"If you'll give me her name and address," said he, with the future
entirely in his mind.
"Why, Laramie!" and the Governor feigned surprise.
"Say, Doc," said Lin,
uneasily, "none of 'em ain't married me since I saw
yu' last."
"Then she hasn't written from Laramie," said the hilarious Governor, and
Mr. McLean understood and winced in his spirit deep down. "Gee whiz!"
went on Barker, "I'll never forget you and Lusk that day!"
But the mask fell now. "You're talking of his wife, not mine," said the
cow-puncher very quietly, and smiling no more; "and, Doc, I'm going to
say a word to yu', for I know yu've always been my good friend. I'll
never forget that day myself--but I don't want to be reminded of it."
"I'm a fool, Lin," said the Governor,
generousinstantly. "I never
supposed--"
"I know yu' didn't, Doc. It ain't you that's the fool. And in a way--in a
way--" Lin's speech ended among his crowding memories, and Barker, seeing
how
wistful his face had turned, waited. "But I ain't quite the same fool
I was before that happened to me," the cow-puncher resumed, "though maybe
my actions don't show to be wiser. I know that there was better luck than
a man like me had any call to look for."
The sobered Barker said, simply, "Yes, Lin." He was put to thinking by
these words from the unsuspected inner man.
Out in the Bow Leg country Lin McLean had met a woman with thick, red
cheeks,
calling herself by a
maiden name; and this was his whole
knowledge of her when he put her one morning a
stride a Mexican
saddle and
took her fifty miles to a magistrate and made her his
lawful wife to the
best of his
ability and
belief. His sage-brush intimates were confident
he would never have done it but for a rival. Racing the rival and beating
him had swept Mr. McLean past his own intentions, and the marriage was an
inadvertence. "He jest bumped into it before he could pull up," they
explained; and this casualty, resulting from Mr. McLean's sporting blood,
had entertained several hundred square miles of
alkali. For the new-made
husband the joke soon died. In the immediate weeks that came upon him he
tasted a
bitterness worse than in all his life before, and
learned also
how deep the woman, when once she begins, can sink beneath the man in
baseness. That was a knowledge of which he had lived
innocent until this
time. But he carried his
outward self serenely, so that citizens in
Cheyenne who saw the cow-puncher with his bride argued shrewdly that men
of that sort liked women of that sort; and before the
strain had broken
his
endurance an
unexpected first husband, named Lusk, had appeared one
Sunday in the street,
prosperous, forgiving, and
exceedingly drunk. To
the arms of Lusk she went back in the public street, deserting McLean in
the presence of Cheyenne; and when Cheyenne saw this, and
learned how she
had been Mrs. Lusk for eight long, if intermittent, years, Cheyenne
laughed loudly. Lin McLean laughed, too, and went about his business,
ready to swagger at the necessary moment, and with the necessary kind of
joke always ready to
shield his hurt spirit. And soon, of course, the
matter grew stale, seldom raked up in the Bow Leg country where Lin had
been at work; so
lately he had begun to remember other things beside the
smouldering humiliation.
"Is she with him?" he asked Barker, and musingly listened while Barker
told him. The Governor had thought to make it a racy story, with the
moral that the joke was now on Lusk; but that inner man had
spoken and
revealed the cow-puncher to him in a new and
complicated light; hence he
quieted the proposed
livelycadence and
vocabulary of his
anecdote about
the house of Lusk, but instead of narrating how Mrs. beat Mr. on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays, and Mr. took his turn the odd days, thus getting
one ahead of his lady, while the kid Lusk had outlined his opinion of the
family by recently skipping to parts unknown, Barker detailed these
incidents more
gravely, adding that Laramie believed Mrs. Lusk addicted
to opium.
"I don't guess I'll leave my card on 'em," said McLean,
grimly, "if I
strike Laramie."
"You don't mind my
saying I think you're well out of that scrape?" Barker
ventured.
"Shucks, no! That's all right, Doc. Only--yu' see now. A man gets tired
pretending--onced in a while."
