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Destiny At Drybone
by
Lin McLean’s horse took him across the square without guiding from the cow-puncher, who sat absently with his hands folded upon the horn of his saddle. This horse, too, was patient and experienced, and could not know what remote thoughts filled his master’s mind. He looked around to see why his master did not get off lightly, as he had done during so many gallant years, and hasten in to the conviviality. But the lonely cow-puncher sat mechanically identifying the horses of acquaintances.
“Toothpick Kid is here,” said he, “and Limber Jim, and the Doughie. You’d think he’d stay away after the trouble he–I expect that pinto is Jerky Bill’s.”
“Go home!” said a hearty voice.
McLean eagerly turned. For the moment his face lighted from its sombreness. “I’d forgot you’d be here,” said he. And he sprang to the ground. “It’s fine to see you.”
“Go home!” repeated the Governor of Wyoming, shaking his ancient friend’s hand. “You in Drybone to-night, and claim you’re reformed?
“Yu’ seem to be on hand yourself,” said the cow-puncher, bracing to be jocular, if he could.
“Me! I’ve gone fishing. Don’t you read the papers? If we poor governors can’t lock up the State House and take a whirl now and then–“
“Doc,” interrupted Lin, “it’s plumb fine to see yu’!” Again he shook hands.
“Why, yes! we’ve met here before, you and I.” His Excellency the Hon. Amory W. Barker, M.D., stood laughing, familiar and genial, his sound white teeth shining. But behind his round spectacles he scrutinized McLean. For in this second hand-shaking was a fervor that seemed a grasp, a reaching out, for comfort. Barker had passed through Separ. Though an older acquaintance than Billy, he had asked Jessamine fewer and different questions. But he knew what he knew. “Well, Drybone’s the same old Drybone,” said he. “Sweet-scented hole of iniquity! Let’s see how you walk nowadays.”
Lin took a few steps.
“Pooh! I said you’d never get over it.” And his Excellency beamed with professional pride. In his doctor days Barker had set the boy McLean’s leg; and before it was properly knit the boy had escaped from the hospital to revel loose in Drybone on such another night as this. Soon he had been carried back, with the fracture split open again.
“It shows, does it?” said Lin. “Well, it don’t usually. Not except when I’m–when I’m–“
“Down?” suggested his Excellency.
“Yes, Doc. Down,” the cow-puncher confessed.
Barker looked into his friend’s clear hazel eyes.
Beneath their dauntless sparkle was something that touched the Governor’s good heart. “I’ve got some whiskey along on the trip–Eastern whiskey,” said he. “Come over to my room awhile.”
“I used to sleep all night onced,” said McLean, as they went. “Then I come to know different. But I’d never have believed just mere thoughts could make yu’–make yu’ feel like the steam was only half on. I eat, yu’ know!” he stated, suddenly. “And I expect one or two in camp lately have not found my muscle lacking. Feel me, Doc.”
Barker dutifully obeyed, and praised the excellent sinews.
Across from the dance-hall the whining of the fiddle came, high and gay; feet blurred the talk of voices, and voices rose above the trampling of feet. Here and there some lurking form stumbled through the dark among the rubbish; and clearest sound of all, the light crack of billiard balls reached dry and far into the night Barker contemplated the stars and calm splendid dimness of the plain. “‘Though every prospect pleases, and only man is vile,'” he quoted. “But don’t tell the Republican party I said so.”
“It’s awful true, though, Doc. I’m vile myself. Yu’ don’t know. Why, I didn’t know!”
And then they sat down to confidences and whiskey; for so long as the world goes round a man must talk to a man sometimes, and both must drink over it. The cow-puncher unburdened himself to the Governor; and the Governor filled up his friend’s glass with the Eastern whiskey, and nodded his spectacles, and listened, and advised, and said he should have done the same, and like the good Governor that he was, never remembered he was Governor at all with political friends here who had begged a word or two. He became just Dr. Barker again, the young hospital surgeon (the hospital that now stood a ruin), and Lin was again his patient—-Lin, the sun-burnt free-lance of nineteen, reckless, engaging, disobedient, his leg broken and his heart light, with no Jessamine or conscience to rob his salt of its savor. While he now told his troubles, the quadrilles fiddled away careless as ever, and the crack of the billiard balls sounded as of old.