The Arizona sun was setting in its accustomed blaze of splendor, when Val Collins and Alice Mackenzie put their horses again toward the ranch and the rainbow-hued west. In his contented eyes were reflected the sunshine and a serenity born of life in the wide, open spaces. They rode in silence for long, the gentle evening breeze blowing in soughs.
“Did you ever meet a man of such promises gone wrong so utterly? He might have been anything—and it has come to this, that he is hunted like a wild beast. I never saw anything so pitiful. I would give anything to save him.”
He had no need to ask to whom she was referring. “Can’t be done. Good qualities bulge out all over him, but they don’t count for anything. ‘Unstable as water.’ That’s what’s the matter with him. He is the slave of his own whims. Hence he is only the splendid wreck of a man, full of all kinds of rich outcropping pay-ore that pinch out when you try to work them. They don’t raise men gamer, but that only makes him a more dangerous foe to society. Same with his loyalty and his brilliancy. He’s got a haid on him that works like they say old J. E. B. Stuart’s did. He would run into a hundred traps, but somehow he always worked his men out of them. That’s Leroy, too. If he had been an ordinary criminal he would have been rounded up years ago. It’s his audacity, his iron nerve, his good horse-sense judgment that saves his skin. But he’s certainly up against it at last.”
“You think Sheriff Forbes will capture him?”
He laughed. “I think it more likely he’ll capture Forbes. But we know now where he hangs out, and who he is. He has always been a mystery till now. The mystery is solved, and unless he strikes out for Sonora, Leroy is as good as a dead man.”
“A dead man?”
“Does he strike you as a man likely to be taken alive? I look to see a dramatic exit to the sound of cracking Winchesters.”
“Yes, that would be like him,” she confessed with shudder. “I think he was made to lead a forlorn hope. Pity it won’t be one worthy of the best in him.”
“I guess he does have more moments set to music than most of us, and I’ll bet, too, he has hidden way in him a list of ‘Thou shalt nots.’ I read a book once by a man named Stevenson that was sure virgin gold. He showed how every man, no matter how low he falls, has somewhere in him a light that burns, some rag of honor for which he is still fighting I’d hate to have to judge Leroy. Some men, I reckon, have to buck against so much in themselves that even failure is a kind of success for them.”
“Yet you will go out to hunt him down?” she’ said, marveling at the broad sympathy of the man.