Nasmyth, who understood her, stood silent a moment or two, with one hand tightly closed. "In that case there is nothing to be said, and I must try to face it gracefully," he told her. "Reproaches are not exactly becoming in the case of a discarded man." He took off his wide hat as he held out his hand. "Miss Hamilton, the thing naturally hurts me, but perhaps I cannot reasonably blame you. I"m not sure you could expect me to go any further now."
"Ah!" exclaimed Violet, "you have made it easy. I would like to a.s.sure you of my good-will."
He held her hand a moment and swung abruptly away. He met Mrs. Acton as he went down a corridor. He stopped in front of her, and she looked at him questioningly when she saw his face.
"I have not come up to expectations. It is, perhaps, fortunate Miss Hamilton found it out when she did," he said.
"Oh!" Mrs. Acton replied, "I told you it would not be well to stay away very long."
"I scarcely think the result would have been different in any case,"
Nasmyth declared.
Mrs. Acton was silent for a moment. Then she looked at him sharply.
"Where are you going now?" she asked.
"Back to the world I belong to," answered Nasmyth,--"to the railroad, in the first case. I"m not sure that Miss Hamilton would like to feel that I was in the house."
Mrs. Acton made no protest, and ten minutes later he had crossed the clearing and plunged into the Bush.
Mrs. Acton, crossing the veranda, laid her hand on the girl"s shoulder.
"I naturally don"t know what he said to you, but I can"t help believing that he acquitted himself rather well," she observed. "After all, it must have been a little painful to him."
"Perhaps it was," replied Violet. "Still, I don"t think it hurt him dreadfully."
She was more or less correct in this surmise, for, as Nasmyth walked on through the Bush, he became conscious of a faint relief.
CHAPTER x.x.xI
THE LAST SHOT
Laura Waynefleet was preparing breakfast, and the door of the ranch stood open, when she heard the sharp clatter of the flung-down slip-rails in the fence across the clearing jar upon the stillness of the surrounding woods. It was early in the morning, and since it was evident that, if the strangers who were approaching came from the settlement, they must have set out as soon as it was light, she decided that their business was probably urgent. Laying down the frying-pan in which she was making flapjacks, she moved toward the door, and stood watching two men ride across the clearing in the direction of the house. They did not belong to the settlement, for she had never seen either of them before, a fact which made it clear that they had not ridden in from the canon. She had quick eyes, and she noticed that, although they could not have ridden very far that morning, their horses appeared jaded, which suggested that they had made a long journey the previous day. The men appeared weary, too, and she imagined that they were not accustomed to the Bush.
As she watched them she wondered with a trace of uneasiness what their business could be, and decided that it was, perhaps, as well that her father was busy in the stable, where he could not hear them arrive.
Since Gordon usually called at the ranch when he went down to the settlement, she was more or less acquainted with what was being done at the canon and with Nasmyth"s affairs, and she was on her guard when one of the strangers pulled his horse up close in front of her.
"Can we hire a couple of horses here?" he asked. "Ours are played out."
There was then a cayuse pony in Waynefleet"s stable, but it belonged to a neighbouring rancher, and Laura had no intention of handing it over to the strangers.
"I"m afraid not," she answered. "The only horse on the ranch does not belong to us, and I wouldn"t care to hire it out unless I had permission. Besides, I may want it myself. You could have obtained horses at the settlement hotel."
"We didn"t put up there."
"But you must have come through the settlement. You have evidently ridden in from the railroad."
The man laughed. "Well," he admitted, "we certainly did, but we got off the trail last night, and they took us in at Bullen"s ranch. Soon after we started out a chopper told us we could save a league by riding up the valley instead of by the settlement. Does the man you said the horse belonged to live in the neighbourhood?"
Laura did not answer immediately. She was quick-witted, and she recognized that, while the man"s explanation was plausible, there were weak points in it. For one thing, the previous night had not been dark, and it was difficult to understand how anyone could have wandered off the wide trail to the settlement into the one which led through thick undergrowth to Bullen"s ranch. She guessed that the strangers must have had an object in not visiting the settlement. Then there was, it seemed to her, something suggestive in the fact that Bullen, who had a share in Nasmyth"s project, and owned several horses, had not seized upon the opportunity to aid the travellers, for, if he had not been willing to lend his horses, it could only have been because he was a little dubious about the strangers.
