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Going Some

Page 8

by Beach, Rex Ellingwood


  "There ain't a-goin' to be no accidents or excuses. It's pay or play, money at the tape. You're his trainer, and it's your fault if he ain't fit when he toes the mark. Understand?"

  Willie lowered the muzzle of his weapon, and fired between the legs of Glass, who leaped into the air with all the grace of a gazelle. It was due to no conscious action on his part that the trainer leaped; his muscles were stimulated spasmodically, and propelled him from the floor. At the same time his will was so utterly paralyzed that he had no control over his movements; he did not even hear the yell that burst from his throat as his lungs contracted; he merely knew that he was in the supremest peril, and that flight was futile. Therefore he undertook to steady himself. Every tissue of his body seemed to creep and crawl. The flesh inside his legs was quivering, the close-cropped hair of his thick neck rose and prickled, and his capacious abdomen throbbed and pulsated like a huge bowl of jelly. He laid his hands upon it to still the disturbance. Then he became conscious that he had bitten his pipe-stem in two and swallowed the end. He felt it sticking in his throat.

  "Did you hear what I said?" demanded Willie, in a voice that sounded like the sawing of a meat bone.

  Glass opened his mouth, and when no sound issued, nodded.

  "And you understand?"

  Again the trainer bobbed his head. The pipe-stem had cut off all power of speech, and he knew himself dumb for life.

  "Then I guess that's all. It's up to you." Willie replaced his gun, and the fat man threatened to fall. "Come on, boys!" The cowboys filed out silently, but on the threshold Willie paused and darted a venomous glance at his enemy. "Don't forget what I said about Mr. Colt and the equality of man."

  "Yes, sir!—yes, ma'am!" ejaculated the frightened trainer, nervously. When they were gone he collapsed.

  "They are rather severe, aren't they?" ventured Fresno.

  "Severe!" cried the unhappy man. "Why, Speed can't—" He was about to explain everything when the memory of Willie's words smote him like a blow. That fiend had threatened to kill him, Lawrence Glass, without preliminary if it became evident that a fraud had been practiced. Manifestly this was no place for hysterical confidences. Larry's mouth closed like a trap, while the Californian watched him intently. At length he did speak, but in a strangely softened tone, and at utter variance with his custom.

  "Say, Mr. Fresno! Which direction is New York?"

  "That way." Fresno pointed to the east, and the other man stared longingly out through the bunk-house window.

  "It's quite a walk, ain't it?"

  "Walk?" Berkeley laughed. "It's two or three thousand miles!"

  Glass sighed heavily. "Why do you ask?"

  "Oh, nothin'. Jest gettin' homesick." He calmed himself with an effort, entered the gymnasium as if in search of something, and then set forth to find Speed.

  That ecstatic young gentleman wrenched his gaze away from the blue eyes of Miss Blake to see his trainer signalling him from afar.

  "What is it, Lawrence?"

  "Got to see you."

  "Presently."

  "Nix! I got to see you now!" Glass's ruddy face was blotched, and he seemed to rest in the grip of some blighting malady. Beneath his arm he carried a tight-rolled bundle. Sensing something important back of this unusual demeanor, Speed excused himself and followed Larry, who did not trust to speech until they were alone in the gymnasium with the doors closed. Then he unrolled the bundle he carried, spread it upon the floor, and stepped into its exact centre.

  "Are you standing on my prayer-rug?" demanded his companion, angrily.

  "I am! And from this on I'm goin' to make it work itself to death. She said a feller couldn't get hurt if he stood on it and said 'Allah.' Well, I'm goin' to wear it out."

  "What's wrong?"

  "Do you know what's goin' to happen to me if Covington don't get here and beat this cook?"

  "Happen to you?"

  "Yes, me! These outlaws have put it up to me to win this bet for them."

  "Well, Covington can beat anybody."

  "But Covington isn't here yet."

  "Not yet, but—" The young man smiled. "You're not frightened, are you?"

  "Scared to death, that's all," acknowledged the other. Then when his employer laughed openly, he broke out at a white-heat. "Joke, eh? Well, you'd better have a good laugh while you can, because Humpy Joe's finish will be a ten-course dinner to what you'll get if Covington misses his train."

  "How easily frightened you are!"

