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<h2> 4 </h2>
<p>Joan Randle rode on and on, through the cañon, out at its head and over a
pass into another cañon, and never did she let it be possible for Kells to
see her eyes until she knew beyond peradventure of a doubt that they hid
the strength and spirit and secret of her soul.</p>
<p>The time came when traveling was so steep and rough that she must think
first of her horse and her own safety. Kells led up over a rock-jumbled
spur of range, where she had sometimes to follow on foot. It seemed miles
across that wilderness of stone. Foxes and wolves trotted over open
places, watching stealthily. All around dark mountain peaks stood up. The
afternoon was far advanced when Kells started to descend again, and he
rode a zigzag course on weathered slopes and over brushy benches, down and
down into the canons again.</p>
<p>A lonely peak was visible, sunset-flushed against the blue, from the point
where Kells finally halted. That ended the longest ride Joan had ever made
in one day. For miles and miles they had climbed and descended and wound
into the mountains. Joan had scarcely any idea of direction. She was
completely turned around and lost. This spot was the wildest and most
beautiful she had ever seen. A cañon headed here. It was narrow,
low-walled, and luxuriant with grass and wild roses and willow and spruce
and balsam. There were deer standing with long ears erect, motionless,
curious, tame as cattle. There were moving streaks through the long grass,
showing the course of smaller animals slipping away.</p>
<p>Then under a giant balsam, that reached aloft to the rim-wall, Joan saw a
little log cabin, open in front. It had not been built very long; some of
the log ends still showed yellow. It did not resemble the hunters' and
prospectors' cabins she had seen on her trips with her uncle.</p>
<p>In a sweeping glance Joan had taken in these features. Kells had
dismounted and approached her. She looked frankly, but not directly, at
him.</p>
<p>“I'm tired—almost too tired to get off,” she said.</p>
<p>“Fifty miles of rock and brush, up and down! Without a kick!” he
exclaimed, admiringly. “You've got sand, girl!”</p>
<p>“Where are we?”</p>
<p>“This is Lost Canon. Only a few men know of it. And they are—attached
to me. I intend to keep you here.”</p>
<p>“How long?” She felt the intensity of his gaze.</p>
<p>“Why—as long as—” he replied, slowly, “till I get my ransom.”</p>
<p>“What amount will you ask?”</p>
<p>“You're worth a hundred thousand in gold right now... Maybe later I might
let you go for less.”</p>
<p>Joan's keen-wrought perception registered his covert, scarcely veiled
implication. He was studying her.</p>
<p>“Oh, poor uncle. He'll never, never get so much.”</p>
<p>“Sure he will,” replied Kells, bluntly.</p>
<p>Then he helped her out of the saddle. She was stiff and awkward, and she
let herself slide. Kells handled her gently and like a gentleman, and for
Joan the first agonizing moment of her ordeal was past. Her intuition had
guided her correctly. Kells might have been and probably was the most
depraved of outcast men; but the presence of a girl like her, however it
affected him, must also have brought up associations of a time when by
family and breeding and habit he had been infinitely different. His action
here, just like the ruffian Bill's, was instinctive, beyond his control.
Just this slight thing, this frail link that joined Kells to his past and
better life, immeasurably inspirited Joan and outlined the difficult game
she had to play.</p>
<p>“You're a very gallant robber,” she said.</p>
<p>He appeared not to hear that or to note it; he was eying her up and down;
and he moved closer, perhaps to estimate her height compared to his own.</p>
<p>“I didn't know you were so tall. You're above my shoulder.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I'm very lanky.”</p>
<p>“Lanky! Why you're not that. You've a splendid figure—tall, supple,
strong; you're like a Nez Perce girl I knew once.... You're a beautiful
thing. Didn't you know that?”</p>
<p>“Not particularly. My friends don't dare flatter me. I suppose I'll have
to stand it from you. But I didn't expect compliments from Jack Kells of
the Border Legion.”</p>
<p>“Border Legion? Where'd you hear that name?”</p>
<p>“I didn't hear it. I made it up—thought of it myself.”</p>
<p>“Well, you've invented something I'll use.... And what's your name—your
first name? I heard Roberts use it.”</p>
<p>Joan felt a cold contraction of all her internal being, but outwardly she
never so much as nicked an eyelash. “My name's Joan.”</p>
<p>“Joan!” He placed heavy, compelling hands on her shoulders and turned her
squarely toward him.</p>
<p>Again she felt his gaze, strangely, like the reflection of sunlight from
ice. She had to look at him. This was her supreme test. For hours she had
prepared for it, steeled herself, wrought upon all that was sensitive in
her; and now she prayed, and swiftly looked up into his eyes. They were
windows of a gray hell. And she gazed into that naked abyss, at that dark,
uncovered soul, with only the timid anxiety and fear and the
unconsciousness of an innocent, ignorant girl.</p>
<p>“Joan! You know why I brought you here?”</p>
<p>“Yes, of course; you told me,” she replied, steadily. “You want to ransom
me for gold.... And I'm afraid you'll have to take me home without getting
any.”</p>
<p>“You know what I mean to do to you,” he went on, thickly.</p>
<p>“Do to me?” she echoed, and she never quivered a muscle. “You—you
didn't say.... I haven't thought.... But you won't hurt me, will you? It's
not my fault if there's no gold to ransom me.”</p>
<p>He shook her. His face changed, grew darker. “You KNOW what I mean.”</p>
<p>“I don't.” With some show of spirit she essayed to slip out of his grasp.
