The building of the U. P. R. as it advanced westward caused many
camps and towns to spring up and flourish, like mushrooms, in a
single night; and trains were run as far as the rails were laid.
Therefore strange towns and communities were born, like to nothing
that the world had ever seen before.
Warren Neale could not get away from the fascination of the work and
life, even though he had lost all his ambition and was now nothing
more than an ordinary engineer, insignificant and idle. He began to
drink and gamble in North Platte, more in a bitter defiance to fate
than from any real desire; then with Larry King he drifted out to
Kearney.
At Kearney, Larry got into trouble--characteristic trouble. In a
quarrel with a construction boss named Smith, Larry accused Smith of
being the crooked tool of the crooked commissioners who had forced
Neale to quit his job. Smith grew hot and profane. The cowboy
promptly slapped his face. Then Smith, like the fool he was, went
after his gun. He never got it out.
It distressed Neale greatly that Larry had shot up a man--and a
railroad man at that. No matter what Larry said, Neale knew the
shooting was on his account. This deed made the cowboy a marked man.
It changed him, also, toward Neale, inasmuch as that he saw his
wildness, was making small Neale's chances of returning to work.
Larry never ceased importuning Neale to go back to his job. After
shooting Smith the cowboy made one more eloquent appeal to Neale and
then left for Cheyenne. Neale followed him.
Cheyenne was just sobering up after its brief and tempestuous reign
as headquarters town, and though depleted and thin, it was now
making a bid for permanency. But the sting and wildness of life had
departed with the construction operations, and now Benton had become
the hub of the railway universe.
Neale boarded a train for Benton and watched with bitterness the
familiar landmarks he had learned to know so well while surveying
the line. He was no longer connected with the great project--no more
a necessary part of the great movement.
Beyond Medicine Bow the grass and the green failed and the immense
train of freight-cars and passenger-coaches, loaded to capacity,
clattered on into arid country. Gray and red, the drab and fiery
colors of the desert lent the ridges character--forbidding and
barren.
From a car window Neale got his first glimpse of the wonderful
terminus city, and for once his old thrills returned. He recalled
the distance--seven hundred--no, six hundred and ninety-eight miles
from Omaha. So far westward was Benton.
It lay in the heart of barrenness, alkali, and desolation, on the
face of the windy desert, alive with dust-devils, sweeping along,
yellow and funnel-shaped--a huge blocked-out town, and set where no
town could ever live. Benton was prey for sun, wind, dust, drought,
and the wind was terribly and insupportably cold. No sage, no
cedars, no grass, not even a cactus-bush, nothing green or living to
relieve the eye, which swept across the gray and the white, through
the dust, to the distant bare and desolate hills of drab.
The hell that was reported to abide at Benton was in harmony with
its setting.
The immense train clattered and jolted to a stop. A roar of wind, a
cloud of powdery dust, a discordant and unceasing din of voices,
came through the open windows of the car. The heterogeneous mass of
humanity with which Neale had traveled jostled out, struggling with
packs and bags.
Neale, carrying his bag, stepped off into half a foot of dust. He
saw a disintegrated crowd of travelers that had just arrived, and of
travelers ready to depart--soldiers, Indians, Mexicans, Negroes,
loafers, merchants, tradesmen, laborers, an ever-changing and ever-
remarkable spectacle of humanity. He saw stage-coaches with hawkers
bawling for passengers bound to Salt Lake, Ogden, Montana, Idaho; he
saw a wide white street--white with dust where it was not thronged
with moving men and women, and lined by tents and canvas houses and
clapboard structures, together with the strangest conglomeration of
painted and printed signs that ever advertised anything in the
world.
A woman, well clad, young, not uncomely, but with hungry eyes like
those of a hawk, accosted Neale. He drew away. In the din he had not
heard what she said. A boy likewise spoke to him; a greaser tried to
take his luggage; a man jostling him felt of his pocket; and as
Neale walked on he was leered at, importuned, jolted, accosted, and
all but mobbed.
A pistol-shot pierced the din. Some one shouted. A wave of the crowd
indicated commotion somewhere; and then the action and noise went on
precisely as before. Neale crossed five intersecting streets;
evidently the wide street he was on must be the main one.
In that walk of five blocks he saw thousands of persons, but they
were not the soldiers who protected the line, nor the laborers who
made the road. These were the travelers, the business people, the
stragglers, the nondescripts, the parasites, the criminals, the
desperadoes, and the idlers--all who must by hook or crook live off
the builders.
