“No, we ain’t!” denied Yaller Whiskers, which I now seen was wearing a deputy’s badge. And he got off and shaken my hand heartily. “You didn’t know we was special law-officers, and I reckon it did look bad, six men chasin’ a woman. We thought you was a outlaw! We was purty mad at you when we finally caught our hosses and headed back. But I begun to wonder about you when we found them six disabled outlaws in the store at Red Cougar. Then when we got to Clements’ cave, and found you’d befriended him, and had lit out on Ridgeway’s trail, it looked still better for you, but I still thought maybe you was after that gold on yo’re own account. But, of course, I see now I was all wrong, and I apolergizes. Where’s Ridgeway?”
“He got away,” I said.
“Never mind!” says Clements, pumping my hand again. “Kirby here and his men has got Jeff Middleton and five more men in the jail at Red Cougar. McVey, the old hypocrite, taken to the hills when Kirby rode into town. And we got six more of Ridgeway’s gang tied up over at Ridgeway’s cabin — or where it was till you burnt it down. They’re shore a battered mob! It musta been a awful fight! You look like you been through a tornado yoreself. Come on with us and our prisoners to Tomahawk. I buys you a new suit of clothes, and we celebrates!”
“I got to git a feller I left tied up in a tree down the gulch,” I said. “Jack Montgomery. He’s et loco weed or somethin’. He’s crazy.”
They laughed hearty, and Kirby says: “You got a great sense of humor, Elkins. We found him when we come up the gulch, and brung him on with us. He’s tied up with the rest of ’em back there. You shore was slick, foolin’ McVey into tellin’ you where Clements was hidin’, and foolin’ that whole Ridgeway gang into thinkin’ you aimed to rob Clements! Too bad you didn’t know we was officers, so we could of worked together. But I gotta laugh when I think how McVey thought he was gyppin’ you into stealin’ for him, and all the time you was jest studyin’ how to rescue Clements and bust up Ridgeway’s gang! Haw! Haw! Haw!”
“But I didn’t—” I begun dizzily, because my head was swimming.
“You jest made one mistake,” says Kirby, “and that was when you let slip where Clements was hidin’.”
“But I never told nobody but Sue Pritchard!” I says wildly.
“Many a good man has been euchered by a woman,” says Kirby tolerantly. “We got the whole yarn from Montgomery. The minute you told her, she snuck out and called in two of Ridgeway’s men and sent one of ’em foggin’ it to tell Buck where to find Clements, and she sent the other’n, which was Montgomery, to go along with you and lay you out before you could git there. She lit for the hills when we come into Red Cougar and I bet her and Ridgeway are streakin’ it over the mountains together right now. But that ain’t yore fault. You didn’t know she was Buck’s gal.”
The perfidity of wimmen!
“Gimme my hoss,” I said groggily. “I been scorched and shot and cut and fell on by a avalanche, and my honest love has been betrayed. You sees before you the singed, skint and blood-soaked result of female treachery. Fate has dealt me the joker. My heart is busted and the seat is tore outa my pants. Git outa the way. I’m ridin’.”
“Where to?” they ast, awed.
“Anywhere,” I bellers, “jest so it’s far away from Red Cougar.”
* * *
HIGH HORSE RAMPAGE
First published in Action Stories, August 1936
I GOT a letter from Aunt Saragosa Grimes the other day which said:
Dear Breckinridge:
I believe time is softenin’ yore Cousin Bearfield Buckner’s feelings toward you. He was over here to supper the other night jest after he shot the three Evans boys, and he was in the best humor I seen him in since he got back from Colorado. So I jest kind of casually mentioned you and he didn’t turn near as purple as he used to every time he heered yore name mentioned. He jest kind of got a little green around the years, and that might of been on account of him chokin on the b’ar meat he was eatin’. And all he said was he was going to beat yore brains out with a post oak maul if he ever ketched up with you, which is the mildest remark he’s made about you since he got back to Texas. I believe he’s practically give up the idee of sculpin’ you alive and leavin’ you on the prairie for the buzzards with both laigs broke like he used to swear was his sole ambition. I believe in a year or so it would be safe for you to meet dear Cousin Bearfield, and if you do have to shoot him, I hope you’ll be broad- minded and shoot him in some place which ain’t vital because after all you know it was yore fault to begin with. We air all well and nothin’s happened to speak of except Joe Allison got a arm broke argyin’ politics with Cousin Bearfield. Hopin’ you air the same, I begs to remane.
