PAGE 8
In Pipi Valley
by
It was at this point that Shon McGann entered, looked round, nodded to all, and then came forward to the table where Pretty Pierre sat. As the other took out his watch, Shon said firmly but quietly: “Pierre, I gave you the lie to-day concerning me wife, and I’m here, as I said I’d be, to stand by the word I passed then.”
Pierre waved his fingers lightly towards the other, and slowly rose. Then he said in sharp tones: “Yes, Shon McGann, you gave me the lie. There is but one thing for that in Pipi Valley. You choked me; I would not take that from a saint of heaven; but there was another thing to do first. Well, I have done it; I said I would bring proofs–I have them.” He paused, and now there might have been seen a shining moisture on his forehead, and his words came menacingly from between his teeth, while the room became breathlessly still, save that in the silence a sleeping dog sighed heavily: “Shon McGann,” he added, “you are living with my wife.”
Twenty men drew in a sharp breath of excitement, and Shon came a step nearer the other, and said in a strange voice: “I–am–living–with–your–wife?”
“As I say, with my wife, Lucy Rives. Francois Rives was my name ten years ago. We quarrelled. I left her, and I never saw her again until to-night. You went to see her two hours ago. You did not find her. Why? She was gone because her husband, Pierre, told her to go. You want a proof? You shall have it. Here is the wedding-ring you gave her last night.”
He handed it over, and Shon saw inside it his own name and hers.
“My God!” he said. “Did she know? Tell me she didn’t know, Pierre?”
“No, she did not know. I have truth to speak to night. I was jealous, mad, and foolish, and I left her. My boat was found upset. They believed I was drowned. ‘Bien,’ she waited until yesterday, and then she took you–but she was my wife; she is my wife–and so you see!”
The Irishman was deadly pale.
“It’s an avil heart y’ had in y’ then, Pretty Pierre, and it’s an avil day that brought this thing to pass, and there’s only wan way to the end of it.”
“So, that is true. There is only one way,” was the reply; “but what shall that way be? Someone must go: there must be no mistake. I have to propose. Here on this table we lay a revolver. We will give up these which we have in our pockets. Then we will play a game of euchre, and the winner of the game shall have the revolver. We will play for a life. That is fair, eh–that is fair”? he said to those around.
King Kinkley, speaking for the rest, replied: “That’s about fair. It gives both a chance, and leaves only two when it’s over. While the woman lives, one of you is naturally in the way. Pierre left her in a way that isn’t handsome; but a wife’s a wife, and though Shon was all in the glum about the thing, and though the woman isn’t to be blamed either, there’s one too many of you, and there’s got to be a vacation for somebody. Isn’t that so?”
The rest nodded assent. They had been so engaged that they did not see a woman enter the bar from behind, and crouch down beside Lady Jane, a woman whom the latter touched affectionately on the shoulder and whispered to once or twice, while she watched the preparations for the game.
The two men sat down, Shon facing the bar and Pierre with his back to it.
The game began, neither man showing a sign of nervousness, though Shon was very pale. The game was to finish for ten points. Men crowded about the tables silent but keenly excited; cigars were chewed instead of smoked, and liquor was left undrunk. At the first deal Pierre made a march, securing two. At the next Shon made a point, and at the next also a march. The half-breed was playing a straight game. He could have stacked the cards, but he did not do so; deft as he was he might have cheated even the vigilant eyes about him, but it was not so; he played as squarely as a novice. At the third, at the fourth, deal he made a march; at the fifth, sixth, and seventh deals, Shon made a march, a point, and a march. Both now had eight points. At the next deal both got a point, and both stood at nine!