Max Brand
The Untamed
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Table of contents
1. PAN OF THE DESERT
2. THE PANTHER
3. SILENT SHOOTS
4. SOMETHING YELLOW
5. FOUR IN THE AIR
6. LAUGHTER
7. THE MUTE MESSENGER
8. RED WRITING
9. THE PHANTOM RIDER
10. THE STRENGTH OF WOMEN
11. SILENT BLUFFS
12. PARTNERS
13. THE LONG RIDERS ENTERTAIN
14. DELILAH
15. THE CROSSROADS
16. THE THREE OF US
17. THE PANTHER'S PAW
18. CAIN
19. REAL MEN
20. ONE TRAIL ENDS
21. ONE WAY OUT
22. THE WOMAN'S WAY
23. HELL STARTS
24. THE RESCUE
25. THE LONG RIDE
26. BLACK BART TURNS NURSE
27. NOBODY LAUGHS
28. WHISTLING DAN, DESPERADO
29. "WEREWOLF"
30. "THE MANHANDLING"
31. "LAUGH, DAMN IT!"
32. THOSE WHO SEE IN THE DARK
33. THE SONG OF THE UNTAMED
34. THE COWARD
35. CLOSE IN!
36. FEAR
37. DEATH
38. THE WILD GEESE
1. PAN OF THE DESERT
Even to a high-flying bird this was a country to be passed over
quickly. It was burned and brown, littered with fragments of rock,
whether vast or small, as if the refuse were tossed here after the
making of the world. A passing shower drenched the bald knobs of a
range of granite hills and the slant morning sun set the wet rocks
aflame with light. In a short time the hills lost their halo and
resumed their brown. The moisture evaporated. The sun rose higher and
looked sternly across the desert as if he searched for any remaining
life which still struggled for existence under his burning course.
And he found life. Hardy cattle moved singly or in small groups
and browsed on the withered bunch grass. Summer scorched them, winter
humped their backs with cold and arched up their bellies with famine,
but they were a breed schooled through generations for this fight
against nature. In this junk-shop of the world, rattlesnakes were
rulers of the soil. Overhead the buzzards, ominous black specks
pendant against the white-hot sky, ruled the air.
It seemed impossible that human beings could live in this rock-
wilderness. If so, they must be to other men what the lean, hardy
cattle of the hills are to the corn-fed stabled beeves of the States.
Over the shoulder of a hill came a whistling which might have been
attributed to the wind, had not this day been deathly calm. It was
fit music for such a scene, for it seemed neither of heaven nor
earth, but the soul of the great god Pan come back to earth to charm
those nameless rocks with his wild, sweet piping. It changed to
harmonious phrases loosely connected. Such might be the exultant
improvisations of a master violinist.
A great wolf, or a dog as tall and rough coated as a wolf, trotted
around the hillside. He paused with one foot lifted and lolling,
crimson tongue, as he scanned the distance and then turned to look
back in the direction from which he had come. The weird music changed
to whistled notes as liquid as a flute. The sound drew closer. A
horseman rode out on the shoulder and checked his mount. One could
not choose him at first glance as a type of those who fight nature in
a region where the thermometer moves through a scale of a hundred and
sixty degrees in the year to an accompaniment of cold-stabbing winds
and sweltering suns. A thin, handsome face with large brown eyes and
black hair, a body tall but rather slenderly made—he might have
been a descendant of some ancient family of Norman nobility; but
could such proud gentry be found riding the desert in a tall-crowned
sombrero with chaps on his legs and a red bandana handkerchief
knotted around his throat? That first glance made the rider seem
strangely out of place in such surroundings. One might even smile at
the contrast, but at the second glance the smile would fade, and at
the third, it would be replaced with a stare of interest. It was
impossible to tell why one respected this man, but after a time there
grew a suspicion of unknown strength in this lone rider, strength
like that of a machine which is stopped but only needs a spark of
fire to plunge it into irresistible action. Strangely enough, the
youthful figure seemed in tune with that region of mighty distances,
with that white, cruel sun, with that bird of prey hovering high,
high in the air.
It required some study to guess at these qualities of the rider,
for they were such things as a child feels more readily than a grown
man; but it needed no expert to admire the horse he bestrode. It was
a statue in black marble, a steed fit for a Shah of Persia! The
stallion stood barely fifteen hands, but to see him was to forget his
size. His flanks shimmered like satin in the sun. What promise of
power in the smooth, broad hips! Only an Arab poet could run his hand
over that shoulder and then speak properly of the matchless curve.
