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She Of The Triple Chevron
by
They’ve a notion, that in glory, when we wicked ones have chains They will all be major-generals–and that! They’re a lovely band of pilgrims are the Riders of the Plains Will some sinner please to pass around the hat?” [bb] As he reached the last two lines of the verse the door opened and Sergeant Tom entered. Pretty Pierre did not stop singing. His eyes simply grew a little brighter, his cheek flushed ever so slightly, and there was an increase of vigour in the closing notes.
Sergeant Tom smiled a little grimly, then he nodded and said: “Been at it ever since, Pretty Pierre? You were singing the same song on the same spot when I passed here six months ago.”
“Eh, Sergeant Tom, it is you? What brings you so far from your straw-bed at Fort Desire?” From underneath his hat-brim Pierre scanned the face of the trooper closely.
“Business. Not to smile on virtue, but to collar what is wrong. I guess you ought to be ready by this time to go into quarters, Pierre. You’ve had a long innings.”
“Not yet, Sergeant Tom, though I love the Irish, and your company would make me happy. But I am so innocent, and the world–it cannot spare me yet. But I think you come to smile on virtue, all the same, Sergeant Tom. She is beautiful is Jen Galbraith. Ah, that makes your eye bright–so! You Riders of the Plains, you do two things at one time. You make this hour someone happy, and that hour someone unhappy. In one hand the soft glove of kindness, in the other, voila! the cold glove of steel. We cannot all be great like that, Sergeant Tom.”
“Not great, but clever. Voila, the Pretty Pierre! In one hand he holds the soft paper, the pictures that deceive–kings, queens, and knaves; in the other, pictures in gold and silver–money won from the pockets of fools. And so, as you say, ‘bien,’ and we each have our way, bedad!”
Sergeant Tom noticed that the half-breed’s eyes nearly closed, as if to hide the malevolence that was in them. He would not have been surprised to see a pistol drawn. But he was quite fearless, and if it was not his duty to provoke a difficulty, his fighting nature would not shrink from giving as good as he got. Besides, so far as that nature permitted, he hated Pretty Pierre. He knew the ruin that this gambler had caused here and there in the West, and he was glad that Fort Desire, at any rate, knew him less than it did formerly.
Just then Peter Galbraith entered with the coffee, followed by Jen. When the old man saw his visitor he stood still with sudden fear; but catching a warning look from the eye of the half-breed, he made an effort to be steady, and said: “Well, Jen, if it isn’t Sergeant Tom! And what brings you down here, Sergeant Tom? After some scalawag that’s broke the law?”
Sergeant Tom had not noticed the blanched anxiety in the father’s face; for his eyes were seeking those of the daughter. He answered the question as he advanced towards Jen: “Yes and no, Galbraith; I’m only takin’ orders to those who will be after some scalawag by daylight in the mornin’, or before. The hand of a traveller to you, Miss Jen.”
Her eyes replied to his in one language; her lips spoke another. “And who is the law-breaker, Sergeant Tom”? she said, as she took his hand.
Galbraith’s eyes strained towards the soldier till the reply came: “And I don’t know that; not wan o’ me. I’d ridden in to Fort Desire from another duty, a matter of a hundred miles, whin the major says to me, ‘There’s murder been done at Moose Horn. Take these orders down to Archangel’s Rise, and deliver them and be back here within forty-eight hours.’ And here I am on the way, and, if I wasn’t ready to drop for want of a bite and sup, I’d be movin’ away from here to the south at this moment.”