He held her the tighter.</p>
<p>“How old are you?”</p>
<p>It was only in her height and development that Joan looked anywhere near
her age. Often she had been taken for a very young girl.</p>
<p>“I'm seventeen,” she replied. This was not the truth. It was a lie that
did not falter on lips which had scorned falsehood.</p>
<p>“Seventeen!” he ejaculated in amaze. “Honestly, now?”</p>
<p>She lifted her chin scornfully and remained silent.</p>
<p>“Well, I thought you were a woman. I took you to be twenty-five—at
least twenty-two. Seventeen, with that shape! You're only a girl—a
kid. You don't know anything.”</p>
<p>Then he released her, almost with violence, as if angered at her or
himself, and he turned away to the horses. Joan walked toward the little
cabin. The strain of that encounter left her weak, but once from under his
eyes, certain that she had carried her point, she quickly regained her
poise. There might be, probably would be, infinitely more trying ordeals
for her to meet than this one had been; she realized, however, that never
again would she be so near betrayal of terror and knowledge and self.</p>
<p>The scene of her isolation had a curious fascination for her. Something—and
she shuddered—was to happen to her here in this lonely, silent
gorge. There were some flat stones made into a rude seat under the
balsam-tree, and a swift, yard-wide stream of clear water ran by.
Observing something white against the tree, Joan went closer. A card, the
ace of hearts, had been pinned to the bark by a small cluster of
bullet-holes, every one of which touched the red heart, and one of them
had obliterated it. Below the circle of bulletholes, scrawled in rude
letters with a lead-pencil, was the name “Gulden.” How little, a few
nights back, when Jim Cleve had menaced Joan with the names of Kells and
Gulden, had she imagined they were actual men she was to meet and fear!
And here she was the prisoner of one of them. She would ask Kells who and
what this Gulden was. The log cabin was merely a shed, without fireplace
or window, and the floor was a covering of balsam boughs, long dried out
and withered. A dim trail led away from it down the cañon. If Joan was any
judge of trails, this one had not seen the imprint of a horse track for
many months. Kells had indeed brought her to a hiding place, one of those,
perhaps, that camp gossip said was inaccessible to any save a border hawk.
Joan knew that only an Indian could follow the tortuous and rocky trail by
which Kells had brought her in. She would never be tracked there by her
own people.</p>
<p>The long ride had left her hot, dusty, scratched, with tangled hair and
torn habit. She went over to her saddle, which Kells had removed from her
pony, and, opening the saddlebag, she took inventory of her possessions.
They were few enough, but now, in view of an unexpected and enforced
sojourn in the wilds, beyond all calculation of value. And they included
towel, soap, toothbrush, mirror and comb and brush, a red scarf, and
gloves. It occurred to her how seldom she carried that bag on her saddle,
and, thinking back, referred the fact to accident, and then with honest
amusement owned that the motive might have been also a little vanity.
Taking the bag, she went to a flat stone by the brook and, rolling up her
sleeves, proceeded to improve her appearance. With deft fingers she
rebraided her hair and arranged it as she had worn it when only sixteen.
Then, resolutely, she got up and crossed over to where Kells was
unpacking.</p>
<p>“I'll help you get supper,” she said.</p>
<p>He was on his knees in the midst of a jumble of camp duffle that had been
hastily thrown together. He looked up at her—from her shapely,
strong, brown arms to the face she had rubbed rosy.</p>
<p>“Say, but you're a pretty girl!”</p>
<p>He said it enthusiastically, in unstinted admiration, without the
slightest subtlety or suggestion; and if he had been the devil himself it
would have been no less a compliment, given spontaneously to youth and
beauty.</p>
<p>“I'm glad if it's so, but please don't tell me,” she rejoined, simply.</p>
<p>Then with swift and business-like movements she set to helping him with
the mess the inexperienced pack-horse had made of that particular pack.
