen?”

“Crumb.”

The man raised his heavy brows.

“How long since you been there--in that house in Hollywood?”

“Not since the last of July. I left the house the same time Allen did.”

“You know how Allen he get in jail?” the Mexican asked.

The girl saw that a new suspicion had been aroused in the man, and she
judged that the safer plan was to be perfectly frank.

“I do not know, for I have seen neither Crumb nor Allen since; but when
I read in the paper that he had been arrested that night, I guessed
that Crumb had done it. I heard Crumb ask him to deliver some snow to
a man in Hollywood. I know that Crumb is a bad man, and that he was
trying to steal your share of the money from Allen.”

The man thought in silence for several minutes, the lines of his heavy
face evidencing the travail with which some new idea was being born.
Presently he looked up, the light of cunning gleaming in his evil eyes.

“You go now,” he said. “I know you! Allen tell me about you a long
time ago. You Crumb’s woman, and your name is Gaza. You will not tell
anything about us to your rich friends the Penningtons--you bet you
won’t!”

The Mexican laughed loudly, winking at his companions.

Shannon could feel the burning flush that suffused her face. She
closed her eyes in what was almost physical pain, so terrible did the
humiliation torture her pride, and then came the nausea of disgust. The
man had dropped her reins, and she wheeled Baldy about.

“You will not come Friday night?” she asked, wishing some assurance
that her sacrifice had not been entirely unavailing.

“Mr. Pennington will not find us Friday night, and so he will not be
shot.”

She rode away then; but there was a vague suspicion lurking in her mind
that there had been a double meaning in the man’s final words.

Custer Pennington, occupied in the office for a couple of hours after
lunch, had just come from the house, and was standing on the brow of
the hill looking out over the ranch toward the mountains. His gaze,
wandering idly at first, was suddenly riveted upon a tiny speck moving
downward from the mouth of a distant ravine--a moving speck which he
recognized, even at that distance, to be a horseman, where no horseman
should have been. For a moment he watched it, and then, returning to
the house, he brought out a pair of binoculars.

Now the speck had disappeared; but he knew that it was down in the
bottom of the basin, hidden by the ridge above Jackknife Cañon, and he
waited for the time when it would reappear on the crest. For five, ten,
fifteen minutes he watched the spot where the rider should come into
view once more. Then he saw a movement in the brush and leveled his
glasses upon the spot, following the half seen figure until it emerged
into a space clear of chaparral. Now they were clearly revealed by the
powerful lenses, the horse and its rider--Baldy and Shannon!

Pennington dropped the glasses at his side, a puzzled expression on
his face, as he tried to find some explanation of the fact that the
binoculars had revealed. From time to time he caught glimpses of her
again as she rode down the cañon; but when, after a considerable time,
she did not emerge upon the road leading to the house, he guessed that
she had crossed over El Camino Corto. Why she should do this he could
not even conjecture. It was entirely out of her way, and a hilly trail,
while the other was a wagon road leading almost directly from Sycamore
to her house.

Presently he walked around the house to the north side of the hill,
where he had a view of the valley spreading to the east and the west
and the north. Toward the west he could see the road that ran above
the Evanses’ house all the way to Horse Camp Cañon.

He did not know why he stood there watching for Shannon. It was none
of his affair where she rode, or when. It seemed strange, though, that
she should have ridden alone into the hills after having refused to
ride with him. It surprised him, and troubled him, too, for it was the
first suggestion that Shannon could commit even the most trivial act of
underhandedness.

After a while he saw her emerge from Horse Camp Cañon and follow the
road to her own place. Custer ran his fingers through his hair in
perplexity. He was troubled not only because Shannon had ridden without
him, after telling him that she could not ride that afternoon, but also
because of the direction in which she had ridden--the trail of which he
had told her that he thought it led to the solution of the mystery of
the nocturnal traffic. He had told her that he would not ride it before
Saturday, for fear of arousing the suspicions of the men he wished to
surprise in whatever activity they might be engaged upon; and within
a few hours she had ridden deliberately up into the mountains on that
very trail.

The more Custer considered the matter, the more perplexed he became. At
last he gave it up in sheer disgust. Doubtless Shannon would tell him
all about it when he called for her later in the afternoon. He tried to
forget it; but the thing would not be forgotten.

Several times he realized, with surprise, that he was hurt because she
had ridden without him. He tried to argue that he was not hurt, that it
made no difference to him, that she had a perfect right to ride with or
without him as she saw fit, and that he did not care a straw one way or
the other.

No, it was not that that was troubling him--it was something else.
He didn’t know what it was, but a drink would straighten it out; so
he took a drink. He realized that it was the first he had had in a
week, and almost decided not to take it; but he changed his mind.
After that he took several more without bothering his conscience to
any appreciable extent. When his conscience showed signs of life, he
reasoned it back to innocuous desuetude by that unanswerable argument:

“What’s the use?”

By the time he left to call for Shannon he was miserably happy and
happily miserable; yet he showed no outward sign that he had been
drinking, unless it was that he swung the roadster around the curves of
the driveway leading down the hill a bit more rapidly than usual.

Shannon was ready and waiting for him. She came out to the car with a
smile--a smile that hid a sad and frightened heart; and he greeted her
with another that equally belied his inward feelings. As they rode up
to the castle on the hill, he gave her every opportunity to mention and
explain her ride, principally by long silences, though never by any
outward indication that he thought she had aught to explain. If she did
not care to have him know about it, she should never know from him that
he already knew; but the canker of suspicion was already gnawing at
his heart, and he was realizing, perhaps for the first time, how very
desirable this new friendship had grown to be.

Again and again he insisted to himself that what she had done made
no difference--that she must have had some excellent reason. Perhaps
she had just wanted to be alone. He often had experienced a similar
longing. Even when Grace had been there, he had occasionally wanted to
ride off into the hills with nothing but his own thoughts for company.

Yet, argue as he would, the fact remained that it had made a
difference, and that he was considering Shannon now in a new light.
Just what the change meant he probably could not have satisfactorily
explained, had he tried; but he did not try. He knew that there was a
difference, and that his heart ached when it should not ache. It made
him angry with himself, with the result that he went to his room and
had another drink.

Shannon, too, felt the difference. She thought that it was her own
guilty conscience, though why she should feel guilt for having risked
so much for his sake she did not know. Instinctively she was honest,
and so to deceive one whom she loved, even for a good purpose, troubled
her.

Something else troubled her, too. She knew that Custer had been
drinking again, and she recalled what he had said to her, that morning,
of the help she had been to him in getting away from his habit. She
knew too well herself what it meant to fight for freedom from a settled
vice, and she had been glad to have been instrumental in aiding him.
She had had to fight her own battle alone; she did not want him to face
a similar ordeal.

She wondered why he had been drinking that afternoon. Could it have
been because she had not been able to ride with him, and thus left
alone he had reverted to the old habit? The girl reproached herself,
even though she felt, after her interview with the Mexicans, that she
had undoubtedly saved Custer’s life.

The Evanses, mother and son, were also at the Penningtons’ for dinner
that night. Shannon had noticed that it was with decreasing frequency
that Grace’s name was mentioned of late. She knew the reason. Letters
had become fewer and fewer from the absent girl. She had practically
ceased writing to Custer. Her letters to Mrs. Evans were no longer
read to the Penningtons, for there had crept into them a new and
unpleasant note that was as foreign as possible to the girl who had
gone away months before. They showed a certain carelessness and lack of
consideration that had pained them all.

They always asked after the absent girl, but her present life and her
career were no longer discussed, since the subject brought nothing but
sorrow to them all. That she had been disappointed and disillusioned
seemed probable, since she had obtained only a few minor parts in
mediocre pictures; and now she no longer mentioned her ambition, and
scarcely ever wrote of her work.

At dinner that night Eva was unusually quiet until the colonel,
noticing it, asked if she was ill.

“There!” she cried. “You all make life miserable for me because I talk
too much, and then, when I give you a rest, you ask if I am ill. What
shall I do? If I talk, I pain you. If I fail to talk, I pain you; but
if you must know, I am too thrilled to talk just now--I am going to be
married!”

“All alone?” inquired Custer.

A sickly purplish hue, threatening crimson complications, crept from
beneath Guy’s collar and enveloped his entire head. He reached for his
water goblet and ran the handle of his fork up his sleeve. The ensuing
disentanglement added nothing to his equanimity, though it all but
overturned the goblet. Custer was eying him with a seraphic expression
that boded ill.

“What’s the matter, Guy--measles?” he asked with a beatific smile.

Guy grinned sheepishly, and was about to venture an explanation when
Eva interrupted him. The others at the table were watching the two with
amused smiles.

“You see, momsy,” said Eva, addressing her mother, “Guy has sold a
story. He got a thousand dollars for it--a thousand!”

“Oh, not a thousand!” expostulated Guy.

“Well, it was nearly a thousand--if it had been three hundred dollars
more it would have been--and so now that our future is assured we are
going to be married. I hadn’t intended to mention it until Guy had
talked with popsy, but this will be very much nicer, and easier for
Guy.”

Guy looked up appealingly at the colonel.

“You see, sir, I was summing to key you--I mean I was----”

“You see what it is going to mean to have an author in the family,”
said Custer. “He’s going to talk away above our heads. We won’t know
what he’s talking about half the time. I don’t know. Do you, Guy?”

“For pity’s sake, Custer, leave the boy alone!” laughed Mrs.
Pennington. “You’re enough to rattle a stone image. And now, Guy, you
know you don’t have to feel embarrassed. We have all grown accustomed
to the idea that you and Eva would marry, so it is no surprise. It
makes us very happy.”

“Thank you, Mrs. Pennington,” said the boy. “It wasn’t that it was hard
to tell you. It was the way Eva wanted me to do it--like a book. I was
supposed to come and ask the colonel for her hand in a very formal
manner, and it made me feel foolish, the more I thought of it--and I
have been thinking about it all day. So, you see, when Eva blurted it
out, I thought of my silly speech and I----”

“It wasn’t a silly speech,” interrupted Eva. “It was simplimetic
gorgeristic. You thought so yourself when you made _Bruce Bellinghame_
ask _Hortense’s_ father for her. ‘_Mr. Le Claire_,’ he said, squaring
his manly shoulders, ‘it is with emotions of deepest solemnity and
a full realization of my unworthiness that I approach you upon this
beautiful day in May----’”

“Oh, for Heaven’s sake, Eva, _please_!” begged Guy.

They were all laughing now, including Eva and Guy. The tears were
rolling down Custer’s cheeks.

“That editor was guilty of grand larceny when he offered you seven
hundred berries for the story. Why, the gem alone is easily worth a
thousand. Adieu, Mark Twain! Farewell, Bill Nye! You’ve got ’em all
nailed to the post, Guy Thackeray!”

The colonel wiped his eyes.

“I gather,” he said, “that you two children wish to get married. Do I
surmise correctly?”

“Oh, popsy, you’re just wonderful!” exclaimed Eva.

“Yes, how did you guess it, father?” asked Custer. “Marvelous deductive
faculties for an old gentleman, I’ll say!”

“That will be about all from you, Custer,” admonished the colonel.

“Any time that I let a chance like this slip!” returned young
Pennington. “Do you think I have forgotten how those two imps pestered
the life out of Grace and me a few short years ago? Nay, nay!”

“I don’t blame Custer a bit,” said Mrs. Evans. “Guy and Eva certainly
did make life miserable for him and Grace.”

“That part of it is all right--it is Guy’s affair and Eva’s; but did
you hear him refer to me as an old gentleman?”

They all laughed.

“But you _are_ a gentleman,” insisted Custer.

The colonel, his eyes twinkling, turned to Mrs. Evans.

“Times have changed, Mae, since we were children. Imagine speaking thus
to our fathers!”

“I’m glad they have changed, Custer. It’s terrible to see children
afraid of their parents. It has driven so many of them away from home.”

“No danger of that here,” said the colonel.

“It is more likely to be the other way around,” suggested Mrs.
Pennington. “In the future we may hear of parents leaving home because
of the exacting tyranny of their children.”

“My children shall be brought up properly,” announced Eva, “with proper
respect for their elders.”

“Guided by the shining example of their mother,” said Custer.

“And their Uncle Cutie,” she retorted.

“Come, now,” interrupted the colonel, “let’s hear something about your
plans. When are you going to be married?”

“Yes,” offered Custer. “Now that the seven hundred dollars has assured
their future, there is no reason why they shouldn’t be married at once
and take a suite at the Ambassador. I understand they’re as low as
thirty-five hundred a month.”

“Aw, I have more than the seven hundred,” said Guy. “I’ve been saving
up for a long time. We’ll have plenty to start with.”

Shannon noticed that he flushed just a little as he made the statement,
and she alone knew why he flushed. It was too bad that Custer’s little
sister should start her married life on money of that sort!

Shannon felt that at heart Guy was a good boy--that he must have been
led into this traffic originally without any adequate realization of
its criminality. Her own misfortune had made her generously ready to
seek excuses for wrong-doing in others; but she dreaded to think what
it was going to mean to Eva and the other Penningtons if ever the truth
became known. From her knowledge of the sort of men with whom Guy was
involved, she was inclined to believe that the menace of exposure or
blackmail would hang over him for many years, even if the former did
not materialize in the near future; for she was confident that if his
confederates were discovered by the authorities, they would immediately
involve him, and would try to put the full burden of responsibility
upon his shoulders.

“I don’t want the financial end of matrimony to worry either of you,”
the colonel was saying. “Guy has chosen a profession in which it may
require years of effort to produce substantial returns. All I shall ask
of my daughter’s husband is that he shall honestly apply himself to his
work. If you do your best, Guy, you will succeed, and in the meantime
I’ll take care of the finances.”

“But we don’t want it that way,” said Eva. “We don’t want to live on
charity.”

“Do you think that what I give to my little girl would be given in a
spirit of charity?” the colonel asked.

“Oh, popsy, I know you wouldn’t feel that it was; but can’t you see how
Guy would feel? I want him to be independent. I’d rather get along with
a little, and feel that he had earned it all.”

“It may take a long time, Eva,” said Custer; “and in the meantime the
best part of your lives would be spent in worry and scrimping. I know
how you feel; but there’s a way around it that has the backing of
established business methods. Let father finance Guy’s writing ability,
just as inventive genius is sometimes financed. When Guy succeeds, he
can pay back with interest.”

“What a dapper little thought!” exclaimed the girl. “That would fix
everything, wouldn’t it? You radiant man!”



CHAPTER XXI


On the following Monday a pock-marked Mexican appeared at the county
jail in Los Angeles, during visitors’ hours, and asked to be permitted
to see Slick Allen. The two stood in a corner and conversed in
whispers. Allen’s face wore an ugly scowl when his visitor told him of
young Pennington’s interference with their plans.

“It’s getting too hot for us around there,” said Allen. “We got to
move. How much junk you got left?”

“About sixty cases of booze. We got rid of nearly three hundred cases
on the coast side, without sending ’em through Evans. There isn’t much
of the other junk left--a couple pounds altogether, at the outside.”

“We got to lose the last of the booze,” said Allen; “but we’ll get our
money’s worth out of it. Now you listen, and listen careful, Bartolo.”

He proceeded very carefully and explicitly to explain the details of
a plan which brought a grin of sinister amusement to the face of the
Mexican. It was not an entirely new plan, but rather an elaboration and
improvement of one that Allen had conceived some time before in the
event of a contingency similar to that which had now arisen.

“And what about the girl?” asked Bartolo. “She should pay well to keep
the Penningtons from knowing.”

“Leave her to me,” replied Allen. “I shall not be in jail forever.”

During the ensuing days of that late September week, when Shannon and
Custer rode together, there was a certain constraint in their relations
that was new and depressing. The girl was apprehensive of the outcome
of his adventure on the rapidly approaching Friday, while he could not
rid himself of the haunting memory of her solitary and clandestine ride
over the mysterious trail that led into the mountains.

It troubled him that she should have kept the thing a secret, and it
troubled him that he should care. What difference could it make to him
where Shannon Burke rode? He asked himself that question a hundred
times; but though he always answered that it could make no difference,
he knew perfectly well that it _had_ made a difference.

He often found himself studying her face, as if he would find there
either an answer to his question, or a refutation of the suspicion of
trickery and deceit which had arisen in his mind and would not down.
What a beautiful face it was--not despite its irregular features, but
because of them, and because of the character and individuality they
imparted to her appearance. Custer could not look upon that face and
doubt her.

Several times she caught him in the act of scrutinizing her thus,
and she wondered at it, for in the past he had never appeared to be
consciously studying her. She was aware, too, that he was troubled
about something. She wished that she might ask him--that she might
invite his confidence, for she knew the pain of unshared sorrows; but
he gave her no opening. So they rode together, often in silence; and
though their stirrups touched many a time, yet constantly they rode
farther and farther apart, just because chance had brought Custer
Pennington from the office that Saturday afternoon to look out over the
southern hills at the moment when Shannon had ridden down the trail
into the meadow above Jackknife Cañon.

At last Friday came. Neither had reverted, since the previous Saturday,
to the subject that was uppermost in the mind of each; but now Shannon
could not refrain from seeking once more to deter Custer from his
project. She had not been able to forget the sinister smile of the
Mexican, or to rid her mind of an intuitive conviction that the man’s
final statement had concealed a hidden threat.

They were parting at the fork of the road--she had hesitated until the
last moment.

“You still intend to try to catch those men to-night?” she asked.

“Yes--why?”

“I had hoped you would give it up. I am afraid something may happen.
I--oh, please don’t go, Custer!” She wished that she might add: “For my
sake.”

He laughed shortly.

“I guess there won’t be any trouble. If there is, I can take care of
myself.”

She saw that it was useless to insist further.

“Let me know if everything is all right,” she asked. “Light the light
in the big cupola on the house when you get back--I can see it from
my bedroom window--and then I shall know that nothing has happened. I
shall be watching for it.”

“All right,” Custer promised, and they parted.

He wondered why she should be so perturbed about his plans for the
night. There was something peculiar about that--something that he
couldn’t understand or explain, except in accordance with a single
hypothesis--a hypothesis which he scorned to consider, yet which rode
his thoughts like a veritable _Little Old Man of the Sea_. Had he known
the truth, it would all have been quite understandable; but how was he
to know that Shannon Burke loved him?

When he reached the house, the ranch bookkeeper came to tell him that
the Los Angeles operator had been trying to get him all afternoon.

“Somebody in L. A. wants to talk to you on important business,” said
the bookkeeper. “You’re to call back the minute you get here.”

Five minutes later he had his connection. An unfamiliar voice asked if
he were the younger Mr. Pennington.

“I am,” he replied.

“Some one cut your fence last Friday. You like to know who he is?”

“What about it? Who are you?”

“Never mind who I am. I was with them. They double-crossed me. You want
to catch ’em?”

“I want to know who they are, and why they cut my fence, and what the
devil they’re up to back there in the hills.”

“You listen to me. You _sabe_ Jackknife Cañon?”

“Yes.”

“To-night they bring down the load just before dark. They do that
every Friday, and hide the burros until very late. Then they come down
into the valley while every one is asleep. To-night they hide ’em in
Jackknife. They tie ’em there an’ go away. About ten o’clock they come
back. You be there nine o’clock, and you catch ’em when they come back.
_Sabe?_”

“How many of ’em are there?”

“Only two. You don’t have to be afraid--they don’t pack no guns. You
take gun an’ you catch ’em all alone.”

“But how do I know that you’re not stringing me?”

“You listen. They double-cross me. I get even. You no want to catch
’em, I no care--that’s all. Good-by!”

Custer turned away from the phone, running his fingers through his hair
in a characteristic gesture signifying perplexity. What should he do?
The message sounded rather fishy, he thought; but it would do no harm
to have a look into Jackknife Cañon around nine o’clock. If he was
being tricked, the worst he could fear was that they had taken this
method of luring him to Jackknife while they brought the loaded burros
down from the hills by some other route. If they had done that, it was
very clever of them; but he would not be fooled a second time.

Custer Pennington didn’t care to be laughed at, and so, if he was
going to be hoaxed that night, he had no intention of having a witness
to his idiocy. For that reason he did not take Jake with him, but
rode alone up Sycamore when all the inmates of the castle on the hill
thought him in bed and asleep. It was a clear night. Objects were
plainly discernible at short distances, and when he passed the horse
pasture he saw the dim bulks of the brood mares a hundred yards away. A
coyote voiced its uncanny cry from a near hill. An owl hooted dismally
from a distance; but these sounds, rather than depressing him, had the
opposite effect, for they were of the voices of the nights that he had
known and loved since childhood.

When he turned into Jackknife, he reined the Apache in and sat for a
moment listening. From farther up the cañon, out of sight, there came
the shadow of a sound. That would be the tethered burros, he thought,
if the whole thing was not a trick; but he was certain that he heard
the sound of something moving there.

He rode on again, but he took the precaution of loosening his gun in
its holster. There was, of course, the bare possibility of a sinister
motive behind the message he had received. As he thought of it now, it
occurred to him that his informant was perhaps a trifle too insistent
in assuring him that it was safe to come up here alone. Well, the man
had put it over cleverly, if that had been his intent.

Now Custer saw a dark mass beneath a sycamore. He rode directly toward
it, and in another moment he saw that it represented half a dozen laden
burros tethered to the tree. He moved the Apache close in to examine
them. There was no sign of men about.

He examined the packs, leaning over and feeling one. What they
contained he could not guess; but it was not firewood. They evidently
consisted of six wooden boxes to each burro, three on a side.

He reined the Apache in behind the burros in the darkness of the tree’s
shade, and there he waited for the coming of the men. He did not like
the look of things at all. What could those boxes contain? There was
no legitimate traffic through or out of those hills that could explain
the weekly trip of this little pack train; and if the men in charge
of it were employed in any illegitimate traffic, they would not be
surrendering to a lone man as meekly as his informant had suggested.
The days of smuggling through the hills from the ocean was over--or at
least Custer had thought it was over; but this thing commenced to look
like a recrudescence of the old-time commerce.

As he sat there waiting, he had ample time to think. He speculated upon
the identity and purpose of the mysterious informant who had called
him up from Los Angeles. He speculated again upon the contents of the
packs. He recalled the whisky that Guy had sold him from time to time,
and wondered if the packs might not contain liquor. He had gathered
from Guy that his supply came from Los Angeles, and he had never
given the matter a second thought; but now he recalled the fact, and
concluded that if this was whisky, it was not from the same source as
Guy’s.

All the time he kept thinking of Shannon and her mysterious excursion
into the hills. He recalled her anxiety to prevent him from coming up
here to-night, and he tried to find reasonable explanations for it. Of
course, it was the obvious explanation that did not occur to him; but
several did occur that he tried to put from his mind.

Then from the mouth of Jackknife he heard the sound of horses’ hoofs.
The Apache pricked up his ears, and Custer leaned forward and laid a
hand upon his nostrils.

“Quiet, boy!” he admonished, in a low whisper.

The sounds approached slowly, halting occasionally. Presently two
horsemen rode directly past him on the far side of the cañon. They
rode at a brisk trot. Apparently they did not see the pack train, or,
if they saw it, they paid no attention to it. They disappeared in the
darkness, and the sound of their horses’ hoofs ceased. Pennington knew
that they had halted. Who could they be? Certainly not the drivers of
the pack train, else they would have stopped with the burros.

He listened intently. Presently he heard horses walking slowly
toward him from up the cañon. The two who had passed were coming
back--stealthily.

“I sure have got myself in a pretty trap!” he soliloquized a moment
later, when he heard the movement of mounted men in the cañon below him.

He drew his gun and sat waiting. It was not long that he had to wait. A
voice coming from a short distance down the cañon addressed him.

“Ride out into the open and hold up your hands!” it said. “We got you
surrounded and covered. If you make a break, we’ll bore you. Come on,
now, step lively--and keep your hands up!”

It was the voice of an American.

“Who in thunder are you?” demanded Pennington.

“I am a United States marshal,” was the quick reply.

Pennington laughed. There was something convincing in the very tone
of the man’s voice--possibly because Custer had been expecting to
meet Mexicans. Here was a hoax indeed; but evidently as much on the
newcomers as on himself. They had expected to find a lawbreaker. They
would doubtless be angry when they discovered that they had been duped.

Custer rode slowly out from beneath the tree.

“Hold up your hands, Mr. Pennington!” snapped the marshal.

Custer Pennington was nonplused. They knew who he was, and yet they
demanded that he should hold up his hands like a common criminal.

“Hold on there!” he cried. “What’s the joke? If you know who I am, what
do you want me to hold up my hands for? How do I know you’re a marshal?”

“You don’t know it; but I know that you’re armed, and that you’re in a
mighty bad hole. I don’t know what you might do, and I ain’t taking no
chances. So stick ’em up, and do it quick. If anybody’s going to get
bored around here it’ll be you, and not none of my men!”

“You’re a damned fool,” said Pennington succinctly; but he held his
hands before his shoulders, as he had been directed.

Five men rode from the shadows and surrounded him. One of them
dismounted and disarmed him. He lowered his hands and looked about at
them.

“Would you mind,” he said, “showing me your authority for this, and
telling me what in hell it’s all about?”

One of the men threw back his coat, revealing a silver shield.

“That’s my authority,” he said; “that, and the goods we got on you.”

“What goods?”

“Well, we expect to get ’em when we examine those packs.”

“Look here!” said Custer. “You’re all wrong. I have nothing to do with
that pack train or what it’s packing. I came up here to catch the
fellows who have been bringing it down through Ganado every Friday
night, and who cut our fence last week. I don’t know any more about
what’s in those packs than you do--evidently not as much.”