  "Yes? Well, any time people start shooting shots I'm too big for this earth. The hole in a gun looks as big as a gas-tank to me."

  "But nobody is going to shoot you!" exclaimed the mystified college man.

  "They ain't, hey? I missed the Golden Stairs by a lip not half an hour ago. I got a pipe-stem crossways in my gullet now, and it tickles." He coughed loudly, then shook his head. "No use; it won't come up." With feverish intensity he told of his narrow escape from destruction, the memory bringing a sweat of agony to his brow. "And the worst of it is," he concluded, "I'm 'marked' with guns. I've always been that way."

  "Tut! tut! Don't alarm yourself. If Covington shouldn't come, the race will be declared off."

  "No chance," announced the trainer, with utter conviction. "These thugs have made it pay or play, and the bets are down."

  "You know I can't run."

  "If he don't come, you'll have to!"

  "Absurd! I shall be indisposed."

  "If you mean you'll get sick, or sprain an ankle, or break a leg, or kill yourself, guess again. I'm responsible for you now. Something may go wrong with me, that pipe-stem is liable to gimme a cancer, but nothin' is goin' to happen to you. My only chance to make a live of it is to cough up that clay, and get some one to outrun this cook. You're the only chance I've got, if Culver don't show, and the first law of nature ain't never been repealed."

  "Self-protection, eh?"

  "Exactly." Glass coughed thrice without result, stepped off the prayerrug, rolled it up tightly; then, hugging it beneath his arm, went on: "That four-eyed guy slipped me a whole lot of feed- box information. Why, he's a killer, Wally! And he's got a cash- register to tally his dead."

  "Notches on his gun-handle, I suppose?"

  "So many that it looks like his wife had used it to hang pictures with. I tell you, he's the most deceitful rummy I ever seen. What's more, he's got the homicide habit, and the habit has got its eye on me." Glass was in deadly earnest, and his alarm contrasted so strongly with his former contemptuous attitude toward the cowboys that Speed was constrained to laugh again.

  "It's the most amusing thing I ever heard of."

  "Yes," said the trainer, with elaborate sarcasm, "it would be awful funny if it wasn't on the square." He moistened his lip nervously.

  "You alarm yourself unnecessarily. We'll hear from Culver soon, either by wire or in person. He's never failed me yet. But if I were you, Larry, I'd leave that Mexican girl alone."

  "Mary?"

  "Yes. Mariedetta. Now, there's something to be afraid of. If these cowboys are in love with her and have their eyes on you—"

  "Oh, Willie ain't her steady, and he's the only one I'm leary of. Mary's beau is that Egyptian with the funny clothes, and I can lick any guy with tight pants."

  A gentle knock sounded at the door, at which Speed called:

  "Come in!"

  Senor Aurelio Maria Carara entered. He was smoking his customary corn-husk cigarette, but his dark eyes were grave and his silken mustachios were pointed to the fineness of a bristle.

  CHAPTER X

  "Buenos dias, Senor." Carara bowed politely to Speed.

  "Good-morning again," said Wally.

  Turning to the trainer, Carara eyed him from top to toe, removed his cigarette, and flipped the ashes daintily from it; then, smiling disdainfully, said:

  "Buenos dias, Senor Fat!"

  Glass started. "You talkin' to me?"

  "Yes." Carara leaned languidly against the wall, took a match from his
pocket, and dextrously struck it between the nails of his thumb and finger. He breathed his lungs full of smoke and exhaled it through his nose. "I would have spik to you biffore, but the Senor Fat is"—he shrugged his shoulders—"frighten' so bad he will not understan'. So—I come back."

  "Who's scared?" said Glass, gruffly.

  Carara turned his palm outward, in gentle apology.

  "You been talk' a gret deal to my Senorita—to Mariedetta, eh?"

  "Oh, the Cuban Queen!" Glass winked openly at Speed. "Sure! I slip her a laugh now and then."

  "She is not Cubana, she is Mexicana," said Carara, politely.

  "Well, what d'you think of that! I thought she was a Cuban."

  Glass began to chuckle.

  "Senor Fat," broke in the Mexican, sharply, while Larry winced at the distasteful appellation, "she is my Senorita!"

