With that he went forward. So did I; but the barricade at the end of My Lady’s seat was intact, and I sat down in my own seat, to keep expectant eye upon her profile—a decided relief amidst that crude mÉlange of people in various stages of hasty dressing after a night of cramped postures. The brakeman’s words, although mysterious in part, had concluded reassuringly. My Lady, he said, would prove a valuable friend in Benton. A friend at hand means a great deal to any young man, stranger in a strange land. The conductor came back—a new conductor; stooped familiarly over the barricade and evidently exchanged pleasantries with her. “Sidney! Sidney! Twenty minutes for breakfast!” the brakeman bawled, from the door. There was the general stir. My Lady shot a glance at me, with inviting eyes, but arose in response to the proffered arm of the conductor, and I was late. The aisle filled between us as he ushered her on and the train slowed to grinding of brakes and the tremendous clanging of a gong. Of Sidney there was little to see: merely a station-house and the small Railroad Hotel, with a handful of other buildings forming a single street—all squatting here near a rock quarry that broke the expanse of uninhabited brown plains. The air, however, was wonderfully invigorating; the meal excellent, as usual; and when I emerged from the dining-room, following closely a black figure crowned with gold, I found her strolling alone upon the platform. Therefore I caught up with her. She faced me with ready smile. “You are rather slow in action, sir,” she lightly accused. “We might have breakfasted together; but it was the conductor again, after all.” “I plead guilty, madam,” I admitted. “The trainmen have an advantage over me, in anticipating events. But the next meal shall be my privilege. We stop again before reaching Benton?” “For dinner, yes; at Cheyenne.” “And after that you will be home.” “Home?” she queried, with a little pucker between her brows. “Yes. At Benton.” “Of course.” She laughed shortly. “Benton is now home. We have moved so frequently that I have grown to call almost no place home.” “I judge then that you are connected, as may happen, with a flexible business,” I hazarded. “If you are in the army I can understand.” “No, I’m not an army woman; but there is money in following the railroad, and that is our present life,” she said frankly. “A town springs up, you know, at each terminus, booms as long as the freight and passengers pile up—and all of a sudden the go-ahead business and professional men pull stakes for the next terminus as soon as located. That has been the custom, all the way from North Platte to Benton.” “Which accounts for your acquaintance along the line. The trainmen seem to know you.” “Trainmen and others; oh, yes. It is to be expected. I have no objections to that. I am quite able to take care of myself, sir.” We were interrupted. A near-drunken rowdy (upon whom I had kept an uneasy corner of an eye) had been careening over the platform, a whiskey bottle protruding from the hip pocket of his sagging jeans, a large revolver dangling at his thigh, his slouch hat cocked rakishly upon his tousled head. His language was extremely offensive—he had an ugly mood on, but nobody interfered. The crowd stood aside—the natives laughing, the tourists like myself viewing him askance, and several Indians watching only gravely. He sighted us, and staggered in. “Howdy?” he uttered, with an oath. “Shay—hello, stranger. Have a smile. Take two, one for lady. Hic!” And he thrust his bottle at me. My Lady drew back. I civilly declined the “smile.” “Thank you. I do not drink.” “What?” He stared blearily. His tone stiffened. “The hell you say. Too tony, eh? Too—’ic! Have a smile, I ask you, one gent to ’nother. Have a smile, you (unmentionable) pilgrim; fer if you don’t——” “Train’s starting, Jim,” she interposed sharply. “If you want to get aboard you’d better hurry.” The engine tooted, the bell was ringing, the passengers were hurrying, incited by the conductor’s shout: “All ’board!” Without another word she tripped for the car steps. I gave the fellow one firm look as he stood stupidly scratching his thatch as if to harrow his ideas; and perforce left him. By the cheers he undoubtedly made in the same direction. I was barely in time myself. The train moved as I planted foot upon the steps of the nearest car—the foremost of the two. The train continued; halted again abruptly, while cheers rang riotous; and when I crossed the passageway between this car and ours the conductor and brakeman were hauling the tipsy Jim into safety. My Lady was ensconced. “Did they get him?” she inquired, when I paused. “By the scruff of the neck. The drunken fellow, you mean.” “Yes; Jim.” “You know him?” “He’s from Benton. I suppose he’s been down here on a little pasear, as they say.” “If you think he’ll annoy you——?” I made bold to suggest, for I greatly coveted the half of her seat. “Oh, I’m not afraid of Jim. But yes, do sit down. You can put these things back in your