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The Path-Master
by
“‘Fraid?”
“Ya-as,” drawled Byram.
The game-warden laboriously produced a six-shooter from his side pocket. A red bandanna handkerchief protected the shiny barrel; he unwrapped this, regarded the weapon doubtfully, and rubbed his fat thumb over the butt.
“Huh!” ejaculated Byram, contemptuously, “he’s got a repeatin’-rifle; he can cut a pa’tridge’s head off from here to that butternut ‘cross the creek!”
“I’m goin’ to git into his ice-house all the same,” said the warden, without much enthusiasm.
“An’ I’m bound to git my road-tax,” said Byram, “but jest how I’m to operate I dunno.”
“Me neither,” added the warden, musingly. “God knows I hate to shoot people.”
What he really meant was that he hated to be shot at.
A young girl in a faded pink sunbonnet passed along the road, followed by a dog. She returned the road-master’s awkward salutation with shy composure. A few moments later the game-warden saw her crossing the creek on the stepping-stones; her golden-haired collie dog splashed after her.
“That’s a slick girl,” he said, twisting his heavy black mustache into two greasy points.
Byram glanced at him with a scowl.
“That’s the kid,” he said.
“Eh? Elton’s?”
“Yes.”
“Your path-master?”
“Well, what of it?”
“Nuthin’–she’s good-lookin’–for a path-master,” said the warden, with a vicious leer intended for a compliment.
“What of it?” demanded Byram, harshly.
“Be you fixin’ to splice with that there girl some day?” asked the game-warden, jocosely.
“What of it?” repeated Byram, with an ugly stare.
“Oh,” said the warden, hastily, “I didn’t know nothin’ was goin’ on; I wasn’t meanin’ to rile nobody.”
“Oh, you wasn’t, wasn’t you?” said Byram, in a rage. “Now you can jest git your pa’tridges by yourself an’ leave me to git my road-tax. I’m done with you.”
“How you do rile up!” protested the warden. “How was I to know that you was sweet on your path-master when folks over to Spencers say she’s sweet on Dan McCloud–“
“It’s a lie!” roared young Byram.
“Is it?” asked the warden, with interest. “He’s a good-lookin’ chap, an’ folks say–“
“It’s a damn lie!” yelled Byram, “an’ you can tell them folks that I say so. She don’t know Dan McCloud to speak to him, an’ he’s that besotted with rum half the time that if he spoke to her she’d die o’ fright, for all his good looks.”
“Well, well,” said the game-warden, soothingly; “I guess he ain’t no account nohow, an’ it’s jest as well that we ketch him with them birds an’ run him off to jail or acrost them mountains yonder.”
“I don’t care where he is as long as I git my tax,” muttered Byram.
But he did care. At the irresponsible suggestion of the gossiping game-warden a demon of jealousy had arisen within him. Was it true that Dan McCloud had cast his sodden eyes on Ellie Elton? If it were true, was the girl aware of it? Perhaps she had even exchanged words with the young man, for McCloud was a gentleman’s son and could make himself agreeable when he chose, and he could appear strangely at ease in his ragged clothes–nay, even attractive.
All Foxville hated him; he was not one of them; if he had been, perhaps they could have found something to forgive in his excesses and drunken recklessness.
But, though with them, he was not of them; he came from the city–Albany; he had been educated at Princeton College; he neither thought, spoke, nor carried himself as they did. Even in his darkest hours he never condescended to their society, nor, drunk as he was, would he permit any familiarities from the inhabitants.
Byram, who had been to an agricultural college, and who, on his return to Foxville had promptly relapsed into the hideous dialect which he had imbibed with his mother’s milk, never forgave the contempt with which McCloud had received his advances, nor that young man’s amused repudiation of the relationship which Byram had ventured to recall.
So it came about that Byram at length agreed to aid the game-warden in his lawful quest for the ice-box, and he believed sincerely that it was love of law and duty which prompted him.