PAGE 10
Ranson’s Folly
by
“I take it,” he said genially to Miss Post, “that you and the young lady are sisters.”
“No,” said Miss Post, “we are not related.”
It was eight o’clock, and the moon was full in the heavens when “Pop” Henderson hoisted them into the stage and burdened his driver, Hunk Smith, with words of advice which were intended solely for the ears of the passengers.
“You want to be careful of that near wheeler, Hunk,” he said, “or he’ll upset you into a gully. An’ in crossing the second ford, bear to the right; the water’s running high, and it may carry youse all down stream. I don’t want that these ladies should be drowned in any stage of mine. An’ if the Red Rider jumps you don’t put up no bluff, but sit still. The paymaster’s due in a night or two, an’ I’ve no doubt at all but that the Rider’s laying for him. But if you tell him that there’s no one inside but womenfolk and a tailor, mebbe he won’t hurt youse. Now, ladies,” he added, putting his head under the leather flap, as though unconscious that all he had said had already reached them, “without wishing to make you uneasy, I would advise your having your cash and jewelry ready in your hands. With road- agents it’s mostly wisest to do what they say, an’ to do it quick. Ef you give ’em all you’ve got, they sometimes go away without spilling blood, though, such being their habits, naturally disappointed.” He turned his face toward the shrinking figure of the military tailor. “You, being an army man,” he said, “will of course want to protect the ladies, but you mustn’t do it. You must keep cool. Ef you pull your gun, like as not you’ll all get killed. But I’m hoping for the best. Good-night all, an’ a pleasant journey.”
The stage moved off with many creaks and many cracks of the whip, which in part smothered Hunk Smith’s laughter. But after the first mile, he, being a man with feelings and a family, pulled the mules to a halt.
The voice of the drummer could instantly be heard calling loudly from the darkness of the stage: “Don’t open those flaps. If they see us, they’ll fire!”
“I wanted you folks to know,” said Hunk Smith, leaning from the box- seat, “that that talk of Pop’s was all foolishness. You’re as safe on this trail as in a Pullman palace-car. That was just his way. Pop will have his joke. You just go to sleep now, if you can, and trust to me. I’ll get you there by eleven o’clock or break a trace. Breakin’ a trace is all the danger there is, anyway,” he added, cheerfully, “so don’t fret.”
Miss Post could not resist saying to Mrs. Truesdall: “I told you he was joking.”
The stage had proceeded for two hours. Sometimes it dropped with locked wheels down sheer walls of clay, again it was dragged, careening drunkenly, out of fathomless pits. It pitched and tossed, slid and galloped, danced grotesquely from one wheel to another, from one stone to another, recoiled out of ruts, butted against rocks, and swept down and out of swollen streams that gurgled between the spokes.
“If ever I leave Fort Crockett,” gasped Mrs. Truesdall between jolts, “I shall either wait until they build a railroad or walk.”
They had all but left the hills, and were approaching the level prairie. That they might see the better the flaps had been rolled up, and the soft dry air came freely through the open sides. The mules were straining over the last hill. On either side only a few of the buttes were still visible. They stood out in the moonlight as cleanly cut as the bows of great battleships. The trail at last was level. Mrs. Truesdall’s eyes closed. Her head fell forward. But Miss Post, weary as she was in body, could not sleep. To her the night-ride was full of strange and wonderful mysteries. Gratefully she drank in the dry scent of the prairie-grass, and, holding by the frame of the window, leaned far out over the wheel. As she did so, a man sprang into the trail from behind a wall of rock, and shouted hoarsely. He was covered to his knees with a black mantle. His face was hidden by a blood-red mask.