"To oblige me, girl. I want to hold that fellow in his room a few days more and keep his arm in a sling. He"s no easier to handle than a wildcat."
Kate looked perplexed: "What shall I say to him?"
Carpy stood at the door with his hand on the k.n.o.b: "Jolly him along--you know how. He says he"s coming down here for dinner tonight.
Tell him Belle"s sick."
Belle listened. The more Kate considered the mandate, the more confusing it seemed. But she rang up the hotel, called for Laramie and heard presently a man"s voice in answer.
"Is this Mr. Laramie?" she asked.
"It is not," was the answer.
"Isn"t he there?"
"No."
"Can you tell me when he will be in?"
"He won"t be in."
She sighed with impatience: "I want to speak to him. And I think this is he speaking. You know very well who I am," she persisted.
"I do."
"And I know very well who you are."
"In that you may be mistaken."
"Surely I"m not mistaken in believing Mr. Laramie a gentleman."
"But you are mistaken in believing any person by that name here."
"There is a person there who loves to persecute me, isn"t there?"
"There is not."
"Is there one there that likes to have his own way?"
"No more than you like to have your own way."
"Is there a man named Jim there?"
"Speaking, Kate."
"I"ve a message from Belle."
"What is the message?"
"She is in bed with a cold and fever and wants you not to come tonight.
As soon as she is up she will let you know."
Belle held her peace till Kate left the telephone. "I can"t make Doctor Carpy out," she grumbled. "If he didn"t want Jim Laramie to come down here what did he ask _you_ to call him up for? If he doesn"t know any more than that about doctoring," she added, contemptuously, "I"d hate to take his medicine."
She waited for Kate"s comment but Kate possessed the great art of saying nothing. "I guess," continued Belle, at length, "it"s time to take that pill he left, but I guess I won"t take it. What do you think about it?" she asked, referring again to Carpy.
Kate was not to be drawn out: "I found out a long time ago that Doctor Carpy doesn"t tell all he knows," she observed dryly. "But I do know he wants Mr. Laramie to stay in his room. He says his shoulder will never heal if he doesn"t keep still."
Belle made no response, but when Laramie knocked at the door in the evening she knew who it was. Kate received him.
Talking in leisurely fashion to her, he walked to the door of Belle"s room, looked in, wanted to know whom she had been fighting with and asked if she would get up and get supper for him.
He carried his right arm at his side with the thumb hooked into his belt: "Where"s your sling?" demanded Belle, tartly. Laramie pulled it out of his pocket: "I put it on when Carpy comes around," he explained.
"You keep fooling around the streets this way and they"ll get you sometime," said Belle, tartly.
He turned the remark: "That idea doesn"t seem to worry me as much as it used to. Have I got to cook my own supper?"
This venture after discussion was a.s.sumed by Kate. She put on her hat to go across the street to get a steak. Laramie insisted on going with her. She asked him not to.
"Why not?" he asked.
Kate was keyed up with apprehension: "Why take chances all the time?"
she asked in turn. "Someone might shoot from the dark."
Belle answered for him: "n.o.body in this country would shoot a man when a woman"s with him," she said. "Go along."
The butcher stumping in from the back room to wait on them showed no surprise at the two from hostile camps asking for one steak, but he tried so hard to watch the pair and to hear what they were saying that he nearly ruined one quarter of beef before he got what Kate wanted.
What he finally cut off and trimmed looked more like a roast than a steak but neither customer seemed disturbed by this.
Laramie paid, over indignant protests, and placing the package in the loop of his left arm, opened the shop door for his companion. He pa.s.sed out behind her in excellent spirits. The butcher, looking after them, took his surrept.i.tious pipe from his pocket, watched the shop door close, shook his head and ramming the burnt tobacco down hard with the finger that lacked the first joint, stumped back to his lonely stove.
The kitchen was farthest removed from Belle"s room. Laramie started the fire with kerosene. When he lighted it there was a flare-back that alarmed Belle in her bed, but she could hear nothing of what was going on in the kitchen. While the supper was being cooked, Laramie stood on the other side of the stove from his enemy"s daughter, watching every move. If Kate walked over to the cupboard, his eyes followed her step--she walked with such decision and planted her heels so fast and firm. If she turned from the stove to the table, his eyes devoured her slenderness in amazement that one so delicately proportioned could so crowd everything else out of his head. It seemed as if nothing before had ever been shaped like her ankles--there was so little of them to bear uncomplainingly even so slight a figure--and Kate was by no means diminutive.
As the supper progressed, Laramie watched almost in awe the short-arm jabs she gave the meat on the broiler. The cuffs of her shirtwaist, half back to her elbows, revealed white arms tapering to wrists molded like the ankles, and hands that his eyes fed on as a miser"s feed on gold. The blazing coals flushed her cheeks and when she looked up at him to answer some foolish question her own eyes, flushed and softened by the heat, took on an expression that stole all the strength he had left. When she asked him how he liked it, he exclaimed, "Fine," and Kate had to ask him whether he liked the steak well done or rare.
"Any way you like it," he stammered, "but lots of gravy."
As he watched her laugh at his efforts to help her by picking up the hot platter, a sense of his own clumsiness and size and general roughness overcame him. She was too far removed, he told himself, from his kind to make it possible for her ever to like him.
The closer he got to her daintiness and spirit and laughter, the more hopeless his wild dreams seemed. Whenever she asked if the steak were cooked enough, he suggested--to prolong the pleasure of watching her hands--that she give it one more turn. Every moment he saw something new to admire. While she was attending to the meat he could look at her hair and see where the sun had browned her pink throat and neck.
As the broiling drew near an end, almost a panic gripped Laramie. The happiest moments of his life had been spent there at the stove. They were slipping away. She was lifting the steak the last time from the fire. He asked her to turn it once more.
"Why, look at it," she exclaimed, "it"s burnt up now; hold the platter closer."
It brought him closer in spirit than he had ever been to heaven, to feel her elbow brush against his own, as she deftly landed the smoking steak on the platter while Laramie held it.
A great melancholy overcame him: "What do you want me to do?" he said suddenly.
Kate"s eyebrows rose. She looked at him: "Why, set it on the table,"