■I M M--' DEVIL’5 HALF WILL LEVINGTON COMFORT OI»yilK*HT OIP )' ‘ ♦ ■>* ' 1^1 l1 h ’il ■ ^ M . i* »■/ t: .f I ■nv 'f.‘.>.- Ml ('courreJ t‘> n;e to Cr'll this .1 l)ii,i^t*v 1 ocds " 'T a 111!V ill affil- 'II. I r niviy 1 e’'!Olh. • all events, it be.ean ’he Flint tv;in to . whfi'e v.'e ' au and :v t''rej;ntluTC' !. p. rtie. e\en to io«>k 11 v.a I'lose to the Mexi- vhere I’ve always noted . t'> sieken. Then there Ui^h \v')!nen about to keep ^’il nuieh nose- diri) gra\ , !ik.'vlu>t-uiiumed glass. ‘‘Steve's nc\ cr I his wnv ''vlu'ii he's himself." Tin !C)\A 'V. refiiinj; of an unlovely yel- . inasmuch as Steve didn't w ith any of the rest of us. ■ ’•'.c f'ndurauce lay. The - od when Steve awoke the Martin camc- in from the to ;^L‘C ii liir: brother r'.'Ctled s- ‘ft ■ule h.tir-dyt'. PvntiT's field 1' Disconi >r human Irv I'ht ts eaine t.> t.»\vn in a '•■'rt I'.ai'.d-in iiar. I fashion, ust a few days after Mar\’ Clive i-\vn to make buns. pies. ^’’i2:er-:''rea>l and coffee-cake. She '• '-1^'^. delev^tnble as her cookies, a!i i ♦r*‘'.i';urel b.er from the i-t S':e eovd 1 have made a livins; • I :".i: ’ p'.o>. . . . The Flints were n'odiurn - si?:ed men, quick, small- sl '>pe - slKXildere.i and low 's '•f'd. They seemed conditioned an 1 s -ip’-iisticated.but my.good friend, Di'isey Leeds, remarked: ■ I’vo always been dead-set against splittin’ hnman packages into twins. Th^ annuals of mankind prove that there ain't more than enough virtues shelled out per nativity. Look at .\h(^ Lincoln now! There's my style ■'" .1 m in m all respects, but suppose 1 had divvy the cristnin’ facilita- '.v'th an Ike'” takf '■ He ki.' day wax ,.. : next morning, riaim frciiuont help. “^’ou routined me a good deal last night, Steve." he said. “Did L-T ilidn't know?” was the satis faction he drew, a> the other started off for Biltong's. \ow in this v, i>man matter, I intend to go light and keep in my own shadow. . . . Mary Clive was one with Discord in hates and hopes: of the center and import in our midst, it might be said, of the moon in our hot night skies. I looked from afar at the soft-skinned, yellow-haired young woman, and the light rich t'lgure of her—all unhurt by toil. She was as far from me as the moon. It was sober Martin Flint w’ho seemed to mal-.e the headway to her heart. I have said that he was by nature a marrying man a reckonable state-builder, not a maverick. Didsey and I blessed his progress. Steve spent his nights at Bil tong’s and his days in watching h- inother work. Their claim was a very good one, as the river went; and the town tigured, as months drew on and the romance prospered, that Martin must have quite a leather stock ing cached somewhere for the bride. We all hoped so, and were glad for all the good that could come to Mart, because he was show ing whiter and braver every month in the little ways that count—the patience with sin, the soft hand with a mount, the quick hand with a gun in time of stress, and the voice that wins the child. Finally, when Steve appeared to realize that he was enter ing into a three-sided arrangement, instead much along his route that he forgets he's a public servant. Didsey and I cleared oitr voices to depart—when Martin called. He was shaking, and very white in the candle light of the cabin; his face shone with sweat, but hLs voice w'as con trolled: ‘‘You two have been powerful good to me,’’ he began .sim|dy, handing over.the letter. ‘‘It's hard for me to work this out alone. I’ve never had to do all the think ing before.’’ ^ *' Martin ; I don't ask you to forgive me, but you’ve got to believe I didn’t know until just now, Steve stole your money- I mean when he took me away. It just came out row—the awful truth. I made a big mistake, and I’m doing the suffering, but I didn’t know I was 'marrying a thief, and I won’t live with one. I think Steve will kill me, be cause I don’t let him in ” The letter got a bit incoherent here for a space, as it had a license to be, but finished “ He w^as so like you when he came ; and yet so different in just the ways I thought I wanted you a little different. I was blind and wicked, but oh, I am paying the cost. ... I write to pray you to come here before someone is killed. .Steve's awful. Mary Clive.” I liked the woman from that letter. . . . “He was so like you when he came; and yet so different in just the ways I thought I want ed you to be a little different!'’ This rang true to me. I could imagine Steve’s magic after the silent adoring style of the heavier brother. The more I think of it, too, there’s some thing penetrating in Didsey’s later com ment, “The Flints bein’ so much alike con fused her morals.” I’ve never had a woman— never done a part to shut your ears to that call. Then, lookin’ at it solely from Steve’s point of \dew^: He’ll swing easier—for some last words wnth you.' ’ “But you couldn’t understand,” Martin replied mildly. Anyway, w'e three w’ent over to Mariposa. I w'on’t soon forget the night we struck that town. Rio Rt)jo was sloping by, mudi^y, feverish and still. Night was com ing on, but the sand w^as a griddle, still hot Which remark nettled Didsey, who likes to feel he’s carrying the crowd when on the floor. “Oh, I don’t know, enough truth ought to seep into even Mariposa over night to spoil that.” An ominous jeer went up from the crowd. “Twin brother” had a shop-worn sound to me. I spoke to the big fellow whom they called Ping Delor. “If you hit Discord, being sent for, we wouldn’t keep you standing out here all even- the shadow's, lights ahead and endless moun tains around all. ... A naked baby on the road before us was suddenly snatched away by a mad-faced w^oman, who ran from us to her door as if we were wild beasts; then stood there screaming crazily. Her man ap peared from behind the hut wdth a shot-gun, and presently began to yell for his neighbor. “What is this—some mountaineous mad house?” Didsey mumbled. There were now’a pair of Mariposers trail ing us, a couple ahead and another skirting around to get into to-wn before us. Really it wasn’t like a village of \vhite men at all, but stuffy as a dream. When the poor de\dls caught up the sirength of a mob, they closed in and we three looked into enough guns to stop a stampede of steers. “Do you-all alw’^ays welcome strangers to Mariposa this elaborate?” Didsey in quired. “Whar did’ge pick up yer fren’s, Lat- trice?” a long cool individual drawded, looking Martin in the eye. Of course, the trouble was now plain. Our companion w^as taken for Steve, who w^as Lattrice in ]Mariposa. I thought of the woman snatch- man’s share'for them—good or bad. Any- ing her babe away. Steve had been busy from noon-day burning. . . . Huts dim in ing, pickled in sweat on the edge of nothing. way, it struck me solid as proper medicine to get busy in the case of Mary Clive. Put ting everything else aside, she wanted to do the right thing now. She wanted a home. It may be because I haven’t a wife, that I with something more than clean man-killing from that. Martin saw it now also, but did not answer. He was thinking too hard. The only thing botherin’ us is yer fren’s, We generally listen to people w e don’t know —at least, let em’ buy a drink.” “All to the good for nerve,” said Delor. “Come on, men, we can’t do nothin’ ’till we hear from the French Drip Cave delegation —an’ you say you want to drag the woman into this dirty mess?” “Only on the grounds that it ain’t,” re marked Didsey. “What do you do with w’oman-beaters over’n your white man's town? ” I felt the shock of the words as they passed through poor Martin. “We don't feature ’em so’s to make ’em popular,” said Didsey, “bein’ what you might call not strong on women-folks over home.” Big Ping stepped into the doorway of the bar-room, and faced the crowd outside. Only for a second or two at a time