Only an Arab could appreciate legs like thin and carefully drawn
steel below the knees; or that flow of tail and windy mane; that
generous breast with promise of the mighty heart within; that arched
neck; that proud head with the pricking ears, wide forehead, and
muzzle, as the Sheik said, which might drink from a pint-pot.
A rustling like dried leaves came from among the rocks and the
hair rose bristling around the neck of the wolflike dog. With
outstretched head he approached the rocks, sniffing, then stopped and
turned shining eyes upon his master, who nodded and swung from the
saddle. It was a little uncanny, this silent interchange of glances
between the beast and the man. The cause of the dog's anxiety was a
long rattler which now slid out from beneath a boulder, and giving
its harsh warning, coiled, ready to strike. The dog backed away, but
instead of growling he looked to the man.
Cowboys frequently practise with their revolvers at snakes, but
one of the peculiarities of this rider was that he carried no gun,
neither six-shooter nor rifle. He drew out a short knife which might
be used to skin a beef or carve meat, though certainly no human being
had ever used such a weapon against a five-foot rattler. He stooped
and rested both hands on his thighs. His feet were not two paces from
the poised head of the snake. As if marvelling at this temerity, the
big rattler tucked back his head and sounded the alarm again. In
response the cowboy flashed his knife in the sun. Instantly the snake
struck but the deadly fangs fell a few inches short of the riding
boots. At the same second the man moved. No eye could follow the leap
of his hand as it darted down and fastened around the snake just
behind the head. The long brown body writhed about his wrist, with
rattles clashing. He severed the head deftly and tossed the twisting
mass back on the rocks.
Then, as if he had performed the most ordinary act, he rubbed his
gloves in the sand, cleansed his knife in a similar manner, and
stepped back to his horse. Contrary to the rules of horse-nature, the
stallion had not flinched at sight of the snake, but actually
advanced a high-headed pace or two with his short ears laid flat on
his neck, and a sudden red fury in his eyes. He seemed to watch for
an opportunity to help his master. As the man approached after
killing the snake the stallion let his ears go forward again and
touched his nose against his master's shoulder. When the latter swung
into the saddle, the wolf-dog came to his side, reared, and resting
his forefeet on the stirrup stared up into the rider's face. The man
nodded to him, whereat, as if he understood a spoken word, the dog
dropped back and trotted ahead. The rider touched the reins and
galloped down the easy slope. The little episode had given the effect
of a three-cornered conversation. Yet the man had been as silent as
the animals.
In a moment he was lost among the hills, but still his whistling
came back, fainter and fainter, until it was merely a thrilling
whisper that dwelt in the air but came from no certain direction.
His course lay towards a road which looped whitely across the
hills. The road twisted over a low ridge where a house stood among a
grove of cottonwoods dense enough and tall enough to break the main
force of any wind. On the same road, a thousand yards closer to the
rider of the black stallion, was Morgan's place.
2. THE PANTHER
In the ranch house old Joseph Cumberland frowned on the floor as
he heard his daughter say: "It isn't right, Dad. I never noticed
it before I went away to school, but since I've come back I begin to
feel that it's shameful to treat Dan in this way."
Her eyes brightened and she shook her golden head for emphasis.
Her father watched her with a faintly quizzical smile and made no
reply. The dignity of ownership of many thousand cattle kept the old
rancher's shoulders square, and there was an antique gentility about
his thin face with its white goatee. He was more like a quaint figure
of the seventeenth century than a successful cattleman of the
twentieth.
"It is shameful, Dad," she went on, encouraged
by his silence, "or you could tell me some reason."
"Some reason for not letting him have a gun?" asked the
rancher, still with the quizzical smile.
"Yes, yes!" she said eagerly, "and some reason for
treating him in a thousand ways as if he were an irresponsible boy."
"Why, Kate, gal, you have tears in your eyes!"
He drew her onto a stool beside him, holding both her hands, and
searched her face with eyes as blue and almost as bright as her own.
"How does it come that you're so interested in Dan?"
"Why, Dad, dear," and she avoided his gaze, "I've
always been interested in him. Haven't we grown up together?"
