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Title: The medicine-man
Author: W. C. Tuttle
Release date: May 3, 2026 [eBook #78587]
Language: English
Original publication: New York, NY: The Ridgway Company, 1924
Other information and formats: www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78587
Credits: Prepared by volunteers at BookCove (bookcove.net)
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MEDICINE-MAN ***
THE MEDICINE-MAN
By W. C. Tuttle
Bud Daley sat humped over on his wash-bench near the kitchen door of his
unpretentious little ranch-house, staring with moody blue eyes across
the hills. The wash-bench was sloppy with soap-suds, plain evidence that
Bud had performed his ablutions in a violent manner.
And as he sat looking moodily into space, he dangled a none-too-clean
towel in his hands. Just behind him, leaning against the side of the
kitchen door, stood Mrs. Daley, a thoughtful frown on her pretty face.
She was dressed in a plain calico dress, faded from many washings; a
girlish looking woman, whose crown of glorious auburn hair tumbled in
unruly fashion about her face.
Bud’s visible attire consisted of a battered sombrero, a thin blue
shirt, wide open at the neck, a pair of bat-winged chaps, boots and
holstered gun. His thin face was decorated with several days’ growth
of beard. Down in the little corral, which was hooked to the long,
low barn, a roan horse, sweat-marked, rolled wearily.
Bud’s eyes turned from the panorama of low hills, which swept away
across the Modoc ranges, and his fingers searched his pockets for
tobacco and cigaret papers.
“Bud, are you sure?” Mrs. Daley spoke softly, a trifle hopefully.
“Yeah,” Bud nodded and licked the edge of the paper, “I reckon it’s a
fact, May.”
“Then it means that we’re--broke?”
“Broke?”
The match burned Bud’s fingers, and he snapped it away as he turned and
looked at her.
“May, we’re worse than that. I still owe Cleve Lavelle five thousand
dollars.”
“As much as that, Bud?”
There were tears in her voice. Bud laughed shortly and got to his feet.
“Just that much, May.”
“But--but where have the cattle gone? Surely----”
“They’ve been stolen!” said Bud savagely. “Somebody has rustled every
head of Triangle-D stock in the Modoc country. By ----, we haven’t even
got a hide nor a horn to show.
“I told Cleve Lavelle. He was at the round-up, May. They were all there;
every puncher in this country. I tell you, we combed every inch of the
county, and there wasn’t a cattleman there, except me, that wasn’t
satisfied.”
“Was Uncle Jimmy Miller there, Bud?”
“Yeah, he was there. He exploded over it. Just the same as told me I
was a ---- liar. But he found out that I was right. Oh, we’re broke;
that’s a cinch.”
Bud threw the towel aside and backed against the wall.
“But, Bud, we must have had close to five hundred head,” said Mrs.
Daley. “Why, you can’t lose five hundred head of cattle.”
“Can’t we?” Bud laughed bitterly. “I wish you was right, May. I kept
sayin’ the same thing--until I had it proved to me. Somebody
just--well--” Bud shrugged his shoulders wearily--“they took ’em,
thassall.”
“Well--” Mrs. Daley sighed deeply and patted him on the shoulder--“we’re
not very lucky, Bud. Dinner is ready.”
“I’m not hungry, May. It kinda hits me in the pit of m’ stummick.”
“Starving won’t help you any, dear.”
“I s’pose not.” Bud grinned and shook his head. “I reckon I’ve got to
keep m’ head up and m’ stummick full. I wish----”
Two riders swung around the corner of the cottonwood clump beyond the
barn and came toward the house, causing Bud’s wish to go unfinished.
“It’s Uncle Jimmy Miller and ‘Sody’ Slavin,” said Mrs. Daley.
“Two of the toughest old pelicans that ever wore a boot,” remarked Bud
as they rode up and dismounted.
Uncle Jimmy Miller was only five feet four inches tall, thin of frame,
thin of voice, with the whiskers of a gray old bob-cat and an explosive
disposition.
Sody Slavin was nearly six feet tall and so fat that he could hardly
find a saddle-horse strong enough to carry him more than half a day at
a time. Sody talked in a counter-tenor voice and panted at all times.
He was of a nervous temperament and so ticklish that everything annoyed
him. Uncle Jimmy owned the JM outfit--one of the big cattle outfits of
the Modoc--and Sody was his foreman.
“’Lo, Mrs. Daley,” called Sody. “Nice weather we’re havin’.”
“Hello, Mr. Slavin,” she answered, smiling.
“Mister!” he snorted indignantly.
“Mrs.!” she shot right back at him.
“All right, May. I didn’t want to call you May right in front of yore
husband; but if you ain’t scared of him, I ain’t.”
“That’s what polite folks calls ‘small-talk’, I reckon,” observed Uncle
Jimmy. “Anyway, it’s too ---- small to pay for the wear and tear on yore
teeth.”
Uncle Jimmy spat dryly and turned to Bud.
“Well, whatcha know about it, Bud?”
“Not any more than I did before.”
“Uh-huh.” Uncle Jimmy scratched his mustache violently.
“Aw, they must ’a’ strayed,” said Sody. “Dog-gone it, yuh----”
“They did, like ----!” snorted Uncle Jimmy. “Sody, you ain’t got---- My
----, you make me mad, Sody! Must ’a’ strayed! Since when did one brand
of cows all git together and vamoose? Mebbe they didn’t like to
associate with the other brands, eh? Sody, you do think of the dangdest,
craziest answers to questions.”
“Mebbe I’m wrong,” said Sody contritely.
“Mebbe!”
“You ain’t got no better answer,” grinned Sody. “They’re all gone, ain’t
they? They must ’a’ went away together.”
“Yeah! With some range-burglars fannin’ their south ends with a lariat.”
Bud grinned in spite of his loss. To Uncle Jimmy and Sody Slavin,
life was just one argument after another. At times the arguments
grew so personal that Uncle Jimmy would fire Sody. He was known to
have discharged Sody three times in one day, and Sody was known to
have quit his job three times in one day. And the majority of their
arguments were over things that neither of them knew anything about,
which neither would admit.
“Well, let’s not fight over it,” said Bud. “They’re gone, thassall.”
“I know it,” nodded Uncle Jimmy. “I know they’re gone, Bud; but
that--that----”
“Your Mister Slavin,” suggested Sody sweetly.
“Yea-a-a-ah!” snorted Uncle Jimmy. “My mister!”
“What’s the joke?” asked Bud.
“Joke, ----!” exploded Uncle Jimmy. “When Sody took that trip to Frisco
he went out to a packin’ plant. I s’pose he lied to ’em about the cows
we’ve got out here, and all that. You know how a danged half-wit like
him would talk. Anyway, I got a letter from the packer, and he says:
“‘Regardin’ a conversation with your Mr. Slavin.’
“My Mister Slavin! He ain’t mine, Bud. That’s the only thing that saves
him. If he was mine, I’d----”
“You wouldn’t have to,” interrupted Sody. “If I belonged to you, I’d
’a’ grieved m’self to death long ago. There is things that flesh and
blood can’t stand.”
“And you’re one of ’em,” declared Uncle Jimmy.
“If the argument is over, we might eat,” smiled Mrs. Daley.
“It never was no argument, as far as I was concerned,” said Uncle Jimmy.
“I--I-- Now, Sody, if you open your danged mouth, I’ll----”
“Who’s openin’ their mouth?” demanded Sody. “You took exceptions to a
statement I made, didn’t yuh? Yeah, yuh did, too. I’ll bet you don’t
even know what I said that started the argument.”
“Don’t I? The ---- I don’t! Huh! Do you?”
“Nope,” said Sody honestly.
Uncle Jimmy stared at him for several moments, his mustache working
violently. Then he turned his head and looked at Mrs. Daley, his face
breaking into an expansive smile.
“May, you sure do look fine,” he observed sincerely. “If I was thirty
years younger, I’d sure steal yuh away from that good-for-nothin’
husband of yours.”
Mrs. Daley laughed lightly, but Bud’s laugh was bitter, as he unbuckled
and kicked off his chaps.
“They’ve stole everythin’ else from me, Uncle Jimmy.”
“Yeah, that’s true, I reckon.”
Uncle Jimmy turned and squinted reflectively at the sunswept hills of
Modocland.
“Yeah, they’ve plumb cleaned yuh out, Bud. ’S far as I can see, yuh
ain’t got hide nor horn in this county. We’ve been free of rustlin’ for
a long time in the Modocs; but every once in a while they steps out and
starts in where they left off. But I don’t sabe it yet--nossir. Mebbe
I’ve lost a few head--I dunno.”
“May jist said that dinner was waitin’,” reminded Sody.
“Well, who said she didn’t?” demanded Uncle Jimmy. “You’re always tryin’
to start an argument, Sody.”
“No such a danged thing!” Sody shook his head violently. “I never start
arguments, Jim. You start ’em, and then----”
“Let’s eat,” suggested Bud.
Thus ended another argument that might have lasted several minutes--and
ended nowhere.
* * * * *
The Fall round-up of the Modoc country had just been completed, and
in all those thousands of cattle there was not a single one bearing
Bud Daley’s Triangle D brand. It was unbelievable, but true. An army
of cowboys had ridden for days, combing the hills so thoroughly that
hardly an animal had escaped them.
And all of them knew that Bud Daley owned at least five hundred head of
cattle, outside of possible increase. Bud had been foreman for Uncle
Jimmy Miller for a year; a top-hand cow-man, who had gained the respect
of every one during that one year.
But Bud was not content with a salary. He had married May Lloyd, the
prettiest girl in the Red Hills range country, and he wanted to make
good for her sake. For a few hundred dollars he had acquired the
Triangle ranch and iron, which he had had registered as the Triangle
D. Bud had a little money, which he invested in stock, starting his
little herd.
Then he had gone to Cleve Lavelle, the political and cattle power of
the Modoc country, and borrowed five thousand dollars, which he
invested in cattle--or rather, all except two hundred dollars. Bud
was a gambler. As soon as his cattle buying was over he went into the
Rest Ye All gambling-house, which was owned by Cleve Lavelle, and won
ten thousand dollars at roulette.
But, instead of paying Lavelle the borrowed money, he went out and
bought cattle with every cent of it. This gave him a respectable-sized
herd, and, barring the unforeseen, Bud Daley was destined to become a
regular cattleman.
Cleve Lavelle came in for a great amount of good-natured joking over
the fact that Bud had cleaned out the gambling-house, but Lavelle
was a cool-nerved gambler and merely smiled. It was all in the game.
Perhaps he felt that Bud should have paid his debts, but did not say
so. Lavelle was close-mouthed, and his square, deep-lined face, thin
lips and level gray eyes told nothing.
Lavelle owned the 76A cattle outfit, located about six miles from the
town of Modoc, where he employed a big crew of cowboys and
broncho-riders. Lavelle broke many horses for the Eastern markets and
took pride in the fact that he had the hardest riding crew of punchers
in the county.
And Lavelle was the political power in Modoc County. He was a mixer,
known as a square-shooter, but the political pot of the county was
mixed in Lavelle’s private office at the rear of the ornate Rest Ye All
gambling-house in Modoc. Whether or not the ingredients were according
to the pure political ideas of some of the people, they were according
to Cleve Lavelle.
Bud Daley had not the slightest idea of who had taken his stock. If he
had, he would not have gone to see Dug Breed, the sheriff, the day after
the close of the round-up. Bud did not like Dug Breed. He had opposed
Dug at the election of the year before, and Dug had not forgotten it. He
was a square-built man, about forty years of age, with harsh features,
narrow lips and eyes that flashed green in anger.
Breed was a competent officer, saying little, drinking none and paying
strict attention to running the sheriff’s office. To him went Bud. He
had heard of Bud’s loss. Every one in the Modoc range knew of it. Breed
had little to say, but Bud felt that he did not believe that the stock
had been stolen.
“You ain’t sold any stock lately, have you, Daley?” he asked.
“Sold any?” Bud shook his head, and it suddenly dawned upon him that the
sheriff was hinting that he had sold his stock and was trying to claim
that he had been robbed. For a moment he had difficulty in holding his
temper.
“Mebbe,” said the sheriff suggestively, “they were herded out through
the Crooked Cañon country and shipped from Black Wells.”
The Crooked Cañon country lay to the West of Bud’s ranch, and Black
Wells was a small shipping-point thirty miles from Modoc. Before the
advent of the railroad into Modoc, Black Wells had been the shipping
point for all of the Modoc range.
“That’s probably where they went,” admitted Bud slowly. “And Black Wells
ain’t a place where yuh can get reliable information.”
“No, it’s a pretty safe place,” said the sheriff thoughtfully. “Folks
over there mind their own business. This kind leaves you in a bad shape,
don’t it, Daley?”
“Well,” Bud smiled a trifle, “I’ve still got my health and the Triangle
D ranch.”
“I mean--you’re kinda left in debt, ain’t yuh?”
“Am I?” Bud’s lips shut tightly for a moment. “Where did yuh get that
idea, Breed?”
“It ain’t an idea, Daley. In fact, it’s none of my business; but
everybody knows that you couldn’t accumulate a herd of that size in
a year and not be in debt. I hope you’re not. And if you are, I hope
that yuh won’t be stuck for the payment.”
“Stuck for it?”
“You know what I mean--have the ranch taken away from yuh.”
Bud laughed softly as he rolled a cigaret. The ranch-house, brand and
the water-rights to a few springs had cost him less than five hundred
dollars. The repairs would not amount to more than two hundred more.
“You were just gettin’ a good start,” observed the sheriff.
Bud threw away his match and looked quizzically at the sheriff.
“Breed, I didn’t come here for sympathy,” he said slowly. “If that’s
what I wanted, ---- knows I’d never come to you. I’ve been robbed,
dontcha understand? Ain’t it kinda up to you to do something besides
settin’ there and feelin’ sorry for me?”
Breed frowned heavily for a moment, looking down at the toes of his
boots. Bud turned away and moved over to the open door. He had not
expected much from Breed; so he was not disappointed.
“Did you think I was offerin’ you sympathy?” asked Breed.
“I hoped you wasn’t,” said Bud, without turning his head.
“Well, I wasn’t.” Breed laughed shortly and turned back to some papers
on his desk.
Bud turned and looked at Breed, but the latter did not look up. For
a moment Bud’s lips curled with anger, and he rubbed an itching palm
across the brass heads of the cartridges in his belt. He knew that
Breed was a fighter, a dangerous man to provoke; yet every drop of
fighting blood in his body cried out against the injustice of an
officer refusing assistance because of a personal grudge.
But he fought down the desire to tell Breed what he thought of him
and to back up his opinions with hot lead. Bud knew that one of them
would probably never walk out of the place--possibly both. If the
sheriff killed him, it would be easy to explain; but if he killed the
sheriff--that would be a difficult situation.
* * * * *
So he turned, stepped out on the sidewalk and crossed the street to the
Rest Ye All saloon. It was the slack time of the day, and he found Cleve
Lavelle in his private office, reading a newspaper.
Lavelle put the paper aside, motioned Bud to a chair and waited for him
to speak.
“You heard what happened to me, didn’t yuh, Lavelle?” asked Bud.
Lavelle nodded curtly. He did not seem greatly concerned.
“I’m broke, I reckon,” continued Bud. “Somebody has cleaned me out as
slick as a rifle-barrel.”
“I heard about it,” said Lavelle. “Well?”
“Well?” Bud swallowed hard and shifted his position. “Well, I’m broke,
thasall. I owe you five thousand dollars, Lavelle.”
“You do.”
“Due next month,” said Bud.
“The first of the month, Daley.”
“All right. It looks to me like it was just too bad, thasall.”
“You can’t pay it?” Coldly.
“What with?”
“Mm-m-m.” Lavelle rubbed his chin with a hand that was just a trifle
over-decorated with diamonds. Bud estimated that just one of those
white stones would cost more than his debt.
“What’s your ranch worth, Daley?” asked Lavelle.
“That’s a question,” replied Bud thoughtfully. “It ain’t for sale.”
“Possibly not,” smiled Lavelle, “but under the present situation, I
might have to take it over.”
“I reckon I get yore idea,” nodded Bud, “but I didn’t come with that
idea in mind a-tall, Lavelle. Yuh see, it’s like this: yo’re a
gambler, Lavelle. You ain’t got a ghost of a chance to ever get that
five thousand. My ranch ain’t worth a fifth of that amount.”
“I understand that!” snapped Lavelle.
“You’ve set into big games,” continued Bud, ignoring the interruption.
“You’ve been stuck for five thousand dollars lots of times. Did you
quit, Lavelle?”
“What do you mean?”
“Did you quit the game, when you was five thousand in it?”
“No.” Lavelle shook his head. “No, I never quit, but----”
“Yo’re into my game five thousand dollars, Lavelle. If you quit now,
you lose five thousand; if you back me again, you’ve got a chance to
get yore money back.”
“Like ---- I have!” Lavelle threw back his head and laughed. “Daley,
you’ve got more nerve than a bank-robber. Do you think I’d gamble at
those odds?”
Bud did not laugh. His blue eyes bored into Lavelle’s face, and his jaw
was set tight.
“You sure make me laugh,” declared Lavelle.
“Ten thousand dollars would put me on my feet, Lavelle,” persisted Bud.
“Inside of three years----”
“They’d clean you out again,” finished Lavelle. “No, you’ve got me all
wrong, Daley. On the first of next month, you be here with five thousand
dollars.”
Lavelle dropped a heavy fist on the polished surface of his desk.
“In the first place, I don’t think that anybody robbed you. It isn’t
reasonable, Daley. Look at the thing right.”
Bud got to his feet and stood looking down at Lavelle.
“Just what do you mean by that remark, Lavelle?”
“Figure it out for yourself, Daley.”
“You mean that I----”
Bud leaned forward, his hands clenched tightly, as he stared down at
Lavelle.
“Hold your temper,” advised Lavelle. “You’re not a good bluffer, Daley.”
“I’m not goin’ to bluff,” said Bud slowly. “I’m goin’ to mean everythin’
I say to you, Lavelle. Yo’re ----”
“Wait a moment,” interrupted Lavelle. “You are going to say something
that you’ll be sorry for, Daley. You already owe me more than you want
to pay, and you are sore because I won’t lend you more. Your opinions
of me are of no interest to any one except yourself; so tell them to
yourself and save trouble.”
Bud relaxed slowly and a grin wreathed his lips. Then he laughed and
turned to the door.
“All right, Lavelle. I reckon that’s good advice. I’m sorry I acted like
a fool, and I’ll try to have that money for yuh.”
Bud crossed the gambling-room and entered the bar, where he found Sody
Slavin and “Dinah” Blewette. Dinah was a little dark-skinned cowpuncher
from the JM ranch, with an impediment in his speech, bow-legs and a
totally bald head.
They greeted Bud effusively and expansively. Between them they owned the
world and were perfectly willing to cut their share to thirds. Would he
accept?
“I ain’t a bit dry,” protested Bud. “Not a danged bit, boys.”
“Bud’s had grief,” explained Sody, while Dinah listened attentively.
“He’s sure had flocks of grief, Dinah.”
“Sh-sure,” agreed Dinah, nodding violently, which caused his sombrero to
shift in a circle on his bald dome.
“I--I--I--I--I----”
“That’s all from you,” interrupted Sody. “Me and Bud will do all the
talkin’, Dinah. Thasall right, we’ll excuse yuh from participatin’ in
conversation. You nod or shake, thasall.”
Dinah’s lips worked convulsively for a moment, as if trying to frame
a protest; but he broke into an expansive grin and turned to the bar,
signaling frantically for the bartender to show more speed.
Bud could not resist their invitation. It had been a long time since he
had taken a drink, and the potent liquor lifted him out of his blue
haze and transported him into a world which was filled with rose-tinted
atmosphere.
Lavelle came through the barroom a little later, but none of the three
cowboys paid any attention to him. Other cowboys, with their round-up
stakes in their pockets, were invading the place, anxious for their
drinks and a chance to woo the Goddess of Luck.
“She’s goin’ to be a big night,” declared Sody. “A big night.”
“Yuh--yuh--yuh--yuh--” choked Dinah.
“Yuh betcha,” said Sody, anticipating what Dinah was trying to say.
“Now, you stop that, Dinah. Yo’re a good cowboy and I like yuh fine;
but you never was intended to talk.”
“Tha--tha--tha--tha----”
“That’s right,” prompted Bud, nodding violently. “We know all about yuh,
Dinah.” And then to Sody, “I’ll make yuh a little bet that Dinah can’t
say ‘Piper Heidsick’ inside of five minutes.”
“Not with me yuh don’t,” grinned Sody. “The last time he tried to say
it, he was plumb unconscious for an hour. My gosh, he jist chokes plumb
to death. Uncle Jimmy wanted him to bring some chewin’ tobacco one day.
Uncle Jimmy chaws Piper; so he tells Dinah to bring him some. ‘Shorty’
Ryan was workin’ out there at that time, and he chaws Star. He wanted
some, too.
“Well, Dinah comes down to the store and horns up to the counter. He
was goin’ to order the Star first. They tells me that he started to
siss-s-s-- You know what I mean? Well, he keeps it up for so long
that everybody thought he was loaded to the gills with sody water.
Dinah sees that it ain’t goin’ to be no success; so he decides to
buy the Piper Heidsick first.
“Well, I reckon the change didn’t do Dinah no good, ’cause he collapsed
before he ever got past the pup part of it.”
* * * * *
Dinah took it good-naturedly, but tried for the next fifteen minutes to
tell Bud that Sody’s story was a ---- lie. Bud knew what Dinah wanted
to say, so everybody was satisfied. Things were going along fine, until
some of the 4-A cowboys came in, loaded for bear.
Among them was “Short-Horn” Adams, a fat-faced, blear-eyed puncher, who
had in some way incurred the displeasure of Dinah Blewette. Dinah was
getting all tuned to sing a song, when he happened to see Short-Horn.
Dinah proceeded to swing his heavy beer-glass overhanded and threw it
with all his strength at his enemy.
It was a good shot--except that Dinah threw it at Short-Horn’s
reflection in the back-bar mirror, causing the big mirror to radiate
cracks in every direction and creating havoc among the stacks of
glittering glassware on the back-bar.
Dug Breed happened to be among those present and proceeded to collar
the luckless Dinah, who was but a handful for Breed. As a result of
his reverse-English marksmanship Dinah would have probably spent the
night in the Modoc jail but about that time Sody Slavin accidentally
tangled his feet with those of Dug Breed, and the sheriff sat down
hard.
And Dinah ducked like a rabbit, although a trifle uncertain of gait,
while the cowpunchers cheered everybody concerned.
Breed got to his feet, blazing with wrath, only to be met with words of
apology and regret from Sody Slavin.
“My gosh, that was awful,” explained Sody. “I dunno how in ---- m’ feet
ever got over there.”
Sody seemed very sincere and serious. Breed glared at him, his fists
clenched tightly at his sides. There was no doubt that the sheriff was
fighting mad.
But Sody ignored the sheriff’s attitude as he kept on explaining:
“I must ’a’ slipped, dontcha know it? I’m sure-footed, too. I must ’a’
stepped on somethin’ with m’ left foot, and m’ right swung like this.”
Sody’s exaggerated slip caused him to lose balance and his swinging
right foot caught Breed on the shin-bone of his right leg. It was a
painful thing. Sody was badly off balance; so he grabbed at the
yelping sheriff and they both went down, half-under a table, with
Sody on top.
The fall half-stunned Breed, but did not affect Sody, who got to his
feet, still apologizing, and dragged his spurred heel across the
sheriff’s knee-cap as he stepped away. Breed struggled to his feet and
leaned on the table, panting and cursing painfully. He was so mad that
his eyes were shut.
Then Bud blundered into the table, knocking away the sheriff’s visible
means of support; and he and Sody went out through the front door. They
heard the sheriff hit the floor again, and his curses were wonderful to
hear; but Sody and Bud were too joyful to care about mere words.
“Oh, m’ ----!” wheezed Sody, clinging to Bud. “It went jist like
clockwork, Bud. Ain’t I the thinker? Ain’t I? And then you moved the
table away from him! Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!”
“He’ll try to kill us both,” choked Bud.
“He can’t. It’s ag’in’ the law, Bud.”
“He’s so mad that the law won’t stop him, Sody.”
“All right,” laughed Sody. “I hope I don’t die so painful that I can’t
take time to think of how I kicked him in the shin, fell on top of him
and then spurred him in the knee. Ha-ha-ha! And every danged bit of it
was accidental, too.”
“I couldn’t help bumpin’ into that table,” added Bud. “I was so drunk I
never knowed what I was doin’. I wonder where Dinah went?”
“He won’t go far,” gasped Sody. “What did the ---- fool bust that mirror
for? Why, he jist whaled away at it with his glass.”
“I--I--I--I--I----”
Dinah stepped out from the dark corner of the building and began his
explanation.
“Wait a minute,” begged Sody. “Let’s get farther away from Breed.”
They went farther down the street and stopped in a dark spot.
“Didja jist want to bust that mirror?” asked Sody. “Don’t talk, Dinah;
nod or shake.”
Dinah shook.
“Accidental?”
Dinah shook again.
“Uh-huh,” reflected Sody. “That’s funny.”
“Say, didja see somebody in the mirror?”
Dinah nodded violently.
“Who?” asked Sody.
“Sh--sh--sh--sh--sh--”
“Stop it!” snapped Sody. “Was it Short-Horn Adams?”
Dinah nodded quickly.
“Well, that’s settled,” said Sody. “Now what do we do?”
“I’m goin’ home,” said Bud. “I’ve got a home and a wife, yuh must
remember.”
“If I was in yore condition, I’d not thank anybody to remind me of it,”
said Sody seriously. “You might as well stay and make a good night of
it, Bud.”
“I’ll be sober by the time I get home, Sody.”
“Yeah--by the time yuh git home. You’ll prob’ly fall off yore horse
before yuh get there.”
“No, I won’t either. You and Dinah better go home, too. If yuh stay
around here, Breed’ll have yuh both in jail.”
“You better stay,” insisted Sody. “You’ll get a lot of good laughs out
of watchin’ him try it.”
But Bud had made up his mind to go home; so Dinah and Sody parted
reluctantly with him and went seeking more fun, while Bud mounted and
rode swiftly out of Modoc.
* * * * *
It was five miles from town to Bud’s ranch, but before he had gone half
the distance he realized that he contained far too much whisky. Solitude
and the swinging motion of his horse caused him to realize also that he
was in no condition to converse with his wife.
“It can’t last always,” he told himself; “so I’ll swing into the hills
and ride it off.”
There was a full moon, which lighted the hills, and a cool breeze that
fanned his fevered brow; but instead of sobering up, he grew even more
intoxicated. In a half-daze, he circled through the hills and came in
at the rear of the ranch.
He could see a dim light in the living-room, and he knew that May was
waiting up for him. He felt sorry for her. He had promised her many
things which she had been denied. Now he was worse than broke. He
remembered dimly that Breed was not going to try to find the stolen
cattle, and that Lavelle had refused to help him again. It seemed like
weeks ago that he had talked with them. He dismounted and dropped the
reins, forgetting to unsaddle his horse.
“To ---- with ’em!” he told himself thickly. “I’ll git along. Tha’s jist
what I’ll do--git along, y’betcha.”
He approached the house from the rear, laughing foolishly at his
erratic progress. At the kitchen door he stopped. The door was open.
A foolish idea took root in his addled brain. He would take off his
boots and sneak in. The idea appealed to him immensely.
So he sat down on the step and drew off his boots, chuckling to himself.
Somewhere he had heard of a drunken man doing that same thing. It didn’t
seem so funny then, but it did now. Perhaps, he thought, May might be
asleep--and never know that he did not come home sober.
He tucked a boot under each arm and crept inside. He could see the light
in the living-room. It was an oil-lamp, turned low. Into the living-room
he went and stopped near the table. The front door, which led out on to
a porch, was open, and he heard voices. They were talking softly.
Bud frowned and listened closely, but could not hear plainly enough; so
he moved over closer to the door. It was a man’s voice and a woman’s. He
could hear them plain enough now. The man’s voice was very distinct:
“Oh, I know--loyalty and all that. But you’ve tried it two years. And
what have you got? Nothing. Why, this ranch wouldn’t bring the price
of two dresses--the kind you ought to have.”
Bud blinked wonderingly, straining his ears for the woman’s reply, which
was pitched too low for him to hear what she said. He looked around the
room, as if wondering if he had entered the wrong house by mistake. Then
the man’s voice again:
“Look at it right. You are young yet; the prettiest woman in this
county. Do you want to throw away your youth? Do you want to look like
the rest of these cattlemen’s wives in a few years, or do you want to
live in luxury, retain your beauty?
“Bud Daley can never hope to give you much. I will admit that Bud is
doing the best he can, but it isn’t enough. As a cattleman, he is a
failure; and you two can’t live on a cowpuncher’s salary. Just now,” the
man laughed, “he is down in Modoc filling his skin with whisky--leaving
you here alone.”
If the woman made any reply, Bud was unable to hear it. He was sober
now. The whisky had evaporated from his brain. He looked down at his
bedraggled socks and at the boots under his arms. He lifted his eyes
and stared toward the door, as the man’s voice continued:
“I remember when you came here to Modoc. I knew then that you were the
most beautiful girl I had ever seen. I pictured you in silks and furs,
May. Since then you have been in my dreams, day-dreams and night-dreams.
You are not happy. No, you are not. Can you look me in the eyes and tell
me that you are satisfied with life? No, I didn’t think you could.
“May, you can’t afford to throw away your life. Bud is man enough to
understand--and if he doesn’t--well, what matter?”
Bud’s face had gone gray in the yellow light of the lamp, and the lines
of his face deepened, as he stared across the room into space. His mouth
was so dry that it was painful, and his eyes ached from the intensity of
looking far into the future.
They were talking again, but he did not listen. The world had gone flat,
stale. He wondered dimly if May had a wrap around her shoulders. It was
cool out there on the porch. He felt cold.
Then he found himself back at his horse and started to mount before he
realized that he still carried his boots. They were hard to get on, and
he wondered why he had ever taken them off. It was a foolish thing to
do, he thought.
He mounted his horse and looked slowly around.
“Where am I goin’?” he asked himself, half-aloud. “I’m ready to go, and
there ain’t no place.”
Somewhere a cow bawled sleepily.
“Wish I was a cow,” said Bud wearily. “Cows don’t think.”
On all sides stretched the moonlit hills, silver, blue and haze that hid
their harsh outlines--a sparkling fairyland, topped with a ceiling of
stars. Bud turned and rode out of the rear gate, heading into the hills;
riding away from humanity, seeking the open places to clear his brain.
On the slope of the hill he drew rein and looked back toward the
ranch-house, where the oil-lamp gleamed, a dull pin-point of yellow
light. It seemed that he could still hear the drone of voices on the
front porch; but it was only the whispering of the breeze through the
purple sage.
“Lavelle, I reckon yo’re right,” he said softly. “Bud Daley can’t ever
hope to give her much. And she can’t afford to throw away her life--look
like the rest of the cattlemen’s wives. I--I never thought about it
thataway, Lavelle.”
Bud sighed deeply and the fumes of the forgotten whisky tasted sour to
his palate.
“Gawd,” he said softly, “you made a wonderful world, but, if I’m any
judge, the makin’ of humanity wasn’t no job for one man.”
Then he bowed his head and rode straight into the hills.
* * * * *
After Bud had left them, Sody and Dinah proceeded to keep out of Dug
Breed’s way and to drink much liquor. Dinah promised Sody that he
would bury the hatchet as far as Short-Horn Adams was concerned and
hold nothing but good thoughts for everybody.
And so passed several pleasant hours in the lives of Dinah and Sody.
The wooden sidewalks became far too narrow for their tread and the
buildings, at times, surged and jerked violently. Then, without any
warning, Dinah’s cup of joy turned sour, and he choked with a great
emotion. In fact, he wept brokenly. Sody tried to cheer him, without
avail. Then a great sadness came down upon Sody, and he cried too.
It is very likely that the tears blinded them to such an extent that
they separated. No one will ever know whether Sody lost Dinah or Dinah
lost Sody. Anyway, as soon as he partly recovered from his crying spree,
Sody went hunting for his little partner.
But in all that vast army of gyrating houses, lamps, cowboys, he was
unable to find the object of his search. From saloon to saloon he
went, but there was no sign of Dinah Blewette. Then Sody decided that
Dinah had gone home; so he went to the hitch-rack, intending to see
if Dinah’s horse was still there.
It was--and so was Dinah. He was sitting on the ground, with his back up
against a post, and Sody did not see him until he stepped on his leg.
“Yuh-yuh-yuh----” began Dinah indignantly.
“Oh, there yuh are, eh?” said Sody.
