The Range Boss - Charles Alden Seltzer (best life changing books txt) đ
- Author: Charles Alden Seltzer
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Ruth was not cool. When the buckboard had finally vanished into the distance, with nothing left of it but a thin dust cloud that spread and disintegrated and at last settled down, Ruth walked to a rocker on the porch and sank into it, her face flushed, her eyes glowing with eager expectancy.
A few days before, while rummaging in a wooden box which had been the property of her uncle, William Harkness, she had come upon another box, considerably smaller, filled with cartridges. She had examined them thoughtfully, and at last, with much care and trepidation, had taken one of them, found Uncle Harknessâ big pistol, removed the cylinder and slipped the cartridge into one of the chambers. It had fitted perfectly. Thereafter she had yielded to another period of thoughtfulnessâlonger this time.
A decision had resulted from those periods, for the day before, when a puncher had come in from the outfit, on an errand, she had told him to send Randerson in to the ranchhouse to her, on the following day. And she was expecting him now.
She had tried to dissuade Uncle Jep and Aunt Martha from making the trip to Lazette today, but, for reasons which she would not have admittedâand did not admit, even to herselfâshe had not argued very strongly. And she had watched them go with mingled regret and satisfaction; two emotions that persisted in battling within her until they brought the disquiet that had flushed her cheeks.
It was an hour before Randerson rode up to the edge of the porch, and when Patches came to a halt, and her range boss sat loosely in the saddle, looking down at her, she was composed, even though her cheeks were still a little red.
âYou sent for me, maâam.â
It was the employee speaking to his âboss.â He was not using the incident of a few nights before to establish familiarity between them; his voice was low, deferential. But Willard Mastenâs voice had never made her feel quite as she felt at this moment.
âYes, I sent for you,â she said, smiling calmlyâtrying to seem the employer but getting something into her voice which would not properly belong there under those circumstances. She told herself it was not pleasureâbut she saw his eyes flash. âI have found some cartridges, and I want you to teach me how to shoot.â
He looked at her with eyes that narrowed with amusement, after a quick glint of surprise.
âI reckon I cân teach you. Are you figurinâ that thereâs some one in this country that you donât want here any more?â
âNo,â she said; âI donât expect to shoot anybody. But I have decided that as long as I have made up my mind to stay here and run the Flying W, I may as well learn to be able to protect myselfâif occasion arises.â
âThatâs a heap sensible. You cân never tell when youâll have to do some shootinâ out here. Not at men, especial,â he grinned, âbut youâll run across thingsâa wolf, mebbe, thatâll get fresh with you, or a sneakinâ coyote thatâll kind of make the hair raise on the back of your neck, not because youâre scared of him, but because you know his mean tricks anâ donât admire them, or a wildcat, or a hydrophobia polecat, maâam,â he said, with slightly reddening cheeks; âbut mostly, maâam, I reckon youâll like shootinâ at side-winders best. Sometimes they get mighty full of fight, maâamâwhen itâs pretty hot.â
âHow long will it take you to teach me to shoot?â she asked.
âThat depends, maâam. I reckon I could show you how to pull the trigger in a jiffy. That would be a certain kind of shootinâ. But as for showinâ you how to hit somethinâ you shoot at, why, thatâs a little different. Iâve knowed men that practiced shootinâ for years, maâam, anâ they couldnât hit a barn if they was inside of it. Thereâs others that can hit most anything, right handy. They say itâs all in the eye anâ the nerves, maâamâwhatever nerves are.â
âYou havenât any nerves, I suppose, or you wouldnât speak of them that way.â
âIf you mean that I go to hollerinâ anâ jumpinâ around when somethinâ happens, why I ainât got any. But Iâve seen folks with nerves, maâam.â
He was looking directly at her when he spoke, his gaze apparently without subtlety. But she detected a gleam that seemed far back in his eyes, and she knew that he referred to her actions of the other night.
She blushed. âI didnât think you would remind me of that,â she said.
âWhy, I didnât, maâam. I didnât mention any names. But of course, a womanâs got nerves; they canât help it.â
âOf course men are superior,â she taunted.
She resisted an inclination to laugh, for she was rather astonished to discover that manâs disposition to boast was present in this son of the wilderness. Also, she was a little disappointed in him.
But she saw him redden.
âI ainât bragginâ, maâam. Take them on an average, anâ I reckon woman has got as much grit as men. But they show it different. Theyâre quicker to imagine things than men. That makes them see things where there ainât anything to see. A manâs mother is always a woman, maâam, anâ if heâs got any grit in him he owes a lot of it to her. I reckon I owe more to my mother than to my father.â
His gaze was momentarily somber, and she felt a quick, new interest in him. Or had she felt this interest all alongâa desire to learn something more of him than he had expressed?
âYou might get off your horse and sit in the shade for a minute. It is hot, youâve had a long ride, and I am not quite ready to begin shooting,â she invited.
He got off Patches, led him to the shade of the house, hitched him, and then returned to the porch, taking a chair near her.
