do it; but he needn’t try to play ‘em
off as presents. He talks suthin’ o’
coming down here, sportin’ hisself off on Flip
as a fancy buck! Not ez long ez the old man’s
here, you bet!” Thoroughly carried away by his
fancied wrongs, it was perhaps fortunate that he did
not observe the flashing eyes of Lance behind his
lank and lustreless wig; but seeing only the figure
of Lance as he had conjured him, he went on:
“That’s why I want you to hang around her.
Hang around her ontil my boy—him that’s
comin’ home on a visit—gets here,
and I reckon he’ll clear out that yar Sacramento
counter-jumper. Only let me get a sight o’
him afore Flip does. Eh? D’ye hear?
Dog my skin if I don’t believe the d——d
Injin’s drunk.” It was fortunate
that at that moment Flip reappeared, and, dropping
on the hearth between her father and the infuriated
Lance, let her hand slip in his with a warning pressure.
The light touch momentarily recalled him to himself
and her, but not until the quick-witted girl had revealed
to her, in one startled wave of consciousness, the
full extent of Lance’s infirmity of temper.
With the instinct of awakened tenderness came a sense
of responsibility, and a vague premonition of danger.
The coy blossom of her heart was scarce unfolded before
it was chilled by approaching shadows. Fearful
of, she knew not what, she hesitated. Every moment
of Lance’s stay was imperiled by a single word
that might spring from his suppressed white lips;
beyond and above the suspicions his sudden withdrawal
might awaken in her father’s breast, she was
dimly conscious of some mysterious terror without that
awaited him. She listened to the furious onslaught
of the wind upon the sycamores beside their cabin,
and thought she heard it there; she listened to the
sharp fusillade of rain upon roof and pane, and the
turbulent roar and rush of leaping mountain torrents
at their very feet, and fancied it was there.
She suddenly sprang to the window, and, pressing her
eyes to the pane, saw through the misty turmoil of
tossing boughs and swaying branches the scintillating
intermittent flames of torches moving on the trail
above, and
knew it was there!
In an instant she was collected and calm. “Dad,”
she said, in her ordinary indifferent tone, “there’s
torches movin; up toward the diamond pit. Likely
it’s tramps. I’ll take the squaw and
see.” And before the old man could stagger
to his feet she had dragged Lance with her into the
road.
CHAPTER VI.
The wind charged down upon them, slamming the door
at their backs, extinguishing the broad shaft of light
that had momentarily shot out into the darkness, and
swept them a dozen yards away. Gaining the lee
of a madrono tree, Lance opened his blanketed arms,
enfolded the girl, and felt her for one brief moment
tremble and nestle in his bosom like some frightened
animal. “Well,” he said, gayly, “what
next?” Flip recovered herself. “You’re
safe now anywhere outside the house. But did
you expect them to-night?” Lance shrugged his
shoulders. “Why not?” “Hush!”
returned the girl; “they’re coming this
way.”