The Drift Fence

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The Drift Fence Page 23

by Zane Grey


  The cabin was very old, built of peeled pine logs and split shingles, which in places had rotted through. The front of the roof had an overhang of ten feet or more, with one post at each corner. That end of the cabin was open and there were no windows or doors. The fire was inside. Saddles and pack outfits were stacked under this projecting shed-like roof.

  “Wal, we’re heah,” announced Seth Haverly to Jim, as they came to a halt at the cabin. “I cain’t say that you squealed a hell of a lot on the way.”

  He was a thin, wiry young man, blond, with hazel eyes, clear as light and which certainly did not have any shifty quality. His beard was like fine amber moss.

  “No, Haverly, I’m not a squealer,” replied Jim. “And I could be worse off.”

  “Shore you could,” said the other, after a moment of surprise. “I reckon Jocelyn had you figgered wrong or he lied like a streak.”

  “What notion of me did he give you?”

  “Wal, you was a dude tenderfoot, afeered of your shadder. Swore he licked stuffin’s out of you.”

  Jim laughed. “Am I to get down?” he inquired.

  “Shore. Pile off.”

  “Was Jocelyn in West Fork yesterday when I had a little set-to with Dunn?”

  “Nope. But I was an’ I seen your little set-to. … Might I ask, Mister Traft, what you’d call a big set-to?”

  “Well, there’ll be a pretty fair one when Curly Prentiss and the Diamond hole you fellows here,” responded Jim, cheerfully. “And a real one when Slinger Dunn meets Hack Jocelyn. I wouldn’t be in Jocelyn’s boots for a million.”

  “Huh!—Wal, I kinda like you, Jim Traft, an’ I reckon I did thet furst day at Limestone, when I rid into your camp with Slinger. Do you recollect?”

  “Yes, I remember you, and that you seemed to have some sense.”

  “Wal, I used to. But I’m damned if I don’t think it left me when I fell out with Slinger.”

  Meanwhile the horses were unsaddled, hobbled, and turned loose. And Jim had a chance to look over the men. They were all young and they looked the part they were playing. Jim did not, however, conceive a very unfavorable impression. They were a group of cowboys misled—gone wrong; and that appeared to be a common enough thing in Arizona during the last of the ’eighties.

  Sam Haverly was also blond, almost red of hair and complexion, more sturdy than his brother, less lean of face and intelligent of eye. Hart Merriwell could not have been picked out of a group of cowboys for any distinct individuality. Boyd Flick was dark, small, and as he hobbled around in his enormous chaps Jim thought that he could never have stopped a pig in a lane. Jim had yet to hear the names of the two members of Haverly’s outfit that had been keeping camp here in the park. They certainly struck him forcibly, and the bigger one, a brawny fellow for a rider, had very pale eyes and hair like tow.

  “Whar’s our new boss?” he inquired, after greeting Seth, and his tone did not lack sarcasm.

  “Matty, you can cut thet talk,” replied Haverly. “Or I’m gonna get sore. … Jocelyn stayed behind.” And in succinct words he gave his questioner a few details of what had detained him. And these elicited a short terse comment, mostly profane.

  “If you’re hungry come an’ git it before I throw it out,” called the other fellow, from the cabin.

  “Make yourself to home,” said Haverly to Jim, leading him in.

  Whereupon these backwoods riders, precisely after the manner of cowboys, ate their breakfast standing or sitting or squatting, and one of them knelt with his. Jim very soon could have recommended the cook, and he made a hearty meal.

  “What am I supposed to do now?” he asked, genially.

  “Wal, you shore wouldn’t expect me to sing fer your amoosement,” replied Seth, dryly.

  “No. I’m feeling pretty good now, considering, and I don’t want to take risks,” returned Jim, just as dryly.

  This retort went home, for remarks were forthcoming anent Seth’s opinion of his vocal powers. The men looked frankly at Jim.

  “Wal, Traft, do I hawg-tie you or not?” queried Haverly.

  “I’m sure I can’t read your mind. As a matter of fact, Haverly, I don’t think you’ve got much gray matter. Or you’d never have let Jocelyn persuade you into this deal.”

  Haverly took that retort gravely, as well as corroborative ones from Matty and the cook.

  “If you’ll give your word not to make a break I won’t tie you up,” went on Haverly to Jim.

  “Man, I can’t promise that. Would you?” protested Jim.

