The Irishman suddenly clutched the gambler, shook him like a dog, and threw him against the farther wall. Pierre’s pistol was levelled from the instant Shon moved; but he did not use it. He rose on one knee after the violent fall, and pointing it at the other’s head, said coolly: “I could kill you, my friend, so easy! But it is not my whim. Till ten o’clock is not long to wait, and then, just here, one of us shall die. Is it not so?” The Irishman did not flinch before the pistol. He said with low fierceness, “At ten o’clock, or now, or any time, or at any place, y’ll find me ready to break the back of the lies y’ve spoken, or be broken meself. Lucy Rives is my wife, and she’s true and straight as the sun in the sky. I’ll be here at ten o’clock, and as ye say, Pierre, one of us makes the long reckoning for this.” And he opened the door and went out.

The half-breed moved to the bar, and, throwing down a handful of silver, said: “It is good we drink after so much heat. Come on, come on, comrades.”

The miners responded to the invitation. Their sympathy was mostly with Shon McGann; their admiration was about equally divided; for Pretty Pierre had the quality of courage in as active a degree as the Irishman, and they knew that some extraordinary motive, promising greater excitement, was behind the Frenchman’s refusal to send a bullet through Shon’s head a moment before.

King Kinkley, the best shot in the Valley next to Pierre, had watched the unusual development of the incident with interest; and when his glass had been filled he said, thoughtfully: “This thing isn’t according to Hoyle. There’s never been any trouble just like it in the Valley before. What’s that McGann said about the lady being his wife? If it’s the case, where hev we been in the show? Where was we when the license was around? It isn’t good citizenship, and I hev my doubts.”

Another miner, known as the Presbyterian, added: “There’s some skulduggery in it, I guess. The lady has had as much protection as if she was the sister of every citizen of the place, just as much as Lady Jane here (Lady Jane, the daughter of the proprietor of the Saints’ Repose, administered drinks), and she’s played this stacked hand on us, has gone one better on the sly.”

“Pierre,” said King Kinkley, “you’re on the track of the secret, and appear to hev the advantage of the lady: blaze it—blaze it out.”

Pierre rejoined, “I know something; but it is good we wait until ten o’clock. Then I will show you all the cards in the pack. Yes, so, ‘bien sur.’”

And though there was some grumbling, Pierre had his way. The spirit of adventure and mutual interest had thrown the French half-breed, the Irishman, and the Hon. Just Trafford together on the cold side of the Canadian Rockies; and they had journeyed to this other side, where the warm breath from the Pacific passed to its congealing in the ranges. They had come to the Pipi field when it was languishing. From the moment of their coming its luck changed; it became prosperous. They conquered the Valley each after his kind. The Honourable—he was always called that—mastered its resources by a series of “great lucks,” as Pierre termed it, had achieved a fortune, and made no enemies; and but two months before the day whose incidents are here recorded, had gone to the coast on business. Shon had won the reputation of being a “white man,” to say nothing of his victories in the region of gallantry. He made no wealth; he only got that he might spend. Irishman-like he would barter the chances of fortune for the lilt of a voice or the clatter of a pretty foot.

Pierre was different. “Women, ah, no!” he would say, “they make men fools or devils.”

His temptation lay not that way. When the three first came to the Pipi, Pierre was a miner, simply; but nearly all his life he had been something else, as many a devastated pocket on the east of the Rockies could bear witness; and his new career was alien to his soul. Temptation grew greatly on him at the Pipi, and in the days before he yielded to it he might have been seen at midnight in his but playing solitaire. Why he abstained at first from practising his real profession is accounted for in two ways: he had tasted some of the sweets of honest companionship with the Honourable and Shon, and then he had a memory of an ugly night at Pardon’s Drive a year before, when he stood over his own brother’s body, shot to death by accident in a gambling row having its origin with himself. These things had held him back for a time; but he was weaker than his ruling passion.