nd is
dead. No one can stop me. I'm goin' out there to drive those hogs
away an' bury him."
"Esther, for Heaven's sake, listen," replied Isbel. "If y'u show
yourself outside, Jorth an' his gang will kin y'u."
"They may be mean, but no white men could be so low as that."
Then they pleaded with her to give up her purpose. But in vain! She
pushed them back and ran out through the kitchen with Jacobs's wife
following her. Jean turned to the window in time to see both women run
out into the lane. Jean looked fearfully, and listened for shots. But
only a loud, "Haw! Haw!" came from the watchers outside. That coarse
laugh relieved the tension in Jean's breast. Possibly the Jorths were
not as black as his father painted them. The two women entered an open
shed and came forth with a shovel and spade.
"Shore they've got to hurry," burst out Gaston Isbel.
Shifting his gaze, Jean understood the import of his father's speech.
The leader of the hogs had no doubt scented the bodies. Suddenly he
espied them and broke into a trot.
"Run, Esther, run!" yelled Jean, with all his might.
That urged the women to flight. Jean began to shoot. The hog reached
the body of Guy. Jean's shots did not reach nor frighten the beast.
All the hogs now had caught a scent and went ambling toward their
leader. Esther and her companion passed swiftly out of sight behind a
corral. Loud and piercingly, with some awful note, rang out their
screams. The hogs appeared frightened. The leader lifted his long
snout, looked, and turned away. The others had halted. Then they,
too, wheeled and ran off.
All was silent then in the cabin and also outside wherever the Jorth
faction lay concealed. All eyes manifestly were fixed upon the brave
wives. They spaded up the sod and dug a grave for Guy Isbel. For a
shroud Esther wrapped him in her shawl. Then they buried him. Next
they hurried to the side of Jacobs, who lay some yards away. They dug
a grave for him. Mrs. Jacobs took off her outer skirt to wrap round
him. Then the two women labored hard to lift him and lower him. Jacobs
was a heavy man. When he had been covered his widow knelt beside his
grave. Esther went back to the other. But she remained standing and
did not look as if she prayed. Her aspect was tragic--that of a woman
who had lost father, mother, sisters, brother, and now her husband, in
this bloody Arizona land.
The deed and the demeanor of these wives of the
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