Ridgway of Montana | Page 6

William MacLeod Raine
One expects a friendly
leaning from the men one put in office."
"Isn't the judiciary supposed to be the final, incorruptible bulwark of
the nation?" she pretended to want to know.
"I believe it is supposed to be."
"Isn't it rather--loading the dice, to interfere with the courts?"
"I find the dice already loaded. I merely substitute others of my own."
"You don't seem a bit ashamed of yourself."
"I'm ashamed of the Consolidated"--he smiled.
"That's a comfortable position to be able to take." She fixed him for a
moment with her charming frown of interrogation. "You won't mind
my asking these questions? I'm trying to decide whether you are too
much of a pirate for me. Perhaps when I've made up my mind you
won't want me," she added.
"Oh, I'll want you!" Then coolly: "Shall we wait till you make up your
mind before announcing the engagement?"
"Don't be too sure," she flashed at him.
"I'm horribly unsure."
"Of course, you're laughing at me, just as you would"--she tilted a
sudden sideways glance at him--"if I asked you WHY you wanted to

marry me."
"Oh, if you take me that way----"
She interrupted airily. "I'm trying to make up my mind whether to take
you at all."
"You certainly have a direct way of getting at things."
He studied appreciatively her piquant, tilted face; the long, graceful
lines of her slender, perfect figure. "I take it you don't want the
sentimental reason for my wishing to marry you, though I find that
amply justified. But if you want another, you must still look to yourself
for it. My business leads me to appreciate values correctly. When I
desire you to sit at the head of my table, to order my house, my
judgment justifies itself. I have a fancy always for the best. When I
can't gratify it I do without."
"Thank you." She made him a gay little mock curtsy "I had heard you
were no carpet-knight, Mr. Ridgway. But rumor is a lying jade, for I
am being told--am I not?--that in case I don't take pity on you, the lone
future of a celibate stretches drear before you."
"Oh, certainly."
Having come to the end of that passage, she tried another. "A young
man told me yesterday you were a fighter. He said he guessed you
would stand the acid. What did he mean?"
Ridgway was an egoist from head to heel. He could voice his own
praises by the hour when necessary, but now he side-stepped her little
trap to make him praise himself at second-hand.
"Better ask him."
"ARE you a fighter, then?"
Had he known her and her whimsies less well, he might have taken her
audacity for innocence.

"One couldn't lie down, you know."
"Of course, you always fight fair," she mocked.
"When a fellow's attacked by a gang of thugs he doesn't pray for
boxing-gloves. He lets fly with a coupling-pin if that's what comes
handy."
Her eyes, glinting sparks of mischief, marveled at him with mock
reverence, but she knew in her heart that her mockery was a fraud. She
did admire him; admired him even while she disapproved the
magnificent lawlessness of him.
For Waring Ridgway looked every inch the indomitable fighter he was.
He stood six feet to the line, straight and strong, carrying just sufficient
bulk to temper his restless energy without impairing its power. Nor did
the face offer any shock of disappointment to the promise given by the
splendid figure. Salient-jawed and forceful, set with cool, flinty,
blue-gray eyes, no place for weakness could be found there. One might
have read a moral callousness, a colorblindness in points of rectitude,
but when the last word had been said, its masterful capability, remained
the outstanding impression.
"Am I out of the witness-box?" he presently asked, still leaning against
the mantel from which he had been watching her impersonally as an
intellectual entertainment.
"I think so."
"And the verdict?"
"You know what it ought to be," she accused.
"Fortunately, kisses go by favor, not by, merit."
"You don't even make a pretense of deserving."
"Give me credit for being an honest rogue, at least."

"But a rogue?" she insisted lightly.
"Oh, a question of definitions. I could make a very good case for
myself as an honest man."
"If you thought it worth while?"
"If I didn't happen to want to be square with you"--he smiled.
"You're so fond of me, I suppose, that you couldn't bear to have me
think too well of you."
"You know how fond of you I am."
"Yes, it is a pity about you," she scoffed.
"Believe me, yes," he replied cheerfully.
She drummed with her pink finger-tips on her chin, studying him
meditatively. To do him justice, she had to admit that
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