Neale was conscious of a sudden exhilaration. The spirit was still
in him. After all, his defeated ambition counted for nothing in the
great sum of this work. How many had failed! He thought of the
nameless graves already dotting the slopes along the line and
already forgotten. It would be something to live through the heyday
of Benton,
Under a sign, "Hotel," he entered a door in a clapboard house. The
place was as crude as an unfinished barn. Paying in advance for
lodgings, he went to the room shown him--a stall with a door and a
bar, a cot and a bench, a bowl and a pitcher. Through cracks he
could see out over an uneven stretch of tents and houses. Toward the
edge of town stood a long string of small tents and several huge
ones, which might have been the soldiers' quarters.
Neale went out in search of a meal and entered the first restaurant.
It was merely a canvas house stretched over poles, with compartments
at the back. High wooden benches served as tables, low benches as
seats. The floor was sand. At one table sat a Mexican, an Irishman,
and a Negro. The Irishman was drunk. The Negro came to wait on
Neale, and, receiving an order, went to the kitchen. The Irishman
sidled over to Neale.
"Say, did yez hear about Casey?" he inquired, in very friendly
fashion.
"No, I didn't," replied Neale. He remembered Casey, the flagman, but
probably there were many Caseys in that camp.
"There wus a foight, out on the line, yisteddy," went on the fellow,
"an' the dom' redskins chased the gang to the troop-train. Phwat do
you think? A bullet knocked Casey's pipe out of his mouth, as he wus
runnin', an' b'gorra, Casey sthopped fer it an' wus all shot up."
Neale knew that particular Casey, and he examined this loquacious
Irishman more closely. He recognized him as Pat Shane, one of the
trio he had known during the survey in the hills two years ago. The
recognition was like a stab to Neale. Memory of the Wyoming hills--
of the lost Allie Lee--cut him to the quick. Shane had aged greatly.
There were scars on his face that Neale had not seen before.
"Mister, don't I know yez?" leered Shane, studying Neale with bleary
eyes.
Neale did not care to be remembered. The waiter brought his dinner,
which turned out to be a poor one at a high price. After eating,
Neale went out and began to saunter along the walk. The sun had set
and the wind had gone down. There was no flying dust. The street was
again crowded with men, but nothing like it had been after the
arrival of the train. No one paid much attention to Neale. On that
walk he counted nineteen saloons, and probably some of the larger
places were of like nature, but not so wide open to the casual
glance.
Neale strolled through the town from end to end, and across the
railroad outside the limits, to a high bank, where he sat down. The
desert was beautiful away to the west, with its dull, mottled hues
backed by gold and purple, with its sweep and heave and notched
horizon. Near at hand it seemed drab and bare. He watched a long
train of flat and box cars come in, and saw that every car swarmed
with soldiers and laborers. The train discharged its load of
thousands, and steamed back for more.
Twilight fell. All hours were difficult for Neale, but twilight was
the most unendurable, for it had been the hour Allie Lee loved best,
and during which she and Neale had walked hand in hand along the
brook, back there in the lovely and beautiful valley in the hills.
Neale could not sit still long; he could not rest, nor sleep well,
nor work, nor indeed be of any use to himself or to any one, and all
because he was haunted and driven by the memory of Allie Lee. And at
such quiet hours as this, in the midst of the turmoil he had sought
for weeks, a sadness filled his soul, and an eternal remorse. The
love that had changed him and the life that had failed him seemed
utterly misrelated.
To and fro he paced on the bare ridge while twilight shadowed. A
star twinkled in the west, a night wind began to seep the sand. The
desert, vast, hidden, mysterious, yet so free and untrammeled,
darkened.
Lights began to flash up along the streets of Benton, and presently
Neale became aware of a low and mounting hum, like a first stir of
angry bees.
The loud and challenging strains of a band drew Neale toward the
center of the main street, where men were pouring into a big tent.
He halted outside and watched. This strident, businesslike, quick-
step music and the sight of the men and women attracted thereby made
Neale realize that Benton had arisen in a day and would die out in a
night; its life would be swift, vile, and deadly.
When the band ceased a sudden roar came from inside the big tent, a
commingling of the rough voices of men and the humming of wheels,
the clinking of glasses and gold, the rattling of dice, the hoarse
call of a dealer, the shuffling of feet--a roar pierced now and then
by the shrill, vacant, soundless laugh of a woman.
