<h2> CHAPTER VI </h2>
<h3> The Problem of Getting Somewhere </h3>
<br/>
<p>Dawn came tardily after a long, cheerless night, during which the
wind whined over the prairie and the stars showed dimly through a
shifting veil of low-sweeping clouds. Ford had not slept much,
for hunger and cold make poor bedfellows, and all the brush he
could glean on that barren hillside, with the added warmth of his
saddle-blanket wrapped about him, could no more make him
comfortable than could cigarettes still the gnawing of his
hunger.</p>
<p>When he could see across the coulée, he rose from where he had
been sitting with his back to the ledge and his feet to the
meager fire, brooding over all the unpleasant elements in his
life thus far, particularly the feminine element. He folded the
saddle-blanket along its original creases and went over to where
Rambler stood dispiritedly with his back humped to the cold,
creeping wind and his tail whipping between his legs when a
sudden gust played with it. Ford shivered, and beat his gloved
hands about his body, and looked up at the sky to see whether the
sun would presently shine and send a little warmth to this bleak
land where he wandered. He blamed the girl for all of this
discomfort, and he told himself that the next time a woman
appeared within his range of vision he would ride way around her.
They invariably brought trouble; of various sorts and degrees, it
is true, but trouble always. It was perfectly safe, he decided,
to bank on that. And he wished, more than ever, that he had not
improvidently given that pint of whisky to a disconsolate-looking
sheep-herder he had met the day before on his way out from town;
or that he had put two flasks in his pocket instead of one. In
his opinion a good, big jolt right now would make a new man of
him.</p>
<p>Rambler, as he had half expected, was obliged to do his walking
with three legs only; which is awkward for a horse accustomed to
four exceedingly limber ones, and does not make for speed,
however great one's hurry. Ford walked around him twice, scooped
water in his hands, and once more bathed the shoulder—not
that he had any great faith in cold water as a liniment, but
because there was nothing else that he could do, and his anxiety
and his pity impelled service of some sort. He rubbed until his
fingers were numb and his arm aching, tried him again, and gave
up all hope of leading the horse to a ranch. A mile he might
manage, if he had to but ten! He rubbed Rambler's nose
commiseratingly, straightened his forelock, told him over and
over that it was a darned shame, anyway, and finally turned to
pick up his saddle. He could not leave that lying on the prairie
for inquisitive kit-foxes to chew into shoestrings, however much
he might dread the forty-pound burden of it on his shoulders. He
was stooping to pick it up when he saw a bit of paper twisted and
tied to the saddle-horn with a red ribbon.</p>
<p>"Lordy me!" he ejaculated ironically. "The lady left a note on my
pillow—and I never received it in time! Now, ain't that a
darned shame?" He plucked the knot loose, and held up the ribbon
and the note, and laughed.</p>
<p>"'When this reaches you, I shall be far away, though it breaks my
heart to go and this missive is mussed up scandalous with my
bitter tears. Forgive me if you can, and forget me if you have
to. It is better thus, for it couldn't otherwise was,'" he
improvised mockingly, while his chilled fingers fumbled to
release the paper, which was evidently a leaf torn from a man's
memorandum book. "Lordy me, a letter from a lady! Ain't that
sweet!"</p>
<p>When he read it, however, the smile vanished with a click of the
teeth which betrayed his returning anger. One cold, curt sentence
bidding him wait until help came—that was all. His eye
measured accusingly the wide margin left blank under the words;
she had not omitted apology or explanation for lack of space, at
any rate. His face grew cynically amused again.</p>
<p>"Oh, certainly! I'd roost on this side-hill for a month, if a
lady told me to," he sneered, speaking aloud as he frequently did
in the solitude of the range land. He glanced from ribbon to
note, ended his indecision by stuffing the note carelessly into
his coat pocket and letting the ribbon drop to the ground, and
with a curl of the lips which betrayed his mental attitude toward
all women and particularly toward that woman, picked up his
saddle.</p>
<p>"I can't seem to recollect asking that lady for help, anyway," he
summed up before he dismissed the subject from his mind
altogether. "I was trying to help her; it sure takes a woman to
twist things around so they point backwards!"</p>
<p>He turned and glanced pityingly at Rambler, watching him with
ears perked forward inquiringly. "And I crippled a damned good
horse trying to help a blamed poor specimen of a woman!" he
gritted. "And didn't get so much as a pleasant word for it. I'll
sure remember that!"</p>
<p>Rambler whinnied after him wistfully, and Ford set his teeth hard
together and walked the faster, his shoulders slightly bent under
the weight of the saddle. His own physical discomfort was
nothing, beside the hurt of leaving his horse out there
practically helpless; for a moment his fingers rested upon the
butt of his six-shooter, while he considered going back and
putting an end to life and misery for Rambler. But for all the
hardness men had found in Ford Campbell, he was woman-weak where
his horse was concerned. With cold reason urging him, he laid the
saddle on the ground and went back, his hand clutching grimly the
gun at his hip. Rambler's nicker of welcome stopped him half-way
and held him there, hot with guilt.</p>
<p>"Oh, damn it, I can't!" he muttered savagely, and retraced his
steps to where the saddle lay. After that he almost trotted down
the coulée, and he would not look back again until it struck him
as odd that the nickerings of the horse did not grow perceptibly
fainter. With a queer gripping of the muscles in his throat he
did turn, then, and saw Rambler's head over the little ridge he
had just crossed. The horse was making shift to follow him rather
than be left alone in that strange country. Ford waited, his
lashes glistening in the first rays of the new-risen sun, until
the horse came hobbling stiffly up to him.</p>
<p>"You old devil!" he murmured then, his contrite tone contrasting
oddly with the words he used. "You contrary, ornery, old devil,
you!" he repeated softly, rubbing the speckled nose with more
affection than he had ever shown a woman. "You'd tag along,
if—if you didn't have but one leg to carry you! And I was
going to—" He could not bring himself to confess his
meditated deed of mercy; it seemed black-hearted treachery, now,
and he stood ashamed and humbled before the dumb brute that
nuzzled him with such implicit faith.</p>
<p>It was slow journeying, after that. Ford carried the saddle on
his own back rather than burden the horse with it, and hungry as
he was, he stopped often and long, and massaged the sprained
shoulder faithfully while Rambler rested it, with all his weight
on his other legs and his nose rooting gently at Ford's bowed
head.</p>
<p>A stray rider assured him that he was on the right trail, but it
was past noon when he thankfully reached the Double Cross, threw
his saddle down beside the stable door, and gave Rambler a chance
at the hay in the corral.</p>
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