Yore lovin’ Ant Saragosa.
It’s heartening to know a man’s kin is thinking kindly of him and forgetting petty grudges. But I can see that Bearfield is been misrepresenting things and pizening Aunt Saragosa’s mind agen me, otherwise she wouldn’t of made that there remark about it being my fault. All fair-minded men knows that what happened warn’t my fault — that is all except Bearfield, and he’s naturally prejudiced, because most of it happened to him.
I knowed Bearfield was somewheres in Colorado when I j’ined up with Old Man Brant Mulholland to make a cattle drive from the Pecos to the Platte, but that didn’t have nothing to do with it. I expects to run into Bearfield almost any place where the licker is red and the shotguns is sawed-offs. He’s a liar when he says I come into the High Horse country a-purpose to wreck his life and ruin his career.
Everything I done to him was in kindness and kindredly affection. But he ain’t got no gratitude. When I think of the javelina meat I et and the bare- footed bandits I had to associate with whilst living in Old Mexico to avoid having to kill that wuthless critter, his present attitude embitters me.
I never had no notion of visiting High Horse in the first place. But we run out of grub a few miles north of there, so what does Old Man Mulholland do but rout me outa my blankets before daylight, and says, “I want you to take the chuck wagon to High Horse and buy some grub. Here’s fifty bucks. If you spends a penny of that for anything but bacon, beans, flour, salt and coffee, I’ll have yore life, big as you be.”
“Why’n’t you send the cook?” I demanded.
“He’s layin’ helpless in a chaparral thicket reekin’ with the fumes of vaniller extract,” says Old Man Mulholland. “Anyway, yo’re responsible for this famine. But for yore inhuman appetite we’d of had enough grub to last the whole drive. Git goin’. Yo’re the only man in the string I trust with money and I don’t trust you no further’n I can heave a bull by the tail.”
Us Elkinses is sensitive about sech remarks, but Old Man Mulholland was born with a conviction that everybody is out to swindle him, so I maintained a dignerfied silence outside of telling him to go to hell, and harnessed the mules to the chuck wagon and headed for Antioch. I led Cap’n Kidd behind the wagon because I knowed if I left him unguarded he’d kill every he-hoss in the camp before I got back.
Well, jest as I come to the forks where the trail to Gallego splits off of the High Horse road, I heard somebody behind me thumping a banjer and singing, “Oh, Nora he did build the Ark!” So I pulled up and purty soon around the bend come the derndest looking rig I’d saw since the circus come to War Paint.
It was a buggy all painted red, white and blue and drawed by a couple of wall-eyed pintos. And they was a feller in it with a long-tailed coat and a plug hat and fancy checked vest, and a cross-eyed nigger playing a banjer, with a monkey setting on his shoulder.
The white man taken off his plug hat and made me a bow, and says, “Greetings, my mastodonic friend! Can you inform me which of these roads leads to the fair city of High Horse?”
“That’s leadin’ south,” I says. “T’other’n goes east to Gallego. Air you all part of a circus?”
“I resents the implication,” says he. “In me you behold the greatest friend to humanity since the inventor of corn licker. I am Profes
sor Horace J. Lattimer, inventor and sole distributor of that boon to suffering humanity, Lattimer’s Lenitive Loco Elixir, good for man or beast!”
He then h’isted a jug out from under the seat and showed it to me and a young feller which had jest rode up along the road from Gallego.
“A sure cure,” says he. “Have you a hoss which has nibbled the seductive loco-weed? That huge brute you’ve got tied to the end-gate there looks remarkable wild in his eye, now—”
“He ain’t loco,” I says. “He’s jest blood-thirsty.”
“Then I bid you both a very good day, sirs,” says he. “I must be on my way to allay the sufferings of mankind. I trust we shall meet in High Horse.”
So he drove on, and I started to cluck to the mules, when the young feller from Gallego, which had been eying me very close, he says, “Ain’t you Breckinridge Elkins?”
