Charley, the herder, had one of his queer spells the other day, and
swore to me he had a letter from you. He told the blamed lie with a
sincere and placid eye, and even a smile of pride. Queer guy, that
Charley!
Flo and Lee Stanton had another quarrel--the worst yet, Lee tells me.
Flo asked a girl friend out from Flag and threw her in Lee's way, so to
speak, and when Lee retaliated by making love to the girl Flo got mad.
Funny creatures, you girls! Flo rode with me from High Falls to West
Fork, and never showed the slightest sign of trouble. In fact she was
delightfully gay. She rode Calico, and beat me bad in a race.
Adios, Carley. Won't you write me?
GLENN.
No sooner had Carley read the letter through to the end than she
began it all over again, and on this second perusal she lingered over
passages--only to reread them. That suggestion of her face sculptured by
shadows on the canyon walls seemed to thrill her very soul.
She leaped up from the reading to cry out something that was
unutterable. All the intervening weeks of shame and anguish and fury and
strife and pathos, and the endless striving to forget, were as if by the
magic of a letter made nothing but vain oblations.
"He loves me still!" she whispered, and pressed her breast with
clenching hands, and laughed in wild exultance, and paced her room like
a caged lioness. It was as if she had just awakened to the assurance she
was beloved. That was the shibboleth--the cry by which she sounded the
closed depths of her love and called to the stricken life of a woman's
insatiate vanity.
Then she snatched up the letter, to scan it again, and, suddenly
grasping the import of Glenn's request, she hurried to the telephone to
find the number of the hospital in Bedford Park. A nurse informed her
that visitors were received at certain hours and that any attention to
disabled soldiers was most welcome.
Carley motored out there to find the hospital merely a long one-story
frame structure, a barracks hastily thrown up for the care of invalided
men of the service. The chauffeur informed her that it had been used
for that purpose during the training period of the army, and later when
injured soldiers began to arrive from France.
A nurse admitted Carley into a small bare anteroom. Carley made known
her errand.
"I'm glad it's Rust you want to see," replied the nurse. "Some of these
boys are going to die. And some will be worse off if they live. But Rust
may get well if he'll only behave. You are a relative--or friend?"