It was that last sound which almost turned Neale away from the door.
He shunned women. But this place fascinated him. He went in under
the flaming lamps.
The place was crowded--a huge tent stretched over a framework of
wood, and it was full of people, din, smoke, movement. The floor was
good planking covered with sand. Walking was possible only round the
narrow aisles between groups at tables.
Neale's sauntering brought him to the bar. It had to him a familiar
look, and afterward he learned that it had been brought complete
from St. Louis, where he had seen it in a saloon. It seemed a huge,
glittering, magnificent monstrosity in that coarse, bare setting.
Wide mirrors, glistening bottles, paintings of nude women, row after
row of polished glasses, a brawny, villainous barkeeper, with three
attendants, all working fast, a line of rough, hoarse men five deep
before the counter--all these things constituted a scene that had
the aspects of a city and yet was redolent with an atmosphere no
city ever knew. The drinkers were not all rough men. There were
elegant black-hatted, frock-coated men of leisure in that line--not
directors and commissioners and traveling guests of the U. P. R.,
but gentlemen of chance. Gamblers!
The band now began a different strain of dance music. Neale slowly
worked his way around. At the end of the big tent a wide door opened
into another big room--a dance-hall, full of dancers.
Neale had seen nothing like this in the other construction camps.
A ball was in progress. Just now it was merry, excited, lively.
Neale got inside and behind the row of crowded benches; he stood up
against a post to watch. Probably two-hundred people were in the
hall, most of them sitting. How singular, it struck Neale, to see
good-looking, bare-armed and bare-necked young women dancing there,
and dancing well! There were other women--painted, hollow-eyed--sad
wrecks of womanhood. The male dancers were young men, as years
counted, mostly unfamiliar with the rhythmic motion of feet to a
tune, and they bore the rough stamp of soldiers and laborers. But
there were others, as there had been before the bar, who wore their
clothes differently, who had a different poise and swing--young men,
like Neale, whose earlier years had known some of the graces of
society. They did not belong there; the young women did not belong
there. The place seemed unreal. This was a merry scene, apparently
with little sign, at that moment, of what it actually meant. Neale
sensed its undercurrent.
He left the dance-hall. Of the gambling games, he liked best both to
watch and to play poker. It had interest for him. The winning or
losing of money was not of great moment. Poker was not all chance or
luck, such as the roll of a ball, the turn of a card, or the facing
up of dice. Presently he became one of an interested group round a
table watching four men play poker.
One, a gambler in black, immaculate in contrast to his companions,
had a white, hard, expressionless face, with eyes of steel and thin
lips. His hands were wonderful. Probably they never saw the
sunlight, certainly no labor. They were as swift as light, too swift
for the glance of an eye. But when he dealt the cards he was slow,
careful, deliberate. The stakes were gold, and the largest heap lay
in front of him. One of his opponents was a giant of a fellow,
young, with hulking shoulders, heated face, and broken nose--a
desperado if Neale ever saw one. The other two players called this
strapping brute Fresno. The little man with a sallow face like a
wolf was evidently too intent on the game to look up. He appeared to
be losing. Beside his small pile of gold stood an empty tumbler. The
other and last player was a huge, bull-necked man whom Neale had
seen before. It was difficult to place him, but after studying the
red cheeks and heavy, drooping mustache, and hearing the loud voice,
he recognized him as a boss of graders--a head boss. Presently the
sallow-faced player called him Mull, and then Neale remembered him
well.
Several of the watchers round this table lounged away, leaving a
better vantage-place for Neale.
"May I sit in the game?" he inquired, during a deal.
The gambler leaned back and his swift white hands flashed. Neale
believed he had a derringer up each sleeve. A wrong word now would
precipitate a fight.
"Excuse me," said Neale, hastily. "I don't want to make trouble. I
just said I never saw this gentleman before."
"Nor I him," returned the gambler, courteously. "My name is Place
Hough and my word is not doubted."
Neale had heard of this famous Mississippi River gambler. So,
evidently, had the other three players. The game proceeded, and when
it came to Hough's deal Mull bet hard and lost all. His big, hairy
hands shook. He looked at Fresno and the other fellow, but not at
Hough.
"I'm broke," he said, gruffly, and got up from the bench.
He strode past Hough, and behind him; then as if suddenly,
instinctively, answering to fury, he whipped out a gun.
