Gunsight Pass: How Oil Came to the Cattle Country and Brought a New West

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Gunsight Pass: How Oil Came to the Cattle Country and Brought a New West Page 5

by William MacLeod Raine


  CHAPTER V

  SUPPER AT DELMONICO'S INTERRUPTED

  The two D Bar Lazy R punchers ate supper at Delmonico's. The restaurantwas owned by Wong Chung. A Cantonese celestial did the cooking andanother waited on table. The price of a meal was twenty-five cents,regardless of what one ordered.

  Hop Lee, the waiter, grinned at the frolicsome youths with the serenityof a world-old wisdom.

  "Bleef steak, plork chop, lamb chop, hlam'neggs, clorn bleef hash,Splanish stew," he chanted, reciting the bill of fare.

  "Yes," murmured Bob.

  The waiter said his piece again.

  "Listens good to me," agreed Dave. "Lead it to us."

  "You takee two--bleef steak and hlam'neggs, mebbe," suggested Hophelpfully.

  "Tha's right. Two orders of everything on the me-an-you, Charlie."

  Hop did not argue with them. He never argued with a customer. If theystormed at him he took refuge in a suddenly acquired lack ofunderstanding of English. If they called him Charlie or John or One Lung,he accepted the name cheerfully and laid it to a racial mental deficiencyof the 'melicans. Now he decided to make a selection himself.

  "Vely well. Bleef steak and hlam'neggs."

  "Fried potatoes done brown, John."

  "Flied plotatoes. Tea or cloffee?"

  "Coffee," decided Dave for both of them. "Warm mine."

  "And custard pie," added Bob. "Made from this year's crop."

  "Aigs sunny side up," directed his friend.

  "Fry mine one on one side and one on the other," Hart continuedfacetiously.

  "Vely well." Hop Lee's impassive face betrayed no perplexity as hedeparted. In the course of a season he waited on hundreds of wild menfrom the hills, drunk and sober.

  Dave helped himself to bread from a plate stacked high with thick slices.He buttered it and began to eat. Hart did the same. At Delmonico's nobodyever waited till the meal was served. Just about to attack a secondslice, Dave stopped to stare at his companion. Hart was looking past hisshoulder with alert intentness. Dave turned his head. Two men, leavingthe restaurant, were paying the cashier.

  "They just stepped outa that booth to the right," whispered Bob.

  The men were George Doble and a cowpuncher known as Shorty, a broad,heavy-set little man who worked for Bradley Steelman, owner of theRocking Horse Ranch, what time he was not engaged on nefarious businessof his own. He was wearing a Chihuahua hat and leather chaps with silverconchas.

  At this moment Hop Lee arrived with dinner.

  Dave sighed as he grinned at his friend. "I need that supper in mysystem. I sure do, but I reckon I don't get it."

  "You do not, old lizard," agreed Hart. "I'll say Doble's the mostinconsiderate guy I ever did trail. Why couldn't he 'a' showed up ahalf-hour later, dad gum his ornery hide?"

  They paid their bill and passed into the street. Immediately the sound ofa clear, high voice arrested their attention. It vibrated indignation anddread.

  "What have you done with my father?" came sharply to them on the wings ofthe soft night wind.

  A young woman was speaking. She was in a buggy and was talking to two menon the sidewalk--the two men who had preceded the range-riders out of therestaurant.

  "Why, Miss, we ain't done a thing to him--nothin' a-tall." The man Shortywas speaking, and in a tone of honeyed conciliation. It was quite plainhe did not want a scene on the street.

  "That's a lie." The voice of the girl broke for an instant to a sob. "Doyou think I don't know you're Brad Steelman's handy man, that you do hismeanness for him when he snaps his fingers?"

  "You sure do click yore heels mighty loud, Miss." Dave caught in thatsoft answer the purr of malice. He remembered now hearing from BuckByington that years ago Emerson Crawford had rounded up evidence to sendShorty to the penitentiary for rebranding through a blanket. "I reckonyou come by it honest. Em always acted like he was God Almighty."