  “Wal, I’ve done it, an’ lied like hell. … Mister Jim, you pear to be a straight-talkin’ fellar. Reckon we’ll jest cut this idee of you bein’ a tenderfoot. … You can set around heah in comfort. But if you run we’ll wing you. Thet’s my order. Do you savvy?”

  “Sure. And much obliged. Molly was right when she said you were a pretty decent fellow. It was only bad company that was making an outlaw of you. She was glad Slinger quit your outfit,” replied Jim, departing somewhat from literal veracity. But he had a deep game to play and he knew he could work hard in this simple, primitive mind.

  “Wal, so Molly said thet!” he ejaculated, with a queer look on his face. And he fell into a profound reverie.

  “Hyar we air,” announced Matty, spreading his hands. “An’ thet Jocelyn not in the outfit, Air we goin’ to wait around, riskin’ our necks, while he sparks a gurl?”

  “Sparks nuthin’. He’ll have to hawg-tie Molly Dunn, if he wants her near him,” replied Seth, snorting.

  Jim imagined he saw an opening. “Say, didn’t you see Jocelyn grab Molly last night? If he hadn’t she’d have run.”

  “I seen him. An’ I’ll bet you-all a hundred thet he packs her up heah,” replied Haverly.

  “Why, the man’d be out of his haid,” said Matty. “It’s bad enough to kidnap this heah Traft boy fer money. But to haul a Cibeque gurl up heah—for doubtful reasons!—Seth, this Jocelyn ain’t no Cibeque fellar no how.”

  “Matty, you’d needn’t rag me,” rejoined Seth, sullenly. “I cussed him fierce last night. An’ I said ‘No!’ If he fetches her— —; it’ll be the wuss fer him!”

  “An’ it’d be wuss fer us, don’t you fergit thet.”

  Sam Haverly spoke up, “Matty, you ain’t heerd aboot Jocelyn shootin’ Andy Stoneham last night?”

  “Andy! Fer Heaven’s sake, thet good-natured clerk of Enoch’s!” exclaimed Matty, aghast.

  “Hack swore Andy was informin’ ag’in’ us.”

  They all looked puzzled, and Seth Haverly shook his blond head broodingly. The expression of thoughts, opinions, criticisms, animosities, by these woodsmen seemed equivalent to the amassing of evidence.

  “Fellows,” broke in Jim, “Hack Jocelyn is too deep for you. He had the Diamond standing on its head. Even after I saw through him I had a job convincing some of them.”

  “S’pose you give us a hunch aboot this deal,” suggested Seth Haverly.

  “I will,” declared Jim, “provided you agree to what I asked.”

  Seth turned to Matty, who evidently was an important member of the outfit. “Traft says he’ll advise his uncle to pay a ransom, providin’ it’s not out of all reason, an’ thet Jocelyn don’t git no share.”

  “Strikes me hard,” said Matty.

  “Jocelyn will raise hell. He wanted to name the amount of ransom an’ write the letter to old Traft. But he’s not heah an’ we’ve shore no time to lose.”

  Jim had a wild idea. “Haverly, would you trust me to get the ransom for you?”

  That rendered the eager group speechless. Before Haverly regained his voice the cook, who had gone outside to empty a pan, whistled low and sharp. They all jumped, and it certainly startled Jim. Then Seth strode out, to be followed by the others.

  “Jocelyn comin’ down out of the woods—ridin’ double,” said the cook, pointing.

  “Fletch, if you ain’t correct!” ejaculated Matty. To this Seth Haverly added a volley of curses.

&nbs
p; Jim’s eyes roved and strained, at last to espy a horse coming under the pines carrying double. He stood stock-still, suddenly galvanized. How slowly the tired horse descended the slope! It was some moments before Jim made out Molly clearly. She was riding astride, behind Jocelyn’s saddle, and appeared to sit there easily. Her dark head grew distinct—then her face—then her eyes. Jim wondered how he would ever have the courage to look into them. A long night ride through the wild forest with that vicious cowboy!

  Jocelyn had a gray corded face—eyes like gimlets. He threw the bridle and, hands on hips, regarded the silent group.

  “Missed the trail an’ was lost till daylight,” he explained.

  Seth Haverly took a step out in front of his comrades. He was slow, guarded, but not afraid.

  “So, Jocelyn, you kidnapped Molly?” he queried, harshly.

  “Nope. She come willin’.”

  “What!”

  “She come willin’. Ask her yourself,” returned Jocelyn, coolly.

  “Molly, is he tellin’ me straight? Did you come up heah of your own accord?” demanded Haverly.