“That’s all right, Mr. Pennington. You’ll probably get a chance to tell
all that to a jury. We been laying for you since last spring. We didn’t
know it was you until one of your gang squealed; but we knew that this
stuff was somewhere in the hills above L. A., and we aimed to get it
and you sooner or later.”

“Me?”

“Well, not you particularly, but whoever was bootlegging it. To tell
you the truth, I’m plumb surprised to find who it is. I thought
all along it was some gang of cheap greasers; but it don’t make no
difference who it is to your Uncle Sam.”

“You say some one told you it was I?” asked Custer.

“Sure! How else would we know it? It don’t pay to double-cross your
pals, Mr. Pennington.”

“What are you going to do with me?” he asked.

“We’re going to take you back to L. A. and get you held to the Federal
grand jury.”

“To-night?”

“We’re going to take you back to-night.”

“Can I stop at the house first?”

“No. We got a warrant to search the place, and we’re going to leave a
couple of my men here to do it the first thing in the morning. I got
an idea you ain’t the only one around there that knows something about
this business.”

As they talked, one of the deputies had taken a case from a pack and
opened it.

“Look here!” he called. “It’s it, all right!”

“It’s what?” asked Custer.

“Oh, pe-ru-na, of course!” replied the deputy facetiously. “What did
you think it was? I hope you never thought it none of that hootch
stolen from a government bonded warehouse in New York!”

The others laughed at his joke.

“It’s too bad,” said the marshal, not at all unkindly, “for a decent
young fellow like you to get mixed up in a nasty business like this.”

“I agree with you,” said Pennington.

His mind traveled like lightning, flashing a picture of Shannon Burke
riding out of the hills and across the meadow above Jackknife Cañon;
of her inquiry that very afternoon as to whether he was coming up
here to-night. Had she really wished to dissuade him, or had she only
desired to make sure of his intentions? The light would not shine from
the big cupola to-night. What message would the darkness carry to
Shannon Burke?



CHAPTER XXII


They took Custer down to the village of Ganado, where they had left
their cars and obtained horses. Here they left the animals, including
the Apache, with instructions that he should be returned to the Rancho
del Ganado in the morning.

The inhabitants of the village, almost to a man, had grown up in
neighborly friendship with the Penningtons. When he from whom the
officers had obtained their mounts discovered the identity of the
prisoner, his surprise was exceeded only by his anger.

“If I’d known who you was after,” he said, “you’d never have got no
horses from me. I’d ’a’ hamstrung ’em first! I’ve known Cus Pennington
since he was knee high to a grasshopper, and whatever you took him for
he never done it. Wait till the colonel hears of this. You won’t have
no more job than a jack rabbit!”

The marshal turned threateningly toward the speaker.

“Shut up!” he advised. “If Colonel Pennington hears of this before
morning, you’ll wish to God you was a jack rabbit, and could get out of
the country in two jumps! Now you get what I’m telling you--you’re to
keep your trap closed until morning. Hear me?”

“I ain’t deaf, but sometimes I’m a leetle mite dumb.” The last he added
in a low aside to Pennington, accompanying it with a wink; and aloud:
“I’m mighty sorry, Cus--_mighty_ sorry. If I’d only knowed it was you!
By gosh, I’ll never get over this--furnishin’ horses to help arrest a
friend, and a Pennington!”

“Don’t worry about that for a minute, Jim. I haven’t done anything.
It’s just a big mistake.”

The officers and their prisoner were in the car ready to start. The
marshal pointed a finger at Jim.

“Don’t forget what I told you about keeping your mouth shut until
morning,” he admonished.

They drove off toward Los Angeles. Jim watched them for a moment, as
the red tail light diminished in the distance. Then he turned into the
office of his feed barn and took the telephone receiver from its hook.
“Gimme Ganado No. 1,” he said to the sleepy night operator.

It was five minutes before continuous ringing brought the colonel to
the extension telephone in his bedroom. He seemed unable to comprehend
the meaning of what Jim was trying to tell him, so sure was he that
Custer was in bed and asleep in a near-by room; but at last he was
half convinced, for he had known Jim for many years, and well knew his
stability and his friendship.

“If it was anybody but you, Jim, I’d say you were a damned liar,” he
commented in characteristic manner; “but what in hell did they take the
boy for?”

“They wouldn’t say. Just as I told ’em. I don’t know what he done, but
I know he never done it.”

“You’re right, Jim--my boy couldn’t do a crooked thing!”

“I’m just like you, colonel--I know there ain’t a crooked hair in Cus
Pennington’s head. If there’s anything I can do, colonel, you jest let
me know.”

“You’ll bring the Apache up in the morning? Thank you again, Jim, and
good-by.”

He hung up the receiver. While he dressed hastily, he explained to his
wife the purport of the message he had just received.

“What are you going to do, Custer?” she asked.

“I’m going to Los Angeles, Julia. Unless that marshal’s driving a
racing car, I’ll be waiting for him when he gets there!”

Shortly before breakfast the following morning two officers, armed with
a warrant, searched the castle on the hill. In Custer Pennington’s
closet they found something which seemed to fill them with elation--two
full bottles of whisky and an empty bottle, each bearing a label
identical with those on the bottles they had found in the cases borne
by the burros. With this evidence and the laden pack train, they
started off toward the village.

Shannon Burke had put in an almost sleepless night. For hours she
had lain watching the black silhouette of the big cupola against the
clear sky, waiting for the light which would announce that Custer had
returned home in safety; but no light had shone to relieve her anxiety.
She had strained her ears through the long hours of the night for the
sound of shooting from the hills; but only the howling of coyotes
and the hooting of owls had disturbed the long silence. She sought
to assure herself that all was well--that Custer had returned and
forgotten to switch on the cupola light--that he had not forgotten, but
that the bulb was burned out. She manufactured probable and improbable
explanations by the score; but always a disturbing premonition of evil
dispersed the cohorts of hope.

She was up early in the morning, and in the saddle at the first streak
of dawn, riding directly to the stables of the Rancho del Ganado. The
stableman was there, saddling the horses while they fed.

“No one has come down yet?” she asked.

“The Apache’s gone,” he replied. “I don’t understand it. He hasn’t been
in his box all night. I was just thinkin’ of goin’ up to the house to
see if Custer was there. Don’t seem likely he’d be ridin’ all night,
does it?”

“No,” she said. Her heart was in her mouth. She could scarcely speak.
“I’ll ride up for you,” she managed to say.

Wheeling Baldy, she put him up the steep hill to the house. The iron
gate that closed the patio arch at night was still down, so she rode
around to the north side of the house and _coo-hooed_ to attract the
attention of some one within. Mrs. Pennington, followed by Eva, came to
the door. Both were fully dressed. When they saw who it was, they came
out and told Shannon what had happened.

He was not injured, then. The sudden sense of relief left her
weak, and for a moment she did not consider the other danger that
confronted him. He was safe! That was all she cared about just then.
Later she commenced to realize the gravity of his situation, and the
innocent part that she had taken in involving him in the toils of the
scheme which her interference must have suggested to those actually
responsible for the traffic in stolen liquor, the guilt of which
they had now cleverly shifted to the shoulders of an innocent man.
Intuitively she guessed Slick Allen’s part in the unhappy contretemps
of the previous night; for she knew of the threats he had made against
Custer Pennington, and of his complicity in the criminal operations of
the bootleggers.

How much she knew! More than any other, she knew all the details of
the whole tragic affair. She alone could untangle the knotted web,
and yet she dared not until there was no other way. She dared not let
them guess that she knew more of the matter than they. She could not
admit such knowledge without revealing the source of it and exposing
herself to the merited contempt of these people whose high regard had
become her obsession, whose friendship was her sole happiness, and the
love she had conceived for one of them the secret altar at which she
worshiped.

In the last extremity, if there was no alternative, she would sacrifice
everything for him. To that her love committed her; but she would wait
until there was no other way. She had suffered so grievously through no
fault of her own that she clung with desperation to the brief happiness
which had come into her life, and which was now threatened, once again
because of no wrong-doing on her part.

Fate had been consistently unkind to her. Was it fair that she should
suffer always for the wickedness of another? She had at least the right
to hope and wait.

But there was something that she could do. When she turned Baldy down
the hill from the Penningtons’, she took the road home that led past
the Evanses’ ranch, and, turning in, dismounted and tied Baldy at the
fence. Her knock was answered by Mrs. Evans.

“Is Guy here?” asked Shannon.

Hearing her voice, Guy came from his room, drawing on his coat.

“You’re getting as bad as the Penningtons,” he said, laughing. “They
have no respect for Christian hours!”

“Something has happened,” she said, “that I thought you should know
about. Custer was arrested last night by government officers and taken
to Los Angeles. He was out on the Apache at the time. No one seems to
know where he was arrested, or why; but the supposition is that they
found him in the hills, for the man who runs the feed barn in the
village--Jim--told the colonel that the officers got horses from him
and rode up toward the ranch, and that it was a couple of hours later
that they brought Custer back on the Apache. The stableman just told me
that the Apache had not been in his stall all night, and I know--Custer
told me not to tell, but it will make no difference now--that he was
going up into the hills last night to try to catch the men who have
been bringing down loads on burros every Friday night for a long time,
and who cut his fence last Friday.”

She looked straight into Guy’s eyes as she spoke; but he dropped his as
a flush mounted his cheek.

“I thought,” she continued, “that Guy might want to go to Los Angeles
and see if he could help Custer in any way. The colonel went last
night.”

“I’ll go now,” said Guy. “I guess I can help him.”

His voice was suddenly weary, and he turned away with an air of
dejection which assured Shannon that he intended to do the only
honorable thing that he could do--assume the guilt that had been thrown
upon Custer’s shoulders, no matter what the consequences to himself.
She had had little doubt that Guy would do this, for she realized
his affection for Custer, as well as the impulsive generosity of his
nature, which, however marred by weakness, was still fine by instinct.

Half an hour later, after a hasty breakfast, young Evans started for
Los Angeles, while his mother and Shannon, standing on the porch of
the bungalow, waved their good-bys as his roadster swung through the
gate into the county road. Mrs. Evans had only a vague idea as to what
her son could do to assist Custer Pennington out of his difficulty;
but Shannon Burke knew that Pennington’s fate lay in the hands of Guy
Evans, unless she chose to tell what she knew.

Colonel Pennington had overtaken the marshal’s car before the
latter reached Los Angeles, but after a brief parley on the road
he had discovered that he could do nothing to alter the officer’s
determination to place Custer in the county jail pending his
preliminary hearing before a United States commissioner. Neither the
colonel’s plea that his son should be allowed to accompany him to a
hotel for the night, nor his assurance that he would be personally
responsible for the young man’s appearance before the commissioner on
the following morning, availed to move the obdurate marshal from his
stand; nor would he permit the colonel to talk with the prisoner.

This was the last straw. Colonel Pennington had managed to dissemble
outward indications of his rising ire, but now an amused smile lighted
his son’s face as he realized that his father was upon the verge of an
explosion. He caught the older man’s eye and shook his head.

“It’ll only make it worse,” he cautioned.

The colonel directed a parting glare at the marshal, muttered something
about homeopathic intellects, and turned back to his roadster.



CHAPTER XXIII


During the long ride to Los Angeles, and later in his cell in the
county jail, Custer Pennington had devoted many hours to seeking an
explanation of the motives underlying the plan to involve him in
a crime of which he had no knowledge, nor even a suspicion of the
identity of its instigators. To his knowledge, he had no enemies whose
hostility was sufficiently active to lead them to do him so great a
wrong. He had had no trouble with any one recently, other than his
altercation with Slick Allen several months before; yet it was obvious
that he had been deliberately sacrificed for some ulterior purpose.
What that purpose was he could only surmise.

The most logical explanation, he finally decided, was that those
actually responsible, realizing that discovery was imminent, had sought
to divert suspicion from themselves by fastening it upon another.
That they had selected him as the victim might easily be explained
on the ground that his embarrassing interest in their movements had
already centered their attention upon him, while it also offered
the opportunity for luring him into the trap without arousing his
suspicions.

It was, then, just a combination of circumstances that had led him
into his present predicament; but there still remained unanswered one
question that affected his peace of mind more considerably than all
the others combined. Who had divulged to the thieves his plans for the
previous night?

Concurrently with that question there arose before his mind’s eye a
picture of Shannon Burke and Baldy as they topped the summit above
Jackknife from the trail that led across the basin meadow back into the
hills, he knew not where.

“I can’t believe that it was she,” he told himself for the hundredth
time. “She could not have done it. I won’t believe it! She could
explain it all if I could ask her; but I can’t ask her. There is a
great deal that I cannot understand, and the most inexplicable thing
is that she could possibly have had any connection whatever with the
affair.”

When his father came with an attorney, in the morning, the son made no
mention of Shannon Burke’s ride into the hills, or of her anxiety, when
they parted in the afternoon, to learn if he was going to carry out his
plan for Friday night.

“Did any one know of your intention to watch for these men?” asked the
attorney.

“No one,” he replied; “but they might have become suspicious from the
fact that the week before I had all the gates padlocked on Friday. They
had to cut the fence that night to get through. They probably figured
that it was getting too hot for them, and that on the following Friday
I would take some other steps to discover them. Then they made sure of
it by sending me that message from Los Angeles. Gee, but I bit like a
sucker!”

“It is unfortunate,” remarked the attorney, “that you had not discussed
your plans with some one before you undertook to carry them out on
Friday night. If we could thus definitely establish your motive for
going alone into the hills, and to the very spot where you were
discovered with the pack train, I think it would go much further toward
convincing the court that you were there without any criminal intent
than your own unsupported testimony to that effect!”

“But haven’t you his word for it?” demanded the colonel.

“I am not the court,” replied the attorney, smiling.

“Well, if the court isn’t a damned fool it’ll know he wouldn’t have
padlocked the gates the week before to keep himself out,” stated the
colonel conclusively.

“The government might easily assume that he did that purposely to
divert suspicion from himself. At least, it is no proof of innocence.”

Colonel Pennington snorted.

“The best thing to do now,” said the attorney, “is to see if we can get
an immediate hearing, and arrange for bail in case he is held to the
grand jury.”

“I’ll go with you,” said the colonel.

They had been gone but a short time when Guy Evans was admitted to
Custer’s cell. The latter looked up and smiled when he saw who his
visitor was.

“It was bully of you to come,” he said. “Bringing condolences, or
looking for material, old thing?”

“Don’t joke, Cus,” exclaimed Evans. “It’s too rotten to joke about, and
it’s all my fault.”

“Your fault?”

“I am the guilty one. I’ve come down to give myself up.”

“Guilty! Give yourself up! What are you talking about?”

“God, Cus, I hate to tell you. It didn’t seem such an awful thing to
do until this happened. Every one’s buying booze, or selling booze, or
making booze. Every one’s breaking the damned old Eighteenth Amendment,
and it’s got so it don’t seem like committing a crime, or anything like
that. You know, Cus, that I wouldn’t do anything criminal, and, oh,
God, what’ll Eva think?”

Guy covered his face with his hands and choked back a sob.

“Just what the devil are you talking about?” inquired Pennington.
“Do you mean to tell me that you have been mixed up in--well, what
do you know about that?” A sudden light had dawned upon Custer’s
understanding. “That hootch that you’ve been getting me--that I joked
you about--it was really the stuff that was stolen from a bonded
warehouse in New York? It wasn’t any joke at all?”

“You can see for yourself now how much of a joke it was,” replied
Evans.

“I’ll admit,” returned Custer ruefully, “that it does require
considerable of a sense of humor to see it in this joint!”

“What do you suppose they’ll do to me?” asked Guy. “Do you suppose
they’ll send me to the penitentiary?”

“Tell me the whole thing from the beginning--who got you into it,
and just what you’ve done. Don’t omit a thing, no matter how much it
incriminates you. I don’t need to tell you, old man, that I’m for you,
no matter what you’ve done.”

“I know that, Cus; but I’m afraid no one can help me. I’m in for it. I
knew it was stolen from the start. I have been selling it since last
May--seven thousand seven hundred and seventy-six quarts of it--and
I made a dollar on every quart. It was what I was going to start
housekeeping on. Poor little Eva!” Again a sob half choked him. “It
was Slick Allen that started me. First he sold me some; then he got me
to sell you a bottle, and bring him the money. Then he had me, or at
least he made me think so; and he insisted on my handling it for them
out in the valley. It wasn’t hard to persuade me, for it looked safe,
and it didn’t seem like such a rotten thing to do, and I wanted the
money the worst way. I know they’re all bum excuses. I shan’t make any
excuses--I’ll take my medicine; but it’s when I think of Eva that it
hurts. It’s only Eva that counts!”

“Yes,” said Pennington, laying his hand affectionately on the other’s
shoulder. “It is only Eva who counts; and because of Eva, and because
you and I love her so much, you cannot go to the penitentiary.”

“What do you mean--cannot go?”

“Have you told any one else what you have just told me?”

“No.”

“Don’t. Go back home, and keep your mouth shut,” said Custer.

“You mean that you will take a chance of going up for what I did?
Nothing doing! Do you suppose I’d let you, Cus, the best friend I’ve
got in the world, go to the pen for me--for something I did?”

“It’s not for you, Guy. I wouldn’t go to the pen for you or any other
man; but I’d go to the pen for Eva, and so would you.”

“I know it, but I can’t let you do it. I’m not rotten, Cus!”

“You and I don’t count. To see her unhappy and humiliated would be
worse for me than spending a few years in the penitentiary. I’m
innocent. No matter if I am convicted, I’ll know I’m innocent, and
Eva’ll know it, and so will all the rest at Ganado; but, Guy, they’ve
got too much on you if they ever suspect you, and the fact that you
voluntarily admitted your guilt would convince even my little sister.
If you were sent up it might ruin her life--it _would_ ruin it. Things
could never be the same for her again; but if I was sentenced for a few
years, it would only be the separation from a brother whom she knew to
be innocent, and in whom she still had undiminished confidence. She
wouldn’t be humiliated--her life wouldn’t be ruined; and when I came
back everything would be just as it was before. If you go, things will
not be the same when you come back--they can never be the same again.
You cannot go!”

“I cannot let you go, and be punished for what I did, while I remain
free!”

“You’ve got to--it’s the easiest way. We’ve all got to be punished for
what you did--those who love us are always punished for our sins; but
let me tell you that I don’t think you are going to escape punishment
if I go up for this. You’re going to suffer more than I. You’re going
to suffer more than you would if you went up yourself; but it can’t be
helped. The question is, are you man enough to do this for Eva? It is
your sacrifice more than mine.”

Evans swallowed hard and tried to speak. It was a moment before he
succeeded.

“My God, Cus, I’d rather go myself!”

“I know you would.”

“I can never have any self-respect again. I can never look a decent man
in the face. Every time I see Eva, or your mother, or the colonel, I’ll
think: ‘You dirty cur, you let their boy go to the pen for something
you did!’ Oh, Cus, please don’t ask me to do it! There must be some
other way. And--and, Cus, think of Grace. We’ve been forgetting Grace.
What’ll it mean to Grace if you are sent up?”

“It won’t mean anything to Grace, and you know it. None of us mean much
to Grace any more.”

Guy looked out of the little barred window, and tears came to his eyes.

“I guess you’re right,” he said.

“You’re going to do it, Guy--for Eva?”

“For Eva--yes.”

Pennington brightened up as if a great load had been lifted from his
shoulders.

“Good!” he cried. “Now the chances are that I’ll not be sent up, for
they’ve nothing on me--they can’t have; but if I am, you’ve got to take
my place with the folks. You’ve had your lesson. I know you’ll never
pull another fool stunt like this again. And quit drinking, Guy. I
haven’t much excuse for preaching; but you’re the sort that can’t do
it. Leave it alone. Good-by, now; I’d rather you were not here when
father comes back--you might weaken.”

Evans took the other’s hand.

“I envy you, Cus--on the level, I do!”

“I know it; but don’t feel too bad about it. It’s one of those things
that’s done, and it can’t be undone. Roosevelt would have called what
you’ve got to do ‘grasping the nettle.’ Grasp it like a man!”

Evans walked slowly from the jail, entered his car, and drove away. Of
the two hearts his was the heavier; of the two burdens his the more
difficult to bear.

Custer Pennington, appearing before a United States commissioner
that afternoon for his preliminary hearing, was held to the Federal
grand jury, and admitted to bail. The evidence brought by the deputies
who had searched the Pennington home, taken in connection with the
circumstances surrounding his arrest, seemed to leave the commissioner
no alternative. Even the colonel had to admit that to himself, though
he would never have admitted it to another. The case would probably
come up before the grand jury on the following Wednesday.

The colonel wanted to employ detectives at once to ferret out those
actually responsible for the theft and bootlegging of the stolen
whisky; but Custer managed to persuade him not to do so, on the ground
that it would be a waste of time and money, since the government was
already engaged upon a similar pursuit.

“Don’t worry, father,” he said. “They haven’t a shred of evidence
that I stole the whisky, or that I ever sold any. They found me with
it--that is all. I can’t be hanged for that. Let them do the worrying.
I want to get home in time to eat one of Hannah’s dinners. I’ll say
they don’t set much of a table in the sheriff’s boarding house!”

“Where did you get the three bottles they found in your room?”

“I bought them.”

“I asked where, not how.”

“I might get some one else mixed up in this if I were to answer that
question. I can’t do it.”

“No,” said the colonel, “you can’t. When you buy whisky, nowadays, you
are usually compounding a felony. It’s certainly a rotten condition
to obtain in the land of the free; but you’ve got to protect your
accomplices. I shall not ask you again; but they’ll ask you in court,
my boy.”

“All the good it’ll do them!”

“I suppose so; but I’d hate to see my boy sent to the penitentiary.”

“You’d hate to be in court and hear him divulge the name of a man who
had trusted him sufficiently to sell him whisky.”

“I’d rather see you go to the penitentiary!” the colonel said.

That night, at dinner, Custer made light of the charge against him,
yet at the same time he prepared them for what might happen, for
the proceedings before the commissioner had impressed him with the
gravity of his case, as had also the talk he had had with his attorney
afterward.

“No matter what happens,” he said to them all, “I shall know that you
know I am not guilty.”

“My boy’s word is all I need,” replied his mother.

Eva came and put her arms about him.

“They wouldn’t send you to jail, would they?” she demanded. “It would
break my heart!”

“Not if you knew I was innocent.”

“N-no, not then, I suppose; but it would be awful. If you were guilty,
it would kill me. I’d never want to live if my brother was convicted of
a crime, and was guilty of it. I’d kill myself first!”

Her brother drew her face down and kissed her tenderly.

“That would be foolish, dear,” he said. “No matter what one of us does,
such an act would make it all the worse--for those who were left.”

“I can’t help it,” she said. “It isn’t just because I have had the
honor of the Penningtons preached to me all my life. It’s because it’s
in me--the Pennington honor. It’s a part of me, just as it’s a part of
you, and mother, and father. It’s a part of the price we have to pay
for being Penningtons. I have always been proud of it, Custer, even if
I am only a silly girl.”

“I’m proud of it, too, and I haven’t jeopardized it; but even if I had,
you mustn’t think about killing yourself on my account, or any one’s
else.”

“Well, I know you’re not guilty, so I don’t have to.”

“Good! Let’s talk about something pleasant.”

“Why didn’t you see Grace while you were in Los Angeles?”

“I tried to. I called up her boarding place from the lawyer’s office. I
understood the woman who answered the phone to say that she would call
her, but she came back in a couple of minutes and said that Grace was
out on location.”

“Did you leave your name?”

“I told the woman who I was when she answered the phone.”

“I’m sorry you didn’t see her,” said Mrs. Pennington. “I often think
that Mrs. Evans, or Guy, should run down to Los Angeles occasionally
and see Grace.”

“That’s what Shannon says,” said Custer. “I’ll try to see her next
week, before I come home.”

“Shannon was up nearly all afternoon waiting to hear if we received
any word from you. When you telephoned that you had been held to the
Federal grand jury, she would scarcely believe it. She said there must
be some mistake.”

“Did she say anything else?”

“She asked whether Guy got there before you were held and I told her
that you said Guy visited you in the jail. She seems so worried about
the affair--just as if she were one of the family. She is such a dear
girl! I think I grow to love her more and more every day.”

“Yes,” said Custer, non-committally.

“She asked me one rather peculiar question,” Eva went on.

“What was that?”

“She asked if I was _sure_ that it was _you_ who had been held to the
grand jury.”

“That was odd, wasn’t it?”

“She’s so sure of your innocence--just as sure as we are,” said Eva.

“Well, that’s very nice of her,” remarked Custer.



CHAPTER XXIV


The next morning he saw Shannon, who came to ride with them, the
Penningtons, as had been her custom. She looked tired, as if she had
spent a sleepless night. She had--she had spent two sleepless nights,
and she had had to fight the old fight all over again. It had been very
hard, even though she had won, for it had shown her that the battle was
not over. She had thought that she had conquered the craving; but that
had been when she had had no troubles or unhappiness to worry her mind
and nerves. The last two days had been days of suffering for her, and
the two sleepless nights had induced a nervous condition that begged
for the quieting influence of the little white powder.

Custer noticed immediately that something was amiss. The roses were
gone from her cheeks, leaving a suggestion of the old pallor; and
though she smiled and greeted him happily, he thought that he detected
an expression of wistfulness and pain in her face when she was not
conscious that others were observing her.

There was a strange suggestion of change in their relations, which
Custer did not attempt to analyze. It was as if he had been gone a long
time, and, returning, had found Shannon changed through the natural
processes of time and separation. She was not the same girl--she could
never be the same again, nor could their relations ever be the same.

