A Texas Ranger (Western Classic). William MacLeod Raine
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He glanced at her in quick surprise, then made the mistake of letting himself smile at her frosty aloofness instead of being crestfallen by it. She happened to look round and catch that smile before he could extinguish it. Her petulance hardened instantly to a resolution.
“I don’t quite know what we’re going to do about it—unless you walk,” he proposed, amused at the absurdity of his suggestion.
“That’s just what I’m going to do,” she retorted promptly.
“What!” He wheeled on her with an astonished smile on his face.
This served merely to irritate her.
“I said I was going to walk.”
“Walk seventeen miles?”
“Seventy if I choose.”
“Nonsense! Of course you won’t.”
Her eyebrows lifted in ironic demurrer. “I think you must let me be the judge of that,” she said gently.
“Walk!” he reiterated. “Why, you’re walked out. You couldn’t go a mile. What do you take me for? Think I’m going to let you come that on me.”
“I don’t quite see how you can help it, Mr. Neill,” she answered.
“Help it! Why, it ain’t reasonable. Of course you’ll ride.”
“Of course I won’t.”
She set off briskly, almost jauntily, despite her tired feet and aching limbs.
“Well, if that don’t beat—” He broke off to laugh at the situation. After she had gone twenty steps he called after her in a voice that did not suppress its chuckle: “You ain’t going the right direction, Miss Kinney.”
She whirled round on him in anger. How dared he laugh at her?
“Which is the right way?” she choked.
“North by west is about it.”
She was almost reduced to stamping her foot.
Without condescending to ask more definite instructions she struck off at haphazard, and by chance guessed right. There was nothing for it but to pursue. Wherefore the man pursued. The horse at his heels hampered his stride, but he caught up with her soon.
“Somebody’s acting mighty foolish,” he said.
She said nothing very eloquently.
“If I need punishing, ma’am, don’t punish yourself, but me. You ain’t able to walk and that’s a fact.”
She gave her silent attention strictly to the business of making progress through the cactus and the sand.
“Say I’m all you think I am. You can trample on me proper after we get to the Mal Pais. Don’t have to know me at all if you don’t want to. Won’t you ride, ma’am? Please!”
His distress filled her with a fierce delight. She stumbled defiantly forward.
He pondered a while before he asked quietly:
“Ain’t you going to ride, Miss Kinney?”
“No, I’m not. Better go on. Pray don’t let me detain you.”
“All right. See that peak with the spur to it? Well, you keep that directly in line and make straight for it. I’ll say good-by now, ma’am. I got to hurry to be in time for dinner. I’ll send some one out from the camp to meet you that ain’t such a villain as I am.”
He swung to the saddle, put spurs to his pony, and cantered away. She could scarce believe it, even when he rode straight over the hill without a backward glance. He would never leave her. Surely he would not do that. She could never reach the camp, and he knew it. To be left alone in the desert again; the horror of it broke her down, but not immediately. She went proudly forward with her head in the air at first. He might look round. Perhaps he was peeping at her from behind some cholla. She would not gratify him by showing any interest in his whereabouts. But presently she began to lag, to scan draws and mesas anxiously for him, even to call aloud in an ineffective little voice which the empty hills echoed faintly. But from him there came no answer.
She sat down and wept in self-pity. Of course she had told him to go, but he knew well enough she did not mean it. A magnanimous man would have taken a better revenge on an exhausted girl than to leave her alone in such a spot, and after she had endured such a terrible experience as she had. She had read about the chivalry of Western men. Yet these two had ridden away on their horses and left her to live or die as chance willed it.
“Now, don’t you feel so bad, Miss Margaret. I wasn’t aiming really to leave you, of course,” a voice interrupted her sobs to say.
She looked through the laced fingers that covered her face, mightily relieved, but not yet willing to confess it. The engineer had made a circuit and stolen up quietly behind.
“Oh! I thought you had gone,” she said as carelessly as she could with a voice not clear of tears.
“Were you crying because you were afraid I hadn’t?” he asked.
“I ran a cactus into my foot. And I didn’t say anything about crying.”
“Then if your foot is hurt you will want to ride. That seventeen miles might be too long a stroll before you get through with it.”
“I don’t know what I’ll do yet,” she answered shortly.
“I know what you’ll do.”
“Yes?”
“You’ll quit your foolishness and get on this hawss.”
She flushed angrily. “I won’t!”
He stooped down, gathered her up in his arms, and lifted her to the saddle.
“That’s what you’re going to do whether you like it or not,” he informed her.
“How are you going to make me stay here, now you have put me here?”
“I’m going to get on behind and hold you if it’s necessary.”
He was sensible enough of the folly of it all, but he did not see what else he could do. She had chosen to punish him through herself in a way that was impossible. It was a childish thing to do, born of some touch of hysteria her experience had induced, and he could only treat her as a child till she was safely back in civilization.
Their wills met in their eyes, and the man’s, masculine and dominant, won the battle. The long fringe of hers fell to the soft cheeks.
“It won’t be at all necessary,” she promised.
“Are you sure?”
“Quite sure.”
“That’s