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The Charles Alden Seltzer Megapack

Page 107

by Charles Alden Seltzer


  Della had really felt vindictive toward Lawler on that last day in the line cabin. She had yielded to the resentment that had assailed her over the conviction that she had made no impression upon the man. And she had lied when she had told Warden that she had been merely infatuated with Lawler. She discovered that after she reached the hotel following her sojourn in the cabin with him. She wanted him more than she had ever wanted anything in the world. And she was determined to have him. She meant to win him even if she had to bring confusion upon Warden. And so she smiled as she watched Moreton open the jail doors to Lawler—a smile in which there was much triumph.

  CHAPTER XXXI

  “JAIL’S EMPTY, KANE!”

  The jail was small—merely one room with barred windows and an iron door, opening upon the street. The iron door was supplemented with a wooden one, which halted the glances of the curious. The windows were high, thus insuring further privacy; the hard adobe floor was clean, and the bunk in which Lawler lay when the dawn came was as comfortable as might have been expected.

  Moreton had come in just before daylight, solicitous, concerned, eager to lessen the discomforts of his prisoner. Back of the apology in his voice was a note of rage:

  “It goes ag’in’ the grain to keep you here, Lawler,” he said when he closed the door after entering; “but I’m goin’ to bring this case to a showdown today, an’ don’t you forget it!”

  But the sheriff did not bring the case up that day. A little later he provided Lawler with breakfast, and toward noon he opened the door to ask Lawler how he was getting along. On the occasion of this visit he told Lawler he was trying to locate Warden, but so far hadn’t been successful.

  “An’ I ain’t found that Wharton woman, either!” he declared. “I’m sendin’ a man out to the Two Diamond for both of them, an’ if they ain’t in town to appear ag’in’ you by night I’m goin’ to turn you loose—an’ be damned to them!”

  It seemed to Lawler that only an hour or so had elapsed when the key grated in the lock of the door and Moreton stuck his head in. His face lacked expression.

  “Someone to see you, Lawler,” he grunted, gruffly. “Wants to talk to you alone. I’ll be right outside, so’s you can call me when you’ve got enough of it.”

  He pushed the door open, and Della Wharton stepped in.

  Moreton closed the door, and Della stood watching Lawler steadily.

  Lawler had been standing near one of the rear windows, and when he recognized his visitor he came forward and stood within three or four paces of her.

  “Well, Miss Wharton?” he said, quietly.

  “I heard you were here, Lawler,” she said, evenly, her voice expressionless. “In fact, I saw the sheriff bring you in, last night.”

  “You expected me, I presume?”

  The sarcasm in his voice brought a faint glow to her cheeks. But her gaze was level and steady, containing much inquiry.

  “Yes,” she said slowly; “I expected you to be brought here. You know, of course, about the charge I brought against you?”

  “Why did you do it, Miss Wharton?”

  She laughed mirthlessly. “Why? I don’t know, Lawler. I expect I did it because I felt I ought to tell the truth.”

  Lawler’s grim smile did not seem to affect her. She met it steadily.

  “You say in your charge that I deliberately planned to kill Link and Givens; you said I laid in wait for them at the door. Is that the way you saw it?”

  “Yes.”

  “And you are willing to swear to that?” His smile was incredulous.

  She nodded affirmatively.

  He bowed stiffly to her. “In that case, Miss Wharton, there seems to be nothing more for us to talk about.” He walked to the front window, and stood on his toes, intending to call to Moreton to open the door for Miss Wharton, when she moved close to him and seized his left arm, drawing him suddenly toward her while he was off balance, so that when he turned he was facing her, standing close to her.

  The color that had surged into her face soon after her entrance, had gone. Her cheeks were white and her eyes held mute appeal that, she felt, he must respond to.

  She saw the cold contempt in his eyes as he looked at her, the lurking passion that lay deep in them, and the disgust that she should lie about a matter that might mean life or death to him.

  She must act, now, and she must sacrifice Warden. Her grasp on his arm tightened; she clung to him in seeming frenzy, and she spoke brokenly, pleadingly.

