The Charles Alden Seltzer Megapack

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The Charles Alden Seltzer Megapack Page 191

by Charles Alden Seltzer


  The latter was seated at his desk and looked up at the stray-man’s entrance. He opened his lips to speak, but closed them again, surprised at the stray-man’s appearance.

  During the months that Ferguson had worked at the Two Diamond, Stafford had not seen him as he looked at this moment. Never, during the many times the manager had seen him, had he been able to guess anything of the stray-man’s emotions by looking at his face. Now, however, there had come a change. In the set, tightly drawn lips were the tell-tale signs of an utterable resolve. In the narrowed, steady eyes was a light that chilled Stafford like a cold breeze in the heat of a summer’s day. In the man’s whole body was something that shocked the manager into silence.

  He came into the room, standing near the door, his set lips moving a very little, “You heard anything from Leviatt yet?” he questioned.

  “Why, yes,” returned Stafford, hesitatingly; “he was here, talkin’ to me. Ain’t been gone more’n half an hour. I reckon he’s somewhere around now.”

  “You talkin’ to him, you say?” said the stray-man slowly. He smiled mirthlessly. “I reckon you told him about them missin’ calves?”

  “I sure did!” returned Stafford with much vehemence. He laughed harshly. “I told him more,” he said; “I told him you was goin’ to show me the man who’d rustled them.”

  Ferguson’s lips wreathed into a grim smile. “So you told him?” he said. “I was expectin’ you’d do that, if he got in before me. That’s why I stopped in here. That was somethin’ which I was wantin’ him to know. I don’t want it to be said that I didn’t give him a chance.”

  Stafford rose from his chair, taking a step toward the stray-man.

  “Why, what—?” he began. But a look at the stray-man’s face silenced him.

  “I’ve come over here to-day to show you that rustler I told you about yesterday. I’m goin’ to look for him now. If he ain’t sloped I reckon you’ll see him pretty soon.”

  Leviatt stepped down from the door of the manager’s office and strode slowly toward the bunkhouse. On the way he passed several of the men, but he paid no attention to them, his face wearing an evil expression, his eyes glittering venomously.

  When he reached the bunkhouse he passed several more of the men without a word, going directly to a corner of the room where sat Tucson and conversing earnestly with his friend. A little later both he and Tucson rose and passed out of the bunkhouse, walking toward the blacksmith shop.

  After a little they appeared, again joining the group outside the bunkhouse. It was while Leviatt and Tucson were in the blacksmith shop that Ferguson had come in. When they came out again the stray-man had disappeared into the manager’s office.

  Since the day when in the manager’s office, Ferguson had walked across the floor to return to Leviatt the leather tobacco pouch that the latter had dropped in the depression on the ridge above the gully where the stray-man had discovered the dead Two Diamond cow and her calf, Leviatt had known that the stray-man suspected him of being leagued with the rustlers. But this knowledge had not disturbed him. He felt secure because of his position. Even the stray-man would have to have absolute, damning evidence before he could hope to be successful in proving a range boss guilty of cattle stealing.

  Leviatt had been more concerned over the stray-man’s apparent success in courting Mary Radford. His hatred—beginning with the shooting match in Dry Bottom—had been intensified by the discovery of Ferguson on the Radford porch in Bear Flat; by the incident at the bunkhouse, when Rope Jones had prevented Tucson from shooting the stray-man from behind, and by the discovery that the latter suspected him of complicity with the cattle thieves. But it had reached its highest point when Mary Radford spurned his love. After that he had realized that just so long as the stray-man lived and remained at the Two Diamond there would be no peace or security for him there.

  Yet he had no thought of settling his differences with Ferguson as man to man. Twice had he been given startling proof of the stray-man’s quickness with the six-shooter, and each time his own slowness had been crushingly impressed on his mind. He was not fool enough to think that he could beat the stray-man at that game.

  But there were other ways. Rope Jones had discovered that—when it had been too late to profit. Rope had ridden into a carefully laid trap and, in spite of his reputation for quickness in drawing his weapon, had found that the old game of getting a man between two fires had proven efficacious.