seat. Then we can talk.” I had no more than settled triumphantly, when the brakeman ambled through, his face in a broad grin. He also paused, to perch upon the seat end, his arm extended friendlily along the back. “Well, we got him corralled,” he proclaimed needlessly. “That t’rantular juice nigh broke his neck for him.” “Did you take his bottle away, Jerry?” she asked. “Sure thing. He’ll be peaceable directly. Soused to the guards. Reckon he’s inclined to be a trifle ugly when he’s on a tear, ain’t he? They’d shipped him out of Benton on a down train. Now he’s going back up.” “He’s safe, you think?” “Sewed tight. He’ll sleep it off and be ready for night.” The brakeman winked at her. “You needn’t fear. He’ll be on deck, right side up with care.” “I’ve told this gentleman that I’m not afraid,” she answered quickly. “Of course. And he knows what’s best for him, himself.” The brakeman slapped me on the shoulder and good-naturedly straightened. “So does this young gentleman, I rather suspicion. I can see his fortune’s made. You bet, if he works it right. I told him if you cottoned to him——” “Now you’re talking too much, Jerry,” she reproved. “The gentleman and I are only traveling acquaintances.” “Yes, ma’am. To Benton. Let ’er roar. Cheyenne’s the closest I can get, myself, and Cheyenne’s a dead one—blowed up, busted worse’n a galvanized Yank with a pocket full o’ Confed wall-paper.” He yawned. “Guess I’ll take forty winks. Was up all night, and a man can stand jest so much, Injuns or no Injuns.” “Did you expect to meet with Indians, sir, along the route?” I asked. “Hell, yes. Always expect to meet ’em between Kearney and Julesburg. It’s about time they were wrecking another train. Well, so long. Be good to each other.” With this parting piece of impertinence he stumped out. “A friendly individual, evidently,” I hazarded, to tide her over her possible embarrassment. Her laugh assured me that she was not embarrassed at all, which proved her good sense and elevated her even farther in my esteem. “Oh, Jerry’s all right. I don’t mind Jerry, except “He? No, I don’t think so. He may have tried it, but his Western expressions are beyond me as yet. In fact, what he was driving at on the rear platform I haven’t the slightest idea.” “Driving at? In what way, sir?” “He referred to the green in his eye and in the moon, as I recall; and to a mysterious ‘system’; and gratuitously offered me a ‘steer.’” Her face hardened remarkably, so that her chin set as if tautened by iron bands. Those eyes glinted with real menace. “He did, did he? Along that line of talk! The clapper-jaw! He’s altogether too free.” She surveyed me keenly. “And naturally you couldn’t understand such lingo.” “I was not curious enough to try, my dear madam. He talked rather at random; likely enjoyed bantering me. But,” I hastily placated in his behalf, “he recommended Benton as a lively place, and you as a friend of value in case that you honored me with your patronage.” “My patronage, for you?” she exclaimed. “Indeed? To what extent? Are you going into business, too? As one of—us?” “If I should become a Bentonite, as I hope,” I gallantly replied, “then of course I should look to permanent investment of some nature. And before my “Oh!” Her face lightened. “I dare say Jerry means well. But when you spoke of ‘patronage’—— That is a current term of certain import along the railroad.” She leaned to me; a glow emanated from her. “Tell me of yourself. You have red blood? Do you ever game? For if you are not afraid to test your luck and back it, there is money to be made very easily at Benton, and in a genteel way.” She smiled bewitchingly. “Or are you a Quaker, to whom life is deadly serious?” “No Quaker, madam.” How could I respond otherwise to that pair of dancing blue eyes, to that pair of derisive lips? “As for gaming—if you mean cards, why, I have played at piquet and romp, in a social way, for small stakes; and my father brought Old Sledge back from the army, to the family table.” “You are lucky. I can see it,” she alleged. “I am, on this journey,” I asserted. She blushed. “Well said, sir. And if you choose to make use of your luck, in Benton, by all means——” Whether she would have shaped her import clearly I did not know. There was a commotion in the forward part of the car. That same drunken wretch Jim had appeared; his bottle (somehow restored to “Have a smile, ladies an’ gents,” he was bellowing thickly. “Hooray! Have a smile on me. Great an’ gloryus ’casion—’ic! Ever’body smile. Drink to op’nin’ gloryus Pac’fic—’ic—Railway. Thash it. Hooray!” Thus he came reeling down the aisle, thrusting his bottle right and left, to be denied with shrinkings or with bluff excuses. It seemed inevitable that he should reach us. I heard My Lady utter a little gasp, as she sat more erect; and here he was, espying us readily enough with that uncanny precision of a drunken man, his bottle to the fore. “Have a smile, you two. Wouldn’t smile at station; gotto smile now. Yep. ’Ic! ’Ray for Benton! All goin’ to Benton. Lesh be good fellers.” “You go back to your seat, Jim,” she ordered tensely. “Go back, if you know what’s good for you.” “Whash that? Who your dog last year? Shay! You can’t come no highty-tighty over me. Who your new friend? Shay!” He reeled and gripped the seat, flooding me with his vile breath. “By Gawd, I got the dead-wood on you, you——!” and he had loosed such a torrent of low epithets that they are inconceivable. “For that I’d kill you in any other place, Jim,” she said. “You know I’m not afraid of you. Now Assuredly My Lady did know how to take care of herself. Still, that was not necessary now. “No!” I warned. “No matter. I’ll tend to him.” The fellow’s face had convulsed with a snarl of redder rage, his mouth opened as if for fresh abuse—and half rising I landed upon it with my fist. “Go where you belong, you drunken whelp!” I had struck and spoken at the same time, with a rush of wrath that surprised me; and the result surprised me more, for while I was not conscious of having exerted much force he toppled backward clear across the aisle, crashed down in a heap under the opposite seat. His bottle shattered against the ceiling. The whiskey spattered in a sickening shower over the alarmed passengers. “Look out! Look out!” she cried, starting quickly. Up he scrambled, cursing, and wrenching at his revolver. I sprang to smother him, but there was a flurry, a chorus of shouts, men leaped between us, the brakeman and conductor both had arrived, in a jiffy he was being hustled forward, swearing and Congratulations echoed dully. “The right spirit!” “That’ll l’arn him to insult a lady.” “You sartinly rattled him up, stranger. Squar’ on the twitter!” “Shake, Mister.” “For a pilgrim you’re consider’ble of a hoss.” “If he’d drawn you’d have give him a pill, I reckon, lady. I know yore kind. But he won’t bother you ag’in; not he.” “Oh, what a terrible scene!” To all this I paid scant attention. I heard her, as she sat composedly, scarcely panting. The little pistol had disappeared. “The play has been made, ladies and gentlemen,” she said. And to me: “Thank you. Yes,” she continued, with a flash of lucent eyes and a dimpling smile, “Jim has lost his whiskey and has a chance to sober up. He’ll have forgotten all about this before we reach Benton. But I thank you for your promptness.” “I didn’t want you to shoot him,” I stammered. “I was quite able to tend to him myself. Your pistol is loaded?” “To be sure it is.” And she laughed gaily. Her lips tightened, her eyes darkened. “And I’d kill him The brakeman returned with a broom, to sweep up the chips of broken bottle. He grinned at us. “There’s no wind in him now,” he communicated. “Peaceful as a baby. We took his gun off him. I’ll pass the word ahead to keep him safe, on from Cheyenne.” “Please do, Jerry,” she bade. “I’d prefer to have no more trouble with him, for he might not come out so easily next time. He knows that.” “Surely ought to, by golly,” the brakeman agreed roundly. “And he ought to know you go heeled. But that there tanglefoot went to his head. Looks now as if he’d been kicked in the face by a mule. Haw haw! No offense, friend. You got me plumb buffaloed with that fivespot o’ yourn.” And finishing his job he retired with dust-pan and broom. “You’re going to do well in Benton,” she said suddenly, to me, with a nod. “I regret this scene—I couldn’t help it, though, of course. When Jim’s sober he has sense, and never tries to be familiar.” She was amazingly cool under the epithets that he had applied. I admired her for that as she gazed at me pleadingly. “A drunken man is not responsible for words or actions, although he should be made so,” I consoled her. “Possibly I should not have struck him. In the “I don’t know. There is a limit. You did right. I thank you heartily. Still”—and she mused—“you can’t always depend on your fists alone. You carry no weapon, neither knife nor gun?” “I never have needed either,” said I. “My teaching has been that a man should be able to rely upon his fists.” “Then you’d better get ’heeled,’ as we say, when you reach Benton. Fists are a short-range weapon. The men generally wear a gun somewhere. It is the custom.” “And the women, too, if I may judge,” I smiled. “Some of us. Yes,” she repeated, “you’re likely to do well, out here, if you’ll permit me to advise you a little.” “Under your tutelage I am sure I shall do well,” I accepted. “I may call upon you in Benton? If you will favor me with your address——?” “My address?” She searched my face in manner startled. “You’ll have no difficulty finding me; not in Benton. But I’ll make an appointment with you in event”—and she smiled archly—“you are not afraid of strange women.” “I have been taught to respect women, madam,” said I. “And my respect is being strengthened.” “Oh!” I seemed to have pleased her. “You have been carefully brought up, sir.” “To fear God, respect woman, and act the man as long as I breathe,” I asserted. “My mother is a saint, my father a nobleman, and what I may have learned from