Time had gone while they were in talk, and it was now half after one and
Mr. McLean late for that long-plotted first square meal. So the friends
shook hands, wishing each other Merry Christmas, and the cow-puncher
hastened toward his chosen companions through the
stirring cheerfulness
of the season. His play-hour had made a dull
beginning among the toys. He
had come upon people engaged in a pleasant game, and waited, shy and well
disposed, for some bidding to join, but they had gone on playing with
each other and left him out. And now he went along in a sort of hurry to
escape from that
loneliness where his human promptings had been lodged
with him
useless. Here was Cheyenne, full of
holiday for sale, and he
with his pockets full of money to buy; and when he thought of Shorty, and
Chalkeye, and Dollar Bill, those dandies to hit a town with, he stepped
out with a brisk, false hope. It was with a
mentalhurrah and a foretaste
of a good time coming that he put on his town clothes, after
shaving and
admiring himself, and sat down to the square meal. He ate away and drank
with a
robustimitation of
enjoyment that took in even himself at first.
But the
sorrowful process of his spirit went on, for all he could do. As
he groped for the
contentment which he saw around him he began to receive
the jokes with
counterfeit mirth. Memories took the place of
anticipation, and through their moody shiftings he began to feel a
distaste for the company of his friends and a shrinking from their
livelyvoices. He blamed them for this at once. He was surprised to think he had
never recognized before how light a weight was Shorty; and here was
Chalkeye, who knew better, talking religion after two glasses. Presently
this attack of noticing his friends' shortcomings mastered him, and his
mind, according to its wont, changed at a stroke. "I'm celebrating no
Christmas with this crowd," said the inner man; and when they had next
remembered Lin McLean in their hilarity he was gone.
Governor Barker, finishing his purchases at half-past three, went to meet
a friend come from Evanston. Mr. McLean was at the railway station,
buying a ticket for Denver.
"Denver!" exclaimed the amazed Governor.
"That's what I said," stated Mr. McLean, doggedly.
"Gee whiz!" went his Excellency. "What are you going to do there?"
"Get good and drunk."
"Can't you find enough
whiskey in Cheyenne?"
"I'm drinking
champagne this trip."
The cow-puncher went out on the
platform and got
aboard, and the train
moved off. Barker had walked out too in his surprise, and as he stared
after the last car, Mr. McLean waved his wide hat defiantly and went
inside the door.
"And he says he's got maturity," Barker muttered. "I've known him since
seventy-nine, and he's kept about eight years old right along." The
Governor was cross, and sorry, and
presently crosser. His jokes about
Lin's marriage came back to him and put him in a rage with the departed
fool. "Yes, about eight. Or six," said his Excellency, justifying himself
by the past. For he had first known Lin, the boy of nineteen,
supreme in
length of limb and recklessness, breaking horses and feeling for an early
mustache. Next, when the
mustache was nearly
accomplished, he had mended
the boy's badly broken thigh at Drybone. His skill (and Lin's utter
health) had
wrought so swift a healing that the
surgeon overflowed with
the pride of science, and over the bandages would explain the human body
technically to his wild-eyed and flattered patient. Thus young Lin heard
all about tibia, and comminuted, and other
glorious new words, and when
sleepless would rehearse them. Then, with the bone so nearly knit that
the patient might leave the ward on crutches to sit each morning in
Barker's room as a
privilege, the disobedient child of twenty-one had
slipped out of the hospital and hobbled
hastily to the hog ranch, where
whiskey and
variety waited for a
languishing convalescent. Here he grew
gay, and was soon carried back with the leg refractured. Yet Barker's
surgical rage was disarmed, the patient was so
forlorn over his doctor's
professional chagrin.
"I suppose it ain't no better this morning, Doc?" he had said, humbly,
after a new week of bed and weights.
"Your right leg's going to be shorter. That's all."
"Oh, gosh! I've been and spoiled your comminuted fee-mur! Ain't I a
son-of-a-gun?"
You could not chide such a boy as this; and in time's due course he had