âAunt Martha says you were born here,â Ruth said. âHave you always been a cowboy?â
A flash that came into his eyes was concealed by a turn of the head. So she had asked Aunt Martha about him.
âI donât remember ever beinâ anything else. As far back as I cân recollect, thereâs been cows hanginâ around.â
âHave you traveled any?â
âTo Denver, Frisco, Kansas City. I was in Utah, once, lookinâ over the Mormons. Theyâre a curious lot, maâam. I never could see what on earth a man wanted half a dozen wives for. One can manage a man right clever. But half a dozen! Why, theyâd be pullinâ one anotherâs hair out, fightinâ over him! One would be wantinâ him to do one thing, anâ another would be wantinâ him to do another. Anâ between them, the man would be goinâ off to drown himself.â
âBut a woman doesnât always manage her husband,â she defended.
âDonât she, maâam?â he said gently, no guile in his eyes. âWhy, all the husbands Iâve seen seemed to be pretty well managed. You can see samples of it every day, maâam, if you look around. Young fellows that have acted pretty wild when they was single, always sort of steady down when theyâre hooked into double harness. They go to actinâ quiet anâ subdued-likeâlike theyâd lost all interest in life. I reckon it must be their wives managinâ them, maâam.â
âItâs a pity, isnât it?â she said, her chin lifting.
âThe men seem to like it, maâam. Every day thereâs new ones makinâ contracts for managers.â
âI suppose you will never sacrifice yourself?â she asked challengingly.
âIt ainât time, yet, maâam,â he returned, looking straight at her, his eyes narrowed, with little wrinkles in the corners. âIâm waitinâ for you to tell Masten that you donât want to manage him.â
âWe wonât talk about that, please,â she said coldly.
âThen we wonât, maâam.â
She sat looking at him, trying to be coldly critical, but not succeeding very well. She was trying to show him that there was small hope of him ever realizing his desire to have her âmanageâ him, but she felt that she did not succeed in that very well either. Perplexity came into her eyes as she watched him.
âWhy is it that you donât like Willard Masten?â she asked at length. âWhy is it that he doesnât like you?â
His face sobered. âI donât recollect to have said anything about Masten, maâam,â he said.
âBut you donât like him, do you?â
A direct answer was required. âNo,â he said simply.
âWhy?â she persisted.
âI reckon mebbe youâd better ask Masten,â he returned, his voice expressionless. Then he looked at her with an amused grin. âIf itâs goinâ to take you any time to learn to shoot, I reckon weâd better begin.â
She got up, went into the house for the pistol and cartridges, and came out again, the weapon dangling from her hand.
âShucks!â he said, when he saw the pistol, comparing its huge bulk to the size of the hand holding it, âyouâll never be able to hold it, when it goes off. You ought to have a smaller one.â
âUncle Jep says this ought to stop anything it hits,â she declared. âThat is just what I want it to do. If I shoot anything once, I donât want to have to shoot again.â
âI reckon youâre right bloodthirsty, maâam. But I expect itâs so big for you that you wonât be able to hit anything.â
âIâll show you,â she said, confidently. âWhere shall we go to shoot? We shall have to have a target, I suppose?â
âNot a movinâ one,â he said gleefully. âAnâ I ainât aiminâ to hold it for you!â
âWait until you are asked,â she retorted, defiantly. âPerhaps I may be a better shot than you think!â
âI hope so, maâam.â
She looked resentfully at him, but followed him as he went out near the pasture fence, taking with him a soap box that he found near a shed, and standing it up behind a post, first making sure there were no cattle within range in the direction that the bullets would take. Then he stepped off twenty paces, and when she joined him he took the pistol from her hands and loaded it from the box. He watched her narrowly as she took it, and she saw the concern in his eyes.
âOh, I have used a revolver before,â she told him, ânot so large a one as this, of course. But I know better than to point it at myself.â
âI see you do, maâam.â His hand went out quickly and closed over hers, for she had been directing the muzzle of the weapon fairly at his chest. âYou ought never point it at anybody that you donât want to shoot,â he remonstrated gently.
He showed her how to hold the weapon, told her to stand sideways to the target, with her right arm extended and rigid, level with the shoulder.
He took some time at this; three times after she extended her arm he seemed to find it necessary to take hold of the arm to rearrange its position, lingering long at this work, and squeezing the pistol hand a little too tightly, she thought.
âDonât go to pullinâ the trigger too fast or too hard,â he warned; âa little time for the first shot will save you shootinâ again, mebbeâuntil you get used to it. Sheâll kick some, but youâll get onto that pretty quick.â
She pulled the trigger, and the muzzle of the pistol flew upward.
âI reckon that target feels pretty safe, maâam,â he said dryly. âBut that buzzard up there will be pullinâ his freightâif heâs got any sense.â
She fired again, her lips compressed determinedly. At the report a splinter of wood flew from the top of the post. She looked at him with an exultant smile.
âThatâs better,â he told her, grinning; âyouâll be
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