When I says I was, he says with some bitterness, “That there perfessor don’t have to go to High Horse to find locoed critters. They’s a man in Gallego right now, crazy as a bedbug — yore own cousin, Bearfield Buckner!”
“What?” says I with a vi’lent start, because they hadn’t never been no insanity in the family before, only Bearfield’s great-grand-uncle Esau who onst voted agen Hickory Jackson. But he recovered before the next election.
“It’s the truth,” says the young feller. “He’s sufferin’ from a hallucination that he’s goin’ to marry a gal over to High Horse by the name of Ann Wilkins. They ain’t even no gal by that name there. He was havin’ a fit in the saloon when I left, me not bearin’ to look on the rooins of a onst noble character. I’m feared he’ll do hisself a injury if he ain’t restrained.”
“Hell’s fire!” I said in great agitation. “Is this the truth?”
“True as my name’s Lem Campbell,” he declared. “I thought bein’ as how yo’re a relation of his’n, if you could kinda git him out to my cabin a few miles south of Gallego, and keep him there a few days maybe he might git his mind back—”
“I’ll do better’n that,” I says, jumping out of the wagon and tying the mules. “Foller me,” I says, forking Cap’n Kidd. The Perfessor’s buggy was jest going out of sight around a bend, and I lit out after it. I was well ahead of Lem Campbell when I overtaken it. I pulled up beside it in a cloud of dust and demanded, “You say that stuff kyores man or beast?”
“Absolutely!” declared Lattimer.
“Well, turn around and head for Gallego,” I said. “I got you a patient.”
“But Gallego is but a small inland village” he demurs. “There is a railroad and many saloons at High Horse and—”
“With a human reason at stake you sets and maunders about railroads!” I roared, drawing a .45 and impulsively shooting a few buttons off of his coat. “I buys yore whole load of loco licker. Turn around and head for Gallego.”
“I wouldn’t think of argying,” says he, turning pale. “Meshak, don’t you hear the gentleman? Get out from under that seat and turn these hosses around.”
“Yes suh!” says Meshak, and they swung around jest as Lem Campbell galloped up.
I hauled out the wad Old Man Mulholland gimme and says to him, “Take this dough on to High Horse and buy some grub and have it sent out to Old Man Mulholland’s cow camp on the Little Yankton. I’m goin’ to Gallego and I’ll need the wagon to lug Cousin Bearfield in.”
“I’ll take the grub out myself,” he declared, grabbing the wad. “I knowed I could depend on you as soon as I seen you.”
So he told me how to get to his cabin, and then lit out for High Horse and I headed back up the trail. When I passed the buggy I hollered, “Foller me into Gallego. One of you drive the chuck wagon which is standin’ at the forks. And don’t try to shake me as soon as I git out of sight, neither!”
“I wouldn’t think of such a thing,” says Lattimer with a slight shudder. “Go ahead and fear not. We’ll follow you as fast as we can.”
So I dusted the trail for Gallego.
It warn’t much of a town, with only jest one saloon, and as I rode in I heard a beller in the saloon and the door flew open and three or four fellows come sailing out on their heads and picked theirselves up and tore out up the street.
“Yes,” I says to myself, “Cousin Bearfield is in town, all right.”
Gallego looked about like any town does when Bearfield is celebrating. The stores had their doors locked and the shutters up, nobody was on the streets, and off down acrost the flat I seen a man which I taken to be the sheriff spurring his hoss for the hills. I tied Cap’n Kidd to the hitch-rail and as I approached the saloon I nearly fell over a feller which was crawling around on his all-fours with a bartender’s apron on and both eyes swelled shet.
“Don’t shoot!” says he. “I give up!”
“What happened?” I ast.
“The last thing I remember is tellin’ a feller named Buckner that the Democratic platform was silly,” says he. “Then I think the roof must of fell in or somethin’. Surely one man couldn’t of did all this to me.”
“You don’t know my cousin Bearfield,” I assured him as I stepped over him and went through the door which was tore off its hinges. I’d begun to think that maybe Lem Campbell had exaggerated about Bearfield; he seemed to be acting in jest his ordinary normal manner. But a instant later I changed my mind.
Bearfield was standing at the bar in solitary grandeur, pouring hisself a drink, and he was wearing the damnedest-looking red, yaller, green and purple shirt ever I seen in my life.
