“How's the chances for a dance with the girl, partner?”
“This dance is already booked,” Pierre answered, and kept his eyes on the tall man with the scarred face and the resolute jaw. He wondered why Jacqueline had chosen such a partner.
At least she had prophesied correctly, for the big man turned toward them just as he seemed about to head for another part of the hall. The crowd gave way before him, not that he shouldered them aside, but they seemed to feel the coming of his shadow before him, and separated as they would have done before the shadow of a falling tree.
In another moment Pierre found himself looking up to the giant. No mask could cover that long, twisting mark of white down his cheek, nor hide the square set of the jaw, nor dim the steady eyes.
And there came to Pierre an exceedingly great uneasiness in his right hand, and a twitching of the fingers low down on his thigh where the familiar holster should have hung. His left hand rose, following the old instinct, and touched beneath his throat where the cold cross lay.
He was saying easily: “This is your dance, isn't it?”
“Right, Bud,” answered the big man in a mellow voice as great as his size. “Sorry I can't swap partners with you, but I hunt alone.”
An overwhelming desire to get a distance between himself and this huge unknown came to Pierre.
He said: “There goes the music. You're off.”
And the other, moving toward Jack, leaned down a little and murmured at the ear of the outlaw: “Thanks, Pierre.”
Then he was gone, and Jacqueline was laughing over his shoulder back to Pierre.
Through his daze and through the rising clamor of the music, a voice said beside him: “You look sort of sick, dude. Who's your friend?”
“Don't you know him?” asked Pierre.
“No more than I do you; but I've ridden the range for ten years around here, and I know that he's new to these parts. If I'd ever glimpsed him before, I'd remember him. He'd be a bad man in a mix, eh?”
And Pierre answered with devout earnestness: “He would.”
“But where'd you buy those duds, pal? Hey, look! Here's what I've been waiting for—the Barneses and the girl that's visitin' 'em from the East.”
“What girl?”
“Look!”
The Barnes group was passing through the door, and last came the unmistakable form of Dick Wilbur, masked, but not masked enough to hide his familiar smile or cover the well-known sound of his laughter as it drifted to Pierre across the hall, and on his arm was a girl in an evening dress of blue, with a small, black mask across her eyes, and deep-golden hair.
Pausing before she swung into the dance with Wilbur, she made a gesture with the white arm, and looked up laughing to big, handsome Dick. Pierre trembled with a red rage when he saw the hands of Wilbur about her.
Dick, in passing, marked Pierre's stare above the heads of the crowd, and frowned with trouble. The hungry eyes of Pierre followed them as they circled the hall again; and this time Wilbur, perhaps fearing that something had gone wrong with Pierre, steered close to the edge of the dancing crowd and looked inquisitively across.
He leaned and spoke to the girl, and she turned her head, smiling, to Pierre. Then the smile went out, and even despite the mask, he saw her eyes widen. She stopped and slipped from the arm of Wilbur, and came step by step slowly toward him like one walking in her sleep. There, by the edge of the dancers, with the noise of the music and the shuffling feet to cover them, they met. The hands she held to him were cold and trembling.
“Is it you?”
“It is I.”
That was all; and then the shadow of Wilbur loomed above them.
“What's this? Do you know each other? It isn't possible! Pierre, are you playing a game with me?”
But under the glance of Pierre he fell back a step, and reached for the gun which was not there. They were alone once more.
“Mary—Mary Brown!”
“Pierre!”
“But you are dead!”
“No, no! But you—Pierre, where can we go?”
“Outside.”
“Let us go quickly!”
“Do you need a wrap?”
“No.”
“But it is cold outside, and your shoulders are bare.”
“Then take that cloak. But quickly, Pierre, before we're followed.”
He drew it about her; he led her through the door; it clicked shut; they were alone with the sweet, frosty air before them. She tore away the mask.