Sody lighted a match and looked Dinah over. His eyes were swollen and
purple, his nose slightly out of line and he appeared to be minus
several front teeth. Taking him all in all, Dinah was a greatly changed
man.
“Yuh found Short-Horn, didn’t yuh,” commented Sody. “Don’t try to answer
me, Dinah. Every inch of yuh proclaims the fact that you cried yore way
into his heart. My ----, but yo’re a mess!”
He helped Dinah to his feet and backed him against the post, while he
tried to wipe Dinah’s face with a handkerchief, which only increased
the misery of the little cowpuncher.
“Don’t try to tell me what to do,” growled Sody. “Yore face has got to
be set right, or it’ll look awful queer. You ain’t got no sense, Dinah.
Short-Horn is big enough to tie yuh in a knot and hang yuh up to dry.”
“He-he dud-did,” said Dinah sadly.
“Uh-huh.” Sody made a last swipe at Dinah’s face with the handkerchief
and hitched up his own belt.
“Well, we’ll have speech with Mister Short-Horn, Dinah. He’s a powerful
mean critter, the same of which I ain’t too drunk to remember; so I goes
cautious-like. I ain’t takin’ yore troubles upon me, yuh understand.
Yore battles are yore battles, Dinah; but jist now I feels antagonistic
agin’ him and all his ilk.
“Know what ‘ilk’ means, Dinah? Don’t answer me. My ----, I do like these
one-sided conversations. C’mon.”
Sody hitched up his belt, squared around to get his bearings and headed
for the Rest Ye All, with Dinah weaving along in his wake. For all of
his huge bulk, Sody was as hard as nails; but he was cognizant of the
fact that he was just a little too drunk to do a good job of fighting
with his hands.
The Rest Ye All was well filled with cowboys, who were spending their
round-up stakes as fast as possible. The long bar was crowded to
capacity, and the gambling-hall, at the rear, was blue with tobacco
smoke and shifting forms. Sody shouldered his way past the bar, with
Dinah following along in his wake, taking advantage of Sody’s bulk to
clear a trail for him.
Dug Breed was coming out into the barroom, elbowing his way along; but
when he saw Sody and Dinah he turned around and forced his way back.
Breed had heard that Short-Horn Adams had whipped Dinah Blewette, and
he knew that the trail of these two JM cowpunchers would probably lead
to trouble.
And not only that, but Breed held no forgiveness in his heart for what
Sody had done to him earlier in the evening; and he was all primed to
tap Sody over the head with a gun and take him to jail.
Short-Horn Adams was bucking a roulette wheel at the extreme end of the
room and was having no luck whatever. Short-Horn’s voice was plainly
audible as he complained over his ill-luck. Other punchers laughed,
shouted with rough glee and placed their bets.
A dapper little gambler was running the game, his derby hat cocked at
a rakish angle on his head, a cigar held jauntily between his teeth.
Short-Horn glared belligerently at him, as the gambler raked in
Short-Horn’s last bets.
“The house is lucky tonight, gents,” he laughed. “Put down your
contributions and accept our sympathy.”
“Yeah, yo’re sure lucky,” agreed Short-Horn. “I betcha I know what makes
yuh lucky.”
With a sweep of his hand, Short-Horn removed the hat from the gambler’s
head and placed it on his own. Short-Horn’s head was a trifle too small
and the derby fitted down over his brows.
“Now spin yore wheel,” roared Short-Horn. “C’mon, gents. I’ve removed
the curse from our midst, and we c’n break the danged game in three
whirls.”
_Whap!_
Sody’s broad palm descended upon the derby with great force and drove it
down over Short-Horn’s head, covering his face and wedging it down over
his ears. Short-Horn whirled around clawing at the brim of the hat, but
only succeeding in ripping the brim away.
“Now yuh got him, Dinah,” said Sody calmly. “He’s yore size now, li’l
feller. Help yoreself to the mustard.”
And Dinah did not need a second invitation. With both fists he hammered
the blinded Short-Horn unmercifully, while the crowd cheered wildly and
gave him plenty of room. Many of them knew that Short-Horn had beaten
Dinah, and they wanted to see the smaller man even the score, even if
he was doing it unfairly.
While Short-Horn clawed at the hat-brim, which stuck tightly, Dinah
socked him with both fists, driving him back into the roulette layout.
And then, through the cheering crowd, came Dug Breed, shoving his way
to the center, only to be met by Sody Slavin.
“Stop it!” yelped Breed. “I’ll arrest every----”
But his threat was unfinished, when Sody bumped into him, crashing him
back into the crowd. At this moment, Short-Horn managed to get the hat
loose, and charged Dinah, who ducked down and let Short-Horn fall over
him.
“Rattle yore hocks, Dinah!” yelled Sody. “The sheriff is angry with us.
C’mon!”
Sody dived straight at the crowd, with Dinah wobbling after him, and
the crowd surged in behind them, blocking the sheriff and the cursing
Short-Horn, who had a gun in his hand and murder in his eye.
Straight out past the bar went Sody and Dinah, heading for their horses,
which were up the street at the nearest hitch-rack. Sody knew that it
would be dangerous for them to stay in Modoc. It would mean a gun-battle
with Short-Horn and his gang--if the sheriff did not get them first.
They had swung on to their horses and spurred into the street when
they heard the unmistakable thud of a revolver shot, fired from inside
a building. Sody’s horse lurched sidewise and went to its knees, while
Sody flung himself free, bounced to his feet and ran to Dinah, who was
having trouble with his animal.
Up behind Dinah’s saddle climbed the big cowpuncher, while Dinah’s
horse, unused to a double-load, bawled wildly, threw down its head and
bucked out of town, heading for the home ranch.
But the bucking was of short duration, because of the fact that Sody’s
weight was too much for the broncho to handle; but they faded out of
Modoc’s sight so fast that only a wisp of dust blew back to show of
their leaving.
* * * * *
Dug Breed clawed his way to the street about the time that they faded
out. Several others arrived about this time, their interest centered
on Sody’s horse, which sprawled in the middle of the street. The fact
that some one had fired several pistol shots did not alarm them in the
least.
“I heard three shots fired,” volunteered a cowpuncher. “I was comin’ up
the street and I see this horse go down. I think the first shot hit the
horse, but I dunno where they was fired from.”
Dug Breed said nothing. The horse was quite dead; so they unsaddled
it, and two cowboys, using their ropes, hooked on to it from their
saddle-horns and dragged the carcass off the street.
Breed knew that the shots had not been fired by Short-Horn nor by any
one in the Rest Ye All; and he wondered who else had a grievance against
Sody Slavin.
Across the street was a general merchandise store, post office,
restaurant and the Modoc bank. The restaurant was the only one of the
four that was open at this time of night. Farther up that side of the
street were more saloons, but the shots could hardly have been fired
from there.
Beside the Rest Ye All saloon was a big feed store, on one side, and
on the other was another general merchandise store, both closed. Breed
found the cowboy who had heard the shots and questioned him.
“I dunno much about it,” confessed the cowboy, “but they did seem to
come from the other side, and they was kinda muffled, like they was
from inside a house. I heard one shot, and then I seen the horse
fall down. I was kinda interested in that, but I sure heard two more
shots.”
Breed crossed the street and walked past the restaurant. There were
several diners within, busily engaged with their food. He walked past
the store, which was unlighted, the door locked. The post office was
locked, blinds drawn.
But in front of the Modoc bank he stopped. There was glass on the
sidewalk, which had fallen from one of the front windows. A closer
examination showed that almost the entire pane was missing.
“Did somebody shoot from inside the bank?” wondered Breed as he peered
in through the broken window.
He broke away some of the jagged glass and prepared to climb within, but
changed his mind. It might look bad, he thought.
It was only a short distance to the home of Frank Jordan, president of
the bank, and Breed negotiated it in short order.
Jordan was asleep, but Breed beat a tattoo on the door with the muzzle
of his gun and soon aroused him.
“This is the sheriff,” informed Breed. “One of the front windows of the
bank has been smashed out.”
“Smashed out?” Jordan grew very wide awake. “Who smashed it?”
“----, I dunno!” snapped Breed. “Hop into yore pants and let’s find out.
And don’t forget yore key.”
Jordan appeared in a few minutes, and they hurried down to the bank.
Breed told him nothing about the shots nor of the dead saddle-horse,
but Jordan volunteered the information that George Findlay, the
cashier, intended to work late that evening.
“Did he have anythin’ agin’ Sody Slavin?” asked Breed.
“Slavin? That big cowboy? Why, I--I really can’t say, sheriff. Not that
I know of. In fact, I doubt that George knows him.”
Jordan grunted wonderingly at the broken window and opened the door. The
bank was lighted with oil-lamps, which it took several moments to find
in the dark. The vault door was wide open, as was the inner door.
Jordan gawped wildly around, while Breed walked to the vault door and
peered inside.
“Look over there!” exclaimed Jordan, pointing back toward the door.
Just to the left of the door, directly below the smashed window, was the
huddled body of the bank cashier. Breed went swiftly to him, turning his
face up to the light.
“Is he dead?” asked Jordan hoarsely.
“Yeah.” Breed squinted at the window and back at the dead cashier.
“He’s been hit over the head,” said Breed. “Mebbe that didn’t stop him;
so they used lead on the poor ----. Better take a look at the vault,
Jordan.”
They left the body lying there and went to the vault, carrying a lamp.
Swiftly the banker examined the place, but shook his head wearily.
“I can’t tell how much, if anything, is missing, sheriff. It will take a
complete check to tell. I am afraid that the Modoc bank is hit hard.”
He stooped and picked up several loose bills which had been dropped on
the floor. The sheriff picked up several silver dollars, and among them
was a silver piece, which was not a dollar. He looked closely at it.
“What is it, sheriff?” asked the banker.
“A rosette,” said Breed thoughtfully.
“A rosette?”
“Yeah. One of them ornaments that punchers wear on the side of their
chaps. I’ll keep this, ’cause it might come in handy.”
They went back into the room, and the banker closed the vault, while
Breed studied the case. There was a spot of blood on the floor near
the vault door. The cashier was wearing a coat. Just to the right of
the front door, the sheriff picked up a black hat.
“That’s George’s hat,” said the banker.
“They probably laid for him,” said Breed. “When he came out the door
they herded him back in here, made him open the vault and then sapped
him over the head. They probably thought he was hit hard enough to
make him lay still; but he recovered and tried to make a getaway. They
missed him with one shot and smashed the window. That bullet killed
Sody Slavin’s horse. The other two got George. You stay here while I
get the coroner, Jordan.”
“Have you any idea who did it?” asked Jordan.
“If I have, I ain’t yellin’ it,” said Breed, and slammed the door behind
him.
He felt of the hammered silver rosette as he hurried along, and the feel
of it brought a grin to his lips.
* * * * *
It was after nine o’clock the following morning, when Bud Daley rode up
to his stable. All night long he had ridden the hills, and his horse
stumbled wearily to a standstill, its head hanging.
And Bud was just as weary as the horse. His face was gray and drawn from
his mental battle, but his lips were drawn tightly in a stern resolution
to put the case squarely up to his wife. He felt that he would know in a
moment just how she felt about it.
She came out through the kitchen door as he dismounted, shading her
eyes from the sun, and walked slowly toward him, while he yanked the
saddle from his horse.
Another rider was coming in toward the ranch, and Mrs. Daley turned to
look at him. It was Dug Breed, the sheriff. He raised his hat to Mrs.
Daley and dismounted beside her, as Bud came up to them.
“Hello, Dug,” said Bud wearily.
He felt that Breed was out there because of what happened the night
before, and grinned slightly, as he remembered that he had knocked the
table away from the sheriff.
“Mornin’, Bud,” said Breed softly. “Been ridin’?”
Bud looked at his wife. Her general appearance indicated that she had
spent a sleepless night. Breed looked at Bud’s horse, which was rolling
in the dust beside the corral. It was easy to see that the horse had
traveled many miles during the night.
“Yeah,” Bud nodded slowly. “I’ve been ridin’. Why?”
“Where yuh been ridin’ to, Bud?”
“What’s that to you, Dug?”
“Mebbe a lot--mebbe a little, Bud. Can yuh prove where you’ve been
ridin’?”
Bud shifted uneasily and his eyes hardened.
“Where was you about midnight, Bud?” asked Breed.
“None of your ---- business!”
Bud’s body tensed angrily and his right hand dropped to his side. Mrs.
Daley looked from one to the other quickly and started to put her hand
on Bud’s arm, but he stepped aside.
“I ain’t goin’ to quarrel with yuh, Bud,” said Breed slowly. “You don’t
have to tell me where you’ve been, if yuh don’t want to. But, under the
circumstances, I’ve got to arrest yuh for the murder of George Findlay
and for robbin’ the Modoc bank.”
Bud’s right hand came up slowly and the back of it brushed across his
eyes. He scowled thoughtfully, but a grin crossed his lips.
“You jokin’ me, Dug?” he asked hoarsely.
“Wish I was, Bud. You’ll come peaceful-like, won’t yuh?”
“I’m under arrest?”
“Yeah, yuh sure are, Bud. I hate----”
“What do you know about hate?” Bud’s voice was flat, toneless.
He looked at his wife. Her eyes were wide with fright and her face
looked pale and drawn.
“Bud,” she whispered, “you--you didn’t do this. Why, you couldn’t have
done a thing like that, Bud.”
Bud looked at her thoughtfully. Then he shook his head, and a wistful
smile passed his lips as he said:
“May, yuh never can tell what a human bein’ will do. I’ve kinda lost
faith in folks.”
“But you can prove that you didn’t do it, can’t you, Bud?”
“No-o-o,” Bud shook his head. “I don’t reckon I can, and I don’t know
anybody that can prove it for me.”
Breed turned to Mrs. Daley.
“Wasn’t Bud home last night?”
“You don’t need to answer that, May,” said Bud quickly.
“No, she don’t have to,” admitted Breed.
“But why do yuh blame me for it, Dug?” asked Bud. “You ain’t told me a
thing, except that I’m guilty.”
Breed stepped in closer to Bud, examining the sides of his leather
chaps, while Bud watched him curiously. Then Breed pointed to a spot
about midway of Bud’s right leg.
“Where’s the rosette gone, Bud?”
“The rosette?”
Bud frowned and looked closely. On the left leg there were five silver
rosettes; on the right there were only four. They were of a peculiar
design, hand-hammered from silver. Bud had made them from Mexican silver
and had stamped the designs with a leather stamping tool.
“I must ’a’ lost it,” muttered Bud.
“I found it on the vault floor,” said Breed slowly, watching Bud’s
face. “There was some scattered money, too. Findlay was over by the
front window--dead.”
“On the vault floor?” muttered Bud vacantly. “That’s funny.”
He examined the leg of his chaps closely. The piece of whang-leather,
which looped through the rosette, had worn through.
“Yeah--on the vault floor,” said Breed.
“Oh, Bud!” breathed his wife. “You didn’t do this. Say that you didn’t
do it, Bud.”
Bud sighed and shook his head.
“What’s the use, May? I reckon it don’t make much difference, anyway.”
He held his hands out to Breed, a wistful smile on his lips.
“Better put ’em on, Dug, yuh never can tell about me--or any other human
bein’.”
Breed snapped the handcuffs on Bud’s wrists, took Bud’s gun and shoved
it inside his own waist-band.
“You’ll have to saddle my horse for me, Dug,” he grinned.
“All right,” Breed sighed with relief.
He was glad to have taken Bud Daley without trouble. Bud followed him
down to the horse, but Mrs. Daley turned and went back to the house, a
dejected little figure, and leaned against the kitchen door wearily,
while Bud and the sheriff rode away.
Bud did not look back.
“Mebbe it’s better this way,” he told himself. “I don’t care a dang what
happens from now on.”
There was no demonstration in Modoc when the sheriff came in with his
prisoner. Bud was well liked by the cattlemen. Jordan had made an
investigation of the robbery and found that the Modoc bank was about
twenty thousand dollars loser.
Jordan lost no time in interviewing Bud in the jail. Even if Bud was
convicted, the fact still remained that the Modoc bank was still twenty
thousand dollars short--which was a lot of money.
Jordan intimated that the return of the money would react in Bud’s
favor; but Bud only grinned at him and reminded him that murder was
murder and had nothing whatever to do with money.
“And besides,” reminded Bud, “if I was able to hand yuh back that money,
it would only cinch the murder on to me. Whoever got that money killed
Findlay.”
Then came Uncle Jimmy Miller, like a raging bob-cat. He swore and raved
about what he was going to do, while Bud grinned and smoked his
cigarets. Then he cooled down and told Bud that one of Bud’s shots had
killed Sody Slavin’s horse. The fact that Uncle Jimmy was sure that Bud
had done the job made no difference.
“I’ll back yuh for the last ---- cent I’ve got,” he declared. “Never
did have no use for banks, by ----! Wanted to borry some money about
a year ago from Jordan. Wanted ten p’cent.! Wanted me to give him a
mortgage on the JM. Dang him, he wanted the world with a fence around
it. Jist the same as told me that m’ word wasn’t no good. I’ll betcha
he’ll be dunnin’ yuh for ten p’cent., if they convicts yuh, Bud.”
“They’ll likely hang me, if they find me guilty,” grinned Bud.
“Like ---- they will! Let ’em try it. By ----, I’ll organize a gang of
m’ own and take this town apart. Oh, I ain’t too old to act right smart
at times, Bud. I used t’ be a hellion in m’ time, and Dug Breed won’t be
the first sheriff that I’ve called upon to hunt a new stompin’-ground.
And some of ’em has sure hummed like a spike gettin’ away, too.”
Bud laughed and shook his head.
“Better let things go as they lay, Uncle Jimmy.”
“Uh-huh.” Thoughtfully. “What about May? How’d she take it?”
“Oh, all right, I reckon.”
Uncle Jimmy considered Bud closely.
“You and May ain’t antagonistic toward each other, are yuh?”
“No-o-o.”
“Yes, yuh are. Now, you jist set easy, Bud; I’ll take care of May.”
Bud shook his head and stared at the ashes of his cigaret.
“Better let her alone, Uncle Jimmy.”
“Thasso? You go to ----, will yuh?” Uncle Jimmy got to his feet and
backed to the barred door. “You see if I let her alone, young feller.
Ain’t either one of yuh got any sense. Now you set down on the seat of
yore pants, ’cause you ain’t goin’ nowhere.”
Dug Breed unlocked the door and Uncle Jimmy went swearing back to the
street.
Sody and Dinah came cautiously back to town, but every one seemed to
have forgotten the incidents of the night before. Uncle Jimmy told
them about the arrest, and Sody swore wonderingly at the fact that it
was one of Bud’s misdirected shots that killed his horse.
“Gug-gosh!” blurted Dinah in amazement.
“Now that’s about all from you,” warned Sody. “This ain’t a case that
requires a lot of conversation, Dinah. How much money did Bud get, Uncle
Jimmy?”
“Twenty thousand dollars.”
“The ol’ son of a gun!” applauded Sody. “Bud ain’t no piker, is he?
Whooee-e-e! Twenty thousand!”
“But he’s in jail for murder,” reminded Uncle Jimmy.
“I know, but--gosh, that’s a lot of money. He likely planted it in a
safe place, too.”
“You kinda amaze me, Sody,” said Uncle Jimmy sadly. “Don’tcha know yo’re
applaudin’ a murderer? My ----, ain’tcha got no respect for the law?”
“Since when did you git so danged sanitary?” demanded Sody.
“I’ve allus respected the law, Sody.” Softly and sadly.
“You have, like----!”
“I have respect for the law, Sody.”
“Yeah, sure yuh have. You respect a kickin’ bronc, too. You don’t monkey
with the business end of the ---- thing; you get ahead of it.”
“He-he-he-he,” chuckled Dinah.
“Sure he does,” interrupted Sody. “We know him. He gits ahead of the
law--where the thing can’t kick him. Ha-ha-ha-ha!”
“A prophet is without honor in his own home town,” said Uncle Jimmy
sadly, shaking his head.
“Profit!” snorted Sody. “Yo’re a dead loss, Jim Miller. Let’s go and git
a drink.”
“If I was in m’ right mind, I’d fire you, Sody,” declared Uncle Jimmy.
“If you wait for that, I’ve got a life job,” grinned Sody.
They went into the Rest Ye All and stopped at the bar. Several men
were there, and among them was Cleve Lavelle. He nodded absently and
continued to converse with the others. Naturally the robbery and
murder was the topic of conversation.
“I dunno how Bud Daley is goin’ to even hire a lawyer,” said one of the
men. “He’s flat broke, I hear.”
“I’ll be ---- if he is!” snorted Uncle Jimmy, “the JM ranch is behind
him, with every horn and hide I’ve got.”
“You don’t think he’s guilty, Miller?” asked Lavelle.
“What the ---- difference does that make?”
“All right,” nodded Lavelle. “I’ll go fifty-fifty with you on the deal.”
“You mean that you’ll help him, too, Lavelle?”
“Just that,” said Lavelle firmly. “As far as Daley is personally
concerned, I’m not interested; but we’ve got to remember that he’s got a
wife. Things like this hurt a woman, boys. Whether he’s guilty or not,
we’ve got to try and save him. He owes me a lot of money, which I never
expect to collect. He got sore because I would not lend him another ten
thousand.”
“Then he needed money, eh?” queried one of the men.
“I suppose I shouldn’t have mentioned that,” said Lavelle. “He must
have needed it, or he wouldn’t have tried to borrow. Yes, he claimed
that some one had stolen all his cattle.”
“They did,” said Uncle Jimmy. “Bud won’t lie.”
“All right,” laughed Lavelle. “Let’s have a drink.”
II.
The smoking-car creaked and groaned as the train swung slowly around one
of the many sharp curves in the Modoc country. From the engine came the
shrill whistle, sounding eerie and far away; from the wheels came the
_clickety-click_, _clickety-click_, caused by the rail-joints.
There were only two men in the smoker--“Hashknife” Hartley and “Sleepy”
Stevens. Hashknife sprawled his six-feet-plus in solid comfort, hunched
down so low that his coat hiked up around his ears and the lower part of
his lean face was hidden inside the unbuttoned collar.
Sleepy was also at ease, although he did not have as much length to
distribute. His booted feet were heel-hooked against the cushion of
the opposite seat, his nose slightly flattened against the window as
he stared out into the darkness.
Both men were dressed in range fashion. On the seat in front of them
rested a couple of cheap telescope valises, not at all bulged. In
fact, the sides were just a trifle sunken, which would indicate that
these two sons of the range were traveling light.
Hashknife’s right hand fumbled in the pocket of his faded vest and drew
out a conglomeration of matches, cigaret papers, a revolver cartridge
and a piece of string. He selected a paper, carefully replaced the other
impedimenta and glanced sidewise at Sleepy.
“Gimme yore Durham.”
Sleepy’s nose squeaked on the glass, as he turned his head.
“Why dontcha buy yuh some Durham once in a while?”
Hashknife looked with disapproval upon his partner.
“You ain’t refusin’ me yore Durham, are yuh, cowboy?”
Sleepy grunted complainingly, dug into a hip-pocket and drew out a sack
of the required brand.
“Yo’re always stingy,” observed Hashknife, helping himself from the
inverted sack, and spilling a goodly quantity into the wrinkles of his
shirt. “I always give you tobacco, don’t I? Answer me that, why don’t
yuh? Any old time I have tobacco----”
“Any old time yuh do!” snorted Sleepy, accepting the sack and shoving it
deep in his pocket.
Hashknife scratched a match and settled down to solid comfort again.
Sleepy humped over, searching under the seat for a much-thumbed
time-table, which he perused diligently for a while.
“The ---- fool that got up this here time-table must ’a’ knowed what he
meant; but I don’t,” he declared. “It says here for yuh to read up. Read
up, ----! It ain’t no ways----”
“He means for yuh to read up the page,” informed Hashknife.
“Didja think I thought he meant for me to read up the side of my boot? I
know what he meant.”
“Didja? When do we hit Modoc?”
Sleepy perused the page again.
“Up or down?” he asked.
“Which way are we goin’?”
“That’s why I complains,” explained Sleepy, throwing the offending
folder on the floor. “Nobody knows, except the _hombre_ that wrote
it--and he prob’ly didn’t want to go to Modoc.”
“Probably not,” agreed Hashknife. “I’ll betcha that Modoc don’t care
what he thought, though.”
“I s’pose not.” Thus Sleepy wearily. “Mebbe Bud Daley won’t be a ----
bit glad to see us.”
“Yeah, he will,” said Hashknife. “Old Bud’s a good feller.”
“Was,” corrected Sleepy. “You ain’t heard from him lately.”
“Year ago last Christmas.”
“And this is September. Danged near two years.”
“That’s right. Time sure does gallop along.”
“And it wasn’t nothin’ but a Christmas card he sent yuh.”
“That’s all,” Hashknife yawned widely and threw away his cigaret. “But
it said he’d like to have us stop and see him some time, Sleepy--him and
May.”
“He had to be polite,” grinned Sleepy. “I wonder if May is as pretty as
she used to be? My golly, she sure was a dinger.”
“Wouldn’t change much in two years, or so. Yessir, she sure was pretty,
Sleepy. I’ve seen a lot of girls, but I’ll betcha that May Daley is the
prettiest. She was too pretty to be safe and sound.”
“M-m-m-m. I s’pose that Bud and her are gettin’ along like old married
folks. He prob’ly puts on his slippers at night, don’t play no poker,
has to sneak a drink and then eat cloves. Smokes a pipe out in the
woodshed and never says ----, except when he refers to a irrigation
project.
“How did he ever happen to go to this Modoc country, Hashknife? Didn’t
her folks live up here, or how was it?”
“I dunno about her folks, Sleepy. Bud met the owner of a cowranch up
here and he offers Bud a good job, I reckon. That’s the way it was
told to me. Bud never said how it comes. Anyway, it don’t make me no
never mind. As long as we’re passin’ Modoc, I thought we might as
well stop off to see him.”
“Sure; I’d like to see old Bud. He used to be a forked sort of a
puncher. Didja ever hear anythin’ about this Modoc range?”
Hashknife shook his head.
“Nope. It’s a big range, I reckon. There’s a lot of cows shipped out of
here. Remember them two painted broncs that Red Ellers had at Skyline?
They was branded with the Bow-Knot. Red called ’em the ‘Necktie’ broncs.
Them two was from Modoc. Red spoke about the range once in a while, but
I don’t remember much of his talk.”
They were silent for quite a while as the train lurched along through
the hills. Then:
“Hashknife, I wonder if me and you will ever settle down?”
“I dunno.” Hashknife smiled softly and rubbed his chin against the
collar of his shirt. “I s’pose so, Sleepy. I’m gettin’ kinda tired
of rammin’ around the country, hornin’ into other folks’ business.
Sometimes I wish I had a home, cowboy.”
“Mebbe we’ll hit a good range some day; a range where we’ll want to
settle down and take life easy. The years roll along, Sleepy. A
buckin’ bronc kinda makes me weary, and I’m gettin’ slow with a gun.
We’re bound to slow up, don’tcha know it? We try to kid ourselves
into thinkin’ that we’re just as fast as we was a few years ago, but
age sneaks along and takes the snap out of us. Pretty soon me and
you will buck up agin’ a tough deal and we’ll find that we’re just a
fraction of a second slow.”
Sleepy looked at Hashknife and laughed.
“All right, Methusalem; yo’re about ready for the bone-yard.”
Hashknife grinned and stretched in a wide yawn.
“All right. Anyway, I’m growin’ timid in my old age. Here comes the
brakeman, lightin’ his way with a lantern that don’t give no light.”
The brakeman came up the swaying aisle, grasping the backs of the seats,
and when almost to the two men, he opened his mouth and yelled--
“Moo-o-doc!”
Hashknife and Sleepy uncoupled quickly and grasped their valises. Came a
long-drawn wail from the locomotive, and the _clickety-clicks_ sounded
at longer intervals as the brake-shoes gripped softly on to the wheels
and slowly brought the train to a stop.
* * * * *
Hashknife and Sleepy were halfway to the doorway, when the train
stopped, with Hashknife in the lead. Suddenly he stopped and Sleepy
bumped into him. For a moment Hashknife held firm, then turned quickly
and shoved Sleepy out of the aisle and into a seat.
It was all done so quickly that Sleepy had no time to protest, and
found himself sitting down, with Hashknife beside him, while through
the doorway came two men. Sleepy blinked. One of the men was Bud Daley,
the man they were going to stop at Modoc to see, and he was linked by a
handcuff to the other man.
Then the train started on. The two men sat down a few seats ahead and
across the aisle from Hashknife and Sleepy, without paying any attention
to them. The two cowboys looked at each other, as if seeking an answer
to the question that was uppermost in their minds. Bud Daley had not
seen them. Just now he sat on the inside, looking straight ahead, saying
nothing.
The other man turned his head and looked at Hashknife and Sleepy. He
was a man of about forty years of age, hard-faced, keen of eye and
rather cruel of mouth. He merely glanced at them and turned back.
“Whatcha know about that?” whispered Sleepy.
“Bud has done had the deadwood put upon him, it seems.”
The train gained speed again. It was evident that there were many
curvings of the railroad on this side of Modoc, as the old coach
protested against the contortions; while the engineer shrilled an
almost constant warning.
They were possibly two miles out of Modoc when the train seemed to
shudder its whole length as the brakes were applied heavily. The windows
rattled and the doors banged loudly, while the whistle shrilled in short
blasts. Then the train ground to a lurching stop.
The man to whom Daley was linked leaned across and peered out of the
window. Sleepy flattened his face against the window and tried to see
something, but there was nothing but the dark.
“Prob’ly hit a cow,” said Hashknife.
“They sure can flag a train. I remember----”
Hashknife stopped and turned his head. Some one was coming down the
aisle from the rear of the train. And that someone was two masked men,
very business-like with their six-shooters.
“Don’t move, gents!”
The one in the lead spoke sharply. Bud Daley jerked around, as did the
man with him.
“Just take things easy,” he cautioned. “That’s what we’re aimin’ to do.”
He walked past Hashknife and Sleepy, past Daley and the other man and
turned, while his companion stayed farther back, guarding from the rear.
The man at the front took off his hat, disclosing the fact that the mask
covered his entire head.
“Now,” he said, “we will take up the collection. Just ante what you’ve
got and don’t hold out on the handsome gent. Remember that the man
behind yuh is lookin’ on, and don’t start nothin’.”
He held out his hat, and for the first time he seemed to notice that the
two men were linked together.
“Well, well!” he exclaimed. “What have we here, folks? This must be the
sheriff, takin’ a prisoner to the big corral. Bet there ain’t enough
money on the two of yuh to buy a breakfast for a hummin’-bird. Huh!
“Probably against the law, but I’m goin’ to ask the officer to turn his
man loose. Officer, have yuh got the key for that padlock?”
The officer squinted closely at him and was about to shake his head,
when the bandit continued:
“Go ahead and lie, if yuh want to; you’ll have to produce the key, just
the same.”
“All right,” grunted the officer, taking the key from his pocket.
“You’ve got the drop.”
He snapped the hand-cuff loose. The bandit motioned for Bud Daley to get
up, which he lost no time in doing.
“Beat it,” said the bandit. “I’ve done all I can for yuh.”
Swiftly Daley went to the door and swung off into the darkness. The
bandit laughed, stepped past the officer and faced Hashknife and Sleepy,
holding out his hat.
“Pardner,” grinned Hashknife, “you’ve sure picked a blank. We’ve got
what’s left of a pair of tickets, an appetite and nowhere in particular
to go.”
“Yeah?” The bandit glanced sidewise at the officer, who was sitting
rigidly in his seat.
“Broke, eh?” he asked.
“Bent all to thunder,” nodded Hashknife.
Swiftly the bandit reached into his pocket and drew out a handful of
silver, which he tossed to Hashknife.
“Breakfast stake, gents,” he laughed. “Sit just like yuh are and
everybody will have a pleasant evenin’.”
“Much obliged,” said Hashknife, “and we’re holdin’ firm.”
Swiftly the two bandits backed out of the car, shutting the door behind
them. Then the officer sprang to his feet, drew a gun and ran toward the
rear door; but there was no sign of the two bandits.
He came back cursing his luck, and went to the front door. From outside,
farther up the train, came a fusillade of shots. The officer stepped out
on the platform, but did not leave the car.
“What do yuh make of it, Hashknife?” queried Sleepy.
“I dunno, cowboy. Let’s investigate.”
They found the officer on the steps, leaning out, looking toward the
front of the train. There was nothing to be seen. Then a man came
running back, carrying a lantern. It was the brakeman.
“They’re gone!” he yelled, as he came up to them. “Robbed every car,
cut loose the express car and engine and took ’em away. Did they come
into this car?”
“By ----, they sure did!” snorted the officer. “They took my prisoner
away from me.”