  And now Leviatt and Tucson were to attempt the scheme again. Since his interview with Stafford, Leviatt had become convinced that the time for action had come. Ferguson had left word with the manager that he was to show the latter the rustler, and by that token Leviatt knew that the stray-man had gathered evidence against him and was prepared to show him to the manager in his true light. He, in turn, had left a message with the manager for Ferguson. “We’ll be ready for him,” he had said.

  He did not know whether Ferguson had received this message. It had been a subtle thought; the words had been merely involuntary. By “We” the manager had thought that he had meant the entire outfit was to be held ready to apprehend the rustler. Leviatt had meant only himself and Tucson.

  And they were ready. Down in the blacksmith shop, while Ferguson had ridden in and stepped into the manager’s office, had Leviatt and Tucson made their plan. When they had joined the group in front of the bunkhouse and had placed themselves in positions where thirty or forty feet of space yawned between them, they had been making the first preparatory movement. The next would come when Ferguson appeared, to carry out his intention of showing Stafford the rustler.

  To none of the men of the outfit did Leviatt or Tucson reveal anything of the nervousness that affected them. They listened to the rough jest, they laughed when the others laughed, they dropped an occasional word of encouragement. They even laughed at jokes in which there was no visible point.

  But they did not move from their places, nor did they neglect to keep a sharp, alert eye out for the stray-man’s appearance. And when they saw him come out of the door of the office they neglected to joke or laugh, but stood silent, with the thirty or forty feet of space between them, their faces paling a little, their hearts laboring a little harder.

  When Ferguson stepped out of the door of the office, Stafford followed. The stray-man had said enough to arouse the manager’s suspicions, and there was something about the stray-man’s movements which gave the impression that he contemplated something more than merely pointing out the thief. If warning of impending tragedy had ever shone in a man’s eyes, Stafford was certain that it had shone in the stray-man’s during the brief time that he had been in the office and when he had stepped down from the door.

  Stafford had received no invitation to follow the stray-man, but impelled by the threat in the latter’s eyes and by the hint of cold resolution that gave promise of imminent tragedy, he stepped down also, trailing the stray-man at a distance of twenty yards.

  Ferguson did not hesitate once in his progress toward the bunkhouse, except to cast a rapid, searching glance toward a group of two or three men who lounged in the shade of the eaves of the building. Passing the blacksmith shop he continued toward the bunkhouse, walking with a steady stride, looking neither to the right or left.

  Other men in the group, besides Leviatt and Tucson, had seen the stray-man coming, and as he came nearer, the talk died and a sudden silence fell. Ferguson came to a point within ten feet of the group of men, who were ranged along the wall of the bunkhouse. Stafford had come up rapidly, and he now stood near a corner of the bunkhouse in an attitude of intense attention.

  He was in a position where he could see the stray-man’s face, and he marveled at the sudden change that had come into it. The tragedy had gone, and though the hard lines were still around his mouth, the corners twitched a little, as though moved by a cold, feline humor. There was a hint of mockery in his eyes—a chilling mockery, much like that which the manager had seen in them months before when in Dry
Bottom the stray-man had told Leviatt that he thought he was a “plum man.”

  But now Stafford stood breathless as he heard the stray-man’s voice, directed at Leviatt. “I reckon you think you’ve been some busy lately,” he drawled.

  Meaningless words, as they appear here; meaningless to the group of men and to the Two Diamond manager; yet to Leviatt they were burdened with a dire significance. They told him that the stray-man was aware of his duplicity; they meant perhaps that the stray-man knew of his dealings with the cattle thieves whom he had visited yesterday in the hills near the river. Whatever Leviatt thought, there was significance enough in the words to bring a sneering smile to his face.

  “Meanin’?” he questioned, his eyes glittering evilly.

  Ferguson smiled, his eyes unwavering and narrowing a very little as they met those of his questioner. Deliberately, as though the occasion were one of unquestioned peace, he drew out some tobacco and several strips of rice paper. Selecting one of the strips of paper, he returned the others to a pocket and proceeded to roll a cigarette. His movements were very deliberate. Stafford watched him, fascinated by his coolness. In the tense silence no sound was heard except a subdued rattle of pans in the bunkhouse—telling that the cook and his assistant were at work.