“What,” I demanded in horror, “is that thing you got on?”
“If yo’re referrin’ to my shirt,” he retorted with irritation, “it’s the classiest piece of goods I could find in Denver. I bought it special for my weddin’.”
“It’s true!” I moaned. “He’s crazy as hell.”
I knowed no sane man would wear a shirt like that.
“What’s crazy about gittin’ married?” he snarled, biting the neck off of a bottle and taking a big snort. “Folks does it every day.”
I walked around him cautious, sizing him up and down, which seemed to exasperate him considerable.
“What the hell’s the matter with you?” he roared, hitching his harness for’ard. “I got a good mind to—”
“Be ca’m, Cousin Bearfield,” I soothed him. “Who’s this gal you imagine yo’re goin’ to marry?”
“I don’t imagine nothin’ about it, you ignerant ape,” he retorts cantankerously. “Her name’s Ann Wilkins and she lives in High Horse. I’m ridin’ over there right away and we gits hitched today.”
I shaken my head mournful and said, “You must of inherited this from yore great-grand-uncle Esau. Pap’s always said Esau’s insanity might crop out in the Buckners again some time. But don’t worry. Esau was kyored and voted a straight Democratic ticket the rest of his life. You can be kyored too, Bearfield, and I’m here to do it. Come with me, Bearfield,” I says, getting a good rassling grip on his neck.
“Consarn it!” says Cousin Bearfield, and went into action.
We went to the floor together and started rolling in the general direction of the back door and every time he come up on top he’d bang my head agen the floor which soon became very irksome. However, about the tenth revolution I come up on top and pried my thumb out of his teeth and said, “Bearfield, I don’t want to have to use force with you, but — ulp!” That was account of him kicking me in the back of the neck.
My motives was of the loftiest, and they warn’t no use in the saloon owner belly-aching the way he done afterwards. Was it my fault if Bearfield missed me with a five-gallon demijohn and busted the mirror behind the bar? Could I help it if Bearfield wrecked the billiard table when I knocked him through it? As for the stove which got busted, all I got to say is that self- preservation is the first law of nature. If I hadn’t hit Bearfield with the stove he would of ondoubtedly scrambled my features with that busted beer mug he was trying to use like brass knucks.
I’ve heard maniacs
fight awful, but I dunno as Bearfield fit any different than usual. He hadn’t forgot his old trick of hooking his spur in my neck whilst we was rolling around on the floor, and when he knocked me down with the roulette wheel and started jumping on me with both feet I thought for a minute I was going to weaken. But the shame of having a maniac in the family revived me and I throwed him off and riz and tore up a section of the brass foot-rail and wrapped it around his head. Cousin Bearfield dropped the bowie he’d jest drawed, and collapsed.
I wiped the blood off of my face and discovered I could still see outa one eye. I pried the brass rail off of Cousin Bearfield’s head and dragged him out onto the porch by a hind laig, jest as Perfessor Lattimer drove up in his buggy. Meshak was behind him in the chuck wagon with the monkey, and his eyes was as big and white as saucers.
“Where’s the patient?” ast Lattimer, and I said, “This here’s him! Throw me a rope outa that wagon. We takes him to Lem Campbell’s cabin where we can dose him till he recovers his reason.”
Quite a crowd gathered whilst I was tying him up, and I don’t believe Cousin Bearfield had many friends in Gallego by the remarks they made. When I lifted his limp carcass up into the wagon one of ’em ast me if I was a law. And when I said I warn’t, purty short, he says to the crowd, “Why, hell, then, boys, what’s to keep us from payin’ Buckner back for all the lickin’s he’s give us? I tell you, it’s our chance! He’s unconscious and tied up, and this here feller ain’t no sheriff.”
“Git a rope!” howled somebody. “We’ll hang ‘em.”
They begun to surge for’ards, and Lattimer and Meshak was so scairt they couldn’t hardly hold the lines. But I mounted my hoss and pulled my pistols and says. “Meshak, swing that chuck wagon and head south. Perfessor, you foller him. Hey, you, git away from them mules!”
One of the crowd had tried to grab their bridles and stop ‘em, so I shot a heel off’n his boot and he fell down hollering bloody murder.
Delphi Works of Robert E. Howard (Illustrated) (Series Four) Page 232