The careless freedom of their association, which had resembled that of
a brother and sister more than any other relationship between a man and
a woman, had gone forever. What had replaced it Custer did not know.
Sometimes he thought that it was a suspicion of Shannon that clung to
his mind in spite of himself, but again and again he assured himself
that he held no suspicion of her.

He wished, though, that she would explain that which was to him
inexplicable. He had the faith to believe that she could explain it
satisfactorily; but would she do so? She had had the opportunity,
before this thing had occurred, and had not taken advantage of it. He
would give her another opportunity that day, and he prayed that she
would avail herself of it. Why he should care so much, he did not try
to reason. He did not even realize how much he did care.

Presently he turned toward her.

“I am going to ride over to the east pasture after breakfast,” he said,
and waited.

“Is that an invitation?”

He smiled and nodded.

“But not if it isn’t perfectly convenient,” he added.

“I’d love to come with you. You know I always do.”

“Fine! And you’ll breakfast with us?”

“Not to-day. I have a couple of letters to write that I want to get off
right away; but I’ll be up between eight thirty and nine. Is that too
late?”

“I’ll ride down after breakfast and wait for you--if I won’t be in the
way.”

“Of course you won’t. It will take me only a few minutes to write my
letters.”

“How are you going to mail them? This is Sunday.”

“Mr. Powers is going to drive in to Los Angeles to-day. He’ll mail them
in the city.”

“Who looks after things when Mr. and Mrs. Powers are away?”

“Who looks after things? Why, I do.”

“The chickens, and the sow, and Baldy--you take care of them all?”

“Certainly, and I have more than that now.”

“How’s that?”

“Nine little pigs! They came yesterday. They’re perfect beauties.”

The man laughed.

“What are you laughing about?” she demanded.

“The idea of you taking care of chickens and pigs and a horse!”

“I don’t see anything funny about it, and it’s lot of fun. Did you
think I was too stupid?”

“I was just thinking what a change two months have made. What would you
have done if you’d been left alone two months ago with a hundred hens,
a horse, and ten pigs to care for?”

“The question then would have been what the hens, the horse, and the
pigs would have done; but now I know pretty well what to do. The two
letters I have to write are about the little pigs. I don’t know much
about them, and so I am writing to Berkeley and Washington for the
latest bulletins.”

“Why don’t you ask _us_?”

“Gracious, but I do! I am forever asking the colonel questions, and
the boys at the hog house must hate to see me coming. I’ve spent hours
in the office, reading Lovejoy and Colton; but I want something for
ready reference. I’ve an idea that I can raise lots more hogs than I
intended by fencing the orchard and growing alfalfa between the rows,
for pasture. There’s something solid and substantial about hogs that
suggests a bank balance even in the years when the orange crop may be
short or a failure, or the market poor.”

“You’ve got the right idea,” said Custer. “There isn’t a rancher or an
orchardist, big or little, in the valley who couldn’t make more money
year in and year out if he’d keep a few brood sows.”

“What’s Cus doing?” asked Eva, who had reined back beside them.
“Preaching hog raising again? That’s his idea of a dapper little way to
entertain a girl--hogs, Herefords and horses! Wouldn’t he make a hit in
society? Regular little tea pointer, I’ll say!”

“I knew you were about to say something,” remarked her brother. “You’ve
been quiet for all of five minutes.”

“I’ve been thinking,” said Eva. “I’ve been thinking how lonely it will
be when you have to go away to jail.”

“Why, they can’t send me to jail--I haven’t done anything,” he tried to
reassure her.

“I’m so afraid, Cus!” The tears came to her eyes. “I lay awake for
hours last night, thinking about it. Oh, Cus, I just couldn’t stand it
if they sent you to jail! Do you think the men who did it would let you
go for something they did? Could any one be so wicked? I never hated
any one in my life, but I could hate them, if they don’t come forward
and save you. I could _hate_ them, _hate_ them, _hate_ them! Oh, Cus,
I believe that I could _kill_ the man who would do such a thing to my
brother!”

“Come, dear, don’t worry about it. The chances are that they’ll free
me. Even if they don’t, you mustn’t feel quite so bitterly against the
men who are responsible. There may be reasons that you know nothing of
that would keep them silent. Let’s not talk about it. All we can do now
is to wait and see what the grand jury is going to do. In the meantime
I don’t intend to worry.”

Shannon Burke, her heart heavy with shame and sorrow, listened as might
a condemned man to the reading of his death sentence. She felt almost
the degradation that might have been hers had she deliberately planned
to ensnare Custer Pennington in the toils that had been laid for him.

She determined that she would go before the grand jury and tell all she
knew. Then she would go away. She would not have to see the contempt
and hatred they must surely feel for her after she had recited the
cold facts that she must lay before the jury, unmitigated by any of
those extenuating truths that must lie forever hidden in the secret
recesses of her soul. They would know only that she might have warned
Custer, and did not; that she might have cleared him at his preliminary
hearing, and did not. The fact that she had come to his rescue at the
eleventh hour would not excuse her, in their minds, of the guilt
of having permitted the Pennington honor to be placed in jeopardy
needlessly; nor could it explain her knowledge of the crime, or those
associations of her past life that had made it possible for her to have
gained such knowledge.

No, she could never face them again after the following Wednesday; but
until then she would cling to the brief days of happiness that remained
to her before the final catastrophe of her life, for it was thus that
she thought of it--the moment and the act that would forever terminate
her intercourse with the Penningtons, that would turn the respect of
the man she loved to loathing.

She counted the hours before the end. There would be two more morning
rides--to-morrow and Tuesday. They would ask her to dinner, or to
lunch, or to breakfast several times in the ensuing three days, and
there would be rides with Custer. She would take all the happy memories
that she could into the bleak and sunless future.

Their ride that morning was over a loved and familiar trail that led
across El Camino Corto over low hills into Horse Camp Cañon, and up
Horse Camp to Coyote Springs; then over El Camino Largo to Sycamore
Cañon and down beneath the old, old sycamores to the ranch. She felt
that she knew each bush and tree and bowlder, and they held for her the
quiet restfulness of the familiar faces of old friends. She should miss
them, but she would carry them in her memory forever.

When they came to the fork in the road, she would not let Custer ride
home with her.

“At eight thirty, then,” he called to her, as she urged Baldy into a
canter and left them with a gay wave of the hand that gave no token of
the heavy sorrow in her heart.

As was her custom, she ate breakfast with Mr. and Mrs. Powers at the
little tenant cottage a couple of hundred yards in rear of her own
bungalow--a practice which gave her an opportunity to discuss each
day’s work in advance with her foreman, and at the same time to add
to her store of information concerning matters of ranching and citrus
culture. Her knowledge of these things had broadened rapidly, and was a
constant source of surprise to Powers, who took great pride in bragging
about it to his friends; for Shannon had won as great a hold upon the
hearts of these two as she had upon all who were fortunate enough to
know her well.

After breakfast, as she was returning to her bungalow to write her
letters, she saw a Mexican boy on a bicycle turn in at her gate. They
met in front of the bungalow.

“Are you Miss Burke?” he asked. “Bartolo says for you to come to his
camp in the mountains this morning, sure,” he went on, having received
an affirmative reply.

“Who is Bartolo?”

“He says you know. You went to his camp a week ago yesterday.”

“Tell him I do not know him and will not go.”

“He says to tell you that he only wants to talk to you about your
friend who is in trouble.”

The girl thought for a moment. Possibly here was a way out of her
dilemma. If she could force Bartolo by threats of exposure, he might
discover a way to clear Custer Pennington without incriminating
himself. She turned to the boy.

“Tell him I will come.”

“I do not see him again. He is up in his camp now. He told me this
yesterday. He also told me to tell you that he would be watching for
you, and if you did not come alone you would not find him.”

“Very well,” she said, and turned into the bungalow.

She wrote her letters, but she was not thinking about them. Then she
took them over to Powers to take to the city for her. After that she
went to the telephone and called the Rancho del Ganado, asking for
Custer when she got the connection.

“I’m terribly disappointed,” she said, when he came to the telephone.
“I find I simply can’t ride this morning; but if you’ll put it off
until afternoon----”

“Why, certainly! Come up to lunch and we’ll ride afterward,” he told
her.

“You won’t go, then, until afternoon?” she asked.

“I’ll ride over to the east pasture this morning, and we’ll just take a
ride any old place that you want to go this afternoon.”

“All right,” she replied.

She had hoped that he would not ride that morning. There was a chance
that he might see her, even though the east pasture was miles from the
trail she would ride, for there were high places on both trails, where
a horseman would be visible for several miles.

“This noon at lunch, then,” he said.



CHAPTER XXV


Half an hour later Custer Pennington swung into the saddle and headed
the Apache up Sycamore Cañon.

The trail to the east pasture led through Jackknife. As he passed the
spot where he had been arrested on the previous Friday night, the man
made a wry face--more at the recollection of the ease with which he
had been duped than because of the fact of his arrest. Being free from
any sense of guilt, he could view with a certain lightness of spirit
that was almost levity the mere physical aspects of possible duress.
The reality of his service to Eva could not but tend to compensate for
any sorrow he must feel because of the suffering his conviction and
imprisonment might bring to his family, so much greater must be their
sorrow should Eva be permitted to learn the truth.

When Shannon had broken their engagement for the morning, he had felt
a disappointment entirely out of proportion to its cause--a thing
which he had realized himself, but had been unable to analyze. Now, in
anticipation of seeing her at noon and riding with her after lunch, he
experienced a rise in spirits that was equally unaccountable. He liked
her very much, and she was excellent company--which, of course, would
account for the pleasure he derived from being with her. To-day, too,
he hoped for an explanation of her ride into the mountains the week
before, so that there might be no longer any shadow on his friendship
for her.

The more he thought about it, the more convinced he was that this
afternoon she would explain the whole matter quite satisfactorily, and
presently he found himself whistling as if there were no such places as
jails or penitentiaries in the whole wide and beautiful world.

Just then he reached the summit of the trail leading out of Jackknife
Cañon toward the east pasture. As was his wont, the Apache stopped
to breathe after the hard climb, and, as seems to be the habit of
all horses in like circumstances, he turned around and faced in the
opposite direction from that in which his rider had been going.

Below and to Custer’s right the ranch buildings lay dotted about in the
dust like children’s toys upon a gray rug. Beyond was the castle on the
hill, shining in the sun, and farther still the soft-carpeted valley,
in grays and browns and greens. Then the young man’s glance wandered
to the left and out over the basin meadow, and instantly the joy died
out of his heart and the happiness from his eyes. Straight along the
mysterious trail loped a horse and rider toward the mountains, and even
at that distance he recognized them as Baldy and Shannon.

The force of the shock was almost equivalent to an unexpected blow
in the face. What could it mean? He recalled her questions. She had
deliberately sought to learn his plans, as she had that other day, and
then, as before, she had hastened off to some mysterious rendezvous in
the hills.

Suddenly a hot wave of anger surged through him. Quiet and
self-controlled as he usually was, there were times when the Pennington
temper seized and dominated him so completely that he himself was
appalled by the acts it precipitated. Under its spell a Pennington
might commit murder. Now Custer did what was almost as foreign to his
nature--he cursed the girl who rode on, unconscious of his burning eyes
upon her, toward the mountains. He cursed her aloud, searching his
memory for opprobrious epithets and anathemas to hurl after her.

This was the end. He was through with her forever. What did he know
about her? What did any of them know about her? She had never mentioned
her life or associations in the city--he recalled that now. She had
known no one whom they knew, and they had taken her in and treated her
as a daughter of the house, without knowing anything of her; and this
was their reward!

She was doubtless a hireling of the gang that had stolen the whisky and
disposed of it through Guy. They had sent her here to spy on Guy and to
watch the Penningtons. It was she who had set the trap in which he had
been caught, not to save Guy, but to throw the suspicion of guilt upon
Custer.

But for what reason? There was no reason except that he had been
selected from the first to be the scapegoat when the government
officers were too hot upon their trail. She had watched him carefully.
God, but she had been cunning and he credulous! There had been scarce
a day that she had not been with him. She had ridden the hills with
him, and she had kept him from following the mysterious trail--so he
reasoned in his rage, though as a matter of fact she had done nothing
of the sort; but anger and hate are blind, and Custer Pennington was
angry and filled with hate. Unreasoning rage consumed him.

He believed that he never had hated before as he hated this girl now,
so far to the other extreme had the shock of her duplicity driven his
regard for her. He would see her just once more, and he would tell
her what he thought of her, so that there might be no chance that she
would ever again enter the home of the Penningtons. He must see to that
before he went away, that Eva might not be exposed to the influence of
such a despicable character.

But he could not see her to-day. He could not trust himself to see her,
for even in his anger he remembered that she was a woman, and that when
he saw her he must treat her as a woman. If she had been within reach
when he first discovered her, a moment since, he could have struck her,
choked her.

With the realization, the senseless fury of his anger left him. He
turned the Apache away, and headed him again toward the east pasture;
but deep within his heart was a cold anger that was quite as terrible,
though in a different way.

Shannon Burke rode up the trail toward the camp of the smugglers, all
unconscious that there looked down upon her from a high ridge behind
eyes filled with hate and loathing--the eyes of the man she loved.

She put Baldy up the steep trail that had so filled her with terror
when she first scaled it, and down upon the other side into the grove
of oaks that had hidden the camp; but now there was no camp there--only
the debris that always marks the stopping place of men.

As she reached the foot of the trail, she saw Bartolo standing beneath
a great oak, awaiting her. His pony stood with trailing reins beneath
the tree. A rifle butt protruded from a boot on the right of the
saddle. He came forward as she guided Baldy toward the tree.

“_Buenos dias, señorita_,” he greeted her, twisting his pock-marked
face into the semblance of a smile.

“What do you want of me?” Shannon demanded.

“I need money,” he said. “You get money from Evans. He got all the
money from the hootch we take down two weeks ago. We never get no
chance to get it from him.”

“I’ll get you nothing!”

“You get money now--and whenever I want it,” said the Mexican, “or I
tell about Crumb. You Crumb’s woman. I tell how you peddle dope. I
know! You do what I tell you, or you go to the pen. _Sabe?_”

“Now listen to me,” said the girl. “I didn’t come up here to take
orders from you. I came to give you orders.”

“What?” exclaimed the Mexican, and then he laughed aloud. “You give me
orders? That is damn funny!”

“Yes, it is funny. You will enjoy it immensely when I tell you what you
are to do.”

“Hurry, then; I have no time to waste.”

He was still laughing.

“You are going to find some way to clear Mr. Pennington of the charge
against him. I don’t care what the way is, so long as it does not
incriminate any other innocent person. If you can do it without getting
yourself in trouble, well and good. I do not care; but you must see
that there is evidence given before the grand jury next Wednesday that
will prove Mr. Pennington’s innocence.”

“Is that all?” inquired Bartolo, grinning broadly.

“That is all.”

“And if I don’t do it--eh?”

“Then I shall go before the grand jury and tell them about you, and
Allen--about the opium and the morphine and the cocaine--how you
smuggled the stolen booze from the ship off the coast up into the
mountains.”

“You think you would do that?” he asked. “But how about me? Wouldn’t I
be telling everything I know about you? Allen would testify, too, and
they would make Crumb come and tell how you lived with him. Oh, no, I
guess you don’t tell the grand jury nothing!”

“I shall tell them everything. Do you think I care about myself? I will
tell them all that Allen or Crumb could tell; and listen, Bartolo--I
can tell them something more. There used to be five men in your gang.
There were three when I came up last week, and Allen is in jail; but
where is the other?”

The man’s face went black with anger, and perhaps with fear, too.

“What you know about that?” he demanded sharply.

“Allen told Crumb the first time he came to the Hollywood bungalow
that he was having trouble among his gang, that you were a hard lot
to handle, and that already one named Bartolo had killed one named
Gracial. How would you like me to tell that to the grand jury?”

“You never tell that to no one!” growled the Mexican. “You know too
damn much for your health!”

He had stepped suddenly forward and seized her wrist. She struck at him
and at the same time put the spurs to Baldy--in her fear and excitement
more severely than she had intended. The high-spirited animal, unused
to such treatment, leaped forward past the Mexican, who, clinging
to the girl’s wrist, dragged her from the saddle. Baldy turned, and
feeling himself free, ran for the trail that led toward home.

“You know too damn much!” repeated Bartolo. “You better off up here
alongside Gracial!”

The girl had risen to her feet and stood facing him. There was no fear
in her eyes. She was very beautiful, and her beauty was not lost upon
the Mexican.

“You mean that you would kill me to keep me from telling the truth
about you?” she asked.

“Why not? Should I die instead? If you had kept your mouth shut, you
would have been all right; but now”--he shrugged suggestively--“you
better off up here beside Gracial.”

“They’ll get you and hang you for it,” she said.

“Who will know?”

“The boy who brought me the message from you.”

“He will not tell. He my son.”

“I wrote a note and left it in my desk before I came up here, telling
everything, for fear of something of this sort,” she said.

“You lie!” he accused, correctly; “but for fear you did, I go down and
burn your house to-night, after I get through with you. The ground
pretty hard after the hot weather--it take me long time to dig a hole
beside Gracial!”

The girl was at her wits’ end now. Her pitiful little lie had not
availed. She began to realize that nothing would avail. She had made
the noose, stuck her head into it, and sprung the trap. It was too late
to alter the consequences. The man had the physique of a bull--she
could not hope to escape him by recourse to any power other than her
wits, and in the first effort along that line she had failed miserably
and put him on his guard.

Her case appeared hopeless. She thought of pleading with him, but
realized the futility of it. The fact that she did not do so indicated
her courage, which had not permitted her to lose her head. She saw
that it was either his life or hers, as he saw the matter, and that it
was going to be hers was obvious.

The man stood facing her, holding her by the wrist. His eyes appraised
her boldly.

“You damn good-looking,” he said, and pulled the girl toward him.
“Before I kill you, I----”

He threw an arm about her roughly, and, leaning far over her as she
pulled away, he sought to reach her lips with his.



CHAPTER XXVI


The Apache had taken but a few steps on the trail toward the east
pasture when Custer reined him in suddenly and wheeled him about.

“I’ll settle this thing now,” he muttered. “I’ll catch her with them.
I’ll find out who the others are. By God, I’ve got her now, and I’ve
got them!”

He spurred the Apache into a lope along the steep and dangerous
declivity leading downward into the basin. The horse was surprised.
Never before had he been allowed to go down hill faster than a
walk--his sound forelegs attested the careful horsemanship of his rider.

Where the trail wound around bushes, he took perilous jumps on the
steep hillside, for his speed was too great to permit him to make the
short turns. He cleared them, and somehow he stuck to the trail beyond.
His iron shoes struck fire from half embedded bowlders.

A rattler crossing the trail ahead coiled, buzzing its warning. The
hillside was steep--there was no footing above or below the snake.
The Apache could not have stopped in time to save himself from those
poisoned fangs. A coward horse would have wheeled and gone over the
cliff; but the Morgan is no coward.

The rider saw the danger at the instant the horse did. The animal felt
the spurs touch him lightly, he heard a word of encouragement from the
man he trusted. As the snake struck, he rose, gathering his four feet
close to his belly, and cleared the danger spot far out of reach of the
needle-like fangs.

The trail beyond was narrow, rocky, and shelving--the thing could not
have happened in a worse place. The Apache lit, stumbled, slipped. His
off hind foot went over the edge. He lunged forward upon his knees.

Only the cool horsemanship of his rider saved them both. A pound of
weight thrown in the wrong direction would have toppled the horse to
the bottom of the rocky gorge; a heavy hand upon the bit would have
accomplished the same result. Pennington sat easily the balanced seat
that gave the horse the best chance to regain his footing. His touch
upon the bit was only sufficient to impart confidence to his mount,
giving the animal’s head free play, as nature intended, as he scrambled
back to the trail again.

At last they reached the safer footing of the basin, and were off in
a straight line for the ravine into which led the mysterious trail.
The Apache knew that there was need for haste--an inclination of his
master’s body, a closing of the knees against his barrel, the slight
raising of the bridle hand, had told him this more surely than loud
cries of the punishment of steel rowels. He flattened out and flew.

The cold rage that gripped Pennington brooked no delay. He was glad,
though, that he was unarmed; for he knew that when he came face to face
with the men with whom Shannon Burke had conspired against him, he
might again cease to be master of his anger.

They reached the foot of the acclivity terminating at the summit of the
ridge beyond which lay the camp of the bootleggers. Again the man urged
his mount to the necessity of speed. The powerful beast leaped upward
along the steep trail, digging his toes deep into the sun-baked soil,
every muscle in his body strained to the limit of its powers.

At the summit they met Baldy, head and tail erect, snorting and
riderless. The appearance of the horse and his evident fright bespoke
something amiss. Custer had seen him just as he was emerging from
the upper end of the dim trail leading down the opposite side of the
hogback. He turned the Apache into it and headed him down toward the
oaks.

Below, Shannon was waging a futile fight against the burly Bartolo.
She struck at his face and attempted to push him from her, but he only
laughed his crooked laugh and pushed her slowly toward the trampled
dust of the abandoned camp.

“Before I kill you----” he repeated again and again, as if it were some
huge joke.

He heard the sound of the Apache’s hoofs upon the trail above, but he
thought it the loose horse of the girl. Custer was almost at the bottom
of the trail when the Mexican glanced up and saw him. With a curse, he
hurled Shannon aside and leaped toward his pony.

At the same instant the girl saw the Apache and his rider, and in
the next she saw Bartolo seize his rifle and attempt to draw it from
its boot. Leaping to her feet, she sprang toward the Mexican, who
was cursing frightfully because the rifle had stuck and he could not
readily extricate it from the boot. As she reached him, he succeeded
in jerking the weapon free. Swinging about, he threw it to his
shoulder and fired at Pennington, just as Shannon threw herself upon
him, clutching at his arms and dragging the muzzle of the weapon
downward. He struck at her face, and tried to wrench the rifle from her
grasp; but she clung to it with all the desperation that the danger
confronting the man she loved engendered.

Custer had thrown himself from the saddle and was running toward them.
Bartolo saw that he could not regain the rifle in time to use it.
He struck the girl a terrible blow in the face that sent her to the
ground. Then he turned and vaulted into his saddle, and was away across
the bottom and up the trail on the opposite side before Pennington
could reach him and drag him from his pony.

Custer turned to the girl lying motionless upon the ground. He knelt
and raised her in his arms. She had fainted, and her face was very
white. He looked down into it--the face of the girl he hated. He felt
his arms about her, he felt her body against his, and suddenly a look
of horror filled his eyes.

He laid her back upon the ground, and stood up. He was trembling
violently. As he had held her in his arms, there had swept over him an
almost irresistible desire to crush her to him, to cover her eyes and
cheeks with kisses, to smother her lips with them--the girl he hated!

A great light had broken upon his mental horizon--a light of
understanding that left all his world in the dark shadow of despair. He
loved Shannon Burke!

Again he knelt beside her, and very gently he lifted her in his arms
until he could support her across one shoulder. Then he whistled to the
Apache, who was nibbling the bitter leaves of the live oak. When the
horse came to him, he looped the bridle reins about his arm and started
on foot up the trail down which he had just ridden, carrying Shannon
across his shoulder. At the summit of the ridge he found Baldy grazing
upon the sparse, burned grasses of late September.

It was then that Shannon Burke opened her eyes. At first, confused
by the rush of returning recollections, she thought that it was the
Mexican who was carrying her; but an instant later she recognized the
whipcord riding breeches and the familiar boots and spurs of the son of
Ganado. Then she stirred upon his shoulder.

“I am all right now,” she said. “You may put me down. I can walk.”

He lowered her to the ground, but he still supported her as they stood
facing each other.

“You came just in time,” she said. “He was going to kill me.”

“I am glad I came,” was all that he said.

She noticed how tired and pinched Custer’s face looked, as if he had
risen from a sick bed after a long period of suffering. He looked
older--very much older--and oh, so sad! It wrung her heart; but she did
not question him. She was waiting for him to question her, for she knew
that he must wonder why she had come here, and what the meaning of the
encounter he had witnessed; but he did not ask her anything, beyond
inquiring whether she thought she was strong enough to sit her saddle
if he helped her mount.

“I shall be all right now,” she assured him.

He caught Baldy and assisted her into the saddle. Then he mounted the
Apache and led the way along the trail toward home. They were halfway
across the basin meadow before either spoke. It was Shannon who broke
the silence.

“You must have wondered what I was doing up there,” she said, with a
backward nod of her head.

“That would not be strange, would it?”

“I will tell you.”

“No,” he said. “It is bad enough that you went there to-day and the
Saturday before I was arrested. Anything more that you could tell
me would only make it worse. Do you remember that girl I told you
about--that friend of Cousin William--who visited us?”

“Yes.”

“I followed you up here to-day to tell you the same thing I told her.”

“I understand,” she said.

“You do not understand,” he snapped, almost angrily. “You understand
nothing. I only said that I followed to tell you that. I have not told
you, have I? Well, I don’t intend to tell you; but my shame that I
don’t is enough without you telling me any more to add to it. There
can be no honorable excuse for your having come here that other time,
or this time, either. There is no reason in the world why a woman
should have any dealings with criminals, or any knowledge that would
make dealings with them possible. That is the reason I don’t want you
to tell me more. Oh, Shannon”--his voice broke--“I don’t want to hear
anything bad about you!... Please!”

She had been upon the verge of just anger until then. Even now she did
not understand--only that he wanted to believe in her, however much he
doubted her, and that their friendship had meant more to him than she
had imagined.