Neale, just as instinctively, grasped the rising hand.
"Hold on, there!" he called. "Would you shoot a man in the back?"
And Neale, whose grip was powerful, caused the other to drop the
gun. Neale kicked it aside. Fresno got up.
"Whar's your head, Mull?" he growled. "Git out of this!"
Attention had been attracted to Mull. Some one picked up the gun.
The sallow-faced man rose, holding out his hand for it. Hough did
not even turn around.
"I was goin' to hold him up," said Mull. He glared fiercely at
Neale, wrenched his hand free, and with his comrades disappeared in
the crowd.
The gambler rose and shook down his sleeves. The action convinced
Neale that he had held a little gun in each hand. "I saw him draw,"
he said. "You saved his life! ... Nevertheless, I appreciate your
action. My name is Place Hough. Will you drink with me?"
"I was in North Platte, Kearney, Cheyenne, and Medicine Bow during
their rise," said Hough. "They were tough. But they were not Benton.
And the next camp west, which will be the last--it will be Roaring
Hell. What will be its name?"
"The big work is well under way now, with a tremendous push from
behind. There are three men for every man's work. That lays off two
men each day. Drunk or dead. The place is wild--far off. There's
gold--hundreds of thousands of dollars in gold dumped off the
trains. Benton has had one payday. That day was the sight of my
life! ... Then... there are women."
"Beauty Stanton, they call her," went on Hough. "I saw her in New
Orleans years ago when she was a very young woman--notorious then.
She had the beauty and she led the life... did Beauty Stanton."
Neale made no comment, and Hough, turning to pay for the drinks, was
accosted by several men. They wanted to play poker.
"Gentlemen, I hate to take your money," he said. "But I never refuse
to sit in a game. Neale, will you join us?"
They found a table just vacated. Neale took two of the three
strangers to be prosperous merchants or ranchers from the Missouri
country. The third was a gambler by profession. Neale found himself
in unusually sharp company. He did not have a great deal of money.
So in order to keep clear-headed he did not drink. And he began to
win, not by reason of excellent judgment, but because he was lucky.
He had good cards all the time, and part of the time very strong
ones. It struck him presently that these remarkable hands came
during Hough's deal, and he wondered if the gambler was deliberately
manipulating the cards to his advantage. At any rate, he won
hundreds of dollars.
"Mr. Neale, do you always hold such cards?" asked one of the men.
"Why, sure," replied Neale. He could not help being excited and
elated.
"Lucky at cards, unlucky in love," remarked the third of the trio.
"I pass."
Hough was looking straight at Neale when this last remark was made.
And Neale suddenly lost his smile, his flush. The gambler dropped
his glance.
"Play the game and don't get personal in your remarks," he said.
"This is poker."
Neale continued to win, but his excitement did not return, nor his
elation. A random word from a strange man had power to sting him.
Unlucky in love! Alas! What was luck, gold--anything to him any
more!
By the time the game was ended Neale felt a friendly interest in
Hough that was difficult to define or explain; and the conviction
gained upon him that the gambler had deliberately dealt him those
remarkable cards.
"Let's see," said Hough, consulting his watch. "Twelve o'clock!
Stanton's will be humming. We'll go in."
Neale did not want to show his reluctance, yet he did hot know just
what to say. After all, he was drifting. So he went.
It seemed that all the visitors who had been in the gambling-hall
had gravitated to this other dance-hall. The entrance appeared to be
through a hotel. At least Neale saw the hotel sign. The building was
not made of canvas, but painted wood in sections, like the scenes of
a stage. Men were coming and going; the hum of music and gaiety came
from the rear; there were rugs, pictures, chairs; this place,
whatever its nature, made pretensions. Neale did not see any bar.
They entered a big room full of people, apparently doing nothing.
From the opposite side, where the dance-hall opened, came a hum that
seemed at once music and discordance, gaiety and wildness, with a
strange, carrying undertone raw and violent.
Hough led Neale across the room to where he could look into the
dance-hall.
Neale saw a mad, colorful flash and whirl of dancers.
Hough whispered in Neale's ear: "Stanton throws the drunks out of
here."