And when that was straightened out she began with the biscuit dough while
he lighted a fire. It appeared to be her skill, rather than her
willingness, that he yielded to. He said very little, but he looked at her
often. And he had little periods of abstraction. The situation was novel,
strange to him. Sometimes Joan read his mind and sometimes he was an
enigma. But she divined when he was thinking what a picture she looked
there, on her knees before the bread-pan, with flour on her arms; of the
difference a girl brought into any place; of how strange it seemed that
this girl, instead of lying a limp and disheveled rag under a tree,
weeping and praying for home, made the best of a bad situation and
unproved it wonderfully by being a thoroughbred.</p>
<p>Presently they sat down, cross-legged, one on each side of the tarpaulin,
and began the meal. That was the strangest supper Joan ever sat down to;
it was like a dream where there was danger that tortured her; but she knew
she was dreaming and would soon wake up. Kells was almost imperceptibly
changing. The amiability of his face seemed to have stiffened. The only
time he addressed her was when he offered to help her to more meat or
bread or coffee. After the meal was finished he would not let her wash the
pans and pots, and attended to that himself.</p>
<p>Joan went to the seat by the tree, near the camp-fire. A purple twilight
was shadowing the cañon. Far above, on the bold peak the last warmth of
the afterglow was fading. There was no wind, no sound, no movement. Joan
wondered where Jim Cleve was then. They had often sat in the twilight. She
felt an unreasonable resentment toward him, knowing she was to blame, but
blaming him for her plight. Then suddenly she thought of her uncle, of
home, of her kindly old aunt who always worried so about her. Indeed,
there was cause to worry. She felt sorrier for them than for herself. And
that broke her spirit momentarily. Forlorn, and with a wave of sudden
sorrow and dread and hopelessness, she dropped her head upon her knees and
covered her face. Tears were a relief. She forgot Kells and the part she
must play. But she remembered swiftly—at the rude touch of his hand.</p>
<p>“Here! Are you crying?” he asked, roughly.</p>
<p>“Do you think I'm laughing?” Joan retorted. Her wet eyes, as she raised
them, were proof enough.</p>
<p>“Stop it.”</p>
<p>“I can't help—but cry—a little. I was th—thinking of
home—of those who've been father and mother to me—since I was
a baby. I wasn't crying—for myself. But they—they'll be so
miserable. They loved me so.”</p>
<p>“It won't help matters to cry.”</p>
<p>Joan stood up then, no longer sincere and forgetful, but the girl with her
deep and cunning game. She leaned close to him in the twilight.</p>
<p>“Did you ever love any one? Did you ever have a sister—a girl like
me?”</p>
<p>Kells stalked away into the gloom.</p>
<p>Joan was left alone. She did not know whether to interpret his
abstraction, his temper, and his action as favorable or not. Still she
hoped and prayed they meant that he had some good in him. If she could
only hide her terror, her abhorrence, her knowledge of him and his motive!
She built up a bright camp-fire. There was an abundance of wood. She
dreaded the darkness and the night. Besides, the air was growing chilly.
So, arranging her saddle and blankets near the fire, she composed herself
in a comfortable seat to await Kells's return and developments. It struck
her forcibly that she had lost some of her fear of Kells and she did not
know why. She ought to fear him more every hour—every minute.
Presently she heard his step brushing the grass and then he emerged out of
the gloom. He had a load of fire-wood on his shoulder.</p>
<p>“Did you get over your grief?” he asked, glancing down upon her.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she replied.</p>
<p>Kells stooped for a red ember, with which he lighted his pipe, and then he
seated himself a little back from the fire. The blaze threw a bright glare
over him, and in it he looked neither formidable nor vicious nor ruthless.
