<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<h3> The Feminine Point of View </h3>
<br/>
<p>When Ford stepped upon the porch with the jug in his hand, he
gave every indication of having definitely made up his mind. When
he glimpsed Josephine's worried face behind the lace curtain in
the window, he dropped the jug lower and held it against his leg
in such a way as to indicate that he hoped she could not see it,
but otherwise he gave no sign of perturbation. He walked along
the porch to the door of his own room, went in, locked the door
after him, and put the jug down on a chair. He could hear faint
sounds of dishes being placed upon the table in the dining-room,
which was next to his own, and he knew that dinner was half an
hour late; which was unusual in Mrs. Kate's orderly domain. Mrs.
Kate was one of those excellent women whose house is always
immaculate, whose meals are ever placed before one when the clock
points to a certain hour, and whose table never lacks a salad and
a dessert—though how those feats are accomplished upon a
cattle ranch must ever remain a mystery. Ford was therefore
justified in taking the second look at his watch and in holding
it up to his ear, and also in lifting his eyebrows when all was
done. Fifteen minutes by the watch it was before he heard the
silvery tinkle of the tea bell, which was one of the ties which
bound Mrs. Kate to civilization, and which announced that he
might enter the dining-room.</p>
<p>He went in as clean and fresh and straight-backed and quiet as
ever he had done, and when he saw that the room was empty save
for Buddy, perched upon his long-legged chair with his heels
hooked over the top round and a napkin tucked expectantly inside
the collar of his blue blouse, he took in the situation and sat
down without waiting for the women. The very first glance told
him that Mrs. Kate had never prepared that meal. It was, putting
it bluntly, a scrappy affair hastily gathered from various
shelves in the pantry and hurriedly arranged haphazard upon the
table.</p>
<p>Buddy gazed upon the sprinkle of dishes with undisguised
dissatisfaction. "There ain't any potatoes," he announced
gloomily. "My own mamma always cooks potatoes. Josephine's the
limit! I been working to-day. I almost dug out a badger, over by
the bluff. I got where I could hear him scratching to get away,
and then it was all rocks, so I couldn't dig any more. Gee, it
was hard digging! And I'm just about starved, if you want to
know. And there ain't any potatoes."</p>
<p>"Bread and butter is fine when you're hungry," Ford suggested,
and spread a slice for Buddy, somewhat inattentively, because he
was also keeping an eye upon the kitchen door, where he had
caught a fleeting glimpse of Josephine looking in at him.</p>
<p>"You're putting the butter all in one place," Buddy criticised,
with his usual frankness. "I guess you're drunk, all right. If
you're too drunk to spread butter, let me do it."</p>
<p>"What makes you think I'm drunk?" Ford questioned, lowering his
voice because of the person he suspected was in the kitchen.</p>
<p>"Mamma and Jo was quarreling about it; that's why. And my own
mamma cried, and shut the door, and wouldn't let me go in. And Jo
pretty near cried too, all right. I guess she did, only not when
any one was looking. Her eyes are awful red, anyway." Buddy took
great, ravenous bites of the bread and butter and eyed Ford
unwinkingly.</p>
<p>"What's disslepointed?" he demanded abruptly, after he had given
himself a white mustache with his glass of milk.</p>
<p>"Why do you want to know?"</p>
<p>"That's what my own mamma is, and that's what Jo is. Only my own
mamma is it about you, and Jo's it about mamma. Say, did you lick
Dick? Jo told my own mamma she wisht you'd killed him. Jo's awful
mad to-day. I guess she's mad at Dick, because he ain't very much
of a fighter. Did you lick him easy? Did you paste him one in the
jaw?"</p>
<p>Josephine entered then with Ford's belated tea. Her eyelids were
pink, as Buddy had told him, and she did not look at him while
she filled his cup.</p>
<p>"Kate has a sick headache," she explained primly, "and I did the
best I could with lunch. I hope it's—"</p>
<p>"It is," Ford interrupted reassuringly. "Everything is fine and
dandy."</p>
<p>"You didn't cook any potatoes!" Buddy charged mercilessly. "And