“But I must tell you, Custer,” she insisted. “Now that you have learned
this much, I can see that your suspicions wrong me more than I deserve.
I came here the Saturday before you were arrested to warn them that
you were going to watch for them on the following Friday. Though I did
not know the men, I knew what sort they were, and that they would kill
you the moment they found that they were discovered. It was only to
save your life that I came that other time, and this time I came to try
to force them to go before the grand jury and clear you of the charge
against you; but when I threatened the man, and he found what I knew
about him, he said that he would kill me.”

“You did not know that I was going to be arrested that night?”

“Oh, Custer, how could you believe that of me?” exclaimed Shannon.

“I didn’t want to believe it.”

“I came into all this information--about the work of this gang--by
accidentally overhearing a conversation in Hollywood, months ago. I
know the names of the principals, I know Guy’s connection with them.
To-day I was trying to keep Guy’s name out, too, if that were possible;
but he is guilty and you are not. I cannot understand how he could come
back from Los Angeles without telling them the truth and removing the
suspicion from you.”

“I would not let him,” said Pennington.

“You would not let him? You would go to the penitentiary for the crime
of another?”

“Not for him, but for Eva. Guy and I thrashed it all out. He wanted to
give himself up--he almost demanded that I should let him; but it can’t
be done. Eva must never know.”

“But, Custer, you can’t go! It wouldn’t be fair--it wouldn’t be right.
I won’t let you go! I know enough to clear you, and I shall go before
the grand jury on Wednesday and tell all I know.”

“No,” he said. “You must not. It would involve Guy.”

“I won’t mention Guy.”

“But you will mention others, and they will mention Guy--don’t doubt
that for a minute.” He turned suddenly toward her. “Promise me,
Shannon, that you will not go--that you will not mention what you know
to a living soul. I would rather go to the pen for twenty years than
see Eva’s life ruined. You don’t know her. She’s gay and happy and
frivolous on the outside; but deep within her is a soul of wondrous
sensitiveness and beauty, which is fortified and guarded by her pride
and her honor. Strike down one of these, and you will have given her
soul a wound from which it may never recover. She can understand
neither meanness nor depravity in men and women. Should she ever learn
that Guy had been connected with this gang, and that the money upon
which they were to start their married life was the fruits of his
criminality, it would break her heart. I know that Guy isn’t criminally
inclined, and that this will be a lesson that will keep him straight as
long as he lives; but she wouldn’t look at it that way. Now do you see
why you must not tell what you know?”

“Perhaps you are right, but it seems to me she would not suffer any
more if Guy went than if her brother went. She loves you very much.”

“But she will know that I am innocent. If Guy went, she would know that
he was guilty.”

Shannon had no answer to this, and they were silent for a while.

“You will help me to keep this from Eva?” he asked.

“Yes.”

She was thinking of the futility of her sacrifice, and wondering what
explanation he was putting upon her knowledge of the activities of the
criminals. He had said that there could be no reason in the world why
a woman should have any dealings with such men, or any knowledge that
would make dealings with them possible. What would he think of her if
he knew the truth?

The man’s mind was a chaos of conflicting thoughts--the
sudden realization of a love that was as impossible as it was
unwelcome--recollection of his vows to Grace, which were as binding
upon his honor as the marriage vows themselves would have been--doubts
as to the character and antecedents of this girl who rode at his side
to-day, and whose place in his life had suddenly assumed an importance
beyond that of any other.

Then he turned a little, his eyes rested upon her profile, and he found
it hard to doubt her.

Shannon felt his eyes upon her, and looked up.

“You have been so good to me, Custer, all of you--you can never know
how I have valued the friendship of the Penningtons, or what it has
meant to me, or how I have striven to deserve it. I would have done
anything to repay a part, at least, of what it has done for me. That
was what I was trying to do--that is why I wanted to go before the
grand jury, no matter what the cost to me; but I failed, and perhaps I
have only made it worse. I do not even know that you believe me.”

“I believe you, Shannon,” he said. “There is much that I do not
understand; but I believe that what you did was done in our interests.
There is nothing more that any of us can do now but keep still about
what we know, for the moment one of those actually responsible
is threatened with exposure Guy’s name will be divulged--you may
rest assured of that. They would be only too glad to shift the
responsibility to his shoulders.”

“But you will make some effort to defend yourself?”

“I shall simply plead not guilty, and tell the truth about why I was up
there when the officers arrested me.”

“You will make no other defense?”

“What other defense can I make that would not risk incriminating Guy?”
Custer asked her.

She shook her head. It seemed quite hopeless.



CHAPTER XXVII


Federal officers, searching the hills found the camp above Jackknife
Cañon. They collected a number of empty bottles bearing labels
identical with those on the bottles in the cases carried by the
burros, and those found in Custer Pennington’s room. That was all they
discovered, except that the camp was located on the Pennington property.

The district attorney, realizing the paucity of evidence calculated to
convict the prisoner on any serious charge, was inclined to drop the
prosecution; but the prohibition enforcement agents, backed by a band
of women, most of whom had never performed a woman’s first duty to the
state and society, and therefore had ample time to meddle in affairs
far beyond the scope of their intellects, seized upon the prominence
of the Pennington name to gain notoriety for themselves on the score
that the conviction of a member of a prominent family would have an
excellent moral effect upon the community at large.

Just how they arrived at this conclusion it is difficult to discern.
Similarly one might argue that if it could be proved that the Pope was
a pickpocket, it would be tremendously effective in regenerating the
morals of the world.

Be that as it may, the works of the righteous were not without fruit,
for on the 12th of October Custer Pennington was found guilty and
sentenced to six months in the county jail for having had several
hundred dollars’ worth of stolen whisky in his possession. He was
neither surprised nor disheartened. His only concern was for the
sensibilities of his family, and these--represented at the trial in the
person of his father--seemed far from overwhelmed, for the colonel was
unalterably convinced of his son’s innocence.

Eva, who had remained at home with her mother, was more deeply affected
than the others, though through a sense of injustice rather than of
shame. Shannon, depressed by an unwarranted sense of responsibility
for the wrong that Custer had suffered, and chagrined that force of
circumstances should have prevented her from saving the Penningtons
from a stain upon their escutcheon, found it increasingly difficult to
continue her intimacy with these loved friends. Carrying in her heart
the knowledge and the proof of his innocence, she regarded herself as a
traitor among them, and in consequence held herself more and more aloof
from their society, first upon one pretext and then upon another.

At a loss to account for her change toward them, Eva, in a moment of
depression, attributed it to the disgrace of Custer’s imprisonment.

“She is ashamed to associate with the family of a--a--jailbird!” she
cried.

“I don’t believe anything of the kind,” replied the colonel. “Shannon’s
got too much sense, and she’s too loyal. That’s all damned poppycock!”

“I’m sure she couldn’t feel that way,” said Mrs. Pennington. “She has
been just as positive in her assertions of Custer’s innocence as any of
us.”

“You might as well think the same about Guy,” said the colonel. “He’s
scarcely been up here since Custer’s arrest.”

“He’s very busy on a new story. Anyway, I asked him about that very
thing, and offered to break the engagement if he felt our disgrace too
keenly to want to marry into the family.”

The colonel drew her down to his knee.

“You silly little girl!” he said. “Do you suppose that this has made
any difference in the affection that Guy or any other of our real
friends feel for us? Not in the slightest. Even if Cus were guilty,
they would not change. Those who did we would be better off not to
know. I am rather jealous of the Pennington honor myself, but I have
never felt that this affair is any reflection upon it, and you need
not.”

“But I can’t help it, popsy. My brother, my dear brother, in jail with
a lot of thieves and murderers and horrible people like that! It is
just too awful! I lie awake at night thinking about it. I am ashamed to
go to the village, for fear some one will point at me and say, ‘There
goes the girl whose brother is in jail!’”

“You are taking it much too hard, dear,” said her mother. “One would
think that our boy was really guilty.”

“Oh, if he really were, I should kill myself!”

The only person, other than the officious reformers, to derive any
happiness from young Pennington’s fate was Slick Allen. He occupied
a cell not far from Custer’s, and there were occasions when they
were thrown together. Several times Allen saw fit to fling gibes at
his former employer, much to the amusement of his fellows. They were
usually indirect.

One day, as Custer was passing, Allen remarked in a loud tone:

“There’s a lot more of these damn fox-trottin’ dudes that put on airs,
but ain’t nothin’ but common thieves!”

Pennington turned and faced him.

“You remember what you got the last time you tried calling me names,
Allen? Well, don’t think for a minute that just because we’re in
jail I won’t hand you the same thing again some day, if you get too
funny. The trouble with you, Allen, is that you are laboring under the
misapprehension that you are a humorist. You’re not, and if I were you
I wouldn’t make faces at the only man in this jail who knows about you,
and Bartolo, and--Gracial. Don’t forget Gracial!”

Allen paled, and his eyes closed to two very narrow slits. He made no
more observations concerning Pennington; but he devoted much thought
to him, trying to arrive at some reasonable explanation of the man’s
silence, when it was evident that he must have sufficient knowledge of
the guilt of others to clear himself of the charge upon which he had
been convicted.

To Allen’s hatred of Custer was now added a real fear, for he had been
present when Bartolo killed Gracial. The other two witnesses had been
Mexicans, and Allen had no doubt but that if Bartolo were accused, the
three of them would swear that the American committed the murder.

One of the first things to do, when he was released from jail, would
be to do away with Bartolo. Bartolo disposed of, the other witnesses
would join with Allen to lay the guilt upon the departed. Such pleasant
thoughts occupied the time and mind of Slick Allen, as did also his
plans for paying one Wilson Crumb a little debt he felt due this
one-time friend.

Nor was Crumb free from apprehension for the time that would see
Allen’s jail sentence fulfilled. He well knew the nature of the man.
It is typical of drug addicts to disregard the effect of their acts
further than the immediate serving of their own interests, and the
director had encompassed Allen’s arrest merely to meet the emergency of
the moment. Later, as time gave him the opportunity to consider what
must inevitably follow Allen’s release, he began to take thought as to
means whereby he might escape the just deserts of his treachery.

He knew enough of Allen’s activities to send the man to a Federal
prison for a long term, but these matters he could not divulge without
equally incriminating himself. There was, however, one little item of
Allen’s past which might be used against him without signal danger to
Crumb, and that was the murder of Gracial. It would not be necessary
for Crumb to appear in the matter at all. An anonymous letter to the
police would suffice to direct suspicion of the crime toward Allen, and
to insure for Crumb, if not permanent immunity, at least a period of
reprieve.

With the natural predilection of the weak for avoiding or delaying the
consummation of their intentions, Crumb postponed the writing of this
letter of accusation. There was no cause for hurry, he argued, since
Allen’s time would not expire until the 6th of the following August.

Crumb led a lonely life after the departure of Gaza. His infatuation
for the girl had as closely approximated love as a creature of his
type could reach. He had come to depend upon her, and to look forward
to finding her at the Vista del Paso bungalow on his return from the
studio. Since her departure his evenings had been unbearable, and with
the passing weeks he developed a hatred for the place that constantly
reminded him of his loss. He had been so confident that she would have
to return to him after she had consumed the small quantity of morphine
he had allotted her that only after the weeks had run into months did
he realize that she had probably gone out of his life forever. How she
had accomplished it he could not understand, unless she had found means
of obtaining the narcotic elsewhere.

Not knowing where she had gone, he had no means of searching for her.
In his own mind, however, he was convinced that she must have returned
to Los Angeles. Judging others by himself, he could conceive of no
existence that would be supportable beyond the limits of a large city,
where the means for the gratification of his vice might be obtained.

That Gaza de Lure had successfully thrown off the fetters into which he
had tricked her never for a moment entered his calculations. Finally,
however, it was borne in upon him that there was little likelihood of
her returning; and so depressing had become the familiar and suggestive
furnishings of the Vista del Paso bungalow that he at last gave it up,
stored his furniture, and took a room at a local hotel. He took with
him, carefully concealed in a trunk, his supply of narcotics--which
he did not find it so easy to dispose of since the departure of his
accomplice.

During the first picture in which Grace Evans had worked with him,
Crumb had become more and more impressed with her beauty and the subtle
charm of her refinement, which appealed to him by contrast with the
ordinary surroundings and personalities of the K. K. S. studio. There
was a quiet restfulness about her which soothed his diseased nerves,
and after Gaza’s desertion he found himself more and more seeking her
society. As was his accustomed policy, his attentions were at first so
slight, and increased by such barely perceptible degrees, that, taken
in connection with his uniform courtesy, they gave the girl no warning
of his ultimate purposes.

The matter of the test had shocked and disgusted her for the moment;
but the thing having been done, and no harm coming from it, she began
to consider even that with less revulsion than formerly. The purpose of
it she had never been able to fathom; but if Crumb had intended it to
place him insidiously upon a plane of greater intimacy with the girl,
he had succeeded. That the effect was subjective rendered it none the
less effective.

Added to these factors in the budding intimacy between the director and
the extra girl was the factor which is always most potent in similar
associations--the fear that the girl holds of offending a potent ally,
and the hope of propitiating a power in which lies the potentiality of
success upon the screen.

Lunches at Frank’s, dinners at the Ship, dances at the Country Club,
led by easy gradations to more protracted parties at the Sunset
Inn and the Green Mill. The purposes of Crumb’s shrewdly conceived
and carefully executed plan were twofold. Primarily, he sought a
companionship to replace that of which Gaza de Lure had robbed him.
Secondarily, he needed a new tool to assist in the disposal of the
considerable store of narcotics that he had succeeded in tricking Allen
and his accomplices into delivering to him with the understanding that
he would divide the profits of the sales with them--which, however,
Crumb had no intention of doing if he could possibly avoid it.

In much the same manner that he had tricked Gaza de Lure, he tricked
Grace Evans into the use of cocaine; and after that the rest was easy.
Renting another and less pretentious bungalow on Circle Terrace, he
installed the girl there, and transferred the trunk of narcotics to her
care, retaining his room at the hotel for himself.

Grace’s fall was more easily accomplished than in the case of Gaza,
and was more complete, for the former had neither the courage nor the
strength of character that had enabled the other to withstand the
more degrading advances of her tempter. To assume that the girl made
no effort to oppose his importunings would be both unfair and unjust,
for both heredity and training had endowed her with a love of honor
and a horror of the sordidness of vice; but the gradual undermining of
her will by the subtle inroads of narcotics rendered her powerless to
withstand the final assault upon the citadel of her scruples.

One evening, toward the middle of October, they were dining together
at the Winter Garden. Crumb had bought an evening paper on the street,
and was glancing through it as they sat waiting for their dinner to be
served. Presently he looked up at the girl seated opposite him.

“Didn’t you come from a little jerk-water place up the line, called
Ganado?” he asked.

She nodded affirmatively.

“Why?”

“Here’s a guy from there been sent up for bootlegging--fellow by the
name of Pennington.”

She half closed her eyes, as if in pain.

“I know,” she said. “It has been in the newspapers for the last couple
of weeks.”

“Did you know him?”

“Yes--he has been out to see me since his arrest, and he called up
once.”

“Did you see him?”

“No--I would be ashamed to see any decent person!”

“Decent!” snorted Crumb. “You don’t call a damned bootlegger decent, do
you?”

“I don’t believe he ever did it,” said the girl. “I have known him all
my life, and his family. I’m certain that he couldn’t have done it.”

A sudden light came into Crumb’s eye.

“By God!” he exclaimed, bringing his fist down upon the table.

“What is the matter?” Grace inquired.

“Well, wouldn’t that get you?” he exclaimed. “I never connected you at
all!”

“What do you mean?”

“This fellow Pennington may not be guilty, but I know who is.”

“How do you know? I don’t understand you. Why do you look at me that
way?”

“Well, if that isn’t the best ever!” exclaimed the man. “And here you
have been handing me a long line of talk about the decent family you
came from, and how it would kill them if they knew you sniffed a little
coke now and then. Well, wouldn’t that get you? You certainly are a
fine one to preach!”

“I don’t understand you,” said the girl. “What has this to do with me?
I am not related to Mr. Pennington, but it would make no difference if
I were, for I know he never did anything of the sort. The idea of a
Pennington bootlegging! Why, they have more money than they need, and
always have had.”

“It isn’t Pennington who ought to be in jail,” he said. “It’s your
brother.”

She looked at him in surprise, and then she laughed.

“You must have been hitting it up strong to-day, Wilson,” she said.

“Oh, no, I haven’t; but it’s funny I never thought of it before.
Allen told me a long while ago that a fellow by the name of Evans was
handling the hootch for him. He said he got a job from the Penningtons
as stableman in order to be near the camp where they had the stuff
cached in the hills. He described Evans as a young blood, so I guess
there isn’t any doubt about it. You have a brother--I’ve heard you
speak of him.”

“I don’t believe you,” she said.

“It don’t make any difference whether you believe me or not. I could
put your brother in the pen, and they’ve only got Pennington in the
county jail. All they could get on him, according to this article, was
having stolen goods in his possession; but your brother was in on the
whole proposition. It was hidden in his hay barn. He delivered it to a
fellow who came up there every week, ostensibly to get hay, and your
brother collected the money. Gosh, they’d send him up for sure if I
ever tipped them off to what I know!”

And thus was fashioned the power he used to force her to his will.

A week later the bungalow on Circle Terrace was engaged, and Grace
Evans took up the work of peddling narcotics, which Shannon Burke had
laid down a few months before. With this difference--Gaza de Lure had
shared in the profits of the traffic, while Grace Evans got nothing
more than her living, and what drugs she craved for her personal use.

Her life, her surroundings, every environment of this new and terrible
world into which her ambition had introduced her, tended rapidly to
ravish her beauty. She faded with a rapidity that was surprising even
to Crumb--surprising and annoying. He had wanted her for her beauty,
and now she was losing it; but still he must keep her, because of her
value in his nefarious commerce.

As weeks and months went by, he no longer took pleasure in her
society, and was seldom at the bungalow save when he came to demand
an accounting and to collect the proceeds of her sales. Her pleas and
reproaches had no other effect upon him than to arouse his anger. One
day, when she clung to him, begging him not to desert her, he pushed
her roughly from him so that she fell, and in falling she struck the
edge of a table and hurt herself.

This happened in April. On the following day Custer Pennington, his
term in the county jail expired, was liberated.



CHAPTER XXVIII


Custer’s long hours of loneliness had often been occupied with plans
against the day of his liberation. That Grace had not seen him or
communicated with him since his arrest and conviction had been a source
of wonder and hurt to him. He recalled many times the circumstance of
the telephone call, with a growing belief that Grace had been there,
but had refused to talk with him. Nevertheless, he was determined to
see her before he returned to Ganado.

He had asked particularly that none of his family should come to Los
Angeles on the day of his release, but that the roadster should be sent
up on the preceding day and left in a garage for him. He lost no time,
after quitting the jail, in getting his machine and driving out to
Hollywood, to the house where Grace had boarded.

The woman who answered his ring told him that Grace no longer lived
there. At first she was loath to give him any information as to the
girl’s whereabouts; but after some persuasion she gave him a number on
Circle Terrace, and in that direction Pennington turned his car.

As he left his car before the bungalow, and approached the building, he
could see into the interior through the screen door, for it was a warm
day in April, and the inner door was open. As he mounted the few steps
leading to the porch, he saw a woman cross the living room, into which
the door opened. She moved hurriedly, disappearing through a doorway
opposite and closing the door after her. Though he had but a brief
glimpse of her in the darkened interior, he knew that it was Grace,
so familiar were every line of her figure and every movement of her
carriage.

It was several minutes after Custer rang before a Japanese appeared at
the doorway. It was the same Japanese “schoolboy” who had served as
general factotum at the Vista del Paso bungalow. He opened the screen
door a few inches and looked inquiringly at the caller.

“I wish to see Miss Evans,” said Custer.

He took a card case from his pocket and handed a card to the servant,
who looked blankly at the card and then at the caller, finally shaking
his head stupidly and closing the door.

“No here,” he said. “Nobody home.”

Pennington recalled once more the affair of the telephone. He knew that
he had just seen Grace inside the bungalow. He had come to talk with
her, and he intended to do so.

He laid his hand on the handle of the door and jerked it open. The
Jap, evidently lacking in discretion, endeavored to prevent him from
entering. First the guardian clawed at the door in an effort to close
it, and then, very foolishly, he attempted to push Pennington out on
the porch. The results were disastrous to the Jap.

Crossing the living room, Custer rapped on the door through which he
had seen Grace go, calling her by name. Receiving no reply, he flung
the door open. Facing him was the girl he was engaged to marry.

With her back against the dresser, Grace stood at the opposite end of
the room. Her disheveled hair fell about her face, which was overspread
with a sickly pallor. Her wild, staring eyes were fixed upon him. Her
mouth, drooping at the corners, tremulously depicted a combination of
terror and anger.

“Grace!” he exclaimed.

She still stood staring at him for a moment before she spoke.

“What do you mean,” she demanded at last, “by breaking into my bedroom?
Get out! I don’t want to see you. I don’t want you here!”

He crossed the room and put a hand upon her shoulder.

“My God, Grace,” he cried, “what is the matter? What has happened to
you?”

“Nothing has happened,” she mumbled. “There is nothing the matter with
me. I suppose you want me to go back with the rest of the rubes. I am
through with the damned country--and country jakes, too!” she added.

“You mean that you don’t want me here, Grace? That you don’t love me?”
he asked.

“Love you?” She broke into a disagreeable laugh. “Why, you poor rube, I
never want to see you again!”

He stood looking at her for a moment longer, and then he turned slowly
and walked out of the bungalow and down to his car. When he had
gone, the girl threw herself face down upon the bed and burst into
uncontrollable sobs. For the moment she had risen triumphant above the
clutches of her sordid vice. For that brief moment she had played her
part to save the man she loved from greater torture and humiliation in
the future--at what a price only she could ever know.

Custer found them waiting for him on the east porch as he drove up to
the ranch house. The new freedom and the long drive over the beautiful
highway through the clear April sunshine, with the green hills at his
left and the lovely valley spread out upon his right hand, to some
extent alleviated the depression that had followed the shock of his
interview with Grace; and when he alighted from the car he seemed quite
his normal self again.

Eva was the first to reach him. She fairly threw herself upon her
brother, laughing and crying in a hysteria of happiness. His mother was
smiling through her tears, while the colonel blew his nose violently,
remarking that it was “a hell of a time of year to have a damned cold!”

Custer joked a little about his imprisonment, but he soon saw that the
mere mention of it had a most depressing effect upon Eva; so he did
not revert to the subject again in her presence. He confined himself
to plying them with a hundred questions about happenings on the ranch
during his long absence, the condition of the stock, and the crop
outlook for the season.

As he considered the effect his undeserved jail sentence had produced
upon the sensibilities of his sister, he was doubly repaid for the
long months of confinement that he had suffered in order to save
her from the still greater blow of having the man she was to marry
justly convicted of a far more serious crime. He saw no reason now
why she should ever learn the truth. The temporary disgrace of his
incarceration would soon be forgotten in the everyday run of work and
pleasure that constituted the life of Ganado, and the specter of her
hurt pride would no longer haunt her.

Custer was surprised that Guy and Mrs. Evans had not been of the
party that welcomed his return. When he mentioned this, Eva told him
that Mrs. Evans thought the Penningtons would want to have him all to
themselves for a while, and that their neighbors were coming up after
dinner. And it was not until dinner that he asked after Shannon.

“We have seen very little of her since you left,” explained his mother.
“She returned Baldy soon after that, and bought the Senator from Mrs.
Evans.”

“I don’t know what is the matter with the child,” said the colonel.
“She is as sweet as ever when we do see her, and she always asks after
you and tells us that she believes in your innocence. She rides a great
deal at night, but seldom, if ever, in the daytime. I don’t think it is
safe for a woman to ride alone in the hills at night, and I have told
her so; but she says that she is not afraid, and that she loves the
hills as well by night as by day.”

“Eva has missed her company very much,” said Mrs. Pennington. “I was
afraid that we might have done something to offend her, but none of us
could think what it could have been.”

“I thought she was ashamed of us,” said Eva.

“Nonsense!” exclaimed the colonel.

“Of course that’s nonsense,” said Custer. “She knows as well as the
rest of you that I was innocent.”

He was thinking how much more surely Shannon knew his innocence than
any of them.

During dinner Eva regained her old-time spirit. More than once the
tears came to Mrs. Pennington’s eyes as she realized that once more
their little family was united, and that the pall of sorrow that had
weighed so heavily upon them for the past six months had at last
lifted, revealing again the sunshine of the daughter’s heart, which had
never been the same since their boy had gone away.

“Oh, Cus!” exclaimed Eva. “The most scrumptious thing is going to
happen, and I’m so glad that you are going to be here too. It’s going
to be perfectly gorgeristic! There’s be a whole regiment of them, and
they’re going to be camped right up at the mouth of Jackknife. I can
scarcely wait until they come--can you?”

“I think I might manage,” said her brother; “at least until you tell me
what you are talking about.”

“Pictures,” exclaimed Eva. “Isn’t it simplimetic gorgeristic? And they
may be here a whole month!”

“What in the world is the child talking about?” asked Custer, appealing
to his mother.

“Your father----” Mrs. Pennington started to explain.

“Oh, don’t tell him”; cried Eva. “I want to tell him myself.”

“You have been explaining for several minutes,” said Custer; “but you
haven’t said anything yet.”

“Well, I’ll start at the beginning, then. They’re going to have
Indians, and cowboys, and----”

“That sounds more like the finish,” suggested Custer.

“Don’t interrupt me! They’re going to take a picture on Ganado.”

Custer turned toward his father with a look of surprise.

