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Hank’s Woman
by
“The railroad brought the stuff for Galena Creek, and Hank would not look at it on account of his courtin’. I took it alone myself by Yancey’s and the second bridge and Miller Creek to the camp, nor I didn’t tell Willomene good-bye, for I had got disgusted at her blindness.”
The Virginian shifted his position, and jerked his overalls to a more comfortable fit. Then he continued:
“They was married the Tuesday after at Livingston, and Hank must have been pow’ful pleased at himself. For he gave Willomene a wedding present, with the balance of his cash, spending his last nickel on buying her a red-tailed parrot they had for sale at the First National Bank. The son-of-a-gun hollad so freely at the bank, the president awde’d the cashier to get shed of the out-ragious bird, or he would wring its neck.
“So Hank and Willomene stayed a week up in Livingston on her money, and then he fetched her back to Gardner, and bought their grub, and bride and groom came up to the camp we had on Galena Creek.
“She had never slep’ out before. She had never been on a hawss, neither. And she mighty near rolled off down into Pitchstone Canyon, comin’ up by the cut-off trail. Why, seh, I would not willingly take you through that place, except yu’ promised me yu’ would lead your hawss when I said to. But Hank takes the woman he had married, and he takes heavy-loaded pack-hawsses. ‘Tis the first time such a thing has been known of in the country. Yu’ remember them big tall grass-topped mountains over in the Hoodoo country, and how they descends slam down through the cross-timber that yu’ can’t scatcely work through afoot, till they pitches over into lots an’ lots o’ little canyons, with maybe two inches of water runnin’ in the bottom? All that is East Fork water, and over the divide is Clark’s Fork, or Stinkin’ Water, if yu’ take the country yondeh to the southeast. But any place yu’ go is them undesirable steep slopes, and the cut-off trail takes along about the worst in the business.
“Well, Hank he got his outfit over it somehow, and, gentlemen, hush! but yu’d ought t’ve seen him and that poor girl pull into our camp. Yu’d cert’nly never have conjectured them two was a weddin’ journey. He was leadin’, but skewed around in his saddle to jaw back at Willomene for riding so ignorant. Suppose it was a thing she was responsible for, yu’d not have talked to her that-a-way even in private; and hyeh was the camp a-lookin’, and a-listenin’, and some of us ashamed. She was setting straddleways like a mountain, and between him and her went the three packanimals, plumb shiverin’ played out, and the flour–they had two hundred pounds–tilted over hellwards, with the red-tailed parrot shoutin’ landslides in his cage tied on top o’ the leanin’ sacks.
“It was that mean to see, that shameless and unkind, that even a thoughtless kid like the McLean boy felt offended, and favorable to some sort of remonstrance. ‘The son-of-a–!’ he said to me. ‘The son-of-a–! If he don’t stop, let’s stop him.’ And I reckon we might have.
“But Hank he quit. ‘Twas plain to see he’d got a genu-wine scare comin’ through Pitchstone Canyon, and it turned him sour, so he’d hardly talk to us, but just mumbled ‘How!’ kind o’ gruff, when the boys come up to con- gratulate him as to his marriage.
“But Willomene, she says when she saw me, ‘Oh, I am so glad!’ and we shook hands right friendly. And I wished I’d told her good-bye that day at the Mammoth. For she bore no spite, and maybe I had forgot her feelings in thinkin’ of my own. I had talked to her down at the Mammoth at first, yu’ know, and she said a word about old friends. Our friendship was three weeks old that day, but I expect her new experiences looked like years to her. And she told me how near she come to gettin’ killed.