<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I</h2>
<h3>VENGEANCE AVOWED</h3>
<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">C</span>urtis Conrad turned from superintending repairs on the adobe wall, and
walked across the corral to the gate at the opposite side. As he filled
his pipe he looked across the wide, greenish-gray New Mexican plateau
stretching far to east and south and west. It was dotted here and
there with little groups of grazing cattle, and he noted a straggling
procession of the creatures, their figures wavering and distorted in the
heat haze, coming down from the distant foot-hills. They were following
a trail that cut across the plain in a straight line to the pond across
the road from the house, beyond a grove of cottonwood trees.</p>
<p>“Poor devils!” he thought. “They’re tramping miles for a drink of
water, and to-morrow they’ll tramp back again for their breakfast. The
Castletons are going to lose big money in dead cattle this Summer,
unless <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span>there’s more rain than there was last. It’s awful to see the
poor brutes dropping in their tracks. I’ll begin looking for a job in a
wetter country if this Summer doesn’t bring more rain.” He turned his
attention to his pipe, sheltering bowl and match in his hollowed hand.
“No use, in this wind,” he muttered. “What a blast it’s blowing to-day!
Well, there’s no sand in it.”</p>
<p>The plain stretched away from the ranch-house in low, rolling hills, so
evenly sized that it gave the impression of a level surface. Up from one
of the little valleys rose a horseman, as if he had sprung suddenly from
the depths of the earth. Through the heat that wavered over the plain
his horse’s legs drew out into long, knobby sticks, and both man and
steed became an absurd caricature of the sinewy pony and cowboy rider
that presently cantered up to the gate with the mail for which Conrad
had been waiting.</p>
<p>“Three cow-brutes are down on the pond trail, just where it crosses the
road. One of ’em’s got a calf.”</p>
<p>“Are they dead?”</p>
<p>“Mighty nigh—will be by night.”</p>
<p>“You and Red Jack go and skin them in the morning.” Conrad turned toward
the <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span>house, looking at his letters. His mind still lingered over the
calf. “Poor little devil, it ought to have a chance,” he was thinking,
when his eye caught the name on one of the envelopes. He turned upon the
cowboy a gaze suddenly grown preoccupied.</p>
<p>“No, Peters,” he said; “the calf won’t go with the other cattle while
its mother is alive, and I saw that gray wolf skulking along the draw
this afternoon. You and Red Jack’d better go down now and put the cows
out of their misery. Skin them and bring the calf into the corral till
night, and then put it down by the pond with the other cow-brutes.”</p>
<p>His eyes quickly returned to the letter that had attracted his
attention. “Tremper & Townsend!” he exclaimed with eager surprise. “Why,
they were Delafield’s attorneys!” He tore open the envelope with an
impatient jerk and the rushing wind almost blew from his fingers the
check it contained. As his eye ran quickly down the half-dozen lines of
the letter his face lighted with satisfaction and amusement.</p>
<p>The sound of a carriage distracted his attention. It turned in at his
house-gate and he hastened forward, a lean, long-legged figure of a man,
hat doffed and hand outstretched.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“How are you, Bancroft? Glad to see you! And Miss Bancroft, too! Of
course you’re coming in. Thirsty? I’ll bet you are! And you know we’ve
got the best water in Silverside County here. How much better your
daughter’s looking, Aleck! If you keep on like this, Miss Bancroft,
you’ll soon forget you were ever ill.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ve forgotten that already, there’s such magic in the winds you
have here,” the girl replied laughingly as he lifted her to the ground.