  “Lawler, I don’t believe what I said—what was written on that paper I signed. I know you acted in self-defense; you couldn’t help doing as you did.

  “Gary Warden forced me to sign that statement, Lawler—he threatened to kill me if I didn’t! He found out, some way, that I had been in the cabin with you. And he made me sign.

  “He told me that he didn’t intend to charge you with the murder; he said he merely wanted to threaten you—to keep you out of politics. Please believe me, Lawler!”

  Lawler laughed coldly, incredulously. “A minute ago you told me—”

  “I did that to frighten you,” she declared. “I—I thought that—perhaps—when you saw that I would testify against you—you would—” She paused and tried to get closer to him, but he held her off and watched her keenly, suspiciously.

  “Lawler,” she urged; “don’t you see? I thought you would agree to marry me if—if I told you that. And, now—”

  “An’ now it don’t make a damn bit of difference what you say!” interrupted a voice from the doorway. Both Miss Wharton and Lawler wheeled quickly, to see Sheriff Moreton standing in the room.

  He was grinning hugely, though his eyes were gleaming subtly.

  While Lawler and Miss Wharton watched him, he slowly tore to pieces the statement the woman had signed, and scattered them upon the floor.

  “That’s all of that damned nonsense!” he declared. “Lawler, I knowed they was somethin’ behind all this. That’s why I let this hussy in to talk to you. I thought I’d hear somethin’, an’ I did!”

  “Lawler, you’re free as the air! If there’s any more of this talk about chargin’ you with killin’ them two guys, an’ you don’t salivate them that’s doin’ the talkin’, I will!”

  After his first quick glance at Moreton, Lawler looked at Della. The deep amusement Lawler felt over the knowledge that the sheriff had overheard Della, and that the woman’s evidence would now be discredited, was revealed in his smile as he watched her.

  She saw it. She also understood that she had failed. But she veiled her chagrin and disappointment behind a scornful smile.

  “Framed!” she said. “And it was crude work, too—wasn’t it, Lawler? I should have been more careful. Ha, ha! Lawler, I should have known you would do something like this—after what happened in the line cabin. And I let you trick me!”

  She raised her head, disdaining to glance at Lawler as she walked to the door, in front of which Moreton was standing.

  She smiled broadly at the latter. “Mr. Sheriff,” she said, evenly; “if you will stand aside, I shall be glad to leave you.”

  Moreton grinned, admiringly. “You’ve sure got a heap of nerve, ma’am,” he complimented; “I’ll say that for you! I don’t know what your game is, but you’re mighty clever—though you’re wastin’ your time out here in the sagebrush. You ought to stay East—where there’s a lot more rummies than there is out here!”

  He opened the door, and bowed her out with extravagant politeness. Then, when she had gone, he motioned Lawler toward the door.

  “Jail’s empty, Kane. But I reckon we’d better play this deal safe. Dorgan, the county prosecutor, is in his office. We’ll go down to see him, an’ I’ll have him make a record of what happened here. Then, if I happen to get bumped off this here planet them scum can’t come back at you, sayin’ this never came off!”

  Lawler accompanied Moreton to the office of the prosecutor, who took the depositions of both men, attested the document and placed it in
the office safe.

  “So that’s the kind of a dame she is—eh?” grinned the official. “Well, she don’t look it. But you never can tell—can you?”

  CHAPTER XXXII

  RED KING RUNS

  Sheriff Moreton had left Red King at the livery stable, and after Lawler had thanked the sheriff for his part in the little drama that had just been played, he walked to the stable, saddled and bridled the big horse, mounted and rode out of town, toward the Circle L.

  While grim tragedy had lurked over the incident that had just closed, the thing had had its humorous side. And as Lawler rode he reflected smilingly, though feeling a pulse of shame for Della Wharton.

  In spite of the fact that the woman had charged Gary Warden with evolving the plot, Lawler felt nothing but contempt for the man. Warden’s schemes, so far, had resulted only in discomfiture for Warden himself. And because Lawler was not vindictive, he entertained no thoughts of reprisal.