Ford's too drunk to put the butter on right. I'm going to tell my
dad that next time he goes to Oregon I'm going along. This outfit
will sure go to the devil if he stays much longer!"</p>
<p>"Where did you hear that, Bud?" Josephine asked, still carefully
avoiding a glance at Ford.</p>
<p>"Well, Dick said it would go to the devil. I guess," he added on
his own account, with an eloquent look at the table, "it's on the
trail right now."</p>
<p>Ford looked at Josephine, opened his lips to say that it might
still be headed off, and decided not to speak. There was a
stubborn streak in Ford Campbell. She had said some bitter
things, in her anger. Perhaps she had not entirely believed them
herself, and perhaps Mrs. Kate had not been accurately quoted by
her precocious young son; she may not have said that she was
disappointed in Ford. They might not have believed whatever it
was Dick told them, and they might still have full confidence in
him, Ford Campbell. Still, there was the stubborn streak which
would not explain or defend. So he left the table, and went into
his own room without any word save a muttered excuse; and that in
spite of the fact that Josephine looked full at him, at last, and
with a wistfulness that moved him almost to the point of taking
her in his arms and kissing away the worry—if he could.</p>
<p>He went up to the table where stood the jug, looked at it, lifted
it, and set it down again. Then he lifted it again and pulled the
cork out with a jerk, wondering if the sound of it had reached
through the thin partition to the ears of Josephine; he was
guilty of hoping so. He put back the cork—this time
carefully—walked to the outer door, turned the key, opened
the door, and closed it again with a slam. Then, with a grim set
of the lips, he walked softly into the closet and pulled the door
nearly shut.</p>
<p>He knew there was a chance that Josephine, if she were interested
in his movements, would go immediately into the sitting-room,
where she could see the path, and would know that he had not
really left the house. But she did not, evidently. She sat long
enough in the dining-room for Ford to call himself a name or two
and to feel exceedingly foolish over the trick, and to decide
that it was a very childish one for a grown man to play upon a
woman. Then she pushed back her chair, came straight toward his
room, opened the door, and looked in; Ford knew, for he saw her
through the crack he had left in the closet doorway. She stood
there looking at the jug on the table, then went up and lifted
it, much as Ford had done, and pulled the cork with a certain
angry defiance. Perhaps, he guessed shrewdly, Josephine also felt
rather foolish at what she was doing—and he smiled over the
thought.</p>
<p>Josephine turned the jug to the light, shut one eye into an
adorable squint, and peered in. Then she set the jug down and
pushed the cork slowly into place; and her face was puzzled. Ford
could have laughed aloud when he saw it, but instead he held his
breath for fear she should discover him. She stood very still for
a minute or two, staring at nothing at all; moved the jug into
the exact place where it had stood before, and went out of the
room on her toes.</p>
<p>So did Ford, for that matter, and he was in a cold terror lest
she should look out and see him walking down the path where he
should logically have walked more than five minutes before. He
did not dare to turn and look—until he was outside the
gate; then inspiration came to aid him and he went back boldly,
stepped upon the porch with no effort at silence, opened his
door, and went in as one who has a right there.</p>
<p>He heard the click of dishes which told that she was clearing the
table, and he breathed freer. He walked across the room, waited a
space, and walked back again, and then went out with his heart in
its proper position in his chest; Ford was unused to feeling his
heart rise to his palate, and the sensation was more novel than
agreeable. When he went again down the path, there was a certain
exhilaration in his step. His thoughts arranged themselves in
clear-cut sentences, as if he were speaking, instead of those
vague, almost wordless impressions which fill the brain
ordinarily.</p>
<p>"She's keeping cases on that jug. She must care, or she wouldn't
do that. She's worried a whole lot; I could see that, all along.