“Uh-huh,” nodded the brakeman, too excited to even care who the prisoner
might be. “They’ve done a good job of it, I guess. I’ve got to flag the
rear, or some darned freight will come along and ruin us.”
He trotted away up the track, his lantern bobbing in the dark.
“Got any idea who pulled the job?” asked Hashknife.
“No!” The officer was sore.
“You’re the sheriff, ain’t yuh?”
“Yeah.”
“Waitin’ for ’em to come back?”
“Waitin’ for who to come back?”
“The hold-up men,” said Hashknife innocently.
The sheriff grunted an unprintable word and dropped off the platform.
“Now yuh went and made him sore,” complained Sleepy. “And he’ll go away
and leave us here alone. You don’t show no judgment a-tall, Hashknife.”
The sheriff heard it, but did not turn his head. The conductor came on
to the platform and flashed his lantern into them.
“Did they collect back here, too?” he asked.
“They had it in mind,” grinned Hashknife. “But it wasn’t in the cards.
What did they do--swipe the express car?”
“They sure did,” said the conductor. “There must have been a bunch of
’em, because they worked all the cars at the same time. Some of the
bunch took the engine and express car, but the rest of them had their
horses handy and pulled out as soon as they had cleaned out the train.
It sure was a neat job.”
“Yeah, they knowed how to do it,” said Hashknife. “How far are we from
Modoc?”
“About two miles.” The conductor swung his lantern outward.
“Who is that out there?” he asked.
“That’s the sheriff,” explained Hashknife. “He’s lookin’ for ’em to come
back.”
The sheriff turned and climbed back onto the platform, where he glared
at Hashknife and turned to the conductor.
“I got on with a prisoner--a murderer,” he said coldly, “and that gang
turned him loose.”
“Got on at Modoc?” asked the conductor.
“Yeah.”
From down the track came the whistle of a locomotive. The conductor
swung down and ran toward the front of the train, as the engine came
backing around the curve, shoving the express car. There was a great
bobbing about of lanterns near the car, as the train jerked from the
jar of the coupling. Came a shrill blast of a whistle, and the train
began slowly backing toward Modoc.
The sheriff turned and went back into the car, followed by Hashknife and
Sleepy.
“Did you say that yore prisoner was a murderer?” asked Hashknife.
“What’s it to yuh?” Thus the sheriff sarcastic in his anger.
“Don’t antagonize him, I tell yuh,” warned Sleepy. “He’s the sheriff,
and he’s got a awful mad spell upon himself.”
“You think you’re smart, don’t yuh?” queried the sheriff.
“Well, mebbe I ain’t so smart,” said Sleepy seriously, “but I’m sure
cautious. As far back as we’ve ever traced our family tree, there has
been a cautious streak. Yessir, the old sap jist fairly oozes caution.
Now----”
“Aw, to ---- with your family tree!” snorted the sheriff.
“That’s what I always told pa. I don’t hold with no----”
“My ----!” breathed the sheriff wearily and moved away down the car.
* * * * *
Hashknife and Sleepy exchanged mirthful glances and secured their
valises. The train was backing into the depot at Modoc; so they swung
on to the platform and headed up the main street of the town. Neither
of them cared to stay there at the depot and hear a rehearsal of the
hold-up; and it would likely be a relief for the sheriff to know that
he was rid of their presence.
The main street of Modoc was not well-enough lighted for them to get
much of an idea of the town, but from the number of hitch-racks and the
general appearance of the street it appeared to be a well patronized
cow-town.
Most of the buildings were of the false-fronted variety, but here and
there a two-story frame building lifted its top a trifle above the
ordinary. It seemed that the business district was composed mostly of
saloons.
Out in front of one, which bore the title of Rest Ye All, a fat cowboy
was doing his little best to brace up the front of the place, while he
sang mournfully:
“I don’ wanna play in yore yard,
I don’ like you any mo-o-o-o-ore.
You’ll be sor-r-ree when you see me-e-e-e
Slidin’ dow-w-wn our cel-lur-r doo-o-o-or.
You can’t hol-ler dow-w-wn our rain bar’l,
You can’t climb our apple tree-e-e-e;
You can’t play in ow-w-wer yar-r-r-rd,
’Cause you won’t be good to me-e-e-e-e.”
Hashknife and Sleepy waited until he had finished and was still panting
from clinging quaveringly to the personal pronoun at the end of the
chorus.
“You’ve got a good voice, pardner,” said Hashknife.
“Y’betcha,” agreed the cowpuncher heartily. “Yuh like to hear me sing?”
“Nope. You’ve got a good voice--but not for singin’. Do yuh think this
saloon would fall down, if yuh moved away?”
The cowpuncher grunted, shoved himself away from the wall and grasped a
porch-post firmly with both arms.
“Now whatcha goin’ to do?” asked Sleepy.
“Sing. I’m sad, don’tcha know it? My ---- but I’m sad. And when I’m
sad--I seeng, thasall.”
“Oh, yo’re a seenger, are yuh?” laughed Hashknife. “Well, hop to it,
brother. Far be it from us to curtail yore sadness.”
“That’s real kind of yuh, I’m sure.”
The cowboy almost fell off the sidewalk in trying to bow his
appreciation, but Sleepy steadied him and helped him get a fresh grip
on the post.
Hashknife and Sleepy passed on into the saloon, while the puncher lifted
his voice in a wailing sort of a dirge, which bore a certain resemblance
to “When You and I Were Young, Maggie.”
The Rest Ye All was rather a pretentious place inside. A long, mahogany
bar extended down the left side, backed by an ornate but damaged mirror.
The walls were decorated with oil paintings of considerable merit,
mounted in gaudy frames. Even the lamps were decorative.
The barroom proper was about thirty feet long by twenty feet wide, with
an archway at the rear, which led to the gambling parlor. As Hashknife
and Sleepy stopped at the bar they caught a glimpse of several gaudily
dressed women in the rear room, and to their ears came the rattle of
poker-chips, the whir of a roulette-wheel, the soft voice of a dealer
at a stud table.
The pink-faced bartender, with a diamond horseshoe in his shirt front,
lifted his eyebrows in interrogation. Hashknife and Sleepy made known
their wants and drank silently.
“Yuh got quite a place here, pardner,” observed Hashknife.
“Yeap.” The bartender carefully polished the bar and replaced the
bottle.
“Swellest place this side of New York.”
“Coverin’ a lot of territory, ain’t yuh?” asked Sleepy.
“I’ve never been to New York,” grinned the bartender.
“You spent much time between here and there?” queried Hashknife.
“Nope. I’ve been as far East as Cheyenne.”
“Thasso? You must like to travel.”
At this time the fat cowboy came inside and weaved up to the bar, where
he goggled at Hashknife.
“I’m Sody Slavin,” he announced, and added, “And I’m sad within me.
They took m’ friend Bud Daley t’ prison, don’tcha know it? And all he
done was t’ kill a cashier and steal twenty thousand dollars. This
here country is gettin’ too antisheptic for me, by gosh.”
Hashknife squinted at Sleepy, who was making faces at himself in the
back bar mirror. Came the sound of excited voices outside, and the
sheriff came in, followed by several men. Sody squinted at the sheriff
and reached for him with both hands.
“Whazzamatter?” blurted Sody. “Where’s Bud?”
“Aw, go to ----!” snorted the sheriff, shoving Sody aside, and heading
for the back room.
Hashknife and Sleepy followed them into the gambling-room. Cleve Lavelle
was just coming in from the rear, and the sheriff went straight to him
with the news, blurting it loud enough for every one to hear.
Those at the games quit playing and crowded around, while the sheriff
told them what had taken place. But he only told of the cutting loose
of the express car and the loss of his prisoner.
“They robbed the passengers, too, didn’t they?” asked Hashknife.
The crowd turned their attention to Hashknife. Breed squinted at him and
shook his head.
“No. That brakeman got so excited that he thought everybody was robbed.
None of the passengers were molested, except me.”
“How much did they git?” queried a cowboy.
“Not much,” said the sheriff. “They dynamited the express safe, but
didn’t get much. The messenger said that it was empty.”
“And Bud Daley got away from yuh, eh?” chuckled another.
“Oh, hurray! Hurray!” whooped Sody, who had followed them in. “Hurray
f’r ol’ Bud.”
Sody’s enthusiasm drew a laugh from the crowd and lessened any sympathy
that might have gone to the sheriff.
“It seems to me that there ought to be more action and less talk,”
observed Hashknife. “A train robbery and an escaped murderer ought to
make a sheriff do somethin’ besides talk himself tired.”
Dug Breed squinted at Hashknife and Sleepy closely.
“Takin’ quite a lot of interest in this ain’t yuh?” asked Breed
sarcastically.
“Well,” Hashknife grinned softly, “I’m a citizen, and I kinda like t’
feel that I’m protected by the law.”
“You ain’t,” declared Sody seriously. “P’tect yourself, stranger. The
law means right, but she’s plumb flat-footed around here.”
Breed grunted angrily and looked around, as though wondering just what
reply to make. Hashknife grinned at Sody, who nodded owlishly and
essayed a few jig-steps.
“Who are these two men, Dug?” asked Lavelle.
“---- if I know!” snapped Breed. “They were on the train.”
“We’re just a couple of helpless mortals,” said Hashknife slowly. “We’re
lookin’ for a peaceful place, thasall. We finds that we ain’t safe on a
train; so we unloads here. Ain’t no objection to it, is there?”
“Not that I know of,” said Lavelle.
“Well, that’s nice of yuh, I’m sure,” said Hashknife. “We both thank
yuh. My pardner is kinda timid; so I does the talkin’.”
“Myah!” snorted Breed angrily, and turned his back on Hashknife.
“Goin’ to git up a posse, Dug?” asked a cowboy.
“Y’betcha.” Breed turned and walked swiftly back toward the barroom.
“Let’s go and find a hotel, Sleepy,” said Hashknife.
“Hotel, ----!” snorted Sody. “Git yore broncs and come out to the ranch
with me.”
“We ain’t got no broncs, Sody,” grinned Hashknife.
“Ain’tcha?” Sody took this under advisement. “I’ll git yuh some.”
“Not tonight,” said Hashknife. “We’ll hit the hay in a hotel tonight.”
“All right,” grudgingly. “I’ll see yuh ’morrow. Yo’re the kinda folks I
like, and you’ll like ol’ Jim Miller’s outfit. He’s got the JM outfit;
_sabe_?”
They talked outside and Sody pointed out the hotel down the street.
“Who’s the feller that the sheriff talked to back there in the saloon?”
asked Sleepy.
“Tha’s Cleve Lavelle.”
“Outside of his name, what is he?”
“Mos’ly everythin’,” said Sody. “Owns everythin’, almost. Owns the 76A
ranch, too.”
“Was Bud Daley a friend of yours?” asked Hashknife.
“Yo’re ---- right. Bud’s a dinger. And he’s loose, ain’t he? Tha’s fine,
y’betcha. Good ol’ Bud. I don’t like Dug Breed. He’s the sheriff. I’m
jist as pop’lar with him as a set of delirium tremens.”
“And they put the deadwood on Bud, did they?”
“Oh, pos’tively. Twelve good men and true said he was guilty. Uncle
Jimmy Miller and Cleve Lavelle hired the bes’ lawyers yuh ever seen,
but they cinched him. Bud wouldn’t talk. My ----, I can’t con-shee-ve
of anybody not talkin’, in a case like that. I’d talk so much and so
fast that the judge would never have a chance to pronounsh shentence.
That’s me--a man of many words.”
“The sheriff was takin’ him to the pen, wasn’t he?”
“Exactly. Oh, indeed he was, yessir. Bud was shentenced yesterday. They
gave him twenty years.”
“Who do yuh reckon took him away from the sheriff?” asked Hashknife.
“Who? I dunno. I’ve got to do a lot of thinkin’ before I can shay
pos’tively. I’ll buy a drink.”
“Not tonight,” laughed Hashknife. “Do yuh think they’ll catch Bud
Daley?”
“I refuse to state.” Sody grew very wise and serious. “If Bud don’t want
to be caught, tha’s another matter en-tirely. Bud’s forked, don’tcha
know it? He’ll fight. Yessir, I kinda look for gore to be spilled before
they git ol’ Bud agin’.”
They shook hands with Sody and went on toward the hotel.
“What do yuh think of it, Hashknife?” queried Sleepy.
“Looks like Bud Daley had growed horns and a tail, Sleepy. But yuh never
can tell. We’ll sleep over it.”
“We ought to have stayed on that train,” said Sleepy. “The first thing
we know we’ll be sharpenin’ our horns agin’--and this don’t look like a
one-man proposition.”
* * * * *
There was little excitement in Modoc the next morning. The sheriff and
his posse, which consisted of Charley Morse, the deputy sheriff, “Monte”
Sells, foreman of the 76A ranch, Frank Asher, of the same outfit, and
Steve Harris, of the 4X, had not come back to town.
Hashknife and Sleepy ate breakfast late and ran into Sody Slavin at the
post office. Uncle Jimmy had come in with him, and Sody lost no time in
introducing Hashknife and Sleepy to him.
“Sody tells me that you was on the train last night when it was held
up,” said Uncle Jimmy.
“Yeah, we were there,” grinned Hashknife. “Yuh see, we were on our way
here to make Bud Daley a little visit. We came in by stage through the
Brant River country to Dixon; and found ourselves so close to Modoc
that we figured it would be kinda handy to drop off and see Bud.”
“Thasso? You knowed Bud before, eh?”
“Sure. We used to work with him. Tell us somethin’ about the trial, will
yuh?”
Uncle Jimmy related everything, according to the evidence, while the
four of them sat on the edge of the board sidewalk and dug their heels
into the dirt.
“There wasn’t a lot of evidence ag’in him,” explained Uncle Jimmy. “That
rosette off his chaps looked bad to the jury. Bud wouldn’t tell where he
was that night, and everybody knowed that Bud needed money. He jist sat
there and let ’em convict him, without even arguin’ about it.
“Me and Cleve Lavelle hired lawyers for him, but they didn’t help Bud
much, ’cause Bud wouldn’t talk. He jist didn’t seem to give a ----
what they done to him. Old Jordan has been doin’ his dangdest to find
out what Bud done with that money, but Bud won’t never tell.
“If he lives to serve that twenty years, he’ll have twenty thousand
dollars. Mebbe he looks at it thataway, I dunno. Didja ever know his
wife, Hartley?”
“Yeah. Knowed her before she married Bud. This must ’a’ been danged
tough for her.”
Uncle Jimmy nodded sadly.
“----, yes. May is salt of the earth.”
“They can’t take the ranch away from her, can they?” asked Hashknife.
“I dunno. Anyway, it ain’t worth enough to battle about.”
“Bud wasn’t a success as a cattleman, eh?”
“He was doin’ all right until somebody stole all his cows.”
Hashknife’s eyes opened a trifle wider and he looked sidewise at the old
cattleman.
“Stole all his cows?”
“That’s what Bud says. He had a nice herd started. Bought out the old
Triangle outfit, about three miles west of here, and had it registered
as the Triangle D. Bud had a little money, but not enough; so he borrows
five thousand from Lavelle, who owns the Rest Ye All over across the
street.
“Bud always was a gambler; so he takes that borrowed money and tackles
the roulette. He sure was right that day, and he annexes ten thousand
from Lavelle. That gives him fifteen thousand, and he soaks it all into
cows.”
“Was Lavelle sore?” asked Hashknife.
“No. Lavelle is a gambler. Bud should ’a’ paid back that money right
then, but he didn’t. The round-up was about three weeks ago, and there
ain’t a Triangle D animal in the Modoc range.
“I don’t sabe it no more than anybody else does. A lot of ’em think that
Bud picked ’em up quietly and shoved the herd through the Crooked Cañon
country and over to Black Wells.”
“To keep from payin’ Lavelle that five thousand, eh?” queried Hashknife.
“Seems to be the idea,” nodded Uncle Jimmy. “He even went and tried to
borrow ten thousand more from Lavelle, but didn’t git it.”
Hashknife laughed softly and shook his head.
“Our friend Bud has become a salty sort of a gent, it seems.”
“Could he drive his cows out of the country and not have it known?”
asked Sleepy.
“Could be done,” said Sody. “Bud’s place is kinda away by itself, and
right on the old trail to Black Wells. He could ’a’ worked easy-like,
bunched ’em in the hills back of his place and hammered ’em out at
night, and it wouldn’t take more than a few hours to put ’em well into
the Crooked Cañon country.”
“But,” demurred Hashknife, “if he sold ’em in Black Wells, it ought to
be easy to find it out.”
Uncle Jimmy spat viciously and shook his head.
“The only thing yuh ever find out in Black Wells is that it’s a ----
good place to keep yore mouth shut.”
“It’s a good place to dispose of stock,” grinned Sody. “They don’t even
look at brands.”
“Lavelle and Bud were good friends?”
“Well,” grinned Uncle Jimmy, “he loaned Bud five thousand dollars, and
then he paid half of his lawyer bill. I reckon that’s friendship, ain’t
it?”
“Kinda has the ear-marks,” smiled Hashknife. “Who do yuh reckon held up
the train and turned Bud loose?”
“More friendship,” laughed Sody. “Ol’ Bud was pop’lar.”
“Bud didn’t trail with train-robbers, did he?” asked Hashknife.
Uncle Jimmy squinted closely at Hashknife and placed a horny hand on
Hashknife’s knee.
“You ain’t pious, are yuh, Hartley?” he asked slowly.
Hashknife laughed and shook his head.
“Then don’t build yuh any glass houses and start throwin’ rocks.
Friendship is friendship, accordin’ to my way of lookin’ at it,
Hartley. I’ve heard that there was a ---- of a lot of bad folks in
the Modoc country--but there ain’t none of us that say a prayer
before we go to bed, ’cause we ain’t afraid of anybody shootin’ us
in our sleep.”
“I beg yore pardon, Jim Miller,” said Hashknife softly. “I reckon I
understand how it is.”
“Thasall right,” nodded Uncle Jimmy. “You know how we stand now.”
“I’d like to see Mrs. Daley,” said Hashknife. “Yuh see, we came here to
see Bud, and we’d like to do what we can for his wife.”
“Mebbe we can get horses at the livery stable,” suggested Sleepy.
“Yuh can, but yuh won’t need to,” grinned Sody. “I dragged in a
couple of extra broncs with me this mornin’, and they’re over at the
hitch-rack, waitin’ for yuh.”
“You fellers kinda hypnotized Sody, didn’t yuh?” laughed Uncle Jimmy.
“He wouldn’t do that much for me. I remember----”
“No, yuh don’t,” interrupted Sody. “I’ve done a lot for you.”
Uncle Jimmy got to his feet and brushed off his knees.
“There ain’t no use arguin’ with yuh, Sody,” he declared. “You ain’t
noways changeable. I never did see anybody as set in their ways as
you are. I sure made a awful mistake when I made you foreman of the
JM outfit--I should ’a’ given it to yuh.”
“It ain’t too late,” grinned Sody. “But if yuh do I’ll fire yuh right
off the reel. I’d want capable men on my ranch.”
They went over to the hitch-rack and untied the horses. Sody had brought
a couple of hammer-headed, evil-eyed animals for Hashknife and Sleepy;
but he was not trying to play any tricks on them.
“They’ll likely buck a little,” he told them. “Mebbe they’ll buck more
than a little, but I didn’t want to insult yuh by bringin’ a couple of
rockin’-chairs for yuh.”
“If we git ditched, it’ll be all yore fault,” laughed Hashknife as he
swung aboard.
Neither animal made any effort to buck, and Sody nodded wisely.
“Yuh can’t fool a bronc,” he declared as they rode out of town. “Them
animals knowed right away that it wasn’t no use tryin’ to shuck you two
fellers; so they don’t waste their energy.”
“I reckon we’ll find Ma out at Bud’s place,” said Uncle Jimmy. “She
didn’t say she was goin’ out there, but she will.”
“Y’betcha,” nodded Sody. “Where there’s sufferin’, you’ll find Ma
Miller.”
* * * * *
It did not take them long to ride the three miles to the Triangle D
ranch-house. A sorrel buggy team was tied to the fence near the house,
and near the front porch was grouped a number of saddled horses.
“That’s Ma’s buggy team,” observed Sody, “and them broncs belong to the
sheriff’s posse. I c’n tell Dug Breed’s black animal.”
They rode up and dismounted, just as Breed and his posse came out of
the front door. Breed squinted hard at them, but did not say anything.
Ma Miller, a tall, raw-boned woman, followed them out.
Her jaw was set at a belligerent angle, and it was plain to be seen that
she was not at all in accord with the officers. She ignored Uncle Jimmy
and the rest and centered her indignation upon Dug Breed and his men.
“Git off the ranch--the whole caboodle of yuh!” she ordered in a
masculine voice. “Dug Breed, you ain’t got the feelin’s of a coyote.
Trompin’ in like that! Didja expect to find Bud Daley here? You can’t
keep a man when yuh do git one.
“Anyway, you’re a sweet-lookin’ gang to be enforcin’ the law. Yeah,
I mean it, too. Monte Sells and Frank Asher! Steve Harris! Say, when
did you snake-hunters git a license to hunt criminals? If we had a
sheriff that’d uphold the law, you fellers would be huntin’ the high
places yourself.”
They were riding away, making faces at each other, and Ma turned
belligerently toward Uncle Jimmy and the others.
“You sure can tell ’em things, Ma,” laughed Sody. “Whooee! Meet Mister
Hartley and Mister Stevens, Ma. Gents, this is Ma Miller. Most men has
a better half, but Uncle Jimmy has a better seven-eighths.”
Ma grinned and shook hands with them.
“Ma, I’m sure glad to meet yuh,” laughed Hashknife. “Yo’re worth a lot
to a man whose eyes hankers for the home folks.”
“That’s a reg’lar speech,” laughed Ma Miller. “Didja say yore name was
Hartley?”
“Yes’m. Hashknife, to m’ friends.”
Mrs. Daley had come to the door and was staring at Hashknife. Her face
was tear-streaked and her eyes shadowed with sorrow, but she held out
both hands at the sight of Hashknife.
“I heard your name,” she said gladly. “Oh, I’m so glad to see you,
Hashknife. And there is Sleepy Stevens!”
Hashknife took both of her hands, while Sleepy crowded in to shake hands
with her.
“How in the world did you ever happen to come here?” she asked.
“We came here to visit yuh, Mrs. Daley.”
“When did you come?”
“We was on the train that Bud was on, and we seen him turned loose.”
Mrs. Daley looked away, her lips trembling.
“Then you know what has happened to us, Hashknife.”
“Y’betcha. We’ve heard a lot of the story.”
“Haven’t you heard all of it?”
Hashknife shook his head slowly.
“Nobody knows all of it, ma’am. Yuh see, the last chapter ain’t been
written yet.”
“By gosh, there’s a lot of sense in that, too!” exclaimed Ma Miller.
“May has been grievin’ her heart out; but she don’t know yet how it’s
goin’ to turn out.”
May smiled wistfully and shook her head.
“I don’t see how things can be better for us, Ma.”
“Well, they ain’t got Bud in no danged prison,” reminded Sody. “He’s got
a fightin’ chance.”
“Quit talkin’ about it,” grunted Uncle Jimmy.
“Anyway, I am awful glad to see you two boys,” smiled Mrs. Daley. “Bud
speaks about you so often.”
She turned to Ma Miller and took her by the hand.
“Ma, you’ll like these two men. Bud swears by both of them. He says
that Hashknife Hartley--no, I won’t repeat it--but it used to make me
jealous. He used to wonder what old Hashknife and Sleepy are doing
today, and wish that they would come along and advise him on certain
things.”
“I told yuh they was reg’lar folks,” Sody grinned at Uncle Jimmy
triumphantly. “By golly, I can pick ’em--drunk or sober.”
“Are you going to stay a while?” asked Mrs. Daley.
“Yuh never can tell about us,” smiled Hashknife. “We ain’t gentlemen
of leisure, but it kinda seems that we don’t stay put in one place
very long.”
“You don’t look like a pair of drifters,” observed Ma Miller.
“No, ma’am,” Hashknife shook his head. “We travel under our own power.”
“Bud used to say that they were the best cowpunchers in the world, but
they never punch cows,” said Mrs. Daley. “He said they were always too
busy to work.”
“What did he mean by that?” asked Sody.
Hashknife laughed and began rolling a cigaret.
“Yuh see, we’re kinda unlucky--me and Sleepy. Everywhere we go we
find somebody in a jam. We jist can’t mind our own business--somehow.
Personally, I’d like to settle down and grow old with the country;
but Sleepy can’t git over his childish ways; so I reckon we’ll--keep
movin’ along.”
“You won’t have much for yore old age, will yuh?” asked Uncle Jimmy.
“Yeah, we’ll have quite a lot,” smiled Hashknife. “It won’t be anythin’
that yuh can cash in at a bank. And when we die, we won’t leave nothin’
spendable. There ain’t nobody dependin’ on either one of us, except the
other.”
“I think I know what you mean,” said Mrs. Daley softly. “Bud told me
some of the things you have done.”
“Likely magnified ’em,” grunted Sleepy. “Bud always did have a big
imagination. We’ve been lucky, thasall.”
“I hope it will never change,” said Ma Miller earnestly.
“It won’t, Ma--as long as we’re right,” said Hashknife. “Sometimes it’s
hard to be right. Humanity is a queer thing. We might do wrong through
friendship, through a wrong hunch, or believin’ a lie.”
“If yuh want jobs, I’ll give ’em to yuh,” stated Uncle Jimmy. “I ain’t
got a danged thing for yuh to do, but that ain’t goin’ to interest
nobody but me. Mebbe it’ll be worth it to have somebody for Sody to
argue with. He’ll leave me alone. Harry McKee won’t argue with him, and
Dinah Blewette stutters so bad that he ain’t got a chance in the world;
so Sody makes me miserable. If there’s anythin’ on earth that I hate,
it’s an argument.”
“Yeah, you do,” growled Sody. “You hate it like yuh hate fried chicken.
When you won’t argue--you’re in danged bad shape.”
“Thasso!” Uncle Jimmy bristled belligerently. “Lemme tell yuh somethin’,
you----”
“Jim Miller, don’t start it!” snapped Ma Miller. “My gosh, you two
gallinippers make me tired. Your arguments never have no beginnin’ nor
end. And anyway, this ain’t no time nor place for arguments.”
“He started it, Ma,” protested Uncle Jimmy. “He always starts ’em, if
yuh notice. All I done was to offer these two men jobs.”
“They never asked yuh for a job, Jim.”
“Didn’t they? I s’pose I’ve got to be asked, have I? Say, who owns the
JM ranch? Ain’t I got a right to offer a job without bein’ asked?”
“I’m the foreman,” reminded Sody.
“Are yuh?” Uncle Jimmy teetered on the balls of his feet and hooked his
thumbs over his cartridge belt. “You are, are yuh? That makes you quite
important, eh? Anybody’d think you was the Grand Exalted Ruler of the
Universe, Sody. I made yuh foreman, didn’t I? Anybody’d think you was
born thataway? You sure do wear yore honors lightly, fat feller. Well,
go ahead and hire ’em, why don’tcha?”
Sody turned and looked seriously at Hashknife and Sleepy.
“Did you fellers want a job on the JM ranch?” he asked.
Hashknife and Sleepy both shook their heads. Ma Miller threw back her
head and laughed, and even Mrs. Daley forgot her troubles long enough
to join in the merriment.
“That was a lot of talk wasted,” said Ma Miller, wiping her eyes with
her apron. “But that’s like Jim and Sody. I’ve been tryin’ to convince
May that she ought to come over to the JM and stay with us a while. She
can’t stay here alone.”
“By golly, she sure can have the JM, if she wants it,” said Uncle
Jimmy. “That’s her home. You come and live with us, May. Ma needs
somebody to argue with, don’tcha know it. Then she’d leave me alone.
I sure don’t git much peace in this world--and yuh never can tell
about the hereafter.”
Hashknife laughed and threw away his cigaret.
“Now that’s a good idea,” he said seriously. “Suppose Mrs. Daley goes up
to yore ranch and leaves us in charge here. We’ve got to have a place to
sleep, and I don’t like that hotel. We’ll run the ranch for a few days.”
“Why, you wouldn’t want to do that,” protested Mrs. Daley.
“Sure, we’d enjoy it,” said Sleepy enthusiastically. “We hate hotels.”
“But there’s nothing here to do.”
“_Esto buena_, as the Mexican says,” laughed Hashknife. “If we wanted
work, we’d ’a’ grabbed Uncle Jimmy’s offer.”
“Well,” said Mrs. Daley dubiously. “I don’t know. There isn’t a very big
stock of food in the house, and the----”
“Ne’ mind the food,” grinned Sleepy. “We’ll haul some out. If we see a
fat JM on the hill, we’ll eat steaks.”
“I’ll herd one down to yuh,” offered Uncle Jimmy. “Or yuh might beef a
76A. Lavelle wouldn’t miss one.”
Hashknife happened to be looking at Mrs. Daley and noticed the quick
flush that came to her white cheeks at the mention of Lavelle.
“Lavelle owns the 76A?” asked Hashknife.
“Yeah,” nodded Uncle Jimmy. “He’s the he-hawk of this country. Two of
his men are in that sheriff’s posse, but I’ll betcha he’ll give ’em----
when he finds it out.”
“Mr. Lavelle has been very kind to us,” murmured Mrs. Daley.
“Well, I’m glad we’ve got a place to stay,” observed Hashknife, looking
around. “Yuh don’t mind if we keep them two broncs for a while, do yuh,
Uncle Jimmy?”
“I should say not. Keep ’em as long as yuh want ’em. If there’s anythin’
else on the JM that yuh want, come a-hootin’ and have at it. Ma, you and
May git yore stuff into the buggy. By golly, it’s goin’ to be fine to
have May back home ag’in. If Bud----”
Uncle Jimmy stopped and squinted toward the hills. The tears had come to
Mrs. Daley’s eyes again, but she turned and went into the house, while
Ma Miller glared at Uncle Jimmy before following her inside.
It did not take them long to pack up what clothing Mrs. Daley wanted to
take to the JM ranch, and they drove away down the dusty road. Uncle
Jimmy and Sody shook hands with Hashknife and Sleepy, promising to drop
in on them very soon.
“Bring yuh down a fat yearlin’ t’morrow,” promised Uncle Jimmy, “and
mebbe Sody’ll bring yuh a hatful of aigs.”
* * * * *
They went out through the rear gate and swung into the hills, cutting
across to the JM, which was about three miles to the North. Hashknife
and Sleepy locked the house, mounted their horses and headed back
toward town, itemizing the groceries they would need.
“Bacon,” said Sleepy. “What do yuh think of the proposition?”
“May’s prettier than she ever was,” said Hashknife thoughtfully. “We
gotta have a few cans of tomatoes.”
“Ma’s a dinger, Hashknife. How about some beans?”
“Beans? Sure. Who do yuh reckon stole Bud’s cows? And matches. I never
did live in a place where there was enough matches. And Uncle Jimmy
ain’t no--Sleepy, don’t let me forget canned peaches. I love peaches.
How’s yore Durham?”
“Mine’s all right; how’s yours? You ought to buy some tobacco for
yourself, Hashknife. Honest, yuh ought to do that. And if you forget
bakin’-powder, I’ll massacree yuh. ’Member the time we-- Say, that
posse sure got told about themselves, didn’t they? Ma sure rattled
their skeletons for ’em.”
“And salt’n pepper,” added Hashknife. “I suppose that posse went back to
Modoc and got drunk.”
And so they enumerated jerkily all the way back to Modoc, filled with
joy at the prospect of doing their own cooking and of eating it.
To one who did not know Hashknife Hartley they might have classed him
with the average irresponsible cowboy, but back in his serious mind was
the germ of an idea.
Sleepy did not originate ideas. He was content to follow Hashknife’s
lead in all things; content to sit back and let the lanky one work
out the salvation of both. In many things, Sleepy Stevens was a
pessimist, an arguer, but open to conviction. He was outspoken in
his likes and dislikes, as was Hashknife, ready to do battle for a
friend, caring little for the future. Men had said that these two
were animated antidotes for range poison--a title which had caused
them much amusement.
Neither of them was a wizard with a six-shooter. In fact, their
marksmanship was criticized by both; but cold nerve had carried them
through some tough battles against men who were reputed to be lightning
on the draw.
Both of them were good average rifle-shots, although neither would
admit it. Sleepy loved trouble. His idea of bliss was to swap lead
with somebody. Not hand to hand swapping; but a battle in the hills,
long-range rifle-work. The _sping-g-g_ of a high-power bullet,
ricocheting off the rocks, was music to his ears.
But Sleepy was not blood-thirsty. It was all in a day’s work with both
of them. And their work had made them confirmed fatalists; confirmed
humorists. They had laughed at death, laughed at life.