“They’re strong enough to blow the past out of your memory and make you
forget even your own name!” Her father suddenly turned away and began to
hitch the horses. He sent back a covert glance at her as she stood at
Conrad’s side, a slender figure, her face still thin from recent illness
but aglow with the pink of returning health, the breeze fluttering the
short brown curls that clustered over her bare head.</p>
<p>“Oh, my hat, please!” she exclaimed, with sudden remembrance of the
head-covering she had left hanging in the carriage top. Curtis took it
down for her and looked on with undisguised admiration while she tied it
with a big bow of ribbon under her chin. Bancroft came back, explaining
that they had <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span>driven since mid-forenoon from the base of Mangan’s Peak,
and asking if Conrad did not think they had made pretty good time with
their new team of horses. Curtis looked them over critically, praising
their good points, and approving heartily when Bancroft told him they
had been bought for both riding and driving, for he wanted Lucy, now
that she was growing strong again, to become an expert horsewoman.</p>
<p>A big cottonwood tree grew beside the gate, and a little plot of grass,
enclosed on three sides by whitewashed adobe walls, made a square of
welcome green. Lucy Bancroft exclaimed with delight as they entered the
tiny yard, stepping mincingly across the grass with lifted gown, and
smiling back at the two men, while fleeting dimples played hide-and-seek
in her cheeks.</p>
<p>“I’m so glad, Mr. Conrad,” she laughed, “that you haven’t any signs up
to ‘keep off the grass,’ for I simply must walk on it. I never saw
anything so lovely as this little lawn and this beautiful big green
tree, after our long ride across the plain. It makes me think of that
line in the Bible about ‘the shadow of a great rock in a weary land.’”</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied Curtis as he threw open the <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span>door. “I never knew until I
came to New Mexico how much comfort and pleasure there can be in a few
blades of grass. When I come in from a long ride and look at this little
checker-board square of turf I feel as if I uncurled a whole yard of
wrinkles and squints from around my eyes.”</p>
<p>The Socorro Springs ranch-house was a rambling sequence of adobe rooms,
so joined one to another that they formed the eastern and part of the
northern side of the big square corral. It was low and flat-roofed, and
struggling tufts of weeds and grass grew along the top and trailed over
the edge, adding their chapter to Nature’s endless tale of the unwearied
determination of Life to evade and overcome Death. The rooms opened out
of one another in a long row, all with outside doors looking toward the
east and some with additional doors into the corral. A bare adobe yard
sloping eastward was bordered by a trickling stream of water along which
grew some willows and cottonwoods. Beyond it spread a golden-green field
of young alfalfa, and beyond that the greenish-gray plain stretched to
the far horizon. Across the front of the house was a narrow wooden
porch, and house and porch, walls and sheds, were <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>all a dazzling white
that in the vivid sunshine smote the sight like a blow across the
eyeballs. In the low, large room in front gayly colored Navajo rugs were
spread on the floor, white muslin curtains hung at the windows, and
rose-bedecked paper covered the walls and ceiling. Unpainted shelves of
pine above a battered, flat-topped desk were filled with books, and the
round table in the middle of the room was littered with newspapers,
magazines, tobacco pouches, and pipes.</p>
<p>The housekeeper, Mrs. Peters, brought a pitcher of water, and Conrad
explained to Lucy that the springs from which the ranch took its
appellation, <i>Los Ojos del Socorro</i>, “The Springs of Succor,” had been
so named nearly three hundred years before by a party of Spanish
explorers, because they had come unexpectedly upon the pure waters when
they were almost dead from thirst. At the housekeeper’s suggestion Lucy
went into the next room to lie down for a half-hour’s rest before they
should start for their home in Golden, twenty miles farther westward.
The door, accidentally left ajar, swung part way open and she could hear
plainly the voices of her father and Conrad as she lay with eyes <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span>closed
and thoughts wandering, scarcely heeding what they said.</p>
<p>The two men were absorbed in a discussion of local politics. “Dan
Tillinghurst is all right,” said Conrad. “He’s made a good sheriff and
he ought to have the office again. I shall do all I can to have him
renominated and to help elect him afterwards. But Dellmey Baxter for
Congress again! That’s where I buck, and buck hard, and keep a-buckin’.”</p>
<p>“But he’s the head of the party in the Territory,” objected Bancroft.