"Part ways you have."
"And haven't we been always just like brother and sister?"
"You're talkin' a little more'n sisterly, Kate."
"What do you mean?"
"Ay, ay! What do I mean! And now you're all red. Kate, I got
an idea it's nigh onto time to let Dan start on his way."
He could not have found a surer way to drive the crimson from her
face and turn it white to the lips.
"Dad!"
"Well, Kate?"
"You wouldn't send Dan away!"
Before he could answer she dropped her head against his shoulder
and broke into great sobs. He stroked her head with his calloused,
sunburned hand and his eyes filmed with a distant gaze.
"I might have knowed it!" he said over and over again;
"I might have knowed it! Hush, my silly gal."
Her sobbing ceased with magic suddenness.
"Then you won't send him away?"
"Listen to me while I talk to you straight," said Joe
Cumberland, "and accordin' to the way you take it will depend
whether Dan goes or stays. Will you listen?"
"Dear Dad, with all my heart!"
"Humph!" he grunted, "that's just what I don't
want. This what I'm goin' to tell you is a queer thing—a mighty lot
like a fairy tale, maybe. I've kept it back from you years an' years
thinkin' you'd find out the truth about Dan for yourself. But bein'
so close to him has made you sort of blind, maybe! No man will
criticize his own hoss."
"Go on, tell me what you mean. I won't interrupt."
He was silent for a moment, frowning to gather his thoughts.
"Have you ever seen a mule, Kate?"
"Of course!"
"Maybe you've noticed that a mule is just as strong as a
horse— "
"Yes."
"—but their muscles ain't a third as big?"
"Yes, but what on earth—"
"Well, Kate, Dan is built light an' yet he's stronger than
the biggest men around here."
"Are you going to send him away simply because he's strong?"
"It doesn't show nothin'," said the old man gently,
"savin' that he's different from the regular run of men—an'
I've seen a considerable pile of men, honey. There's other funny
things about Dan maybe you ain't noticed. Take the way he has with
hosses an' other animals. The wildest man-killin', spur-hatin'
bronchos don't put up no fight when them long legs of Dan settle
round 'em."
"Because they know fighting won't help them!"
"Maybe so, maybe so," he said quietly, "but it's
kind of queer, Kate, that after most a hundred men on the best hosses
in these parts had ridden in relays after Satan an' couldn't lay a
rope on him, Dan could jest go out on foot with a halter an' come
back in ten days leadin' the wildest devil of a mustang that ever
hated men."
"It was a glorious thing to do!" she said.
Old Cumberland sighed and then shook his head.
"It shows more'n that, honey. There ain't any man but Dan
that can sit the saddle on Satan. If Dan should die, Satan wouldn't
be no more use to other men than a piece of haltered lightnin'. An'
then tell me how Dan got hold of that wolf, Black Bart, as he calls
him."
"It isn't a wolf, Dad," said Kate, "it's a dog. Dan
says so himself."
"Sure he says so," answered her father, "but there
was a lone wolf prowlin' round these parts for a considerable time
an' raisin' Cain with the calves an' the colts. An' Black Bart comes
pretty close to a description of the lone wolf. Maybe you remember
Dan found his 'dog' lyin' in a gully with a bullet through his
shoulder. If he was a dog how'd he come to be shot —"
"Some brute of a sheep herder may have done it. What could it
prove?"
"It only proves that Dan is queer—powerful queer! Satan an'
Black Bart are still as wild as they ever was, except that they got
one master. An' they ain't got a thing to do with other people. Black
Bart'd tear the heart out of a man that so much as patted his head."
"Why," she cried, "he'll let me do anything with
him!"
"Humph!" said Cumberland, a little baffled; "maybe
that's because Dan is kind of fond of you, gal, an' he has sort of
introduced you to his pets, damn 'em! That's just the pint! How is he
able to make his man-killers act sweet with you an' play the devil
with everybody else."
"It wasn't Dan at all!" she said stoutly, "and
he isn't queer. Satan and Black Bart let me do what I want
with them because they know I love them for their beauty and their
strength."
"Let it go at that," growled her father. "Kate,
you're jest like your mother when it comes to arguin'. If you wasn't
my little gal I'd say you was plain pig-headed. But look here, ain't
you ever felt that Dan is what I call him—different? Ain't you ever
seen him get mad—jest for a minute—an' watched them big brown
eyes of his get all packed full of yellow light that chases a chill
up and down your back like a wrigglin' snake?"