  The cigarette was made finally, and then the stray-man lighted it and looked again at Leviatt, ignoring his question, asking another himself. “You workin’ down the creek yesterday?” he said.

  “Up!” snapped Leviatt. The question had caught him off his guard or he would have evaded it. He had told the lie out of pure perverseness.

  Ferguson took a long pull at his cigarette. “Well, now,” he returned, “that’s mighty peculiar. I’d have swore that I seen you an’ Tucson ridin’ down the river yesterday. Thought I saw you in a basin in the hills, talkin’ to some men that I’d never seen before. I reckon I was mistaken, but I’d have swore that I’d seen you.”

  Leviatt’s face was colorless. Standing with his profile to Tucson, he closed one eye furtively. This had been a signal that had previously been agreed upon. Tucson caught it and turned slightly, letting one hand fall to his right hip, immediately above the butt of his pistol.

  “Hell!” sneered Leviatt, “you’re seein’ a heap of things since you’ve been runnin’ with Mary Radford!”

  Ferguson laughed mockingly. “Mebbe I have,” he returned. “Ridin’ with her sure makes a man open his eyes considerable.”

  Now he ignored Leviatt, speaking to Stafford. “When I was in here one day, talkin’ to you,” he said quietly, “you told me about you an’ Leviatt goin’ to Dry Bottom to hire a gunfighter. I reckon you told that right?”

  “I sure did,” returned Stafford.

  Ferguson took another pull at his cigarette—blowing the smoke slowly skyward. And he drawled again, so that there was a distinct space between the words.

  “I reckon you didn’t go around advertisin’ that?” he asked.

  Stafford shook his head negatively. “There ain’t anyone around here knowed anything about that but me an’ you an’ Leviatt,” he returned.

  Ferguson grinned coldly. “An’ yet it’s got out,” he stated quietly. “I reckon if no one but us three knowed about it, one of us has been gassin’. I wouldn’t think that you’d done any gassin’,” he added, speaking to Stafford.

  The latter slowly shook his head.

  Ferguson continued, his eyes cold and alert. “An’ I reckon that I ain’t shot off about it—unless I’ve been dreamin’. Accordin’ to that it must have been Leviatt who told Mary Radford that I’d been hired to kill her brother.”

  Leviatt sneered. “Suppose I did?” he returned, showing his teeth in a savage snarl. “What are you goin’ to do about it?”

  “Nothin’ now,” drawled Ferguson. “I’m glad to hear that you ain’t denyin’ it.” He spoke to Stafford, without removing his gaze from the range boss.

  “Yesterday,” he stated calmly, “I was ridin’ down the river. I found a basin among the hills. There was a cabin down there. Four men was talkin’ in front of it. There was twenty calves an’ a dozen cows in a corral. Two of the men was—”

  Leviatt’s right hand dropped suddenly to his holster. His pistol was half out. Tucson’s hand was also wrapped around the butt of his pistol. But before the muzzle of either man’s gun had cleared its holster, there was a slight movement at the stray-man’s sides and his two guns glinted in the white sunlight. There followed two reports, so rapidly that they blended. Smoke curled from the muzzles of the stray-man’s pistols.

  Tucson sighed, placed both hands to his chest, and pitched forward headlong, stretching his length in the sand. For an instant Leviatt stood rigid, his left arm swinging helplessly by his side, broken by the stray-man’s bullet, an expression of surprise and fear in his eyes. Then with a sudden, savage motion he dragged again at his gun.

  One of the stray-man’s guns crashed again, sharply. Leviatt’s weapon went off, its bullet throwing up sand in front of Ferguson. Leviatt’s eyes closed, his knees doubled under him, and he pitched forward at Ferguson’s feet. He was face down, his right arm outstretched, the pistol still in his hand. A thin, blue wreath of smoke rose lazily from its muzzle.

  Ferguson bent over him, his weapons still in his hands. Leviatt’s legs stretched slowly and then stiffened. In the strained silence that had followed the shooting Ferguson stood, looking gloomily down upon the quiet form of his fallen adversary.