“And why not?” Hashknife had questioned. “Nobody knows what life is.
Neither do they know what death means. When yuh see somethin’ that
yuh don’t know nor understand, ain’t it better to laugh than to cry
over it?”
Hashknife was partly right when he prophesied that the posse had gone
back to Modoc to get drunk. Breed and his deputy were cold sober, but
the others were having their fill at the Rest Ye All bar, while their
weary horses nodded at the hitch-rack.
Hashknife and Sleepy tied their horses at a rack in front of a general
merchandise store and were ordering their groceries, when Breed came in.
He watched them sack up their stuff and then followed them outside.
“Goin’ batchin’?” he asked.
Hashknife grinned and nodded, as he tied a sack behind the cantle of his
saddle.
“We’re goin’ to live at Bud Daley’s ranch for a while.”
“Oh, thasso?” The sheriff was interested. “You knew Bud, didn’t yuh?”
“Yeah, we used to know him pretty well.”
“His wife goin’ to stay there?”
“Nope. She’s gone out to the JM ranch. We’ll be there alone.”
“What’s the idea?”
Hashknife knotted a string and squinted at it critically before he said:
“Well, now I don’t reckon you could call it an idea, sheriff. We jist
got tired of the hotel, thasall.”
“Uh-huh.”
The sheriff scratched his chin thoughtfully. Naturally, he wanted all
the information possible. Bud Daley was still at large, and this might
be a scheme to get him a grub-stake. But it might not be an opportune
time to mention such a thing, he realized; so he nodded and walked
away.
Sleepy went to the hotel, paid their bill, took their valises and came
back to the horses. The half-broke bronchos objected to the valises,
but were soon convinced that this excess baggage was there to stay. Dug
Breed watched them ride away and grew thoughtful.
These two men rode well, he observed. They both wore guns, and their
guns and belts seemed more practical than ornamental.
“That tall jasper ain’t no man to fool with,” he mused. “I dunno about
the shorter one. I wish I knew what they are goin’ to do out there at
Bud’s ranch. They’re friends of Bud’s, that’s a cinch. But I can’t stop
’em. There’s no law against ’em living out there.”
Breed shook his head, rubbed some of the dust out of his sleepy eyes and
went across the street to the Rest Ye All.
* * * * *
The 76A ranch was located about five miles northeast of Modoc. Lavelle
had spent much money in making it the finest cattle-ranch in the
country, although he did not spend much of his time at the ranch-house.
A Chinese cook and a Chinese house boy had charge of the ranch-house,
while Monte Sells was in charge of the ranch.
While no one had objected openly there were many who did not exactly
care for Sells, “Red” Blair, Frank Asher, “Mesa” Caldwell and Brent
Allard, Lavelle’s cowpunchers. They were a hard-riding, hard-drinking
crew of men, who gave Lavelle back their salaries over the green
cloth, or drank it up over his polished bar.
Just now Red Blair and Brent Allard were enjoying a cigaret siesta in
the shade of a big cottonwood near the big red stable at the 76A. Red
was lying flat on his back, his sombrero half-across his face. Blair
was a big man, with high cheek-bones, eyes deeply set under bushy
brows and a flaming thatch of red hair.
Allard was a smaller man, colorless, tow-headed, but with a cruel mouth
and a deep knife scar along his right jaw-bone. His cigaret hung limply
from his lips as he humped over on his haunches and drew meaningless
patterns in the dirt with his forefinger.
“I’d jist like t’ know where Monte got his information,” he said
musingly.
Red Blair grunted and brushed a fly off his nose.
“He won’t tell,” continued Allard complainingly.
“---- the flies!” Red grunted angrily, and sat up slowly to reach for a
match.
“Wonder if the posse caught Bud Daley yet?”
Allard shook his head and spat disgustedly.
“I’d jist like to know who stuck up Dug Breed.”
“You ought to buy a dictionary,” said Red wearily.
“Why?”
“You want to know so ---- much.”
“Yeah?” Allard dug savagely at the dirt. “I don’t like to risk my neck
for nothin’, Red.”
“You didn’t risk yore neck.”
“Didn’t, eh? Aw, I know. You fellers think yuh can do anythin’ yuh want,
as long as yo’re workin’ for Cleve Lavelle. Sure. He makes the sheriff
and all that, and we’re perfectly safe. But Lavelle didn’t have nothin’
to do with this, yuh must remember.”
“He’d have somethin’ to say,” replied Red easily. “Yuh don’t see the
sheriff moseyin’ around here, do yuh? Dug Breed knows which side his
bread is buttered on, y’betcha.”
“Stick yore head in the sand like an ostrich,” grunted Allard. “That
bird ain’t the only animal that rams its head out of sight and thinks
nobody can see the rest of it.”
“Why don’tcha go back to Oklahoma?” queried Red. “You ain’t got the guts
of a canary-bird, Allard.”
Red got to his feet, slapped his hat on his head and squinted toward the
road.
“Here comes Monte and Frank,” he grunted, “and they’re ridin’ kinda
loose.”
Allard got up and they walked down to the corral where Monte Sells and
Frank Asher had dismounted. Both men had been drinking and were in a
joyful mood.
“We’ve been upholdin’ the law,” declared Asher, yanking the saddle off
his panting animal and almost upsetting himself.
“Yuh look like you’d been holdin’ up a saloon,” observed Red
caustically.
“Didja find Bud Daley?” asked Allard.
“Find ----!” snorted Monte angrily. “Breed led us all over the ----
hills in the dark. Mebbe he thought Bud would be carryin’ a lantern.”
“Yeah, and we went to Bud’s house,” laughed Asher. “Breed wanted to
search the place, didn’t he, Monte? Ma Miller was there. And what she
told Breed was a plenty. Man, she sure read his sign for him.”
“Read our epitaph, too,” laughed Monte. “Said we’d be high-tailin’ it a
long time ago, if we had an honest sheriff.”
“Wonder where Bud went,” said Allard.
“You better go down and join Breed,” snorted Monte. “He’s in the same
fix you are.”
“Did Breed give up the posse idea?” asked Red.
“As far as we’re concerned,” laughed Monte. “Lavelle was sore as a boil,
when he found that me and Frank was on the posse. Lavelle spent a lot of
money tryin’ to clear Bud; and he said he’d be ---- if he wanted his men
to help run him down in the hills.”
“Bud’s wife still at the ranch?” queried Red.
“She’s gone out to the JM,” said Asher. “Anyway, that’s what Breed
told us before we left. Couple of strange punchers goin’ to batch at
the Triangle D. Friends of Jim Miller, I reckon. They came out there
about the time that Ma Miller hoodled us out of the house.”
“Who are the strange punchers?” asked Red. “Didn’t yuh hear their
names?”
“Aw, Breed said that one of ’em was named Hartley, or somethin’ like
that. I don’t know whether that’s the name or not.”
Allard moved in a little closer, his lower lip sagging, as if his
half-smoked cigaret weighed pounds.
“Didja say ‘Hartley,’ Frank?”
“It was somethin’ like that, Brent. I didn’t pay much attention to the
name.”
“What kind of a lookin’ feller, Frank?”
“Tall, skinny geezer.”
“The other one was shorter? Kinda sad-faced and bow-legged?”
“That’s him.”
Allard brushed the cigaret off his lip and cleared his throat.
“That’s Hashknife Hartley and Sleepy Stevens, by ----! And I’m draggin’
m’self off this range right away.”
Monte Sells stared at Allard for a moment and broke into a laugh. Allard
was squinting into space, his lips shut tight.
“What’s the matter with you, Allard?” asked Monte. “You act like this
feller might be gunnin’ for yuh.”
Allard shook his head quickly.
“No, he ain’t gunnin’ for me, Monte. At least, I don’t think he is. But
he’s jist bad luck, thasall. I’ve seen his work--him and the bow-legged
one.”
“Why you ---- fool!” exploded Red angrily. “What can he do to you?”
“Not a ---- thing!” snapped Allard. “’Cause I ain’t goin’ to give him a
chance. I’m goin’ away--a long ways away.”
“Not a gut in his body,” declared Red inelegantly, pointing at Brent
Allard. “Runnin’ away from a spook.”
“Thasso?” Allard flushed indignantly. “I’ve got all I need to keep me
in a healthy condition, Red. And I’m goin’ to keep ’em, too. I wonder
what them two are doin’ around here.”
Monte laughed shortly and hitched up his belt.
“They’re just livin’ at the Triangle D, thasall.”
“No, that ain’t all,” declared Allard. “Jist livin’ ain’t all where
they’re concerned.”
“They were on the train the night of the hold-up,” volunteered Frank.
“Uh-huh-h-h,” said Allard triumphantly. “And you ---- fools think
they’re jist livin’ here, eh?”
“Detectives?” queried Red a trifle uneasily.
“Malignantly,” nodded Allard. “Hashknife Hartley can read yore mind, I
tell yuh.”
Monte laughed sarcastically and slapped Allard on the back.
“We’ll see that our minds are clear of all evil, when we meet him,
Brent. Don’t be a fool. Hartley is just a human bein’, ain’t he? Well,
I reckon we know how to deal with human bein’s, don’t we?”
“You said a heap,” laughed Red. “If that pelican monkeys around us,
we’ll sure clip his wings, eh, Monte?”
“Hop to it,” said Allard wearily. “But don’t ask me to help yuh. I’ve
warned yuh, thasall.”
Allard turned and walked toward the bunk-house, while the rest of the
cowboys looked after him, a laugh on their lips.
“Scared plumb stiff,” declared Monte.
“And,” observed Frank seriously, “it ain’t like Brent to get scared
thataway. He ain’t no coward, Monte.”
“That’s right,” muttered Red. “Brent’s no coward, but right now he’s
scared. Mebbe we better investigate this Hartley person. It’s better
to be safe than sorry, Monte.”
“That’s true enough, Red. If he’s here to find trouble, we’ll sure guide
him to plenty of it, won’t we?”
“Danged right. And we’ll label it in big letters, so he won’t make no
mistake. I’m kinda anxious to see this pair of whip-poor-wills, m’self.
If they’re dangerous, the sooner we find it out the better it will be
for all of us.”
“Mebbe they’ll be in town tonight,” grinned Monte widely. “If they’re
not, we know where they will be.”
“That’s my idea, too,” laughed Red.
III.
Dug Breed was greatly disgruntled over his failure to find any clue
to Bud Daley’s whereabouts. He had not expected to find any trace of
the train-robbers. The express messenger and the engine crew said
that there were several masked men in the gang; but their failure to
do more than damage the through-safe and the interior of the car
hardly made them worth bothering with.
Breed was of the opinion that the hold-up was planned only as a
means for taking Bud Daley away from him, because of the fact that
an organized gang would hardly stick up a train and blow the express
safe unless they were reasonably certain of some remuneration.
But he could hardly understand just who would do such a job. The JM
outfit might have done such a thing. There were four men at that ranch.
But Breed well knew that Sody Slavin was too drunk that night, and that
Uncle Jimmy Miller had been at the depot to see Bud leave. This was a
perfect alibi for the JM.
“I don’t _sabe_ it a-tall,” he told Charley Morse, his deputy, who was
tilted back in an office chair, trying to coax a tune from a home-made
banjo.
Charley balanced the banjo on his knee while he rolled a cigaret.
Charley was not very keen mentally, and Breed’s worries bothered him
very little.
“Bud’s prob’ly got a gun, by this time,” he observed.
“Yeah, he prob’ly has,” agreed Breed.
“And he’ll use it, too.”
“What would you do, if yuh had twenty years starin’ yuh in the face?
Wouldn’t you use a gun, Charley?”
“Y’betcha.”
“All of which makes Bud a dangerous man,” mused Breed.
“Gotta outsmart him, thasall,” declared Charley, picking up his banjo
and hunching to a comfortable position.
“Yeah? How would you outsmart him, Charley?”
Charley yawned widely and rubbed his nose. Charley was not slighted when
they passed around noses.
“He’s got a wife, Dug,” said Charley. “He’ll want to see her, won’t he?
Stick him up when he comes home.”
“Uh-huh?” Breed squinted reflectively. It was not such a bad idea, at
that, he agreed.
“He’ll come home after grub, I reckon,” added Charley. “Feller has got
to eat.”
“But his wife ain’t home, Charley. She’s at the JM ranch.”
“Does Bud know it?”
Breed glared at Charley and spat disgustedly.
“How in ---- do I know what Bud knows?”
“Have to watch both places, I reckon.”
“All right. As soon as it gets dark we’ll pull out. You go to the JM
and I’ll watch Bud’s place. It ain’t likely that he knows she went
to the JM, Charley. Don’t let nobody see yuh, _sabe_? Cache yourself
away where yuh can watch the house all night.”
“----!” Charley threw the banjo on the table and fumbled for a match.
“Set there all night, eh? I had a ---- of a good idea, didn’t I?”
Charley rubbed an ear violently. “Next time I’ll keep my danged mouth
shut. Bein’ real smart didn’t git me anythin’.”
“You prob’ly won’t have much to do, Charley?”
“Only keep awake. I played poker all night, I’d have yuh know.”
“That ain’t my fault. You better take a shotgun along, ’cause you’re
cock-eyed already.”
Breed went across the street to the Rest Ye All, where he sat in at a
poker game. It was shortly before dark when the boys from the 76A rode
in and proceeded to regale themselves with plenty of liquor.
Breed noticed that they talked among themselves, ignoring the games,
but drank plenty of whisky. Then they went out and were gone quite a
while, drifting back in singles to meet at the bar again.
“Lookin’ for somebody,” Breed decided.
More cowboys drifted in, and in a little while Breed cashed in his
chips and drew out of the game. Charley was at the office, with the
two saddled horses, and in a few minutes they were out of Modoc and
on their way, unseen by any one in the town.
* * * * *
About a mile out of town the road forked; one road leading to the JM and
the other to Bud’s ranch. Breed gave Charley final instructions and they
separated.
There was no moon, but the sky was brilliant with stars. The road
led along the slope of the hills, winding in and out of the hollows,
crossing an old water-course, deep in the shadows of cottonwood and
willow, only to lead straight back into the sage-covered hill again.
Further on it skirted the side of a hill, and Breed could see a light in
the ranch-house window. Somewhere a horse nickered shrilly. Breed drew
up, dropped to the ground and placed a hand over his horse’s muzzle.
After a minute or two he went on, walking and leading his horse.
The road led in past the stable, but Breed dismounted in the brush
before reaching the stable, tied his horse and went cautiously past
the corral and stopped at the corner of the stable. He was not in a
position to watch the entire house; so he went back to an open window,
climbed inside the stable and felt his way to the door, which he found
unlocked.
He shoved the door partly open and sat down. From here he could see
part of the front porch, all of one side and the kitchen door. The
horses moved uneasily for several moments, but settled down to their
feeding.
He could not see the lighted window now. It was warm there in the barn.
He found a saddle-blanket and a box, with which he made a comfortable
seat, and settled down to his long vigil. He felt sure that Bud would
not show up before midnight, if at all.
Then he did the natural thing under the circumstances--fell asleep.
After all, a sheriff is only human, and he was comfortable.
He did not know what awakened him, but he suddenly found himself wide
awake and staring out through the doorway. A man was between him and the
house, bulking large in the half-light. As far as Breed could determine,
this man was watching the house. Then he began moving slowly toward the
front porch, apparently cautious.
Breed grunted to himself, drew his gun and stepped softly outside.
“He ain’t takin’ no chances,” he observed to himself. “Bud always was
cautious, and he don’t know who might be in the house.”
Swiftly but softly, Breed crossed toward the man, who was so intent on
the house that he did not think of any danger from the rear, and when
within about twenty feet, Breed stopped and spoke:
“Put ’em up real high, young feller.”
The man whirled swiftly, and his answer was an orange-colored streak of
fire and the crashing report of a revolver. Breed felt the wind from the
bullet, ducked instinctively and shot from his hip. The man grunted,
staggered sideways and went to his knees, shooting as fast as he could,
while Breed’s gun stabbed streaks of fire in his direction.
Then a bullet struck in the gravel a few feet from Breed and threw a
spray of fine rocks into his face. He ducked sideways and almost ran
into a bullet, which was coming from another direction; while from
three different directions came the barking reports of six-shooters,
all throwing lead at the sheriff.
Breed did not stop to question any one. He almost decided not to bother
with a horse, but his course was in that direction. Luckily the corral
gate was open, which gave him a chance for a long run before his jump,
and he barely scraped a heel on the top pole of that seven-foot corral.
Hashknife and Sleepy were in bed when the first shot caused them to
sit up, like a pair of mechanical toys. The next shot sent them out
of bed, gun in hand and running toward the door; but the fusillade
caused Hashknife, who was in the lead, to stop short, and Sleepy
bumped violently into him.
“What the ---- are yuh tryin’ to do--knock m’ teeth out?” demanded
Sleepy. “Yore danged elbow is jist like a bay’net.”
“Aw, hire a hall!” snapped Hashknife. “What’s goin’ on around here,
anyway?”
The firing ceased. Some one ran past the front porch, crunching heavily
on the gravel. Hashknife cautiously opened the door and peered out. All
was serene. From far away came the sound of a running horse, and
somewhere in the hills a coyote barked snappily and wailed dismally, as
if protesting against being disturbed.
“Well, now that sure does beat ---- by a neck!” exclaimed Hashknife.
“Jist why do they pick our little ranch to stage a battle?”
“Some of it was danged close, too,” said Sleepy. “Them first few shots
were right up against our house.”
Hashknife led the way back to the bedroom, where they proceeded to dress
and buckle on their belts.
“She’s a small world,” complained Sleepy, “when they have to come out to
our yard to have their fights. What do you make of it, Hashknife?”
“Mebbe somebody was havin’ fun with us, Sleepy.”
“Well, they’ve had it, cowboy. I’m a-quiverin’ all over.”
They went out on the front porch and looked around. There was not a
sound to be heard. Hashknife led the way around the corner and stopped
short. A man was lying flat on his back, looking up at the sky, arms
outstretched. A few feet from him was a heavy six-shooter.
Hashknife knelt beside him and felt of his heart. He was still
breathing, and as Hashknife touched him he groaned aloud.
“He ain’t dead, is he?” asked Sleepy.
“Yeah. They always groan thataway after they’re dead.”
Hashknife got to his feet and dusted off his knees.
“Grab his feet, Sleepy; we’ll take him in the house.”
They carried him in and placed him on the floor, after which they
lighted a lamp and looked him over. It was Red Blair; but he was an
unknown to them. Hashknife made a brief examination of him and
pronounced him a case for a doctor.
“And we ain’t got no time to lose,” declared Hashknife. “There’s a
buckboard down at the stable, and I reckon them other two horses are
broke to harness. We’ll take this jasper to Modoc and find out who he
is.”
It did not take them long to harness the team, load the wounded man
into the buckboard, and head for town. The road was not very smooth,
but Sleepy held the man down, while Hashknife drove the team at a
stiff gallop most of the way.
* * * * *
It was past midnight when they drove up to the Rest Ye All. The place
was fairly well filled, and Lavelle was at the bar, talking with several
men, when Hashknife asked the bartender where he could find a doctor.
“Somebody hurt?” asked Lavelle.
“Yeah,” replied Hashknife, “I dunno who he is. There was a lot of
shootin’ goin’ on out at Daley’s ranch, and this feller must ’a’ got
in the way of some lead. He’s out there in the buckboard.”
There was a general exodus to the front of the saloon, and Hashknife
soon found out who the man was. Lavelle took immediate charge and sent
a man for the doctor.
“Mind telling me how it happened?” asked Lavelle.
Hashknife told him what he knew of the matter, but it was evident that
Lavelle did not believe a word of it. Some one was sent after the
sheriff, who appeared in a few minutes. He made a great show of asking
questions, which no one could answer--except the sheriff himself--and
he grew absent-minded, trying to appear at ease and to puzzle out what
Red Blair was doing at the Triangle D ranch, and who did the shooting
after Red Blair went down.
He felt sure that Hashknife and Sleepy were telling the truth, as
strange as it might seem to those who did not know.
The doctor took charge of the wounded man, and Hashknife and Sleepy
went back to the ranch, wondering what Lavelle’s cowpuncher was doing
at their doorstep, and who shot him.
“This,” declared Hashknife, “sure as ---- has got me fightin’ my head,
Sleepy. What did that red-headed puncher want out there? Who shot him?
Was all them shots fired at the jasper that shot this Red Blair? Who
were they? Sleepy, I’ll be darned if this ain’t some mix-up.”
“Do yuh reckon Bud Daley was mixed up in it?” queried Sleepy.
“That’s hard to tell, Sleepy. There’s a lot of things to work out.
F’r instance, who stole Bud’s cows? Who robbed the bank? Who held up
that train? Why did they take Bud away from the sheriff? What in ----
was Red Blair doin’ out there tonight, and who shot him? My gosh, no
wonder Sherlock Holmes was a hop-head.”
“Well,” laughed Sleepy, “yo’re happy, ain’t yuh, cowboy?”
“Gittin’ thataway,” laughed Hashknife.
They unsaddled at the stable and went to the house, but drew all the
curtains before lighting the lamp. Hashknife started toward the bedroom,
but stopped and squinted toward a corner of the living room.
“Sleepy,” he asked, “wasn’t there a rifle in that corner when we left
here?”
“By jolly, I think there was, Hashknife. It was there the last I seen of
it.”
“Uh-huh.” Hashknife strode into the kitchen with the lamp and looked
around, with a wide grin on his face.
“We’ve had a visitor,” he stated. “Bud’s been here after a gun and a
grub stake, Sleepy. That dog-gone pantry is jist about cleaned out,
and I’ll betcha we’re shy a horse and saddle.”
“That’s fine!” grunted Sleepy. “Takes a load off m’ mind. I was kinda
worryin’ about Bud, but we know he’s all right now.”
They went back to the bedroom and undressed.
“I wish we’d ’a’ been here,” said Hashknife thoughtfully. “I’ve got a
lot of questions to ask that danged fool.”
“What about, Hashknife?”
“Oh, about hang-nails, and if he’s bothered with dandruff,” replied
Hashknife sarcastically. “If I’ve got to live with an idiot, I might
as well be crazy, too. Good night.”
One of their horses was missing in the morning, but Bud took his own
saddle. Sleepy saddled one of the buggy team and found it much better
riding than a harness-animal. They went to Modoc, where they found
that Red Blair was still unconscious and that the doctor was still
prospecting him for bullets.
Dug Breed made a show of questioning Hashknife, while Cleve Lavelle
listened. But Hashknife had told all he knew the night before. Lavelle
was thoughtfully serious, and the bartender confided to Hashknife that
Lavelle had lost a lot of money at stud poker last night.
“And that’s the first time anybody has tapped him hard since Bud Daley
took ten thousand out of here,” stated the bartender.
“Lost his luck?” queried Hashknife, grinning.
“I betcha.” The bartender breathed tenderly upon a glass, and polished
it carefully.
“Lavelle’s sure out of luck when they can hit him hard.”
“Gamblin’ is a queer profession,” mused Hashknife. “They’re all
superstitious. They make up their mind that somethin’ brings ’em
luck--and it does. I reckon it’s just another case of mind.”
“Lavelle’s thataway,” laughed the bartender. “Horse-shoes, pins on the
floor, pointin’ toward him, pictures hangin’ crooked on the wall--oh, a
lot of hoodoo or good-lucks.”
“Alle same Injun medicine-bag, eh?” grinned Sleepy.
“That’s it.”
Lavelle came in and walked over to the bar, inviting the two cowboys to
have a drink.
“How far is it to Black Wells?” asked Hashknife as they lifted their
glasses.
“About thirty-five miles,” said Lavelle.
“Good road?”
“Good enough for a saddle-horse. Been neglected so long that it wouldn’t
be passable for a wagon. Thinking of going there?”
Hashknife nodded slowly.
“Yeah, I’m goin’ over there, Lavelle. Have you got any idea what could
have become of Bud Daley’s cattle?”
Lavelle laughed and indicated for the bartender to fill up the glasses
again.
“Just between us,” said Lavelle, “I think that Bud sold his cattle.”
“In Black Wells?”
“Perhaps. That is the best place.”
“Well,” said Hashknife, “we’re goin’ over there and see what we can
see. There ought to be somebody there that could put us on to the right
track.”
“If they would. Black Wells,” said Lavelle slowly, “is one place where
it’s hard to get folks to talk.”
“We never get folks to talk,” said Hashknife. “Let ’em alone and they’ll
tell everythin’. Well, Sleepy, we better be hittin’ the grit. We’ve got
to stop at the JM outfit a while, and I dunno if them hammer-headed
broncs are good for thirty-five miles, or not.”
“You two were on the car the night the hold-up men took Bud away from
the sheriff, wasn’t you?” asked Lavelle.
“Y’betcha,” grinned Hashknife. “I’ll never forget it. They tried to rob
me and Sleepy, but I told ’em that all we had left was the draggin’ end
of a pair of railroad tickets, so he dug into his pocket and tossed me
some money for a breakfast stake.”
Lavelle laughed and lighted a cigar.
“How much did he give you?”
“I dunno. It wasn’t much. Well, c’mon, Sleepy; let’s hit the grit.”
Monte Sells and Frank Asher were riding into town, as Hashknife and
Sleepy rode out. Monte squinted closely at them and turned in his
saddle to watch them fade out down the road in a cloud of dust.
* * * * *
The Miller family, Mrs. Daley and the cowpunchers were all at the JM
and greeted them warmly. Sody noticed that Sleepy was riding one of
Bud’s horses and asked him what was wrong with the JM horse.
“Bud took him,” laughed Hashknife. “From what we can observe, Bud has a
horse, grub and a gun. He took that rifle out of the corner of the front
room, cleaned out the cupboard and lifted a horse.”
“Oh, did you see him--talk to him?” exclaimed Mrs. Daley.
“Wish I had,” said Hashknife. “We wasn’t there when he came. We was
packin’ Red Blair to a doctor.”
“What happened to Red Blair?” asked Uncle Jimmy.
Hashknife described what had happened at the ranch the night before,
and Dinah Blewette almost choked to death, trying to express himself.
Sody hammered him on the back and ordered him to use his ears and let
his tongue alone.
“Do you suppose that Bud had anything to do with it?” asked Mrs. Daley
wonderingly.
“He didn’t have no gun,” said Sleepy. “Least we don’t reckon he did. It
was after that when he took the rifle.”
“Well, tie up yore horses and have somethin’ to eat,” invited Ma
Miller. “You two gallinippers are jist like every other puncher I ever
knowed--always show up at meal-time.”
“Ma throws a mean flock of food,” grinned Uncle Jimmy. “I know she’s
bakin’ bread and there’s beans in the oven, too.”
“Oh, we’ll stay,” said Hashknife. “My gosh, we’ll stay.”
The wide porch of the ranch-house looked inviting to Hashknife. Sody
and Dinah were breaking a bronc at the corral, and this was inviting
enough for Sleepy. Uncle Jimmy followed Ma to the kitchen, leaving
Hashknife and Mrs. Daley together. They sat down in the shade, and
Mrs. Daley waited for Hashknife to speak. His long, lean face was
serious as he carefully rolled and shaped a cigaret before saying a
word. Then--
“Where was you the night the bank was robbed?”
“Why, I was at home.”
Mrs. Daley looked curiously at him, and a fear clutched at her heart.
Did he know that Cleve Lavelle was out at the ranch that night, she
wondered?
“Wasn’t Bud home that night?” he asked.
She shook her head slowly.
“No, he did not come home.”
“Where’d he go that day--to Modoc?”
“I--I think so. He said he was going to see the sheriff about the stolen
cattle.”
“Uh-huh,” Hashknife smoked thoughtfully. “Are him and Breed good
friends?”
“No, I do not think so.”
Hashknife turned and looked directly at her, as he said--
“Lavelle thinks that Bud sold his cows and lied about ’em bein’ stolen.”
“That is not true! Why, Bud wouldn’t do a thing like that. You ought to
know Bud better----”
“I didn’t say it,” interrupted Hashknife. “Lavelle said it.”
“Well, it’s not true. We were just getting a good start in life, when
this all happened.”
“All right.” Hashknife nodded and shoved his hat onto the back of his
head. “Why didn’t Bud talk at the trial?”
“Why didn’t he talk?” Mrs. Daley looked at Hashknife closely.
“Yeah. He didn’t even try to tell where he was that night.”
“No, he didn’t tell,” Mrs. Daley spoke softly. “He wouldn’t tell
anything.”
“Feller ought to talk,” said Hashknife slowly. “Did he ever tell you
that he didn’t do it, May?”
“No.” Softly.
“Did he ever tell you where he was that night?”
“No.”
“Say!”
Hashknife turned half-around and looked at her. She lowered her eyes,
but he put his hand on her shoulder and she looked up at him, her eyes
filmed with tears.
“May Daley, did Bud talk to you a-tall?”
She bit her lips to try and keep back the tears, as she shook her head.
“Why didn’t he?”
“I--I do not know.”
“Grub-pile!” yelled Uncle Jimmy. “Come and git it!”
Hashknife helped her to her feet and she gripped his hand tightly as she
looked up at him.
“Why do you ask me these questions?”
Hashknife grinned down at her and shook his head.
“I can’t tell yuh yet, May. I don’t want yuh to think that I’m meddlin’
into yore personal affairs; but I’d like to ask yuh if yuh still care
for Bud?”
“More than any one in the world, Hashknife Hartley.”
Hashknife nodded slowly.
“I hope he knows that, May. If I wasn’t his friend I’d think he was
guilty; but friendship makes it look different.”
“Do you--” she faltered--“do you think there is any way of saving him?”
Hashknife grinned and patted her on the arm.
“Miracles do happen,” he told her smiling. “I saved half of my salary
one year. Let’s eat and forget it.”
* * * * *
The town of Black Wells was on the east side of the range and on the
main line of the railroad, the branch of which extended into the Modoc
country, but from a point much farther South.
Until the building of this branch line, all the cattle of the Modoc
had been herded into Black Wells for shipment; but since then, Black
Wells had ceased to be more than one of the many little cattle-towns
along the railroad.
Its one street was little more than a dusty road, bordered by
false-fronted, unpainted buildings, which looked as if they might fall
down in the next gust of wind; their signs were faded and dimmed by
time.
The railroad did not come within a quarter of a mile of the town and it
seemed that the town did not like the railroad well enough to move over
close to it. The little depot stood bravely forth in the sage-covered
plain, and a few hundred yards from it were the big corrals and
loading-pens, fast falling apart from neglect.
Hashknife and Sleepy rode into Black Wells after dark, put their horses
into a corral, foraged some hay and went hunting for a hotel. A frowsy
hotel-keeper answered their banging on the front door, grumbled at being
disturbed, but finally agreed to give them a place to sleep.
He held up his overalls with one hand, a smoking oil-lamp in the other,
and padded along barefooted to a door, which creaked a protest at being
disturbed.
“Ain’t used to puttin’ up folks at night,” he explained. “The hotel
business ain’t what it used to be. I’ve seen the time when this old
Californy House was loaded to the guards. I’ll leave yuh fix up the
bed the way yuh want it. This lamp ain’t got more’n enough ile to see
yuh to bed, and I’ll be darned ’f I’d ever fill one by match-light.”
He placed the lamp on a rickety dresser and peered around.
“How about a little water, pardner?” asked Hashknife.
“Water? T’night? Nope.” He shook his head violently. “Fetch yuh some
in the mornin’. That ---- old pump is hard t’ find in the dark, and
she’s gotta be primed to beat ----, or yuh don’t git nothin’ to come
up.”
He padded out, shut the door and went down the narrow hallway,
complaining audibly. The room was hot, unventilated; but both cowboys
were too tired to care about that. They flopped on the old bed, which
creaked and groaned at every move, and stayed there until daylight,
when they went wearily down the hall and on to the front porch.
Black Wells woke up by degrees. A mongrel dog got up from in front of
the Welcome saloon, turned around three times, lay down. Then it got
up, yawned widely, snapped at a fly and went down the street toward a
watering-trough.
Somewhere a door banged shut, and some one began whistling discordantly.
A high-pitched voice complained profanely against the whistler, who
stopped whistling long enough to tell the plaintiff to go plumb to ----.
A window slammed down and there came a tinkle of broken glass.
“You ---- fool, that winder has been cracked ever since eighteen
eighty-six!” complained a feminine voice. “Whatcha slammin’ it down
fer?”
The reply was muffled. A man came across the street, leading a horse to
the watering-trough. He began manipulating the rusty old pump-handle,
which screeched loud enough to wake every one. Another man came out of a
one-story building across the street; a short dumpy man, bearded to the
eyes. He slid back the wide door of the blacksmith shop and went inside,
where he busied himself singing a tuneless song and beating time on the
anvil. The proprietor of the hotel, evidently fearful that Hashknife and
Sleepy might get away without paying for their lodging, came out on to
the porch, still using his two hands in lieu of suspenders.