She considered this statement in a little silence.
"I saw him kill a rattler once," she said in a low
voice. "Dan caught him behind the head after he had struck. He
did it with his bare hand! I almost fainted. When I looked again he
had cut off the head of the snake. It was —it was terrible!"
She turned to her father and caught him firmly by the shoulders.
"Look me straight in the eye, Dad, and tell me just what you
mean."
"Why, Kate," said the wise old man, "you're
beginnin' to see for yourself what I'm drivin' at! Haven't you got
somethin' else right on the tip of your tongue?"
"There was one day that I've never told you about," she
said in a low voice, looking away, "because I was afraid that if
I told you, you'd shoot Black Bart. He was gnawing a big beef bone
and just for fun I tried to take it away from him. He'd been out on a
long trail with Dan and he was very hungry. When I put my hand on the
bone he snapped. Luckily I had a thick glove on and he merely pinched
my wrist. Also I think he realized what he was doing for otherwise
he'd have cut through the glove as if it had been paper. He snarled
fearfully and I sprang back with a cry. Dan hadn't seen what
happened, but he heard the snarl and saw Black Bart's bared teeth.
Then—oh, it was terrible!"
She covered her face.
"Take your time, Kate," said Cumberland softly.
"'Bart,' called Dan," she went on, "and there was
such anger in his face that I think I was more afraid of him than of
the big dog.
"Bart turned to him with a snarl and bared his teeth. When
Dan saw that his face turned—I don't know how to say it!"
She stopped a moment and her hands tightened.
"Back in his throat there came a sound that was almost like
the snarl of Black Bart. The wolf-dog watched him with a terror that
was uncanny to see, the hair around his neck fairly on end, his teeth
still bared, and his growl horrible.
"'Dan!' I called, 'don't go near him!'
"I might as well have called out to a whirlwind. He leaped.
Black Bart sprang to meet him with eyes green with fear. I heard the
loud click of his teeth as he snapped—and missed. Dan swerved to
one side and caught Black Bart by the throat and drove him into the
dust, falling with him.
"I couldn't move. I was weak with horror. It wasn't a
struggle between a man and a beast. It was like a fight between a
panther and a wolf. Black Bart was fighting hard but fighting
hopelessly. Those hands were settling tighter on his throat. His big
red tongue lolled out; his struggles almost ceased. Then Dan happened
to glance at me. What he saw in my face sobered him. He got up,
lifting the dog with him, and flung away the lifeless weight of Bart.
He began to brush the dust from his clothes, looking down as if he
were ashamed. He asked me if the dog had hurt me when he snapped. I
could not speak for a moment. Then came the most horrible part. Black
Bart, who must have been nearly killed, dragged himself to Dan on his
belly, choking and whining, and licked the boots of his master!"
"Then you do know what I mean when I say Dan is—
different?"
She hesitated and blinked, as if she were shutting her eyes on a
fact. "I don't know. I know that he's gentle and kind
and loves you more than you love him." Her voice broke a little.
"Oh, Dad, you forget the time he sat up with you for five days
and nights when you got sick out in the hills, and how he barely
managed to get you back to the house alive!"
The old man frowned to conceal how greatly he was moved.
"I haven't forgot nothin', Kate," he said, "an'
everything is for his own good. Do you know what I've been tryin' to
do all these years?"
"What?"
"I've been tryin' to hide him from himself! Kate, do you
remember how I found him?"
"I was too little to know. I've heard you tell a little about
it. He was lost on the range. You found him twenty miles south of the
house."
"Lost on the range?" repeated her father softly. "I
don't think he could ever have been lost. To a hoss the corral is a
home. To us our ranch is a home. To Dan Barry the whole
mountain-desert is a home! This is how I found him. It was in the
spring of the year when the wild geese was honkin' as they flew
north. I was ridin' down a gulley about sunset and wishin' that I was
closer to the ranch when I heard a funny, wild sort of whistlin' that
didn't have any tune to it that I recognized. It gave me a queer
feelin'. It made me think of fairy stories—an' things like that!
Pretty soon I seen a figure on the crest of the hill. There was a
triangle of geese away up overhead an' the boy was walkin' along
lookin' up as if he was followin' the trail of the wild geese.
