"Sure, honey. Has the throbbing gone out of the ankle?" he asked anxiously.
"Not entirely, but it"s a good deal better. Good-night, dad."
"If Doc comes I"ll bring him in," Lee said after he had kissed her.
"Do, please."
But after she was left alone Melissy did not prepare herself for sleep.
Her wide open eyes stared into the darkness, while her mind stormily reviewed the day. The man who for years had been her best friend was a scoundrel. She had proved him unworthy of her trust, and on top of that he had insulted her. Hot tears stung her eyes--tears of shame, of wounded self-love, of mortification, and of something more worthy than any of these.
She grieved pa.s.sionately for that which had gone out of her life, for the comradeship that had been so precious to her. If this man were a waddy, who of all her friends could she trust? She could have forgiven him had he done wrong in the heat of anger. But this premeditated evil was beyond forgiveness. To make it worse, he had come direct from the doing of it to meet her, with a brazen smile on his lips and a lie in his heart. She would never speak to him again--never so long as she lived.
CHAPTER IV
THE MAN WITH THE CHIHUAHUA HAT
A little dust cloud was traveling up the trail toward the Bar Double G, the center of which presently defined itself as a rider moving at a road gait. He wore a Chihuahua hat and with it the picturesque trappings the Southwest borrows on occasion from across the border. Vanity disclosed itself in the gold-laced hat, in the silver conchos of the fringed chaps, in the fine workmanship of the saddle and bit. The man"s finery was overdone, carried with it the suggestion of being on exhibition. But one look at the man himself, sleek and graceful, black-haired and white-toothed, exuding an effect of cold wariness in spite of the masked smiling face, would have been enough to give the lie to any charge of weakness. His fopperies could not conceal the silken strength of him. One meeting with the chill, deep-set eyes was certificate enough for most people.
Melissy, sitting on the porch with her foot resting on a second chair, knew a slight quickening of the blood as she watched him approach.
"Good evenin", Miss M"lissy," he cried, sweeping his sombrero as low as the stirrup.
"_Buenos tardes_, _Senor_ Norris," she flung back gayly.
Sitting at ease in the saddle, he leisurely looked her over with eyes that smoldered behind half-shuttered lids. To most of her world she was in spirit still more boy than woman, but before his bold, possessive gaze her long lashes wavered to the cheeks into which the warm blood was beating.
Her long, free lines were still slender with the immaturity of youth, her soul still hesitating reluctantly to cross the border to womanhood toward which Nature was pushing her so relentlessly. From a fund of experience Philip Norris read her shrewdly, knew how to evoke the latent impulses which brought her eagerly to the s.e.x duel.
"Playing off for sick," he scoffed.
"I"m not," she protested. "Never get sick. It"s just a sprained ankle."
"Sho! I guess you"re Miss Make Believe; just harrowing the feelings of your beaux."
"The way you talk! I haven"t got any beaux. The boys are just my friends."
"Oh, just friends! And no beaux. My, my! Not a single sweetheart in all this wide open country. Shall I go rope you one and bring him in, _compadre_?"
"No!" she exploded. "I don"t want any. I"m not old enough yet." Her dancing eyes belied the words.
"Now I wouldn"t have guessed it. You look to me most ready to be picked."
He rested his weight on the farther stirrup and let his lazy smile mock her. "My estimate would be sixteen. I"ll bet you"re every day of that."
"I only lack three months of being eighteen," she came back indignantly.
"You don"t say! You"ll ce"tainly have to be advertising for a husband soon, Miss Three-Quarters-Past-Seventeen. Maybe an ad in the Mesa paper would help. You ain"t so awful bad looking."
"I"ll let you write it. What would you say?" she demanded, a patch of pink standing out near the curve of the cheek bone.
He swung from the saddle and flung the reins to the ground. With jingling spurs he came up the steps and sat on the top one, his back against a pillar. Boldly his admiring eyes swept her.
"_Nina_, I couldn"t do the subject justice. Honest, I haven"t got the vocabulary."
"Oh, you!" Laughter was in the eyes that studied him with a side tilt of the chin. "That"s a fine way to get out of it when your bluff is called."
He leaned back against the post comfortably and absorbed the beauty of the western horizon. The sun had just set behind a saddle of the Galiuros in a splash of splendor. All the colors of the rainbow fought for supremacy in a brilliant-tinted sky that blazed above the fire-girt peaks. Soon dusk would slip down over the land and tone the hues to a softer harmony. A purple sea would flow over the hills, to be in turn displaced by a deep, soft violet. Then night, that night of mystery and romance which transforms the desert to a thing of incredible wonder!
"Did your father buy this sunset with the ranch? And has he got a guarantee that it will perform every night?" he asked.
"Did you ever see anything like it?" she cried. "I have looked at them all my life and I never get tired."
He laughed softly, his indolent, sleepy look on her. "Some things I would never get tired of looking at either."
Without speaking she nodded, still absorbing the sunset.
"But it wouldn"t be that kind of scenery," he added. "How tall are you, _muchacha_?"
Her glance came around in surprise. "I don"t know. About five foot five, I think. Why?"
"I"m working on that ad. How would this do? "Miss Three-Quarters-Past-Seventeen wants to meet up with gentleman between eighteen and forty-eight. Object, matrimony. Description of lady: Slim, medium height, brunette, mop of blue-black hair, the prettiest dimple you ever saw----""
"Now I know you"re making fun of me. I"m mad." And the dimple flashed into being.
""--mostly says the opposite of what she means, has a----""
"I don"t. I don"t"
""--has a spice of the devil in her, which----""
"Now, I _am_ mad," she interrupted, laughing.
""--which is excusable, since she has the reddest lips for kissing in Arizona.""
He had gone too far. Her innocence was in arms. Norris knew it by the swiftness with which the smile vanished from her face, by the flash of anger in the eyes.
"I prefer to talk about something else, Mr. Norris," she said with all the prim stiffness of a schoolgirl.
Her father relieved the tension by striding across from the stable. With him came a bowlegged young fellow in plain leathers. The youngster was Charley Hymer, one of the riders for the Bar Double G.
"You"re here at the right time, Norris," Lee said grimly. "Charley has just come down from Antelope Pa.s.s. He found one of my cows dead, with a bullet hole through the forehead. The ashes of a fire were there, and in the brush not far away a running iron."
The eyes of Norris narrowed to slits. He was the cattle detective of the a.s.sociation and for a year now the rustlers had outgeneraled him. "I"ll have you take me to the spot, Charley. Get a move on you and we"ll get there soon as the moon is up."
Melissy gripped the arms of her chair tightly with both hands. She was looking at Norris with a new expression, a kind of breathless fear. She knew him for a man who could not be swerved from the thing he wanted. For all his easy cynicism, he had the reputation of being a bloodhound on the trail. Moreover, she knew that he was no friend to Jack Flatray. Why had she left that running iron as evidence to convict its owner? What folly not to have removed it from the immediate scene of the crime!
The cattle detective and her father had moved a few steps away and were talking in low tones. Melissy became aware of a footfall. The man who called himself Morse came around the corner of the house and stopped at the porch steps.