Her Prairie Knight, Lonesome Land & The Uphill Climb: Complete Western Trilogy. B. M. Bower
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Kelly stared at her meditatively a minute, and said: “Well, I’ll be damned!”
Keith looked at her also, but he did not say anything.
The way he slapped his saddle back upon Redcloud and cinched it, and saddled Rex, was a pretty exhibition of precision and speed, learned in roundup camps. Kelly watched him grimly.
“I knowed you wasn’t as swift as yuh knew how ‘t be, a while back,” he commented. “I’ve got this t’ say fur you two: You’re a little the toughest proposition I ever run up ag’inst—and I’ve been up ag’inst it good and plenty.”
“Thanks,” Keith said cheerfully. “You’d better take Rex now and go ahead, Miss Lansell. I’ll take that gun and look after this fellow. Get up, Kelly.”
“What are you going to do with him?”
Kelly got unsteadily upon his feet. Beatrice looked at him, and then at Keith. She asked a question.
“March him home, and send him in to the nearest sheriff.” Keith was businesslike, and his tone was crisp.
Beatrice’s eyes turned again to Kelly. He did not whine, or beg, or even curse. He stood looking straight before him, at something only his memory could see, and in his face was weariness, and a deep loneliness, and a certain, grim despair. There was an ugly bruise where the rock had struck, but the rest of his face was drawn and white.
“If you do that,” cried Beatrice, in a voice hardly more than a fierce whisper, “I shall hate you always. You are not a man-hunter. Let him stay here, and take his chance in the hills.”
Keith was not a hard man to persuade into being merciful. “It’s easy enough to say yes, Miss Lansell. I always was chicken-hearted when a fellow seemed down on his luck. You can stay here, Kelly—I don’t want you, anyway.” He laughed boyishly and irresponsibly, for he felt that Kelly had done him a service that day.
Beatrice flashed him a smile that went to his head and made him dizzy, and took up Rex’s bridle rein. She hesitated, looked doubtfully at Kelly, who stood waiting stoically, and turned to her saddle. She untied a bundle and went quickly over to him.
“You—I don’t want my lunch, after all. I’m going home now. I—I want you to take it, please. There are some sandwiches—with veal loaf, that Looey Sam makes deliciously—and some cake. I—I wish it was more. I know you’ll like the veal loaf.”
Kelly looked down at her, and God knows what thoughts were in his mind. He did not answer her with words; he just swallowed hard.
“Poor devil!” was what Keith said to himself, and the gun he was holding threatened, for a minute, to wing a cloud.
Beatrice laid the package in Kelly’s unresisting hand, looked up into his averted face and said simply: “Good-by, Mr. Kelly.”
After that she hurried Rex up the steep ridge much faster than she had gone down it, endangering his bones and putting herself very empty lunged.
At the top of the ridge Keith stopped and looked down.
“Hi, Kelly!”
Kelly showed that he heard.
“Here’s your gun, on this rock. You can come up and get it, if you want to. And—say! I’ve got a few broke horses ranging down here somewhere. VN brand, on left shoulder. I won’t scour the hills, very bad, if I should happen to miss a cayuse. So long!”
Kelly waved his hand for farewell.
Chapter 13. Keith’s Masterful Wooing
Keith faced toward home, with Redcloud following at his heels like a pet dog. For some reason, which he did not try to analyze, he was feeling light of heart—as though something very nice had happened to him. It might have been the unexpected clearing up of the mystery of the prairie-fire, though he was not dwelling particularly upon that. He was thinking a great deal more of Beatrice’s blue-brown eyes, which had never been more baffling, so far as he knew. And his blood was still dancing with the smile she had given him; it hardly seemed possible that a girl could smile just like that and not mean anything.
When he reached the level, where she was waiting for him, he saw that she had her arms around the neck of her horse, and that she was crying dismally, heart-brokenly, with an abandon that took no thought of his presence. Keith had never seen a girl cry like that before. He had seen them dab at their eyes with their handkerchief, and smile the next breath—but this was different. For a minute he didn’t quite know what to do; he could hear the blood hammering against his temples while he stood dumbly watching her. He went hesitatingly up, and laid a gloved hand deprecatingly upon her shoulder.
“Don’t do that, Miss Lansell! The fellow isn’t worth it. He’s only living the life he chose for himself, and he doesn’t mind, not half as much as you imagine. I know how you feel—I felt sorry for him myself—but he doesn’t deserve it, you know.” He stopped; not being able, just at the moment, to think of anything more to say about Kelly. Beatrice, who had not been thinking of Kelly at all, but remorsefully of a fellow she had persisted in misjudging, only cried the harder.
“Don’t—don’t cry like that! I—Miss Lansell—Trix—darling!” Keith’s self-control snapped suddenly, like a rope when the strain becomes too great. He caught her fiercely in his arms, and crushed her close against him.
Beatrice stopped crying, and gasped.
“Trixie, if you must cry, I wish you’d cry for me. I’m about as miserable a man—I want you so! God made you for me, and I’m starving for the feel of your lips on mine.” Then Keith, who was nothing if not daring, once he was roused, bent and kissed her without waiting to see if he might—and not only once, but several times.
Beatrice made a half-hearted attempt to get free of his arms, but Keith was not a fool—he held her closer, and laughed from pure, primitive joy.
“Mr. Cameron!” It was Beatrice’s voice, but it had never been like that before.
“I think you might call me Keith,” he cut in. “You’ve got to begin some time, and now is as good a time as any.”
“You—you’re taking a good deal for granted,” she said, wriggling unavailingly in his arms.
“A man’s got to, with a girl like you. You’re so used to turning a fellow down I believe you’d do it just from habit.”
“Indeed?” She was trying to be sarcastic and got kissed for her pains.
“Yes, ‘indeed.’” He mimicked her tone. “I want you. I want you! I wanted you long before I ever saw you. And so I’m not taking any chances—I didn’t dare, you see. I just had to take you first, and ask you afterward.”
Beatrice laughed a little, with tears very close to her lashes, and gave up. What was the use of trying to resist this masterful fellow, who would not even give her a chance to refuse him? She did not know quite how to say no to a man who did not ask her to say yes. But the queer part, to