“Howja sleep?” he asked.
“With our eyes shut,” said Hashknife.
“Howja find the bed?”
“That wasn’t a bed,” said Sleepy dryly, “that was a buggy.”
The man seemed aggrieved.
“Yuh can’t expect no New Yawk accommodations in Black Wells. ----,
man; yo’re in the West. Black Wells is a good town. Whatcha like for
breakfast--coffee or tea?”
Hashknife laughed and got to his feet.
“That’s what I’ve always heard about Black Wells--yuh can get what yuh
want. We’ll take coffee.”
“Yuh sure can git anythin’ yuh want,” admitted the proprietor. “She’s a
he-man’s town, y’betcha.”
He went back into the house. The blacksmith was still singing to the
music of his anvil, his voice quavering with the intensity of feeling.
Hashknife grinned and nodded toward the shop.
“That feller’s human, Sleepy. My bronc has a loose shoe; so we’ll give
the singer a job, and mebbe he’ll talk.”
They got the horse at the corral and took it to the shop. The blacksmith
grinned good-naturedly and examined the loose shoe.
“Better take her off and shape her up li’l’, eh?” he asked.
“Yo’re the doctor,” said Hashknife. “Do yore job.”
“Quite a town yuh got here,” observed Sleepy.
The blacksmith looked up from his work and squinted at Sleepy.
“You tryin’ to be funny, or start an argument?” he asked.
“Neither one,” grinned Sleepy. “But that’s the regular thing to say,
ain’t it?”
The blacksmith laughed and walked back to his forge, where he shoved the
shoe into the fire and leaned heavily on his bellows pole.
“You fellers are strangers here,” he said slowly. “I _sabe_ the JM
brand on this bronc, and I _sabe_ the Modoc. I ain’t been here long,
but I know everybody by their first name. Black Wells is a ---- of a
town, any old way yuh look at it.”
“Ain’t much since Modoc quit bringin’ their cows over here, I reckon,”
said Hashknife. “I dunno how yuh make a livin’.”
“Oh, I manage to get a little job now and then.”
“Know the 76A outfit?”
“Know of ’em. I put a couple of shoes on a 76A bronc not long ago. That
was the first job I had, after I opened this shop.”
“You been open long?”
“Less than a month.”
He took the shoe from the fire and shaped it carefully, while Hashknife
sat on the edge of the slack-tub and watched him work.
“You must ’a’ been here when them Triangle D cows were brought over
here,” said Hashknife thoughtfully. “That wasn’t more than a month ago.”
The blacksmith squinted thoughtfully for a moment.
“No, I don’t remember them. Mebbe that was before my time. Who owned
them Triangle-D cattle?”
“Bud Daley.”
“Oh, yeah. He was the feller that robbed the Modoc bank, wasn’t he? And
then got away from the sheriff?”
“That’s the feller.”
“I dunno him. How did he happen to bring his cows over here?”
Hashknife laughed shortly and shook his head.
“Do you know the sheriff of Modoc?”
“Nope.” The blacksmith went over to the horse and fitted the shoe. “I
dunno many folks over there. I used to be there a couple of years ago,
but I went up to Pocatello, Idaho, and stayed there until jist a while
ago.”
“Over in Modoc they told me that Black Wells has a pretty bad
reputation,” said Hashknife, watching the blacksmith closely.
“I dunno.” The blacksmith laughed shortly and came back to the forge.
“I never seen anythin’ bad about it. I suppose there’s a certain gang
that ain’t teachin’ no Sunday schools; but they jist kinda fade in and
fade out of here. Nobody bothers me; so I keep my mouth shut and drive
nails.”
“After all,” observed Hashknife, “that’s the best thing to do.”
“Safest, anyway,” grunted the blacksmith.
The proprietor of the hotel came out on the porch, a huge bell in his
hand, and proceeded to announce breakfast. Men began to drift in from
all directions, and there was a sizable crowd in the dining-room, when
Hashknife and Sleepy arrived.
No one spoke to them, but, being strangers, they created a certain
amount of silent interest. Hashknife sized up the crowd and decided
that Black Wells might be able to live up to advance notices. There
were two men whose attire stamped them as saloon owners or gamblers,
another whose tonsorial splendor shrieked of the fact that he mixed
drinks for a livelihood. Another might be a keeper of a store. The
rest were cowpunchers or cattlemen.
There was little conversation, except in a low tone. The proprietor of
the hotel waited on table, assisted by a slatternly, middle-aged woman,
who did not change expression during the meal.
After breakfast they filed silently out of the room. Hashknife and
Sleepy went back to the blacksmith shop, paid for the work and took
their horse back to the corral.
“I wish I knowed what in ---- we came down here for,” complained Sleepy.
“This ain’t my idea of a good place to stay.”
“I want to find out if Bud sold them cows himself,” replied Hashknife.
“All right,” grinned Sleepy. “That’s somethin’ yuh never did expect to
find out down here.”
“You’d laugh at me, if I told yuh why I came, Sleepy.”
“No, I’d fall dead, Hashknife.”
They went into the Welcome saloon, where a poker game had already
started. Hashknife looked the players over, but decided that there was
too much dexterity shown by the dealer; so he did not take the vacant
chair. The blacksmith came in, bought himself a drink and appropriated
the chair.
Several hard-faced cowpunchers drifted in, took a few drinks and went
away. It was hot. The old saloon reeked of stale liquor and tobacco
smoke. Flies crawled over the bar and buzzed up and down the dusty
mirror and windows.
The proprietor of the saloon, a crafty-faced individual, with an
almost-bald head, which was knobby in contour, was in the poker game.
He drank whisky copiously and perspired generously on his bald dome.
* * * * *
The day passed slowly, dustily. The poker game was listless, and
Hashknife and Sleepy dozed in a pair of chairs on the porch of the
saloon. Cow-ponies stood listlessly at the hitch-racks, switching their
tails wearily at the flies, while the sun beat down on the dusty street
until the pine boards of the buildings oozed pitch.
“There ain’t been a soul spoke to us all day,” said Sleepy. “I hope to
gosh that we pull out this evenin’. Even if they do use our dooryard to
pull off their killin’s, I’d rather be there than here.”
Supper time came and about the same crowd went to eat. There was a
little more conversation, because of the fact that much liquor had
been consumed. Several of the men nodded to Hashknife and Sleepy,
and the proprietor of the Welcome muttered something about it being
a warm day for this time of year.
“They’re thawin’ out,” grinned Hashknife.
“At a hundred and ten in the shade, they ought to,” grunted Sleepy,
wrinkling up his nose at the dishes of hot food. “I’d like to hit that
old Crooked Cañon ag’in. It’s cool there.”
“Don’t get impatient,” said Hashknife. “Rome wasn’t built in a day.”
“Oh, that’s what yo’re doin’ over here, eh? Buildin’ another Rome.”
They went back to the Welcome saloon and sat down. Men drifted in
and started another poker game, but this time the proprietor of the
saloon did not sit in at the games. He went behind the bar and let
the bartender go to eat his supper, and his first act was to invite
everybody up to have a drink.
Hashknife and Sleepy came up with the others, but stayed at the bar
after the rest of the crowd had gone back to their drinks.
“You fellers goin’ to locate around here?” asked the proprietor.
He had drunk enough whisky to make him just a trifle thick of tongue,
but his eyes were keen.
Hashknife considered his question thoughtfully, but finally shook his
head.
“Didja come from over in the Modoc country?”
The man was busy washing glasses and did not look up when he asked the
question.
“Yeah, we rode in from there last night,” yawned Hashknife.
The proprietor filled several bottles from a keg, arranged his glasses
carefully and turned back to them.
“Many Modoc folks drift over this way?” queried Hashknife.
The man appeared interested in an argument which had started at one of
the poker tables and did not answer, although Hashknife felt sure that
he had heard the question. Finally he said:
“When are you goin’ back to Modoc?”
“Mebbe tonight, we dunno,” said Hashknife.
“Nicer ridin’ at night than in the daytime.”
The man looked straight at them when he spoke, and it seemed that his
statement held a warning.
“That’s right,” grinned Hashknife. “It’s kinda hot in the daytime. You
know much about the Modoc country?”
“Not much.”
Hashknife leaned across the bar and lowered his voice.
“Pardner, I’m lookin’ for information. Do you know who Bud Daley is?”
The man squinted keenly at him, but lowered his eyes, a slight frown on
his face. He was putting up a show of thinking. Then:
“I’ve heard the name. Didn’t he git into trouble over there?”
“They say he shipped some stock from here,” said Hashknife, ignoring the
question, “and we’re tryin’ to find out if that is the truth.”
The man shook his head, but called to a cowpuncher who was watching one
of the games. He was a frowsy, unkempt individual, who had been around
there all day. He slouched over to the bar.
“Jud,” said the proprietor, “here’s a man who wants to find out if Bud
Daley has shipped any stock from here lately?”
Jud licked his lips and reached for a cigaret-paper.
“Jud kinda has charge of the loadin’ corrals,” explained the proprietor.
“Bud Daley?” Jud seemed to be questioning himself. Then he looked at
Hashknife keenly, “Whatcha want to know fer?”
“I’ll trade answers with yuh,” said Hashknife.
“Trade with me?”
“Yeah. You tell me if he has and I’ll tell yuh what I wanted to know
for.”
Jud grinned wisely and licked the edge of his cigaret-paper. His eyes
shifted to the face of the proprietor and back to Hashknife.
“Suppose I tell yuh I don’t know,” he suggested. “How’d yuh trade on
that?”
“By tellin’ yuh it wasn’t none of yore ---- business,” replied
Hashknife.
Jud gawped at Hashknife for a moment and flushed angrily.
“Yo’re kinda salty, ain’t yuh?” he queried.
Hashknife laughed with his mouth, but there was no mirth in his steady
eyes. Jud fidgeted nervously, ripped a match viciously along the bar and
lit his cigaret.
“I’ll buy a drink,” said the proprietor slowly.
Jud whirled on his heel and walked back to the poker-table, ignoring the
invitation. The proprietor laughed and set out glasses and a bottle. He
did not drink, but lighted a fresh cigar instead.
“This one is on me,” said Hashknife, tossing a dollar on the bar, “I
reckon that folks didn’t lie to us when they said that we’d never find
out anythin’ in Black Wells.”
He and Sleepy tossed off their drinks and went outside, leaving the
dollar on the bar.
“My gosh, that’s awful whisky!” exclaimed Sleepy. “No wonder this town
hates itself. Where now?”
“Back to Modoc,” said Hashknife, “I don’t like this place.”
They went back to the corral and began saddling. A moon had just come
up over the Modoc hills. Sleepy was fussing with his cinch and looking
at the moon. Then he stopped and grasped the saddle with both hands.
The moon was acting queerly. It seemed to advance and recede rapidly,
and the queer motion was making Sleepy sea-sick. He looked over at
Hashknife, who seemed to be acting strangely. Then a sudden dizziness
struck him and he fell backward against the corral fence, where he
slumped down in a heap.
It seemed to Sleepy that he had only been on the ground a short time,
when he groped for the fence and managed to get back to his feet. The
moon was high in the heavens now, and he wondered how it had got up
there in such a short time. He was still nauseated, hazy; but the cool
night breeze revived him rapidly.
The horses were still there. He crossed the corral, where he found
Hashknife leaning against the fence, his head on his hands.
“Say, what in ---- happened?” queried Sleepy painfully.
Hashknife groaned and straightened up. He looked at Sleepy and laughed
hoarsely.
“Feel in yore pockets, Sleepy?”
Sleepy did so.
“Anythin’ missin’?” asked Hashknife.
“Well, I’ll be ---- if I ain’t shy about ten dollars!”
“They cleaned me out,” groaned Hashknife. “I’m as clean as a new six-gun
barrel.”
“Well, what in ---- is the answer?” demanded Sleepy angrily.
“Them last drinks,” said Hashknife, “they must ’a’ filled ’em full of
knockout drops, Sleepy. I’ve been doped before, but I never got all
there was in the world in one drink. Waugh!”
“They doped and robbed us?” queried Sleepy.
“That’s the answer.”
“All right.” Sleepy’s voice was harsh with anger. “We’ll go back to
that Welcome saloon and take it back with interest. C’mon, Hashknife.
I’ll show that bunch of tin-horns somethin’ quaint.”
“Nope.” Hashknife laughed and went back to his horse. “Me and you are
goin’ back to Modoc. It’s late.”
“You ain’t goin’ to let that bunch of side-winders get away with all
this, are yuh?” demanded Sleepy.
“They didn’t get much.”
Sleepy went to his horse, shook up the saddle and drew up the cinch.
He was mad. They rode out of the corral gate and down the street. As
they passed the Welcome saloon, Sleepy drew up his horse and peered
through the window. There were several men at the bar and among them
was the proprietor.
“Hang on to yourself,” advised Hashknife. But he was too late.
Sleepy drew his gun and sent a bullet smashing through the window and
into the back-bar. The crowd at the bar fell back in a panic. Another
bullet bored through the broken window, splintered the back-bar mirror
and played havoc with some bottled goods, which were on display.
A man threw open the door, but slammed it shut quickly, when a bullet
buzzed in over his head.
“Yeow! Ye-e-e-ow!” whooped Sleepy. “Dodge, you Black Wells pickpockets!”
Three times more he sent bullets in through the windows, before he set
spurs to his horse and went thundering out of Black Wells, riding high
in his saddle and stuffing more cartridges into his six-shooter.
Straight out the old Crooked Cañon road they went and into the moonlit
hills before they slackened pace.
“I sure gave ’em a receipt for my money,” laughed Sleepy, looking back
toward the town, “yo’re too easy, Hashknife. I only hope that bunch of
reptiles will be pickin’ glass splinters out of their mangy hides for
a month.”
“Well,” laughed Hashknife, “I dunno that I blame yuh, cowboy.”
“Blame, ----!” snorted Sleepy, “I wish we’d ’a’ gone in there and
salivated the whole works. I was shootin’ at the cash register, and I
hope I rung up enough to make it worth while. You wanted to come to
Black Wells, and I hope you’re satisfied.”
“I’m satisfied,” answered Hashknife. “Perfectly satisfied.”
“You didn’t do no good for anybody.”
“Didn’t I?”
“Well, where in ---- did yuh? You asked questions and got no answer. We
got doped and robbed. And you’re satisfied. Brother, it don’t take much
to satisfy you, does it? Sometimes, I wonder if you’re just right in the
head.”
“My heart is in the right place, Sleepy.”
“Yeah--and I suppose yore liver is accordin’ to the location notice.
You’re actin’ as happy as though you done some good there.”
But Hashknife only laughed joyfully, in spite of the fact that his
stomach was almost too weak to bear the drag of his heavy belt and gun.
* * * * *
It was breakfast time the next morning at the 76A, when Dug Breed and
Charley Morse rode in for breakfast. A rumor that Bud Daley was back in
the Lost Pine country had given them eighteen hours of riding, with no
results.
Monte Sells, Frank Asher and Brent Allard were eating, but stopped long
enough to greet the sheriff and deputy, who sat down at the long table.
“A feller don’t have to strain his eyesight to see that yuh didn’t have
much luck, sheriff,” observed Monte.
He winked at the other two cowboys. Dug Breed noted the wink, but did
not appreciate the humor of Monte’s observation.
“Not much,” said Breed dryly.
Frank Asher laid down his fork, rested his elbows on the table and
leaned toward Breed, as he said--
“Breed, who do you think shot Red Blair?”
The sheriff had a cup of hot coffee at his lips, but he slowly lowered
it to the table, his eyes searching the faces of the three men across
the table.
“What in ---- was Blair doin’ out there?” he countered.
“What’s that got to do with it?” asked Monte.
“Quite a lot.” The sheriff seemed more at ease. “If we knew what Red
Blair was doin’ out there, we might get a line on who shot him.”
Asher grunted and began eating, but Monte took up the discussion.
“What do yuh know about them two punchers who are livin’ at Bud’s
place?”
“Not a thing.”
“Did yuh ever think that they might ’ve had a hand in the shootin’ of
Red?”
“If you’ll tell me what Red was doin’ out there, I might say.”
Brent Allard got to his feet and shoved back his chair.
“What’s the use of arguin’ about it?” he asked.
“I’m not arguin’ about it,” laughed Breed. “Red will likely tell us what
he was doin’ out there, as soon as he is able.”
“The doctor don’t think he’ll get well,” observed Monte. “I was down
there last night. Them two punchers told about a lot of shots bein’
fired out there that night. They claim to have found Red after the
shootin’ was all over.”
Breed nodded slowly.
“Yeah, I know that’s what they said.”
“Who do yuh reckon done all the shootin’?” queried Allard.
“Didn’t you say that there wasn’t no use arguin’ about it?” asked Breed,
grinning. “Don’t ask me who done it, Allard; I didn’t see ’em.”
Breed and Morse finished their breakfast and went on to town, while
the three cowboys sat down on the ranch-house porch and rolled fresh
cigarets.
“Do yuh know what I think?” asked Monte.
Nobody seemed to care what he thought, but he continued--
“I think that Bud Daley was the one that shot Red.”
“All right,” said Brent Allard. “It’s a free country, Monte. I told yuh
before we went there that we was monkeyin’ with dynamite. But Red got a
lot of drinks under his belt----”
“He didn’t get any more than the rest of us did,” interrupted Monte.
“I know it. But Red got braver than the rest of us. I told yuh what
would happen. Red thought we could frame up a scare for them two
jaspers; but yuh see what happened, don’t yuh.”
“Aw-w-w, ----!” snorted Frank Asher. “You can’t make me believe that
one of them was guardin’ the place. They didn’t know we was comin’
out there. I’ll betcha that Bud was the one what busted up the party
for Red.”
“Here comes Mesa,” said Monte, pointing down the road, where a lone
horseman was riding swiftly toward the ranch.
They watched him ride in at the gate and come straight to the porch,
where he dismounted and joined them.
“Red died a couple of hours ago,” he stated wearily. “He never got
conscious.”
Monte swore softly and rolled a fresh cigaret, while Mesa Caldwell
helped himself to Monte’s tobacco.
“Lavelle thinks it was Bud Daley that done it,” said Mesa. “I was
talkin’ to Lavelle a while ago. Met the sheriff and his deputy and
told them about it. I reckon most everybody thinks that Bud done the
shootin’.”
“That’s where yo’re all wrong,” insisted Brent Allard. “If you ----
fools would only believe me, when I tell yuh that them two fellers,
Hartley and Stevens, are----”
“Aw, stop croakin’, Brent!” wailed Monte. “My ----, yo’re always
lookin’ for spooks! If yo’re so scared of them two, why don’tcha pull
yore freight out of here?”
“Gimme my time, then,” said Brent quickly. “I’m plumb willin’ to go,
Monte. I tell yuh, there ain’t nothin’ but trouble, where yuh find
them two snake-hunters. I remember the time they----”
“Aw, hire a hall!” exploded Frank Asher, and Allard subsided, growling
and shaking his head.
“So Lavelle thinks that Bud Daley shot Red, does he?” queried Monte.
“I wonder if Lavelle thinks that his opinions are worth a ---- of a
lot? They’d have a sweet time convicting Bud of it, wouldn’t they?
Personally, I think the least said about it the better it will be for
all of us. Bud’s likely got a horse and a gun by this time, and he’ll
be a hard jigger to corral.”
“We’ll likely find out,” grinned Mesa knowingly. “Lavelle is goin’ to
turn us all over to the sheriff--to assist him in gettin’ Bud Daley.”
The three cowboys stared at Mesa, who seemed to enjoy their silent
expressions.
“Mesa Caldwell, are you lyin’ to us?” demanded Monte.
“Cross m’ heart and hope t’ die, if I am. The county is offerin’ two
thousand for Bud, dead or alive, and the bank antes a thousand. As
soon as our friend Dug Breed gets back to Modoc, Lavelle is goin’ to
offer him our services.”
“Well,” said Brent Allard slowly, “Cleve Lavelle and Dug Breed can go
plumb to ----, as far as I’m concerned.”
Allard set his jaw tightly and hitched up his belt.
“Scared?” queried Mesa, grinning.
“Yeah, I’m scared.”
“Of one man?”
“No, not of one man. Bud Daley don’t count. I liked Bud and I still like
him. Them two punchers ----”
“Aw, they’ve got yore goat,” laughed Monte, and the other two punchers
joined in the laugh at Allard’s fears.
“All right,” Allard was not interested in their sarcasm.
He knew what he knew, and their joking would not change him.
“They ain’t got nothin’ to do with us,” pointed out Mesa.
“Not until we try to put the deadwood on Bud Daley,” agreed Allard.
“They’re friends of Bud Daley, that’s a cinch; and I don’t intend to
give them a chance to work agin’ me. I’ll take my pay and hunt for
another range--it’s safer.”
“You won’t find a safer place to work than for Lavelle.” Thus Monte, who
did not want to lose Allard.
“Mebbe we better go over and have a talk with these bad _hombres_,”
suggested Mesa, laughing. “Would they recognize yuh, Brent?”
Allard squinted at Mesa, but did not answer. He was not going to commit
himself.
“We could ride over there,” continued Mesa. “It would be four against
two. It wouldn’t be hard to start somethin’, especially if they
recognized you and made some remarks.”
“Any ti-i-ime,” drawled Allard, shaking his head quickly. “Not for
mine, Mesa. You fellers trot right along and start somethin’ with them
two; but leave me here. Mebbe they’d recognize me. Hartley, the tall
one, ain’t got a bad memory for faces. And--” Allard squinted seriously
and rubbed his stubbled chin--“I’d like to bet that he knows more about
why and how things have been done since he showed up than the men that
done ’em.”
“Yo’re crazy,” declared Monte.
“Jist like a li’l fox,” grinned Allard. “I love my own hide so much that
I’ll go into a hole any old time that the runnin’ ain’t good.”
“Well,” observed Mesa, “mebbe yo’re right, Brent. If yuh feel like
yo’re runnin’ into bad luck, it’s a good thing to lay off the game for
a while. Talkin’ about luck, Lavelle got a trimmin’ at stud agin’ last
night. Sody Slavin and a gambler from Burke sure cleaned out Lavelle.
“Sody went in on a shoe-string and came out with enough to buy a
train-load of cows. Lavelle almost lost his shirt. That bird from Burke
and Sody took turns throwin’ the hooks into Lavelle, and I’m tellin’ you
that the Rest Ye All is danged badly bent.”
“They must ’a’ been loaded with luck,” observed Monte. “Lavelle is
usually awful lucky at his own game. But he’s been gettin’ hit hard
lately. I wonder if his luck is slippin’?”
“Sure it’s slippin’!” Brent Allard spoke with conviction. “The minute I
heard them two names, I knew----”
“You poor fool!” Monte swung around angrily. “What in ---- would they
have to do with Cleve Lavelle’s luck? You talk like a sick buzzard,
Brent.”
“He’s sure superstitious,” laughed Mesa.
But there was a note of uneasiness in Mesa’s voice. He, too, believed in
omens.
“I dunno,” continued Mesa. “Somethin’ is wrong with Lavelle’s luck--and
Lavelle knows it, too. He’s sour-balled, I tell yuh. I watched him
playin’, and he was as nervous as an old woman. Kept kinda lickin’ his
lips. He got sore at Sody Slavin, ’cause Sody kidded him about his bad
luck. Why, I even seen Lavelle kinda countin’ his chips.”
“Countin’ his chips, eh?” grunted Allard. “That’s a jinx.”
“Mebbe,” said Monte thoughtfully, “he was workin’ one jinx against the
other. Sometimes that works.”
Which proved that Monte Sells was not proof against superstition. Brent
Allard laughed at Monte’s opinion and stalked off the porch toward the
bunk-house.
“---- him!” muttered Monte, after Allard had passed out of earshot.
“Him and his ---- superstition make me tired. We’ll all be jumpin’
around with bad nerves if he don’t quit it.”
“Well, let’s go and take a look at these two pelicans,” suggested Mesa.
“We don’t have to choose ’em, if we don’t want to.”
* * * * *
And while the boys of the 76A argued about them, Hashknife and Sleepy
rode in at the JM ranch in time for breakfast. Sody Slavin, with wealth
in every pocket, greeted them like long-lost brothers and insisted on
telling them how he had helped clean out Cleve Lavelle.
“It was like takin’ straw away from the ‘crippled cow,’” explained Sody.
“I seen him quit cold, when he had me beat in sight. And I went in with
ten dollars. Man, I never seen a game like that. I’d take a wallop at
Lavelle and then that gambler from Burke would paste him for a bushel of
chips. We sure seesawed him out of a lot of _dinero_.”
“Yuh ought to have a little compassion,” said Hashknife.
“Not me.” Sody shook his head. “I hookum cow, when I git m’ feet rammed
into a lucky spot. Lavelle has cleaned me plenty of times, but I’m
more’n even with him this time.”
Ma Miller welcomed them to breakfast and demanded the latest news from
Black Wells.
“I used to know Black Wells pretty well,” she laughed. “When we used to
trail our cows over there, I handled the chuck-wagon.”
“And there never was a puncher late for a meal,” declared Uncle Jimmy
proudly. “Ma sure can make food. Black Wells ain’t much, is she?”
“Not much,” grinned Hashknife. “This here food don’t look like what they
feed yuh over there.”
“They didn’t like us,” grinned Sleepy, balancing a whole fried egg on
his knife-blade. “They don’t fuss over strangers.”
Sody grinned encouragingly. He felt that something worth while had
happened over there and wondered how they had found out that Black Wells
did not like them. Mrs. Daley came from up-stairs and smiled a welcome
to them. She sat down at the table and waited for the conversation to
resume.
“Do any of you folks know a puncher over there named Jud? He’s kinda
pointed-faced, with squirrel-teeth, and looks like he never lived in
a country where there was soap.”
“That’s Jud Mahley,” said Uncle Jimmy. “I betcha that’s who yuh mean.
His eyes are awful close together--kinda makes him look like he’s
cross-eyed.”
“That’s him,” grinned Hashknife. “And there’s the proprietor of the
Welcome saloon. He’s----”
“That’s ‘Bumpy’ Dickenson,” laughed Sody. “Got a bald head, with bumps
all over it, ain’t he?”
“That’s the whip-poor-will,” admitted Sleepy. “Nice sort of a gent.”
“With a reverse-English!” exploded Uncle Jimmy. “There ain’t a bigger
crook in the world than Dickenson.”
“Unless it’s Jud Mahley,” amended Sody. “He ain’t only crooked, but he’s
lucky.”
“Sody shot at him once,” grinned Uncle Jimmy, “and Sody has been sore
ever since.”
“Danged right!” snorted Sody. “I’d bet forty dollars agin’ a cigaret
paper that it was Jud Mahley. He was usin’ a runnin’-iron on a calf,
back toward Crooked Cañon. I had a .45-70 and a lot of them ---- D.
C. ca’tridges that got into this country, because they was cheap.
“Anyway, I got a good runnin’ shot at that jasper, and I’d ’a’ handed
him a harp; but the head blowed off the shell, knocked ---- out of my
Winchester, and I couldn’t see to spit for twenty minutes.”
Hashknife laughed at Sody’s disgusted expression. He knew just how Sody
had felt at the time.
“So Jud used to be over here, eh?” he asked.
“Yeah, he sure did,” grunted Sody. “He worked around for the different
outfits. Thinks he’s a gun-man. He sure rattled his hocks out of the
Modoc hills.”
“Aw, he comes back once in a while,” said Uncle Jimmy. “I seen him in
Modoc a few weeks ago.”
“And yuh didn’t tell me?” Sody grew indignant to think that this
information had been withheld.
“You still want to kill him?” asked Hashknife.
“Yo’re ---- right I do!”
“Well, you’ve got my permission,” laughed Sleepy. “But you’ve got to
beat me to him. I’ve picked him, cowboy.”
They got up from the breakfast table and moved into the living-room,
while Ma and Mrs. Daley cleared away the breakfast table.
Uncle Jimmy signaled Hashknife to follow him outside, and they walked to
the far corner of the porch.
“Did yuh find out anythin’?” queried Uncle Jimmy.
Hashknife shook his head slowly.
“Nothin’ that would show who sold them cows of Bud’s. They’re a
tight-lipped outfit over there, Uncle Jimmy.”
“----, yes,” thoughtfully, “I dunno whether we’ll ever find out the
truth of it all. I hate to think that Bud is guilty.”
“I wish to gosh I could have a talk with Bud.”
“He wouldn’t talk when he was in jail, Hartley.”
“He’d talk to me or I’d knock ---- out of him.”
“Uh-huh.” Uncle Jimmy seemed a bit dubious of Hashknife’s ability to do
this.
“I’ve got a hunch that Bud’s cows were shipped out of Black Wells,”
said Hashknife, “but that’s as far as my hunch goes. This Jud Mahley
has charge of the loadin’ corrals over there, but he won’t talk. Have
yuh heard how that Red Blair is gettin’ along?”
Uncle Jimmy shook his head. He was not interested in Blair.
“That was kind of a funny deal,” observed Hashknife. “Do yuh suppose Bud
had anythin’ to do with it?”
“I don’t think so.” Uncle Jimmy sucked thoughtfully on his old pipe.
“Red Blair and Bud never had any trouble that I know about.”
“Blair works for Lavelle, don’t he? Who else is in that outfit?”
Uncle Jimmy named over the other cowboys of the 76A. Hashknife listened
thoughtfully, squinting his eyes away from the smoke of his cigaret.
“Brent Allard, eh? Kinda sad-lookin’ jasper, with a lock of hair that’s
always in his eyes?”
“Yeah.” Uncle Jimmy looked up quickly. “You know him?”
Hashknife grinned softly and threw away his cigaret.
“I know a Brent Allard, and I’d like to see if this is the one. Does Bud
Daley know Jud Mahley?”
“Yeah, he knows him. Everybody around here knows Jud. There’s a fat
reward out for Bud. The country offers two thousand dollars, dead or
alive; and the bank says he’s worth a thousand to them.”
“That’s a lot of money, Uncle Jimmy.” The old man nodded slowly.
“Yeah--dead or alive,” he said sadly and jerked his head toward the
door. “I ain’t told May. She’s got enough to worry about without knowin’
that the law is willin’ to pay for Bud’s carcass. I sure feel sorry for
her, Hartley. She’s jist a kid.
“Her and Bud was jist gittin’ a good start, when he got hit with all
the troubles in the world. I got sore as ---- at Bud, ’cause he
wouldn’t talk to nobody. I went down there and argued with him, but
he didn’t seem to give a ---- what they done to him. Why, that ----
fool seemed pleased when the judge sentenced him.”
Uncle Jimmy snorted his disgust and knocked the dottle from his pipe
against his spurred heel.
“Wouldn’t even talk to May,” added Hashknife.
“Not to anybody. It looked bad to the jury. What could a lawyer do in a
case like that? They’ve got to know whether yo’re guilty or not, before
they can prove that yuh ain’t. But they never did know about Bud.”
“That’s the one big question,” observed Hashknife. “If we only knew why
he wouldn’t talk.”
* * * * *
Hashknife did not get a chance to talk with Mrs. Daley before they left
the JM ranch. He and Sleepy had ridden all night and were too weary to
think of much except a chance to stretch out and sleep.
They went back to Bud’s ranch-house, stabled and fed their horses and
slept until mid-afternoon. Bud had cleaned out their food supply, which
had not been replenished; so they decided to go to Modoc and eat.
At the restaurant they heard that Red Blair was dead, but it did not
seem to have excited the town greatly. They met the sheriff, who seemed
disposed to talk, or rather to ask questions; so they got away from him
as gently as possible and went over to the Rest Ye All.
Lavelle was behind the bar, talking to the bartender, but turned as
they came up. He squinted at them closely and smiled as he placed a
bottle and glasses on the bar.
“We’ll have some see-gars,” said Hashknife, shoving the bottle aside and
leaning against the bar.
“That stuff is ten years old,” stated Lavelle.
“Let her live to a ripe old age,” grinned Hashknife. “We got hold of
some bad liquor over at Black Wells, and it kinda cured us of the
drink habit. A shot of that stuff is the best temperance lecture I
ever attended.”
“Strong?” queried Lavelle.
“Well, I took one drink and it affected the moon,” grinned Sleepy. “And
that’s no danged imagination either.”
Lavelle laughed and handed out a box of dusty-looking cigars.
“I remember that you said you was going to Black Wells,” he said
indifferently. “It used to be a wild place a few years ago.”
“I’ll bet they’re wild yet,” laughed Sleepy. “I wrote my initials on the
back-bar of the Welcome saloon with a six-gun.”
“You did?”
Lavelle grew interested and would like to have heard more, but Sleepy
decided that he had told quite enough. Sleepy dropped his cigar into a
cuspidor and began rolling a cigaret.
