The Max Brand Megapack

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by Max Brand


  “The moment you even start to move fast, I pull the trigger. Remember it, Scottie. For as sure as there’s a hell, I’ll send you into it head first, if you don’t.” “So help me heaven,” said Scottie, “I’ll do what I can. I think I can talk ’em into it. But if I don’t?”

  “If you don’t, you’re dead. That’s short, and that’s sweet. Keep it in your head. Go back and tell them it would take too great a risk to try to fix me.

  “And there’s another thing to remember. If you should be able to get behind the wall without being shot, you’re not safe. Not by a long way, Scottie. I’d still be alive. And, though you’d have Hal Dozier there to cut up as you pleased, I’d be here outside the cabin watching it—with my rifle. And I’d tag some of you when you tried to get out. And if I didn’t get you all I’d start on your trail. Scottie, you fellows, even when you had Allister to lead you, couldn’t get off scot-free from Dozier. Scottie, I give you my solemn word of honor, you’ll find me a harder man to get free from than Hal Dozier.

  “Here’s the last thing: If you do what I tell you—if you get that crowd of drunken brutes out of the cabin and away without harming Dozier, I’ll wipe out the score between us. No matter what you told the rest of them, you know I’ve never broken a promise, and that I never shall.”

  He stopped and, stepping back to the rocks, sank slowly down behind them. Only the muzzle of his rifle showed, no more than the glint of a tiny bit of quartz; his left hand was raised, and, at its gesture, Scottie turned and walked slowly toward the cabin doorway. Once, stumbling over something, he reeled almost out of the shaft of light, but stopped on the edge of safety with a terrible trembling. There he stood for a moment, and Andrew knew that he was gathering his nerve. He went on; he stood in the doorway, leaning with one arm against it.

  What followed Andrew could not hear, except an occasional roar from Rankin. Once Larry la Roche came and stood before the new leader, gesturing frantically, and the ring of his voice came clearly to Andrew. The Scotchman negligently stood to one side; the way between Andrew and Larry was cleared, and Andrew could not help smiling at the fiendish malevolence of Scottie. But he was apparently able to convince even Larry la Roche by means of words. At length there was a bustling in the cabin, a loud confusion, and finally the whole troop went out. Somebody brought Scottie his saddle; Jeff Rankin came out reeling.

  But Scottie stirred last from the doorway; there he stood in the shaft of light until some one, cursing, brought him his horse. He mounted it in full view. Then the cavalcade started down the ravine.

  Certainly it was not an auspicious beginning for Scottie Macdougal.

  CHAPTER 41

  The first ten days of the following time were the hardest; it was during that period that Scottie and the rest were most apt to return and make a backstroke at Dozier and Andrew. For Andrew knew well enough that this was the argument—the promise of a surprise attack—with which Scottie had lured his men away from the shack.

  During that ten days, and later, he adopted a systematic plan of work. During the nights he paid two visits to the sick man. On one occasion he dressed the wound; on the next he did the cooking and put food and water beside the marshal, to last him through the day.

  After that he went out and took up his post. As a rule he waited on the top of the hill in the clump of pines. From this position he commanded with his rifle the sweep of hillside all around the cabin. The greatest time of danger for Dozier was when Andrew had to scout through the adjacent hills for food—their supply of meat ran out on the fourth day.

  But the ten days passed; and after that, in spite of the poor care he had received—or perhaps aided by the absolute quiet—the marshal’s iron constitution asserted itself more and more strongly. He began to mend rapidly. Eventually he could sit up, and, when that time came, the great period of anxiety was over. For Dozier could sit with his rifle across his knees, or, leaning against the chair which Andrew had improvised, command a fairly good outlook.

  Only once—it was at the close of the fourth week—did Andrew find suspicious signs in the vicinity of the cabin—the telltale trampling on a place where four horses had milled in an impatient circle. But no doubt the gang had thought caution to be the better part of hate. They remembered the rifle of Andrew and had gone on without making a sign. Afterward Andrew learned why they had not returned sooner. Three hours after they left the shack a posse had picked them up in the moonlight, and there had followed a forty-mile chase.