  However, Lawler was now well equipped with evidence of Warden’s misdeeds. Months before, he had sent to Metcalf, the editor of the News, in the capital, the story of the drive to Red Rock, embellished with an account of his adventure with Antrim’s gang, his capture of Antrim and the subsequent bringing of the outlaw to Willets, where he had delivered him to Warden.

  Metcalf had written him that the publication of the article had created a sensation in the state, and it appeared from the prominent position in which Metcalf had placed the story—on the front page, with a picture of Lawler dominating; and big, black headlines announcing:

  “PROMINENT CATTLEMAN WORSTS TRAIL HORDE!”—that Metcalf had kept his promise to the effect that he intended to “feature” his fight against the power that was attempting to control the cattle industry.

  So far, though, Lawler had no evidence that the governor’s power had been used against them. He was convinced that Warden, Jordan, Simmons, and the others were employing their talents against him with the secret approval of the governor; but until he secured absolute, damning evidence he dared not openly charge it.

  Lawler had been waiting patiently for such evidence. He had felt all along that sooner or later his enemies would over-reach themselves, leaving some weak spot through which he could attack, and he had been content to wait until that time, merely defending himself and his interests, planning no aggressive campaign.

  The effect of the assaults of his enemies thus far had disturbed him little. He had been able to anticipate most of their attacks and they had resulted in little harm to himself. They had left him unperturbed, unharmed—like the attacks of an excitable poodle upon a giant, contemptuous mastiff.

  Deep in his heart, though, lurked a spark of passion that, day by day, had been slowly growing, warming him, making his veins swell a little when his thoughts dwelt upon Warden and the others; bringing into his heart a savage longing that he often had yielded to in the old days—before he had learned to control his passions. There were times when he was almost persuaded to break the laws for which he had fought in the old days—moments when it seemed to him that further toleration of the attacks of his enemies would be a sign of weakness. But he had conquered those surges of passion, though the victory always left him with a smile on his face that would have awed Warden, had he seen it.

  Something of that passion was in his heart now, as he rode toward the Circle L. It had become plain to him that Warden would adopt any means to destroy him; that in the man’s heart was a malignant hatred that was driving him to a boldness that could mean nothing but that in the end they must settle their differences as man to man. Lawler would not always be able to control the passion that lurked in him. He knew it. One day Warden would press him too hard. And then—

  His thoughts had made him oblivious to his surroundings. A whinney from Red King brought him out of his ruminations, and he looked swiftly up, and then directly ahead, to see a horseman racing toward him; the rider crouched in the saddle, the horse running low, coming toward him at a speed that brought him out of depressions with light, flying bounds, and over the crests of small hills with a velocity that was dizzying.

  The running horse and the crouching rider were still a mile from Lawler; but even at that distance Lawler recognized Shorty, and he urged Red King on to meet him, suspecting that nothing but a stern emergency would make the man race his horse at that speed.

  Lawler glanced back as he rode. He had come several miles, and the rolling character of the plains behind him had blotted Willets out. He saw, too, that he had reached a point where three trails converged. One—which Shorty was traveling—came westward from the Two Bar—Hamlin’s ranch; the other, leading almost straight southward, was the Circle L trail; the third, leading southward also, though inclining in a westward direction, ran to the Rabbit Ear, near the Dickman cabin—the ranch where Antrim and his men had established themselves.

  Shorty came on at cyclonic speed. When he reached a point within a hundred yards of Lawler, the latter observed that Shorty’s face was pale; that his jaws were set and his eyes glowing with a wild, savage light.

  Stiffening, his lips straightening, a responsive passion assailing him, Lawler drew Red King down and waited for Shorty to reach him. He knew Shorty did not permit himself to become excited without cause.

  And when Shorty drew his horse to a sliding halt within half a dozen paces of Red King, Lawler saw that Shorty was in the grip of a cold, deadly passion. His eyes were glittering, his lips were stiff and white, and he was drawing great, long breaths that could be heard above the shuddering gasps of the horse he rode.

  The giant’s fingers were working—clenching and unclenching near the butts of the two guns he wore; and his eyes were pools of icy rage that chilled Lawler.