  "Where is he? What's become of him?" she cried.

  "Is yore paw missin'? I'm right sorry to hear that," the cowpunchercountered with suave irony. He was eager to be gone. His glance followedDoble, who was moving slowly down the street.

  The girl's face, white and shining in the moonlight, leaned out of thebuggy toward the retreating vaquero. "Don't you dare hurt my father!Don't you dare!" she warned. The words choked in her tense throat.

  Shorty continued to back away. "You're excited, Miss. You go home an'think it over reasonable. You'll be sorry you talked this away to me," hesaid with unctuous virtue. Then, swiftly, he turned and went straddlingdown the walk, his spurs jingling music as he moved.

  Quickly Dave gave directions to his friend. "Duck back into therestaurant, Bob. Get a pocketful of dry rice from the Chink. Trail thosebirds to their nest and find where they roost. Then stick around like aburr. Scatter rice behind you, and I'll drift along later. First off, Igot to stay and talk with Miss Joyce. And, say, take along a rope. Mightneed it."

  A moment later Hart was in the restaurant commandeering rice and Sanderswas lifting his dusty hat to the young woman in the buggy.

  "If I can he'p you any, Miss Joyce," he said.

  Beneath dark and delicate brows she frowned at him. "Who are you?"

  "Dave Sanders my name is. I reckon you never heard tell of me. I punchcows for yore father."

  Her luminous, hazel-brown eyes steadied in his, read the honesty of hissimple, boyish heart.

  "You heard what I said to that man?"

  "Part of it."

  "Well, it's true. I know it is, but I can't prove it."

  Hart, moving swiftly down the street, waved a hand at his friend as hepassed. Without turning his attention from Joyce Crawford, Daveacknowledged the signal.

  "How do you know it?"

  "Steelman's men have been watching our house. They were hanging around atdifferent times day before yesterday. This man Shorty was one."

  "Any special reason for the feud to break out right now?"

  "Father was going to prove up on a claim this week--the one that takes inthe Tularosa water-holes. You know the trouble they've had about it--howthey kept breaking our fences to water their sheep and cattle. Don't youthink maybe they're trying to keep him from proving up?"

  "Maybeso. When did you see him last?"

  Her lip trembled. "Night before last. After supper he started for theCattleman's Club, but he never got there."

  "Sure he wasn't called out to one of the ranches unexpected?"

  "I sent out to make sure. He hasn't been seen there."

  "Looks like some of Brad Steelman's smooth work," admitted Dave. "If hecould work yore father to sign a relinquishment--"

  Fire flickered in her eye. "He'd ought to know Dad better."

  "Tha's right too. But Brad needs them water-holes in his business bad.Without 'em he loses the whole Round Top range. He might take a crack atturning the screws on yore father."

  "You don't think--?" She stopped, to fight back a sob that filled hersoft throat.

  Dave was not sure what he thought, but he answered cheerfully andinstantly. "No, I don't reckon they've dry-gulched him or anything.Emerson Crawford is one sure-enough husky citizen. He couldn't either beshot or rough-housed in town without some one hearin' the noise. What'smore, it wouldn't be their play to injure him, but to force arelinquishment."

  "That's true. You believe that, don't you?" Joyce cried eagerly.

  "Sure I do." And Dave discovered that his argument or his hopes had forthe moment convinced him. "Now the question is, what's to be done?"

  "Yes," she admitted, and the tremor of the lips told him that shedepended upon him to work out the problem. His heart swelled with gladpride at the thought.

  "That man who jus' passed is my friend," he told her. "He's trailin' thatduck Shorty. Like as not we'll find out what's stirrin'."

  "I'll go with you," the girl said, vivid lips parted in anticipation.

  "No, you go home. This is a man's job. Soon as I find out anything I'lllet you know."

  "You'll come
, no matter what time o' night it is," she pleaded.

  "Yes," he promised.

  Her firm little hand rested a moment in his brown palm. "I'm depending onyou," she murmured in a whisper lifted to a low wail by a stress ofemotion.

 

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