  "Is she? Well, I can't help it if she falls for me." The speaker cast an appreciative glance at his employer. "And you can cut out that 'Senor Fat,' because it don't go—" Then he gasped, for Carara slowly drew from inside his shirt a long, thin-bladed knife bearing marks of recent grinding, and his black eyes snapped. His face had become suddenly convulsed, while his voice rang with the tone of chilled metal. Glass retreated a step, a shudder ran through him, and his eyes riveted themselves upon the weapon with horrified intensity.

  "Listen, Pig! If you spik to her again, I will cut you." The gaze of the Mexican pierced his victim. "I will not keel you, I will just—cut you!"

  Speed, who had sat in open-mouthed amazement during the scene, pinched himself. Like Larry, he could not remove his gaze from the swarthy man. He pulled himself together with an effort, however, undertaking to divert the present trend of the conversation.

  "W—where will you cut him?" he asked, pleasantly, more to make conversation than from any lingering question as to the precise location.

  "Here." Carara turned the blade against himself, and traced a cross upon his front, whereupon the trainer gurgled and laid protecting hands upon his protruding abdomen. "You spik Spanish?" "No." Glass shook his head.

  "But you understan' w'at I try to say?"

  "Yes—oh yes—I'm hep all right."

  "And the Senor Fat will r-r-re-member?"

  "Sure!" Glass sighed miserably, and tearing his eyes away from the glittering blade, rolled them toward his employer. "I don't want her! Mr. Speed knows I don't want her!"

  Carara bowed. "And the Fat Senor will not spik wit' her again?"

  "No!"

  "Gracias, Senor! I thank you!"

  "You're welcome!" agreed the New Yorker, with repressed feeling.

  "Adios! Adios, Senor Speed!"

  "Good-bye!" exclaimed the two in chorus.

  Carara returned the knife to its hiding-place, swept the floor gracefully with his sombrero, then placing the spangled head- piece at an exact angle upon his raven locks, lounged out, his silver spurs tinkling in the silence.

  Glass took a deep breath.

  "He doesn't mean to kill you—just cut you," said Speed. "I got it," declared the other, fervently. Again he laid repressing hands upon his bulging front and looked down at it tenderly. "They've all got it in for my pad, haven't they?"

  "I told you to keep away from that girl."

  "Humph!" Glass spoke with soulful conviction. "Take it from me, Bo, I'll walk around her as if she was a lake. Who'd ever think that chorus-man was a killer?"

  "Surely you don't care for her seriously?"

  "Not now. I—I love my Cuban, but"—he quivered apprehensively—

  "I'll bet that rummy packs a 'shiv' in every pocket."

  From outside the bunk-house came the low, musical notes of a quail, and Glass puckered his lips to answer, then grew pale. "That's her," he declared, in a panic. "I've got a date with her."

  "Are you going to keep it?"

  "Not for a nose-bag full of gold nuggets! Take a look, Wally, and see what she's doing."

  Speed did as directed. "She's waiting."

  "Let her wait," breathed the trainer.

  "Here comes Stover and Willie."

  "More bad news." Glass unrolled his prayer-rug, and stepped upon it hastily. "Say, what's that word? Quick! You know! The password. Quick!"

  "Allah!"

  "That's her!" The fat man began to mumble thickly. It was plain that his spirit was utterly broken.

  But this call was prompted purely by solicitude, it seemed. Willie had little to say, and Stover, ignoring all mention of the earlier encounter he had witnessed, exclaimed:

  "There's been some queer goin's-on 'round here, Mr. Speed. Have you noticed 'em?"

  "No. What sort?"

  "Well, the other mornin' I discovered some tracks through one of

  Miss Jean's flower-beds."

  "Tracks!"

  "Sure! Strange tracks. Man's tracks."

  "What does that signify?"

  "We ain't altogether certain. Carara says he seen a stranger hangin' around night before last, and jest now we found where a hoss had been picketed out in the ravine. Looks like he'd stood there more'n once."

  "Why, this is decidedly mysterious."

  "We figured we'd ought to tell you."

  "It has nothing to do with me."

  "I ain't sure. It looks to us like it's somebody from the

  Centipede. They're equal to any devilment."

  Speed showed an utter lack of comprehension, so Willie explained.

  "Understand, we've made this race pay or play. Mebbe they aim to cripple you."