  Twice he tried to speak as Lawler shot a short question at him, and twice he failed, making guttural sounds that betrayed the awful agitation that had seized him. At the third attempt he blurted:

  “Lawler, Antrim’s gang has cleaned up the Circle L! Damn their sneakin’, dirty hides! They’ve run off our cattle—takin’ ’em through Kinney’s cañon! They’ve wiped out the Circle L outfit! Blackburn’s left—Blackburn an’ three more poor fellows they plugged, an’ didn’t finish!

  “Blackburn made me ride for help—damn him, anyway, Lawler! I wanted to stay with the bunch!” Shorty’s voice broke; his lips quivered; his voice rose to a screech of impotent, awful rage. Brokenly, he told Lawler what had happened after the stampeding of the cattle by Antrim’s men. He related, in tumbling, rapid, quavering sentences, how he had got the help Blackburn had sent him for—Caldwell’s outfit—with the exception of two men who had been sent in different directions to other ranches. And how, later in the morning, he had returned to the shallow gulley on the plains where he had left Blackburn and the others, to find most of them dead. Blackburn and three more had been wounded, but had survived.

  “Fifteen men, Lawler!” raged Shorty; “fifteen men wiped out by that miserable gang of coyotes! But damn them!” he added with a fierce, savage joy; “they didn’t get away without payin’ toll, either! There’s twenty of them layin’ out there, Lawler—twenty of them for the coyotes to find. For Caldwell an’ his outfit wouldn’t touch ’em. When I left, to come an’ tell you—thinkin’ you was in jail—Caldwell an’ his boys was plantin’ our fellows, an’ takin’ Blackburn and the three others to the Hamlin shack!”

  He looked hard at Lawler, noted the paleness of the man’s face, and then spoke less excitedly, and with deep regret in his voice.

  “Lawler, I hate to tell you this. After I seen what happened to our boys, I rode this way, intendin’ to tell you. The trail took me past the Hamlin shack. I wasn’t intendin’ to stop, but it seems like they heard me comin’ an’ run out to see what was up.

  “It was your mother stopped me, Lawler—smiling kind of grim—like she always smiles when things go wrong.

  “‘Shorty,’ she says; ‘you go directly to town and find Kane. You know he’s in jail, for I told you so last night. Tell
Sheriff Moreton to release him; and then tell Kane that Antrim has stolen all the Circle L cattle and has burned all the Circle L buildings. Tell him that Antrim himself burned the buildings, and that Antrim said he would wait for Kane at Antrim’s shack—and that he dared Kane to come there for him. ‘Shorty,’ she said, cold an’ calm; ‘you tell Kane to get out of jail and go to Antrim’s cabin, and kill him!’”

  Lawler had sat, grim and silent, listening to Shorty. Twice had Shorty seen his eyes quicken—when Shorty had mentioned his mother, and again when he had spoken of Antrim’s action in burning the Circle L buildings.

  Now, he leaned forward and peered intently at Shorty, and Shorty marveled how his eyes bored into his own—with a cold intensity that chilled the giant.

  “Shorty,” he said, in a low, strained voice; “Mother hasn’t been hurt?”

  “I forgot to tell you that,” said Shorty; “she said, ‘tell Kane I am all right.’”

  Shorty opened his mouth to speak further, but closed it again when he saw Red King leap down the trails—a flaming red streak that flashed over the new grass at a speed that took him a hundred yards before Shorty could get his own horse turned.

  The big red horse was lost in a dust cloud when Shorty urged his own animal southward. And Shorty rode as he had never ridden before, in an effort to lessen the space between himself and the flying Red King.

  To no avail, however. Shorty’s horse was fast, but Red King seemed to have wings, so lightly did he skim over the green gulf of distance that stretched between his master and the vengeance for which Lawler’s soul was now yearning. Shorty’s horse was tired, and Red King was fresh; and the distance between them grew greater—always greater—slowly, surely—until the red horse was lost in the tiny dust cloud that moved with unbelievable velocity far down the trail toward the Rabbit Ear.

  CHAPTER XXXIII

 

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