"He was up there walkin' between the sunset an' the stars
with his head bent back, and his hands stuffed into his pockets,
whistlin' as if he was goin' home from school. An' such whistlin'."
"Nobody could ever whistle like Dan," she said, and
smiled.
"I rode up to him, wonderin'," went on Cumberland.
"'What're you doin' round here?' I says.
"Says he, lookin' at me casual like over his shoulder: 'I'm
jest takin' a stroll an' whistlin'. Does it bother you, mister?'
"'It doesn't bother me none,' says I. 'Where do you belong,
sonny?'
"'Me?' says he, lookin' sort of surprised, 'why, I belong
around over there!' An' he waved his hand careless over to the
settin' sun.
"There was somethin' about him that made my heart swell up
inside of me. I looked down into them big brown eyes and
wondered—well, I don't know what I wondered; but I remembered all
at once that I didn't have no son.
"'Who's your folks?' says I, gettin' more an' more curious.
"He jest looked at me sort of bored.
"'Where does your folks live at?' says I.
"'Oh, they live around here,' says he, an' he waved his hand
again, an' this time over towards the east.
"Says I: 'When do you figure on reachin' home?'
"'Oh, most any day,' says he.
"An' I looked around at them brown, naked hills with the
night comin' down over them. Then I stared back at the boy an' there
was something that come up in me like hunger. You see, he was lost;
he was alone; the queer ring of his whistlin' was still in my ears;
an' I couldn't help rememberin' that I didn't have no son.
"'Then supposin' you come along with me,' says I, 'an' I'll
send you home in a buckboard tomorrow?'
"So the end of it was me ridin' home with the little kid
sittin' up before me, whistlin' his heart out! When I got him home I
tried to talk to him again. He couldn't tell me, or he wouldn't tell
me where his folks lived, but jest kept wavin' his hand liberal to
half the points of the compass. An' that's all I know of where he
come from. I done all I could to find his parents. I inquired and
sent letters to every rancher within a hundred miles. I advertised it
through the railroads, but they said nobody'd yet been reported lost.
He was still mine, at least for a while, an' I was terrible glad.
"I give the kid a spare room. I sat up late that first night
listenin' to the wild geese honkin' away up in the sky an' wonderin'
why I was so happy. Kate, that night there was tears in my eyes when
I thought of how that kid had been out there on the hills walkin'
along so happy an' independent.
"But the next mornin' he was gone. I sent my cowpunchers out
to look for him.
"'Which way shall we ride?' they asked.
"I don't know why, but I thought of the wild geese that Dan
had seemed to be followin'.
"'Ride north,' I said.
"An' sure enough, they rode north an' found him. After that I
didn't have no trouble with him about runnin' away—at least not
durin' the summer. An' all those months I kept plannin' how I would
take care of this boy who had come wanderin' to me. It seemed like he
was sort of a gift of God to make up for me havin' no son. And
everythin' went well until the next fall, when the geese began to fly
south.
"Sure enough, that was when Dan ran away again, and when I
sent my cowpunchers south after him, they found him and brought him
back. It seemed as if they'd brought back half the world to me, when
I seen him. But I saw that I'd have to put a stop to this runnin'
away. I tried to talk to him, but all he'd say was that he'd better
be movin' on. I took the law in my hands an' told him he had to be
disciplined. So I started thrashin' him with a quirt, very light. He
took it as if he didn't feel the whip on his shoulders, an' he
smiled. But there came up a yellow light in his eyes that made me
feel as if a man was standin' right behind me with a bare knife in
his hand an' smilin' jest like the kid was doin'. Finally I simply
backed out of the room, an' since that day there ain't been man or
beast ever has put a hand on Whistlin' Dan. To this day I reckon he
ain't quite forgiven me."
"Why!" she cried, "I have never heard him mention
it!"
"That's why I know he's not forgotten it. Anyway, Kate, I
locked him in his room, but he wouldn't promise not to run away. Then
I got an inspiration. You was jest a little toddlin' thing then. That
day you was cryin' an awful lot an' I suddenly thought of puttin' you
in Dan's room. I did it. I jest unlocked the door quick and then
shoved you in an' locked it again. First of all you screamed terrible
hard. I was afraid maybe you'd hurt yourself yellin' that way. I was
about to take you out again when all at once I heard Dan start
whistlin' and pretty quick your cryin' stopped. I listened an'
wondered. After that I never had to lock Dan in his room. I was sure
he'd stay on account of you. But now, honey, I'm gettin' to the end
of the story, an' I'm goin' to give you the straight idea the way I
see it.