“You needn’t blame papa,” said Eva. “It was all my fault--or, rather,
I should say our good fortune is all due to me. You see, papa wasn’t
going to let them come at first, but the cutest man came up to see
him--a nice, short, fat little man, and he rubbed his hands together
and said: ‘Vell, colonel?’ Papa told him that he had never allowed any
picture companies on the place; but I happened to be there, and that
was all that saved us, for I teased and teased and teased until finally
papa said that they could come, provided they didn’t take any pictures
up around the house. They didn’t want to do that, for they’re making a
Western picture, and they said the scenery at the back of the ranch is
just what they want. They’re coming up in a few days, and it’s going to
be perfectly radiant, and maybe I’ll get in the pictures!”

“If I thought so,” said Custer, “I’d put a can of nitroglycerine under
the whole works the moment they drove on to the property!” He was
thinking of what the pictures had done for Grace Evans. “I am surprised
that you permitted it, father,” he said, turning to the colonel.

“I’m rather surprised myself,” admitted the older Pennington; “but what
was I to do, with that suave little location manager rubbing his hands
and oiling me on one side, and this little rascal here pestering the
life out of me on the other? I simply had to give in. I don’t imagine
any harm will come from it. They’ve promised to be very careful of all
the property, and whenever any of our stock is used it will be handled
by our own men.”

“I suppose they are going to pay you handsomely for it,” suggested
Custer.

The colonel smiled.

“Well, that wasn’t exactly mentioned,” he said; “but I have a
recollection that the location manager said something about presenting
us with a fine set of stills of the ranch.”

“Generous of them!” said Custer. “They’ll camp all over the shop,
use our water, burn our firewood, and trample up our pasture, and in
return they’ll give us a set of photographs. Their liberality is truly
marvelous!”

“Well, to tell you the truth,” said the colonel, “after I found how
anxious Eva was, I wouldn’t have dared mention payment, for fear they
might refuse to come and this young lady’s life might be ruined in
consequence!”

“What outfit is it?” asked the son.

“It’s a company from the K. K. S., directed by a man by the name of
Crumb.”

“Wilson Crumb, the famous actor-director,” added Eva. “How perfectly
radiant! I danced with him in Los Angeles a year ago.”

“Oh, that’s the fellow, is it?” said Custer. “I have a hazy
recollection that you were mad about him for some fifteen minutes after
you reached home, but I have never heard you mention him since.”

“Well, to tell you the truth,” said Eva, “I had forgotten all about him
until that perfectly gorgeous little loquacious manager mentioned him.”

“Location manager,” corrected her father.

“He was both.”

“Yes, he was,” said the colonel. “I rather hope he comes back. I
haven’t enjoyed any one so much since the days of Weber and Fields.”

It was after eight o’clock when the Evanses arrived. Mrs. Evans was
genuinely affected at seeing Custer again, for she was as fond of
him as if he had been her own son. In Guy, Custer discovered a great
change. The boy that he had left had become suddenly a man, quiet and
reserved, with a shadow of sadness in his expression. His lesson had
been a hard one, Custer knew, and the price that he had had to pay for
it had left its indelible mark upon his sensitive character.

Guy’s happiness at having Custer back again was overshadowed to some
extent by the shame that he must always feel when he looked into the
face of the man who had shouldered his guilt and taken the punishment
which should have been his. The true purpose of Pennington’s sacrifice
could never alter young Evans’s realization of the fact that the part
he had been forced to take had been that of a coward, a traitor, and a
cad.

The first greetings over, Mrs. Evans asked Custer if he had seen Grace
before he left Los Angeles.

“I saw her,” he said, “and she is not at all well. I think Guy should
go up there immediately, and try to bring her back. I meant to speak to
him about it this evening.”

“She is not seriously ill?” exclaimed Mrs. Evans.

“I cannot say,” replied Custer. “I doubt if she is seriously ill in a
physical sense, but she is not well. I could see that. She has changed
a great deal. I think you should lose no time, Guy,” he added, turning
to Grace’s brother, “in going to Los Angeles and getting her. She has
been gone almost a year. It is time she knew whether her dreams are
to come true or not. From what I saw of her, I doubt if they have
materialized.”

“I will go to-morrow,” said young Evans.



CHAPTER XXIX


The six months that had just passed had been months of indecision and
sadness for Shannon Burke. Constantly moved by a conviction that she
should leave the vicinity of Ganado and the Penningtons, she was held
there by a force that she had not the power to overcome.

Never before since she had left her mother’s home in the Middle West
had she experienced the peace and content and happiness that her
little orchard on the highway imparted to her life. The friendship of
the Penningtons had meant more to her than anything that had hitherto
entered her life; and to be near them, even if she saw them but seldom,
constituted a constant bulwark against the assaults of her old enemy,
which still occasionally assailed the ramparts of her will.

After the departure of Custer she had conscientiously observed what she
considered to be his wishes as expressed in his reference comparing her
with the girl friend of Cousin William, whom he had practically ordered
out of the house. She had as far as possible avoided Eva’s society; and
though contemplation of the cause of this avoidance filled her with
humiliation, and with a sense of the injustice of all that it implied,
she nevertheless felt it a duty to the man she loved to respect his
every wish, however indirectly suggested.

That she might put herself in Eva’s way as seldom as possible, Shannon
had formed the habit of riding at those hours at which the Penningtons
were not accustomed to ride. The habit of solitude grew upon her, and
she loved the loneliness of the hills. They never oppressed her--she
never feared them. They drew her to them and soothed her as a mother
might have done. There she forgot her sorrows, and hope was stimulated
to new life.

Especially when the old craving seized her did she long for the hills,
and it was because of this that she first rode at night--on a night
of brilliant moonlight that imparted to familiar scenes the weird
beauties of a strange world. The experience was unique. It assumed
the proportions of an adventure, and it lured her to other similar
excursions.

Even the Senator felt the spell of enchantment. He stepped daintily
with uppricked ears and arched neck, peering nervously into the depth
of each shadowy bush. He leaped suddenly aside at the movement of a
leaf, or halted, trembling and snorting, at the moon-bathed outlines of
some jutting rock that he had passed a hundred times, unmoved, by day.

The moonlight rides led Shannon to others on moonless nights, so that
she was often in the saddle when the valley slept. She invariably
followed the same trail on these occasions, with the result that
both she and the Senator knew every foot of it so well that they had
traversed it beneath the blackness of heavy clouds, or when low fogs
obliterated all but the nearest objects.

Never, in the hills, could her mind dwell upon depressing thoughts.
Only cheerful reflections were her companions of those hours of
solitude. She thought of the love that had come into her life, of the
beauty of it, and of all that it had done to make life more worth the
living; of the Penningtons and the example of red-blooded cleanliness
that they set--decency without prudery; of her little orchard and the
saving problems it had brought to occupy her mind and hands; of her
horse and her horsemanship, two never-failing sources of companionship
and pleasure which the Penningtons had taught her to love and enjoy.

On the morning after Custer’s return, Guy started early for Los
Angeles, while Custer--Shannon not having joined them on their morning
ride--resaddled the Apache after breakfast and rode down to her
bungalow. He both longed to see her and dreaded the meeting; for,
regardless of Grace’s attitude and of the repulse she had given him,
his honor bound him to her. Loyalty to the girl had been engendered by
long years of association, during which friendship had grown into love
by so gradual a process that it seemed to each of them that there had
never been a time when they had not loved. Such attachments, formed in
the heart of youth, hallowed by time, and fortified by the pride and
honor of inherited chivalry, become a part of the characters of their
possessors, and as difficult to uproot as those other habits of thought
and action which differentiate one individual from another.

Custer had realized, in that brief interview of the day before, that
Grace was not herself. What was the cause of her change he could
not guess, since he was entirely unacquainted with the symptoms of
narcotics. Even had a suspicion of the truth entered his mind, he would
have discarded it as a vile slander upon the girl, as he had rejected
the involuntary suggestion that she might have been drinking. His
position was distressing for a man to whom honor was a fetish, since
he knew that he still loved Grace, while at the same time realizing a
still greater love for Shannon.

She saw him coming and came down the driveway to meet him, her face
radiant with the joy of his return, and with that expression of love
that is always patent to all but the object of its concern.

“Oh, Custer!” she cried. “I am so glad that you are home again! It has
seemed years and years, rather than months, to all of us.”

“I am glad to be home, Shannon. I have missed you, too. I have missed
you all--everything--the hills, the valley, every horse and cow and
little pig, the clean air, the smell of flowers and sage--all that is
Ganado.”

“You like it better than the city?”

“I shall never long for the city again,” he said. “Cities are
wonderful, of course, with their great buildings, their parks and
boulevards, their fine residences, their lawns and gardens. The things
that men have accomplished there fill a fellow with admiration; but how
pitiful they really are compared with the magnificence that is ours!”
He turned and pointed toward the mountains. “Just think of those hills,
Shannon, and the infinite, unthinkable power that uplifted such mighty
monuments. Think of the countless ages that they have endured, and then
compare them with the puny efforts of man. Compare the range of vision
of the city dweller with ours. He can see across the street, and to the
top of some tall building, which may look imposing; but place it beside
one of our hills, and see what becomes of it. Place it in a ravine in
the high Sierras, and you would have difficulty in finding it; and
you cannot even think of it in connection with a mountain fifteen or
twenty thousand feet in height. And yet the city man patronizes us
country people, deploring the necessity that compels us to pursue our
circumscribed existence.”

“Pity him,” laughed Shannon. “He is as narrow as his streets. His
ideals can reach no higher than the pall of smoke that hangs over the
roofs of his buildings. I am so glad, Custer, that you have given up
the idea of leaving the country for the city!”

“I never really intended to,” he replied. “I couldn’t have left, on
father’s account; but now I can remain on my own as well as his, and
with a greater degree of contentment. You see that my recent experience
was a blessing in disguise.”

“I am glad if some good came out of it; but it was a wicked injustice,
and there were others as innocent as you who suffered fully as
much--Eva especially.”

“I know,” he said. “She has been very lonely since I left, with Grace
away, too; and they tell me that you have constantly avoided them. Why?
I cannot understand it.”

He had dismounted and tied the Apache, and they were walking toward
the porch. She stopped, and turned to look Custer squarely in the eyes.

“How could I have done otherwise?” she asked.

“I do not understand,” he replied.

She could not hold her eyes to his as she explained, but looked down,
her expression changing from happiness to one of shame and sadness.

“You forget that girl, the friend of Cousin William?” she asked.

“Oh, Shannon!” he cried, laying a hand impulsively upon her arm. “I
told you that I wouldn’t say that to you. I didn’t want you to stay
away. I have implicit confidence in you.”

“No,” she contradicted him. “In your heart you thought it, and perhaps
you were right.”

“No,” he insisted. “Please don’t stay away--promise me that you will
not! You have hurt them all, and they are all so fond of you!”

“I am sorry, Custer. I would not hurt them. I love them all; but I
thought I was doing the thing that you wished. There was so much that
you did not understand--that you can never understand--and you were
away where you couldn’t know what was going on; so it seemed disloyal
to do the thing I thought you would rather I didn’t do.”

“It’s all over now,” he said. “Let’s start over again, forgetting all
that has happened in the last six months and a half.”

Again, as his hand lay upon her arm, he was seized with an almost
uncontrollable desire to crush her to him. Two things deterred him--his
loyalty to Grace, and the belief that his love would be unwelcome to
Shannon.



CHAPTER XXX


Guy Evans swept over the broad, smooth highway at a rate that would
have won him ten days in the jail at Santa Ana had his course led him
through that village. The impression that Custer’s words had implanted
in his mind was that Grace was ill, for Pennington had not gone into
the details of his unhappy interview with the girl, choosing to leave
to her brother a realization of her changed condition, which would have
been incredible to him even from the lips of so trusted a friend as
Custer.

And so it was that when he approached the bungalow on Circle Terrace,
and saw a coupé standing at the curb, he guessed at what it portended;
for though there were doubtless hundreds of similar cars in the city,
there was that about this one which suggested the profession of its
owner. As Guy hurried up the walk to the front door, he was as positive
that he would find Grace ill and a doctor in attendance, as if some one
had already told him so.

There was no response to his ring, and as the inner door was open he
entered. A door on the opposite side of the living room was ajar. As
Guy approached it, a man appeared in the doorway, and beyond him the
visitor could see Grace lying, very white and still, upon a bed.

“Who are you--this woman’s husband?” demanded the man in curt tones.

“I am her brother. What is the matter? Is she very ill?”

“Did you know of her condition?”

“I heard last night that she was not well, and I hurried up here. I
live in the country. Who are you? What has happened? She is not--my
God, she is not----”

“Not yet. Perhaps we can save her. I am a doctor. I was called by a
Japanese, who said that he was a servant here. He must have left after
he called me, for I have not seen him. Her condition is serious, and
requires an immediate operation--an operation of such a nature that I
must learn the name of her own physician and have him present. Where is
her husband?”

“Husband! My sister is not----” Guy ceased speaking, and went suddenly
white. “My God, doctor, you don’t mean that she--that my sister--oh,
no, not that!”

He seized the other’s arm beseechingly. The doctor laid his hand upon
the younger man’s shoulder.

“She had a fall night before last, and an immediate operation is
imperative. Her condition is such that we cannot even take the risk of
moving her to a hospital. I have my instruments in my car, but I should
have help. Who is her doctor?”

“I do not know.”

“I’ll get some one. I have given her something to quiet her.”

The doctor stepped to the telephone and gave a number. Evans entered
the room where his sister lay. She was moving about restlessly and
moaning, though it was evident that she was still unconscious.

Changed! Guy wondered that he had known her at all, now that he
was closer to her. Her face was pinched and drawn. Her beauty was
gone--every vestige of it. She looked old and tired and haggard, and
there were terrible lines upon her face that stilled her brother’s
heart and brought the tears to his eyes.

He heard the doctor summoning an assistant and directing him to bring
ether. Then he heard him go out of the house by the front door--to get
his instruments, doubtless. The brother knelt by the girl’s bed.

“Grace!” he whispered, and threw an arm about her.

Her lids fluttered, and she opened her eyes.

“Guy!”

She recognized him--she was conscious.

“Who did this?” he demanded. “What is his name?”

She shook her head.

“What is the use?” she asked. “It is done.”

“Tell me!”

“You would kill him--and be punished. It would only make it
worse--for--you--and mother. Let it die with me!”

“You are not going to die. Tell me, who is he? Do you love him?”

“I hate him!”

“How were you injured?”

“He threw me--against--a table.”

Her voice was growing weaker. Choking back tears of grief and anger,
the young man rose and stood beside her.

“Grace, I command you to tell me!”

His voice was low, but it was vibrant with power and authority. The
girl tried to speak. Her lips moved, but she uttered no sound. Guy
thought that she was dying, and taking her secret to the grave.

Her eyes moved to something beyond the foot of the bed, back to his,
and back again to whatever she had been looking at, as if she sought to
direct his attention to something in that part of the room. He followed
the direction of her gaze. There was a dressing table there, and on it
a photograph of a man in a silver frame. Guy stepped to the table and
picked up the picture.

“This is he?”

His eyes demanded an answer. Her lips moved soundlessly, and weakly she
nodded an affirmative.

“What is his name?”

She was too weak to answer him. She gasped, and her breath came
flutteringly. The brother threw himself upon his knees beside the bed,
and took her in his arms. His tears mingled with his kisses on her
cheek. The doctor came then and drew him away.

“She is dead!” said the boy, turning away and covering his face with
his hands.

“No,” said the doctor, after a brief examination. “She is not dead. Get
into the kitchen, and get some water to boiling. I’ll be getting things
ready in here. Another doctor will be here in a few minutes.”

Glad of something to do, just to help, Guy hastened into the little
kitchen. He found a kettle and a large pan, and put water in them to
boil.

A moment later the doctor came in. He had removed his coat and vest and
rolled up his sleeves. He placed his instruments in the pan of water on
the stove, and then he went to the sink and washed his hands. While he
scrubbed, he talked. He was an efficient-looking, businesslike person,
and he inspired Guy with confidence and hope.

“She has a fighting chance,” he said. “I’ve seen worse cases pull
through. She’s had a bad time, though. She must have been lying here
for pretty close to twenty-four hours without any attention. I found
her fully dressed on her bed--fully dressed except for what clothes
she’d torn off in her pain. If some one had called a doctor yesterday
at this time, it might have been all right. It may be all right even
now. We’ll do the best we can.”

The bell rang.

“That’s the doctor. Let him in, please.”

Guy went to the door and admitted the second physician, who removed
his coat and vest and went directly to the kitchen. The first doctor
was entering the room where Grace lay. He turned and spoke to his
colleague, greeting him; then he disappeared within the adjoining room.
The second doctor busied himself about the sink, sterilizing his hands.
Guy lighted another burner and put on another vessel with water in it.

A moment later the first doctor returned to the kitchen.

“It will not be necessary to operate, doctor,” he said. “We were too
late!”

His tone and manner were still very businesslike and efficient, but
there was an expression of compassion in his eyes as he crossed the
room and put his arm about Guy’s shoulders.

“Come into the other room, my boy. I want to talk to you,” he said.

Guy, dry-eyed, and walking almost as one in a trance, accompanied him
to the little living room.

“You have had a hard blow,” said the doctor. “What I am going to tell
you may make it harder; but if she had been my sister I should have
wanted to know about it. She is better off. The chances are that she
didn’t want to live. She certainly made no fight for life--not since I
was called.”

“Why should she want to die?” Guy asked dully. “We would have forgiven
her. No one would ever have known about it but me.”

“There was something else--she was a drug addict. That was probably the
reason why she didn’t want to live. The morphine I had to give her to
quiet her would have killed three ordinary men.”

And so Guy Evans came to know the terrible fate that had robbed his
sister of her dreams, of her ambition, and finally of her life. He
placed the full responsibility upon the man whose picture had stood in
its silver frame upon the girl’s dressing table. As he knelt beside the
dead girl, he swore to search until he had learned the identity of that
man, and found him, and forced from him the only expiation that could
satisfy the honor of a brother.



CHAPTER XXXI


The death of Grace had, of course, its naturally depressing effect
upon the circle of relatives and friends at Ganado; but her absence of
more than a year, the infrequency of her letters, and the fact that
they had already come to feel that she was lost to them, mitigated
to some degree the keenness of their grief and lessened its outward
manifestations. Her pitiful end could not seriously interrupt the
tenor of their lives, which had long since grown over the wound of her
departure, as a tree’s growth rolls over the hurt of a severed limb,
leaving only a scar as a reminder of its loss.

Mrs. Evans, Guy and Custer suffered more than the others--Mrs. Evans
because of the natural instincts of motherhood, and Custer from a sense
of loss that seemed to have uprooted and torn away a part of his being,
even though he realized that his love for Grace had been of a different
sort from his hopeless passion for Shannon Burke. It was Guy who
suffered most, for hugged to his breast was the gnawing secret of the
truth of his sister’s life and death. He had told them that Grace had
died of pneumonia, and they had not gone behind his assertion to search
the records for the truth.

Locked in his desk was the silver frame and the picture of the man
whose identity he had been unable to discover. The bungalow had been
leased in Grace’s name. The Japanese servant had disappeared, and Guy
had been unable to obtain any trace of him. The dead girl had had no
friends in the neighborhood, and there was no one who could tell him
anything that might lead to the discovery of the man he sought.

He did not, however, give up his search. He went often to Hollywood,
where he haunted public places and the entrances to studios, in the
hope that some day he would find the man he sought; but as the passing
months brought no success, and the duties of his ranch and his literary
work demanded more and more of his time, he was gradually compelled
to push the furtherance of his vengeance into the background, though
without any lessening of his determination to compass it eventually.

To Custer, the direct effect of Grace’s death was to revive the habit
of drinking more than was good for him--a habit from which he had
drifted away during the past year. That it had ever been a habit he
would, of course, have been the last to admit. He was one of those men
who could drink, or leave it alone. The world is full of them, and so
are the cemeteries.

Custer avoided Shannon when he could do so without seeming unfriendly.
Quite unreasonably, he felt that his love for Shannon was an indication
of disloyalty to Grace. The latter’s dismissal of him he had never
taken as a serious avowal of her heart. He had realized that the woman
who had spoken so bitterly had not been the girl he had loved, and
whose avowals of love he had listened to. Nor had she been the girl
upon whose sad, tired face he had looked for the last time in the
darkened living room of the Evans home, for then death had softened the
hard lines of dissipation, revealing again, in chastened melancholy,
the soul that sin had disguised but not destroyed.

Shannon recognized the change in Custer. She attributed it to his
grief, and to his increased drinking, which she had sensed almost
immediately, as love does sense the slightest change in its object,
however little apparent to another. She did not realize that she was
purposely avoiding her. She was more than ever with Eva now, for Guy,
having settled down to the serious occupations of man’s estate, no
longer had so much leisure to devote to play.

She still occasionally rode at night, for the daytime rides with
Custer were less frequent now. Much of his time was occupied closer
in around the ranch, with the conditioning of the show herds for
the coming fall--an activity which gave him a plausible excuse for
foregoing his rides with Shannon. The previous year they had been
compelled to cancel their entries because of Custer’s imprisonment,
since the colonel would not make the circuit of the shows himself,
and did not care to trust the herds to any one but his son. Now the
Morgans, the Percherons, the Herefords, and the Berkshires that were to
uphold the fame of Ganado were the center of arduous and painstaking
fitting and grooming, as the time approached when the finishing touches
were to be put upon glossy coat and polished horn and hoof.

May, June, and July had come and gone--it was August again. Guy’s
futile visits to Los Angeles were now infrequent. The life of Ganado
had again assumed the cheerfulness of the past. The heat of summer had
brought the swimming pool into renewed demand, and the cool evenings
saved the ballroom from desertion. The youth of the foothills and
valley, reënforced by weekend visitors from the city, filled the old
house with laughter and happiness. Shannon was always of these parties,
for they would not let her remain away.

It was upon the occasion of one of them, early in August, that Eva
announced the date of her wedding to Guy.

“The 2nd of September,” she told them. “It comes on a Saturday. We’re
going to motor to----”

“Hold on!” cautioned Guy. “That’s a secret!”

“And when we come back we’re going to start building on Hill Thirteen.”

“That’s a cow pasture,” said Custer.

“Well, it won’t be one any more. You must find another cow pasture.”

“Certainly, little one,” replied her brother. “We’ll bring the cows up
here in the ballroom. With five thousand acres to pick from, you can’t
find a bungalow site anywhere except in the best dairy cow pasture on
Ganado!”

“With five thousand acres to pick from, I suppose you can’t find a cow
pasture anywhere but on the best bungalow site in southern California!
You radiant brother! You wouldn’t have your little sister living in the
hog pasture, now would you?”

“Heavens, no! Those nine children you aspire to would annoy the brood
sows.”

“You’re hideous!”

“Put on a fox trot, some one,” cried Guy. “Dance with your sister, Cus,
and you’ll let her build bungalows all over Ganado. No one can refuse
her anything when they dance with her.”

“I’ll say they can’t,” agreed Custer. “Was that how she lured you to
your undoing, Guy?”

“What a dapper little idea!” exclaimed Eva.

Guy danced that dance with Mrs. Pennington, and the colonel took out
Shannon. As they moved over the smooth floor with the easy dignity that
good dancers can impart to the fox trot, the girl’s eyes were often on
the brother and sister dancing and laughing together.

“How wonderful they are!” she said.

“Who?” inquired the colonel.

“Custer and Eva. Theirs is such a wonderful relationship between
brother and sister--the way it ought to be, but very seldom is.”

“Oh, I don’t know that it’s unique,” replied the colonel. “Guy and
Grace were that way, and so were my father’s children. Possibly it’s
because we were all raised in the country, where children are more
dependent upon their sisters and brothers for companionship than
children of the city. We all get better acquainted in the country, and
we have to learn to find the best that is in each of us, for we haven’t
the choice of companions here that a city, with its thousands, affords.”

“I don’t know,” said Shannon. “Perhaps that is it; but anyway it is
lovely--really _lovely_, for they are almost like two lovers. At
first, when I heard them teasing each other, I used to think there
might be some bitterness in their thrusts; but when I came to know you
all better, I realized that your affection was so perfect that there
could never be any misunderstanding among you.”

“That attitude is not peculiar to the Penningtons,” replied the
colonel. “I know, for instance, of one who so perfectly harmonized with
their lives and ideals that in less than a year she became practically
one of them.”

He was smiling down into Shannon’s upturned face.

“I know--you mean me,” she said. “It is awfully nice of you, and it
makes me very proud to hear you say so, for I have really tried to be
like you. If I have succeeded the least bit, I am so happy!”

“I don’t know that you have succeeded in being like us,” he laughed;
“but you have certainly succeeded in being liked _by_ us. Why, do you
know, Shannon, I believe Mrs. Pennington and I discuss you and plan for
you fully as much as we do the children. It is almost as if you were
our other daughter.”

The tears came to her eyes.

“I am so happy!” she said again.

It was later in the evening, after a dance, that she and Custer walked
out on the driveway along the north side of the ballroom, and stood
looking out over the moon-enchanted valley--a vista of loveliness
glimpsed between masses of feathery foliage in an opening through the
trees on the hillside just below them. They looked out across the
acacias and cedars of the lower hill toward the lights of a little
village twinkling between two dome-like hills at the upper end of the
valley. It was an unusually warm evening, almost too warm to dance.

“I think we’d get a little of the ocean breeze,” said Custer, “if
we were on the other side of the hill. Let’s walk over to the water
gardens. There is usually a breeze there, but the building cuts us off
from it here.”

Side by side, in silence, they walked around the front of the building
and along the south drive to the steps leading down through the
water gardens to the stables. The steps were narrow and Custer went
ahead--which is always the custom of men in countries where there are
rattlesnakes.

