"No more of that, John."
"What was there to it?"
"I guess there was."
"A ride or something--what?"
"Something, John."
"Thunder! It must have been the ride. I had a deputy marshalship all lined up for you if that hadn"t happened. And believe me, boy, a deputy marshalship isn"t lying around loose every day!"
Kate listened keenly for Laramie"s comment:
"The ride was worth the price, John," was all he said.
"Some skirt, eh?"
Laramie squirmed and with an expletive protested:
"Hang it, John----"
"No matter, no matter. I"ll get it all from Belle some day. And after you get through with your wire thieves we"ll tell the story of your brief romance----"
"Over my grave."
"Right, Jim--over your grave."
"John," Laramie ran on, "do you remember that song Tommie Meggeson used to sing on the round-up--a pretty little thing. It had one good line in it: "Death comes but once, and then, sometimes--too late.""
Belle appeared with a vegetable: "It won"t keep you waiting an awful while if things go on the way they"re going now," she put in grimly.
"That was a good song," mused Laramie, "a good old song." But he heard a slight sound in the kitchen and his eyes were turned toward the archway.
"Just the same that song won"t keep you from getting killed," persisted Belle.
"Even that would beat appendicitis clean to death, Belle," maintained Laramie, still listening.
"You"ve got lots of time," he added, as Lefever looked at his watch.
"I haven"t," exclaimed his companion. "I"ve got to send a message.
Come over to the train."
"I"ve got to write a couple of letters."
"Come over to the station and write your letters."
Laramie shook his head: "I couldn"t even get to the station by one o"clock. Every man in Main Street wants to talk about Tom Stone.
You"d think I had a million friends among the cattlemen this morning."
"I heard old Barb Doubleday is grinning like a hangman today."
"If Belle"s got some ink I"ll write my letters right here."
Kate"s spirits, which had risen at the hope of being so luckily rid of one who might prove troublesome, fell at his refusal to leave. John urged, but Laramie only asked Belle again for the ink. Lefever tried to coax Belle to go to the train with him. Belle would do almost any fool thing--as John bluntly averred--but this time she must have had pity on Kate and would not leave her unprotected. Lefever went his way. From a shelf near where Kate, with clasped hands, sat in silence Belle took paper and ink in to Laramie and began to clear the table.
At this unlucky moment the front door was opened swiftly and a boy from the butcher shop stuck his head inside.
"Miss Shockley," he called, "the milkman is on the "phone now, if you want him." Closing the door he ran back across the street. With a sense of her wrongs keen upon her, Belle, forgetting her charge in the kitchen, hurried after him.
Even then, Kate hoped that by keeping deathly still she might escape an unpleasant meeting. She never breathed more carefully in her life, yet she was doomed. She heard Laramie"s chair pushed back and heard his footsteps. She could not be sure which way he was walking, but she thought only of flight. As stealthily and rapidly as possible, she started for the back door. Without looking around she felt as if he had come to the archway and was looking at her. With courage and resolve, she grasped the k.n.o.b to open the door. It was locked. She fumbled with the key. Behind her, silence. She locked and unlocked the door more than once, and with a fast-dying hope, for the wretched door would _not_ open. Flushed with annoyance, she turned around only to see Laramie standing precisely where she had imagined him.
They faced each other. Kate could not have found a word to say had her life depended on it. Laramie held in his left hand an ink bottle, in his right a pen. He, too, seemed surprised but he recovered himself: "You are certainly unlucky with doors," he said. "If you"ll tell me where Belle keeps her ink, I"ll tell you how to open that," he added calmly.
Kate stiffened and shrugged her shoulders the least bit: "I haven"t any idea where Belle keeps the ink," she replied, clearing her throat of its huskiness.
He pointed to beyond where she stood: "I think the ink supply is on that shelf; she gave me an empty bottle. Should you mind handing me one with ink in it?"
Kate turned to the shelf: "There seem to be two kinds here," she said as coldly as possible.
"Any bottle with a hole in the top will do," he suggested. "This one,"
he held the bottle up in his hand and looked at it, "seems to have a hole top and bottom. Give me the blue ink, will you?"
"I am sure I don"t know which is which. Perhaps you had better help yourself," Kate said icily.
"Thank you. But I"ll show you how to open the door first."
"Don"t trouble yourself."
"No trouble at all." He walked to the door, explaining as he took hold of the k.n.o.b: "The door wasn"t locked, but the catch held the latch. I could tell that from the way you handled it. You locked it, yourself----"
Kate could not hide her resentment: "It wouldn"t open when I first took hold of it," she declared hastily. "I tried it before I touched the key."
"That"s what I"m explaining. When you did take hold of the key you locked the door with the dead bolt and then you couldn"t open it; so you unlocked it and tried it again. After that you worked so fast I lost track." He pointed to the back of the rim lock: "The catch was on." And pushing down the catch, he turned the k.n.o.b and opened the door.
Kate was thoroughly incensed: "You are doubtless better acquainted here than I am."
"To tell the truth, I have to be acquainted with rooms I go into. If _I_ ever tried to get through a door and failed, it might not be pleasant for me. And there"s a board fence, six feet high, all around this yard, so unless you"re a good climber you couldn"t have got out anyway."
Kate felt she looked very silly, standing staring at him, and perhaps looking frightened--as she really was---for he went on as if he were explaining to a child: "I"m not permitted to tell you, but I"m going to----"
"Don"t bother, please----"
"Yes, I"d rather: There is a way to get out without climbing the fence; a loose board I"ll show you sometime--but you must handle yourself fast to make your get-away."
"I never expect," she said contemptuously, "to have to make a get-away."
"Then I was wrong," he returned frankly, "for I kind of thought you were trying to make one a minute ago."