“Did you hear that Red Blair died?” asked Lavelle.
“Three times,” said Hashknife. “First two times I didn’t believe it, but
three times is a charm. Did he ever wake up?”
Lavelle shook his head. He did not like the way Hashknife treated the
subject, but could hardly see where it would be policy to chide him for
his attitude.
“There’s three thousand reward for Bud Daley.”
Hashknife grinned at Lavelle’s statement but suddenly sobered and leaned
across the bar toward Lavelle.
“I hear you’ve lost yore luck, Lavelle?”
Not a muscle of the gambler’s face moved for several moments. Then his
eyelids twitched slightly, and his lips parted.
“What do you mean, Hartley?” he asked coldly.
“I just heard that Sody Slavin busted the stud-game last night. I hear
that you quit cold, with the best cards in sight.”
Lavelle laughed, but without mirth. Hashknife was looking him straight
in the eyes, and the gambler turned his head away.
“Well, he didn’t break me,” he said slowly, “and as far as quitting--I
know enough to quit when I’m beat, Hartley.”
Hashknife grinned thoughtfully and tossed away his cigar. He knew
that Lavelle was mad, and wondered just how far he could go with his
baiting. Lavelle had started to go around the end of the bar, when
Hashknife turned to him again.
“What’s yore particular hoodoo, Lavelle?”
“Hoodoo?” Lavelle stopped and looked queerly at Hashknife. Then he came
back.
“What did you mean by that?” he asked softly.
“Yore bad-luck medicine,” explained Hashknife, although he knew that
Lavelle understood the question.
“I’ve knowed a lot of superstitious gamblers,” continued Hashknife
after a moment. “They believed in signs and all that kinda stuff, and
I wondered what yore pet hoodoo was, thasall.”
Lavelle laughed shortly and shook his head.
“Not me, Hartley. I believe in good luck and bad luck, but I have no
charms to bring me luck.”
“No, I didn’t think yuh did,” said Hashknife.
Lavelle looked quickly at him, but did not reply. Sleepy was itching
to know what it was all about, but he knew, deep down in his heart,
that Hashknife was not talking in vain. Lavelle walked from behind
the bar and went toward the back room without another word, while
Hashknife laughed silently and rested his elbows on the bar.
A moment later Monte Sells, Frank Asher, Mesa Caldwell and Brent Allard
came, rattling their spurs and arguing over the fact that the sheriff
wanted them to start on their man-hunt today. Monte glanced quickly at
Hashknife and Sleepy and stepped aside to see what Brent Allard would
do.
Brent was in the rear, crowding in behind Caldwell, who also stepped
aside, leaving Brent almost within reach of Hashknife. He looked up
and stopped in his tracks. No one spoke. Brent’s two hands had been
against Caldwell’s back, and they remained in that same position for
several moments. Then they slowly relaxed, but he kept them above
his belt-line.
Hashknife was grinning at him, and a foolish grin came to Brent Allard’s
lips.
“Hyah, Allard?” said Hashknife easily. “Long time I no see yuh. Wyomin’,
wasn’t it?”
“Uh-huh.” Allard wet his lips with a dry tongue and cleared his throat
raspingly. “I--I come there from Oklyhomy.”
“That’s right,” nodded Hashknife. “I remember hearin’ that the sheriff
run yuh out of Oklahoma. Boot-leggin’ to the Injuns, wasn’t it, Allard?”
Allard grinned foolishly; Monte snorted disgustedly. He felt that Allard
was too frightened to resent an insult. Hashknife’s eyes flashed to
Monte, considered him coldly for a moment, and turned back to Allard.
“You workin’ for the 76A, ain’t yuh, Allard?”
“Yeah. I’ve been here quite a while, Hartley.”
“Wasn’t it one of yore outfit that got shot out where we’re livin’? We
packed him in. We jist found out that he died.”
“Yeah,” said Monte harshly, “and we’re lookin’ for the man that shot
him.”
Hashknife squinted at Monte and at the rest of the 76A outfit. They
shifted uneasily under his steady, half-contemptuous gaze. They
remembered that Allard had declared that Hartley could read their
minds, and four pairs of eyes shifted uneasily.
“You’re lookin’ for that man, are yuh?” queried Hashknife slowly.
“You’re ---- right!” grunted Monte.
“So are we,” declared Hashknife. “Come and have a drink.”
The invitation was unexpected. For a moment they hesitated, but only for
a moment. They had expected trouble. Allard laughed nervously, but was
the first one to reach the bar, where he filled his glass with a shaky
hand.
“Here’s hopin’ we find him,” said Hashknife seriously.
“If you’re huntin’ for him,” said Allard nervously, “you won’t need
hopes.”
They drank deeply, except Hashknife and Sleepy, who took cigars. Monte
grinned at their choice, but the grin left his face when Hashknife said
seriously--
“We was over at Black Wells yesterday, and Jud Mahley told us to give
yuh his regards.”
“The ---- he did!” blurted Monte. “Can’tcha think of anythin’ funnier
than that to say?”
Hashknife laughed softly and shook his head. He wanted to find out if
Jud Mahley was a friend of the 76A boys--and he found out quickly.
“Mahley never meant it,” laughed Caldwell.
“We’ve got a ---- of a job ahead of us,” said Frank Asher disgustedly.
“We’re goin’ to help the sheriff find Bud Daley.”
“That’ll be quite a chore, I’d imagine.” Hashknife hunched backward
against the bar and proceeded to crumble the cigar between his long
fingers.
“I’ve knowed Bud a long time, and if he ain’t changed, you’ll have to
bring him in on a stretcher.”
“And we ain’t got a ---- thing agin’ him,” complained Brent Allard. “The
law don’t mean nothin’.”
“It never did, to you, did it?” laughed Hashknife.
“Aw, you know what I mean,” protested Allard. “Bud’s all right.”
“He’s all wrong,” said Hashknife. “The danged fool never tried to get
away. That bandit had to almost throw him off the train.”
The 76A boys exchanged quick glances, as if questioning each other.
Monte half-smiled and moved in a trifle closer. It was evident that
he did not want any one, except those immediately concerned, to hear
his question.
“You got a good look at the two men who took Bud away from Dug Breed,
didn’t yuh?” he asked.
Hashknife nodded seriously, but his face broke into a grin.
“Yeah, we got a good look--especially into the muzzle of their guns.
They were masked, yuh know.”
“I _sabe_ that part of it,” nodded Monte. “It’s kinda hard to describe a
masked man. But I thought that mebbe yuh was able to kinda pay attention
to their size and--you know what I mean.”
“Didn’t they say anythin’?” asked Allard.
“One of ’em did,” said Hashknife. “But I reckon he changed his voice
quite a lot. The other one said nothin’. If I remember right, they were
both kinda tall. One was kinda skinny--the one that didn’t talk--but the
other one wasn’t fat.”
“That’s a good description,” stated Mesa Caldwell.
“It must ’a’ been quite a good-sized gang,” observed Sleepy, “and it
looks like they intended to take Bud away from the sheriff. They never
touched any of the other passengers--never even went into the cars.”
Monte scratched his chin thoughtfully and motioned for the bartender to
fill up their glasses again.
“The express robbery must ’a’ been done by tenderfeet,” grinned
Hashknife. “They never got a cent for their trouble.”
“I dunno what they’d expect to get on a branch railroad.” Thus Sleepy
wisely. “They never carry money.”
“Sometimes they do,” said Monte. “The mines at Dixon ship bullion from
the Kalura, and the money for a big pay-roll comes in from the bank at
Burke.”
“They was probably figurin’ on that pay-roll money,” observed Hashknife.
“Somebody must ’a’ got the wrong dope.”
“Yeah, they must have,” agreed Monte dryly.
In a few minutes Charley Morse came in and told them that Breed was in
need of their services. Hashknife and Sleepy watched them all ride out
of town, heading into the hills, with the intention of looking through
the Crooked Cañon country.
* * * * *
The sun was nearly down when Hashknife and Sleepy rode in at the ranch
again and found Mrs. Daley and Dinah Blewette there. Dinah had driven
her down there in the buckboard after some clothes she had forgotten to
take with her.
Dug Breed and the man-hunters had crossed the road just ahead of them,
and Mrs. Daley questioned Hashknife as to whether some one had given the
sheriff information about Bud’s hiding-place. Hashknife assured her that
no one seemed to know just where Bud was located, but that Breed was
making the search on general principles.
She seemed to gather a certain amount of satisfaction from this, but she
knew that evading the posse would only make him safe for the time being.
Dinah took no part in the conversation; being content to nod or shake
his head.
Mrs. Daley gathered up what articles she desired and was putting them
into a battered telescope valise, when there came the sound of a
running horse and a muttered curse, and a man came up the steps. He
flung himself into the doorway, leaning heavily against his elbow,
swinging a six-shooter in his right hand.
It was Bud Daley, unkempt, unshaven; his face drawn and haggard.
Hashknife had taken a step toward him, but Bud’s leveled gun caused
him to stop quickly.
“Bud, don’t yuh know me?” asked Hashknife.
Bud stared at him, licking his dry lips.
“Good ----! Hashknife Hartley!” Bud’s voice was a croak. “And Sleepy
Stevens! Where did you come from?”
His gun-hand waved and dropped to his side weakly.
“Bud, you’ve been hit, ain’t yuh?” Hashknife crossed quickly to him, as
Bud lurched forward.
“In the leg,” breathed Bud. “The posse is close behind me.”
Sleepy quickly closed the door behind Bud, who sank down in a chair.
May, her face white with fear, threw an arm around Bud’s shoulder and
began crying.
Hashknife ran to a window and scanned the hills, which were already
dimming in the fading light.
“How far behind yuh is that posse, Bud?” he asked.
“Close,” panted Bud. “I think they knew I was headin’ home.”
“Where did they hit yuh?” queried Sleepy. “In the leg?”
“Yeah. Through my thigh, I think. It’s bleedin’ quite a lot. They’ve
got me, I guess. I had a rifle; but it wouldn’t do me no good to kill
’em. Can’t kill everybody, yuh know. Ha-ha-ha!”
Bud laughed from sheer weakness, but there was no mirth in it.
“Don’t, Buddie,” begged his wife. “Don’t laugh like that. We’ll take you
to a doctor.”
“And from there to the pen,” said Bud wearily. “Anyway, it’s better than
dodgin’ in the hills. It’s a losin’ game. But, Hashknife, where did you
fellers come from? I can’t believe it’s you two.”
“It’s us all right,” said Hashknife, his face glued to the window pane.
The posse had come out on the sky-line of a hill, about five hundred
yards away and were bunched, as they debated.
Just away from the front porch stood Bud’s horse, one foot on the
dragging reins, its head down as it panted wearily from its long run.
The buggy team was tied near the back of the house, out of sight of
the sheriff and posse.
Hashknife turned from the window. Sleepy had cut away part of Bud’s
overall-clad leg and was trying to stop the flow of blood. Hashknife
examined it quickly and slapped Bud on the shoulder.
“It went plumb through, Bud. You don’t need a doctor; we’ll fix it up
ourselves.”
* * * * *
Dug Breed was highly elated, but still cautious. He knew that Bud was
in that house, but getting him out might be a different matter; hence
the deliberation on the hilltop.
“He’s hit, I tell yuh,” insisted Charley Morse. “I could tell the way he
was ridin’--one foot out of his stirrup.”
“That’s right,” admitted Breed. “He’s plugged; but that makes him a bad
_hombre_ to drag out of a hole. If he wasn’t hurt, I don’t think he’d
hole up at home. Kinda funny he didn’t shoot back at us, though.”
“Nothin’ funny about that,” snorted Monte. “Bud ain’t no danged fool,
Dug. He knows too much to waste ammunition on flyin’ targets. From now
on, he’ll shoot--and he’s a good shot, too.”
Breed nodded, as he squinted at the house below them. Then:
“We’ll surround the place. Monte, you and Caldwell swing to the left and
work into that old washout over there; Frank can watch the front, while
me and Charley and Brent can swing to the right and work in back of the
barn and corrals.”
“You’ve overlooked another bet,” said Brent Allard quickly. “There’s
Hartley and Stevens to look out for.”
Breed squinted at Allard and back at the house.
“Do yuh think they’d back Bud’s play?”
“You’d be a ---- fool to take a chance on ’em not doin’ it. I’d rather
be safe than sorry.”
“Uh-huh.” Breed deliberated, but shook his head stubbornly.
“We’ll go ahead with our program. Better move fast, ’cause a movin’
object is harder to hit. Let’s go.”
Swiftly they separated and began their encircling movement. Frank Asher
rode straight down the hill, with the intention of reaching a thicket
of greasewood about three hundred yards from the house, but he had only
gone a short distance, when he drew his gun and sent two shots into the
air.
A man had run from the front door of the ranch-house--a man who limped
badly. He caught the horse and mounted slowly. Breed had heard the
shots and drew rein, swinging up his rifle. His horse lunged badly on
the steep side-hill, making it impossible for him to draw a bead; so
he dismounted and began shooting.
But the rider was wasting no time in seeing where the shots were coming
from. He swung his horse around the corner of the house, galloped
straight across the open ranch-house yard, hurdled the fence and bored
straight into the hills. The encircling movement had failed.
Breed swore bitterly and mounted again, racing ahead as he stuffed
shells into the loading-gate of his rifle. Monte Sells and Mesa Caldwell
were riding swiftly along the slope to the left of the ranch-house,
while Frank Asher swung wide and followed in the wake of Breed and the
other two riders.
And far ahead of them rode the quarry, riding into the dusk of the
hills, holding a straight line toward the Crooked Cañon country. Mile
after mile reeled away behind them. It was almost dark now. Breed
scowled at the fading light as he roweled his weary horse to greater
efforts.
Suddenly he threw up his head and laughed triumphantly. Monte and
Caldwell, better mounted than the rest, had caused the rider to swing
farther to the right, and Breed had caught a glimpse of him, cutting
around the side of a cañon, heading toward the bottom.
“Got him, by ----!” swore Breed.
He yelled shrilly at Morse and Brent Allard and waved at Frank Asher.
Swiftly they gathered around him, their horses blowing heavily.
“We’ve got him, boys!” panted Breed. “He’s headed into that blind cañon
just ahead of us. All we’ve got to do is to smoke him out. C’mon.”
“Bud wouldn’t head into a blind cañon,” protested Allard.
“Well, he did,” said Breed, laughing. “He didn’t know that I seen him,
and he thinks that’s the last place we’d ever look for him.”
A blind cañon is one of those freaks of nature; like an alley, which
ends in a blank wall. Usually the sides are precipitous, as is the
end. Even the wild things shun them as they would a trap.
The entrance to this one looked harmless enough, sloping away gently
to the bottom; but further along the sides reared higher and higher,
impossible of foot-hold. Monte and Caldwell came in from the opposite
side and the whole posse met at the mouth of the trap where they
stopped to rest their horses.
“He can’t get away,” declared Monte, staring into the gloom of the
cañon. “I’ve been in there, and I know that you’d have to have wings to
get out. But how did Bud happen to run in there? He knows this place as
well as we do.”
Breed laughed and dismounted to tighten his cinch.
“That’s where he tried to outsmart us, Monte. He figured that we’d never
look for him here. It was lucky that I seen him headin’ down here. We’ll
move in to where the sides break straight up and bottle him up. It would
be dangerous to move in on him in the dark. He’s hurt, I think; and a
night up there won’t make him any more active than the law allows.”
Breed swung back on his horse and they moved ahead. Suddenly they
stopped. A rider was coming slowly out of the narrow neck of the cañon.
Breed threw up his rifle, but the rider did not pay any attention to it.
He was looking up at the sides of the cañon. Then he moved in closer;
close enough for them to see that it was Hashknife Hartley.
Breed swore hollowly and lowered his gun. Allard laughed nervously, a
chuckling laugh of vindication. Hashknife rode up to them, his face
serious, as he motioned back toward the far end of the cañon.
“Say,” he remarked easily, “that ---- cañon’s blind.”
“Huh!” Breed crowded the disgust of his soul into one grunt. The rest of
the posse merely nodded.
“Yessir, it’s blind,” continued Hashknife. “A feller could never get out
that way.”
Then he seemed to consider the posse for the first time.
“You fellers goin’ in that way? Don’t do it.”
Breed spluttered angrily for several moments before his tongue finally
shaped words.
“Say, what in ---- do yuh think you’re doin’? You--huh!”
“Me?” queried Hashknife innocently. “Whatcha mean?”
“You know ---- well what I meant! I’ve got a good notion to arrest you.”
“Yeah?” Hashknife seemed amused. “Why don’tcha, Breed?”
Breed looked around at his posse as if trying to seek an answer, but he
found them grinning foolishly. Brent Allard seemed almost convulsed with
mirth, and it angered Breed.
“What the ---- tickles you so ---- much, Allard?”
“Wall,” laughed Allard, “I told you you’d be a ---- fool to overlook
Hartley.”
“Yeah!” Breed snorted and looked back at Hartley, who was grinning
softly and offering his sack of tobacco to Monte.
“I reckon we better call it a day,” observed Caldwell. “I know I’ve
had all the exercise I need, and my horse twisted two shoes off on
that scab-rock below here.”
Breed swung his horse around and led them back out of the cañon to the
open hills, where he stopped and faced Hashknife.
“Hartley,” he said, “I won’t forget this. You made a monkey out of me
and my posse.”
“I’m sorry,” said Hashknife soberly. “I didn’t mean for yuh to ever
catch me; but that danged cañon ruined it.”
“How about goin’ back to the ranch?” suggested Morse.
“Not my gang,” said Monte firmly. “If Bud stayed there while we ran the
heads off our broncs, he ain’t there now.”
“Stevens would see that Bud was taken care of,” laughed Allard.
“All right!” snapped Breed. “It’s too late to do anythin’ tonight
anyway.”
He swung his horse to the left and they headed across the dusky hills
toward Modoc town while Hashknife rode alone down the hills toward the
Triangle-D, grinning into the night.
IV.
That same evening Cleve Lavelle stood near one of his roulette tables,
which was losing heavily. His face was as expressionless as the face
of a savage, but his eyes shifted nervously, as the dealer paid out on
nearly every turn of the wheel.
He knew that every one was talking about his run of bad luck, and, like
a flock of buzzards, they had come to the kill. He turned away from the
roulette and walked to a stud game. Mediocre players were bucking the
game, and nearly every one of them had an array of red, white and blue
chips in front of them.
Lavelle walked to his private office at the rear and sat down alone,
chewing savagely on his cigar. Alone, his features relaxed and he swore
softly to himself.
“If this keeps up, I’ll be flat broke in a short time,” he muttered to
himself.
Then he threw his cigar aside and paced the length of the room.
Came a knock on the door, and he wheeled quickly. It was Dug Breed. He
squinted at Lavelle and came to the center of the room, where he leaned
on a table.
“Well, what luck?” queried Lavelle uneasily.
It was not often that Dug Breed came to his private office, and he felt
that Breed must have a good reason for it now.
And with little omission, Breed told Lavelle of running Bud Daley to
cover, only to have him escape them. Lavelle listened in silence to the
telling, a speculative expression on his face. Then he laughed shortly;
an ugly laugh.
“Breed, you are a mighty poor sheriff,” he declared.
“All right.” Breed shrugged his shoulders. “It was just a case of
mistakin’ Hartley for Bud Daley, thasall.”
“That’s all,” nodded Lavelle. “You had your chance, and missed.”
“Didn’t miss entirely, Lavelle. Bud was hit.”
“Oh, yes, I suppose so.” Lavelle was sarcastic, and it nettled Breed.
“Well, it was just a case of Hartley bein’ smarter than I was,” admitted
Breed.
Lavelle laughed at Breed’s admission, but grew serious.
“It’s too ---- bad you didn’t plug him by mistake.”
“I was mad enough to plug him on purpose, Lavelle.”
“Well, what are you going to do next, Breed?”
“Search me. I’m goin’ to watch Hartley and Stevens, for one thing. They
know where Bud is, and sooner or later they’ll lead me to him. Next time
I won’t be fooled.”
“You better not,” said Lavelle coldly. “You make another mistake like
that, and you’ll not be the next sheriff of Modoc.”
Breed lifted his eyebrows slightly and backed slowly to the door, where
he stood and looked intently at Lavelle.
“Well, what are you waiting for?” demanded Lavelle.
“I was just thinkin’,” said Breed slowly. “They say that you’ve lost
your luck, and I was wonderin’ if it would affect you politically.”
Lavelle came toward him, a scowl on his face.
“What do you mean, Breed?” he snarled.
“It takes money to run politics--even in a county as small in population
as this, Lavelle.”
“Don’t let that bother you, Breed. I’ll be leading the parade next
election, and don’t you forget it. You either ride with me or you walk
alone. Those cheap gamblers out there are only winning chicken-feed.”
“Yeah--all right.” Breed turned and opened the door. “I’ll see how
things go, Lavelle.”
“Just a moment,” said Lavelle, coming closer. “If you need any help, my
boys will be free to ride with you.”
“And a ---- of a lot of good they’ll do me!” snorted Breed. “When
Hartley laughed at me, they laughed with him. _Adios_.”
Breed slammed the door shut, leaving Lavelle staring after him. Then
Lavelle went back to the table and selected a fresh cigar from a box.
For a long time he chewed on the unlighted weed, his face drawn in a
heavy frown.
“Breaking me, are they?” he muttered. “My luck is all gone, eh? I put
him in office, but he’d quit me in a minute--the coyote.”
Lavelle laughed softly, bitterly, as he crumpled the cigar in his
clenched hand. From the gambling-room came the sounds of laughter,
the rattling of chips, the drone of a dealer’s voice. Business was
in full sway, and Lavelle knew that the Rest Ye All was losing money
every minute.
He went back to the games, where men jostled each other for a chance
to place a bet. None of them paid the slightest attention to Lavelle.
His games were on the square--no chance for a fixed wheel, a crooked
deal--and they knew it. It was just one of those unaccountable runs
of ill-luck in which every game in the house suffered heavily.
The stud game halted temporarily while the dealer came to Lavelle and
drew him aside.
“Every chip in the rack gone,” he said softly. “My game is about four
thousand in the hole right now. I’ve paid out about two thousand in
cash.”
“Fill your rack,” said Lavelle shortly, and walked away.
The dealer nodded indifferently and went back to his game. Lavelle went
to the roulette and studied the play. Men were going in on dollar bets
and coming away with a hatful of coins.
He walked over to a draw-poker table and sized up the chips in front of
the different players, estimating swiftly. The dealer looked up at him
inquiringly, but Lavelle walked away and went to the bar. There was
nothing he could do. To close the games would be fatal to his prestige.
Men would say that he was a quitter.
Down deep in his heart he wanted to quit, because he knew that he had
lost his luck.
Sody Slavin and Uncle Jimmy Miller came in, but did not play. Lavelle
knew that Sody had taken a big roll of money out of the place the night
before. Other cowboys came rollicking in and added to the noise and
smoke of the place. Lavelle turned to the bartender and beckoned him
away from the end of the bar, where he was talking to Sody Slavin.
“If anybody wants to see me, I’ll be at my room in the hotel.”
The bartender nodded.
“Sure, I’ll do that.”
* * * * *
As Lavelle turned toward the door he came face to face with Jud Mahley.
The Black Wells cowpuncher paid no attention to Lavelle, but slouched up
to the bar and ordered a drink of whisky.
Lavelle studied him from the rear, a look of half-disgust on his face,
which he could not conceal. Jud gulped his liquor and turned around, as
Lavelle moved up closer to him.
“Hello, Mahley,” Lavelle spoke softly.
Mahley’s ferret-like eyes shifted quickly around the room, as he
returned the greeting.
“What do you know?” queried Lavelle.
“Not a ---- thing.”
“Not a thing, eh?”
Mahley shook his head. A couple of cowboys had come in close to them and
ordered their drinks. Mahley moved aside, drawing his slouchy sombrero
farther down over his eyes.
“Couple of fellers come out to Black Wells,” he said to Lavelle. “They
didn’t like the liquor very well, so they shot the winder out of the
Welcome saloon and smashed the mirror of the back-bar. That’s all the
news.”
“Who was they?”
One of the cowboys turned his head and looked at Mahley.
“I dunno.”
Mahley turned away, as if he did not care to talk about it. The cowboys
laughed and went back toward the gambling-room. Sody and Uncle Jimmy
came toward the bar, laughing over some incident of the gambling, and
Sody moved in beside Mahley.
Lavelle knew of the enmity between Sody and Jud Mahley, and tried to
flash a signal to Mahley; but the signal was lost upon every one,
except Sody, who saw the action in the mirror.
Quickly he turned his head and looked at the profile of the bad-man from
Black Wells. Sody did not believe in arguments. With a sideswipe of his
big left hand he caught Mahley a slap full in the nose and mouth.
The sound of the blow could be heard all over the house, but was of
such a nature that it did little more than sting and partly daze
Mahley. He struck his shoulders against the bar and fairly rebounded,
his hat flying over the bar and both hands grasping for a support.
For an instant he seemed incapable of action, but instinct caused him to
reach for his holstered gun. Sody grunted with glee, swung his right
foot in an arc, catching Mahley’s legs just behind the ankles and kicked
his feet from under him before his hand had quite gripped the butt of
his gun.
The shock of Mahley’s downfall shook the Rest Ye All and also took all
the fight out of Mahley. He sat on the floor, goggling around, while
Sody swiftly disarmed him and tossed the gun over the bar.
“What’s the big idea?” queried Lavelle angrily. “What right ----?”
“You backin’ this scorpion?” asked Sody, pointing at Mahley.
“No, I’m not. But I don’t see----”
“You try and see enough to mind your own business, Lavelle.”
Lavelle stepped aside while Mahley got slowly to his feet, looking
around as if wondering what had happened to him. Then he got a good
look at Sody Slavin, and his face reddened with anger.
“Whatcha tryin’ to do?” he muttered.
“You’ve got a lot of nerve to be showin’ up around here,” said Sody. “If
I wasn’t tender-hearted I’d unwind you, Mahley. And if you show up here
agin, I’ll jist about do that. Now you git off the Modoc range and stay
off, you brand-buster.”
Mahley’s right hand felt of the empty holster, and his eyes squinted
almost shut. He blinked his little eyes angrily and started to say
something, but changed his mind.
“You ain’t goin’ fast enough to suit me,” said Sody. “If I was you I’d
be halfway to Black Wells by this time.”
“Aw right.”
Mahley turned toward the door, and Sody stared after him. Mahley
appeared to be perfectly willing to leave; but at the door he drew a
six-shooter from inside his dirty flannel shirt bosom and whirled on
Sody.
“---- you, I’ll show you!” he snarled, half-sobbing with wrath, as he
threw down on Sody.
But before he could pull the trigger a man dived through the doorway
into him, and he went staggering sideways, the bullet tearing along
the wall.
The man who had knocked him sidewise fell to his knees from the rush,
leaving Mahley still able to recover for another shot; but another
man came through right behind him and was into Mahley with both hands
swinging like pistons.
The first man was Hashknife Hartley, the second Sleepy Stevens.
Neither man said a word. Hashknife got to his feet in time to see
Mahley sway forward and catch one of Sleepy’s punches flush on the
chin. Then Mr. Mahley of Black Wells folded up like an old shirt and
went to sleep. And, without any lost motions, Sleepy picked him up
in his arms, staggered to the doorway and threw him bodily into the
street.
Sody’s altercation with Mahley had drawn quite a crowd, and now they
stood open-mouthed and stared at Hashknife and Sleepy. Hashknife dusted
off his knees with his hands and grinned slowly. Lavelle had not moved,
but now he looked keenly at Hashknife before turning away.
“That was kinda complete,” remarked Sody with a sigh of relief. “I’m
sure much obliged, gents. You came just in time. Mebbe he ain’t a very
good shot, but I’m big enough for anybody to hit at that distance.”
“You don’t need to thank me,” grinned Sleepy, blowing on his sore
knuckles. “I’ve been honin’ for a crack at that horse hobo. And I sure
got my fill. He rattled like a handful of poker-chips when I hit him on
the chin, didn’t he?”
“Mebbe we better take another look at him,” suggested Sody. “Yuh never
can tell how many more guns he’s got with him.”
They filed outside and looked around, but there was no sign of Jud
Mahley. In the space of two minutes he had recovered from his knockout
and had faded from view.
“And I’ll betcha he never even stopped to bother with a horse,” laughed
Sody. “He knows now that Modoc ain’t healthy. Let’s all go and have a
drink.”
They went back to the bar. The curious crowd had gone back to the
gambling-room, leaving only the bartender to applaud them.
“You sure knocked on his gate,” he told Sleepy, grinning. “I ain’t never
seen anybody nail ’em sweeter.”
“Wasn’t he talkin’ to Lavelle?” asked Sody.
“Yeah, he was,” said the bartender. “Most everybody around here knows
Jud Mahley. He’s kinda tough, I’d say.”
“Well, he got softened up quite a little,” laughed Sody. “Let’s have
another little snifter and then help break Lavelle. Everybody wins
from the house these days.”
They all trooped into the gambling-room and began laying small bets
on the roulette. There was no sign of Lavelle, but there was plenty
of talk about the ill-luck of the house. Neither Hashknife nor Sleepy
felt inclined to gamble heavily, but preferred to stand by and watch
the others buck the games.
Uncle Jimmy tried to get Sody to break away and go home; but the fat
cowboy was adding to his bank-roll and did not want to leave any easy
money behind.
* * * * *
Time passes swiftly when stakes are running high, and it was about two
hours after the incident with Jud Mahley when Hashknife, Sleepy and
Uncle Jimmy went back into the barroom. They had about decided to ride
home and were going to take a farewell drink, when Dug Breed staggered
through the doorway.
His face was streaked with blood, as if something with many claws had
scratched him, and he was disheveled and covered with dirt. He spat
dryly and reached for a glass of whisky which Uncle Jimmy had poured
out for his own use. Gulping the liquor at one swallow, he leaned
against the bar and swore hoarsely.
“Morse is dead,” he croaked, shaking his head painfully. “He never
knowed what hit him. I--I----” he felt tenderly of his face--“I reckon
I got the drag of the load.”
“You sure look like you got somethin’,” admitted Hashknife.
“Who killed Morse?” queried Sody wonderingly.
“---- only knows. His horse ran away, and mine won’t pack double, so
I had to leave him there in the road. Somebody bushwhacked us with a
shotgun. I was a little behind Charley. Look at my face!”
“Where did it happen?” asked Hashknife.
“Between here and Bud Daley’s ranch just a little beyond where the JM
road forks. I couldn’t bring Charley in. But he’s dead; so it won’t
matter to him. I’ve got to find a doctor and take him out there. Lucky
it didn’t hit me in the eyes.”
He turned and staggered outside. The word ran swiftly through the
gambling-room and the crowd quit playing to find out the particulars.
Some one went to Lavelle’s office at the rear and told him what had
happened. He added his voice to the rest, and hurried down to the
doctor’s house to get further particulars from Breed.
No one seemed to be able to figure out just why the sheriff and his
deputy should have been ambushed--unless Bud Daley had done it.
Hashknife smiled grimly at their conjectures. He knew what had happened
or thought he did.
Jud Mahley, smarting over what had happened to him, had secured a
shotgun and planted himself beside the road. In the darkness he had
mistaken Breed and Morse for Hashknife and Sleepy, never expecting
any one except them to ride over that road that night.
And Sleepy had arrived at the same conclusions. He drew Hashknife aside.
“Cowboy, she’s a good thing we didn’t get there first,” he said softly.
Hashknife nodded and they walked outside to their horses.
“Breed and Morse were goin’ to the ranch,” declared Sleepy. “They knowed
we were here; so they thought it might be a good chance to look for
Bud.”
“And some of them danged fools are blamin’ poor Bud,” said Hashknife
disgustedly. “We know what happened, but we’ll never be able to prove
it. Still--” he swung into his saddle--“never is a mighty long time,
Sleepy.”
The murder of Charley Morse shocked even the sensibilities of Modoc. It
was so uncalled for, so fiendish, that those who were hard-bitten enough
to overlook an ordinary killing longed for a chance to get their hands
on the murderer.
Morse had never been popular, but he had never been unpopular. He was
soft-spoken, reliable, minded his own business and was an efficient
officer. The charge of bird-shot had scattered enough merely to rake
Breed’s features and drill some little holes in his neck and shoulders.
The shooting had been done at fairly close range, and, from the extent
of Morse’s wounds, the assassin had fired both barrels. Hashknife and
Sleepy had ridden back to town fairly early in the morning and had a
talk with Breed, whose face was plentifully decorated with bits of
court-plaster.
