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PAGE 20

The Withrow Water Right
by [?]

“Have yuh seen anything of yer paw, M’lissy? Why, what ails yuh, child? Y’r as white as buttermilk. Has anything bit yuh?”

“No,” faltered the girl, looking down at her wretched finery; “my shoes ‘a’ been a-hurtin’ my feet. I’m goin’ back to the house to take ’em off. I’m tired.”

“I wish y’d set right down here and take off y’r shoes, M’lissy,” said her brother-in-law anxiously. “We’ll have to kind o’ watch yer paw. I had to tell ‘im about the spring, an’ he struck off right away an’ said he was goin’ up there. I reckoned he’d go away an’ furgit it, but he hain’t come back yit. I’m afraid he’ll git to talkin’ when he comes back to the house, and tell yer maw. It won’t do no good, an’ there ain’t no use in her workin’ herself up red-headed about it,–‘t enny rate not till Poindexter comes back. We must git hold o’ yer paw before he gits to see her, and brace ‘im up ag’in. If you’ll set here an’ call to me if you see ‘im below, I’ll go on up an’ look fer ‘im.”

Melissa had stood quite still, looking down at the uncompromising lines of her drapery. It was rapidly becoming a pink blur to her gaze. The ghastliness of what she had undertaken to conceal came over her like a chill, insweeping fog. She shivered as she spoke, trying in vain to return Lysander’s honest gaze.

“I’ll come back an’ set here when I’ve took off my shoes. You kin go on. I’ll come in a minute.”

Lysander looked into her face an instant as he started.

“The seam o’ yer stockin’ ‘s got over the j’int, M’lissy,” he said kindly; “it’s made you sick at yer stummick; y’r as white as taller.”

VI.

Old Withrow entered his own house with dignity at last.

Strangely enough, when the spiritual and presumably the better part of us is gone, the world stands in awe of what remains. If the bleared eyes could have opened once more, and the dead man could have known that it was for fear of him the children were gathered in a whispering, awestricken group at the window, that respect for him caused the lowering of voices and baring of heads on the part of the household and curious neighbors, he would suddenly have found the world he had left a stranger place than any world to come.

There was no great pretense of grief. Mother Withrow looked at the dead face a while, supporting her elbow with one knotted hand, and grasping her weather-beaten jaw with the other. Perhaps her silence would have been the strangest feature of it all to him, if he could have known. If the years hid any romance that had been theirs, and was now hers, the old woman’s face told no more of it than the flinty outside of a boulder tells of the leaf traced within.

“He wuzn’t no great shakes of a man,” she said to Minerva, “but I don’t ‘low to have him stood up an’ shot at by any o’ Nate Forrester’s crowd without puttin’ the law on the man that done it.”

Lysander’s attempt at concealment had melted away in the heat of the excitement occasioned by the murder. The drying up of the spring had been no secret in camp. The men who had carried Withrow’s body to the house had talked of it unrebuked. Mother Withrow had heard them with a tightening of the muscles of her face and an increased angularity in her tall figure, but she had proudly refrained from the faintest manifestation of surprise. Nor had she asked any questions of Minerva or Lysander. This unexpected reserve had been a great relief to the latter, who found himself not only released from an unpleasant duty, but saved from any reproaches for concealment.

The coroner had come up from Los Angeles, and there had been an inquest. Sterling had not been present, having ridden to Los Angeles to give himself up; but the men to whom he had told the story when he came to the camp had testified, and there had been a verdict that deceased came to his death from a wound made by a revolver in the hands of Frederick Sterling.