“Baby bandits”
It was twenty-four hours
before Detective Sergeant Flannagan awoke to the fact
that something had been put over on him, and that
a Kansas farmer’s wife had done the putting.
He managed to piece it out finally
from the narratives of the two tramps, and when he
had returned to the Shorter home and listened to the
contradictory and whole-souled improvisations of Shorter
pere and mere he was convinced.
Whereupon he immediately telegraphed
Chicago headquarters and obtained the necessary authority
to proceed upon the trail of the fugitive, Byrne.
And so it was that Sergeant Flannagan
landed in El Paso a few days later, drawn thither
by various pieces of intelligence he had gathered
en route, though with much delay and consequent vexation.
Even after he had quitted the train
he was none too sure that he was upon the right trail
though he at once repaired to a telegraph office and
wired his chief that he was hot on the trail of the
fugitive.
As a matter of fact he was much hotter
than he imagined, for Billy and Bridge were that very
minute not two squares from him, debating as to the
future and the best manner of meeting it before it
arrived.
“I think,” said Billy,
“that I’ll duck across the border.
I won’t never be safe in little old U. S.,
an’ with things hoppin’ in Mexico the
way they have been for the last few years I orter
be able to lose myself pretty well.
“Now you’re all right,
ol’ top. You don’t have to duck
nothin’ for you ain’t did nothin’.
I don’t know what you’re runnin’
away from; but I know it ain’t nothin’
the police is worryin’ about—I can
tell that by the way you act—so I guess
we’ll split here. You’d be a boob
to cross if you don’t have to, fer if Villa
don’t get you the Carranzistas will, unless
the Zapatistas nab you first.
“Comin’ or goin’
some greasy-mugged highbinder’s bound to croak
you if you cross, from what little I’ve heard
since we landed in El Paso.
“We’ll feed up together
tonight, fer the last time. Then I’ll
pull my freight.” He was silent for a while,
and then: “I hate to do it, bo, fer you’re
the whitest guy I ever struck,” which was a
great deal for Billy Byrne of Grand Avenue to say.
Bridge finished rolling a brown paper
cigarette before he spoke.
“Your words are pure and unadulterated
wisdom, my friend,” he said. “The
chances are scarcely even that two gringo hoboes would
last the week out afoot and broke in Viva Mexico;
but it has been many years since I followed the dictates
of wisdom. Therefore I am going with you.”
Billy grinned. He could not conceal his pleasure.
“You’re past twenty-one,”
he said, “an’ dry behind the ears.
Let’s go an’ eat. There is still
some of that twenty-five left.”
Together they entered a saloon which
Bridge remembered as permitting a very large consumption
of free lunch upon the purchase of a single schooner
of beer.
There were round tables scattered
about the floor in front of the bar, and after purchasing
their beer they carried it to one of these that stood
in a far corner of the room close to a rear door.
Here Bridge sat on guard over the
foaming open sesame to food while Billy crossed to
the free lunch counter and appropriated all that a
zealous attendant would permit him to carry off.
When he returned to the table he took
a chair with his back to the wall in conformity to
a habit of long standing when, as now, it had stood
him in good stead to be in a position to see the other
fellow at least as soon as the other fellow saw him.
The other fellow being more often than not a large
gentleman with a bit of shiny metal pinned to his left
suspender strap.
“That guy’s a tight one,”
said Billy, jerking his hand in the direction of the
guardian of the free lunch. “I scoops up
about a good, square meal for a canary bird, an’
he makes me cough up half of it. Wants to know
if I t’ink I can go into the restaurant business
on a fi’-cent schooner of suds.”
Bridge laughed.
“Well, you didn’t do so
badly at that,” he said. “I know
places where they’d indict you for grand larceny
if you took much more than you have here.”
“Rotten beer,” commented Billy.
“Always is rotten down here,”
replied Bridge. “I sometimes think they
put moth balls in it so it won’t spoil.”
Billy looked up and smiled.
Then he raised his tall glass before him.
“Here’s to,” he
started; but he got no further. His eyes traveling
past his companion fell upon the figure of a large
man entering the low doorway.
At the same instant the gentleman’s
eyes fell upon Billy. Recognition lit those
of each simultaneously. The big man started
across the room on a run, straight toward Billy Byrne.
The latter leaped to his feet.
Bridge, guessing what had happened, rose too.
“Flannagan!” he exclaimed.
The detective was tugging at his revolver,
which had stuck in his hip pocket. Byrne reached
for his own weapon. Bridge laid a hand on his
arm.
“Not that, Billy!” he
cried. “There’s a door behind you.
Here,” and he pulled Billy backward toward
the doorway in the wall behind them.
Byrne still clung to his schooner
of beer, which he had transferred to his left hand
as he sought to draw his gun. Flannagan was
close to them. Bridge opened the door and strove
to pull Billy through; but the latter hesitated just
an instant, for he saw that it would be impossible
to close and bar the door, provided it had a bar,
before Flannagan would be against it with his great
shoulders.
The policeman was still struggling
to disentangle his revolver from the lining of his
pocket. He was bellowing like a bull—yelling
at Billy that he was under arrest. Men at the
tables were on their feet. Those at the bar had
turned around as Flannagan started to run across the
floor. Now some of them were moving in the direction
of the detective and his prey, but whether from curiosity
or with sinister intentions it is difficult to say.
One thing, however, is certain—if
all the love that was felt for policemen in general
by the men in that room could have been combined in
a single individual it still scarcely would have constituted
a grand passion.
Flannagan felt rather than saw that
others were closing in on him, and then, fortunately
for himself, he thought, he managed to draw his weapon.
