Purdy was not a
physical coward. The insult was direct, uttered distinctly, and in the
hearing of a crowd. At his hip was the six-gun with which he had just
won a shooting contest--yet he did not draw. The silence was becoming
painful when the man shrugged, and without a word, turned his horse
away. Someone laughed, and the tension broke with a hum of low-voiced
conversation.
"Next horse, ready!"
As the crowd drew back Alice Marcum leaned close to Purdy's ear.
"I think it was splendid!" she whispered; "it was the bravest thing I
ever saw." The man could scarcely believe his ears.
"Is she kiddin' me?" he wondered, as he forced his glance to the girl's
face. But no, she was in earnest, and in her eyes the man read
undisguised admiration. She was speaking again.
"Any one of these," she indicated the crowd with a sweep of her gloved
hand, "would have shot him, but it takes a real man to preserve perfect
self-control under insult."
The cowpuncher drew a long breath. "Yes; mom," he answered; "it was
pretty tough to swaller that. But somehow I kind of--of hated to shoot
him." Inwardly he was puzzled. What did the girl mean? He realized
that she was in earnest and that he had suddenly become a hero in her
eyes. Fate was playing strangely into his hands. A glitter of triumph
flashed into his eyes, a glitter that faded into a look of wistfulness
as they raised once more to hers.
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