He asked her where she was born, and upon receiving an answer he followed
that up with another question. And he kept this up until Joan divined that
he was not so much interested in what he apparently wished to learn as he
was in her presence, her voice, her personality. She sensed in him
loneliness, hunger for the sound of a voice. She had heard her uncle speak
of the loneliness of lonely camp-fires and how all men working or hiding
or lost in the wilderness would see sweet faces in the embers and be
haunted by soft voices. After all, Kells was human. And she talked as
never before in her life, brightly, willingly, eloquently, telling the
facts of her eventful youth and girlhood—the sorrow and the joy and
some of the dreams—up to the time she had come to Camp Hoadley.</p>
<p>“Did you leave any sweethearts over there at Hoadley?” he asked, after a
silence.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“How many?”</p>
<p>“A whole campful,” she replied, with a laugh, “but admirers is a better
name for them.”</p>
<p>“Then there's no one fellow?”</p>
<p>“Hardly—yet.”</p>
<p>“How would you like being kept here in this lonesome place for—well,
say for ever?”</p>
<p>“I wouldn't like that,” replied Joan. “I'd like this—camping out
like this now—if my folks only knew I am alive and well and safe. I
love lonely, dreamy places. I've dreamed of being in just such a one as
this. It seems so far away here—so shut in by the walls and the
blackness. So silent and sweet! I love the stars. They speak to me. And
the wind in the spruces. Hear it.... Very low, mournful! That whispers to
me—to-morrow I'd like it here if I had no worry. I've never grown up
yet. I explore and climb trees and hunt for little birds and rabbits—young
things just born, all fuzzy and sweet, frightened, piping or squealing for
their mothers. But I won't touch one for worlds. I simply can't hurt
anything. I can't spur my horse or beat him. Oh, I HATE pain!”</p>
<p>“You're a strange girl to live out here on this border,” he said.</p>
<p>“I'm no different from other girls. You don't know girls.”</p>
<p>“I knew one pretty well. She put a rope round my neck,” he replied,
grimly.</p>
<p>“A rope!”</p>
<p>“Yes, I mean a halter, a hangman's noose. But I balked her!”</p>
<p>“Oh!... A good girl?”</p>
<p>“Bad! Bad to the core of her black heart—bad as I am!” he exclaimed,
with fierce, low passion.</p>
<p>Joan trembled. The man, in an instant, seemed transformed, somber as
death. She could not look at him, but she must keep on talking.</p>
<p>“Bad? You don't seem bad to me—only violent, perhaps, or wild....
Tell me about yourself.”</p>
<p>She had stirred him. His neglected pipe fell from his hand. In the gloom
of the camp-fire he must have seen faces or ghosts of his past.</p>
<p>“Why not?” he queried, strangely. “Why not do what's been impossible for
years—open my lips? It'll not matter—to a girl who can never
tell!... Have I forgotten? God!—I have not! Listen, so that you'll
KNOW I'm bad. My name's not Kells. I was born in the East, and went to
school there till I ran away. I was young, ambitious, wild. I stole. I ran
away—came West in 'fifty-one to the gold-fields in California. There
I became a prospector, miner, gambler, robber—and road-agent. I had
evil in me, as all men have, and those wild years brought it out. I had no
chance. Evil and gold and blood—they are one and the same thing. I
committed every crime till no place, bad as it might be, was safe for me.
Driven and hunted and shot and starved—almost hanged!... And now I'm—Kells!
of that outcast crew you named 'the Border Legion!' Every black crime but
one—the blackest—and that haunting me, itching my hands
to-night.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you speak so—so dreadfully!” cried Joan. “What can I say? I'm
sorry for you. I don't believe it all. What—what black crime haunts
you? Oh! what could be possible tonight—here in this lonely cañon—with
only me?”</p>
<p>Dark and terrible the man arose.</p>
<p>“Girl,” he said, hoarsely. “To-night—to-night—I'll.... What
have you done to me? One more day—and I'll be mad to do right by you—instead
of WRONG.... Do you understand that?”</p>
<p>Joan leaned forward in the camp-fire light with outstretched hands and
quivering lips, as overcome by his halting confession of one last remnant
of honor as she was by the dark hint of his passion.</p>
<p>“No—no—I don't understand—nor believe!” she cried. “But
you frighten me—so! I am all—all alone with you here. You said
I'd be safe. Don't—don't—”</p>
<p>Her voice broke then and she sank back exhausted in her seat. Probably
Kells had heard only the first words of her appeal, for he took to
striding back and forth in the circle of the camp-fire light. The scabbard
with the big gun swung against his leg. It grew to be a dark and monstrous
thing in Joan's sight. A marvelous intuition born of that hour warned her
of Kells's subjection to the beast in him, even while, with all the
manhood left to him, he still battled against it. Her girlish sweetness
and innocence had availed nothing, except mock him with the ghost of dead
memories. He could not be won or foiled. She must get her hands on that
gun—kill him—or—! The alternative was death for herself.
And she leaned there, slowly gathering all the unconquerable and
unquenchable forces of a woman's nature, waiting, to make one desperate,
supreme, and final effort.</p>
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