"I've watched Dan like—like a father, almost. I think he
loves me, sort of—but I've never got over being afraid of him. You
see I can't forget how he smiled when I licked him! But listen to me,
Kate, that fear has been with me all the time—an' it's the only
time I've ever been afraid of any man. It isn't like being scared of
a man, but of a panther.
"Now we'll jest nacherally add up all the points we've made
about Dan —the queer way I found him without a home an' without
wantin' one —that strength he has that's like the power of a mule
compared with a horse—that funny control he has over wild animals
so that they almost seem to know what he means when he simply looks
at them (have you noticed him with Black Bart and Satan?)—then
there's the yellow light that comes in his eyes when he begins to get
real mad—you an' I have both seen it only once, but we don't want
to see it again! More than this there's the way he handles either a
knife or a gun. He hasn't practiced much with shootin' irons, but I
never seen him miss a reasonable mark—or an unreasonable one
either, for that matter. I've spoke to him about it. He said: 'I
dunno how it is. I don't see how a feller can shoot crooked. It jest
seems that when I get out a gun there's a line drawn from the barrel
to the thing I'm shootin' at. All I have to do is to pull the
trigger—almost with my eyes closed!' Now, Kate, do you begin to see
what these here things point to?"
"Tell me what you see," she said, "and then I'll
tell you what I think of it all."
"All right," he said. "I see in Dan a man who's
different from the common run of us. I read in a book once that in
the ages when men lived like animals an' had no weapons except sticks
and stones, their muscles must have been two or three times as strong
as they are now—more like the muscles of brutes. An' their hearin'
an' their sight an' their quickness an' their endurance was about
three times more than that of ordinary men. Kate, I think that Dan is
one of those men the book described! He knows animals because he has
all the powers that they have. An' I know from the way his eyes go
yellow that he has the fightin' instinct of the ancestors of man. So
far I've kept him away from other men. Which I may say is the main
reason I bought Dan Morgan's place so's to keep fightin' men away
from our Whistlin' Dan. So I've been hidin' him from himself. You
see, he's my boy if he belongs to anybody. Maybe when time goes on
he'll get tame. But I reckon not. It's like takin' a panther cub—or
a wolf pup—an tryin' to raise it for a pet. Some day it gets the
taste of blood, maybe its own blood, an' then it goes mad and becomes
a killer. An' that's what I fear, Kate. So far I've kept Dan from
ever havin' a single fight, but I reckon the day'll come when
someone'll cross him, and then there'll be a tornado turned loose
that'll jest about wreck these parts."
Her anger had grown during this speech. Now she rose.
"I won't believe you, Dad," she said. "I'd sooner
trust our Dan than any man alive. I don't think you're right in a
single word!"
"I was sure loco," sighed Cumberland, "to ever
dream of convincin' a woman. Let it drop, Kate. We're about to get
rid of Morgan's place, an' now I reckon there won't be any temptation
near Dan. We'll see what time'll do for him. Let the thing drop
there. Now I'm goin' over to the Bar XO outfit an' I won't be back
till late tonight. There's only one thing more. I told Morgan there
wasn't to be any gun-play in his place today. If you hear any
shootin' go down there an' remind Morgan to take the guns off'n the
men."
Kate nodded, but her stare travelled far away, and the thing she
saw was the yellow light burning in the eyes of Whistling Dan.
3. SILENT SHOOTS
It was a great day and also a sad one for
Morgan. His general store and saloon had been bought out by old Joe
Cumberland, who declared a determination to clear up the landscape,
and thereby plunged the cowpunchers in gloom. They partially
forgave Cumberland, but only because he was an old man. A younger
reformer would have met armed resistance. Morgan's place was miles
away from the next oasis in the desert and the closing meant dusty,
thirsty leagues of added journey to every man in the neighbourhood.
The word "neighbourhood," of course, covered a territory fifty
miles square.
If the day was very sad for this important reason, it was also very
glad, for rustling Morgan advertised the day of closing far and
wide, and his most casual patrons dropped all business to attend
the big doings. A long line of buckboards and cattle ponies
surrounded the place. Newcomers gallopped in every few moments.
