"Well," he admitted, "you do look pretty fine, that"s a fact. Better than you did at Hudson"s. What did you quit for?"
Sheila was sober enough now. The moonlight let some of its silver, uncaught by the twinkling aspen leaves, splash down on her face. It seemed to flicker and quiver like the leaves. She shook her head.
He looked a trifle sullen. "Oh, you won"t tell me.... Funny idea, you being a barmaid. Hudson"s notion, wasn"t it?"
Sheila lifted her clear eyes. "I thought asking questions wasn"t good manners in the West."
"d.a.m.n!" he said. "Don"t you make me angry! I"ve got a right to ask you questions."
She put her hand up against the smooth white trunk of the tree near which she stood. She seemed to grow a little taller.
"Oh, have you? I don"t think I quite understand how you got any such right. And you like to be questioned yourself?"
She had him there, had him rather cruelly, though he was not aware of the weapon of her suspicion. She felt a little ashamed when she saw him wince. He slapped his gloves against his leather chaps, looking at her with hot, sulky eyes.
"Oh, well... I beg your pardon.... Listen--" He flung his ill-humor aside and was sweet and cool again like the night. "Are you going to take the little horse?"
"I don"t know."
His face shadowed and fell so expressively, so utterly, that she melted.
"Oh," he stammered, half-turning from her, "I was sure. I brought him up."
This completed the melting process. "Of course I"ll take him!" she cried.
"Where is he?"
She inspected the beautiful little animal by the moonlight. She even let Hilliard mount her on the shining glossy back and rode slowly about clinging to his mane, ecstatic over the rippling movement under her.
"He"s like a rocking-chair," said Cosme. "You can ride him all day and not feel it." He looked about the silver meadow. "Good feed here, isn"t there? I bet he"ll stay. If not, I"ll get him for you."
Sheila slipped down. They left the horse to graze.
"Yes, it"s first-rate feed. Do you think Miss Blake will let me keep him?"
His answer was entirely lost by a sudden outbreak from the dogs.
"Good Lord!" said Cosme, making himself heard, "what a breed! Isn"t that awful! Why does she keep the brutes? Isn"t she scared they"ll eat her?"
Sheila shook her head. Presently the tumult quieted down. "They"re afraid of her," she said. "She has a dreadful whip. She likes to bully them. I think she"s rather cruel. But she does love Berg; she says he"s the only real dog in the pack."
"Was Berg the one on the bearskin inside?"
"Yes."
"He"s sure a beauty. But I don"t like him. He has wolf eyes. See here--you"re shivering. I"ve kept you out here in the cold. I"ll go.
Good-night. Thank you for keeping the horse. Will you come down to see my house? I built it"--he drawled the words--"for you"--and added after a tingling moment--"to see, ma"am."
This experiment in words sent Sheila to the house, her hand crushed and aching with his good-bye grasp, her heart jumping with a queer fright.
Miss Blake stood astraddle on the hearth, her hands behind her back.
"You better go to bed, Sheila," she said; "it"s eleven o"clock and to-morrow"s wash-day."
Her voice was pleasant enough, but its bluffness had a new edge. Sheila found it easy to obey. She climbed up the ladder to the little gabled loft which was her bedroom. Halfway up she paused to a.s.sert a belated independence of spirit. "Good-night," she said, "how do you like our neighbor?"
Miss Blake stared up. Her lips were set tight. She made no answer. After an instant she sauntered across the room and out of the door. The whip with which she beat the dogs swung in her hand. A moment later a fearful howling and yelping showed that some culprit had been chosen for condign punishment.
Sheila set down her candle, sat on the edge of her cot, and covered her ears with her hands. When it was over she crept into bed. She felt, though she chided herself for the absurdity, like a naughty child who has been forcibly reminded of the consequences of rebellion.
CHAPTER VI
A HISTORY AND A LETTER
The next morning, it seemed Miss Blake"s humor had completely changed. It showed something like an apologetic softness. She patted Sheila"s shoulder when she pa.s.sed the girl at work. When Hilliard next appeared, a morning visit this time, he was bidden to share their dinner; he was even smiled upon.
"She"s not such a bad old girl, is she?" he admitted when Sheila had been given a half-holiday and was riding on the black horse beside Hilliard on his Dusty across one of the mountain meadows.
"_I_ think she"s a dear," said Sheila, pink with grat.i.tude; then, shadowing, "If only she wouldn"t beat the dogs and would give up trapping."
"Why in thunder shouldn"t she trap?"
"I loathe trapping. Do you remember how you felt in the pen? It"s bad enough to shoot down splendid wild things for food, but, to trap them!--small furry things or even big furry things like bears, why, it"s cruel! It"s hideously cruel! When a woman does it--"
"Come, now, don"t call _her_ a woman!"
"Yes, she is. Think of the ap.r.o.ns! And she is so tidy."
"That"s not just a woman"s virtue."
"Maybe not. I"m not sure. But I"ve a feeling that it was Eve who first discovered dust."
"Very bad job if she did. Think of all the bother we"ve been going through ever since."
"There!" Sheila triumphed. "To you it"s just bother. You"re a man. To me it"s a form of sport.... I wonder what Miss Blake"s story is."
"You mean--?" He turned in his saddle to stare wonderingly at her. "You don"t know?"
"No." Sheila blushed confusedly. "I--I don"t know anything about her--"
"Good Lord!" He whistled softly. "Sometimes those ventures turn out all right." He looked dubious. "I"m glad I"m here!"
Sheila"s smile slipped sweetly across her mouth and eyes. "So am I. But,"
she added after a thoughtful moment, "I don"t know much about your story either, do I?"