  But all through the time until the marshal could actually stand and walk, and finally sit his saddle with little danger of injuring the wound, Andrew, knowing nothing of what took place outside, was ceaselessly on the watch. Literally, during all that period, he never closed his eyes for more than a few minutes of solid sleep. And, before the danger line had been crossed, he was worn to a shadow. When he turned his head the cords leaped out on his neck. His mouth had that look, at once savage and nervous, which goes always with the hunted man.

  And it was not until he was himself convinced that Dozier could take care of himself that he wrapped himself in his blankets and fell into a twenty-four-hour sleep. He awoke finally with a start, out of a dream in which he had found himself, in imagination, wakened by Scottie stooping over him. He had reached for his revolver at his side, in the dream, and had found nothing. Now, waking, his hand was working nervously across the floor of the shack. That part of the dream was come true, but, instead of Scottie leaning over him, it was the marshal, who sat in his chair with his rifle across his knees. Andrew sat up. His weapons had been indeed removed, and the marshal was looking at him with beady eyes.

  “Have you seen ’em?” asked Andrew. “Have the boys shown themselves?”

  He started to get up, but the marshal’s crisp voice cut in on him. “Sit down there.”

  There had been—was it possible to believe it?—a motion of the gun in the hands of the marshal to point this last remark.

  “Partner,” said Andrew, stunned, “what are you drivin’ at?”

  “I’ve been thinking,” said Hal Dozier. “You sit tight till I tell you what about.”

  “It’s just driftin’ into my head, sort of misty,” murmured Andrew, “that you’ve been thinkin’ about double-crossin’ me.”

  “Suppose,” said the marshal, “I was to ride into Martindale with you in front of me. That’d make a pretty good picture, Andy. Allister dead, and you taken alive. Not to speak of ten thousand I dollars as a background. That would sort of round off my work. I could retire and live happy ever after, eh?”

  Andrew peered into the grim face of the older man; there was not a flicker of a smile in it.

  “Go on,” he said, “but think twice, Hal. If I was you, I’d think ten times!”

  The marshal met those terrible, blazing eyes without a quiver of his own.

  “I began with thinking about that picture,” he said. “Later on I had some other thoughts—about you. Andy, d’you see that you don’t fit around here? You’re neither a man-killer nor a law-abidin’ citizen. You wouldn’t fit in Martindale any more, and you certainly won’t fit with any gang of crooks that ever wore guns. Look at the way you split with Allister’s outfit! Same thing would happen again. So, as far as I can see, it doesn’t make much difference whether I trot you into town and collect the ten thousand, or whether some of the crooks who hate you run you down—or some posse corners you one of these days and does its job. How do you see it?”

  Andrew said nothing, but his face spoke for him.

  “How d’you see the future yourself?” said the marshal. His voice changed suddenly: “Talk to me, Andy.”

  Andrew looked carefully at him; then he spoke.

  “I’ll tell you short and quick, Hal. I want action. That’s all. I want something to keep my mind and my hands busy. Doing nothing is the thing I’m afraid of.”

  “I gather you’re not very happy, Andy?”

  Lanning smiled, and it was not a pleasant smile to see.


  “I’m empty, Hal,” he answered. “Does that answer you? The crooks are against me, the law is against me. Well, they’ll work together to keep me busy. I don’t want any man’s help. I’m a bad man, Hal. I know it. I don’t deny it. I don’t ask any quarter.”

  It was rather a desperate speech—rather a boyish one. At any rate the marshal smiled, and a curious flush came in Andrew’s face.

  “Will you let me tell you a story, Andrew? It’s a story about yourself.”

  He went on: “You were a kid in Martindale. Husky, good-natured, a little sleepy, with touchy nerves, not very confident in yourself. I’ve known other kids like you, but none just the same type.

