PAGE 8
She Of The Triple Chevron
by
He ate heartily and sipped his coffee slowly, talking meanwhile to Jen and Galbraith. Pretty Pierre watched them all. Presently the gambler said: “Let us go and have our game of euchre, Galbraith. Ma’m’selle can well take care of Sergeant Tom.”
Galbraith drank the rest of his coffee, rose, and passed with Pierre into the bar-room. Then the halfbreed said to him, “You were careful–thirty drops?”
“Yes, thirty drops.” The latent cruelty of the old man’s nature was awake.
“That is right. It is sleep; not death. He will sleep so sound for half a day, perhaps eighteen hours, and then!–Val will have a long start.”
In the sitting-room Sergeant Tom was saying: “Where is your brother, Miss Galbraith?” He had no idea that the order in his pocket was for the arrest of that brother. He merely asked the question to start the talk.
He and Jen had met but five or six times; but the impression left on the minds of both was pleasant–ineradicable. Yet, as Sergeant Tom often asked himself during the past six months, why should he think of her? The life he led was one of severe endurance, and harshness, and austerity. Into it there could not possibly enter anything of home. He was but a noncommissioned officer of the Mounted Police, and beyond that he had nothing. Ireland had not been kind to him. He had left her inhospitable shores, and after years of absence he had but a couple of hundred dollars laid up–enough to purchase his discharge and something over, but nothing with which to start a home. Ranching required capital. No, it couldn’t be thought of; and yet he had thought of it, try as he would not to do so. And she? There was that about this man who had lived life on two continents, in whose blood ran the warm and chivalrous Celtic fire, which appealed to her. His physical manhood was noble, if rugged; his disposition genial and free, if schooled, but not entirely, to that reserve which his occupation made necessary–a reserve he would have been more careful to maintain, in speaking of his mission a short time back in the bar-room, if Jen had not been there. She called out the frankest part of him; she opened the doors of his nature; she attracted confidence as the sun does the sunflower.
To his question she replied: “I do not know where our Val is. He went on a hunting expedition up north. We never can tell about him, when he will turn up or where he will be to-morrow. He may walk in any minute. We never feel uneasy. He always has such luck, and comes out safe and sound wherever he is. Father says Val’s a hustler, and that nothing can keep in the road with him. But he’s a little wild–a little. Still, we don’t hector him, Sergeant Tom; hectoring never does any good, does it?”
“No, hectoring never does any good. And as for the wildness, if the heart of him’s right, why that’s easy out of him whin he’s older. It’s a fine lad I thought him, the time I saw him here. It’s his freedom I wish I had–me that has to travel all day and part of the night, and thin part of the day and all night back again, and thin a day of sleep and the same thing over again. And that’s the life of me, sayin’ nothin’ of the frost and the blizzards, and no home to go to, and no one to have a meal for me like this whin I turn up.” And the sergeant wound up with, “Whooroo! there’s a speech for you, Miss!” and laughed good-humouredly. For all that, there was in his eyes an appeal that went straight to Jen’s heart.
But, woman-like, she would not open the way for him to say anything more definite just yet. She turned the subject. And yet again, woman-like, she knew it would lead to the same conclusion: