3,49 €
Lucky Bill has the reputation of a natural battler, but he is not a cold-blooded killer. Then Bill finds himself on the wrong side of the law when he is accused of a crime he did not commit, and plenty of greenhorns and gringos set their sights on collecting the price on his head. He’s wanted by every tin star in the West and by every greedy gunslinger out for the price they can get for his no-good corpse. But Bill refuses to turn tail and run. Renowned Old West gunslinger Bill is no yellowbelly – he’s aiming to clear his name and he’ll take on any bushwhacker who stands in his way before he’ll be hunted down like an animal. Sweet anticipation hooks you through action-packed adventure! Experience the West as only Max Brand could write it!
Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019
Contents
CHAPTER I. THE RIVALS
CHAPTER II. THE FIGHT
CHAPTER III. MAN'S PAY
CHAPTER IV. THE ABDUCTION
CHAPTER V. MAN TO MAN
CHAPTER VI. FOUL PLAY
CHAPTER VII. THE HAUNTED HOUSE
CHAPTER VIII. THE HIDDEN ROOM
CHAPTER IX. FATHER CONNELL
CHAPTER X. A PHILOSOPHER
CHAPTER XI. THE PAST
CHAPTER XII. A WOMAN'S WAY
CHAPTER XIII. THE SNARE
CHAPTER XIV. THE BIG MAN
CHAPTER XV. JUDGMENT
CHAPTER XVI. THE TRAP
CHAPTER XVII. RIDING THROUGH
CHAPTER XVIII. THE DISCOVERY
CHAPTER XIX. TALIAFERRO ADVISES
CHAPTER XX. THE SECOND CLUE
CHAPTER XXI. DIPLOMACY
CHAPTER XXI. NEW NAMES
CHAPTER XXIII. THE PARTNERS
CHAPTER XXIV. MOLLY'S ROLE
CHAPTER XXV. THE JEST
CHAPTER I. THE RIVALS
“WHERE’S the sheriff?”
“He’ll be on hand in time for the funeral. Hurry up; we want front seats.”
Such murmurs ran behind Lucky Bill as he stepped into the Alcazar Saloon. He went with a quick-beating heart, as the actor who has many times triumphed in his favorite role feels the thrill of the first night when he steps out behind the footlights. It was the old-new thing for Lucky Bill–the curious faces of many men grown a little pale and one central figure.
He had heard of Mat Morgan, a natural battler like himself, but according to a report, one of more malice; and now he measured his man as some champion pugilist measures a challenger, hunting hungrily for the vital spot. He sought, also, for the provocation which he always needed in order to do his best. Usually men of the gun swaggered, often they were sneering, but Mat Morgan was neither the one nor the other. He stood with his back to the bar and his elbows resting lightly on it, a young fellow hardly older than Lucky Bill himself–slender, handsome in a dark way.
Just as the secondary artists draw away toward the wings when the star enters, so the men in the Alcazar scattered toward corners and back from the bar when the door opened upon Lucky Bill. The center of the stage was left for him, with only one man standing in it.
He paused a moment as the door swung behind him, ready for anything. That careless pose of the man at the bar might mean anything. It might be the means through which he hoped to pull Lucky off guard for the split part of a second; that space would be enough for the attack.
But Mat Morgan did not move. His black eyes kept steadily upon the face of Lucky, but there was neither a sneer nor a smile. Absolutely unafraid, he seemed to merely await the cue which his foe would give him. Lucky was puzzled. It was as if he were the steel and yonder fellow was the flint; they had met and yet there was no spark struck.
He sauntered on to the bar, straight to Mat Morgan.
“I hear you want to see me?” he said. “I’m Lucky Bill.”
“I been controlling my impatience pretty well, but–I’m glad to see you, Lucky. I’m Mat Morgan.”
He smiled a little as he spoke; not tauntingly, but rather as one who was stirred a trifle by a sense of humor. And still no spark flew. They were both at pause; Lucky, feeling that his own position was more alert than that of his opponent, hastily assumed a pose equally indifferent. He rested an elbow on the bar and found the foot rail.
“Drink?”
What else could he say to force the conversation, particularly since Mat Morgan remained so passive?
“Why, sure.”
The drinks were poured, and the crowd, seeing that this was not to be a case of fire and gunpowder, blowing up at first touch, settled down to watch, as the audience settles back while the pugilists spar and feel each other out in the first rounds, yet keen-eyed and watchful lest one should stop feinting and lash out with what might be the decisive blow. So they gave plenty of room in the center of the bar to the two, and the bartender found something to busy him far away among the stacks of glasses. The antagonists were talking in low voices.
Lucky Bill, turning his glass between thumb and forefinger, had looked from his foe to his whisky alternately. He was growing embarrassed. Finally he murmured: “Suppose you tell me why you sent word you was waiting for me, Mat?”
“Sure, I will. Because you sent word first that you was hunting me, Lucky.”
“I sent that word?”
“You sure did!”
“It’s a lie!” said Lucky through his teeth.
The crowd caught the tone of the murmur and grew tense; the purring whispers of the two gunmen were more terrible and ominous than if they had blasphemed and shouted at each other. Mat Morgan had stiffened.
“I don’t mind saying it ain’t a lie,” he remarked.
Lucky Bill groaned.
“A little gent with a long nose?”
“That’s him.”
“It’s a frame, Mat. I never sent any word to you.”
“Some skunk is out to get us, then. They’ve started us after each other, Bill. We’ll just shake hands and call it square.”
“But who’ll leave first?”
“Why, I was in here already; it’s up to you to beat it, Lucky.”
But Lucky Bill frowned.
“I don’t see it that way; they’d say I took water.”
Still they turned their glasses and did not touch the liquor in them. Frankly, each of them liked the other, would have trusted him very far, would have chosen him even on this slight acquaintance for a friend in a pinch; but each, in deadly fear lest the other should gain an advantage in the eye of the public, watched the other with catlike steadiness. They were growing more tense now. The expectation of so many men was spurring them on, and they both knew that, sooner or later, trouble would come if they continued to face each other.
“Mat,” said Lucky Bill softly, “we got to break out of this some way. If we stand here staring at each other one of us will wink pretty soon, and then there’ll be a gunplay–it’s in the air.”
“Suppose we sit in at that poker game. They’s only four of them; we’ll make a full game. Getting in a crowd like that–maybe one of us will get busted and then the one that’s broke can beat it.”
“I’m a rotten hand at poker, but I’ll take the chance. And here’s to you, Mat.”
All eyes drifted with them across the room. The apparent friendliness deceived no one–the two were waiting for the break in their silent, deadly little game. Mat Morgan was well known in Wheeler, and as he was never noisy, his quietness now could be considered as evil as one chose. And Wheeler, to a man, chose to consider it in that light.
It was felt, in the barroom, that each was trying to break the will of the other; there had been cases like that in the history of the mountain desert. Men had fenced with each other through an entire evening, using nothing save their eyes, neither daring to withdraw or to make the first move toward a fight, until one of them would crumple suddenly and become a shivering, wild-eyed coward. Wheeler was fairly confident that such a silent duel was now about to take place, and the town quivered with enjoyment.
As for the four who had been pretending to play poker at the corner table since the entrance of Lucky Bill, they viewed the coming of the two recruits without enthusiasm. Indeed, had two lepers slipped into the vacant chairs they would have been received in the same manner. Yet when Lucky and Mat had asked permission to sit in, each of the four had hastily declared his willingness. Six chairs were now drawn up around the table, crowding each other, for the surface was small.
The others in the saloon, seeing that there was little likelihood of a sudden outbreak, now spread back toward the bar, where they gathered in groups, talking together in a murmur, as though they feared that their talk might keep them from hearing something of importance at the poker table. So that there was a continual soft background of noise in the place. It was like the sound of swarming bees heard at a distance–there was the same whining note of anger in it.
The six at the poker table now offered a study. Mat Morgan and Lucky Bill had discreetly assumed attitudes of utmost indifference, but the other four were obviously on edge. It was one thing to sit in at a cheery game with friends. It was quite another to be present where two professional fighters were liable at any moment to whip out guns and start blazing away.
On the very first hand one of the original four began to bet recklessly. He made it twenty to come in and had hardly received his draw when, in his turn, he pushed a hundred to the center of the table. It was more than quadrupling the speed of the former game, but if he was choosing to bluff he had fallen in the wrong company. Mat Morgan instantly saw him and raised him a cool hundred.
But to the astonishment of the other, there was another raise, and so on, until each had staked a round eight hundred dollars. At that point Mat Morgan called and those at the table were staggered to see a miserable pair of nines laid down against Mat’s queen full on deuces. The other pushed back his chair.
“That’s what I took out of the game, boys,” he said, “and I guess they ain’t any objections if I quit you now.”
He went away, mopping his forehead, but evidently vastly relieved.
“Cost me eight hundred,” he said to a friend at the bar, “but what do I care? A whole skin is worth a pile more’n that to me; and I guess the rest of the boys must figure the same way.”
As a matter of fact, on the very next hand another of the original four dropped out, though his bluff had not been quite so rank, and this time it was Lucky Bill who raked in the winnings. By this time the maneuver was plain to both him and Mat Morgan; they crossed glances in a flash of understanding.
They commenced betting on nothing, throwing good cards away, holding up nothing for the draw. But in spite of that they won. It was impossible not to, from men who were determined to lose, and after the fifth hand the last member of the original four had left the table. Mat Morgan turned in his chair and hailed a number of men by name, but no one cared to sit into that unpopular game. He turned back; in spite of all their maneuvering he and Lucky Bill were once more face-to-face.
CHAPTER II. THE FIGHT
ALSO, it was impossible to talk as openly as they had done at the bar. Men were standing closer now. Behind the chairs of the gamblers the space was carefully left empty, in case of a sudden drawing of guns and fusillade of bullets, but on either side men drew close, apparently to watch the fall of the cards. Mat Morgan, shuffling, cunningly flicked a card through the air so that it fell close to Lucky’s chair. He leaned over, fumbled for it, and whispered:
“Lucky, what’s the move? Name it, and I’m with you.”
That question remained unanswered for four hands; there was not the slightest opportunity to talk. And in the meantime the strain grew. A drunkard, coming through the door, stumbled and fell prone. Not a head was turned to mark him; not an ear seemed to be able to hear anything except the monotonous murmur of the players: “See you. Raise you. Call that.” Over and over again.
If the glances of the audience stirred, it was to follow the hands of the two men as they were dropped down beside them. Who knew when one of those hands would flash up, carrying a gun? The test was beginning to tell on the two. As the murmur ceased around them, and that patient waiting continued, Mat Morgan began to lose color, sitting a little stiffer and straighter in his chair.
Lucky Bill marked that, and knew the meaning. Mat was on edge, and his nerve was beginning to give way; but before that was accomplished he would fight. The explosion, Lucky shrewdly guessed, could be only a matter of minutes.
In the next deal, reaching for a random card at the side of the table, he threw his weight forward so that his chair slipped and brought his chest against the table–and the table scraped forward upon Mat Morgan.
There was an instant catching of breath in the room. Was not this the crisis at last? Had not the table been thrust forward to pin down the arms of Morgan? Mat himself seemed to guess that, for he had twisted sidewise in his chair with catlike speed and now gathered his legs under him, ready for any sort of action.
But Lucky Bill had whispered softly, under the noise of the scraping table: “Him that loses the next jackpot goes.” Then he waited. The hand was dealt. Still no answer. He looked fixedly across the table and saw Morgan, staring down at his cards, nod. The jackpot, then, would decide. And he who lost must rise from that table and leave the room disgraced, beaten in the eyes of all those men.
Lucky Bill glanced over their faces, and a hot wave of blood washed into his brain. What were they but coyotes standing about waiting for two great elks to batter each other down? Then they would spring on the one that fell. And Lucky Bill hated them all, despised them all. He would not have changed the whole group for the value of Mat Morgan’s little finger.
Yet to be seen to leave the barroom by these fellows, to know that they were gaping after him, that they would begin to smile the moment the door closed on him–this was maddening. No matter how long he lived, nor how many reckless deeds were marked to his credit, the story of how he lost his nerve when he faced Mat Morgan would never be forgotten.
Even should he meet Morgan later and overcome him, the affair would leave its sting, for every man who faced him thereafter would feel that perhaps this was another off day with Lucky Bill. Men who would not have dared before to take liberties with him would cross him.
Besides, the tale would grow as it spread. There would be shameful details embroidered on it as it circulated through the length and breadth of the mountain desert. Every one would believe. They were always ready to believe that some man of violence had at last fallen. But his word was pledged.
He slipped the cards back and forth across the table, bunched his own deftly together, and then flipped up the corners. Seven, nine, ten, jack, king–that was his layout. With his blood chilling, he forced his glance up, inch by inch, until it reached the face of Mat Morgan. And Mat also sat stricken with the same horror. He was forcing himself to smile, but it was a deadly effort. Their glances met; of one accord a vast relief spread through their faces. Neither of them had openers.
They sweetened the pot and dealt again. Still no openers. Again a hand, and still no pair of jacks appeared. Lucky Bill saw the fingers of Mat Morgan trembling. The man was gone; his nerve had been washed away by the crucial test, and now, under a shell of carelessness, he was a hollow spirit.
Lucky Bill knew that if he forced the fight now, it would be as easy to handle Mat Morgan as if the other were a child. But he felt no exultation as he saw this. It was merely a great pity for Mat that swept through him. Courage was of various kinds; Mat Morgan’s was not of the peculiar kind needed in such a contest as this. Besides, his word had been given. The cards should decide who won this battle, and not a play of guns.
He picked up his next hand like a nervous tyro, one by one sifting the cards between his fingers. Ace, deuce, five, and–two tens! It was like knocking at the door which cannot be opened.
“Open her!” said the voice of Mat Morgan.
And looking up in his despair, Lucky Bill shoved his ante mechanically into the pot, discarded, and called for his three. Mat Morgan was holding up four! Two pairs?
He could see the triumph of Mat as plainly as though he were looking over the shoulder into his hand. The smile trembled on the lips of the other; he had lowered his eyes to control the fire that was in them. Lucky Bill closed his eyes, straightened his shoulders, and made ready. At least he would play the hand out. He picked up the three cards called for–a queen, a deuce, and ten!
He stared at it in wonder. Three tens after this infinity of waiting! He set his teeth to keep from crying out, and from the corner of his eye he examined his foe. Two pairs to begin with, and now that the cards were dealt had he filled? It was impossible to guess; yet from the complacence of Mat Morgan it seemed that this must have happened. He was shuffling his hand idly, waiting.
“Bet–a dollar,” said Lucky hoarsely, and he shoved his chip forward.
“See that,” said Mat Morgan, and Lucky could feel his pity. “See that and raise it a dollar.”
What did the money mean?
Into his mind flashed a hope that he might be able to bluff Mat, but in a moment he knew that the idea was absurd. Mat would call his hand if it took every cent he owned in the world.
“Call you,” muttered Lucky Bill, and pushed in the final money of the game. He thought back to a score of other games in which he had sat at the end of a long evening when the money had been accumulated among a few players–hands where thousands changed pockets.
Mat was not hurrying in laying down his cards, not as one who relishes the discomfiture of an enemy, but rather as if he wished to disclose a brutal truth gradually. He laid down two cards–the queen of diamonds and the queen of clubs. “Openers,” said Mat.
He hesitated; sweat was glistening on the forehead of Lucky Bill; vaguely he knew that all sound had ceased in the barroom, but all that he really knew and saw was that pair of queens on which all the lights seemed to have been focused. But what were the other three cards? Down came the hand of Mat Morgan. Beside the queens lay the king of diamonds and the king of hearts. Two pairs; but had he filled with the fifth card?
“And that?” asked Lucky Bill in a low voice.
The expression of Mat Morgan altered swiftly–doubt, horror coming in place of his smiling content. Hurriedly he put down the last card–the trey of spades–and Lucky Bill dumped his own hand on the table.
“Three of a kind is better, I guess?”
All at once, looking in the sick face of Morgan he felt like crying: “We’ll go together; we’ll stick together, Mat!” But somehow the words would not come. He leaned back in his chair, very cold, waiting and watching.
Mat Morgan, dropping his hands on the table, helped himself up with arms that wabbled, turned slowly, and walked toward the door; Lucky Bill was glad that he could not see his face. But, what was almost as bad, he could see the faces of the others as they glanced at Morgan and then stared incredulously at one another. Gradually the truth came home to them. Mat Morgan had given up without striking a blow. How were the mighty fallen in the high places of Wheeler!
And someone called: “What’s the matter, Morgan? Had enough?”
Morgan whirled on his heel, his face convulsed, but he who had called was veiled by the crowd; all that Mat met was a host of mocking, scornful eyes.
“Enough of what?” he asked.
“Enough of the game, I guess?” said the bartender, and he actually winked.
Lucky Bill shuddered. Suppose he were in that situation instead of Mat Morgan. What would he do?
The bartender was speaking again. “All right, Mat. Just run along.”
“Why, damn your eyes!” groaned Mat. “What d’you mean?”
But the bartender was not abashed.
“Going to take it out on me, eh?” he asked coldly. He turned to the crowd. “D’you make him out, boys? D’you begin to see the nacheral color?”
The right hand of Morgan was twitching; he was suddenly gray, as if dust had blown over his face.
“You see, Lucky,” he said, turning to the other. “They ain’t any other way out for me?”
Lucky Bill rose slowly.
“There don’t appear to be none,” he remarked calmly. “The other thing–we’ll forget.”
And so, in the crisis, he released Mat Morgan from his promise. There was a glint of relief and pleasure in the eye of Mat. What they had said, however, then and thereafter, was a closed book to the rest of the men in the room. One thing was clear–that the long-awaited crash was about to take place.
It was something new in the annals of barroom fights–no sudden outburst of curses; no yell of rage; no ominous whine of the fighter about to strike; but two men talking quietly, soberly. The thing seemed more deadly because it was so new.
“This is one side of the picture,” declared Mat Morgan. “Maybe someday we’ll turn her over and show folks the other side.”
“Partner,” said Lucky gravely, “I’m with you in that.”
“Then–watch yourself!”
“Anytime you say, Mat.”
Like two gentlemen of the old days saluting one another before the rapiers crossed!
But no rapier ever shot from its scabbard like this–so swift that nothing could be seen save a glimmer of light. Lucky Bill was watching, seeing things so clearly in the fever of his swift-moving thoughts that everything else seemed to be standing still. To the other men in the room it seemed that the hand of Mat Morgan was empty one instant, and the split part of a second later the fingers had twitched and came out bearing a flash of light at their tips.
But Lucky Bill saw the hand go back and up, saw the fingers slip around the handle of the gun.
Swift as that movement, his mind was ten thousand times faster, and he was thinking: “Mat, you’re done. You’re too shaky to hit the mark even if you could get your gun out fast enough. It’s a rotten business, but I got to go through with it.”
He even noted that the gun hung a trifle in the holster; it did not come out with the free sweep of his own weapon, that hissed against the leather and then flipped into perfect balance, snuggled against the palm of his hand. He saw the gun come out and wave a little to the right in the hand of Mat Morgan. Then, reluctantly, he pressed his own trigger.
Mat Morgan’s weapon dropped unfired to the floor; he staggered back–not as one who has received a stunning blow, but rather as one who, when on tiptoe, receives a tap that knocks him off balance. The wall checked him; he stood there with his left hand pressed upon his right shoulder, and looked steadily on Lucky Bill.
But Lucky Bill had suddenly become mad; one would have said that he himself had been stung by that bullet. His naked revolver was in his hand still, as he sprang to the bar and banged on it.
“You yaller-hearted, bone-spavined, splint-headed buzzards,” he shouted to the crowd in the Alcazar, “get out into the street, and damned pronto! Move!”
It was, of course, extremely unreasonable, but no one cared to linger and ask the whys and wherefores. The bartender cleared his bar with a leap that brought him sprawling on the floor, and without pausing to rise to his feet he raced on all fours for the door and plowed his way through a throng of legs that were stampeding in the same direction. The door was jammed. The rear sections of the crowd swerved away from it, and dived through the windows.
In thirty seconds the sea of noise was washing far on the outside of the Alcazar, and in the barroom there was silence.
Lucky Bill had forced Mat Morgan into a chair.
“Is it bad, Mat?”
“Enough to lay me up.”
“Gosh, partner, I’m sorry!”
“Sure you are. No fault of yours; just had to happen. Hey, don’t start fussing around me, Billy!”
But the outer shirt of Bill was already off and had followed his vest into a corner of the room; his undershirt he was ripping into convenient strips.
“Don’t talk back,” he warned Mat Morgan. “But, oh, man, man, how I wish that you and me had been back to back and them coyotes against us!”
He had knotted the strips together; now he cut away the shirt of Mat Morgan.
“It’s clean, boy. Never touched a bone or a tendon. You’ll be as spry as ever inside two weeks! Mat, this is better to me than a hundred thousand dollars!”
But Mat was muttering: “I didn’t think they was a man on earth that could of done it–got me clean before I could even get my finger on the trigger. You’re a flash of light, Billy!”
“Huh! I was just lucky. That’s my name, Mattie. Just plain lucky. Why, I seen what happened.” He was busily bandaging while he spoke. “Your gun was coming like a streak when it hung in the holster. That’s what got you off.”
But Mat Morgan smiled queerly at him.
“You seen my gun hang?” he asked.
“Plain as I see you.”
“Well–I know you got a fast eye, partner–but I didn’t think anybody living had an eye fast enough to see that! You’re good, that’s all I have to say.”
“Who’s this?” broke off Lucky Bill.
A quiet little man had stepped through the door.
“Who are you, and what d’you want?”
“Hush up, Billy. That’s Jud Nevil, the sheriff.”
“How are you, sheriff?”
“Oh, fair enough. I guess you’re Lucky Bill?”
He looked quizzically from one gunman to the other.
“Some call me that, but I’m off my luck tonight.”
“You’ll be coming along with me, Bill.”
“How come?”
“Assault with intent to kill.”
“Listen to me, sheriff,” said Mat, Morgan. “You’re wrong. They was just a little accident.”
The sheriff shifted his quid so that a knot stuck out in the center of his cheek. He stepped close and lowered his voice.
“If you don’t lay no charge, Mat, they ain’t any arrest. Now, Bill, I dunno what your game is here, but I got this to say: Leave me alone, and I do the same for you. Good night.”
“That’s what I call sense in a man,” murmured Bill, turning back to his companion. “Thanks for giving me a word, Mat.”
“That’s nothing.”
“You look pretty glum, Mat.”
“Lucky, I’ll tell you why. I’d rather you’d shot me through the head ten days ago than through the shoulder tonight.”
“Because of the crowd that was around, partner? Don’t think about ’em twice. If ever I hear any of ’em talk about this, I’ll shove what he says back through his teeth.”
“Damn the crowd. I can take care of that gang. Take the ten best men in the world and put ’em all together, and you have a mixup that’s part coward, part sneak, and mostly fool. I ain’t afraid of no crowd, Lucky, or what they say much. But you’ve stopped me in the middle of a journey, Bill. That’s what eats into me. But–they’s no use talking about it.”
“Only two weeks, partner.”
“Two weeks–two years–two centuries. All same thing. If you miss a mark by an inch or a promise to your girl by a minute, it’s all the same thing–you’re done.”
“A girl?” said Lucky Bill, and he whistled.
“You ain’t much for ’em?”
“Got me wrong, Mat. I like ’em all–tall and short, fat and lean, young and old; I never met anything in skirts between fifteen and sixty that wasn’t old enough to teach me something and yet young enough to give me a good time. You can learn how to ride a hoss and how to handle one gun as good as the next; but every time I meet a girl I feel like it was the first day of school.”
“Pardner, your ideas and mine are uncommon like each other–except that they’s only one of ’em for me.”
“And it’s her I’ve cut in on?”
“We won’t talk about it.” Mat writhed in the chair.
“That hole in your shoulder acting up, old man?”