Most of them did not stop to tether their mounts, but simply
dropped the reins over the heads of the horses and then went with
rattling spurs and slouching steps into the saloon. Every man was
greeted by a shout, for one or two of those within usually knew
him, and when they raised a cry the others joined in for the sake
of good fellowship. As a rule he responded by ordering everyone up
to the bar.
One man, however, received no more greeting than the slamming of
the door behind him. He was a tall, handsome fellow with tawny hair
and a little smile of habit rather than mirth upon his lips. He had
ridden up on a strong bay horse, a full two hands taller than the
average cattle pony, and with legs and shoulders and straight back
that unmistakably told of a blooded pedigree. When he entered the
saloon he seemed nowise abashed by the silence, but greeted the
turned heads with a wave of the hand and a good-natured "Howdy,
boys!" A volley of greetings replied to him, for in the
mountain-desert men cannot be strangers after the first word.
"Line up and hit the red-eye," he went on, and leaning against the
bar as he spoke, his habitual smile broadened into one of actual
invitation. Except for a few groups who watched the gambling in the
corners of the big room, there was a general movement towards the
bar.
"And make it a tall one, boys," went on the genial stranger. "This
is the first time I ever irrigated Morgan's place, and from what I
have heard today about the closing I suppose it will be the last
time. So here's to you, Morgan!"
And he waved his glass towards the bartender. His voice was well
modulated and his enunciation bespoke education. This, in
connection with his careful clothes and rather modish riding-boots,
might have given him the reputation of a dude, had it not been for
several other essential details of his appearance. His six-gun hung
so low that he would scarcely have to raise his hand to grasp the
butt. He held his whisky glass in his left hand, and the right,
which rested carelessly on his hip, was deeply sunburned, as if he
rarely wore a glove. Moreover, his eyes were marvellously direct,
and they lingered a negligible space as they touched on each man in
the room. All of this the cattlemen noted instantly. What they did
not see on account of his veiling fingers was that he poured only a
few drops of the liquor into his glass.
In the meantime another man who had never before "irrigated" at
Morgan's place, rode up. His mount, like that of the tawny-haired
rider, was considerably larger and more finely built than the
common range horse. In three days of hard work a cattle pony might
wear down these blooded animals, but would find it impossible to
either overtake or escape them in a straight run. The second
stranger, short-legged, barrel-chested, and with a scrub of black
beard, entered the barroom while the crowd was still drinking the
health of Morgan. He took a corner chair, pushed back his hat until
a mop of hair fell down his forehead, and began to roll a
cigarette. The man of the tawny hair took the next seat.
"Seems to be quite a party, stranger," said the tall fellow
nonchalantly.
"Sure," growled he of the black beard, and after a moment he added:
"Been out on the trail long, pardner?"
"Hardly started."
"So'm I."
"As a matter of fact, I've got a lot of hard riding before me."
"So've I."
"And some long riding, too."
Perhaps it was because he turned his head suddenly towards the
light, but a glint seemed to come in the eyes of the bearded
man.
"Long rides," he said more amiably, "are sure hell on hosses."
"And on men, too," nodded the other, and tilted back in his
chair.
The bearded man spoke again, but though a dozen cowpunchers were
close by no one heard his voice except the man at his side. One
side of his face remained perfectly immobile and his eyes stared
straight before him drearily while he whispered from a corner of
his mouth: "How long do you stay, Lee?"
"Noon," said Lee.
Once more the shorter man spoke in the manner which is learned in a
penitentiary: "Me too. We must be slated for the same ride, Lee. Do
you know what it is? It's nearly noon, and the chief ought to be
here."
There was a loud greeting for a newcomer, and Lee took advantage of
the noise to say quite openly: "If Silent said he'll come, he'll be
here. But I say he's crazy to come to a place full of range riders,
Bill."
"Take it easy," responded Bill. "This hangout is away off our
regular beat. Nobody'll know him."
"His hide is his own and he can do what he wants with it," said
Lee. "I warned him before."
"Shut up," murmured Bill, "Here's Jim now, and Hal Purvis with
him!"
Through the door strode a great figure before whom the throng at
the bar gave way as water rolls back from the tall prow of a ship.