"The man who owns the horse lives at least an hour"s ride away," she informed the stranger. "You are going on into the Bush?"
"Yes," answered the man. "Can you tell us the easiest way to reach the canon?"
Laura was glad that he had asked for the easiest route, for soon after the snow had gone, Nasmyth had broken out a shorter and somewhat perilous trail over the steepest part of the divide. Only the pack-horses now went round by the longer way. She thought hard for a moment or two, and then told the man how to find the old trail.
He rode away with his companion, and Laura"s face was thoughtful when she sat down again. She made a hasty breakfast, and went out to the stable. Waynefleet was still busy when she reached it, and she took down the side-saddle before she turned to him.
"I have left your breakfast ready, but you must excuse me," she announced; "I am going to the canon."
Waynefleet raised his brows and looked at her with his most precise air, but, seeing that had no effect, he made a gesture of resignation.
"Very well," he said. "I presume you do not, as usual, think it worth while to acquaint me with your object."
Laura laughed. "I"m not exactly sure of it myself. I may tell you a little more when I come back."
She led the horse out, and, crossing the clearing, rode hard for a league or so, and then made sure by the prints of their horses" feet that the strangers had followed her instructions before she struck into the shorter trail. It was scarcely wide enough to ride along, and for a while dense thickets of fern and undergrowth closed in on it.
Further on, it skirted a quaggy swamp, and led through several rapid creeks, while here and there great fallen trees compelled her to turn aside, and there were groves of willows to be painfully struggled through. The cayuse she rode was, however, more or less accustomed to that kind of work, and she made tolerable progress until she reached the foot of the big divide. There she dismounted, and led the cayuse up a steep gully through which a torrent poured. They stumbled amidst big boulders and over slippery shingle until they reached the head of the gully, and then there were almost precipitous slopes of rock to be faced. They climbed for a couple of hours, and Laura gasped with relief when at last she stood upon the crest of the divide.
The descent was perilous, but already the sun hung low above the western hills, and she went down in the saddle with the cayuse slipping and stumbling horribly, until the roar of the river came faintly up to her. Then she drew bridle, and glanced ruefully at her attire. Her skirt was rent in places, and one little shoe had burst. A branch that had torn her hat off had loosened a coil of gleaming hair, and, anxious as she was, she stopped for several minutes to set these matters straight as far as it was possible. There was, she felt, after all, no reason why Nasmyth should see her in that state. Then she rode on, and a little later a man appeared among the pines at the head of the gully. She was very weary when she got down beside him.
"Have two strangers arrived here yet?" she asked.
"They haven"t," answered the man.
Laura was glad she had undertaken the journey when she saw the sudden intentness of his face.
"Two of them are on the trail?" he inquired sharply.
"Yes," said Laura. "They have gone round by the pack-horse trail. I rode in by the new one."
The man was astonished that she had accomplished the trip, and she saw that he was troubled.
"Well," he advised, "you had better go right on and tell Nasmyth as quick as you can. It"s my business to see no strangers get in, or I"d go with you."
Laura left the horse with him, and, descending the gully, found an unusual number of men busy beside the river. In fact, she believed that all those who had been at work in the valley must have crossed the range to the canon. It was also evident from their faces that most of them were in a state of eager expectation. Something out of the usual course was clearly going on. She asked for Nasmyth, and a few moments later he came scrambling towards her along the log staging.
There was, she was quick to notice, a strained look in his eyes, but he shook hands with her, and then, remembering the state of her attire, she coloured a little.
"Do you expect two men from the city to-night?" she asked.
Nasmyth started. "I have, at least, been wondering when they would turn up," he answered. "There are two men of that kind on the trail?"
His voice was sharp and insistent, and Laura told him hastily about the men who had called at the ranch.