did his eyes leave Martin, but he appeared to ad dress Didsey: “Supposin’ you’d shut up shop of an trailed into silence. The smell of earth evenin’ over’n your home-hamlet, w:hen you came out of the cave, but it w^as warm and sudden hears the screams of a wWpped wo- pent like a long-shut room. I heard the man—hears the voice and the blow's of the snapping of roots in the fire; then a sudden man w'ho broke into her house^’ Supposin’, gust of men’s whispering behind, but I when you an’ others ran to help, you got couldn’t turn to see. My eyes were lost in shot at by this man—so’s your townsmen the inner dark. I felt the shirt sticking to “What d9 you say?” the twin asked quick and low. Delor answered evasively, “You finish him, an’ we won’t have to.” Martin studied a moment. It was plain to me that Steve Flint’s room in hell was to be used that night. The brother saw it, too. “Show^ me the w’ay,” he said, dully. The mouth of the cave was in the hilis a mile from town. We all set out. “Martin, don’t play the ferret here!'’ I w'hispered, on the way. “Steve's amuck He’ll kill you.” There \vas something akin to madness in the eyes w'hich mutely implored me to say no more. A big fire was burning at the mouth of the cave. Two men of the running guard re ported that nothing had been heard of the prisoner, since the messenger had ridden back to town. They stood with repeating rifles just out of range from within. rabbit couldn’t have scurried out and lived. Martin looked slowdy about the firelit faces, pressed my hand and started toward the en trance. Really, it was now' for the first time, that I realized how fond I was of Martin Flint. Didsey cursed softly tftider his breath. The drowd was silent now. We heard Martin's call—a tomb-like rum bling: “Halloo-oo, Steve! . . . I’m cornin’ in. It’s me—Martin!” There was no answer. Martin’s steDS X-'-w vou take them twins. Steve of losing a partner, and began a moral clean- can t see w'hy a woman isn’t allow'ed to get Lattrice,” the big fellow drawled on. I 1 M.ir'in." Didsey went on, “roll t-'ire’lur and bile ’em down to a !’ ';.*\vev-ht licrure, and you'd have one j ’T t t \ -'.1 j^Tnt ,not a world-whipper, V-.r i c:ood average male mammal.” ■■ what’^ the matter with ’em n > v. I iivjuired. “Thev’re d: t;:r, crracelul with tlieir hk': ] .-arry -;ame genial—as be- . >trani;fr'=; - “There you are- that’s just it!” Didsey rx' [aimed with \irtorious spirit. ‘What"” ■ \ou dori t say ‘he.’ You don’t sav ■ r hi« here Mart or ‘TTiis here J'teve stacks up int-) a pretty good gent.' but ’they'!" Didsey ha> a con\incing wav. . . . Xot : -r mf'nrh -r so were any of u- able to tell I he t wins apart, and thry didn't help a great df^al in the maltexof distinguishing garments. I hey weren’t alike inside, however. I pres ently began to develop the case this way: if fjt’ner of the Flints said anything with point i.’jd delicacy, it was Steve; if either tarried at Biltong’s bar during working hours, :t Steve; if only one was working the fia’m at any time, it wasn’t Steve; if either f'ounLcnance lit up like a dance-hall—it ■•'■asn t Martin’s. Close familiarity with a ;>uir of tru^'diatched honey-bees will finally •naHle you to tell them apart; so it was with ’ he brother'*. Say, four month?, and every- ')-)dy in the s-ttlement understood that Steve ‘va.i th'‘ luxury and Martin the substance. Of the laiter'.s love for his weaker, flashier half - well, opinion is still di\nded in Dis- ' >i>., ->ome lu)lding it godly and some insane. ear;y show'ed town-spirit, pre- . nng a conicdine«!s about his cabin and an unobtrusive l^ut seemingly sincere inteuest n the luck of ull men. As natural a family .nan as T ever knew, he was—even habits, a hard worker, a man who loved the cabin up, it really seemed as if the decent brother had come into his high noon of happiness. For true, there never was a serener face on a man than the night