  “Yes, I did, Seth,” replied Molly, calmly.

  Haverly stepped closer and peered up into Molly’s face, as if to read not only confirmation of Molly’s admission but of suspicions of his own. Again he made that striking gesture with his hand, and turning to Jim, baffled, eyes afire, he said, “Traft, will you take a look at Molly an’ tell me if she’s drunk, crazy or—or—”

  He did not finish. There seemed to be eloquent manifestations about him that he had loved Molly Dunn.

  Jim dragged himself forward to obey, and there might have been a chain with iron balls attached to his legs. Yet something sustained him despite the icy clutch at his heart.

  Molly’s face was wan. The big dark eyes gazed straight down into Jim’s. He read in them love, hope, meaning.

  “Mawnin’, Jim!” she said.

  “Good morning, Molly! How—are you?” he managed to get out.

  “I’m all right, Jim.”

  “All—right?” he echoed. But he took little stock of her words. Jocelyn had acquired some control over her, probably lying to her about his authority in this kidnapping deal. Jim’s whole inner being seemed to collapse with his sudden relief. Her eyes told him all he wanted to know.

  “Shore. Only awful sleepy, hungry, an’ sore,” she answered.

  “Did you come with Jocelyn willingly?”

  “Reckon so, Jim. But I didn’t have a lot of choice,” drawled Molly, and from behind Jocelyn’s shoulder she gave him a deep warning look that certainly could not have been lost by the others.

  Jocelyn laughed sardonically. “My word goes a hell of a long way in this heah outfit.”

  “You fetched her ag’in’ my order,” declared Seth Haverly.

  “Yes, I did. But I tell you she would come,” snarled Jocelyn.

  “Tell that to the chipmunks,” retorted Seth, contemptuously, and turning to Molly: “Get down, gurl. You shore look fagged. Fletch will fix you somethin’ to eat. An’ I’ll make a bed for you.”

  He picked up an ax and strode off toward a clump of spruce. Molly slid down, and limping to a seat under the extension she asked for a drink of water. Matty hastened to get a dipperful from a bucket and proffered it, not without kindliness. Here was a girl of the Cibeque—their own kind—placed in a queer predicament by a comparative stranger.

  Jim’s gaze had followed Molly devouringly. Happening then to shift it to Jocelyn, he was struck by that worthy’s deep-set eyes, smoldering fire. Jim read intuitively that his very life was in peril, right at the moment. There did not appear to be any reason why Jocelyn could not and would not shoot him, as he had Andy Stoncham. It stilled Jim’s emotion. Sitting down, back to a log, he studied the ground and tried to catch at whirling thoughts. And the first one he got hold of was that Molly’s strength and composure were due to sacrifice. She was in possession of facts unknown to him or Haverly’s outfit. Jim believed he could unravel the plot presently.

  Seth returned carrying a huge bundle of spruce boughs, which he carried into the back of the cabin, where a stall-like partition hid a corner. Evidently behind this he made a bed, for he came out to get a blanket. After which task he reappeared, to approach Molly.

  “You can sleep back there an’ be out of the way,” he said.

  Finally Jocelyn dismounted, and uncinching the wet horse he threw saddle and blankets, unbuckled the bridle, and let him go.

  “I’ll eat somethin’,” he said, “an’ then we’ll talk.”

  He went in to the fireplace and sat on a box, where he could not see Molly. And when he bent ravenously to his meal Jim ventured to look at her. Deliberately she held up her left hand, and slipping the ring round to the back of her finger, where the big diamond caught the sunlight, she gave Jim a smile that seemed reward for all his agony. Yet, on second thought, there seemed, beside love and loyalty, a sadness that might be renunciation.

  Seth Haverly saw Molly’s look, also the ring, and if he did not put two and two together Jim missed his guess. Moreover, Seth did not react sullenly to this revelation.

  Presently Molly had satisfied her hunger and thirst and she repaired out of sight behind or in the stall at the back of the cabin. Jocelyn, about finished with his meal, watched her go, and there seemed that of a lean wolf in his gaze. A moment later he got up, and giving his belt a hitch he stalked out under the overhang of the roof, a strong figure, sure of himself and his resourcefulness. Among these men, anyway, he had no superior, and knew it.

  “What’s on your mind, Seth?” he queried.

  “Shore there’s aplenty, Jocelyn, an’ you’re part of it,” replied Haverly, gruffly.

