An Apache Princess - Page 154/162

Of him there came sad news but the day after his crack-brained,

Quixotic essay. Infatuated with Elise, and believing in her promise to

marry him, he had placed his savings in her hands, even as had Downs

and Carmody. He had heard the story of her visiting Blakely by night,

and scouted it. He heard, in a maze of astonishment, that she was

being sent to Prescott under guard for delivery to the civil

authorities, and taking the first horse he could lay hands on, he

galloped in chase. He had overtaken the ambulance on Cherry Creek, and

with moving tears she had besought him to save her. Faithful to their

trust, the guard had to interpose, but, late at night, they reached

Stemmer's ranch; were met there by a relief guard sent down by Captain

Stout; and the big sergeant who came in charge, with special

instructions from Stout's own lips, was a new king who knew not

Joseph, and who sternly bade Shannon keep his distance. Hot words

followed, for the trooper sergeant would stand no hectoring from an

equal in rank. Shannon's heart was already lost, and now he lost his

head. He struck a fellow-sergeant who stood charged with an important

duty, and even his own comrades could not interpose when the

infantrymen threw themselves upon the raging Irish soldier and

hammered him hard before they could subdue and bind him, but bind him

they did. Sadly the trooper guard went back to Sandy, bringing the

"borrowed" horse and the bad news that Shannon had been arrested for

assaulting Sergeant Bull, and all men knew that court-martial and

disgrace must follow. It was Shannon's last run on the road he knew so

well. Soldiers of rank came forward to plead for him and bear witness

to his worth and services, and the general commanding remitted most of

the sentence, restoring to him everything the court had decreed

forfeited except the chevrons. They had to go, yet could soon be

regained. But no man could restore to him the pride and self-respect

that went when he realized that he was only one of several plucked and

deluded victims of a female sharper. While the Frenchwoman ogled and

languished behind the bars, Shannon wandered out into the world again,

a deserter from the troop he was ashamed to face, an unfollowed,

unsought fugitive among the mining camps in the Sierras. "Three stout

soldiers stricken from the rolls--two of them gone to their last

account," mused poor Plume, as at last he led his unhappy wife away to

the sea, "and all the work of one woman!"