In his wake went a little man with a face dried and withered by the
sun and small bright eyes which moved continually from side to
side. Lee and Bill discovered their thirst at the same time and
made towards the newcomers.
They had no difficulty in reaching them. The large man stood with
his back to the bar, his elbows spread out on it, so that there was
a little space left on either side of him. No one cared to press
too close to this sombre- faced giant. Purvis stood before him and
Bill and Lee were instantly at his side. The two leaned on the bar,
facing him, yet the four did not seem to make a group set apart
from the rest.
"Well?" asked Lee.
"I'll tell you what it is when we're on the road," said Jim Silent.
"Plenty of time, Haines."
"Who'll start first?" asked Bill.
"You can, Kilduff," said the other. "Go straight north, and go
slow. Then Haines will follow you. Purvis next. I come last because
I got here last. There ain't any hurry—What's this here?"
"I tell you I seen it!" called an angry voice from a corner.
"You must of been drunk an' seein' double, partner," drawled the
answer.
"Look here!" said the first man, "I'm willin' to take that any way
you mean it!"
"An' I'm willin'," said the other, "that you should take it any way
you damn please."
Everyone in the room was grave except Jim Silent and his three
companions, who were smiling grimly.
"By God, Jack," said the first man with ominous softness, "I'll
take a lot from you but when it comes to doubtin' my word—"
Morgan, with popping eyes and a very red face, slapped his hand on
the bar and vaulted over it with more agility than his plumpness
warranted. He shouldered his way hurriedly through the crowd to the
rapidly widening circle around the two disputants. They stood with
their right hands resting with rigid fingers low down on their
hips, and their eyes, fixed on each other, forgot the rest of the
world. Morgan burst in between them.
"Look here," he thundered, "it's only by way of a favour that I'm
lettin' you boys wear shootin' irons today because I promised old
Cumberland there wouldn't be no fuss. If you got troubles there's
enough room for you to settle them out in the hills, but there
ain't none at all in here!"
The gleam went out of their eyes like four candles snuffed by the
wind. Obviously they were both glad to have the tension broken.
Mike wiped his forehead with a rather unsteady hand.
"I ain't huntin' for no special brand of trouble," he said, "but
Jack has been ridin' the red-eye pretty hard and it's gotten into
that dried up bean he calls his brain."
"Say, partner," drawled Jack, "I ain't drunk enough of the hot
stuff to make me fall for the line you've been handing out."
He turned to Morgan.
"Mike, here, has been tryin' to make me believe that he knew a
feller who could drill a dollar at twenty yards every time it was
tossed up."
The crowd laughed, Morgan loudest of all.
"Did you anyways have Whistlin' Dan in mind?" he asked.
"No, I didn't," said Mike, "an' I didn't say this here man I was
talkin' about could drill them every time. But he could do it two
times out of four."
"Mike," said Morgan, and he softened his disbelief with his smile
and the good-natured clap on the shoulder, "you sure must of been
drinkin' when you seen him do it. I allow Whistlin' Dan could do
that an' more, but he ain't human with a gun."
"How d'you know?" asked Jack, "I ain't ever seen him packin' a six-
gun."
"Sure you ain't," answered Morgan, "but I have, an' I seen him use
it, too. It was jest sort of by chance I saw it."
"Well," argued Mike anxiously, "then you allow it's possible if
Whistlin' Dan can do it. An' I say I seen a man who could turn the
trick."
"An' who in hell is this Whistlin' Dan?" asked Jim Silent.
"He's the man that caught Satan, an' rode him," answered a
bystander.
"Some man if he can ride the devil," laughed Lee Haines.
"I mean the black mustang that ran wild around here for a couple of
years. Some people tell tales about him being a wonder with a gun.
But Morgan's the only one who claims to have seen him work."
"Maybe you did see it, and maybe you didn't," Morgan was saying to
Mike noncommittally, "but there's some pretty fair shots in this
room, which I'd lay fifty bucks no man here could hit a dollar with
a six-gun at twenty paces."
"While they're arguin'," said Bill Kilduff, "I reckon I'll hit the
trail."
"Wait a minute," grinned Jim Silent, "an' watch me have some fun
with these short-horns."
He spoke more loudly: "Are you makin' that bet for the sake of
arguin', partner, or do you calculate to back it up with cold
cash?"
Morgan whirled upon him with a scowl, " [...]