No, it appeared the dancers were not drunk with liquor. But there
was evidence of other drunkenness than that of the bottle. The floor
was crowded. Looking at the mass, Neale could only see whirling,
heated faces, white, clinging arms, forms swaying round and round, a
wild rhythm without grace, a dance in which music played no real
part, where men and women were lost. Neale had never seen a sight
like that. He was stunned. There were no souls here. Only beasts of
men, and women for whom there was no name. If death stalked in that
camp, as Hough had intimated, and hell was there, then the two could
not meet too soon.
If the mass and the spirit and the sense of the scene dismayed
Neale, the living beings, the creatures, the women--for the men were
beyond him--confounded him with pity, consternation, and stinging
regret. He had loved two women--his mother and Allie--so well that
he ought to love all women because they were of the same sex. Yet
how impossible! Had these creatures any sex? Yet they were--at least
many were--young, gay, pretty, wild, full of life. They had swift
suppleness, smiles, flashing eyes, a look at once intent and yet
vacant. But few onlookers would have noticed that. The eyes for
which the dance was meant saw the mad whirl, the bare flesh, the
brazen glances, the close embrace.
The music ended, the dancers stopped, the shuffling ceased. There
were no seats unoccupied, so the dancers walked around or formed in
groups.
"Well, I see Ruby has spotted you," observed Hough.
Neale did not gather exactly what the gambler meant, yet he
associated the remark with a girl dressed in red who had paused at
the door with others and looked directly at Neale. At that moment
some one engaged Hough's attention.
The girl would have been striking in any company. Neale thought her
neither beautiful nor pretty, but he kept on looking. Her arms were
bare, her dress cut very low. Her face offered vivid contrast to the
carmine on her lips. It was a round, soft face, with narrow eyes,
dark, seductive, bold. She tilted her head to one side and suddenly
smiled at Neale. It startled him. It was a smile with the shock of a
bullet. It held Neale, so that when she crossed to him he could not
move. He felt rather than saw Hough return to his side. The girl
took hold of the lapels of Neale's coat. She looked up. Her eyes
were dark, with what seemed red shadows deep in them. She had white
teeth. The carmined lips curled in a smile--a smile, impossible to
believe, of youth and sweetness, that disclosed a dimple in her
cheek. She was pretty. She was holding him, pulling him a little
toward her.
The suddenness of the incident, the impossibility of what was
happening, made Neale dumb. He felt her, saw her as he were in a
dream. Her face possessed a peculiar fascination. The sleepy,
seductive eyes; the provoking half-smile, teasing, alluring; the red
lips, full and young through the carmine paint; all of her seemed to
breathe a different kind of a power than he had ever before
experienced--unspiritual, elemental, strong as some heady wine. She
represented youth, health, beauty, terribly linked with evil wisdom,
and a corrupt and irresistible power, possessing a base and
mysterious affinity for man.
The breath and the charm and the pestilence of her passed over Neale
like fire.
"Sweetheart, will you dance with me?" she asked, with her head
tilted to one side and her half-open veiled eyes on his.
"No," replied Neale. He put her from him, gently but coldly.
She showed slow surprise. "Why not? Can't you dance? You don't look
like a gawk."
"Spoiled--hell! ... Didn't he look at me, flirt with me? That's why I
asked him to dance. Then he insulted me. I'll make Cordy shoot him
up for it."
"No, you won't," replied Hough, and he pulled her toward his
companion, a tall woman with golden hair. "Stanton, shut her up."
The woman addressed spoke a few words in Ruby's ear. Then the girl
flounced away. But she spoke with withering scorn to Neale.
"What in hell did you come in here for, you big handsome stiff?"
With that she was lost amid her mirthful companions.
Hough turned to Neale. "The girl's a favorite. You ruffled her
vanity ... you see. That's Benton. If you had happened to be alone
you would have had gunplay. Be careful after this."
"But I didn't flirt with her," protested Neale. "I only looked at
her--curiously, of course. And I said I wouldn't dance."
Hough laughed. "You're young in Benton. Neale, let me introduce to
you the lady who saved you from some inconvenience .... Miss
Stanton--Mr. Neale."
And that was how Neale met Beauty Stanton. It seemed she had done
him a service. He thanked her. Neale's manner with women was
courteous and deferential. It showed strangely here by contrast. The
Stanton woman was superb, not more than thirty years old, with a
face that must have been lovely once and held the haunting ghost of
beauty still. Her hair was dead gold; her eyes were large and blue,
with dark circles under them; and her features had a clear-cut
classic regularity.
"Where's Ancliffe?" asked Hough, addressing Stanton. She pointed,
and Hough left them.
