Border Legion (1990) Read Online Free

Border Legion (1990)
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    Roberts went back to the camp-fire. Joan had to force herself to eat. There was one thing of which she was sure--that she would need all the strength and fortitude she could summon.
    Joan became aware, presently, that Kells was conversing with Roberts, but too low for her to hear what was said. She saw Roberts make a gesture of fierce protest. About the other man there was an air cool, persuading, dominant. He ceased speaking, as if the incident were closed. Roberts hurried and blundered through his task with his pack and went for his horse. The animal limped slightly, but evidently was not in bad shape. Roberts saddled him, tied on the pack. Then he saddled Joan's horse. That done, he squared around with the front of a man who had to face something he dreaded.
    "Come on, Joan. We're ready," he called. His voice was loud, but not natural.
    Joan started to cross to him when Kells strode between them. She might not have been there, for all the sign this ominous man gave of her presence. He confronted Roberts in the middle of the camp- circle, and halted, perhaps a rod distant.
    "Roberts, get on your horse and clear out," he said.
    Roberts dropped his halter and straightened up. It was a bolder action than any he had heretofore given. Perhaps the mask was off now; he was wholly sure of what he had only feared; subterfuge and blindness were in vain; and now he could be a man. Some change worked in his face--a blanching, a setting.
    "No, I won't go without the girl," he said.
    "But you can't take her!"
    Joan vibrated to a sudden start. So this was what was going to happen. Her heart almost stood still. Breathless and quivering, she watched these two men, about whom now all was strangely magnified.
    "Reckon I'll go along with you, then," replied Roberts.
    "Your company's not wanted."
    "Wal, I'll go anyway."
    This was only play at words, Joan thought. She divined in Roberts a cold and grim acceptance of something he had expected. And the voice of Kells--what did that convey? Still the man seemed slow, easy, kind, amiable.
    "Haven't you got any sense, Roberts?" he asked.
    Roberts made no reply to that.
    "Go on home. Say nothing or anything--whatever you like," continued Kells. "You did me a favor once over in California. I like to remember favors. Use your head now. Hit the trail."
    "Not without her. I'll fight first," declared Roberts, and his hands began to twitch and jerk.
    Joan did not miss the wonderful intentness of the pale-gray eyes that watched Roberts--his face, his glance, his hands.
    "What good will it do to fight?" asked Kells. He laughed coolly.
    "That won't help her ... You ought to know what you'll get."
    "Kells--I'll die before I leave that girl in your clutches," flashed Roberts. "An' I ain't a-goin' to stand here an' argue with you. Let her come--or--"
    "You don't strike me as a fool," interrupted Kells. His voice was suave, smooth, persuasive, cool. What strength--what certainty appeared behind it! "It's not my habit to argue with fools. Take the chance I offer you. Hit the trail. Life is precious, man! ... You've no chance here. And what's one girl more or less to you?"
    "Kells, I may be a fool, but I'm a man," passionately rejoined Roberts. "Why, you're somethin' inhuman! I knew that out in the gold-fields. But to think you can stand there--an' talk sweet an' pleasant--with no idee of manhood! ... Let her come now--or--or I'm a-goin' for my gun!"
    "Roberts, haven't you a wife--children?"
    "Yes, I have," shouted Roberts, huskily. "An' that wife would disown me if I left Joan Randle to you. An' I've got a grown girl. Mebbe some day she might need a man to stand between her an' such as you, Jack Kells!"
    All Roberts' pathos and passion had no effect, unless to bring out by contrast the singular and ruthless nature of Jack Kells.
    "Will you hit the trail?"
    "No!" thundered Roberts, Until then Joan Randle had been fascinated, held by the swift interchange between her friend and enemy. But now she had a
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