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     Clutching the lighted lamp in both hands, Wirt began backing away, his eyes wide.

     “Wirt!” Beulah called impatiently. “Tell me who it is!” Nathan hooked the front door with a spur and slammed it. Without raising his voice he said, “It's your brother-in-law, Beulah—the one you saw kill Jed Harper.”

     To Wirt, the voice was as cold and deadly as the .45 on Nathan's thigh. He tried to speak, but the words stuck in his throat and were cracked and warped when they finally came out. “Nate, for God's sake, what are you going to do!”

     “Why, nothing, Wirt. Not just yet, anyway.” Now Wirt realized that Nathan's voice was flat and emotionless, and that all the hate was in his eyes. Although he had made no show of violence, Wirt knew that violence was in the room, ready to explode.

     When Beulah appeared in the doorway, clutching a white wrapper that covered her frail body from her chin to the floor, Nathan merely inclined his head in a hint of a nod. “Hello, Beulah. How have you been sleeping these past five years?”

     Beulah Sewell's face was whiter than the wrapper. The old aggressive thrust of her small chin was missing now, and her eyes were strangely vacant.

     Nathan laughed suddenly, harshly. “I guess you haven't been sleeping so well, at that. I never would have thought you'd be bothered by your conscience, Beulah.”

     He came deeper into the room and dropped slowly into a parlor chair. He sighed softly, stretching his long legs in front of him. Wirt felt that he could almost see eddies of fatigue swirling around Nathan's lean, tough figure, like heat eddies rising over a desert. Until now Beulah had not made a sound, but now she moved slowly into the room, her eyes as blank as a sleepwalker's.

     “Why did you come back?” she asked softly.

     “Didn't you think I would?” His voice was toneless.

     Wirt shot his wife a quick glance of warning, but she didn't see it. Nathan sat like a dead man, his arms hanging limp at his sides. Only his eyes were alive as he stared at Beulah.

     “I came back to see my boy,” he said at last.

     “Haven't you done enough to him?” Beulah asked flatly, ignoring her husband's look of panic. “Aren't you satisfied?”

     Hard lines of anger appeared for the first time at the corners of Nathan's mouth. “Haven't I done enough to him! How about you, Beulah? What have you done to him?” With an unexpected burst of energy, he shoved himself out of the chair. “Haven't I done enough to him!” he demanded again, angrily.

     As suddenly as the outburst was born, it died. He dropped back to the chair and said wearily, “Heat some wash water for me, Beulah. And I could do with some coffee, too, and some grub.”

     Beulah acted as though she hadn't heard. Her husband said quickly, “Do as he says, Beulah!”

     Reluctantly, she turned for the kitchen.

     After a moment Nathan turned to Wirt. “Where's the boy?”

     “He's still here, Nate. Here in Plainsville.”

     “I know that; where's he staying?”

     “In a room over Frank Ludlow's store, I think.”

     “Go rout him out and tell him his pa's come home.”

     “Now, Nate?” Wirt said uneasily. “This time of night?”

     “Right now! And don't let Elec Blasingame see you, either. Or anybody else.”

     Wirt swallowed. “I'll be careful, Nate.”

     “You'd better! And if you've got any ideas about turnin' me in to the law, you better think about it a long time. Remember, I'll be waitin' here with Beulah, and I haven't got much cause to like her.”

     Wirt's voice cracked. “Nate, you know I wouldn't do a thing like that.”

     Nathan looked at him, then he closed his eyes and rested his head back against the chair. “Get going,” he said quietly, and Wirt stumbled over his own feet on the way for his clothes.

     Jeff was in his bunk, but not asleep; he heard the loose boards creek as Wirt made his way up the outside stairs. He lay for a moment, tensely alert, as the footsteps came nearer. There was a timid rap at the door.

     Jeff reached for his revolver. “Who is it?”

     “It's Wirt. I've got to talk to you, Jeff!”

     “Get away from me!”

     “Jeff, it's important!”

     Jeff lay on one elbow, listening to his own breathing. What could be important enough to bring Wirt Sewell here at this time of night? At last he got up and slipped the inside latch. “What do you want?”

     “Jeff, your pa's back. He's at the house right now!”

     For several seconds Jeff did not move. Nathan was back! Didn't he know that the law was looking for him?

     His calmness surprised him. “Wait,” he said, then he got into his pants and shirt, and pulled on his boots. Buckling his cartridge belt, he turned back to Wirt. “How is he? Is he all right?”

     “I—I guess so.”

     “You guess so? Don't you know? He's not hurt, is he?”

     “No, Jeff, he's not hurt. Not in body.” Jeff gave him a hard, savage look, but said nothing. Why had Nathan come back?

     He said, “We'll go out the back way. Follow me.”

     At the far end of the hall there was a window, with a plank ladder outside that served as a fire escape. It was late, and the town was quiet. Jeff stepped through the open window, grabbed the ladder and swung out. When he reached the ground he didn't look back to see if Wirt had made it—he didn't care.

     The pounding of his heart was the only sound he heard as he slipped behind the building and up the alley. At the end of Main Street he cut across town, heading toward the Sewell house, vaguely aware of Wirt stumbling behind.

     The Sewell house was the only place in that part of town that still had a light burning. Jeff came in behind the cowshed, noted the trail-shaggy calico standing hipshot and weary beside the Sewell cow. When he reached the back door he went through without knocking.

     Nathan had just finished washing and shaving. His face looked sunken, raw and red, and he stood motionless for a moment, a towel over his shoulder, looking steadily at his son. Then, with that old gesture that Jeff remembered so well, he threw back his head and searched Jeff's face. And he was the same Nathan Blaine that Jeff remembered, big and proud and dark with danger.

     “You're a man,” Nathan said at last. “I don't think I'd figured on that.”

     “Almost nineteen,” Jeff said evenly.

     “Plenty old enough for a man in these parts.”

     “Pa,” Jeff said, suddenly uncomfortable, “you're all right, aren't you? I mean—

     “I'm fine! A little trail dirty, maybe, but fine.”