  “You weren’t waked up. You see? The pinch was bound to come in a town where every man wore his gun. You were bound to face a show-down. There were equal chances. Either you’d back down or else you’d give the man a beating. If the first thing happened, you’d have been a coward the rest of your life. But the other thing was what happened, and it gave you a touch of the iron that a man needs in his blood. Iron dust, Andy, iron dust!

  “You had bad luck, you think. You thought you’d killed a man; it made you think you were a born murderer. You began to look back to the old stories about the Lannings—a wild crew of men. You thought that blood was what was a-showing in you.

  “Partly you were right, partly you were wrong. There was a new strength in you. You thought it was the strength of a desperado. Do you know what the change was? It was the change from boyhood to manhood. That was all—a sort of chemical change, Andy.

  “See what happened: You had your first fight and you saw your first girl, all about the same time. But here’s what puzzles me: according to the way I figure it, you must have seen the girl first. But it seems that you didn’t. Will you tell me?”

  “We won’t talk about the girl,” said Andrew in a heavy voice.

  “Tut, tut! Won’t we? Boy, we’re going to do more talking about her than about anything else. Well, anyway, you saw the girl, fell in love with her, went away. Met up with a posse which my brother happened to lead. Killed your man. Went on. Rode like the wind. Went through about a hundred adventures in as many days. And little by little you were fixing in your ways. You were changing from boyhood into manhood, and you were changing without any authority over you. Most youngsters have their fathers over them when that change comes. All of ’em have the law. But you didn’t have either. And the result was that you changed from a boy into a man, and a free man. You hear me? You found that you could do what you wanted to do; nothing could hold you back except one thing—the girl!”

  Andrew caught his breath, but the marshal would not let him speak.

  “I’ve seen other free men—most people called them desperadoes. What’s a desperado in the real sense? A man who won’t submit to the law. That’s all he is. But, because he won’t submit, he usually runs foul of other men. He kills one. Then he kills another. Finally he gets the blood lust. Well, Andy, that’s what you never got. You killed one man—he brought it on himself. But look back over the rest of your career. Most people think you’ve killed twenty. That’s because they’ve heard a pack of lies. You’re a desperado—a free man—but you’re not a man-killer. And there’s the whole point.

  “And this was what turned you loose as a criminal—you thought the girl had cut loose from you. Otherwise to this day you’d have been trying to get away across the mountains and be a good, quiet member of society. But you thought the girl had cut loose from you, and it hurt you. Man-killer? Bah! You’re simply lovesick, my boy!”

  “Talk slow,” whispered Andrew. “My—my head’s whirling.”

  “It’ll whirl more, pretty soon. Andy, do you know that the girl never married Charles Merchant?”

  There was a wild yell; Andrew was stopped in mid-air by a rifle thrust into his stomach.

  “She broke off her engagement. She came to me because she knew I was running the manhunt. She begged me to let you have a chance. She tried to buy me. She told me everything that had gone between you. Andy, she put her head on my desk and cried while she was begging for you!”

  “Stop!” whispered Andrew.

  “But I wouldn’t lay off your trail, Andy. Why? Because I’m as proud as a devil. I’d started to get you and I’d lost Gray Peter trying. And even after you saved me from Allister’s men I was still figuring how I could get you. And then, little by little, I saw that the girl had seen the truth. You weren’t really a crook. You weren’t really a man-killer. You were simply a kid that turned into a man in a day—and turned into a free man! You were too strong for the law.

  “Now, Andrew, here’s my point: As long as you stay here in the mountain desert you’ve no chance. You’ll be among men who know you. Even if the governor pardons you—as he might do if a certain deputy marshal were to start pulling strings—you’d run some day into a man who had an old grudge against you, and there’d be another explosion. Because there’s nitroglycerin inside you, son!

  “Well, the thing for you to do is to get where men don’t wear guns. The thing for you to do is to find a girl you love a lot more than you do your freedom, even. If that’s possible—”

  “Where is she?” broke in Andy. “Hal, for pity’s sake, tell me where she is!”