As Shannon stepped from the cement steps to the gravel walk above the
first pool, her foot came down upon a round stone, turning her ankle
and throwing her against Custer. For support she grasped his arm. Upon
such insignificant trifles may the fate of lives depend. It might have
been a lizard, a toad, a mouse, or even a rattlesnake that precipitated
the moment which, for countless eons, creation had been preparing; but
it was none of these. It was just a little round pebble--and it threw
Shannon Burke against Custer Pennington, causing her to seize his arm.
He felt the contact of those fingers, and the warmth of her body, and
her cheek near his shoulder. He threw an arm about her to support her.

Almost instantly she had regained her footing. Laughingly she drew away.

“I stepped on a stone,” she said in explanation; “but I didn’t hurt my
ankle.”

But still he kept his arm about her. At first Shannon did not
understand, and, supposing that he still thought her unable to stand
alone, she again explained that she was unhurt.

He stood looking down into her face, which was turned up to his. The
moon, almost full, revealed her features as clearly as sunlight--how
beautiful they were, and how close. She had not yet fully realized the
significance of his attitude when he suddenly threw his other arm about
her and crushed her to him; and then, before she could prevent, he had
bent his lips to hers and kissed her full upon the mouth.

With a startled cry she pushed him away.

“Custer!” she said. “What have you done? This is not like you. I do not
understand!”

She was really terrified--terrified at the thought that he might have
kissed her without love--terrified that he might have kissed her _with_
love. She did not know which would be the greater catastrophe.

“I couldn’t help it, Shannon,” he said. “Blame the pebble, blame the
moonlight, blame me--it won’t make any difference. I couldn’t help it;
that is all there is to it. I’ve fought against it for months. I knew
you didn’t love me; but, oh, Shannon, I love you! I had to tell you.”

He loved her! He had loved her for months! Oh, the horror of it! Her
little dream of happiness was shattered. No longer could they go on as
they had. There would always be this between them--the knowledge of his
love; and he would learn of her love for him, for she would not lie
to him if he asked her. Then she would either have to explain or to
go away--to explain those hideous months with Crumb. Custer would not
believe the truth--no man would believe the truth--that she had come
through them undefiled. She herself would not believe it of another
woman, and she was too sophisticated to hope that the man who loved her
would believe it of her.

He had not let her go. They still stood there--his arms about her.

“Please don’t be angry, Shannon,” he begged. “You may not want my love,
but there’s no disgrace in it. Maybe I shouldn’t have kissed you, but I
couldn’t help it, and I’m glad I did. I have that to remember as long
as I live. Please don’t be angry!”

Angry! She wished to God that he would crush her to him again and kiss
her--kiss her--kiss like that now and forever. Why shouldn’t he? Why
shouldn’t she let him? What had she done to deserve eternal punishment?
There were countless wives less virtuous than she. Ah, if she could but
have the happiness of his love!

She closed her eyes and turned away her head, and for just an instant
she dreamed her beautiful dream. Why not? Why not? Why not? There could
be no better wife than she, for there could be no greater love than
hers.

He noticed that she no longer drew away. There had been no look of
anger in her eyes--only startled questioning; and her face was still so
near. Again his arms closed about her, and again his lips found hers.

This time she did not deny him. She was only human--only a woman--and
her love, growing steadily in power for many months, had suddenly burst
forth in a consuming fire beneath his burning kisses. He felt her lips
move in a fluttering sob beneath his, and then her dear arms stole up
about his neck and pressed him closer in complete surrender.

“Shannon! You love me?”

“Ah, dear boy, always!”

He drew her to the lower end of a pool, where a rustic seat stood half
concealed by the foliage of a drooping umbrella tree. There they sat
and asked each other the same questions that lovers have asked since
prehistoric man first invented speech, and that lovers will continue to
ask so long as speech exists upon earth; very important questions--by
far the most important questions in the world.

They did not know how long they had sat there--to them it seemed but a
moment--when they heard voices calling their names from above.

“Shannon! Custer! Where are you?”

It was Eva calling.

“I suppose we’ll have to go,” he said. “Just one more kiss!”

He took a dozen; and then they rose and walked up the steps to the
south drive.

“Shall I tell them?” he asked.

“Not yet, please.”

She was not sure that it would last. Such happiness was too sweet to
endure.

Eva spied them.

“Where in the world have you two been?” she demanded. “We’ve been
hunting all over for you, and shouting until I’m hoarse.”

“We’ve been right down there by the upper pool, trying to cool off,”
replied Custer. “It’s too beastly hot to dance.”

“You never thought so before,” said Eva suspiciously. “Do you know, I
believe you two have been off spooning! How perfectly gorgeristic!”

“How perfectly nothing,” replied Custer. “Old people, like Shannon and
me, don’t spoon. That’s for you kids.”

Eva came closer.

“Shannon, you’d better go and straighten your hair before any one else
sees you.” She laughed and pinched the other’s arm. “I’d love it,” she
whispered in Shannon’s ear, “if it were true! You’ll tell me, won’t
you?”

“If it ever comes true, dear”--Shannon returned the whisper--“you shall
be the first to know about it.”

“Scrumptious! But say, I’ve got the divinest news--what do you think?
Popsy has known it all day and never mentioned it--forgot all about it,
he said, until just before he and mother trotted off to bed. Did you
ever hear of anything so outrageous? And now half the folks have gone
home, and I can’t tell ’em. Oh, it’s too spiffy for words! I’ve been
longing and longing for it for months and months and months, and now
it’s going to happen--really going to happen--actually going to happen
on Monday!”

“For Heaven’s sake, little one, unwind, and get to the end of your
harrowing story. What’s going to happen?”

“Why, the K. K. S. company is coming on Monday, and Wilson Crumb is
coming with them!”

Shannon staggered almost as from the force of a physical blow. Wilson
Crumb coming! Coming to Ganado! Short indeed had been her sweet
happiness!

“What’s the matter, Shannon?” asked Custer solicitously.

The girl steadied herself quickly.

“Oh, it’s nothing,” she said, with a nervous laugh. “I just felt a
little dizzy for a moment.”

“You had better go in the house and lie down,” he suggested.

“No, I think I’ll go home, if you’ll drive me down, Custer. You know
ten o’clock is pretty late for us.”

“It’s Saturday night,” said Eva.

“But I don’t want to miss my ride in the morning. You’re all going,
aren’t you?”

“I am,” said Custer.

He noticed that she was very quiet as they drove down to her place, and
when they parted she clung to him as if she could not bear to let him
go.

It was very wonderful--the miracle of this great love. As he drove back
home, he could not think of anything else. He was not egotistical, and
it seemed strange that from all the men she must have known Shannon had
kept her love for him. With Grace it had been different. Their love had
grown up with them from childhood. It had seemed no more remarkable
that Grace should love him than that Eva should love him, or that
he should love Grace; but Shannon had come to him out of a strange
world--a world full of men--where, with her beauty and her charm, she
must have been an object of admiration to many. Yet she had brought
her heart to him intact; for she had told him that she had never loved
another--and she had told him the truth.



CHAPTER XXXII


After Custer left her, Shannon entered the bungalow and sat for a long
time before the table on which stood a framed photograph of her mother.
Never before had she felt the need of loving counsel so sorely as now.
In almost any other emergency she could have gone to Mrs. Pennington,
but in this she dared not. She knew the pride of the Penningtons. She
realized the high altar upon which they placed the purity of their
women in the sacred temple of their love, and she knew that none but
the pure might enter.

In her heart of hearts she knew that she had the right to stand there
beside his mother or his sister; but the pity of it was that she
could never prove that right, for who would believe her? Men had been
hanged upon circumstantial evidence less damning than that which might
be arrayed against her purity. No--if ever they should learn of her
association with Wilson Crumb, they would cast her out of their lives
as they would put a leper out of their home.

Not even Custer’s love could survive such a blow to his honor and his
pride. She did not think the less of him because of that, for she was
wise enough in the ways of the world to know that pride and virtue are
oftentimes uncompromising, even to narrowness.

Her only hope, therefore, lay in avoiding discovery by Wilson Crumb
during his stay at Ganado. Her love, and the weakness it had induced,
permitted her to accept the happiness from which an unkind fate had
hitherto debarred her, and to which even now her honor told her she had
no right.

She wished that Custer had not loved her, and that she might have
continued to live the life that she had learned to love, where
she might be near him, and might constantly see him in the happy
consociation of friendship; but with his arms about her and his kisses
on her lips she had not had the strength to deny him, or to dissimulate
the great love which had ordered her very existence for many months.

In the brief moments of bliss that had followed the avowal of his love,
she had permitted herself to drift without thought of the future; but
now that the sudden knowledge of the approaching arrival of Crumb had
startled her into recollection of the past and consideration of its
bearings upon the future, she realized only too poignantly that the
demands of honor required that sooner or later she herself must tell
Custer the whole sordid story of those hideous months in Hollywood.
There was no other way. She could not mate with a man unless she could
match her honor with his. There was no alternative other than to go
away forever.

It was midnight before she arose and went to her room. She went
deliberately to a drawer which she kept locked, and, finding the key,
she opened it. From it she took the little black case, and, turning
back the cover, she revealed the phials, the needles, and the tiny
syringe that had played so sinister a part in her past.

What she was doing to-night she had done so often in the past year that
it had almost assumed the proportions of a rite. It had been her wont
to parade her tempters before her, that she might have the satisfaction
of deriding them, and of proving the strength of the new will that her
love for Custer Pennington had been so potent a factor in developing.
To-night she went a little further. She took a bit of cotton, and,
placing it in the bowl of a spoon, she dissolved some of the white
powder with the aid of a lighted match held beneath the spoon, and then
she drew the liquid into the syringe.

Her nerves were overwrought and unstrung from the stress of the
conflicting emotions they had endured that evening and the risk she
took was greater than she guessed. And yet, as she looked at the
syringe, and realized that its contents held surcease of sorrow, that
it held quiet and rest and peace, she felt only repugnance toward it.
Not even remotely did she consider the possibility of resorting again
to the false happiness of morphine.

She knew now that she was freer from its temptations than one who had
never used it; but she felt that after to-night, with the avowal of
Pennington’s love still in her ears, she must no longer keep in her
possession a thing so diametrically opposed to the cleanliness of his
life and his character. For months she had retained it as a part of the
system she had conceived for ridding herself of its power. Without it
she might never have known whether she could withstand the temptation
of its presence; but now she had finished with it. She needed it no
longer.

With almost fanatical savagery she destroyed it, crushing the glass
phials and the syringe beneath her heel and tearing the little case
to shreds. Then, gathering up the fragments, she carried them to the
fireplace in the living room and burned them.

       *       *       *       *       *

On the following day the horses and several loads of properties from
the K. K. S. studio arrived at Ganado, and the men who accompanied
them pitched their camp well up in Jackknife Cañon. Eva was very much
excited, and spent much of her time on horseback, watching their
preparations. She tried to get Shannon to accompany her, but the latter
found various excuses to remain away, being fearful that even though
Crumb had not yet arrived, there might be other employees of the studio
who would recognize her.

Crumb and the rest of the company came in the afternoon, although
they had not been expected until the following day. Eva, who had
made Custer ride up again with her in the afternoon, recalled to the
actor-director the occasion upon which she had met him, and they had
danced together, some year and a half before.

As soon as he met her, Crumb was struck by her beauty, youth, and
freshness. He saw in her a possible means of relieving the tedium of
his several weeks’ enforced absence from Hollywood--though in the big
brother he realized a possible obstacle, unless he were able to carry
on his purposed gallantries clandestinely.

In the course of conversation he took occasion to remark that Eva
ought to photograph well. “I’ll let them take a hundred feet of you,”
he said, “some day when you’re up here while we’re working. We might
discover an unsung Pickford up here among the hills!”

“She will remain unsung, then,” said Custer curtly. “My sister has no
desire to go into pictures.”

“How do you know I haven’t?” asked Eva.

“After Grace?” he asked significantly.

She turned to Crumb.

“I’m afraid I wouldn’t make much of an actress,” she said; “but it
would be perfectly radiant to see myself in pictures just once!”

“Good!” he replied. “We’ll get you all right some day that you’re up
here. I promise your brother that I won’t try to persuade you into
pictures.”

“I hope not,” said Custer.

As he and Eva rode back toward the house, he turned to the girl.

“I don’t like that fellow Crumb,” he said.

“Why?” she asked.

“It’s hard to say. He just rubs me the wrong way; but I’d bet almost
anything that he’s a cad.”

“Oh, I think he’s perfectly divine!” said Eva with her usual enthusiasm.

Custer grunted.

“The trouble with you,” announced Eva, “is that you’re jealous of him
because he’s an actor. That’s just like you men!”

Custer laughed.

“Maybe you’re right,” he said; “but I don’t like him, and I hope you’ll
never go up there alone.”

“Well, I’m going to see them take pictures,” replied the girl; “and if
I can’t get any one to go with me, I’m going alone.”

“I don’t like the way he looked at you, Eva.”

“You’re perfectly silly! He didn’t look at me any differently than any
other man does.”

“I don’t know about that. I haven’t the same keen desire to punch the
head of every man I see looking at you as I had in his case.”

“Oh, you’re prejudiced! I’ll bet anything he’s just perfectly lovely!”

Next morning, finding no one with the leisure or inclination to ride
with her, Eva rode up again to the camp. They had already commenced
shooting. Although Crumb was busy, he courteously took the time to
explain the scene on which they were working, and many of the technical
details of picture making. He had a man hold her horse while she came
and squinted through the finder. In fact, he spent so much time with
her that he materially delayed the work of the morning. At the same
time the infatuation that had had its birth on the preceding day grew
to greater proportions in his diseased mind.

He asked her to stay and lunch with them. When she insisted that
she must return home, he begged her to come again in the afternoon.
Although she would have been glad to do so, for she found the work that
they were doing novel and interesting, she declined his invitation, as
she already had made arrangements for the afternoon.

He followed her to her horse, and walked beside her down the road a
short distance from the others.

“If you can’t come down this afternoon,” he said, “possibly you can
come up this evening. We are going to take some night pictures. I
hadn’t intended inviting any one, because the work is going to be
rather difficult and dangerous, and an audience might distract the
attention of the actors; but if you think you could get away alone, I
should be very glad to have you come up for a few minutes about nine
o’clock. We shall be working in the same place. Don’t forget,” he
repeated, as she started to ride away, “that for this particular scene
I really ought not to have any audience at all; so if you come, please
don’t tell any one else about it.”

“I’ll come,” she said. “It’s awfully good of you to ask me, and I won’t
tell a soul.”

Crumb smiled as he turned back to his waiting company.

Brought up in the atmosphere that had surrounded her since birth,
unacquainted with any but honorable men, and believing as she did that
all men are the chivalrous protectors of all women, Eva did not suspect
the guile that lay behind the director’s courteous manner and fair
words. She looked upon the coming nocturnal visit to the scene of their
work as nothing more than a harmless adventure; nor was there, from her
experience, any cause for apprehension, since the company comprised
some forty or fifty men and women who, like any one else, would protect
her from any harm that lay in their power to avert.

Her conscience did not trouble her in the least, although she
regretted that she could not share her good fortune with the other
members of her family, and deplored the necessity of leaving the house
surreptitiously, like a thief in the night. Such things did not appeal
to Pennington standards; but Eva satisfied these qualms by promising
herself that she would tell them all about it at breakfast the next
morning.

After lunch that day Custer went to his room, and, throwing himself on
his bed with a book, with the intention of reading for half an hour,
fell asleep.

Shortly afterward Shannon Burke, feeling that there would be no danger
of meeting any of the K. K. S. people at the Pennington house, rode up
on the Senator to keep her appointment with Eva. As she tied her horse
upon the north side of the house, Wilson Crumb stopped his car opposite
the patio at the south drive. He had come up to see Colonel Pennington
for the purpose of arranging for the use of a number of the Ganado
Herefords in a scene on the following day.

Not finding Eva in the family sitting room, Shannon passed through the
house and out into the patio, just as Wilson Crumb mounted the two
steps to the arcade. Before either realized the presence of the other
they were face to face, scarce a yard apart.

Shannon went deathly white as she recognized the man beneath his
make-up, while Crumb stood speechless for a moment.

“My God, Gaza. You!” he presently managed to exclaim. “What are you
doing here? Thank God I have found you at last!”

“Don’t!” she begged. “Please don’t speak to me. I am living a decent
life here.”

He laughed in a disagreeable manner.

“Decent!” he scoffed. “Where you getting the snow? Who’s putting up for
it?”

“I don’t use it any more,” she said.

“The hell you don’t! You can’t put that over on me! Some other guy is
furnishing it. I know you--you can’t get along two hours without it.
I’m not going to stand for this. There isn’t any guy going to steal my
girl!”

“Hush, Wilson!” she cautioned. “For God’s sake keep still! Some one
might hear you.”

“I don’t give a damn who hears me. I’m here to tell the world that no
one is going to take my girl away from me. I’ve found you, and you’re
going back with me, do you understand?”

She came very close to him, her eyes blazing wrathfully.

“I’m not going back with you, Wilson Crumb,” she said. “If you tell, or
if you ever threaten me again in any way, I’ll kill you. I managed to
escape you, and I have found happiness at last, and no one shall take
it away from me!”

“What about my happiness? You lived with me two years. I love you, and,
by God, I’m going to have you, if I have to----”

A door slammed behind them, and they both turned to see Custer
Pennington standing in the arcade outside his door, looking at them.

“I beg your pardon,” he said, his voice chilling. “Did I interrupt?”

“This man is looking for some one, Custer,” said Shannon, and turned to
reënter the house.

Confronted by a man, Crumb’s bravado had vanished. Intuitively he
guessed that he was looking at the man who had stolen Gaza from him;
but he was a very big young man, with broad shoulders and muscles that
his flannel shirt and riding breeches did not conceal. Crumb decided
that if he was going to have trouble with this man, it would be safer
to commence hostilities at a time when the other was not looking.

“Yes,” he said. “I was looking for your father, Mr. Pennington.”

“Father is not here. He has driven over to the village. What do you
want?”

“I wanted to see if I could arrange for the use of some of your
Herefords to-morrow morning.”

Pennington was leading the way toward Crumb’s car.

“You can find out about that,” he said, “or anything else that you may
wish to know, from the assistant foreman, whom you will usually find up
at the other end, around the cabin. If he is in doubt about anything,
he will consult with us personally; so that it will not be necessary,
Mr. Crumb, for you to go to the trouble of coming to the house again.”

Custer’s voice was level and low. It carried no suggestion of anger,
yet there was that about it which convinced Crumb that he was fortunate
in not having been kicked off the hill physically rather than
verbally--for kicked off he had been, and advised to stay off, into
the bargain.

He wondered how much Pennington had overheard of his conversation with
Gaza. Shannon Burke, crouching in a big chair in the sitting room, was
wondering the same thing.

As a matter of fact, Custer had overheard practically all of the
conversation. The noise of Crumb’s car had awakened him, but almost
immediately he had fallen into a doze, through which the spoken
words impinged upon his consciousness without any actual, immediate
realization of their meaning, of the identity of the speakers. The
moment that he became fully awake, and found that he was listening to a
conversation not intended for his ears, he had risen and gone into the
patio.

When finally he came into the sitting room, where Shannon was, he made
no mention of the occurrence, except to say that the visitor had wanted
to see his father. It did not seem possible to Shannon that he could
have failed to overhear at least a part of their conversation, for they
were standing not more than a couple of yards from the open window of
his bedroom, and there was no other sound breaking the stillness of
the August noon. She was sure that he had heard, and yet his manner
indicated that he had not.

She waited a moment to see if he would be the first to broach the
subject, but he did not. She determined to tell him then and there all
that she had to tell, freeing her soul and her conscience of their
burden, whatever the cost might be.

She rose and came to where he was standing, and, placing a hand upon
his arm, looked up into his eyes.

“Custer,” she said. “I have something to tell you. I ought to have
told you before, but I have been afraid. Since last night there is no
alternative but to tell you.”

“You do not have to tell me anything that you do not want to tell me,”
he said. “My confidence in you is implicit. I could not both love and
distrust at the same time.”

“I must tell you,” she said. “I only hope----”

“Where in the world have you been, Shannon?” cried Eva, breaking
suddenly into the sitting room. “I have been away down to your place
looking for you. I thought you were going to play golf with me this
afternoon.”

“That’s what I came up for,” said Shannon, turning toward her.

“Well, come on, then! We’ll have to hurry, if we’re going to play
eighteen holes this afternoon.”

Custer Pennington went to his room again after the girls had driven off
in the direction of the Country Club. He wondered what it had been that
Shannon wished to tell him. Round and round in his mind rang the words
of Wilson Crumb:

“You lived with me two years--you lived with me two years--you lived
with me two years!”

She had been going to explain that, he was sure; but she did not have
to explain it. The girl that he loved could have done no wrong. He
trusted her. He was sure of her.

But what place had that soft-faced cad had in her life? It was
unthinkable that she had ever known him, much less that they had been
upon intimate terms.

Custer went to his closet and rummaged around for a bottle. It had
been more than two weeks since he had taken a drink. The return to his
old intimacy with Shannon, and the frequency with which he now saw her
had again weaned him from his habit; but to-day he felt the need of a
drink--of a big drink, stiff and neat.

He swallowed the raw liquor as if it had been so much water. He wished
now that he had punched Crumb’s head when he had had the chance. The
cur! He had spoken to Shannon as if she were a common woman of the
streets--Shannon Burke--Custer’s Shannon!

Feeling no reaction to the first drink, he took another.

“I’d like to get my fingers on his throat!” he thought. “Before I
choked the life out of him, I’d drag him up here and make him kiss the
ground at her feet!”

But no, he could not do that. Others would see it, and there would
have to be explanations; and how could he explain it without casting
reflections on Shannon?

For hours he sat there in his room, nursing his anger, his jealousy,
and his grief; and all the time he drank and drank again. He went to
his closet, got his belt and holster, and from his dresser drawer took
a big, ugly-looking forty-five--a Colt’s automatic. For a moment he
stood holding it in his hand, looking at it. Almost caressingly he
handled it, and then he slipped it into the holster at his hip, put on
his hat, and started for the door.



CHAPTER XXXIII


Custer’s gait showed no indication of the amount that he had drunk.
He was a Pennington of Virginia, and he could carry his liquor like
a gentleman. Even though he was aflame with the heat of vengeance,
his movements were slow and deliberate. At the door he paused, and,
turning, retraced his steps to the table where stood the bottle and the
glass.

The bottle was empty. He went to the closet and got another. Again he
drank, and as he stood there by the table he commenced to plan again.

There must be some reason for the thing he contemplated. There must be
some reason so logical that the discovery of his act could in no way
reflect upon Shannon Burke, or draw her name into the publicity which
must ensue. It required time to think out a feasible plan, and time
gave opportunity for additional drinks.

The colonel and Mrs. Pennington were away somewhere down in the valley.
Eva and Shannon were the first to return. In passing along the arcade
by Custer’s open window, Eva saw him lying on his bed. She called to
him, but he did not answer. Shannon was at her side.

“What in the world do you suppose is the matter with Custer?” asked Eva.

They saw that he was fully dressed. His hat had fallen forward over
his eyes. The two girls entered the room, when they could not arouse
him by calling him from the outside. The two bottles and the glass
upon the table told their own story. What they could not tell Shannon
guessed--he had overheard the conversation between Wilson Crumb and
herself.

Eva removed the bottles and the glass to the closet.

“Poor Cus!” she said. “I never saw him like this before. I wonder what
could have happened! What had we better do?”

“Pull down the shades by his bed,” said Shannon, and this she did
herself without waiting for Eva. “No one can see him from the patio
now. It will be just as well to leave him alone, I think, Eva. He will
probably be all right when he wakes up.”

They went out of the room, closing the door after them, and a little
later Shannon mounted the Senator and rode away toward home.

Her thoughts were bitter. Wherever Crumb went he brought misery.
Whatever he touched he defiled. She wished that he was dead. God, how
she wished it! She could have killed him with her own hands for the
grief that he had brought to Custer Pennington.

She did not care so much about herself. She was used to suffering
because of Wilson Crumb; but that he should bring his foulness into
the purity of Ganado was unthinkable. Her brief happiness was over. No
indeed was there nothing more in life for her. She was not easily moved
to tears, but that night she was still sobbing when she fell asleep.

When the colonel and Mrs. Pennington arrived at the ranch house, just
before dinner, Eva told them that Custer was not feeling well, and that
he had lain down to sleep and had asked not to be disturbed. They did
not go to his room at all, and at about half past eight they retired
for the night.

Eva was very much excited. She had never before experienced the thrill
of such an adventure as she was about to embark upon. As the time
approached, she became more and more perturbed. The realization grew
upon her that what she was doing might seem highly objectionable to
her family; but as her innocent heart held no suggestion of evil, she
considered that her only wrong was the infraction of those unwritten
laws of well regulated homes which forbid their daughters going out
alone at night. She would tell about it in the morning, and wheedle her
father into forgiveness.

Quickly she changed into riding clothes. Leaving her room, she
noiselessly passed through the living room and the east wing to the
kitchen, and from there to the basement, from which a tunnel led
beneath the driveway and opened on the hillside above the upper pool of
the water gardens. To get her horse and saddle him required but a few
moments, for the moon was full and the night almost like day.

Her heart was beating with excitement as she rode up the cañon toward
the big sycamore that stood at the junction of Sycamore Cañon and El
Camino Largo, where Crumb had told her the night scenes would be taken.
She walked her horse past the bunk house, lest some of the men might
hear her; but when she was through the east gate, beyond the old goat
corral, she broke into a canter.