  “Ahuh. Mister Traft’s been talkin’ to you. The man who gets your ear last has you on his side.”

  “Wal, if I’m not loco you stuffed both my ears prutty full.”

  “Come away from these crawfish of yours, an’ we’ll settle this deal pronto.”

  “Nope, not no more. Sam an’ the rest of my outfit air goin’ to heah every word I say.”

  Jocelyn rolled and lighted a cigarette. It struck Jim that he was prepared for most anything, and had little respect for the minds and abilities of these Cibeque riders. He leaned against the log post of the cabin and smoked, his hard eyes studying every one of them, and not missing Jim. Something Ring Locke had said to Jim seemed to be justified here. Jocelyn was one of the breed of far-riding cowboys, outlawed from many ranges, perhaps, and a dangerous man. He looked it now.

  Seth Haverly, after a pause, went on speaking: “I’m sore aboot your shootin’ Andy Stoneham.”

  “Thet’s none of your bizness,” snapped Jocelyn.

  “But it is. You’re in my outfit now. We’ll all be held part responsible for thet. I reckon it don’t make a hell of a lot of difference—if we get away with this ransom deal. But your stealin’ Molly Dunn from her home—thet’ll let us out.”

  “Haverly, I didn’t steal her. You’ve got ears, man. You heered her say she came willin’.”

  “Bah!”

  That nettled Jocelyn. He had lost grip here. “Haverly, you’ve no call to worry on account of Molly. She’s goin’ away with me to marry me.”

  “She is!—an’ you’re leavin’ us heah?”

  “Thet’s your affair. I told you it’d be a good idea to light out fer another range or hole up till the thing blowed over.”

  Haverly got up, red in the face.

  “It’s none of my mix, if Molly means to marry you. But it looks damn queer to me. I know thet gurl. She wouldn’t double-cross a Cibeque dog. … You’re playin’ a prutty high hand, Jocelyn, an’ I’m admittin’ you’re too smart fer this outfit.”

  “Thanks. But it ain’t so much of a compliment. … You’ve no kick comin’, if you get your stake out of it.”

  “I wouldn’t of had. But your murderin’ Stoneham an’ runnin’ off with Molly—thet puts a bad complexion on the whole deal. I’ve a mind to back
out of it.”

  “You will like hell!” asserted Jocelyn. “You’ll go through on this deal or you’ll have me to square up with.”

  The scarcely veiled threat had its solid effect upon Haverly. A break was imminent between them—a fact Jocelyn probably saw, but it would not come at once or openly.

  “Wal, we ain’t got a lot of time to palaver,” said Seth. “Curly Prentiss is on Traft’s trail, you can bet. The West Forkers air goin’ to give him a hunch. An’ wurst, Slinger Dunn has got to be considered.”

  “Dunn was beat so bad thet he’ll be layin’ up fer a week. Mister Traft played into our hands there.”

  “Jocelyn, you cain’t figger Slinger, an’ thet’s why I’ve my doubts aboot you. Shore as Gawd made little apples Slinger Dunn is on your trail right this minnit.”

  Jocelyn looked up at the threatening clouds rolling from the southwest.

  “It’ll rain tonight an’ then we can’t be trailed,” he said, confidently.

  “Wal, thet’ll only delay Slinger. He knows every hole in these hills, an’ he’s shore a hound on a scent.”

  Suddenly Jocelyn took hold of Haverly and dragged him out of earshot of the listeners. There in plain sight under a pine they argued, with Haverly growing less and less protesting. Finally they reached some kind of an agreement and returned to the cabin.

  “Sam, we’ve made the best of a bad bargain,” announced Seth. “The hitch was Molly. I jest don’t care to be around if Slinger happens along. Wal, Jocelyn has agreed to take the gurl an’ go to the haid of the draw up heah, an’ stay hid in thet trapper’s cabin at Turkey Spring. A rifle-shot will warn him to rustle. … As fer the deal—we’ll send Boyd to Flag pronto with the letter to old Traft. Boyd’s got the fastest hoss, an’ allowin’ half a day to get the money he can make it in lessen two days. What you say?”

  “Suits me,” said Sam, laconically.

  “Wal, it ain’t so slick,” added Matty. “Tomorrer is Sunday an’ no bank is open. Suppose Boyd don’t find old Traft at home?”

  Jocelyn waved this aside as if unworthy of consideration. “It’s the letter thet’ll fetch results. Blodgett or any of Traft’s friends would dig up ten thousand.”

 

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