when Martin took his brother over to the bakery to meet the bride. It was well that he did this, though the music of his life v;as broken. It was better so. than after he had married the woman. As for Mary Clive’s part, I haven't a word to say in comment. The naked fact is that her heart turned from Martin to the more imperious attraction of the other. Steve was the sort that could make a woman's heart beat -at least the kind of women we know. There is no use expatiating on the ugly event. Months of gentle and tender wooing were forgotten in a night. Within a fortnight after he had first looked into the eyes of his brother's chosen, Steve and Mary Clive fled together. Also was taken, the gold which brother Martin had bitten out of the Canon. Thus w’as the latter looted in a day— heart and cache. There were no words for us. We couldn’t tell him that a woman who w’ould do this on the eve of her marriage, might have been tempted afterward. I never pitied a man so. He seemed suddenly depleted of health, muscle and heart. We used to go and sit with him for a while in the evenings—a sort of running guard of us—clumsy but eager to do any good we could. Martin wouldn’t talk, seldom came down to the hc;>rt of town, but worked like a fiend and sat in his doorway, unwashed from the terrificdaysin the Cafi(m. More than once I caught him thus, staring into the red-plumed west with eyes of a man whose brain is runnini? down. Xeatest of all about his cabin before, the place began to take on the look of a boar's nest. I don’t believe he would have taken trouble to rej>lenish his food stock, if we hadn t started in to bring him stuff. That up when she falls down once. Many choice male spirits develop a chronic crouch from practice in falling gracefully. True, Mar tin Flint w'as too w’hite a man to be made a monkey of a second time, but I couldn’t see Mary Clive trying it. A look in the cool gray eye of Didsey Leeds told me he was thinking my way. “Martin,” said I, “this wortian needs you now’ more than ever she did. Steve’s gone liked him. Leadership sat well on him. “We’ve got to kill you good and quick, but how far and how deep in are these stran gers? Dam’ these compljications!” “What has this Lattrice done?!.’ Martin asked jerkily. The crowd pressed in savagely for answ^er. Didsey who never stays long out of the talk- pot, now raised his voice: “Look a-here, strangers! You-all are ’w’ay off tne mainline mm-' To^d rdoice .hVffart of I How he worked! Often half a centuj-v. . . ' "oman for i heard the ring of his pick at that gray hour A L. • r. . . when the blanket is a soft seduction, and . Biltong s, SIX months after more than once he was still at it, fifteen hours ^ n • • • "’>ht drove him up to the been packmg Biltong s hell-seepage in two- twilight of the Canon’s rim. Full ten the staring day broke over weeks passed before the crisis lifted. One the eastern iunge. Moreover, he had been Sunday morning Didsey and I strolled over -aimng moroeritum m this sort of thing for to find him bath-bricking the cabin floor. Everything washable was breezing in the .hat now he earned a burden hke a house sun outside. Martin was sw’eating over the orally sloshing suds, but we rejoiced to find the wonM f ‘melody. It eyes straight in his head again, and lively, would have made the reputaUon of a villain “ on tiii' ■ ■ - laugh thumping dow.i steel stairs • as a look in his eye, too, of a man whose "»ul has been fumed out for the nonce, and ■vhose body doesn’t care. Steve had shown quite formidable class for treatments at Bil tong’s, but nothing like this, heretofore. Martin entered in mid-evening, stepped up to his brother and talked low', rather sug gesting than pleading. The ajnswer silenc^ the bar-room—a pen Z ^ “ My Gawd, neighbor,” Didsey remarked, the boards hard as a pa^ot s tone, that “ I m sure afraid you’re goin’ to live.” gh. ^ It made me think of disks of