A LONE RIDER drew rein before a gate consisting of three poles cut from straight pine saplings. He leaned from the saddle and dropped one end of each of the two upper bars to the ground, stepped his horse over the remaining bar and, stooping again, replaced the others. Then he rode slowly along a dirt road that showed little signs of travel.
As he rode he seemed but an animated part of the surrounding landscape, so perfectly did he harmonize from the crown of his Stetson to the light shod hoofs of his pony.
Everything that he wore seemed a part of him, as he seemed a part of his horse. His well worn chaps, his cartridge belt and holster, his shirt and bandana, like the leather of his horse trappings, were toned and mellowed by age and usage; yet they carried the same suggestion of strength and freshness and efficiency as did his bronzed face and his clear, gray eyes.
His mount moved at an easy, shuffling gait that some horsemen might call a rack, but which the young man would have described as a pace.
The horse was that homeliest of all horse colors, a blue roan, the only point of distinction in his appearance being a circular white spot, about the size of a saucer, that encircled his right eye, a marking which could not be said to greatly enhance his beauty, though it had served another and excellent purpose in suggesting his name—Bull’s Eye.
At first glance the young man might have been found as little remarkable as his horse. In New Mexico there are probably thousands of other young men who look very much like him. His one personal adornment, in which he took a quiet, secret pride, was a flowing, brown mustache with drooping ends, which accomplished little more than to collect alkali dust and hide an otherwise strong and handsome mouth, while the low drawn brim of his Stetson almost accomplished the same result for the man’s finest features—a pair of unusually arresting gray eyes.
The road wound through low rolling hills covered with stunted cedars, beyond which rose a range of mountains, whose sides were clothed with pine, the dark green of which was broken occasionally by irregular patches of quaking aspens, the whole mellowed and softened and mysterized by an enveloping purple haze.
The road, whose parallel twin paths suggested wheels of traffic, but in whose dust appeared only the spoor of hoofed animals, wound around the shoulder of a hill and debouched into a small valley, in the center of which stood a dilapidated log house.
“This here,” said the young man to his pony, “is where we were headed fer. I hope the old man’s in,” and as though to assure him of the fulfillment of his wish, the door of the cabin opened and a large, droop-shouldered, gray haired man emerged.
“Ev’nen, Ole,” said the rider.
“Ev’nen,” said the older man, rather shortly, as the other stopped his horse and swung from the saddle. “What you doin’ here?”
“I come to see you about that line fence, Ole,” said the young man.
“Gol durned if you aint as bad as your pa,” said the older man. “I aint heared nuthin’ else but that durned line fence fer the last twenty years.”
“You and the old man fit over that fence for eighteen years up to the very day he died, but I’ll be doggoned if I want to scrap about it.”
“Then what you doin’ up here about it?” demanded the other.
“I aint up here to scrap with you, Ole. I just come up to tell you.”
“Tell me what?”
“You aint doin’ nuthin’ with that land. You aint never done nuthin’ with it. You can’t get water on to it. I can and there’s about a hundred acres of it that lies right for alfalfa and joins right on to the patch I put in last year.”
“Well what you goin’ to do about it? It’s my land. You sure can’t put alfalfa on my land.”
“It aint your land, Ole, and you know it. You put your line fence in the wrong place. Maybe you did it accidental at first, but you know well enough that you aint got no title to that land.”
“Well I got it fenced and I have had it fenced for twenty years. That’s title enough for me,” growled Gunderstrom.
“Now listen, Ole; I said I didn’t come up here figurin’ on quarrelin’ with you and I aint a goin’ to. I’m just tellin’ you, I’m goin’ to move that fence and put in alfalfa.”
Olaf Gunderstrom’s voice trembled with suppressed anger as he replied. “If ye lay a hand on that fence of mine, Buck Mason, I’ll kill you.”
“Now don’t make me quarrel with you, Ole,” said the young man, “cause I don’t want to do nuthin’ like that. I’m gonna move the fence, and I’m gonna say here that if anybody gets shot, it aint me. Now let’s don’t chaw any more fat over that. What do you hear from Olga?”
“None of your durn business,” snapped Gunderstrom.
Mason grinned. “Well, Olga and I grew up together as kids,” he reminded the older man, “and I’m just naturally interested in her.”
“Well, I’ll thank you to mind your own business, Buck Mason,” said Gunderstrom surlily. “My girl aint fer no low down cowman. Me and her maw was nuthin’ but trash. We seen it once when we went to Frisco and I aint never been nowhere since, but I made up my mind that my girl was gonna be able to herd with the best of ’em. That’s why I sent her East to school—to keep her away from trash like you and the rest of the slab-sided longhorns that range in Comanche County.