"Neale, you're new here," affirmed the woman, rather curiously.
"Didn't I look like it? I can't forget what that girl said," replied
Neale.
"She asked me what in the hell I came here for. And she called me--"
"Oh, I heard what Ruby called you. It's a wonder it wasn't worse.
She can swear like a trooper. The men are mad over Ruby. It'd be
just like her to fall in love with you for snubbing her."
"I hope she doesn't," replied Neale, constrainedly.
"I just drifted here .... I'm looking for a--a lost friend," said
Neale.
"No work? But you're no spiker or capper or boss. I know that sort.
And I can spot a gambler a mile. The whole world meets out here in
Benton. But not many young men like you wander into my place."
"Who is he? God only knows. But he's an Englishman and a gentleman.
It's a pity men like Ancliffe and you drift out here."
She spoke seriously. She had the accent and manner of breeding.
"Why, Miss Stanton?" inquired Neale. He was finding another woman
here and it was interesting to him.
"Because it means wasted life. You don't work. You're not crooked.
You can't do any good. And only a knife in the back or a bullet from
some drunken bully's gun awaits you."
"That isn't a very hopeful outlook, I'll admit," replied Neale,
thoughtfully.
At this point Hough returned with a pale, slender man whose clothes
and gait were not American. He introduced him as Ancliffe. Neale
felt another accession of interest. Benton might be hell, but he was
meeting new types of men and women. Ancliffe was fair; he had a
handsome face that held a story, arid tired blue eyes that looked
out upon the world wearily and mildly, without curiosity and without
hope. An Englishman of broken fortunes.
"Just arrived, eh?" he said to Neale. "Rather jolly here, don't you
think?"
"A fellow's not going to stagnate in Benton," replied Neale.
"Miss Stanton, that idea seems to persist with you--the brevity of
life," said Neale, smiling. "What are the average days for a mortal
in this bloody Benton?"
"Days! You mean hours. I call the night blessed that some one is not
dragged out of my place. And I don't sell drinks.... I've saved
Ancliffe's life nine times I know of. Either he hasn't any sense or
he wants to get killed."
"I assure you it's the former," said the Englishman.
"But, my friends, I'm serious," she returned, earnestly. "This awful
place is getting on my nerves.... Mr. Neale here, he would have had
to face a gun already but for me."
"Miss Stanton, I appreciate your kindness," replied Neale. "But it
doesn't follow that if I had to face a gun I'd be sure to go down."
Then the music started up again. Conversation was scarcely worth
while during the dancing. Neale watched as before. Twice as he gazed
at the whirling couples he caught the eyes of the girl Ruby bent
upon him. They were expressive of pique, resentment, curiosity.
Neale did not look that way any more. Besides, his attention was
drawn elsewhere. Hough yelled in his ear to watch the fun. A fight
had started. A strapping fellow wearing a belt containing gun and
bowie-knife had jumped upon a table just as the music stopped. He
was drunk. He looked like a young workman ambitious to be a
desperado.
"Ladies an' gennelmen," he bawled, "I been--requested t' sing."
Yells and hoots answered him. He glared ferociously around, trying
to pick out one of his insulters. Trouble was brewing. Something was
thrown at him from behind and it struck him. He wheeled, unsteady
upon his feet. Then several men, bareheaded and evidently attendants
of the hall, made a rush for him. The table was upset. The would-be
singer went down in a heap, and he was pounced upon, handled like a
sack, and thrown out. The crowd roared its glee.
"The worst of that is those fellows always come back drunk and
ugly," said Stanton. "Then we all begin to run or dodge."
"Your men didn't lose time with that rowdy," remarked Neale.
"I've hired all kinds of men to keep order," she replied. "Laborers,
ex-sheriffs, gunmen, bad men. The Irish are the best on the job. But
they won't stick. I've got eight men here now, and they are a tough
lot. I'm scared to death of them. I believe they rob my guests. But
what can I do? Without some aid I couldn't run the place. It'll be
the death of me."
Neale did not doubt that. A shadow surely hovered over this strange
woman, but he was surprised at the seriousness with which she spoke.
Evidently she tried to preserve order, to avert fights and
bloodshed, so that licentiousness could go on unrestrained. Neale
believed they must go hand in hand. He did not see how it would be
possible for a place like this to last long. It could not. The life
of the place brought out the worst in men. It created opportunities.