metal Martin smiled. It ?vas the first. . . . mm y/- : -'ri' ■' ^ ( and neighbors are perforated and on sick report onprecedented, an’ your pore old Doc is buzzin’perturbed from sore to sore—” “And you-all let this female-punisher— this shootin’ gent get aw’ay?” Didsey in quired. “Not aig-sactly,” drawled Delor, cooling, his eye on Martin, “that is, we did have him herded up solitaire in French Drip Cave awhile ago. Returns from thar’ll be in shortlj’. . . , Only Lattrice wasn’t dressed like this here—when w*e drove him into the dark yonder; in fact, he wasn’t dressed much to speak of.” ^ “Why don’t you go in the cave and get him?” Didsey asked. ‘There hain’t no one died from the shootin’ incidents yit,” Delor replied con cisely. “Deekin Deevy is hoverin’, so t’ speak. If Deekin dies, w-e go in an’ get him at any pric;p, alius providin’ he’s there —an’ not here, W’hich would simplify con siderable. This here town is slow’t’ anger, an’ doesn’t care to rush through a zone of light in the range of a man in the dark v;ith two guns. And then, Lattrice has made some promises about usin’ up all his am munition. All in all, we’ve been content to starve him for a day or two.” Nails were driven into Martin Flint this hour. Literally he _ withered under the words of Big Ping. “What of the w’oman?” I asked. “She’s changin’ back to proper color as well as could be expected.” The thought was queer to me, queer and unpalatable—that Mary Clive's soft, white skin should be blackened by a man’s hand. “You say this Lattrice broke into the woman's house?” I went on, after a min ute. “That’s the idea,” Delor replied, making clear that she had not lied in tke letter. “ Night came, when she wouldn’t let him in. Maybe we’re soft an’ ol’-fashioned here in Mariposie, but w’e ’low’ fur a w’oman's natu ral institution of jedgment. We told Lat trice to sleep out that night, offerin’ him accommodations various, suggestin’ he turn up next mornin’ with a shave an’ shine an’ try agin. Stid o’ that, he goes on drinkin’. my skin; the need for a drink. Hate for the seconds, as they passed, sunk li^e-deep into memory. . . . It seemed an hour. . . . Then a voice from far within—tired, hoarse, hopeless. “It s all over, men! . , . Poor Steve—* saved nle—from the dirty work! ” Into the light he came, walking jerkil}*, like a wooden figure pushed from behind. It was the face of jMariin grow'n old, it seemed to me, haggard, horrible with suffer ing. My thought was that only the beating of Mary Clive had steeled him to go in. Out into the firelight, he came, mumbling throatily the repetition—that all was over! Then I was conscious of a woman beside me —Mary Clive—heard a catch in her throat and her scream: “That isn’t Martin! That’s Steve I— He’s left his brother in there I ” For a second, the twin looked at the bruised beautiful face in the firelight—then burst into laughter. It was all plain with that laugh—hard as a parrot's tone—disks of metal thumping down steel stairs—the laugh of a man whose spul has fied and whose body doesn't care. . . . The hideous shock of a pistol—his own—and Steve was dow’n. We caught up brands from the fire, and rushed into the cave. Pear was savage in every brain that murder had been done within, but this was wrong. At a quick turn of the passage, fifty feet from the mouth, Martin stood at bay, squinting at the flares. He w^as half-dressed and had been getting into the rags Steve had worn. The word that he lived w’as shouted back—so that I knew the woman heard. ... In all but spirit, this w'as the man w’hom the Mari posers had hunted. They inclined at first to be rough on account of the trick. Mar tin had heard the shot, and the voices had told him w'hat Steve had done. “I ve got no favors to ask,’’ he said dullv. “I never intended to kill him. I couldn't let him starve! I meant him to take the long chance—of running for it in my clothes!” Didsey patted