Breed was frankly worried. It looked to him as if some one was trying
to put the sheriff’s office out of commission. But he did not have the
slightest idea of who had killed Morse. Only fate had put Morse ahead
of him that night. A loose cinch, which he had stopped to tighten,
caused him to be riding far enough behind to have escaped the force of
the shotgun load.
“You were lookin’ for Bud, wasn’t yuh?” asked Hashknife.
Breed rubbed his speckled face and nodded slowly.
“Yeah, we was, Hartley. I knowed that you and Stevens were here in town;
so we rode out there, intendin’ to take a good look at Bud’s ranch. You
foxed us the other day, but I ain’t holdin’ no hard feelin’s toward yuh.
“Bud and me never did hitch. He’s a wild sort of a jigger, and just a
kid; but he ain’t a feller that yuh can dislike a lot. It ain’t me that
wants him, Hartley; it’s what I represent. The law says he’s guilty--not
me.”
Hashknife held out his hand to Breed, who took it wonderingly.
“Yo’re kinda human, Breed,” said Hashknife warmly. “Mebbe I’ve
misunderstood yuh all the time. Let’s set down and have a talk.”
Hashknife indicated a spot on the board sidewalk and they sat down
together, where no one would overhear them.
“You don’t think that Bud Daley killed Morse, do yuh?” queried
Hashknife.
Breed shook his head quickly.
“No, I don’t, Hartley. Bud Daley ain’t that kind. Bud would shoot, if he
had to, but not from ambush with a shotgun.”
Hashknife glanced across the street. Uncle Jimmy and Ma Miller had
driven in and were tying their team to a hitch-rack. The hitch-racks
were filling up fast. Hashknife grinned and turned to Breed.
“Saturday is always the same in all ranch countries,” he observed.
“Everybody comes in to trade and tell lies. If it wasn’t for Saturday,
I’d live in a city.”
Breed grinned and nodded. Lavelle came out of the Rest Ye All, spoke
to Uncle Jimmy and Ma for several moments and walked down the street.
Hashknife watched him keenly and turned to Breed.
“Funny about Lavelle’s luck, ain’t it, Breed?”
Breed glanced after Lavelle and nodded slowly, a slight frown on his
face.
“Do you believe in luck, Hartley?”
“Yeah.” Hashknife nodded slowly. “I believe in it, sheriff; but not the
way Lavelle does. He’s superstitious; believes in signs and charms, I
hear.”
“Yeah, he does.” Breed laughed shortly. “Most gamblers do.”
“They’re poor sticks to tie to,” declared Hashknife. Breed looked up
quickly.
“What do yuh mean, Hartley?”
“Lavelle got you into the sheriff’s office, didn’t he?”
Breed’s face flushed hotly, but he shut his lips tight.
“He thinks the office belongs to him,” continued Hashknife easily. “I
know how you feel about it.” Hashknife dug his heel into the dirt and
squinted thoughtfully, as he said--
“Breed, did you ever wonder what became of Bud’s cattle?”
“Yeah; but I never figured it out. Bud could ’a’ bunched ’em and
taken ’em to Black Wells. Lavelle thinks that Bud done it. Yuh see,
Bud owes Lavelle five thousand dollars, and Lavelle thinks that Bud
sold his cattle and lied about ’em bein’ stole; so he won’t have to
pay it back.”
“And who do yuh think them two men were that took Bud away from you that
night on the train?”
Breed shut his lips tight and shook his head. Lavelle was riding up the
street from the livery-stable. He had changed to boots and chaps, and
sat his horse as easily as any cowpuncher in the country. He nodded to
Hashknife and Breed, as he passed them and rode out of town.
“I don’t know who them two men were,” said Breed thoughtfully. “But
it strikes me that the hold-up was just a blind to stop the train and
release Bud.”
Hashknife laughed and began rolling a cigaret. Breed looked curiously at
him and said--
“Does it strike you funny?”
“It’s so danged mixed up, Breed. If it was only a blind, why did they
dynamite that safe in the express car? Their intentions were good,
don’tcha think?”
“I dunno. Still, it looks like it might ’a’ been just--well, I dunno
watcha call it. I can’t imagine who the robbers were.”
Breed shook his head seriously, but turned to Hashknife with a grin.
“That jasper that made me unlock Bud’s handcuffs was a queer jigger.
When he found that you didn’t have any money, he gave yuh some.”
“Cold-blooded bluff,” said Hashknife, grinning. “Gentleman bandit stuff.
Wanted to show that he was plumb salty, thasall. Well, we don’t know
much, do we, Breed? Now let’s talk about the bank robbery.
“That happened late at night. Somebody knowed that the cashier was
workin’ late; so he must ’a’ waited for the cashier to come out of the
door. Then he jist about shoved a gun in his ribs and hurried him back
inside.
“Mebbe he made the cashier open the vault. Then he pops the cashier over
the head with his gun. He thinks that the cashier is cool for a spell;
so he proceeds to loot the vault. About that time, the cashier wakes up
and makes a break for the door.
“This robber gent takes a shot at the cashier, misses him, busts the
window and kills Sody’s bronc. The next shot gets the cashier dead
center. Then this man takes his plunder and makes a getaway. Ain’t
that about the ticket?”
“That’s the way I see it,” nodded Breed, “I found a rosette off Bud’s
chaps on the vault floor, kinda mingled with some loose money. I’d know
that rosette anywhere. At daylight, I beat it for the ranch and found
Bud jist pullin’ in. He’s sure been ridin’ a lot that night, and he
won’t tell where. His wife don’t know, except that he ain’t been home.
“We do know that Bud got kinda drunk that evenin’ and said he was goin’
home. He was kinda raisin’ thunder around here--him and Sody Slavin and
Dinah Blewette. Dinah and Short-Horn Adams had a fight, and Dinah got
licked. Then Sody proceeds to lick Short-Horn--or to fix him so Dinah
can lick him--which he does to the queen’s taste. But that was long
after Bud disappeared.”
“And Bud needed the money, didn’t he?” queried Hashknife.
“Yeah. He tried to borrow more from Lavelle that evenin’, but didn’t get
it. I don’t blame Lavelle. Bud wanted me to try and find his cows; but I
was convinced that he’d sold the ---- things; so I got mad at him for
askin’ me to hunt for ’em. If Bud shot Charley Morse----”
“He didn’t,” declared Hashknife. “He couldn’t. You fellers shot Bud
through the leg and he can’t walk.”
“Thasso?” Breed rubbed his chin and grinned at Hashknife.
“Yeah, that’s so, Breed. That’s an alibi for Bud. I know where Bud is
right now, but I’m not goin’ to tell you.”
“I could arrest you for harborin’ a criminal, Hartley.”
“Hop to it,” laughed Hashknife.
Breed frowned reflectively. He knew that Hashknife would not tell,
and somehow he did not blame him. There was something about the
tall, sad-faced cowpuncher that made Breed feel willing to tell him
everything he knew.
“Hartley,” he asked, “are you a detective?”
“No. I’ve done things that a detective might ’a’ done; but never wore a
badge. Didja ever notice that my nose is kinder long and sharp on the
end? Breed, I was born to stick my nose into other people’s business. I
can’t help it.
“Sleepy Stevens is my pet pessimist. Any old time I gets to feelin’ real
smart, he’s there to hang crape on my soul. I need him. Cattle-ranges
get sick, don’tcha know it? Yeah, they do. I reckon the cities get sick,
too; but I don’t _sabe_ their disease. We’re jist cowpunchers, Breed--me
and Sleepy--but fate has made us a couple of medicine-men of the
cow-country.”
“Medicine-men?” queried Breed.
“Yeah--medicine-men, thasall.”
Breed smiled and got to his feet as he said:
“All right, Hartley; Modoc needs somethin’ in that line. I’m jist a
sheriff. Nobody ever gave me credit for havin’ brains. They’re sayin’
that I ought to find the men who robbed that train; find the man who
killed Findlay and find Bud Daley. Now I’ve lost my deputy and got
shot in the face with a scatter-gun. I reckon I’ve got a job on my
hands.”
“Like the Irishman said--single misfortunes seldom come alone,” laughed
Hashknife. “You forgot to mention Red Blair.”
Breed looked quickly, suspiciously at Hashknife; but the tall cowpuncher
was looking at Brent Allard, who was just riding past them, heading
toward the hitch-rack beside the post office. Allard waved at them, and
Hashknife nodded.
“We’ll add Red Blair to the total,” said Breed.
Hashknife looked up quickly and nodded.
“One more won’t hurt.”
Breed crossed toward the Rest Ye All, and Hashknife turned and sauntered
down toward the post office, where Brent Allard was trying to tie a
half-broken broncho to the rack. It was a mean-looking, glass-eyed gray
with a snaky head and ears that seemed to be pinned down.
* * * * *
Allard had passed inside the post office. Hashknife leaned against the
corner and studied the animal. In a few minutes Allard came out, with
a bundle of mail under his arm. He grinned at Hashknife, as he stuffed
the mail into his coat-pockets.
“I seen yuh talkin’ with the sheriff,” he grinned. “By grab, I didn’t
think he’d ever speak to yuh, after the way yuh fooled him in the blind
cañon.”
“Aw, we’re good friends,” laughed Hashknife.
“Uh-huh,” Allard glanced toward the saloon and back at Hashknife. “Well,
he’s got a little sense, anyway.”
“That’s a plumb forked-lookin’ bronc yo’re ridin’,” observed Hashknife.
“That thing?” Allard’s voice was filled with contempt. “Forked? Say,”
Allard laughed, “that ---- bunch of coiled springs never knows when
to quit bouncin’. It’s about seven miles from here to the ranch, I
reckon. Well, that bronc jist went seven miles high. Mebbe it went a
little higher than it did long, ’cause there was times that we stuck
to the same landin’ spot for quite a spell.”
“That’s a ---- of a thing to ride in after mail,” laughed Hashknife.
Allard laughed and shoved the animal away from the rack, so he could
untie the rope.
“That’s what Monte said. But I told him there was so ---- much
bushwhackin’ goin’ on these days that I wanted to ride somethin’ that
would be awful hard to hit--even with a shotgun.”
“Is Lavelle out at the ranch, Allard?”
“Naw. He don’t come out much. Well, I’ve got to git ready to hammer this
jughead out of town.”
The gray whirled wickedly, but Allard cramped its head back against its
shoulder and snapped into the saddle. For a moment there was a blur of
whirling horse and man; then the horse went high in a lunging pitch that
almost unseated Allard, and sent a shower of mail from both his coat
pockets.
Swiftly the gray changed ends, its head seemingly locked between its
front feet, but Allard stuck like a burr. Into the street they went
and the gray broke into a run, which took them out of town, like the
fading of a motion picture on the screen.
Hashknife gathered up the mail from the dust and started into the post
office, but a glance at one of the dusty envelopes caused him to flash
a quick glance around as he swiftly slid it inside his shirt.
He walked into the post office and told the postmaster what had
happened.
“I’ll put it back,” grinned the old man, “I don’t reckon it’s
perishable. Ha-ha-ha-ha!”
Hashknife laughed with the old man and went outside. Sleepy and Sody
had seen the bucking horse, and now they came across the street. They
had imbibed several drinks and insisted on Hashknife joining them, but
Hashknife was not in the mood.
Uncle Jimmy and Ma Miller came out of a store, and Hashknife got rid of
Sleepy and Sody by hailing them.
“C’mon, Sleepy,” urged Sody. “If Ma smells liquor on me, she’ll gimme
---- She always tells me a story about a feller who got all stunted to
---- from whisky. Pers’nally I ain’t scared of not growin’ any more.
C’mon.”
Hashknife joined the old folks and asked where Mrs. Daley was.
“Oh, May stayed home,” explained Ma. “She didn’t have nothin’ to buy,
and she naturally don’t like to talk to folks. She kinda feels that
they’re sayin’ things about her. You know how it’d be.”
“That--and other reasons,” grinned Uncle Jimmy.
Hashknife nodded.
“You try and don’t talk too much,” warned Ma.
“I ain’t said nothin’, have I?” demanded Uncle Jimmy.
“Then don’t repeat it,” said Ma, and then to Hashknife:
“Are yuh comin’ out soon? Come out and eat, can’tcha. My gosh, you’ll
ruin yore stummicks eatin’ city food down here.”
“We’ll be out real soon,” declared Hashknife. “Mebbe we’ll be out
tonight.”
“You just do that,” urged Ma. “I’ll set two extra places.”
Hashknife laughed and went over to the hitch-rack. Sody and Sleepy had
disappeared. Hashknife hesitated for several minutes, but decided to let
Sleepy go ahead and have a good time. He mounted his horse and rode out
of town toward the ranch.
* * * * *
Lavelle also knew that Mrs. Daley had been left at the JM ranch. It was
the first time since Bud’s arrest that Lavelle had had a chance to see
her alone, and he lost no time in taking advantage of it.
He was careful to study the ranch-house at a distance before riding in,
as he wanted to be sure that no one else was there. He dismounted at the
front porch and knocked loudly on the door, but there was no response.
He tried the door and found it unlocked.
Cautiously he opened it. The living-room was empty. Some one was moving
about behind the half-open door of an adjoining room. He listened
closely, thinking that perhaps his knock had not been heard.
“Hello,” he said softly. “Anybody home?”
There was no reply, but the person in the next room continued to move
about. Suddenly the door opened. Lavelle took a step backward, an
unspoken exclamation on his lips.
Bud Daley was standing in the doorway, a half-dressed Bud Daley, whose
face was flushed with fever, his eyes bloodshot. He blinked at Lavelle,
but without a sign of recognition, muttering something unintelligible.
Some one was coming to the front of the house. Lavelle wanted to turn
his head, but there was something that caused him to keep his eyes on
Bud. Then Hashknife Hartley’s voice drawled--
“Mister Lavelle, meet Mister Daley.”
Lavelle turned his head and looked at Hashknife, who was leaning against
the side of the doorway. Bud was paying no attention to either of them;
he was too sick for that.
“I--I just came,” said Lavelle lamely.
“I know yuh did,” said Hashknife indifferently, and started to cross the
room, when Mrs. Daley came in from the dining-room.
She was dressed for riding. At sight of them she stopped, with a quick
intake of breath.
“It’s all right,” assured Hashknife softly. “There’s nothin’ to get
scared about, May.”
“I--I was just going to town after the doctor,” she said wearily. “Bud’s
fever got worse, and there wasn’t anybody here to help me.”
Hashknife crossed to Bud and took him by the arm. Bud half-smiled, as if
he recognized Hashknife, but did not speak.
“You get back into bed, old-timer,” ordered Hashknife. “You’ve got to
take it easy, don’tcha know it?”
Hashknife assisted him back to the bed, where Bud dropped wearily.
Lavelle and May were left alone in the living-room, but neither of them
spoke. Hashknife was back in a minute and went straight to Lavelle.
“You tryin’ to collect that three thousand reward, Lavelle?” he asked.
Lavelle flushed hotly and wished that this long-faced, keen-eyed
cowpuncher was miles away. Lavelle had the feeling that Hashknife
wanted to make him angry; and Lavelle was too clever a gambler to
show his anger.
“The reward does not interest me,” he replied. “I just dropped in. But I
had no idea that Bud was here.”
“You waited until yuh knew that nobody but Mrs. Daley was here, yuh
know,” reminded Hashknife.
“All right,” laughed Lavelle easily. “You did, too.”
Hashknife’s face grew serious as he nodded slowly.
“Yeah, that’s true,” he said softly. “I knowed that she was alone--with
Bud. Yuh see, I think a lot of these folks, Lavelle. Now, there ain’t
nothin’ for you to do, except to tell the sheriff where Bud is--and
collect the reward.”
“---- the reward!” snapped Lavelle. “I’m not looking for any reward.”
“No? Well, that’s funny,” Hashknife laughed shortly. “You let Breed use
yore cowpunchers to try and catch Bud.”
“He swore them in, Hartley. I couldn’t stop him, could I?”
“We’ve got to get a doctor for Bud,” interrupted Mrs. Daley. “All this
talk is a waste of time. You stay here and I’ll go.”
“And the sheriff will find it out,” declared Lavelle.
“Will he?” queried Hashknife. “Listen to me, Lavelle. You’ve got
enough power to keep Breed from doin’ anythin’. Suppose you go after
the doctor? He won’t tell. And if Breed finds it out, a word from you
will stop him from makin’ any arrest.”
Lavelle nodded quickly and turned to the door. He was willing to get
away. Hashknife followed him out on to the porch and watched him mount.
“Just to save arguments, you might not tell the doctor who the sick
person is, Lavelle,” he said. “Tell him it’s mostly a fever.”
“All right,” grunted Lavelle.
“And the sheriff won’t come out here?”
“I’ll do my best,” said Lavelle.
“That won’t be quite enough,” said Hashknife meaningly.
Lavelle turned and rode swiftly away, while Hashknife went back into
the house. Mrs. Daley was standing beside Bud’s bed, looking down at
him, when Hashknife came back in. Bud was mumbling in his delirium a
meaningless jumble of broken sentences.
“--price of two dresses,” he muttered. “--prettiest woman in this
country.”
Hashknife glanced keenly at Mrs. Daley. Her lips were shut tightly, and
her hands clenched.
“What’s he talkin’ about?” queried Hashknife.
“--throw away your youth?” queried Bud, “--retain your beauty? Two can’t
live on cowpuncher’s--failure--throw away your life.”
Bud laughed bitterly in his delirium. “--silks and furs. Bud is man
enough--loyalty and all that.”
* * * * *
Mrs. Daley turned away, with tears running down her cheeks. Now she knew
that Bud had come home and overheard Lavelle and her talking that night.
That was why he did not come home; why he did not care what they did to
him at that trial. He was willing to go to prison. And this was why Bud
would not speak to her.
She walked out into the living-room and sat down in a chair, while
Hashknife followed her to the doorway. Bud had quit talking now. Mrs.
Daley looked up at Hashknife and found him staring intently at her.
“Oh, he’s so sick.” Her voice sounded strained, unreal, and she knew
that Hashknife did not believe that she was overcome on account of
Bud’s condition.
“What did he mean?” asked Hashknife.
Mrs. Daley turned away, trying to ignore the question; but Hashknife was
not to be denied. He came over and put his hand on her shoulder, shaking
her a little.
“What did he mean?” he repeated. “Tell me, May.”
She looked up at him and tried to get to her feet, but he held her
firmly.
“Why, he’s--he’s just delirious,” she faltered. “He doesn’t know
what----”
“It’s back in his mind,” said Hashknife firmly. “He don’t realize what
he’s sayin’, thasall.”
“Will Lavelle send the doctor out?” asked Mrs. Daley.
“That’s up to Lavelle, May. Now will yuh tell me what Bud means?”
“I--I don’t know, Hashknife.”
“You don’t need to lie to me, May.”
She looked up at him, her lips shut tightly; and she turned away from
the determined expression in his eyes.
“And you know yuh lie, when yuh say yuh don’t know, May,” he said
softly. “I’m yore friend--and I’m listenin’ real close.”
“You--you call me a liar?” she faltered. “And you say you are my
friend?”
“I’ve had a lot of friends that lied, May. That’s one of the failin’s of
the human race. There’ll always be liars. Now come clean with me. I want
to help yuh, but I’ve got to have the truth.”
She got up from her chair and walked to the front doorway. He followed
her and she went out on the porch, where she leaned against one of the
porch-posts, staring off across the hills. Hashknife leaned easily
against the side of the doorway and rolled a smoke. Back in the bedroom
Bud muttered some broken sentences.
“Oh, I wish that doctor would hurry,” said May nervously.
“It’s quite a ways to town,” said Hashknife. “But that’s all right; Bud
ain’t in dangerous shape. Are yuh ready to talk?”
“Talk?” She turned on him wearily. “Oh, why don’t you go away and let me
alone? I have nothing to talk about.”
He stepped out and put a hand on each of her shoulders, forcing her to
look into his face.
“May,” he asked softly, “are you in love with Lavelle?”
She shut her eyes quickly and shook her head violently.
“Is he in love with you?”
Quickly she turned away from him, but did not answer.
“All right, I reckon that’s it,” said Hashknife sadly. “I don’t blame
him. Yo’re a lovable sort of a girl, May. I used to wonder how Bud Daley
got yuh.” He laughed softly and rubbed his chin.
“Yo’re too good for Bud Daley.”
She turned quickly, angrily.
“What do you mean by that?” she demanded.
“He’s just a cowpuncher, May. You ought to have silks and furs and all
that, don’tcha know it?”
Her tightly shut lips trembled and tears came to her eyes. He was
goading her with Bud’s own words.
“Lavelle could give yuh all them things, May. He told yuh he could,
didn’t he?”
“Oh, why do you ask me these things?” she cried. “What good can it do
you?”
“And Bud heard yuh talkin’ with Lavelle, didn’t he? He heard Lavelle
offer yuh all these things, May? When did he hear this?”
“What good--?” she began.
“Was it the night that the bank was robbed?”
She tried to turn away, but he caught her by the arm and their eyes met.
She nodded quickly and looked away.
“Thank yuh, May,” he said softly. “Now, let’s talk about it.”
“Oh, I don’t want to talk about anything, Hashknife. Please don’t ask me
to talk about it. I’ve had so much trouble----”
“Yo’re goin’ to talk to me,” laughed Hashknife, “or I’m goin’ to take
you across my lap and spank yuh good; _sabe_?”
She turned angrily on him, but her sense of humor saved Hashknife. In
spite of herself she was forced to laugh at his threat.
“Right down here on the steps,” grinned Hashknife. “We’ll set down and
have a real good talk. I’m a danged good spanker, too.”
They sat down together. It seemed easier to talk now.
“Now,” said Hashknife, “I understand that Lavelle loves you, but you
don’t love him. Makes it tough on Lavelle, but lucky for you. And the
night of the bank robbery, Bud heard Lavelle makin’ love to you, eh?”
“I didn’t know it,” she confessed. “But those were some of the things
that Lavelle said to me; so Bud must have overheard.”
“Prob’ly broke Bud all up. He had tried to borrow more money from
Lavelle that day. Makes it look bad for Bud. He needed money to buy
yuh the things that Lavelle promised yuh. It’s a good thing yuh didn’t
have to testify at the trial, or they’d ’a’ hung him on that kind of
testimony.
“Would you--say, May, this is gettin’ danged personal, and mebbe yuh
won’t answer it, but I’m asking it just the same: If Bud had gone to
the penitentiary, would you have married Lavelle?”
“I don’t love Lavelle,” she replied softly.
“He wanted to marry yuh, didn’t he?”
“Yes--for a long time.”
“Uh-huh. And if Bud was sent to the penitentiary, you could marry him,
if yuh wanted to, May. There wasn’t nothin’ to stop yuh.”
“I realize that,” she said slowly. “Lavelle offered to take me away from
here--away from Modoc. He said he would sell out and we could see the
world. He came to me again, after Bud was convicted. But I told him that
it was impossible. I was so sick over it all. He begged me to go away
with him, but I refused. I told him that I was Bud’s wife as long as he
lived--no matter what he had done.”
“That was square of yuh, May,” said Hashknife softly. “I’m kinda proud
of yuh, don’tcha know it?”
“And you don’t blame me, Hashknife?” she asked eagerly.
“Not that I know of,” he smiled. “It wasn’t no fault of yours, if
Lavelle loved yuh. You wouldn’t be hard to love. If I was ten years
younger, I’d love yuh myself.”
She laughed softly and the color came back to her face.
“I didn’t know that age was a barrier to love,” she said.
“There’s different kinds of love, May. The kind you know is yore love
for Bud. That’s the love of youth. If I was ten years younger--”
Hashknife laughed and got to his feet. “Gettin’ kinda stiff in the
knees.”
“You are not over forty, Hashknife.”
“Well?”
“Lavelle is almost forty.”
“And yo’re about twenty-two. Say, you ain’t tryin’ to make love to me,
are yuh, May?”
“Certainly not!”
“Squirshed agin’,” said Hashknife dejectedly. “I never did have no luck.
I got stuck on a waitress in Cheyenne once. She had the prettiest hair I
ever seen. I reckon I got stuck on her hair. Well, one day she was
waitin’ on my table and I asked her to go to a dance with me that night.
I was sure goin’ to ask her to marry me that night.” Hashknife laughed
softly and rubbed his chin.
“Well, she said she’d go with me. She was standin’ agin’ the wall, where
the hooks are that yuh hang yore hats on, and when she turned to go back
to the kitchen, her hair got caught on a hook--and stayed there.”
“Stayed there?” wondered May.
“Uh-uh.” Hashknife laughed heartily. “It was a wig. She was as bald
as an aig. She beat it for the kitchen; so I got the wig and gave it
to the cashier. That was my only experience as a hair-restorer.”
Mrs. Daley laughed heartily over Hashknife’s sorrows, and to take
her mind off the long wait for the doctor, he told her some of the
experiences that he and Sleepy had encountered; telling them in a
whimsical way, taking no credit for himself.
It was an hour or so later that the doctor arrived. He asked no
questions, but proceeded to administer to Bud, who had recovered to
a certain extent. Uncle Jimmy and Ma Miller came home, excited over
the presence of the doctor, until Hashknife explained how it had all
happened.
“And what was Lavelle doin’ out here?” demanded Ma Miller.
“I reckon he just dropped in,” said Hashknife.
“Dropped, eh?” Ma was suspicious and did not conceal it.
“Ma, it’s none of yore business,” said Uncle Jimmy, glad of a chance to
chide her. “He didn’t come out here to see you, ’cause he knowed you was
in town.”
“Yeah, and he knew that May was here alone. I don’t like it.”
Ma bustled away into the kitchen, and Hashknife went back to his horse.
Uncle Jimmy begged him to stay for supper, but Hashknife declined.
“Mebbe t’morrow night. I’ve got some folks that I want to see pretty
soon.”
“Well, make it tomorrow night then,” said Uncle Jimmy regretfully.
“Ma’ll probably raise ---- when she finds out that yo’re gone, but yo’re
single and can do as yuh ---- please. Might do her good to find out that
she can’t boss everybody.”
V.
Hashknife rode back toward town, deep in thought. He drew out the
letter he had purloined from the 76A mail and looked it over again.
It was directed to Cleve Lavelle and post-marked Black Wells. Inside
was a single sheet of paper, on which was written in lead-pencil:
$75 dols. Plese remit.
It was unsigned. Hashknife grinned as he touched a lighted match to a
corner of it and watched it burn to ashes. Then he rode on into Modoc
and tied his horse to the Rest Ye All rack.
There were three horses at the rack, which looked as if they might
have traveled a long ways. Hashknife noticed that two of them bore a
Cross-Arrow, while the third was branded with three parallel bars on
the left hip. He had seen these brands at Black Wells. It was evident
that some of Black Wells had come to Modoc, and he wondered if it was
any of the gang that were in the Welcome saloon when Sleepy had
bombarded the place.
Modoc was a well-patronized town on Saturday. There were many men in
the Rest Ye All, but Hashknife decided not to go in. There was no use
of running into trouble; which would probably result if he ran into
some folks he knew in Black Wells.
He crossed the street and ran into Breed, who seemed visibly worried. He
jerked his thumb in the direction of the hitch-rack at the Rest Ye All.
“Jud Mahley and a couple of other hard roosters came over from Black
Wells t’day, Hartley. They’re in the saloon, drinkin’ hard liquor and
keepin’ an eye on the door. Sleepy and Sody are down at the Elite
saloon, singin’ songs to a bartender, who don’t care for music.”
“Well, he ain’t hearin’ any,” laughed Hashknife.
Breed grinned shortly and squinted the length of the street.
“I know. But there’ll be ---- to pay, if them two meet Mahley and his
two friends. I figure that they came here to get even for what happened
to Mahley. He’s a dirty coyote, Hartley; and the two men with him ain’t
no better. What had we better do?”
“Well,” said Hashknife slowly, “I reckon we better find a preacher and
have him pray a few times for Mahley and his two gun-men. I dunno much
about Sody Slavin, but I know that Sleepy is able to protect his own
hide.”
“I wasn’t worryin’ about Sody,” grinned Breed. “He’s a big, fat son of
a biscuit-shooter, but he’s a humdinger in a fight. You kinda figure in
this, too, don’tcha?”
“Oh, that don’t matter. I’ll kinda keep out of sight, I s’pose.”
Breed laughed and hitched up his belt. He felt better about it now.
“You ain’t worryin’, are yuh?” asked Hashknife.
“No-o-o, I reckon it’ll be all right. Had supper yet?”
“Nor dinner,” grinned Hashknife. “Plumb forgot it. Let’s get Sody and
Sleepy and all go to eat together. It’ll give us a good chance to keep
’em away from Juddie and his gang.”
“That’s the ticket.” Breed was enthusiastic, but became dubious.
“I seen ’em a while ago, and they wasn’t open to suggestions. Mebbe you
can convince ’em, I dunno.”
They found the two cowpunchers in the Elite, leaning against the bar,
while Sody was trying to tell Sleepy a story about Christopher Columbus.
It dealt with Columbus’ feat of standing an egg on end. Sody had the
egg. The bartender, a sleek, fat individual, with a scant growth of
hair, well plastered down, was interested in the narrative, and none of
them paid any attention to the coming of Hashknife and Breed.
“Well, how’d he do it?” asked Sleepy, owl-eyed. “Yuh can’t stand no aig
on end, Sody. It ain’t built thataway, I tell yuh. Old Chris must ’a’
had a hen that laid a flat-ended aig.”
“Noshir,” Sody wagged his head wisely. “Here’s how he done it.”
Sody grasped the egg firmly in his ham-like hand, held it aloft in
triumph.
“Wa’sh me closely,” he chuckled. “There’s no mushtash to desheeve the
eye. Ol’ Chris jus’ took the aig--thusly, and----”
Thump! Sody brought his hand down hard enough to have broken a much
tougher article than an egg, and the contents of the fruit of the
hen-house squirted all over the interested bartender.
He backed against the back-bar, clawing the yolk out of his eyes, while
Sody looked goggle-eyed at the crushed mass in his palm. Sleepy moved
back, his nose twitching.
“Didja see her stand on end?” asked Sody foolishly.
“I didn’t see it,” said Sleepy. “But I betcha it could. My ----, that
aig was old enough to whip the hen that laid it.”
“You’ve gotta lot of nerve,” wailed the bartender, brushing furiously at
the bobby-goo on his white vest. “Next time yuh want to tell stories,
keep away from here. My ----, that’s a strong egg!”
Sody reached across the bar and dragged the palm of his hand across the
edge to dislodge the remnants of the egg, while with the other hand he
held his nose.
“Well, ’f here ain’t m’ fambly!” exclaimed Sleepy, catching sight of
Hashknife. “Yo’re late, cowboy. Sody jist showed us how to stand an
aig on end. C’mon and have a drink.”
“You’ve had a plenty,” grinned Hashknife. “You and Sody are invited to
eat supper with me and the sheriff.”
“We ain’t under arrest, are we?” queried Sody quickly.
“Not yet--but the evenin’ is still young. C’mon.”
“There’s somethin’ wrong,” declared Sleepy wisely. “They want to keep an
eye on us, Sody. Whatcha s’pose it is?”
“I dunno, and I don’t care,” declared Sody. “I’m hongry--but not for
aigs. Waugh! A voice from the tomb. C’mon, let’s go.”
They went up the street to a restaurant and ordered their meals. Sleepy
was suspicious. He knew that there was a reason for bringing them up
there, and in a few minutes Hashknife told them.
“Great lovely dove!” exploded Sody. “That lop-eared whangdoodle came
back here? Mamma mine, what we’ll do to him will be a joy for the
Cannibal Islands. Where are they, Hashknife?”
“Set still,” ordered Hashknife. “You two jiggers are goin’ to promise
me that yuh won’t start no trouble. Until the proper time, Mahley and
his gang are as safe as a church; _sabe_?”
“Oh, yeah!” snorted Sleepy indignantly.
“They came back here to get even with us--and we’ve got to take it, eh?”
“No, I don’t mean that, Sleepy; and you know I don’t. Keep away from
Mahley and his men. You don’t need to butt into ’em, do yuh?”
“It would be a lot of fun,” muttered Sleepy. “I want to take a shot at
that bat-eared pelican. He ain’t no good, dang his hide.”
“But yuh won’t take no shot at him, Sleepy,” said Hashknife. “I told yuh
not to, and you mind me real fine.”
“All right,” Sleepy nodded violently and upset a glass of water with
his elbow. “I’ll keep my paws off him for yore sake, but if you kill
him without givin’ me and Sody a chance at him we’ll see that Sandy
Claws don’t come to yore house next Christmas.”
They ate their supper and went back to the street. Hashknife noticed
that the three Black Wells horses were missing from the hitch-rack, and
sighed with relief. He felt sure that Sleepy and Sody would proceed to
forget what they had promised--and prove a good alibi later on.
