Free Air - Page 143/176

But at second glance--was it Jeff? This man was tanned to a thick even

brown in which his eyes were startlingly white. His hands were burned

red; there was a scar across one of them; and he was standing with them

cockily at his hips, all unlike the sleekly, noisily quiet Jeff of

Brooklyn. He was in corduroy trousers and belted corduroy jacket, with a

khaki-colored flannel shirt.

But his tranquilly commanding smile was Jeff's, and his lean grace; and

Jeff's familiar amused voice greeted her paralyzed amazement with: "Hello, pard! Ain't I met you some place in Montana?"

"Well--where--in--the----"

"Just landed from Alaska. Had to run up there from California. How are

you, little princess?"

His hand was out to her, then both hands, beseechingly, but she did not

run to him, as she had at Flathead Lake. She stalked him cautiously, and

shook hands--much too heartily. She sought cover in the wing-chair

and--much too cordially--she invited: "Tell me all about it."

He was watching her. Already his old pursuing determination, his steady

dignity, were beginning to frighten her. But he calmly dropped into a

straight chair, and obliged: "It's really been quite a lively journey. Didn't know I could like

roughing-it so well. And it was real roughing-it, pretty much. Oh, not

dangerous at all, but rather vigorous. I had to canoe up three hundred

miles of a shallow river, with one Indian guide, making a portage every

ten miles or so, and we got tipped over in the rapids now and then--the

Big Chief almost got drowned once--and we camped at night in the

original place where they invented mosquitoes--and one morning I shot a

black bear just in time to keep him from eating my boots."

"Oh!" she sighed in admiration, and "Oh!" again, uneasily.

Nothing had been said about it; Jeff was the last person in the world to

spoil his triumph by commenting on it; but both of them knew that they

had violently changed places; that now it was she who was the limp

indoor-dweller, and he who was the ruddy ranger; that as he had admired

her at Flathead Lake, so now it was hers to admire, and his to be

serenely heroic.

She was not far from the worshiping sub-deb in her sighing, "How did

you get the scar?"

"That? Oh, nothing."

"Please tell me."

"Really and truly. Nothing at all. Just a drunken fellow with a knife,

playing the fool. I didn't have to touch him--quite sure he could have

given me a frightful beating and all that sort of thing. It was the Big

Chief who got rid of him."

"He--cut you? With a kniiiiiife? Ohhhhhhh!"

She ran to him, pityingly stroked the scar, looked down at him with

filmy eyes. Then she tried to retreat, but he retained her hand, glanced

up at her as though he knew her every thought. She felt weak. How could

she escape him? "Please!" she begged flutteringly.