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PAGE 3

The Cow-Boss
by [?]

Horrified, furious at this breach of discipline, Pierce ran to meet them, waving his hat and raising the wild yell, “Whoo-ee!” with which he was wont to head off and turn a bunch of steers. “Stop it! Get out!” he shouted as he succeeded in reaching the ears of one or two of the raiders. “It’s all off–there’s a girl here. Somebody sick! Skeedoo!”

The shooting and the tumult died away. The horsemen vanished as swiftly, as abruptly, as they came, leaving their leader in panting, breathless possession of the field. He was sober enough now, and repentant, too.

Slowly he returned to the door of the shack with vague intent to apologize. Something very sudden and very terrible must have fallen upon the postmaster.

After some hesitation he knocked timidly on the door.

“Have they gone?” the girl asked.

“Yes; I’ve scared ’em away. They didn’t mean no harm, I reckon. I want to know can’t I be of some kind of use?”

The door opened cautiously and the girl again appeared. She was very pale and held a pistol in her hand, but her voice was calm. “You’re very good,” she said, “and I’m much obliged. Who are you?”

“I am Roy Pierce, foreman for McCoy, a cattleman north of here.”

“Was it really a band of Indians?”

“Naw. Only a bunch of cow-punchers on a bat.”

“You mean cowboys?”

“That’s what. It’s their little way of havin’ fun. I reckon they didn’t know you was here. I didn’t. Who’s sick?”

“My uncle.”

“You mean the postmaster?”

“Yes.”

“When was he took?”

“Last night. They telegraphed me about six o’clock. I didn’t get here till this morning–I mean yesterday morning.”

“What’s the ail of him?”

“A stroke, I’m afraid. He can’t talk, and he’s stiff as a stake. Oh, I wish the doctor would come!”

Her anxiety was moving. “I’ll try to find him for you.”

“I wish you would.”

“You aren’t all alone?”

“Yes; Mrs. Gilfoyle had to go home to her baby. She said she’d come back, but she hasn’t.”

Roy’s heart swept a wide arc as he stood looking into the pale, awed, lovely face of the girl.

“I’ll bring help,” he said, and vanished into the darkness, shivering with a sense of guilt. “The poor old cuss! Probably he was sick the very minute I was bullyragging him.”

The local doctor had gone down the valley on a serious case, and would not be back till morning, his wife said, thereupon Roy wired to Claywall, the county-seat, for another physician. He also secured the aid of Mrs. James, the landlady of the Palace Hotel, and hastened back to the relief of the girl, whom he found walking the floor of the little kitchen, tremulous with dread.

“I’m afraid he’s dying,” she said. “His teeth are set and he’s unconscious.”

Without knowing what to say in way of comfort, the herder passed on into the little office, where the postmaster lay on a low couch with face upturned, in rigid, inflexible pose, his hands clenched, his mouth foam-lined. Roy, unused to sickness and death, experienced both pity and awe as he looked down upon the prostrate form of the man he had expected to punish. And yet these emotions were rendered vague and slight by the burning admiration which the niece had excited in his susceptible and chivalrous heart.

She was tall and very fair, with a face that seemed plain in repose, but which bewitched him when she smiled. Her erect and powerful body was glowing with health, and her lips and eyes were deliciously young and sweet. Her anxious expression passed away as Roy confidently assured her that these seizures were seldom fatal. He didn’t know a thing about it, but his tone was convincing.

“I knew a man once who had these fits four or five times a year. Didn’t seem to hurt him a bit. One funny thing–he never had ’em while in the saddle. They ‘most always come on just after a heavy meal. I reckon the old man must of over-et.”