Down at the bunk-house she called me Ford twice—and she
said it meant a lot to her, whether I make good or not. I
wonder—Lordy me! A man could make good, all right, and do
it easy, if she cared! She doesn't know what to think—that
jug staying right up to high-water mark, like that!" He laughed
then, silently, and dwelt upon the picture she had made while she
had stood there before the table.</p>
<p>"Lord! she'd want to kill me if she knew I hid in that closet,
but I just had a hunch—that is, if she cared anything about
it. I wonder if she did really say she wished I'd killed Dick?</p>
<p>"Anyway, I can fight it now, with her keeping cases on the quiet.
I know I can fight it. Lordy me, I've got to fight it! I've got
to make good; that's all there is about it. Wonder what she'll
think when she sees that jug don't go down any? Wonder—oh,
hell! She'd never care anything about me. If she did—" His
thoughts went hazy with vague speculation, then clarified
suddenly into one hard fact, like a rock thrusting up through the
lazy sweep of a windless tide. "If she did care, I couldn't do
anything. I'm married!"</p>
<p>His step lost a little of its spring, then, and he went into the
bunk-house with much the same expression on his face as when he
had left it an hour or so before.</p>
<p>He did not see Dick that day. The other boys watched him
covertly, it seemed to him, and showed a disposition to talk
among themselves. Jim was whistling cheerfully in the kitchen. He
turned his head and laughed when Ford went in.</p>
<p>"I found a dead soldier behind the sack of spuds," Jim announced,
and produced an empty bottle, mate to the one Ford had thrown
into the gully. "And Dick didn't seem to have any appetite at
all, and Mose is still in Sleepytown. I guess that's all the news
at this end of the line. Er—hope everything is all right at
the house?"</p>
<p>"Far as I could see, it was," Ford replied, with an inner sense
of evasion. "I guess we'll just let her go as she looks, Jim. Did
you say anything to the boys?"</p>
<p>Jim reddened under his tan, but he laughed disarmingly. "I cannot
tell a lie," he confessed honestly, "and it was too good to keep
to myself. I'm the most generous fellow you ever saw, when it
comes to passing along a good story that won't hurt anybody's
digestion. You don't care, do you? The joke ain't on you."</p>
<p>"If you'd asked me about it, I'd have said keep it under your
hat. But—"</p>
<p>"And that would have been a sin and a shame," argued Jim, licking
a finger he had just scorched on a hot kettle-handle. "The
fellows all like a good story—and it don't sound any worse
because it's on Dick. And say! I kinda got a clue to where he
connected with that whisky. Walt says he come back from the
line-camp with his overcoat rolled up and tied behind the
saddle—and it wasn't what you could call a hot night,
either. He musta had that jug wrapped up in it. I'll bet he sent
in by Peterson, the other day, for it. He was over there, I know.
He's sure a deliberate kind of a cuss, isn't he? Must have had
this thing all figured out a week ago. The boys are all tickled
to death at the way he got it in the neck; they know Dick pretty
well. But if you'd told me not to say anything, I'd have said he
stubbed his toe on his shadow and fell all over himself, and let
it go at that."</p>
<p>"Lordy me! Jim, you needn't worry about it; you ought to know you
can't keep a thing like this quiet, on a ranch. It doesn't matter
much how he got that whisky here, either; I know well enough you
didn't haul it out. I'd figured it out about as Walt says.</p>
<p>"Say, it looks as if you'll have to wrastle with the pots and
pans till to-morrow. The lower fence I'll ride, this afternoon;
did you get clear around the Pinnacle field?"</p>
<p>"I sure did—and she's tight as a drum. Say, Mose is a good
cook, but he's a mighty punk housekeeper, if you ask me. I'm
thinking of getting to work here with a hoe!"</p>
<p>So life, which had of late loomed big and bitter before the soul
of Ford, slipped back into the groove of daily routine.</p>
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