Neale watched them pass, seeing the truth in the red eyes, the heavy
lids, the open mouths, the look and gait and gesture. A wild frenzy
had fastened upon their minds. He found an added curiosity in
studying the faces of Ancliffe and Hough. The Englishman had run his
race. Any place would suit him for the end. Neale saw this and
marveled at the man's ease and grace and amiability. He reminded
Neale of Larry Red King--the same cool, easy, careless air. Ancliffe
would die game. Hough was not affected by this sort of debauched
life any more than he would have been by any other kind. He preyed
on men. He looked on with cold, gray, expressionless face. Possibly
he, too, would find an end in Benton sooner or later.
These reflections, passing swiftly, made Neale think of himself.
What was true for others must be true for him. The presence of any
of these persons--of Hough and Ancliffe, of himself, in Beauty
Stanton's gaudy resort was sad proof of a disordered life.
Neale then saw that the girl Ruby, with a short, bold-looking fellow
who packed a gun, and several companions of both sexes, had come in
from the dance-hall and had taken up a position near him. Stanton
went over to them. She drew Ruby aside and talked to her. The girl
showed none of the passion that had marked her manner a little while
before. Presently Stanton returned.
"Ruby's got over her temper," she said, with evident relief, to
Neale. "She asked me to say that she apologized. It's just what I
told you. She'll fall madly in love with you for what you did....
She's of good family, Neale. She has a sister she talks much of, and
a home she could go back to if she wasn't ashamed."
"That so?" replied Neale, thoughtfully. "Let me talk to her."
At a slight sign from Stanton, Ruby joined the group.
"Ruby, you've already introduced yourself to this gentleman, but not
so nicely as you might have done," said Beauty.
"I'm sorry," replied Ruby. A certain wistfulness showed in her low
tones.
"Maybe I was rude," said Neale. "I didn't intend to be. I couldn't
dance with any one here--or anywhere...." Then he spoke to her in a
lower tone. "But I'll tell you what I will do. I won a thousand
dollars to-night. I'll give you half of it if you'll go home."
The girl shrank as if she had received a stab. Then she stiffened.
"Why don't you go home?" she retorted. "We're all going to hell out
here, and the gamest will get there soonest."
She glared at Neale an instant, white-faced and hard, and then,
rejoining her companions, she led them away.
Beauty Stanton seemed to have received something of the check that
had changed the girl Ruby.
"Gentlemen, you are my only friends in Benton. But these are
business hours."
Presently she leaned toward Neale and whispered to him: "Boy, you're
courting death. Some one--something has hurt you. But you're
young.... go home!"
He looked on in silence after that. And presently, when Ancliffe
departed, he was glad to follow Hough into the street. There the
same confusion held. A loud throng hurried by, as if bent on
cramming into a few hours the life that would not last long.
Neale was interested to inquire more about Ancliffe. And the gambler
replied that the Englishman had come from no one knew where; that he
did not go to extremes in drinking or betting; that evidently he had
become attached to Beauty Stanton; that surely he must be a ruined
man of class who had left all behind him, and had become like so
many out there--a leaf in the storm.
"Stanton took to you," went on Hough. "I saw that.... And poor Ruby!
I'll tell you, Neale, I'm sorry for some of these women."
"Women of this class are strange to you, Neale. But I've mixed with
them for years. Of course Benton sets a pace no man ever saw before.
Still, even the hardest and vilest of these scullions sometimes
shows an amazing streak of good. And women like Ruby and Beauty
Stanton, whose early surroundings must have been refined--they are
beyond understanding. They will cut your heart out for a slight, and
sacrifice their lives for sake of a courteous word. It was your
manner that cut Ruby and won Beauty Stanton. They meet with neither
coldness nor courtesy out here. It must be bitter as gall for a
woman like Stanton to be treated as you treated her--with respect.
Yet see how it got her."
"I didn't see anything in particular," replied Neale.
"You were too excited and disgusted with the whole scene," said
Hough as they reached the roaring lights of the gambling-hell. "Will
you go in and play again? There are always open games."
"Boy, I think nothing except that I liked your company and that I
owed you a service. Good night."
Neale walked to his lodgings tired and thoughtful and moody. Behind
him the roar lulled and swelled. It was three o'clock in the
morning. He wondered when these night-hawks slept. He wondered where
Larry was. As for himself, he found slumber not easily gained. Dawn
was lighting the east when he at last fell asleep.