Sody seemed to have an idea that the Elite bartender might be getting
lonesome; so he and Sleepy headed down there, while Breed and Hashknife
sauntered down to Breed’s office and went inside.
* * * * *
It was growing dark and Breed lighted a lamp. They sat down and smoked
for a while, discussing things in general. The talk drifted around to
Bud Daley and his troubles.
“They convicted Bud on a silver rosette, didn’t they?” asked Hashknife.
“Yeah,” nodded Breed. “Didn’t yuh ever see it?”
He flung open a drawer of his desk beside Hashknife and took out the
rosette, which had been thrown in on top of some papers. Hashknife
examined it closely. It was a hand-made thing and very distinctively
hammered and engraved.
“There was no argument about the ownership,” said Breed as Hashknife
examined it under the light of the lamp.
He had one hand in his pocket, but now he withdrew the hand.
“Funny how a thing like that will convict a man,” he mused. “Bud made
it with his own hands; hammered it out to suit himself, and the danged
thing made an outlaw out of him. Well--” he turned and dropped the
shining ornament back into the drawer and shoved it shut--“it’s the
little things in life that do the damage.”
“It sure looks thataway,” nodded Breed. “But for some reason I ain’t
worryin’ about catchin’ Bud. He’s worth three thousand to the man
that finds him, and I kinda hope he won’t be found. Funny thing for
a sheriff to say, ain’t it?”
Hashknife laughed softly.
“I’m glad yuh feel thataway, Breed. Mebbe you’ll be disappointed, but I
don’t think so.”
“Anyway, I’m not huntin’ for him, Hartley. I probably won’t be the next
sheriff of Modoc.”
“Keep yore shirt on,” grinned Hashknife. “Everybody in the county ain’t
agin’ Bud Daley; and yuh might still get a vote or two.”
“All right, Medicine-Man,” laughed Breed. “We’ll wait and see what
happens.”
They went over to the Rest Ye All and moved about the gambling-room.
It was a big night and the games were well patronized. Lavelle was
there watching the play. He glanced nervously at Hashknife and Breed,
and Hashknife noticed a slight pallor about his face.
Lavelle was not a quiet dresser at any time, but tonight he sparkled
with sartorial splendor. He nodded shortly, as Hashknife and Breed
passed him, but Hashknife did not speak. Lavelle looked after the tall
cowpuncher, a half-sneer on his lips. He noted the big, holstered
six-shooter which seemed to cling tightly to Hashknife’s thigh, hanging
at just the right angle for a quick draw.
He wondered where Sleepy and Sody were. They had been around earlier in
the day. Not that he wanted to see them come in. They were too rough,
too boisterous to suit Lavelle; but he rather wanted to know where they
were and what they were doing.
Hashknife placed a few bets on the roulette and won the majority of
them. But he did not care for roulette. It was all luck, when the wheel
was honest. Hashknife preferred to match his brains with others at draw
or stud poker. But both big games were filled.
He stood around for a while, watching the games and talking with the
players. Breed suddenly disappeared. Hashknife looked for him, but
he was not in the house; so Hashknife took a seat near the wall and
proceeded to smoke a cigaret.
It was about fifteen minutes later that Sleepy and Sody came in. They
seemed in a hurry and there was little evidence in their actions that
they had ever taken a drink. They saw Hashknife and came straight to
him, drawing him away from the crowd.
“It’s all off with Bud, unless we act quick,” whispered Sleepy. “That
---- Mahley found out where Bud is and has told the sheriff.”
“How did Mahley find out?” queried Hashknife.
“He told Breed that the doctor told him. Breed just left with a
livery-rig, but he told me to tell you. Now, we’ve got to do somethin’
real fast, Hashknife.”
“What can we do?” queried Hashknife. “The sheriff knows where Bud is,
and Bud’s too sick to move. We can’t fight the sheriff.”
“We can go down and kill that ---- doctor,” said Sody seriously. “Me
and Sleepy are gunnin’ for Mahley and his two pet skunks, as soon as
they show up back here.”
“Breed took a livery-rig, eh?” mused Hashknife. “He must figure on
bringin’ Bud back with him. How long has he been gone?”
“About ten minutes,” said Sleepy anxiously. “We can still beat him to
the JM, if we cut the hills.”
Hashknife shook his head slowly and squinted back at the windows of the
Rest Ye All.
“No, it wouldn’t do us any good, boys. Killin’ Mahley won’t stop Bud’s
capture. We’ve just got to let ’em go ahead; and in the meantime, let’s
go back and see if Lavelle’s luck is still good.”
Both Sody and Sleepy grumbled over what they were going to do to Jud
Mahley and his two companions, but they followed Hashknife into the
gambling-house.
Lavelle was watching the stud-game, and Hashknife stopped near him.
Lavelle glanced quickly at Hashknife, but turned back to the game.
“You ain’t playin’ much these days, are yuh, Lavelle?” asked Hashknife.
His voice was loud enough for those at the game to hear, and the dealer
looked up at Lavelle, who turned quickly to Hashknife.
“Well, what about it?” Lavelle’s voice held a trace of annoyance.
“Ain’t takin’ chances on bad luck,” grinned Hashknife.
Lavelle stared intently at the table for several moments, as if trying
to make up his mind what to say. One of the players shoved his chips
over to the dealer, who stacked them quickly and shoved the correct
amount in coin across to the player.
“Looks like easy money,” grinned Hashknife.
“Try it!” snapped Lavelle, indicating the vacant chair.
Hashknife laughed softly, but did not accept.
“I was just wonderin’ whether it was yore personal hoodoo, or whether
the house was just havin’ a run of bad luck.”
Lavelle shifted uneasily. Some of the players laughed, and it angered
Lavelle. He disliked being laughed at. Suddenly he looked at Hashknife,
a sneer on his lips.
“What’s all this talk about hoodoos, Hartley? If you’ve got money enough
to make it worth while, I’ll gamble with you.”
“From what I’ve seen around here, it don’t take much,” laughed
Hashknife. “A dollar runs into hundreds pretty quick.”
“I don’t gamble with pikers,” said Lavelle coldly and turned away.
“Same here,” laughed Hashknife. “So there ain’t no chance for us to
clash.”
* * * * *
Lavelle turned and came back to the table. He was mad. At a signal
from him, the dealer got up and let Lavelle sit down in his place.
Swiftly Lavelle arranged the chips to suit himself, broke open a new
deck of cards and looked up at Hashknife.
“I thought I’d bluff yuh into dealin’,” grinned Hashknife, sliding into
the vacant chair. “You ought to be easy to beat.”
The muscles around Lavelle’s thin mouth twitched slightly, but he
did not reply. His hands trembled visibly as he shuffled the cards.
The other three players seemed amused, and grinned at the circle of
spectators. Sody and Sleepy were in that circle; Sody stolid in his
interest, Sleepy alert, because he knew that this gambling challenge
was not at all like Hashknife.
Hashknife drew out a roll of bills and tossed five of them across to
Lavelle.
“Give me twenty blues,” he said.
Lavelle accepted the hundred dollars and shoved the small stack of blue
chips across the table, each chip worth five dollars.
“Cash mine in, Lavelle,” said one of the players. “I can’t see clear
enough to bet only five-dollar chips.”
Lavelle smiled coldly and counted the man’s chips. One of the other
players shuffled uneasily, but decided to stay. The other grinned and
separated his chips into two piles.
“One’s velvet,” he said. “I’ll play close to m’ stummick.”
Four blue chips decorated the center of the green-covered table, and
Lavelle began the deal. Hashknife did not look at his hole-card. Monte
Sells and Brent Allard came in from the bar and stopped to look at the
game.
On the second round, both Hashknife and Lavelle received aces, hearts
and diamonds. Hashknife flipped three blue chips to the center. Lavelle
stayed, but the other two dropped out.
“I’ll high-spade yuh for ten dollars, Lavelle,” challenged Hashknife,
but Lavelle ignored him.
The ace of clubs fell to Hashknife, while Lavelle drew a small card.
Hashknife bet five blues, but Lavelle dropped.
“Looks easy,” grinned Hashknife, raking in the pot. “I’m better off than
the boys were who had inside information that the big pay-roll was goin’
to Dixon that night.”
Lavelle’s eyes flashed questioningly at Hashknife, but he was stacking
his chips carefully and did not look up. Brent Allard shot a swift
glance at Monte Sells, and their eyes met.
On the next deal Hashknife passed without looking at his hole-card.
Lavelle gave him a curious look, but Hashknife only grinned and said:
“Luck’s a funny thing. Now, take Bud Daley, as an example; he’s unlucky.
Somebody stole all his cows, and there’s a lot of folks who don’t know
yet who stole ’em.”
Lavelle scowled heavily as the player at Hashknife’s right won the pot
and raked it in with a laugh.
“Is this a poker game or a lecture?” growled Lavelle angrily.
Hashknife grinned widely and rested his elbows on the table.
“I like to entertain folks, Lavelle,” he said. “Don’t mind me; go ahead
with the deal.”
The onlookers were beginning to enjoy it. Lavelle was noted for his
cold, hard nerve, and it amused them to see him so angry that his
dealing was jerky. Hashknife peeked at his hole-card and laughed
loudly.
“I’ve got a card in the hole that looks like Jud Mahley,” he announced.
“Jud Mahley in the hole, Lavelle. Deal ag’in; this is sure gettin’
good.”
Hashknife seemed to pay no more attention to his hand, but called the
bets as the cards dropped. He had two jacks in sight, while Lavelle’s
hand showed a pair of eights. The other two players quit. Hashknife
bet twenty dollars, and, after due deliberation, Lavelle conceded the
pot to Hashknife, who uncovered his hole-card--a deuce of spades.
“Thought I had a knave, didn’t yuh, Lavelle? You knowed that Mahley was
a knave. Ha-ha-ha-ha! He’s a dirty deuce, too.”
Lavelle shut his jaw tightly and shuffled the cards in a savage way.
“Leave some of the spots on ’em,” cautioned Hashknife. “Jist ’cause
yo’re mad--don’t ruin the pretty cards.”
After the next hand, the other two players decided that the pace was too
hot for them, and dropped out. Lavelle cashed in their chips, leaving
himself and Hashknife to a single-handed battle.
“Speakin’ of Jud Mahley,” said Hashknife seriously. “There’s a lot of
pickpockets in Black Wells.”
He looked around as if challenging somebody to dispute his statement.
Sleepy was grinning widely.
“We know it, don’t we, Hashknife?” he laughed.
“Danged right. Whisky dopers, too. I understand that somebody in Modoc
has got to pay seventy dollars damage to the Welcome saloon. That’ll
take off some of the profit from Bud’s cows.”
Lavelle had dealt two cards and was waiting for Hashknife to make
his bet. Lavelle’s eyes looked strained and there were tiny beads of
perspiration about his temples. The crowd around the table, with the
exception of Sleepy, did not know what it was all about, but they
were more interested in Hashknife than they were in the two-handed
stud-game.
“That’s what happens when yuh lose yore luck,” continued Hashknife,
tossing some chips to the center. “Feller gets to worryin’ about it
and snags himself in his own loop. Bud didn’t have bad luck--he had
some bad friends. Now the sheriff has gone after him. He’s sick in
bed, with a bullet-hole in his leg. They’ll bring him back pretty
soon. You callin’ my last bet, Lavelle?”
Lavelle was staring at the pot, holding the cards tightly in his hand.
He had called Hashknife’s last bet; but now he called it again. Which
showed that Lavelle’s mind was not on the game.
“Yo’re of this game, but not in it,” laughed Hashknife. “But yuh
might as well leave that fifteen dollars in the pot, ’cause I’ll get
it anyway. You ain’t even got poker sense, Lavelle.”
Lavelle flushed hotly and looked around. The former dealer was at his
elbow, and Lavelle started to get out of his chair.
“Goin’ to change dealers, eh?” sneered Hashknife. “Afraid to trust yore
luck any further, are yuh, Lavelle? Yo’re a ---- of a gambler, you are.
Why don’t yuh git some buildin’ blocks and play behind the bar, where
nobody can see yuh?”
Lavelle snapped back into his chair, his face white from the sting of
Hashknife’s insults.
“You want to play poker?” he snarled angrily, “You game to play a
man-sized game of cards? By ----, I’ll show you some action. Buy enough
chips to make it worth while, you mouthy fool!”
Hashknife leaned across the table and laughed into Lavelle’s face.
“You can be bluffed, Lavelle. Right now yore heart is yaller from the
gall yo’re usin’ to brace it up.”
Hashknife drew out a billfold and took out three one-thousand-dollar
bills, which he tossed carelessly across to Lavelle. The ring of
onlookers crowded in close to look at the money.
“My ----!” exploded a cowpuncher. “Thousand-dollar bills! I didn’t know
they was that much money in the world.”
“They’re a safe size,” laughed Hashknife. “If yuh stole one, you’d have
a ---- of a time disposin’ of it in this country.”
Lavelle squinted at the money closely.
“How big do you want to play this?” he asked.
“Man-size,” laughed Hashknife. “You name the amount. I’m in favor of
hundred-dollar chips and no limit.”
Sleepy moved in a little closer and tossed a cheap billfold on to the
table in front of Hashknife.
“Here’s another the same size,” said Sleepy indifferently. “Give him
plenty of action, cowboy.”
Hashknife grinned up at Sleepy and nodded his thanks. Lavelle flashed a
glance at Sleepy, but continued to count out chips. His fingers trembled
slightly and a chip fell to the floor as he shoved thirty chips across
to Hashknife.
It was the biggest price ever paid for poker chips in Modoc, and it
did not take the whole room long to find out that something out of the
ordinary was going on at the stud table.
It was out of the ordinary for cowpunchers to have as much money as
Hashknife and Sleepy had shown, and many of the onlookers glanced
significantly at each other. But the money had been honestly earned. It
was their pay for cleaning up a crew of rustlers in the Ghost Hills,
which had happened but a short time previous to their arrival in Modoc.
Hashknife had insisted on taking the money in thousand-dollar bills,
because it would be more difficult for them to get one cashed. Both he
and Sleepy had visions of saving enough to buy them a little outfit and
go into the cattle business.
* * * * *
The crowd grew silent as the game began. Lavelle’s face was a set mask
under the yellow light of the big lamp. Hashknife’s grin hid any emotion
he might have felt, and he handled hundred-dollar chips as if they were
pennies.
Hand after hand they played, one player or the other conceding the pot,
after two or three cards had been dealt. Neither man was winner as yet;
but every one knew that sooner or later they would get the cards they
were looking for.
“Kinda funny about Charley Morse,” observed Hashknife, as he peered at
his hole-card. “The feller that killed him didn’t have a shotgun until
he came to Modoc. Yuh see, he didn’t have nothin’ agin’ Charley Morse
nor Breed. He wanted to kill me or my pardner. It was just another fool
mistake. Killers all make mistakes.”
The crowd was listening intently, wondering. Lavelle shifted in his
chair, looking nervously at Hashknife as he said hoarsely--
“You calling my bet?”
Hashknife rolled two chips to the center, and they promptly circled and
rolled back to his side of the table.
“They know where the luck is,” laughed Hashknife. “They want to come
back to me, Lavelle.”
Lavelle muttered a curse and dealt the next card. The board showed that
Hashknife had a jack and a six, while Lavelle had a pair of tens.
“Twenty miles of railroad,” laughed Hashknife. “Yore bet.”
After a moment of hesitation, Lavelle shoved five hundred dollars to the
center. Hashknife laughed softly and fingered his chips.
“Mahley in the hole,” he muttered. “A jack and six in sight. That beats
a pair of tens, so I call.”
He shoved in five chips and grinned widely. Lavelle studied Hashknife’s
hand, a half-smile on his lips, as he said--
“Are you playing table-stakes, Hartley?”
Hashknife laughed softly and leaned back in his chair.
“You make your bets, Lavelle. I’ve got over six thousand here.”
Lavelle flipped off the next two cards, which showed another six for
Hashknife and a trey for himself. Hashknife’s hand showed a pair of
sixes and a jack, while Lavelle’s showed a pair of tens and a trey.
“Yore tens are still good,” grinned Hashknife.
Lavelle shoved five chips to the center. Hashknife laughed as he shoved
in five chips to cover the bet and then added ten more as a raise.
“My ----!” exploded a cowpuncher. “Raised him a thousand!”
Lavelle moistened his lips with the tip of his tongue and stared hard at
Hashknife, who was rolling a cigaret with hands that did not tremble.
Again Lavelle looked at the pip on his hole-card. It was a six spot. He
realized that there were big odds against Hashknife having a six spot in
the hole.
And he remembered that Hashknife had said that he had a “Mahley” in the
hole. The last time it had been a deuce; this time it might be a jack.
Lavelle’s fingers trembled over his chips.
“That bank robbery was a funny deal,” said Hashknife, and Lavelle looked
up quickly.
“Funny thing that Bud would pick the vault to lose that silver rosette
in,” continued Hashknife thoughtfully. “It’s too bad that the cashier
didn’t live long enough to tell who done it. He knew, too.”
“Oh, for ----’s sake, shut up!” snarled Lavelle. “What’s all the talk
about, anyway?”
“I’m tryin’ to take yore mind off yore bad luck,” laughed Hashknife.
“I want yuh to call that thousand; but yo’re afraid to do it, when yuh
stop to think. You know where yore luck went, but that don’t help yuh
any, Lavelle. Yuh get kinda sick in the stummick, when yuh think about
it, don’tcha?”
Lavelle’s eyes narrowed, as he shoved ten chips into the pot.
“Bluffed yuh into it, eh?” Hashknife laughed triumphantly. “Yuh didn’t
do that because yo’re brave; yuh did it because yo’re plumb scared to
death.”
“What in ---- are you talking about?” said Lavelle hoarsely.
“Yore luck. Go ahead and deal.”
Lavelle picked up the deck and dealt two more cards. A gasp went up
from the crowd, when they saw that Hashknife had drawn another six,
while Lavelle had another ten-spot.
Lavelle stared at the two hands and a smile of triumph flashed across
his lips.
“What about luck now, Hartley?” he asked nervously.
Hashknife lifted his eyes from an inspection of the two hands and
grinned widely.
“Yore three tens bets, Lavelle.”
There was no nervousness in Hashknife’s voice--only amusement. Lavelle
hesitated. He had faced many a man across the green cloth, but this man
was different from the rest. That third ten had brought the courage back
into Lavelle’s heart, but now he felt it oozing away again.
* * * * *
The crowd moved slightly, and Hashknife looked up to see Jud Mahley
and his two companions crowding in for a look at the table. Hashknife
glanced at Sleepy and Sody. They had seen Jud. Sleepy flashed a glance
at Hashknife, who turned back to his game. He was not worrying about
Jud Mahley now.
“A lot of folks wondered why Bud Daley wouldn’t tell where he was the
night of the bank robbery,” said Hashknife, as if talking to himself.
“I can tell ’em. I know. I know where that rosette came from, and I
know who planted it.”
The crowd stirred nervously. They were hearing something. On the fringe
of the crowd a man questioned another. He wanted to know if he had heard
rightly. Still, Lavelle did not bet.
“Take yore time,” said Hashknife softly. “I’ll entertain the crowd while
yuh figure it out. Yuh know, it took me quite a while to figure out why
Bud Daley was taken away from the sheriff.”
Lavelle jerked up his head.
“What in ---- do I care about Bud Daley?”
Lavelle’s voice was almost a whine. Perspiration trickled into his eyes,
but he did not try to wipe it away.
“Somebody wanted Bud killed,” stated Hashknife. “And it wasn’t because
they wanted to avenge the death of the cashier either. Ain’t yuh about
ready to back up yore three tens, Lavelle?”
With a nervous jerk of his hand Lavelle tossed some chips into the pot.
“Gettin’ jerky, eh?” Hashknife laughed. “Count ’em, Lavelle.”
“Eight chips,” whispered a bystander.
Hashknife slowly counted the pot and found that Lavelle had bet eight
hundred dollars.
“You ain’t got much faith, have yuh?”
Hashknife threw in eight chips and added a thousand-dollar bill from
Sleepy’s billfold.
“There’s a thousand that says my sixes win, Lavelle.”
Lavelle swallowed hard and stared at the pot. His nerves were rubbed raw
and he wanted to get away. Hashknife was talking again.
“Those pickpockets at Black Wells were disappointed.”
As he spoke he looked up at Jud Mahley. The Black Wells cowpuncher did
not have a poker-face, and Hashknife’s statement brought a startled
expression to his countenance. He shot a quick glance sidewise toward
the door and looked into the face of Sleepy Stevens. Then Mr. Mahley
turned his head and studied the wall, but his hands dropped along his
hips.
“Folks who don’t know might think it was funny that they would dope and
rob a stranger,” continued Hashknife. “They didn’t know us--except from
description. I don’t wonder that they want Lavelle to pay damages.”
Lavelle stared at Hashknife, his mouth half-open, as if he were badly
in need of oxygen. He seemed to have trouble in keeping his hands on
the table. He tipped a stack of chips, and they rattled loudly.
“Sounds like a skeleton,” laughed Hashknife. “Didja ever hear a skeleton
rattle, Lavelle?”
“---- you!” breathed Lavelle. “What’s all this talk about? What damages?
I never----”
Breed shoved his way to the table, and behind him was Uncle Jimmy--a
very angry Uncle Jimmy.
“They got Bud, Hashknife,” he said. “The sheriff brought him in.”
“Don’t worry about it,” soothed Hashknife.
“Don’t you worry about anythin’ either, Hashknife,” laughed Sleepy. “Go
ahead and play the game.”
Lavelle shaded his eyes with his hand as he slowly counted out his
chips. Then he shoved thirty chips to the center of the table; a
thousand dollars to call Hashknife’s raise, and a two-thousand-dollar
tilt to the pot.
He did not say a word, but leaned back, dropping his hands to his lap.
Hashknife grinned widely as he said:
“You bet that money just like it was the last bet you’d ever make,
Lavelle. I wonder if you had a hunch. Gamblers do have hunches, don’t
they? I’ve got one, too. But my hunch is backed up by good-luck.”
He leaned across the table, his face suddenly serious, his voice
ominous.
“I’m goin’ to call that bet, Lavelle. There’s a black cat settin’ on
yore shoulder, look’n at yuh.”
Lavelle twitched quickly, and his eyes flashed sidewise. Hashknife
laughed, as he shoved in two thousand dollars. Then something flashed
in the lamplight as he tossed an object to the center of the table,
where it rattled among the chips.
“I’ll raise yuh that much, Lavelle.”
Lavelle jerked forward, staring at the object. It was the rosette that
had been found on the vault floor. Breed gasped and shifted his feet.
Lavelle licked his lips and stared at it.
“It’ll take everythin’ yuh own to cover that, Lavelle,” Hashknife’s
voice was low, but every one heard him. “That represents a lot of
misery, murder and money. You had it once, Lavelle. You got it the
night you was out at Bud’s ranch--that night, Lavelle.”
Lavelle did not speak. It is doubtful whether he could have spoken. His
eyes met Hashknife’s, and Hashknife was not smiling. He reached slowly
into his vest pocket, clenched his hand and extended it across the table
and almost under Lavelle’s nose.
“It’ll take everythin’ yuh own to call that last raise, Lavelle,” he
said. “But yuh can’t win. The god of luck deserted yuh the night that
the train was held up; the night you took Bud Daley away from Dug Breed;
the night you had the boys from the 76A hold up the express car so that
you could have a chance to take Bud away from the sheriff.”
There was not a sound, except the heavy breathing of the crowd. Lavelle
seemed to turn to stone under the accusation.
“You lost your luck that night, Lavelle. It’s here in my hand. You had
’em dope and rob us at Black Wells, thinkin’ I’d have it with me. You
had Jud Mahley try to kill me, but he made a mistake and killed Charley
Morse.”
“All lies!” breathed Lavelle. His lips barely moved, but his eyes looked
straight ahead. “You can’t prove it--you can’t.”
“It proves itself,” said Hashknife. “You stole Bud’s cows to try and
break him, Lavelle. Then you robbed the bank to send him to the
penitentiary. You dirty coyote, you wanted Bud’s wife. But she told you
that she was Bud’s wife as long as he lived; so you took him away from
the law, hoping that he would be killed before being taken. Here’s what
broke yuh, Lavelle.”
Hashknife opened his hand. It was a piece of silver, about the size of a
half-dollar. As swift as the slash of a cat, Lavelle struck Hashknife’s
hand aside and flung himself, drawing a gun from the side-pocket of his
coat, while the crowd behind him scattered like a covey of frightened
quail.
But if Lavelle acted quickly, Hashknife was prepared. His two hands
flashed to the edge of the table, as he flung himself forward, throwing
the weight of the overturning table into Lavelle, who promptly went over
backward, crashing to the floor with his chair under him and the edge of
the heavy table across his throat. Lavelle’s gun exploded, sending a
bullet screeching along the floor and into the boot-heel of a cowboy,
who jumped high from the impact.
The crash of Lavelle’s gun blended with the roar of Sleepy’s
six-shooter. Jud Mahley’s right hand relaxed from around the butt of
his cocked gun and his close-set eyes blinked foolishly as he tried
to reason out why certain things were being done. For instance, why
were several men struggling, cursing, fighting beside him; why were
men shouting? Then the earth was jerked from under Jud Mahley.
Hashknife rolled the table-edge off Lavelle’s throat and kicked the
revolver out of his nerveless hand. Mahley’s two companions were down
on the floor, with Sody and Sleepy astride them, while Dug Breed jerked
this way and that way, trying to figure out what to do first.
“Well, you danged jumpin’-jack, get us some ropes,” yelled Sleepy. “Do
yuh think we want to set on ’em until they petrify?”
Breed turned to obey the order, but men were already producing ropes to
tie up Lavelle and the two men from Black Wells. Jud Mahley needed no
rope. Monte Sells and Brent Allard had disappeared in the confusion,
picking up Frank Asher and Mesa Caldwell at the 76A and leaving only the
tracks of four horses to show that they were all through with the Modoc
country.
Hashknife gathered up his money from the floor and walked outside, while
men tugged at his sleeve and demanded that he tell them the whole story.
Uncle Jimmy shoved them aside and grabbed Hashknife with both hands.
“One of them punchers confessed to stealin’ cows!” he blurted. “Lavelle
hired ’em to do it. And Lavelle gave Mahley the shotgun to kill yuh
with. You sure was right, Hashknife. I’ve got to tell Ma and May.”
He ran across the street toward the sheriff’s office, and Hashknife
followed him. The crowd had already got there with Lavelle and the two
punchers. Bud was lying on the sheriff’s cot, exhausted from the rough
ride, but conscious.
The crowd almost mobbed Bud, trying to exhibit their glee in his
exoneration; but he did not know what it was all about. His wife, white
of face, her eyes staring with fright, watched them and listened with
ears that caught only a jumble of words.
Then Cleve Lavelle and the two cowboys were pushed roughly past her and
into the cells at the rear, while Uncle Jimmy almost knocked her down in
his joy and excitement.
“Bud is cleared!” he shouted in her face. “Don’tcha know what I’m
sayin’? I tell yuh, he’s cleared!”
She tried to smile. It was like a dream. He shook her violently, as if
trying to force her to understand. Ma Miller caught him by the arm and
yanked him away.
“Don’t shake her, you ninny!” grunted Ma. “What happened, Jim? Tell me
what happened?”
She shook him roughly with both hands.
“Don’t shake me, woman!” he exploded. “I’m jist about to bust.”
Hashknife came in and Uncle Jimmy pointed at him.
“He done it--the son of a gun--he done it! I tell yuh, he was the one
what done it. I dunno how he done it, but he did.”
Dinah Blewette shoved in and tried to shake hands with Mrs. Daley. For
once in his life, Dinah did not try to talk.
“What is it all about?” queried Mrs. Daley. “I--I don’t----”
“It means that Bud is cleared,” explained Sody. “Lavelle was the guilty
man. Hashknife Hartley put the deadwood on him.”
Mrs. Daley lifted her head and looked at Hashknife, her eyes filling
with tears of gratitude. Bud had lifted on one elbow and the men stepped
aside to let him see what was going on. They had told him enough to let
him know that he was cleared. Hashknife looked at Bud and a smile came
to his face, as he said:
“Bud, I’m comin’ back some day, when yo’re well. And I’m goin’ to knock
---- out of yuh for believin’ somethin’ that yuh only heard one side
of.”
Bud blinked painfully and looked at his wife, who was coming toward him,
her hands outstretched. He knew what Hashknife meant.
“All right, Hashknife,” he said hoarsely. “I hope you’ll come soon; and
I’ll take the lickin’ with my hands down.”
Hashknife turned and faced Breed, who gripped his hand tightly.
“Monte Sells and Brent Allard pulled out,” he whispered.
“I know it,” replied Hashknife. “But you don’t need ’em. They were
technically guilty, thasall. Mebbe they’ll do better now.”
“They’ll have twelve hours lead,” said Breed meaningly. “Mebbe this will
be a lesson to ’em. It ought to, anyway. I reckon we’ll have to settle
up Lavelle’s estate and square things with Bud. He owes Lavelle five
thousand, and Lavelle owes him for a lot of cows; but we’ll see that Bud
gets a square deal and that nobody suffers from it, Hartley.”
* * * * *
Hashknife nodded and walked out, with Sleepy treading on his heels. Some
one called their names, but they did not heed. Came the whistle of the
southbound train, late as usual. They turned and headed for the depot,
where they climbed aboard the creaking smoker and sat down.
A moment later the car lurched ahead, and the lights of Modoc passed
from view. Sleepy’s nose squeaked on the window glass as Hashknife
said--
“Gimme yore Durham, Sleepy.”
“Why don’tcha buy yuh some once in a while?”
He handed over the sack and leaned back against the seat.
“Where did yuh get that rosette, Hashknife?” he asked.
“From Breed. I took one of the plain ones off my own chaps and had it
in my pocket. When Breed showed me that rosette, I palmed it and put
the other one in the drawer. I thought it would shock Mr. Lavelle. I
had to bluff, Sleepy. I wasn’t sure of it all, but I reckon I guessed
right. Here’s what was among that money that the hold-up man gave me
that night.”
Hashknife drew out the piece of silver. It was so badly worn that the
engraving and inscription was hardly visible; showing that it had been
carried and handled much. One side was blank. The other showed the faint
outline of a shield, on which was a tiger springing to the attack.
It was surrounded with a ribbon bearing the faint inscription in Latin:
In hoc signo spes mea.
And below was the one word--LAVELLE.
“What does it mean?” asked Sleepy. “I _sabe_ the Lavelle, but I dunno
that other jargon.”
“It’s Latin, Sleepy. I had quite a time with it m’self. It’s been a long
time since I studied Latin, but I managed to make it out. It means--In
this sign is my hope. That shield and tiger must be the family crest of
the Lavelle family.
“I knew danged well that nobody but Lavelle would have it; so I had him
dead to rights. He made a ---- bad mistake that night. When they doped
us at Black Wells, I knew they were tryin’ to get it back for him. Yuh
remember, I told him we were goin’ there?
“I knew that Lavelle turned Bud loose that night, but it sure took me
a long time to find out why. A streak of bad luck hit the Rest Ye All,
and Lavelle got superstitious. I made a guess that he had told Monte
Sells that the big pay-roll money was comin’ through that night. He
had to have that hold-up pulled off, and nobody but his own gang would
do it. He had Jud Mahley with him that night, because Jud was the only
one he could trust.”
“And Lavelle was in love with May Daley,” mused Sleepy. “That’s funny,
ain’t it?”
“Funny?” Hashknife looked sideways at Sleepy. “What in ---- is so funny
about that?”
Sleepy’s mouth formed an unspoken, “Oh!” and he settled down in the
seat, while the car wheels sent out their _clickety-click
clickety-click_, and the engine whistled dismally around the sharp
curves of the Modoc hills. Hashknife sat humped in his seat, his eyes
half-shut in speculation.
“Whatcha thinkin’ about, cowboy?” asked Sleepy.
“About a range where there ain’t no more trouble, Sleepy. I’m kinda
tired of it all now. I’m gettin’ so that I can’t think fast, and m’
gun-hand kinda cramps on me--kinda. Ho, hum-m-m!”
Sleepy glanced sideways at him and grinned softly.
“Yore medicine is still good, Hashknife. When you git so danged old
that yuh can’t walk no longer, I’ll put yuh in a wheelchair, hang a
sign around yore neck and take yuh along with me.”
“A sign on my neck?” laughed Hashknife. “What do yuh mean?”
“Jist a sign,” smiled Sleepy. “And on it I’ll have printed: ‘_In hoc
signo spes mea._’ Only I’ll have yuh find me the Latin word for ‘under’
instead of ‘in.’”
And the medicine-man smiled in appreciation.
[Transcriber’s Note: This story appeared in the March 30, 1924 issue of
Adventure magazine.]
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