As she passed the mouth of Jackknife she glanced up the cañon toward
the site of the K. K. S. camp, but she could not see any lights, as
the camp was fairly well hidden from the main cañon by trees. As she
approached El Camino Largo, she saw that all was darkness. There was no
sign of the artificial lights she imagined they would use for shooting
night scenes, nor was there anything to indicate the presence of the
actors.

She continued on, however, until presently she saw the outlines of a
car beneath the big sycamore. A man stepped out and hailed her.

“Is that you, Miss Pennington?” he asked.

“Yes,” she said. “Aren’t you going to take the pictures to-night?”

She rode up quite close to him. It was Crumb.

“I am just waiting for the others. Won’t you dismount?”

As she swung from the saddle, he led her horse to his car and tied him
to the spare tire in the rear; then he returned to the girl. As they
talked, he adroitly turned the subject of their conversation toward
the possibilities for fame and fortune which lay in pictures for a
beautiful and talented girl.

Long practice had made Wilson Crumb an adept in his evil arts.
Ordinarily he worked very slowly, considering that weeks, or even
months, were not ill spent if they led toward the consummation of his
desires; but in this instance he realized that he must work quickly. He
must take the girl by storm or not at all.

So unsophisticated was Eva, and so innocent, that she did not realize
from his conversation what would have been palpable to one more worldly
wise; and because she did not repulse him, Crumb thought that she was
not averse to his advances. It was not until he seized her and tried
to kiss her that she awoke to a realization of her danger, and of the
position in which her silly credulity had placed her.

She carried a quirt in her hand, and she was a Pennington. What matter
that she was but a slender girl? The honor and the courage of a
Pennington were hers.

“How dare you?” she cried, attempting to jerk away.

When he would have persisted, she raised the heavy quirt and struck him
across the face.

“My father shall hear of this, and so shall the man I am to marry--Mr.
Evans.”

“Go slow!” he growled angrily. “Be careful what you tell! Remember that
you came up here alone at night to meet a man you have known only a
day. How will you square that with your assertions of virtue, eh? And
as for Evans--yes, one of your men told me to-day that you and he were
going to be married--as for him, the less you drag him into this the
better it’ll be for Evans, and you, too!”

She was walking toward her horse. She wheeled suddenly toward him.

“Had I been armed, I would have killed you,” she said. “Any Pennington
would kill you for what you attempted. My father or my brother will
kill you if you are here to-morrow, for I shall tell them what you
have done. You had better leave to-night. I am advising you for their
sakes--not for yours.”

He followed her then, and, when she mounted, he seized her reins.

“Not so damned fast, young lady! I’ve got something to say about this.
You’ll keep your mouth shut, or I’ll send Evans to the pen, where he
belongs!”

“Get out of my way!” she commanded, and put her spurs to her mount.

The horse leaped forward, but Crumb clung to the reins, checking him.
Then she struck Crumb again; but he managed to seize the quirt and hold
it.

“Now listen to me,” he said. “If you tell what happened here to-night,
I’ll tell what I know about Evans, and he’ll go to the pen as sure as
you’re a silly little fool!”

“You know nothing about Mr. Evans. You don’t even know him.”

“Listen--I’ll tell you what I know. I know that Evans let your brother,
who was innocent, go to the pen for the thing that Evans was guilty of.”

The girl shrank back.

“You lie!” she cried.

“No, I don’t lie, either. I’m telling you the truth, and I can bring
plenty of witnesses to prove what I say. It was young Evans who handled
all that stolen booze and sold it to some guy from L. A. It was young
Evans who got the money. He was getting rich on it till your brother
butted in and crabbed his game, and then it was young Evans who kept
still and let an innocent man do time for him. That’s the kind of
fellow you’re going to marry. If you want the whole world to know about
it, you just tell your father or your brother anything about me!”

He saw the girl sink down in her saddle, her head and shoulders
drooping like some lovely flower in the path of fire, and he knew that
he had won. Then he let her go.

It was half past nine o’clock when Colonel Pennington was aroused by
some one knocking on the north door of his bedroom--the door that
opened upon the north porch.

“Who is it?” he asked.

It was the stableman.

“Miss Eva’s horse is out, sir,” the man said. “I heard a horse pass the
bunk house about half an hour ago. I dressed and come up here to the
stables, to see if it was one of ours--somethin’ seemed to tell me it
was--an’ I found her horse out. I thought I’d better tell you about it,
sir. You can’t tell, sir, with all them pictur’ people up the cañon,
what might be goin’ on. We’ll be lucky if we have any horses or tack
left if they’re here long!”

“Miss Eva’s in bed,” said the colonel; “but we’ll have to look into
this at once. Custer’s sick to-night, so he can’t go along with us; but
if you will saddle up my horse, and one for yourself, I’ll dress and be
right down. It can’t be the motion-picture people--they’re not horse
thieves.”

While the stableman returned to saddle the horses, the colonel dressed.
So sure was he that Eva was in bed that he did not even stop to look
into her room. As he left the house, he was buckling on a gun--a thing
that he seldom carried, for even in the peaceful days that have settled
upon southern California a horse thief is still a horse thief.

As he was descending the steps to the stable, he saw some one coming
up. In the moonlight there was no difficulty in recognizing the figure
of his daughter.

“Eva!” he exclaimed. “Where have you been? What are you doing out at
this time of night, alone?”

She did not answer, but threw herself into his arms, sobbing.

“What is it? What has happened, child? Tell me!”

Her sobs choked her, and she could not speak. Putting his arm about
her, her father led her up the steps and to her room. There he sat down
and held her, and tried to comfort her, while he endeavored to extract
a coherent statement from her.

Little by little, word by word, she managed at last to tell him.

“You mustn’t cry, dear,” he said. “You did a foolish thing to go up
there alone, but you did nothing wrong. As for what that fellow told
you about Guy, I don’t believe it.”

“But it’s the truth,” she sobbed. “I know it is the truth now. Little
things that I didn’t think of before come back to me, and in the light
of what that terrible man told me I know that it’s true. We always knew
that Custer was innocent. Think what a change came over Guy from the
moment that Custer was arrested. He has been a different man since. And
the money--the money that we were to be married on! I never stopped
to try to reason it out. He had thousands of dollars. He told me not
to tell anybody how much he had; and that was where it came from. It
couldn’t have come from anything else. Oh, popsy, it is awful, and I
loved him so! To think that he, that Guy Evans, of all men, would have
let my brother go to jail for something he did!”

Again her sobs stifled her.

“Crying will do no good,” the colonel said. “Go to bed now, and
to-morrow we will talk it over. Good night, little girl. Remember,
we’ll all stick to Guy, no matter what he has done.”

He kissed her then and left her, but he did not return to his room.
Instead, he went down to the stables and saddled his horse, for the
stableman, when Eva came in with the missing animal, had put it in its
box and returned to the bunk house.

The colonel rode immediately to the sleeping camp in Jackknife Cañon.
His calls went unanswered for a time, but presently a sleepy man stuck
his head through the flap of a tent.

“What do you want?” he asked.

“I am looking for Mr. Crumb. Where is he?”

“I don’t know. He went away in his car early in the evening, and hasn’t
come back. What’s the matter, anyway? You’re the second fellow that’s
been looking for him. Oh, you’re Colonel Pennington, aren’t you? I
didn’t recognize you. Why, some one was here a little while ago looking
for him--a young fellow on horseback. I think it must have been your
son. Anything I can do for you?”

“Yes,” said the colonel. “In case I don’t see Mr. Crumb, you can tell
him, or whoever is in charge, that you’re to break camp in the morning
and be off my property by ten o’clock!”

He wheeled his horse and rode down Jackknife Cañon toward Sycamore.

“Well, what the hell!” ejaculated the sleepy man to himself, and
withdrew again into his tent.



CHAPTER XXXIV


Shannon Burke, after a restless night, rose early in the morning to
ride. She always found that the quiet and peace of the hills acted as a
tonic on jangling nerves, and dispelled, at least for the moment, any
cloud of unhappiness that might be hovering over her.

The first person to see her that morning was the flunky from the
K. K. S. camp who was rustling wood for the cook’s morning fire. So
interested was he in her rather remarkable occupation that he stood
watching her from behind a bush until she was out of sight. As long
as he saw her, she rode slowly, dragging at her side a leafy bough,
which she moved to and fro, as if sweeping the ground. She constantly
looked back, as if to note the effect of her work; and once or twice
he saw her go over short stretches of the road a second time, brushing
vigorously.

It was quite light by that time, as it was almost five o’clock, and the
sun was just rising as she dismounted at the Ganado stables and hurried
up the steps toward the house. The iron gate at the patio entrance had
not yet been raised, so she went around to the north side of the house
and knocked on the colonel’s bedroom door.

He came from his dressing room to answer her knock, for he was fully
dressed and evidently on the point of leaving for his morning ride. The
expression of her face denoted that something was wrong, even before
she spoke.

“Colonel,” she cried, “Wilson Crumb has been killed. I rode early this
morning, and as I came into Sycamore over El Camino Largo I saw his
body lying under the big tree there.”

They were both thinking the same thought, which neither dared
voice--where was Custer?

“Did you notify the camp?” he asked.

“No--I came directly here.”

“You are sure that it is Crumb, and that he is dead?” he asked.

“I am sure that it is Crumb. He was lying on his back, and though I
didn’t dismount I am quite positive that he was dead.”

Mrs. Pennington had joined them, herself dressed for riding.

“How terrible!” she exclaimed.

“Terrible nothing,” exclaimed the colonel. “I’m damned glad he’s dead!”

Shannon looked at him in astonishment, but Mrs. Pennington understood,
for the colonel had told her all that Eva had told him.

“He was a bad man,” said Shannon. “The world will be better off without
him.”

“You knew him?” Colonel Pennington asked in surprise.

“I knew him in Hollywood,” she replied.

She knew now that they must all know sooner or later, for she could not
see how she could be kept out of the investigation and the trial that
must follow. In her heart she feared that Custer had killed Crumb. The
fact that he had drunk so heavily that afternoon indicated not only
that he had overheard, but that what he had heard had affected him
profoundly--profoundly enough to have suggested the killing of the man
whom he believed to have wronged the woman he loved.

“The first thing to do, I suppose,” said the colonel, “is to notify the
sheriff.”

He left the room and went to the telephone. While he was away Mrs.
Pennington and Shannon discussed the tragedy, and the older woman
confided to the other the experience that Eva had had with Crumb the
previous night.

“The beast!” muttered Shannon. “Death was too good for him!”

Presently the colonel returned to them.

“I think I’ll go and see if the children are going to ride with us,” he
said. “There is no reason why we shouldn’t ride as usual.”

He went to Eva’s door and looked in. Apparently she was still fast
asleep. Her hair was down, and her curls lay in soft confusion upon her
pillow. Very gently he closed the door again, glad that she could sleep.

When he entered his son’s room he found Custer lying fully clothed
upon his bed, his belt about his waist and his gun at his hip. His
suspicions were crystallized into belief.

But why had Custer killed Crumb? He couldn’t have known of the man’s
affront to Eva, for she had seen no member of the family but her
father, and in him alone had she confided.

He crossed to the bed and shook Custer by the shoulder. The younger man
opened his eyes and sat up on the edge of his bed. He looked first at
his father and then at himself--at his boots and spurs, and breeches,
and the gun about his waist.

“What time is it?” he asked.

“Five o’clock.”

“I must have fallen asleep. I wish it was dinner time! I’m hungry.”

“Dinner time! It’s only a matter of a couple of hours to breakfast.
It’s five o’clock in the morning.”

Custer rose to his feet in surprise.

“I must have loaded on more than I knew,” he said with a wry smile.

“What do you mean?” asked his father.

“I had a blue streak yesterday afternoon, and I took a few drinks; and
here I have slept all the way through to the next morning!”

“You haven’t been out of the room since yesterday afternoon?” asked the
colonel.

“No, of course not. I thought it was still yesterday afternoon until
you told me that it is the next morning,” said Custer.

The colonel ran his fingers through his hair.

“I am glad,” he said.

Custer didn’t know why his father was glad.

“Riding?” he asked.

“Yes.”

“I’ll be with you in a jiffy. I want to wash up a bit.”

He met them at the stables a few minutes later. The effect of the
liquor had entirely disappeared. He seemed his normal self again, and
not at all like a man who had the blood of a new murder on his soul. He
was glad to see Shannon, and squeezed her hand as he passed her horse
to get his own.

In the few moments since his father had awakened him, he had reviewed
the happenings of the previous day, and his loyalty to the girl he
loved had determined him that he had nothing to grieve about. Whatever
had been between her and Crumb she would explain. Only the fact that
Eva had interrupted her had kept him from knowing the whole truth the
previous day.

They were mounted, and had started out, when the colonel reined to
Custer’s side.

“Shannon just made a gruesome find up in Sycamore,” he said, and paused.

If he had intended to surprise Custer into any indication of guilty
knowledge, he failed.

“Gruesome find!” repeated the younger man. “What was it?”

“Wilson Crumb has been murdered. Shannon found his body.”

“The devil!” ejaculated Custer. “Who do you suppose could have done it?”

Then, quite suddenly, his heart came to his mouth, as he realized that
there was only one present there who had cause to kill Wilson Crumb. He
did not dare to look at Shannon for a long time.

They had gone only a hundred yards when Custer pulled up the Apache and
dismounted.

“I thought so,” he said, looking at the horse’s off forefoot. “He’s
pulled that shoe again. He must have done it in the corral, for it was
on when I put him in last night. You folks go ahead. I’ll go back and
saddle Baldy.”

The stableman was still there, and helped him.

“That was a new shoe,” Custer said. “Look about the corral and the box,
and see if you can find it. You can tack it back on.”

Then he swung to Baldy’s back and cantered off after the others.

A deputy sheriff came from the village of Ganado before they returned
from their ride, and went up the cañon to take charge of Crumb’s body
and investigate the scene of the crime.

Eva was still in bed when they were called to breakfast. They insisted
upon Shannon’s remaining, and the four were passing along the arcade
past Eva’s room.

“I think I’ll go in and waken her,” said Mrs. Pennington. “She doesn’t
like to sleep so late.”

The others passed into the living room, and were walking toward the
dining room when they were startled by a scream.

“Custer! Custer!” Mrs. Pennington called to her husband.

All three turned and hastened back to Eva’s room, where they found Mrs.
Pennington half lying across the bed, her body convulsed with sobs. The
colonel was the first to reach her, followed by Custer and Shannon. The
bedclothes lay half thrown back, where Mrs. Pennington had turned them.
The white sheet was stained with blood, and in Eva’s hand was clutched
a revolver that Custer had given her the previous Christmas.

“My little girl, my little girl!” cried the weeping mother. “Why did
you do it?”

The colonel knelt and put his arms about his wife. He could not speak.
Custer Pennington stood like a man turned to stone. The shock seemed to
have bereft him of the power to understand what had happened. Finally
he turned dumbly toward Shannon. The tears were running down her
cheeks. Gently she touched his sleeve.

“My poor boy!” she said.

The words broke the spell that had held him. He walked to the opposite
side of the bed and bent close to the still, white face of the sister
he had worshiped.

“Dear little sister, how could you, when we love you so?” he said.

Gently the colonel drew his wife away, and, kneeling, placed his ear
close above Eva’s heart. There were no outward indications of life,
but presently he lifted his head, an expression of hope relieving that
of grim despair which had settled upon his countenance at the first
realization of the tragedy.

“She is not dead,” he said. “Get Baldwin! Get him at once!” He was
addressing Custer. “Then telephone Carruthers, in Los Angeles, to get
down here as soon as God will let him.”

Custer hurried from the room to carry out his father’s instructions.

It was later, while they were waiting for the arrival of the doctor,
that the colonel told Custer of Eva’s experience with Crumb the
previous night.

“She wanted to kill herself because of what he told her about Guy,” he
said. “There was no other reason.”

Then the doctor came, and they all stood in tense expectancy and
mingled dread and hope while he made his examination. Carefully and
deliberately the old doctor worked, outwardly as calm and unaffected as
if he were treating a minor injury to a stranger; yet his heart was as
heavy as theirs, for he had brought Eva into the world, and had known
and loved her all her brief life.

At last he straightened up, to find their questioning eyes upon him.

“She still lives,” he said, but there was no hope in his voice.

“I have sent for Carruthers,” said the colonel. “He is on his way now.
He told Custer that he’ll be here in less than three hours.”

“I arranged to have a couple of nurses sent out, too,” said Custer.

Dr. Baldwin made no reply.

“There is no hope?” asked the colonel.

“There is always hope while there is life,” replied the doctor; “but
you must not raise yours too high.”

They understood him, and realized that there was very little hope.

“Can you keep her alive until Carruthers arrives?” asked the colonel.

“I need not tell you that I shall do my best,” was the reply.

Guy had come, with his mother. He seemed absolutely stunned by the
catastrophe that had overwhelmed him. There was a wildness in his
demeanor that frightened them all. It was necessary to watch him
carefully, for fear that he might attempt to destroy himself when he
realized at last that Eva was likely to die.

He insisted that they should tell him all the circumstances that had
led up to the pitiful tragedy. For a time they sought to conceal a part
of the truth from him; but at last, so great was his insistence, they
were compelled to reveal all that they knew.

Of a nervous and excitable temperament, and endowed by nature with a
character of extreme sensitiveness and comparatively little strength,
the shock of the knowledge that it was his own acts that had led Eva
to self-destruction proved too much for Guy’s overwrought nerves and
brain. So violent did he become that Colonel Pennington and Custer
together could scarce restrain him, and it became necessary to send for
two of the ranch employees.

When the deputy sheriff came to question them about the murder of
Crumb, it was evident that Guy’s mind was so greatly affected that he
did not understand what was taking place around him. He had sunk into a
morose silence broken at intervals by fits of raving. Later in the day,
at Dr. Baldwin’s suggestion, he was removed to a sanatorium outside of
Los Angeles.

Guy’s mental collapse, and the necessity for constantly restraining
him, had resulted in taking Custer’s mind from his own grief, at least
for the moment; but when he was not thus occupied he sat staring
straight ahead of him in dumb despair.

It was eleven o’clock when the best surgeon that Los Angeles could
furnish arrived, bringing a nurse with him, and Eva was still breathing
when he came. Dr. Baldwin was there, and together the three worked for
an hour while the Penningtons and Shannon waited almost hopelessly in
the living room, Mrs. Evans having accompanied Guy to Los Angeles.

Finally, after what seemed years, the door of the living room opened,
and Dr. Carruthers entered. They scanned his face as he entered, but
saw nothing there to lighten the burden of their apprehension. The
colonel and Custer rose.

“Well?” asked the former, his voice scarcely audible.

“The operation was successful. I found the bullet and removed it.”

“She will live, then!” cried Mrs. Pennington, coming quickly toward him.

He took her hands very gently in his.

“My dear madam,” he said, “it would be cruel of me to hold out useless
hope. She hasn’t more than one chance in a hundred. It is a miracle
that she was alive when you found her. Only a splendid constitution,
resulting from the life that she has led, could possibly account for
it.”

The mother turned away with a low moan.

“There is nothing more that you can do?” asked the colonel.

“I have done all that I can,” replied Carruthers.

“She will not last long?”

“It may be a matter of hours, or only minutes,” he replied. “She is
in excellent hands, however. No one could do more for her than Dr.
Baldwin.”

The two nurses whom Custer had arranged for had arrived, and when Dr.
Carruthers departed he took his own nurse with him.

It was afternoon when deputies from the sheriff’s and coroner’s offices
arrived from Los Angeles, together with detectives from the district
attorney’s office. Crumb’s body still lay where it had fallen, guarded
by a constable from the village of Ganado. It was surrounded by members
of his company, villagers, and near-by ranchers, for word of the murder
had spread rapidly in the district in that seemingly mysterious way
in which news travels in rural communities. Among the crowd was Slick
Allen, who had returned to the valley after his release from the county
jail.

A partially successful effort had been made to keep the crowd from
trampling the ground in the immediate vicinity of the body, but beyond
a limited area whatever possible clews the murderer might have left in
the shape of footprints had been entirely obliterated long before the
officers arrived from Los Angeles.

When the body was finally lifted from its resting place, and placed
in the ambulance that had been brought from Los Angeles, one of the
detectives picked up a horseshoe that had lain underneath the body.
From its appearance it was evident that it had been upon a horse’s hoof
very recently, and had been torn off by force.

As the detective examined the shoe, several of the crowd pressed
forward to look at it. Among them was Allen.

“That’s off of young Pennington’s horse,” he said.

“How do you know that?” inquired the detective.

“I used to work for them--took care of their saddle horses. This young
Pennington’s horse forges. They had to shoe him special, to keep him
from pulling the off fore shoe. I could tell one of his shoes in a
million. If they haven’t walked all over his tracks, I can tell whether
that horse had been up here or not.”

He stooped and examined the ground close to where the body had lain.

“There!” he said, pointing. “There’s an imprint of one of his hind
feet. See how the toe of that shoe is squared off? That was made by the
Apache, all right!”

The detective was interested. He studied the hoofprint carefully, and
searched for others, but this was the only one he could find.

“Looks like some one had been sweeping this place with a broom,” he
remarked. “There ain’t much of anything shows.”

A pimply-faced young man spoke up.

“There was some one sweeping the ground this morning,” he said. “About
five o’clock this morning I seen a girl dragging the branch of a tree
after her, and sweeping along the road below here.”

“Did you know her?” asked the detective.

“No--I never seen her before.”

“Would you know her if you saw her again?”

“Sure I’d know her! She was a pippin. I’d know her horse, too.”



CHAPTER XXXV


Eva was still breathing faintly as the sun dropped behind the western
hills. Shannon had not left the house all day. She felt that Custer
needed her, that they all needed her, however little she could do to
mitigate their grief. There was at least a sense of sharing their
burden, and her fine sensibilities told her that this service of love
was quite as essential as the more practical help that she would have
been glad to offer had it been within her power.

She was standing in the patio with Custer, at sunset, within call of
Eva’s room, as they had all been during the entire day, when a car
drove up along the south drive and stopped at the patio entrance. Three
of the four men in it alighted and advanced toward them.

“You are Custer Pennington?” one of them asked.

Pennington nodded.

“And you are Miss Burke--Miss Shannon Burke?”

“I am.”

“I am a deputy sheriff. I have a warrant here for your arrest.”

“Arrest!” exclaimed Custer. “For what?”

He read the warrant to them. It charged them with the murder of Wilson
Crumb.

“I am sorry, Mr. Pennington,” said the deputy sheriff; “but I have been
given these warrants, and there is nothing for me to do but serve them.”

“You have to take us away now? Can’t you wait--until--my sister is
dying in there. Couldn’t it be arranged so that I could stay here under
arrest as long as she lives?”

The deputy shook his head.

“It would be all right with me,” he said; “but I have no authority to
let you stay. I’ll telephone in, though, and see what I can do. Where
is the telephone?”

Pennington told him.

“You two stay here with my men,” said the deputy sheriff, “while I
telephone.”

He was gone about fifteen minutes. When he returned, he shook his head.

“Nothing doing,” he said. “I have to bring you both in right away.”

“May I go to her room and see her again before I leave?” asked Custer.

“Yes,” said the deputy; but when Custer turned toward his sister’s
room, the officer accompanied him.

Dr. Baldwin and one of the nurses were in the room. Young Pennington
came and stood beside the bed, looking down on the white face and the
tumbled curls upon the pillow. He could not perceive the slightest
indication of life, yet they told him that Eva still lived. He knelt
and kissed her, and then turned away. He tried to say good-by to her,
but his voice broke, and he turned and left the room hurriedly.

Colonel and Mrs. Pennington were in the patio, with Shannon and the
officers. The colonel and his wife had just learned of this new blow,
and both of them were stunned. The colonel seemed to have aged a
generation in that single day. He was a tired, hopeless old man. The
heart of his boy and that of Shannon Burke went out to him and to the
suffering mother from whom their son was to be taken at this moment
in their lives when they needed him most. In their compassion for the
older Penningtons they almost forgot the seriousness of their own
situation.

At their arraignment, next morning, the preliminary hearing was set for
the following Friday. Early in the morning Custer had received word
from Ganado that Eva still lived, and that Dr. Baldwin now believed
they might hold some slight hope for her recovery.

At Ganado, despair and anxiety had told heavily upon the Penningtons.
The colonel felt that he should be in Los Angeles, to assist in the
defense of his son; and yet he knew that his place was with his wife,
whose need of him was even greater. Nor would his heart permit him to
leave the daughter whom he worshiped, so long as even a faint spark of
life remained in that beloved frame.

Mrs. Evans returned from Los Angeles the following day. She was almost
prostrated by this last of a series of tragedies ordered, as it seemed,
by some malignant fate for the wrecking of her happiness. She told them
that Guy appeared to be hopelessly insane. He did not know his mother,
nor did he give the slightest indication of any recollection of his
past life, or of the events that had overthrown his reason.

At ten o’clock on Wednesday night Dr. Baldwin came into the living
room, where the colonel and his wife were sitting with Mrs. Evans. For
two days none of them had been in bed. They were tired and haggard, but
not more so than the old doctor, who had remained constantly on duty
from the moment when he was summoned. Never had man worked with more
indefatigable zeal than he to wrest a young life from the path of the
grim reaper. There were deep lines beneath his eyes, and his face was
pale and drawn, as he entered the room and stood before them; but for
the first time in many hours there was a smile upon his lips.

“I believe,” he said, “that we are going to save her.”

The others were too much affected to speak. So long had hope been
denied that now they dared not even think of hope.