his shouldei; I wrung the limp cold hand of the man w’ho was making Finally, two nights ago, he gives us the slip, me think so fast. I was glad that he lived, breaks m, an aforesaid screams starts the Big Ping Delor rebuked his men, as one towm. . . . Oh, he am t pretty nor respect- hav’ing authority. able inside, this Lattrice. Yet, I’ve seen “Quit yer grumblin’, fellers!” he ccm- tum look just as innercent and ready-to- manded. “Tliis here’s a family matter. burst-into-tears as this a-ledged twin o’ his’n.” ‘4- It was now that Martin spoke up. His face W’as gray-white in the broken light from the saloon, and there was something in his voice I hadn’t heard for long. There tour or five nights later we w’ere sitting as ...1 usual in his doorway, discussing bugs, tobacco and the sundown, when Gil Reeks hco over in Mariposa where they hang for training-but. brought a letter. Martin took it in a swift, nervous way, and disiippeared. We heard him fumbling w’ith matches inside. Gil Reeks w^as disposed to w'hisper a reflection upon the courtesy of the twin. I C.\rOHT HIM THUS, STARING INTO THE RED-PLUMED WEST WITH EYES OF A MAN WHOSE BRAIN IS RUNNING DOWN take it from me, that letter’s from a woman w’ho’s bigger and finer for it.’ and the block shows red. We came down here at the call of a woman, and entered this settlement proper. We’re three days on the trail from Discord, and accounted for day All we’ve got to know’ is that Mariposie s dead lies yonder at the mouth of the cave. ’ Kindness broke dow’n the strange fellow, as hostility never could have done. “I didn’t want to betray you-all,” he said r 1-' -j , . unsteadily, “but I couldn’t lead him out to Men of Mariposa, he said, clumsily, be strung up. Oh, Gawd, you never could i understand! He—he w’as like the other half o’ me!” “ The devil’s half, Martin!’^ The words startled, silenced all. The tone was soft, thrilling. Mary Clive had followed us in. The men stepped back, so that the way was clear betw’een her and her old love. There seemed to be some bis; tratmK poison in words It burned and “That’s all right,” said Didsey, briefly, thought of'or no't'lSt'” DidsVsidln •n . ,1 ,„en s mmds, without destroying “He’ll thanh you soon enough. He’s had his ^h-ha’nded w ’ ^ ?ka^ ClL needs some mortial troubles.” help. Think w^hat it cost her to turn to you for it—an’ yet her heart turned to you. That show^ what’s in it. It ain’t no man’s He looked at us in his white terrified way, and night before that—all of w^hich is a shaking his head. “I hadn’t thought of negotiable fac’ . . . If the lady’s here, she’ll seem’her again,” he mumbled. - i “We weren’t discussing what you had Don t mind w’hat he says now, fellers,” Gil went back to town grumbling. He’s *M.irtin ^M gged, turning to us. His fare was getting old and crabbed—been a guest so prove W’hat we say. She left Discord w’ith this man’s twin brother, who appears to be ‘Lattrice’ in this section. He was Steve Flint over our w’ay—and this here’s Martin by rights. He run off with the woman I was going to marr>’, and took the money I had saved. His life belongs to me.” “Go and get it!” voices cried. “Go to the cave an’ get your man!” “That’s what I’m askin’,” Martin said, looking straight at Delor. * Didsey and I in, but a quick, im- meaning in that unconscious clearing of the men between them. Tall, slender, the blue eyes shining but pitiful—she stood w^aiting for Martin to speak—in the smoky flare of the torches. There was so much in what she had I have been thinking about it ploring look froni Martin’s eyes made us silent. Delor, w'ho seemed so slow in all things, missed nothing. “Do you mean to kill him in there—or bring him out?” Flint yesterday, to-day'andtV-morr'ow^; out?® MXXt‘^, ,• r t,- H M?;"” the crowd that rw«e bor“"Ld the ™ signifying the a£5nnative. half slain, outright and for all. 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