“That’s right,” agreed the blatant youth. “I’m sick of rustling the mails and other folks’ calves. I’m glad he got what was coming to him,” he concluded vindictively, with a glance at his dead chief and a sudden raucous oath.
McWilliams’s cold blue eye transfixed him “Hadn’t you better be a little careful how your mouth goes off? For one thing, he’s daid now; and for another, he happens to be Mr. Bannister’s cousin.”
“But—weren’t they enemies?”
“That’s how I understand it. But this man’s passed over the range. A man doesn’t unload his hatred on dead folks—and I expect if y’u’ll study him, even y’u will be able to figure out that my friend measures up to the size of a real man.”
“I don’t see why if—”
“No, I don’t suppose y’u do,” interrupted the foreman, turning on his heel. Then to Bannister, who was looking down at his cousin with a stony face: “I reckon, Bann, we better make arrangements to have the bodies buried right here in the valley,” he said gently.
Bannister was thinking of early days, of the time when this miscreant, whose light had just been put out so instantaneously, had played with him day in and day out. They had attended their first school together, had played marbles and prisoners’ base a hundred times against each other. He could remember how they used to get up early in the morning to go fishing with each other. And later, when each began, unconsciously, to choose the path he would follow in already beginning to settle into an established fact. He could see now, by looking back on trifles of their childhood, that his cousin had been badly handicapped in his fight with himself against the evil in him. He had inherited depraved instincts and tastes, and with them somewhere in him a strand of weakness that prevented him from slaying the giants he had to oppose in the making of a good character. From bad to worse he had gone, and here he lay with the drizzling rain on his white face, a warning and a lesson to wayward youths just setting their feet in the wrong direction. Surely it was kismet.
Ned Bannister untied the handkerchief from his neck and laid it across the face of his kinsman. A moment longer he looked down, then passed his hands across his eyes and seemed to brush away the memories that thronged him. He stepped forward to the fire and warmed his hands.
“We’ll go on, Mac, to the rendezvous he had appointed with his outfit. We ought to reach there by noon, and the boys can send a wagon back to get the bodies.”