“My girl aint gonna know the dirt and sweat and greasy pots in no cowman’s kitchen. She aint gonna have no swells high hattin’ her. She’s goin’ to be in a position to do the high hattin’ herself. God and her mother give her the looks; the schools back in the states can give her the education, and I can give her the money; so she can herd with the best of ’em. My girl’s gonna marry a swell; so you needn’t waste your time asking no more questions about her. You aint never goin’ to see her again, and if you do she won’t even know you.”
“Come, come, Ole,” said Mason, “don’t get so excited. I wasn’t aimin’ on bitin’ Olga. She was a good kid; and we used to have a lot of fun together; and, say, if Olga marries a duke she wouldn’t never high hat none of her old friends.”
“She won’t never get a chance while I’m alive,” said Gunderstrom. “She aint never comin’ back here.”
“That’s your business and hers,” said Mason. “It aint none o’mine.” He swung easily into the saddle. “I’ll be moseyin’ along, Ole. So long!”
“Listen,” cried the older man as Mason wheeled his horse to move away. “Remember what I said about that line fence. If you lay a hand on it I’ll kill you.”
Buck Mason reined in his pony and turned in his saddle. “I hope there aint nobody goin’ to be killed, Ole,” he said quietly; “but if there is it aint goin’ to be me. Come on, Bull’s Eye, it’s a long way back to town.”
But Buck Mason did not ride to town. Instead he stopped at his own lonely ranch house, cooked his supper and afterward sat beneath an oil lamp and read.
The book that he was reading he had taken from a cupboard, the door of which was secured by a padlock, for the sad truth was that Mason was ashamed of his library and of his reading. He would have hated to have had any of his cronies discover his weakness, for the things that he read were not of the cow country. They included a correspondence course in English, a number of the classics which the course had recommended, magazines devoted to golf, polo, yachting, and a voluminous book on etiquette; but perhaps the thing that caused him the greatest mental perturbation in anticipation of its discovery by his candid, joke-loving friends was a file of the magazine Vogue.
No one knew that Buck Mason pored over these books and magazines whenever he had a leisure moment; in fact, no one suspected that he possessed them; and he would have died rather than to have explained why he did so.
He had led rather a lonely life, even before his father had died two years previously; but perhaps the greatest blow he had ever suffered had been the departure of Olga Gunderstrom for the East, nearly six years before.
She was sixteen then, and he eighteen. They had never spoken of love; perhaps neither one of them had thought of love; but she was the only girl that he had ever known well. When she had gone and he had commenced to realize how much he missed her, and then gradually to understand the barrier that her education was destined to raise between them, he began to believe that he loved her and that life without her would be a drab and monotonous waste.
Perhaps it was because he was a little bashful with women and guessed that he would never be well enough acquainted with any other girl to ask her to be his wife. He knew that he and Olga would get along well together. He knew that he would always be happy with her, and he thought that this belief constituted love; so he determined to fit himself as best he might to appear well in the society that he believed her superior education destined her to enter, that she might not ever have cause to be ashamed of him.
It was a pathetic little weakness. He did not think of it as pathetic but only as a weakness, and he was very much ashamed of it. Like most quiet men, he had a horror of ridicule; and so he always kept his books and his magazines locked in his cupboard, nor ever took one out unless he was alone, except that when he took one of those long, lonely trips, which were sometimes made necessary in pursuance of his office as deputy sheriff of Comanche County, he would carry one of his books along with him; but never the book of etiquette or a copy of Vogue, each of which he considered a reflection upon his manhood.
In another lonely cabin, several miles away, Olaf Gunderstrom had cooked his own frugal meal, washed his dishes and gone to bed.
He was an eccentric old man, and he had permitted his eccentricities to become more and more marked after the death of his wife and the departure of his daughter for the East.
Possibly the wealthiest man in the county, he lived in the meanest of cabins, notwithstanding the fact that he had a comfortable, if not luxurious home in the county seat; and always he lived alone. His ranch and cow hands had their headquarters on another one of his ranches, several miles from Gunderstrom’s shack. He rode there every day, and sometimes he ate dinner with them; but he always returned to his lonely cabin for his supper.
His only pleasures in life were directing his business, computing his profits and dreaming of the future of his daughter; and, before he fell asleep this night, his mind thus occupied with his daughter, he was reminded of the visit of Buck Mason in the afternoon.
“Always a askin’ about Olga,” he soliloquized grumblingly. “Never see that fellah that he aint askin’ me about Olga. Guess he thinks I can’t see right through him like a ladder. He’d like to marry Ole Gunderstrom’s daughter. That’s what he’d like to do and get his paws on all my land and cattle; but he aint aggona get Olga, and he aint even goin’ to get that quarter section. I’ve had a fence around that for more’n twenty years now; and I guess if that don’t give me no title, nuthin’ else does. Buck Mason! Huh!” he snorted in disgust, and with Mason still in his thoughts he fell asleep.