  "Me!" Speed started. "Good Heavens!"

  "Oh, they'd do it quick enough! I wouldn't put it past 'em to drop a .45 through your winder if it could be done safe."

  "Shoot me, you mean?"

  "Allah!" said Glass, devoutly from his corner.

  Stover and Willie nodded. "If I was you, I'd keep the lamp between me and the winder every night."

  "Why, this is abominable!" exclaimed the young college man, stiffly. "I—I can't stand for this, it's getting too serious."

  "There ain't nothin' to fear," said Willie, soothingly. "Remember, I told you at the start that we'd see there wasn't no crooked work done. Well, I'm goin' to ride herd on you, constant, Mr. Speed." He smiled in a manner to reassure. "If there's any shootin' comes off, I'll be in on it."

  "S—say, what's to prevent us being murdered when we're out for a run?" queried Glass.

  "Me!" declared the little man. "I'll saddle my bronc' an' lope along with you. We'll keep to the open country."

  Instantly Speed saw the direful consequences of such a procedure, and summoned his courage to say: "No. It's very kind of you, but I shall give up training."

  "What!"

  "I mean training on the road. I—I'll run indoors."

  "Not a bit like it," declared Stover. "You'll get your daily run if we have to lay off all the punchers on the place and put 'em on as a body-guard."

  "But I don't want a body-guard!" cried the athlete desperately.

  "We can't let you get hurt. You're worth too much to us."

  "Larry and I will take a chance."

  "Not for mine!" firmly declared the trainer. "I don't need no mineral in my system. I'm for the house."

  "Then I shall run alone."

  "You're game," said Willie admiringly, and his auditor breathed easier, "but we can't allow it."

  "I—I'd rather risk my life than put you to so much trouble."

  "It's only a pleasure."

  "Nevertheless, I can't allow it. I'll run alone, if they kill me for it."

  "Oh, they won't try to kill you. They'll probably shoot you in the legs. That's just as good, and it's a heap easier to get away with."

  Speed felt his knee-caps twitching.

  "I've got it!" said he at last. "I'll run at night!"

  Stover hesitated thoughtfully. "I don't reckon you could do yourself justice that-away, but you might do your trainin' at daylight. The Centipede goes to work the same time we do, and the chances is your assassin won't
miss his breakfast."

  "Good! I—I'll do that!"

  "I sure admire your courage, but if you see anything suspicious, let us know. We'll git 'em," said Willie.

  "Thank you."

  The two men went out, whereupon Glass chattered:

  "W—what did I tell you? It's worse'n suicide to stick around this farm. I'm going to blow."

  "Where are you going?"

  "New York. Let's beat it!"

  "Never!" exclaimed the college man, stubbornly. We'll hear from Covington before long. Besides, I can't leave until I get some money from home."

  "Let's walk."

  "Don't be a fool!"

  "Then I've got to have a drink." Glass started for the living- quarters, but at the door ducked quickly out of sight.

  "She's there!" he whispered tragically. "She seen me, too!"

  Mariedetta was squatting in the shade opposite, her eyes fixed stolidly upon the training-quarters.

  "Then you've got to lay low till she gives up," declared Wally.

  "We're in trouble enough as it is."

  For nearly an hour the partners discussed the situation while the Mexican maid retained her position; then, when Glass was on the verge of making a desperate sally, Cloudy entered silently. Although this had been an unhappy morning for the trainer, here at least was one person of whom he had no fear, and his natural optimism being again to the fore, he greeted the Indian lightly.

  "Well, how's the weather, Cloudy?"

  "Mr. Cloudy to you," said the other. Both Glass and his protege stared. It was the first word the Indian had uttered since their arrival. Lawrence winked at his companion.

  "All right, if you like it better. How's the weather, Mister Cloudy?" He snickered at his own joke, whereupon the aborigine turned upon him slowly, and said, in perfect English:

  "Your humor is misplaced with me. Don't forget, Mr. Glass, that the one Yale football team you trained, I dropped a goal on from the forty-five-yard line."

  Glass allowed his mouth to open in amazement. The day was replete with surprises.

  "'96!" he said, while the light of understanding came over him. "You're Cloudy-but-the-Sun-Shines?"

 

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