Rita Standish was one of those women who are born to make discord. Men saw her and desired. And her laughing eyes surveyed them impersonally, as playthings which had been sent to dance attendance upon her and amuse her.
Vincent Shaffer had been the first of the two. He had sought to impress her with his air of polish, that courtly reserve which had won women before. But when he had been hard hit he lost his mask and begged for her hand in marriage, as eager as a child.
Her laughing eyes surveyed him.
“You have not been hardened to the world. You are a mere boy,” she had told him. “Now father is in Mexico. Perhaps he would have room for you on his mine. Then, after six months — who knows?”
And so Vincent Shaffer had entered the Mexican wilderness, cursing it in his heart, afraid of it. And he wondered whether she had merely devised this method of securing assistance for her father and getting rid of a too pressing suitor, or whether she had been really sincere. The thought tortured him, even as the heat and the coarse fare tortured him.
Dan Harder had been the second. Her laughing eyes had looked at his huge hands.
“You are out of place in a parlor,” she had said. “Now my father has a mine in Mexico. I believe he might find a place—”
Harder had made one of his typical remarks, a remark that was far from the subject.
“The time will come,” he had said, “when your eyes will quit laughing at existence.”
But he had gone to the mine.
Each suspected why the other was there. Vincent Shaffer hated Dan Harder, as he did the country. Dan Harder always regarded Shaffer with quizzical amusement as though wondering what Rita Standish could have seen in such a man.
Robert Standish regarded them impartially through eyes which had been bleached into expressionless courtesy and treated them alike.
Chapter II
In the Hands of “The Wolf?”
From without the ’dobe there sounded the tramp of hoofs as horses broke from a rapid trot into a ragged walk, came to a stop before the doorway.
Robert Standish arose from the desk, went to the door and threw it open. Vincent Shaffer reached toward the rifle with moist hands, then thought better of the action and drew away. Dan Harder remained on the edge of the cot, his knee gripped between his huge hands.
They were a ragged lot, the men without. Saddles are worth more in Mexico than the horses that carry them — at times. These men had sacks, bits of rawhide, scraps of leather, anything that might serve the purpose for saddles. For shoes they had sandals, and their browned feet showed skin that had been cracked and toughened until it resembled leather itself.
The men looked upon those within the ’dobe with eyes that were avaricious. They spoke no word, and that was a bad sign.
Robert Standish knew the country and the ways of the people. Perhaps he was the only one of the three white men who could form an accurate estimate of the danger. But Robert Standish had lived a life. Death would find him indifferent.
“Where is your leader?” he asked.
There was no reply from the horsemen. They looked about them with loot-hungry eyes.
Standish raised his voice.
And then there was a commotion in the rear. A short, broad-shouldered man spurred his horse forward. Here was a saddle that was inlaid with silver. Here were shoes that had cost more than a hundred sandals.
But the face was the same. It was a heavy face, given but little to expression and never to thought. The eyes were loot-hungry, but they looked not at the clothes of the Americans. They flickered over the ore dump, the machinery of the mine.
Shortly behind him came a different type of man.
If the leader was named for the wolf, the man behind should have been named for the fox. His face was thin, mobile with expression, but the expression of cunning dominated all the other expressions. His eyes were large, lustrous, his hands slender, the fingers tapering. The mouth was thin. On occasions it could be cruel.
“
Standish stood to one side of the doorway and bowed deeply. It was noticeable that he did not step outside of the protection of the thick walls.
“Will you honor us by entering? I regret that we cannot offer you hospitality. Our help have been terrified by the lawlessness of the country. They have left us without warning. Now that you are here we know there will be no lawlessness, but our help did not understand you were so close.”
In such manner did the two men dissemble their real feelings, neither being deceived by the speech of the other.
The fox-like man slipped furtively from the saddle. The leader lurched his bulk to the ground.