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No woman can love like a broken woman. If it were not for one thingā ā€”just one thingā ā€”and yet! I canā€™t speak itā ā€”Iā€™d glory in your manhoodā ā€”the lion in you that means to slay for me. Believe meā ā€”and spare Dyer. Be mercifulā ā€”great as itā€™s in you to be greatā ā€Šā ā€¦ Oh, listen and believeā ā€”I have nothing, but Iā€™m a womanā ā€”a beautiful woman, Lassiterā ā€”a passionate, loving womanā ā€”and I love you! Take meā ā€”hide me in some wild placeā ā€”and love me and mend my broken heart. Spare him and take me away.ā€

She lifted her face closer and closer to his, until their lips nearly touched, and she hung upon his neck, and with strength almost spent pressed and still pressed her palpitating body to his.

ā€œKiss me!ā€ she whispered, blindly.

ā€œNoā ā€”not at your price!ā€ he answered. His voice had changed or she had lost clearness of hearing.

ā€œKiss me!ā ā€Šā ā€¦ Are you a man? Kiss me and save me!ā€

ā€œJane, you never played fair with me. But now youā€™re blisterinā€™ your lipsā ā€”blackeninā€™ your soul with lies!ā€

ā€œBy the memory of my motherā ā€”by my Bibleā ā€”no! No, I have no Bible! But by my hope of heaven I swear I love you!ā€

Lassiterā€™s gray lips formed soundless words that meant even her love could not avail to bend his will. As if the hold of her arms was that of a childā€™s he loosened it and stepped away.

ā€œWait! Donā€™t go! Oh, hear a last word!ā ā€Šā ā€¦ May a more just and merciful God than the God I was taught to worship judge meā ā€”forgive meā ā€”save me! For I can no longer keep silent!ā ā€Šā ā€¦ Lassiter, in pleading for Dyer Iā€™ve been pleading more for my father. My father was a Mormon master, close to the leaders of the church. It was my father who sent Dyer out to proselyte. It was my father who had the blue-ice eye and the beard of gold. It was my father you got trace of in the past years. Truly, Dyer ruined Milly Erneā ā€”dragged her from her homeā ā€”to Utahā ā€”to Cottonwoods. But it was for my father! If Milly Erne was ever wife of a Mormon that Mormon was my father! I never knewā ā€”never will know whether or not she was a wife. Blind I may be, Lassiterā ā€”fanatically faithful to a false religion I may have been but I know justice, and my father is beyond human justice. Surely he is meeting just punishmentā ā€”somewhere. Always it has appalled meā ā€”the thought of your killing Dyer for my fatherā€™s sins. So I have prayed!ā€

ā€œJane, the past is dead. In my love for you I forgot the past. This thing Iā€™m about to do ainā€™t for myself or Milly or Fay. Itā€™s not because of anythinā€™ that ever happened in the past, but for what is happeninā€™ right now. Itā€™s for you!ā ā€Šā ā€¦ Anā€™ listen. Since I was a boy Iā€™ve never thanked God for anythinā€™. If there is a Godā ā€”anā€™ Iā€™ve come to believe itā ā€”I thank Him now for the years that made me Lassiter!ā ā€Šā ā€¦ I can reach down enā€™ feel these big guns, enā€™ know what I can do with them. Anā€™, Jane, only one of the miracles Dyer professes to believe in can save him!ā€

Again for Jane Withersteen came the spinning of her brain in darkness, and as she whirled in endless chaos she seemed to be falling at the feet of a luminous figureā ā€”a manā ā€”Lassiterā ā€”who had saved her from herself, who could not be changed, who would slay rightfully. Then she slipped into utter blackness.

When she recovered from her faint she became aware that she was lying on a couch near the window in her sitting-room. Her brow felt damp and cold and wet, someone was chafing her hands; she recognized Judkins, and then saw that his lean, hard face wore the hue and look of excessive agitation.

ā€œJudkins!ā€ Her voice broke weakly.

ā€œAw, Miss Withersteen, youā€™re cominā€™ round fine. Now jest lay still a little. Youā€™re all right; everythinā€™s all right.ā€

ā€œWhere isā ā€”he?ā€

ā€œWho?ā€

ā€œLassiter!ā€

ā€œYou neednā€™t worry none about him.ā€

ā€œWhere is he? Tell meā ā€”instantly.ā€

ā€œWal, heā€™s in the other room patchinā€™ up a few triflinā€™ bullet holes.ā€

ā€œAh!ā ā€Šā ā€¦ Bishopā€™ Dyer?ā€

ā€œWhen I seen him lastā ā€”a matter of half an hour ago, he was on his knees. He was some busy, but he wasnā€™t prayinā€™!ā€

ā€œHow strangely you talk! Iā€™ll sit up. Iā€™mā ā€”well, strong again. Tell me. Dyer on his knees! What was he doing?ā€

ā€œWal, begginā€™ your pardon fer blunt talk, Miss Withersteen, Dyer was on his knees anā€™ not prayinā€™. You remember his big, broad hands? Youā€™ve seen ā€™em raised in blessinā€™ over old gray men anā€™ little curly-headed children likeā ā€”like Fay Larkin! Come to think of thet, I disremember ever hearinā€™ of his liftinā€™ his big hands in blessinā€™ over a woman. Wal, when I seen him lastā ā€”jest a little while agoā ā€”he was on his knees, not prayinā€™, as I remarkedā ā€”anā€™ he was pressinā€™ his big hands over some bigger wounds.ā€

ā€œMan, you drive me mad! Did Lassiter kill Dyer?ā€

ā€œYes.ā€

ā€œDid he kill Tull?ā€

ā€œNo. Tullā€™s out of the village with most of his riders. Heā€™s expected back before eveninā€™. Lassiter will hev to git away before Tull enā€™ his riders come in. Itā€™s sure death fer him here. Anā€™ wuss fer you, too, Miss Withersteen. Thereā€™ll be some of an uprisinā€™ when Tull gits back.ā€

ā€œI shall ride away with Lassiter. Judkins, tell me all you sawā ā€”all you know about this killing.ā€ She realized, without wonder or amaze, how Judkinsā€™s one word, affirming the death of Dyerā ā€”that the catastrophe had fallenā ā€”had completed the change whereby she had been molded or beaten or broken into another woman. She felt calm, slightly cold, strong as she had not been strong since the first shadow fell upon her.

ā€œI jest saw about all of it, Miss Withersteen, anā€™ Iā€™ll be glad to tell you if youā€™ll only hev patience with me,ā€ said Judkins, earnestly. ā€œYou see, Iā€™ve been pecooliarly interested, anā€™ natā€™rully Iā€™m some excited. Anā€™ I talk a lot thet mebbe ainā€™t necessary, but I canā€™t help thet.

ā€œI was at the meetinā€™-house where Dyer was holdinā€™ court. You know he allus acts as magistrate anā€™

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