them is to their credit.” “That may go excellently in the East,” she answered. “But we in the West favor the Persian maxim—to ride, to shoot, and to tell the truth. With those three qualities even a tenderfoot can establish himself.” “Whether I can ride and shoot sufficient for the purpose, time will show,” I retorted. “At least,” and I endeavored to speak with proper emphasis, “you hear the truth when I say that I anticipate much pleasure as well as renewed health, in Benton.” “Were we by ourselves we would seal the future in another ’smile’ together,” she slyly promised. “Unless that might shock you.” “I am ready to fall in with the customs of the country,” I assured. “I certainly am not averse to smiles, when fittingly proffered.” So we exchanged fancies while the train rolled over a track remarkable for its smoothness and leading ever onward across the vast, empty plains bare save for the low shrubs called sage-brush, and rising here and there into long swells and abrupt sandstone pinnacles. We stopped near noon at the town of Cheyenne, in Wyoming Territory. Cheyenne, once boasting the title (I was told) “The Magic City of the Plains,” Last winter, Cheyenne, I was given to understand, had ten thousand inhabitants; but the majority had followed the railroad west, so that now there remained only some fifteen hundred. After dinner we, too, went west. We overcame the Black Hills Mountains about two o’clock, having climbed to the top with considerable puffing of the engine but otherwise almost imperceptibly to the passengers. When we were halted, upon the crown, at Sherman Station, to permit us to alight and see for ourselves, I scarcely might believe that we were more than eight thousand feet in air. There was nothing to indicate, except some little difficulty of breath; not so much as I had feared when in Cheyenne, whose six thousand feet gave me a slightly giddy sensation. My Lady moved freely, being accustomed to the rarity; and she assured me that although Benton was seven thousand feet I would soon grow wonted to the atmosphere. The habituÉs of this country made light of the spot; the strangers on tour picked flowers and gathered rocks as mementoes of the “Crest of the Continent”—which was not a crest but rather a level The fellow Jim had not emerged, as yet, much to my relief. The scenery was increasing in grandeur and interest, and the play of my charming companion would have transformed the most prosaic of journeys into a trip through Paradise. I hardly noted the town named Laramie City, at the western base of the Black Hills; and was indeed annoyed by the vendors hawking what they termed “mountain gems” through the train. Laramie, according to My Lady, also once had been, as she styled it, “a live town,” but had deceased in favor of Benton. From Laramie we whirled northwest, through a broad valley enlivened by countless antelope scouring over the grasses; thence we issued into a wilder, rougher country, skirting more mountains very gloomy in aspect. However, of the panorama outside I took but casual glances; the phenomenon of blue and gold so close at hand was all engrossing, and my heart beat high with youth and romance. Our passage was astonishingly short, but the sun was near to setting beyond distant peaks when by the landmarks that she knew we were approaching Benton at last. We crossed a river—the Platte, again, even away in here; briefly paused at a military post, and entered There was a significant bustle in the car, among the travel-worn occupants. The air was choking with the dust swirled through every crevice by the stir of the wheels—already mobile as it was from the efforts of the teams that we passed, of six and eight horses tugging heavy wagons. Plainly we were within striking distance of some focus of human energies. “Benton! Benton in five minutes. End o’ track,” the brakeman shouted. “My valise, please.” I brought it. The conductor, who like the other officials knew My Lady, pushed through to us and laid hand upon it. “I’ll see you out,” he announced. “Come ahead.” “Pardon. That shall be my privilege,” I interposed. But she quickly denied. “No, please. The conductor is an old friend. I shall need no other help—I’m perfectly at home. You can look out for yourself.” “But I shall see you again—and where? I don’t know your address; fact is, I’m even ignorant of your name,” I pleaded desperately. “How stupid of me.” And she spoke fast and low, over her shoulder. “To-night, then, at the Big Tent. Remember.” I pressed after. “The Big Tent! Shall I inquire there? And for whom?” “You’ll not fail to see me. Everybody knows the Big Tent, everybody goes there. So au revoir.” She was swallowed in the wake of the conductor, and I fain must gather my own belongings before following. The Big Tent, she said? I had not misunderstood; and I puzzled over the address, which impinged as rather bizarre, whether in West or East. We stopped with a jerk, amidst a babel of cries. “Benton! All out!” Out we stumbled. Here I was, at rainbow’s end. |