  “I reckon you won’t lie no more about me,” he said dully.

  Without a glance in the direction of the group of silent men, he sheathed his weapons and strode toward the ranchhouse.

  CHAPTER XXIII

  AT THE EDGE OF THE COTTONWOOD

  Ferguson strode into the manager’s office and dropped heavily into a chair beside the desk. He was directly in front of the open door and looking up he could see the men down at the bunkhouse congregated around the bodies of Leviatt and Tucson.

  The end that he had been expecting for the past two days had come—had come as he knew it must come. He had not been trapped as they had trapped Rope Jones. When he had stood before Leviatt in front of the bunkhouse, he had noted the positions of the two men; had seen that they had expected him to walk squarely into the net that they had prepared for him. His lips curled a little even now over the thought that the two men had held him so cheaply. Well, they had learned differently, when too late. It was the end of things for them, and for him the end of his hopes. When he had drawn his guns he had thought of merely wounding Leviatt, intending to allow the men of the outfit to apply to him the penalty that all convicted cattle thieves must suffer. But before that he had hoped to induce Leviatt to throw some light upon the attempted murder of Ben Radford.

  However, Leviatt had spoiled all that when he had attempted to draw his weapon after he was wounded. He had given Ferguson no alternative. He had been forced to kill the only man who, he was convinced, could have given him any information about the shooting of Radford, and now, in spite of anything that he might say to the contrary, Mary Radford, and even Ben himself, would always believe him guilty. He could not stay at Two Diamond now. He must get out of the country, back to the old life at the Lazy J, where among his friends he might finally forget. But he doubted much. Did men ever forget women they had loved? Some perhaps did, but he was certain that nothing—not even time—could dim the picture that was now in his mind: the hill in the flat, the girl sitting upon the rock beside him, her eyes illuminated with a soft, tender light; her breeze-blown hair—which he had kissed; which the Sun-Gods had kissed as, coming down from the mountains, they had bathed the hill with the golden light of the evening. He had thought then that nothing could prevent him from enjoying the happiness which that afternoon seemed to have promised. He had watched the sun sinking behind the mountains, secure in the thought that the morrow would bring him added happiness. But now there could be no tomorrow—for him.

  Fifteen minutes later Stafford entered the office to
find his stray-man still seated in the chair, his head bowed in his hands. He did not look up as the manager entered, and the latter stepped over to him and laid a friendly hand on his shoulder.

  “I’m thankin’ you for what you’ve done for me,” he said.

  Ferguson rose, leaning one hand on the back of the chair upon which he had been sitting. The manager saw that deep lines had come into his face; that his eyes—always steady before—were restless and gleaming with an expression which seemed unfathomable. But he said nothing until the manager had seated himself beside the desk. Then he took a step and stood looking into Stafford’s upturned face.

  “I reckon I’ve done what I came here to do,” he said grimly. “I’m takin’ my time now.”

  Stafford’s face showed a sudden disappointment.

  “Shucks!” he returned, unable to keep the regret from his voice. “Ain’t things suited you here?”

  The stray-man grinned with straight lips. He could not let the manager know his secret. “Things have suited me mighty well,” he declared. “I’m thankin’ you for havin’ made things pleasant for me while I’ve been here. But I’ve done what I contracted to do an’ there ain’t anything more to keep me here. If you’ll give me my time I’ll be goin’.”

  Stafford looked up at him with a sly, significant smile. “Why,” he said, “Leviatt told me that you’d found somethin’ real interestin’ over on Bear Flat. Now, I shouldn’t think you’d want to run away from her!”

  The stray-man’s lips whitened a little. “I don’t think Mary Radford is worryin’ about me,” he said steadily.

  “Well, now,” returned Stafford, serious again; “then I reckon Leviatt had it wrong.”

  “I expect he had it wrong,” answered the stray-man shortly.

  But Stafford did not yield. He had determined to keep the stray-man at the Two Diamond and there were other arguments that he had not yet advanced which might cause him to stay. He looked up again, his face wearing a thoughtful expression.

 

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