  “I’ve got her address all written out. She forgot nothing. She left it with me, she said, so she could keep in touch with me.”

  “It’s no good,” said Andy suddenly. “I could never get through the mountains. People know me too well. They know Sally too well.”

  “Of course they do. So you’re not going to go with Sally. You’re not going to ride a horse. You’re going in another way. Everybody’s seen your picture. But who’d recognize the dashing young man-killer, the original wild Andrew Lanning, in the shape of a greasy, dirty tramp, with a ten-days-old beard on his face, with a dirty felt hat pulled over one eye, and riding the brake beams on the way East? And before you got off the beams, Andrew, the governor of this State will have signed a pardon for you. Well, lad, what do you say?”

  But Andrew, walking like one dazed, had crossed the room slowly. The marshal saw him go across to the place where Sally stood; she met him halfway, and, in her impudent way, tipped his hat half off his head with a toss of her nose. He put his arm around her neck and they walked slowly off together.

  “Well,” said Hal Dozier faintly, “what can you do with a man who don’t know how to choose between a horse and a girl?”

  GUNMAN’S RECKONING (1921)

  CHAPTER 1

  The fifty empty freights danced and rolled and rattled on the rough road bed and filled Jericho Pass with thunder; the big engine was laboring and grunting at the grade, but five cars back the noise of the locomotive was lost. Yet there is a way to talk above the noise of a freight train just as there is a way to whistle into the teeth of a stiff wind. This freight-car talk is pitched just above the ordinary tone—it is an overtone of conversation, one might say—and it is distinctly nasal. The brakie could talk above the racket, and so, of course, could Lefty Joe. They sat about in the center of the train, on the forward end of one of the cars. No matter how the train lurched and staggered over that fearful road bed, these two swayed in their places as easily and as safely as birds on swinging perches. The brakie had touched Lefty Joe for two dollars; he had secured fifty cents; and since the vigor of Lefty’s oaths had convinced him that this was all the money the tramp had, the two now sat elbow to elbow and killed the distance with their talk.

  “It’s like old times to have you here,” said the brakie. “You used to play this line when you jumped from coast to coast.”

  “Sure,” said Lefty Joe, and he scowled at the mountains on either side of the pass. The train was gathering speed, and the peaks lurched eastward in a confused, ragged procession. “And a durned hard ride it’s been many a time.”

  “Kind of queer to see you,” continued the brakie. “Heard you was rising in the world.”

  He caught the face of the oth
er with a rapid side glance, but Lefty Joe was sufficiently concealed by the dark.

  “Heard you were the main guy with a whole crowd behind you,” went on the brakie.

  “Yeh?”

  “Sure. Heard you was riding the cushions, and all that.”

  “Yeh?”

  “But I guess it was all bunk; here you are back again, anyway.”

  “Yep,” agreed Lefty.

  The brakie scratched his head, for the silence of the tramp convinced him that there had been, after all, a good deal of truth in the rumor. He ran back on another tack and slipped about Lefty.

  “I never laid much on what they said,” he averred. “I know you, Lefty; you can do a lot, but when it comes to leading a whole gang, like they said you was, and all that—well, I knew it was a lie. Used to tell ’em that.”

  “You talked foolish, then,” burst out Lefty suddenly. “It was all straight.”

  The brakie could hear the click of his companion’s teeth at the period to this statement, as though he regretted his outburst.

  “Well, I’ll be hanged,” murmured the brakie innocently.

  Ordinarily, Lefty was not easily lured, but this night he apparently was in the mood for talk.

  “Kennebec Lou, the Clipper, and Suds. Them and a lot more. They was all with me; they was all under me; I was the Main Guy!”

  What a ring in his voice as he said it! The beaten general speaks thus of his past triumphs. The old man remembered his youth in such a voice. The brakie was impressed; he repeated the three names.

  “Even Suds?” he said. “Was even Suds with you?”

 

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