"Four or five weeks ago," the landlord repeated, as though Alta spoke a foreign tongue and must be translated.
"I see," said Lambert, vaguely, shaking to the tips of his fingers with a kind of buck ague that he never had suffered from before. He was afraid the landlord would notice it, and slewed his chair, getting out his tobacco to cover the fool spell.
For that was she, Vesta Philbrook was she, and she was Vesta Philbrook.
He knew it as well as he knew that he could count ten. Something had led him there that day; the force that was shaping the course of their two lives to cross again had held him back when he had considered selling his horse and going West a long distance on the train. He grew calmer when he had his cigarette alight. The landlord was talking again.
"Funny thing about Vesta comin" home, too," he said, and stopped a little, as if to consider the humor of it. Lambert looked at him with a sudden wrench of the neck.
"Which?"
"Philbrook"s luck held out, it looked like, till she got through her education. All through the fights he had and the sc.r.a.pes he run into the last ten years he never got a scratch. Bullets used to hum around that man like bees, and he"d ride through "em like they _was_ bees, but none of "em ever notched him. Curious, wasn"t it?"
"Did somebody get him at last?"
"No, he took typhoid fever. He took down about a week or ten days after Vesta got home. He died about a couple of week ago. Vesta had him laid beside her mother up there on the hill. He said they"d never run him out of this country, livin" or dead."
Lambert swallowed a dry lump.
"Is she running the ranch?"
"Like an old soldier, sir. I tell you, I"ve got a whole lot of admiration for that girl."
"She must have her hands full."
"Night and day. She"s short on fence-riders, and I guess if you boys are lookin" for a job you can land up there with Vesta, all right."
Taterleg and the girl came out and sat on the green rustic bench at the farther end of the porch. It complained under them; there was talk and low giggling.
"We didn"t expect to strike anything this soon," Lambert said, his active mind leaping ahead to shape new romance like a magician.
"You don"t look like the kind of boys that"d shy from a job if it jumped out in the road ahead of you."
"I"d hate for folks to think we would."
"Ain"t you the feller they call; the Duke of Chimney b.u.t.te?"
"They call me that in this country."
"Yes; I knew that horse the minute you rode up, though he"s changed for the better wonderful since I saw him last, and I knew you from the descriptions I"ve heard of you. Vesta"d give you a job in a minute, and she"d pay you good money, too. I wouldn"t wonder if she didn"t put you in as foreman right on the jump, account of the name you"ve got up here in the Bad Lands."
"Not much to my credit in the name, I"m afraid," said Lambert, almost sadly. "Do they still cut her fences and run off her stock?"
"Yes; rustlin"s got to be stylish around here ag"in, after we thought we had all them gangs rounded up and sent to the pen. I guess some of their time must be up and they"re comin" home."
"It"s pretty tough for a single-handed girl."
"Yes, it is tough. Them fellers are more than likely some of the old crowd Philbrook used to fight and round up and send over the road. He killed off four or five of them, and the rest of them swore they"d salt him when they"d done their time. Well, he"s gone. But they"re not above fightin" a girl."
"It"s a tough job for a woman," said Lambert, looking thoughtfully toward the white house on the mesa.
"Ain"t it, though?"
Lambert thought about it a while, or appeared to be thinking about it, sitting with bent head, smoking silently, looking now and then toward the ranchhouse, the lights of which could be seen. Alta came across the porch presently, Taterleg attending her like a courtier. She dismissed him at the door with an excuse of deferred duties within. He joined his thoughtful partner.
"Better go up and see her in the morning," suggested Wood, the landlord.
"I think I will, thank you."
Wood went in to sell a cowboy a cigar; the partners started out to have a look at Glendora by moonlight. A little way they walked in silence, the light of the barber-shop falling across the road ahead of them.
"See who in the morning, Duke?" Taterleg inquired.
"Lady in the white house on the mesa. Her father died a few weeks ago, and left her alone with a big ranch on her hands. Rustlers are runnin"
her cattle off, cuttin" her fences----"
"Fences?"
"Yes, forty thousand acres all fenced in, like Texas."
"You don"t tell me?"
"Needs men, Wood says. I thought maybe----"
The Duke didn"t finish it; just left it swinging that way, expecting Taterleg to read the rest.
"Sure," said Taterleg, taking it right along. "I wouldn"t mind stayin"
around here a while. Glendora"s a nice little place; nicer place than I thought it was."
The Duke said nothing. But as they went on toward the barber-shop he grinned.
CHAPTER VII
THE HOMELIEST MAN
That brilliant beam falling through the barber"s open door and uncurtained window came from a new lighting device, procured from a Chicago mail-order house. It was a gasoline lamp that burned with a gas mantle, swinging from the ceiling, flooding the little shop with a greenish light.
It gave a ghastly hue of death to the human face, but it would light up the creases and wrinkles of the most weathered neck that came under the barber"s blade. That was the main consideration, for most of the barber"s work was done by night, that trade--or profession, as those who pursue it unfailingly hold it to be--being a side line in connection with his duties as station agent. He was a progressive citizen, and no gra.s.s grew under his feet, no hair under his hand.
At the moment that the Duke and Taterleg entered the barber"s far-reaching beam, some buck of the range was stretched in the chair.
The customer was a man of considerable length and many angles, a shorn appearance about his face, especially his big, bony nose, that seemed to tell of a mustache sacrificed in the operation just then drawing to a close.
Taterleg stopped short at sight of the long legs drawn up like a sharp gable to get all of them into the chair, the immense nose raking the ceiling like a double-barreled cannon, the morgue-tinted light giving him the complexion of a man ready for his shroud. He touched Lambert"s arm to check him and call his attention.
"Look in there--look at that feller, Duke! There he is; there"s the man I"ve been lookin" for ever since I was old enough to vote. I didn"t believe there was any such a feller; but there he is!"