“He can bring out more votes than any other man we can put up. If we
turn him down in the convention they’ll beat us at the polls.”</p>
<p>“We’ll deserve to be beaten if we nominate him, anyway. I can’t stomach
him any longer, Aleck, and I don’t see how you can.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you’re prejudiced, Curt,” said the other, good-naturedly. “You know
you can never see any good in a man you dislike, and you took a dislike
to Baxter the first day you set foot in the Territory.”</p>
<p>“Maybe I am prejudiced; but in Dell Baxter’s case there’s ample reason
to be, and I’d be ashamed of myself if I wasn’t. I <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span>know he’s a friend
of yours, but that doesn’t prevent him from being the worst scoundrel in
the whole Territory. I tell you, Aleck, there’s nothing that man
wouldn’t do, unless it was something square and honest.”</p>
<p>“Come, come, Curt, that’s rank exaggeration. I’ve been associated with
Dell Baxter financially ever since I located in this part of the
country, and I’ve always found him strictly on the square.”</p>
<p>“Then it was because it was to his interest to be square. He’ll do you
up yet, if he gets the chance and thinks it worth while. He’s had his
finger in every crooked scheme that’s been put through from Raton to El
Paso, and his hands are as bloody as his pockets are dirty.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you think it’s going a little too far,” asked Bancroft, smiling
calmly, “to accuse a man in that wholesale way when you haven’t any
basis for your assertions but the merest idle gossip?”</p>
<p>Conrad gave an indignant snort. “Oh, I’m not saying he’s done the jobs
himself. He thinks too much of that fat paunch of his to put that into
any danger. But why does he keep those Mexican thugs hanging <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span>around him
if it isn’t to use them for things he wouldn’t dare do himself? Why, I
heard from Santa Fe only last week that he’s taken into his pay that
Mexican cutthroat, Liberato Herrara, whom he saved last Winter from
conviction for the Paxton murder.”</p>
<p>“No, Aleck,” he went on. “I buck when it comes to Dell Baxter for
Congress again. If he gets the nomination and the other side puts up
Johnny Martinez, as it’s likely they will, I’m going to support Johnny.”</p>
<p>“But he’s a Mexican.”</p>
<p>“I don’t care what he is as long as he’s a decent man. He won’t be a
disgrace to the Territory in Washington, and that’s more than you can
say of Baxter.”</p>
<p>Bancroft’s impassive face lighted with a bantering smile. “There’s no
limit to your bad opinion of a man, is there, Curt, if he once gets into
your disfavor? By the way, is it true that the Castletons are behind
Johnny Martinez?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know, and I don’t care. I’m their hired man here on the ranch,
but my vote’s my own, and so’s what little influence I may have, and
I’ll do with both of ’em just what I damn please. And if it came to a
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>show-down, I’d be perfectly willing to lose my job if that would keep
Dell Baxter from going back to Congress.”</p>
<p>Bancroft laughed again. Conrad’s eye, as he turned to his desk for more
cigars, fell upon the little pile of letters and papers he had just
received. On the top lay the Tremper & Townsend envelope. “By the way,
Aleck, you’re from Boston, ain’t you?” he exclaimed impulsively.</p>
<p>In the next room, Lucy, listening sleepily to the two voices, had been
noting the difference in their quality. Conrad’s was high and clear, his
speech rapid and incisive. Her father’s, lower and more deliberate, had
in it a subtle, persuasive quality. “Dear daddy!” she whispered softly,
her heart warm with affection. Then the new, sharp edge in Conrad’s tone
gripped her attention and sent her eyes flying open. Wide awake on the
instant, she listened for the sound of her father’s voice again. Had she
been on the scene, she might have noted that he turned an instant’s keen
gaze upon his companion before he answered, carelessly enough:</p>
<p>“Yes; originally. But I’ve come from so many other places since then
that I almost forget it, unless somebody reminds me. I <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>haven’t been
back there, or known much about the old place, for years.”</p>
<p>Conrad’s boyish smile illuminated his face and twinkled in his blue
eyes. “Yes,” he said; “’most everybody out here is so everlastingly on
the lope that it’s no wonder some of ’em lose their names every once in
a while and have to pick up ’most anything that comes handy. I’m no
exception, though I’ve not yet forgotten ‘what was my name back in the
States.’ But did you know anything about the Delafield affair in Boston,
fifteen or sixteen years ago?”</p>
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