“She regained consciousness a few moments ago. She looked up at me and
smiled, and then she fell asleep. She is breathing quite naturally now.
She must not be disturbed, though. I think it would be well if you all
retired. Mrs. Pennington, you certainly must get some sleep--and you
too, Mrs. Evans, or I cannot be responsible for the results. I have
left word with the night nurse to call me immediately, if necessary,
and if you will all go to your rooms I will lie on the sofa here in the
living room. I feel at last that it will be safe for me to leave her in
the hands of the nurse, and a little sleep won’t hurt me.”

The colonel took his old friend by the hand.

“Baldwin,” he said, “it is useless to try to thank you. I couldn’t,
even if there were the words to do it with.”

“You don’t have to, Pennington. I think I love her as much as you
do. There isn’t any one who knows her who doesn’t love her, and who
wouldn’t have done as much as I. Now, get off to bed all of you, and I
think we’ll find something to be very happy about by morning. If there
is any change for the worse, I will let you know immediately.”

       *       *       *       *       *

In the county jail in Los Angeles, Custer Pennington and Shannon
Burke, awaiting trial on charges of a capital crime, were filled with
increasing happiness as the daily reports from Ganado brought word of
Eva’s steady improvement, until at last that she was entirely out of
danger.

The tedious preliminaries of selecting a jury were finally concluded.
As witness after witness was called, Pennington came to realize for
the first time what a web of circumstantial evidence the State had
fabricated about him. Even from servants whom he knew to be loyal and
friendly the most damaging evidence was elicited. His mother’s second
maid testified that she had seen him fully dressed in his room late
in the evening before the murder, when she had come in, as was her
custom, with a pitcher of iced water, not knowing that the young man
was there. She had seen him lying upon the bed, with his gun in its
holster hanging from the belt about his waist. She also testified that
the following morning, when she had come in to make up his bed, she had
discovered that it had not been slept in.

The stableman testified that the Apache had been out on the night
of the murder. He had rubbed the animal off earlier in the evening,
when the defendant had come in from riding. At that time the two had
examined the horse’s shoes, the animal having just been reshod. He said
that on the morning after the murder there were saddle sweat marks on
the Apache’s back, and that the off fore shoe was missing.

One of the K. K. S. employees testified that a young man, whom he
partially identified as Custer, had ridden into their camp about nine
o’clock on the night of the murder, and had inquired concerning the
whereabouts of Crumb. He said that the young man seemed excited, and
upon being told that Crumb was away he had ridden off rapidly toward
Sycamore Cañon.

Added to all this were the damaging evidence of the detective who had
found the Apache’s off fore shoe under Crumb’s body, and the positive
identification of the shoe by Allen. The one thing that was lacking--a
motive for the crime--was supplied by Allen and the Penningtons’ house
man.

The latter testified that among his other duties was the care of the
hot water heater in the basement of the Pennington home. Upon the
evening of Saturday, August 5, he had forgotten to shut off the burner,
as was his custom. He had returned about nine o’clock, to do so. When
he had left the house by the passageway leading from the basement
beneath the south drive and opening on the hillside just above the
water gardens, he had seen a man standing by the upper pool, with his
arms about a woman, whom he was kissing. It was a bright moonlight
night, and the house man had recognized the two as Custer Pennington
and Miss Burke. Being embarrassed by having thus accidentally come upon
them, he had moved away quietly in the opposite direction, among the
shadows of the trees, and had returned to the bunk house.

The connecting link between this evidence and the motive for the crime
was elicited from Allen in half an hour of direct examination, which
constituted the most harrowing ordeal that Shannon Burke had ever
endured; for it laid bare before the world, and before the man she
loved, the sordid history of her life with Wilson Crumb. It portrayed
her as a drug addict and a wanton; but, more terrible still, it
established a motive for the murder of Crumb by Custer Pennington.

Owing to the fact that he had lain in a drunken stupor during the night
of the crime, that no one had seen him from the time when the maid
entered his room to bring his iced water until his father had found
him fully clothed upon his bed at five o’clock the following morning,
young Pennington was unable to account for his actions, or to state his
whereabouts at the time when the murder was committed.

He realized what the effect of the evidence must be upon the minds
of the jurors when he himself was unable to assert positively, even
to himself, that he had not left his room that night. Nor was he
very anxious to refute the charge against him, since in his heart he
believed that Shannon Burke had killed Crumb. He did not even take the
stand in his own defense.

The evidence against Shannon was less convincing. A motive had been
established in Crumb’s knowledge of her past life and the malign
influence that he had had upon it. The testimony of the camp flunky who
had seen her obliterating what evidence the trail might have given in
the form of hoofprints constituted practically the only direct evidence
that was brought against her. It seemed to Custer that the gravest
charge that could justly be brought against her was that of accessory
after the fact, provided the jury was convinced of his guilt.

Many witnesses testified, giving evidence concerning apparently
irrelevant subjects. It was brought out, however, that Crumb died from
the effects of a wound inflicted by a forty-five-caliber pistol, that
Custer Pennington possessed such a weapon, and that at the time of
his arrest it had been found in its holster, with its cartridge belt,
thrown carelessly upon his bed.

When Shannon Burke took the stand, all eyes were riveted upon her.
They were attracted not only by her youth and beauty, but also by the
morbid interest which the frequenters of court rooms would naturally
feel in the disclosure of the life she had led at Hollywood. Even to
the most sophisticated it appeared incredible that this refined girl,
whose soft, well modulated voice and quiet manner carried a conviction
of innate modesty, could be the woman whom Slick Allen’s testimony had
revealed in such a rôle of vice and degradation.

Allen’s eyes were fastened upon her with the same intent and searching
expression that had marked his attitude upon the occasion of his last
visit to the Vista del Paso bungalow, as if he were trying to recall
the identity of some half forgotten face.

Though Shannon gave her evidence in a simple, straightforward manner,
it was manifest that she was undergoing an intense nervous strain. The
story that she told, coming as it did out of a clear sky, unguessed
either by the prosecution or by the defense, proved a veritable
bombshell to them both. It came after it had appeared that the last
link had been forged in the chain that fixed the guilt upon Custer
Pennington. She had asked, then, to be permitted to take the stand and
tell her story in her own way.

“I did not see Mr. Crumb,” she said, “from the time I left Hollywood on
the 30th of July, last year, until the afternoon before he was killed;
nor had I communicated with him during that time. What Mr. Allen told
you about my having been a drug addict was true, but he did not tell
you that Crumb made me what I was, or that after I came to Ganado to
live I overcame the habit. I did not live with Crumb as his wife. He
used me to peddle narcotics for him. I was afraid of him, and did not
want to go back to him. When I left, I did not even let him know where
I was going.

“The afternoon before he was killed I met him accidentally in the patio
of Colonel Pennington’s home. The Penningtons had no knowledge of my
association with Crumb. I knew that they wouldn’t have tolerated me,
had they known what I had been. Crumb demanded that I should return to
him, and threatened to expose me if I refused. I knew that he was going
to be up in the cañon that night. I rode up there and shot him. The
next morning I went back and attempted to obliterate the tracks of my
horse, for I had learned from Custer Pennington that it is sometimes
easy to recognize individual peculiarities in the tracks of a shod
horse. That is all, except that Mr. Pennington had no knowledge of what
I did, and no part in it.”

Momentarily her statement seemed to overthrow the State’s case
against Pennington; but that the district attorney was not convinced
of its truth was indicated by his cross-examination of her and other
witnesses, and later by the calling of new witnesses. They could not
shake her testimony, but on the other hand she was unable to prove that
she had ever possessed a forty-five-caliber pistol, or to account for
what she had done with it after the crime.

During the course of her cross-examination many apparently unimportant
and irrelevant facts were adduced, among them the name of the Middle
Western town in which she had been born. This trivial bit of testimony
was the only point that seemed to make any impression on Allen. Any
one watching him at the moment would have seen a sudden expression of
incredulity and consternation overspread his face, the hard lines of
which slowly gave place to what might, in another, have suggested a
semblance of grief.

For several minutes he sat staring intently at Shannon. Then he crossed
to the side of her attorney, and whispered a few words in the lawyer’s
ear. Receiving an assent to whatever his suggestion might have been, he
left the court room.

On the following day the defense introduced a new witness in the person
of a Japanese who had been a house servant in the bungalow on the Vista
del Paso. His testimony substantiated Shannon Burke’s statement that
she and Crumb had not lived together as man and wife.

Then Allen was recalled to the stand. He told of the last evening that
he had spent at Crumb’s bungalow, and of the fact that Miss Burke, who
was then known to him as Gaza de Lure, had left the house at the same
time he did. He testified that Crumb had asked her why she was going
home so early; that she had replied that she wanted to write a letter;
that he, Allen, had remarked “I thought you lived here,” to which she
had replied, “I’m here nearly all day, but I go home nights.” The
witness added that this conversation took place in Crumb’s presence,
and that the director did not in any way deny the truth of the girl’s
assertion.

Why Allen should have suddenly espoused her cause was a mystery to
Shannon, only to be accounted for upon the presumption that if he could
lessen the value of that part of her testimony which had indicated a
possible motive for the crime, he might thereby strengthen the case
against Pennington, toward whom he still felt enmity, and whom he had
long ago threatened to “get.”

The district attorney, in his final argument, drew a convincing picture
of the crime from the moment when Custer Pennington saddled his horse
at the stables at Ganado. He followed him up the cañon to the camp in
Jackknife, where he had inquired concerning Crumb, and then down to
Sycamore again, where, at the mouth of Jackknife, the lights of Crumb’s
car would have been visible up the larger cañon.

He demonstrated clearly that a man familiar with the hills, and
searching for some one whom sentiments of jealousy and revenge were
prompting him to destroy, would naturally investigate this automobile
light that was shining where no automobile should be. That the prisoner
had ridden out with the intention of killing Crumb was apparent
from the fact that he had carried a pistol in a country where, under
ordinary circumstances, there was no necessity for carrying a weapon
for self-defense. He vividly portrayed the very instant of the
commission of the crime--how Pennington leaned from his saddle and shot
Crumb through the heart; the sudden leap of the murderer’s horse as he
was startled by the report of the pistol, or possibly by the falling
body of the murdered man; and how, in so jumping, he had forged and
torn off the shoe that had been found beneath Crumb’s body.

“And,” he said, “this woman knew that he was going to kill Wilson
Crumb. She knew it, and she made no effort to prevent it. On the
contrary, as soon as it was light enough, she rode directly to the spot
where Crumb’s body lay, and, as has been conclusively demonstrated by
the unimpeachable testimony of an eyewitness, she deliberately sought
to expunge all traces of her lover’s guilt.”

He derided Shannon’s confession, which he termed an eleventh hour
effort to save a guilty man from the gallows.

“If she killed Wilson Crumb, what did she kill him with?”

He picked up the bullet that had been extracted from Crumb’s body.

“Where is the pistol from which this bullet came? Here it is,
gentlemen!”

He picked up the weapon that had been taken from Custer’s room.

“Compare this bullet with those others that were taken from the clip in
the handle of this automatic. They are identical. This pistol did not
belong to Shannon Burke. It was never in her possession. No pistol of
this character was ever in her possession. Had she had one, she could
have told where she obtained it, and whether it had been sold to her
or to another; and the records of the seller would show whether or not
she spoke the truth. Failing to tell us where she procured the weapon,
she could at least lead us to the spot where she had disposed of it.
She can do neither, and the reason why she cannot is because she never
owned a forty-five-caliber pistol. She never had one in her possession,
and therefore she could not have killed Crumb with one.”

When at length the case went to the jury, Custer Pennington’s
conviction seemed a foregone conclusion, while the fate of Shannon
Burke was yet in the laps of the gods. The testimony that Allen and
the Japanese servant had given in substantiation of Shannon’s own
statement that her relations with Wilson Crumb had only been those of
an accomplice in the disposal of narcotics, removed from consideration
the principal motive that she might have had for killing Crumb.

And so there was no great surprise when, several hours later, the
jury returned a verdict in accordance with the public opinion of Los
Angeles--where, owing to the fact that murder juries are not isolated,
such cases are tried largely by the newspapers and the public. They
found Custer Pennington, Jr., guilty of murder in the first degree, and
Shannon Burke not guilty.



CHAPTER XXXVI


On the day when Custer was to be sentenced, Colonel Pennington and
Shannon Burke were present in the court room. Mrs. Pennington had
remained at home with Eva, who was slowly convalescing. Shannon reached
the court room before the colonel. When he arrived, he sat down beside
her, and placed his hand on hers.

“Whatever happens,” he said, “we shall still believe in him. No matter
what the evidence--and I do not deny that the jury brought in a just
verdict in accordance with it--I know that he is innocent. He told me
yesterday that he was innocent, and my boy would not lie to me. He
thought that you killed Crumb, Shannon. He overheard the conversation
between you and Crumb in the patio that day, and he knew that you had
good reason to kill the man. He knows now, as we all know, that you did
not. Probably it must always remain a mystery. He would not tell me
that he was innocent until after you had been proven so. He loves you
very much, my girl!”

“After all that he heard here in court? After what I have been? I
thought none of you would ever want to see me again.”

The colonel pressed her hand.

“Whatever happens,” he said, “you are going back home with me. You
tried to give your life for my son. If this were not enough, the fact
that he loves you, and that we love you, is enough.”

Two tears crept down Shannon’s cheeks--the first visible signs of
emotion that she had manifested during all the long weeks of the ordeal
that she had been through. Nothing had so deeply affected her as the
magnanimity of the proud old Pennington, whose pride and honor, while
she had always admired them, she had regarded as an indication of a
certain puritanical narrowness that could not forgive the transgression
of a woman.

When the judge announced the sentence, and they realized that Custer
Pennington was to pay the death penalty, although it had been almost a
foregone conclusion, the shock left them numb and cold.

Neither the condemned man nor his father gave any outward indication of
the effect of the blow. They were Penningtons, and the Pennington pride
permitted them no show of weakness before the eyes of strangers. Nor
yet was there any bravado in their demeanor. The younger Pennington did
not look at his father or Shannon as he was led away toward his cell,
between two bailiffs.

As Shannon Burke walked from the court room with the colonel, she could
think of nothing but the fact that in two months the man she loved
was to be hanged. She tried to formulate plans for his release--wild,
quixotic plans; but she could not concentrate her mind upon anything
but the bewildering thought that in two months they would hang him by
the neck until he was dead.

She knew that he was innocent. Who, then, had committed the crime? Who
had murdered Wilson Crumb?

Outside the Hall of Justice she was accosted by Allen, whom she
attempted to pass without noticing. The colonel turned angrily on the
man. He was in the mood to commit murder himself; but Allen forestalled
any outbreak on the old man’s part by a pacific gesture of his hands
and a quick appeal to Shannon.

“Just a moment, please,” he said. “I know you think I had a lot to do
with Pennington’s conviction. I want to help you now. I can’t tell you
why. I don’t believe he was guilty. I changed my mind recently. If I
can see you alone, Miss Burke, I can tell you something that might give
you a line on the guilty party.”

“Under no conceivable circumstances can you see Miss Burke alone,”
snapped the colonel.

“I’m not going to hurt her,” said Allen. “Just let her talk to me here
alone on the sidewalk, where no one can overhear.”

“Yes,” said the girl, who could see no opportunity pass which held the
slightest ray of hope for Custer.

The colonel walked away, but turned and kept his eyes on the man when
he was out of earshot. Allen spoke hurriedly to the girl for ten or
fifteen minutes, and then turned and left her. When she returned to
the colonel, the latter did not question her. When she did not offer
to confide in him, he knew that she must have good reasons for her
reticence, since he realized that her sole interest lay in aiding
Custer.

       *       *       *       *       *

For the next two months the colonel divided his time between Ganado and
San Francisco, that he might be near San Quentin, where Custer was held
pending the day of execution. Mrs. Pennington, broken in health by the
succession of blows that she had sustained, was sorely in need of his
companionship and help. Eva was rapidly regaining her strength and some
measure of her spirit. She had begun to realize how useless and foolish
her attempt at self-destruction had been, and to see that the braver
and nobler course would have been to give Guy the benefit of her moral
support in his time of need.

The colonel, who had wormed from Custer the full story of his
conviction upon the liquor charge, was able to convince her that
Guy had not played a dishonorable part, and that of the two he had
suffered more than Custer. Her father did not condone or excuse Guy’s
wrong-doing, but he tried to make her understand that it was no
indication of a criminal inclination, but rather the thoughtless act of
an undeveloped boy.

During the two months they saw little or nothing of Shannon. She
remained in Los Angeles, and when she made the long trip to San
Quentin to see Custer, or when they chanced to see her, they could not
but note how thin and drawn she was becoming. The roses had left her
cheeks, and there were deep lines beneath her eyes, in which there was
constantly an expression of haunting fear.

As the day of the execution drew nearer, the gloom that had hovered
over Ganado for months settled like a dense pall upon them all. On the
day before the execution the colonel left for San Francisco, to say
good-by to his son for the last time. Custer had insisted that his
mother and Eva must not come, and they had acceded to his wish.

On the afternoon when the colonel arrived at San Quentin, he was
permitted to see his son for the last time. The two conversed in low
tones, Custer asking questions about his mother and sister, and about
the little everyday activities of the ranch. Neither of them referred
to the event of the following morning.

“Has Shannon been here to-day?” the colonel asked.

Custer shook his head.

“I haven’t seen her this week,” he said. “I suppose she dreaded coming.
I don’t blame her. I should like to have seen her once more, though!”

Presently they stood in silence for several moments.

“You’d better go, dad,” said the boy. “Go back to mother and Eva. Don’t
take it too hard. It isn’t so bad, after all. I have led a bully life,
and I have never forgotten once that I am a Pennington. I shall not
forget it to-morrow.”

The father could not speak. They clasped hands once, the older man
turned away, and the guards led Custer back to the death cell for the
last time.



CHAPTER XXXVII


It was morning when the colonel reached the ranch. He found his wife
and Eva sitting in Custer’s room. They knew the hour, and they were
waiting there to be as near him as they could. They were weeping
quietly. In the kitchen across the patio they could hear Hannah sobbing.

They sat there for a long time in silence. Suddenly they heard a door
slam in the patio, and the sound of some one running.

“Colonel Pennington! Colonel Pennington!” a voice cried.

The colonel stepped to the door of Custer’s room. It was the bookkeeper
calling him.

“What is it?” he asked. “Here I am.”

“The Governor has granted a stay of execution. There is new evidence.
Miss Burke is on her way here now. She has found the man who killed
Crumb!”

What more he said the colonel did not hear, for he had turned back into
the room, and, collapsing on his son’s bed, had broken into tears--he
who had gone through those long weeks like a man of iron.

It was nearly noon before Shannon arrived. She had been driven from
Los Angeles by an attaché of the district attorney’s office. The
Penningtons had been standing on the east porch, watching the road with
binoculars, so anxious were they for confirmation of their hopes.

She was out of the car before it had stopped and was running toward
them. The man who had accompanied her followed, and joined them on the
porch. Shannon threw her arms around Mrs. Pennington’s neck.

“He is safe!” she cried. “Another has confessed, and has satisfied the
district attorney of his guilt.”

“Who was it?” they asked.

Shannon turned toward Eva.

“It is going to be another blow to you all,” she said; “but wait until
I’m through, and you will understand that it could not have been
otherwise. It was Guy who killed Wilson Crumb.”

“Guy? Why should he have done it?”

“That was it. That was why suspicion was never directed toward him.
Only he knew the facts that prompted him to commit the deed. It was
Allen who suggested to me the possibility that it might have been Guy.
I have spent nearly two months at the sanatorium with this gentleman
from the district attorney’s office, in an effort to awaken Guy’s
sleeping intellect to a realization of the past, and of the present
necessity for recalling it. He has been improving steadily, but it was
only yesterday that memory returned to him. We worked on the theory
that if he could be made to realize that Eva lived, the cause of his
mental sickness would be removed. We tried everything, and we had
almost given up hope when, almost like a miracle, his memory returned,
while he was looking at a kodak picture of Eva that I had shown him.
The rest was easy, especially after he knew that she had recovered.
Instead of the necessity for confession resulting in a further shock,
it seemed to inspirit him. His one thought was of Custer, his one hope
that we would be in time to save him.”

“Why did he kill Crumb?” asked Eva.

“Because Crumb killed Grace. He told me the whole story yesterday.”

Very carefully Shannon related all that Guy had told of Crumb’s
relations with his sister, up to the moment of Grace’s death.

“I am glad he killed him!” said Eva. “I would have had no respect for
him if he hadn’t done it.”

“Guy told me that the evening before he killed Crumb he had been
looking over a motion picture magazine, and he had seen there a
picture of Crumb which tallied with the photograph he had taken from
Grace’s dressing table--a portrait of the man who, as she told him,
was responsible for her trouble. Guy had never been able to learn this
man’s identity, but the picture in the magazine, with his name below
it, was a reproduction of the same photograph. There was no question
as to the man’s identity. The scarfpin, and a lock of hair falling in
a peculiar way over the forehead, marked the pictures as identical.
Though Guy had never seen Crumb, he knew from conversations that he
had heard here that it was Wilson Crumb who was directing the picture
that was to be taken on Ganado. He immediately got his pistol, saddled
his horse, and rode up to the camp in search of Crumb. It was he whom
one of the witnesses mistook for Custer. He then did what the district
attorney attributed to Custer. He rode to the mouth of Jackknife, and
saw the lights of Crumb’s car up near El Camino Largo. While he was in
Jackknife, Eva must have ridden down Sycamore from her meeting with
Crumb, passing Jackknife before Guy rode back into Sycamore. He rode
up to where Crumb was attempting to crank his engine. Evidently the
starter had failed to work, for Crumb was standing in front of the car,
in the glare of the headlights, attempting to crank it. Guy accosted
him, charged him with the murder of Grace, and shot him. He then
started for home by way of El Camino Largo. Half a mile up the trail he
dismounted and hid his pistol and belt in a hollow tree. Then he rode
home.

“He told me that while he never for an instant regretted his act, he
did not sleep all that night, and was in a highly nervous condition
when the shock of Eva’s supposed death unbalanced his mind; otherwise
he would gladly have assumed the guilt of Crumb’s death at the time
when Custer and I were accused.

“After we had obtained Guy’s confession, Allen gave us further
information tending to prove Custer innocent. He said he could not give
it before without incriminating himself; and as he had no love for
Custer, he did not intend to hang for a crime he had not committed. He
knew that he would surely hang if he confessed the part that he had
played in formulating the evidence against Custer.

“Crumb had been the means of sending Allen to the county jail, after
robbing him of several thousand dollars. The day before Crumb was
killed, Allen’s sentence expired. The first thing he did was to search
for Crumb, with the intention of killing the man. He learned at the
studio where Crumb was, and he followed him immediately. He was hanging
around the camp out of sight, waiting for Crumb, when he heard the
shot that killed him. His investigation led him to Crumb’s body. He
was instantly overcome by the fear, induced by his guilty conscience,
that the crime would be laid at his door. In casting about for some
plan by which he might divert suspicion from himself, he discovered
an opportunity to turn it against a man whom he hated. The fact that
he had been a stableman on Ganado, and was familiar with the customs
of the ranch, made it an easy thing for him to go to the stables,
saddle the Apache, and ride him up Sycamore to Crumb’s body. Here he
deliberately pulled off the fore shoe from the horse and hid it under
Crumb’s body. Then he rode back to the stable, unsaddled the Apache,
and made his way to the village.

“The district attorney said that we need have no fear but that Custer
will be exonerated and freed. And, Eva”--she turned to the girl with
a happy smile--“I have it very confidentially that there is small
likelihood that any jury in southern California will convict Guy, if he
bases his defense upon a plea of insanity.”

Eva smiled bravely and said:

“One thing I don’t understand, Shannon, is what you were doing brushing
the road with a bough from a tree, on the morning after the killing of
Crumb, if you weren’t trying to obliterate some one’s tracks.”

“That’s just what I was trying to do,” said Shannon. “Ever since Custer
taught me something about tracking, it has held a certain fascination
for me, so that I often try to interpret the tracks I see along
the trails in the hills. It was because of this, I suppose, that I
immediately recognized the Apache’s tracks around the body of Crumb. I
immediately jumped to the conclusion that Custer had killed him, and I
did what I could to remove this evidence. As it turned out, my efforts
did more harm than good, until Allen’s explanation cleared up the
matter.”

“And why,” asked the colonel, “did Allen undergo this sudden change of
heart?”

Shannon turned toward him, her face slightly flushed, though she looked
him straight in the eyes as she spoke.

“It is a hard thing for me to tell you,” she said. “Allen is a bad
man--a very bad man; yet in the worst of man there is a spark of good.
Allen told me this morning, in the district attorney’s office, what it
was that had kindled to life the spark of good in him. He is my father.”


THE END



Transcriber’s Notes


Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they
were not changed.

Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced quotation
marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left
unbalanced.

Transcriber removed redundant half-title page.

Page 60: “some one’s else happiness” was printed that way.

Page 78: “an unkind face” was printed that way; may be a typographical
error for “fate”.

Page 79: “the possessor a quiet humor” was printed that way, likely
omitting an “of”.

Page 87: “Half an hour later he emerged” originally was printed as
“merged”.

Page 189: “which had arisen in his mind and would not down.” was printed
that way; probably should be “go down.”

Page 200: “she cared about just then” originally was printed as “just
them”.

Page 248: “There’s be a whole regiment” was printed that way.

Page 263: “she was purposely avoiding her” was printed that way, but
“she” perhaps should be “he”.

Page 310: “leap of the murderer’s horse” originally was printed as
“murder’s”.

Page 319: “pulled off the fore shoe” originally was printed as “the
off”.





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