It was just as Billy was fading through the doorway
into the room beyond. He saw the revolver gleam
in the policeman’s hand and then it became evident
why Billy had clung so tenaciously to his schooner
of beer. Left-handed and hurriedly he threw
it; but even Flannagan must have been constrained
to admit that it was a good shot. It struck
the detective directly in the midst of his features,
gave him a nasty cut on the cheek as it broke and filled
his eyes full of beer—and beer never was
intended as an eye wash.
Spluttering and cursing, Flannagan
came to a sudden stop, and when he had wiped the beer
from his eyes he found that Billy Byrne had passed
through the doorway and closed the door after him.
The room in which Billy and Bridge
found themselves was a small one in the center of
which was a large round table at which were gathered
a half-dozen men at poker. Above the table swung
a single arc lamp, casting a garish light upon the
players beneath.
Billy looked quickly about for another
exit, only to find that besides the doorway through
which he had entered there was but a single aperture
in the four walls-a small window, heavily barred.
The place was a veritable trap.
At their hurried entrance the men
had ceased their play, and one or two had risen in
profane questioning and protest. Billy ignored
them. He was standing with his shoulder against
the door trying to secure it against the detective
without; but there was neither bolt nor bar.
Flannagan hurtling against the opposite
side exerted his noblest efforts to force an entrance
to the room; but Billy Byrne’s great weight
held firm as Gibraltar. His mind revolved various
wild plans of escape; but none bade fair to offer the
slightest foothold to hope.
The men at the table were clamoring
for an explanation of the interruption. Two
of them were approaching Billy with the avowed intention
of “turning him out,” when he turned his
head suddenly toward them.
“Can de beef, you poor boobs,”
he cried. “Dere’s a bunch o’
dicks out dere—de joint’s been pinched.”
Instantly pandemonium ensued.
Cards, chips, and money were swept as by magic from
the board. A dozen dog-eared and filthy magazines
and newspapers were snatched from a hiding place beneath
the table, and in the fraction of a second the room
was transformed from a gambling place to an innocent
reading-room.
Billy grinned broadly. Flannagan
had ceased his efforts to break down the door, and
was endeavoring to persuade Billy that he might as
well come out quietly and submit to arrest.
Byrne had drawn his revolver again. Now he motioned
to Bridge to come to his side.
“Follow me,” he whispered.
“Don’t move ’til I move—then
move sudden.” Then, turning to the door
again, “You big stiff,” he cried, “you
couldn’t take a crip to a hospital, let alone
takin’ Billy Byrne to the still. Beat it,
before I come out an’ spread your beezer acrost
your map.”
If Billy had desired to arouse the
ire of Detective Sergeant Flannagan by this little
speech he succeeded quite as well as he could have
hoped. Flannagan commenced to growl and threaten,
and presently again hurled himself against the door.
Instantly Byrne wheeled and fired
a single shot into the arc lamp, the shattered carbon
rattled to the table with fragments of the globe,
and Byrne stepped quickly to one side. The door
flew open and Sergeant Flannagan dove headlong into
the darkened room. A foot shot out from behind
the opened door, and Flannagan, striking it, sprawled
upon his face amidst the legs of the literary lights
who held dog-eared magazines rightside up or upside
down, as they chanced to have picked them up.
Simultaneously Billy Byrne and Bridge
dodged through the open doorway, banged the door to
behind them, and sped across the barroom toward the
street.
As Flannagan shot into their midst
the men at the table leaped to their feet and bolted
for the doorway; but the detective was up and after
them so quickly that only two succeeded in getting
out of the room. One of these generously slammed
the door in the faces of his fellows, and there they
pulled and hauled at each other until Flannagan was
among them.
In the pitch darkness he could recognize
no one; but to be on the safe side he hit out promiscuously
until he had driven them all from the door, then he
stood with his back toward it—the inmates
of the room his prisoners.
Thus he remained for a moment threatening
to shoot at the first sound of movement in the room,
and then he opened the door again, and stepping just
outside ordered the prisoners to file out one at a
time.
As each man passed him Flannagan scrutinized
his face, and it was not until they had all emerged
and he had reentered the room with a light that he
discovered that once again his quarry had eluded him.
Detective Sergeant Flannagan was peeved.
The sun smote down upon a dusty road.
A heat-haze lay upon the arid land that stretched
away upon either hand toward gray-brown hills.
A little adobe hut, backed by a few squalid outbuildings,
stood out, a screaming high-light in its coat of whitewash,
against a background that was garish with light.
Two men plodded along the road.
Their coats were off, the brims of their tattered
hats were pulled down over eyes closed to mere slits
against sun and dust.
One of the men, glancing up at the
distant hut, broke into verse:
Yet then the sun was shining down, a-blazing
on the little town,
A mile or so ’way down the track a-dancing
in the sun.
But somehow, as I waited there,
there came a shiver in the air,
“The birds are flying south,” he
said. “The winter has begun.”
His companion looked up at him who quoted.
“There ain’t no track,”
he said, “an’ that ’dobe shack don’t
look much like a town; but otherwise his Knibbs has
got our number all right, all right. We are
the birds a-flyin’ south, and Flannagan was
the shiver in the air. Flannagan is a reg’lar
frost. Gee! but I betcha dat guy’s sore.”
“Why is it, Billy,” asked
Bridge, after a moment’s silence, “that
upon occasion you speak king’s English after
the manner of the boulevard, and again after that
of the back alley? Sometimes you say ‘that’
and ‘dat’ in the same sentence. Your
conversational clashes are numerous. Surely something
or someone has cramped your original style.”
“I was born and brought up on
‘dat,’” explained Billy. “She
taught me the other line of talk. Sometimes I
forget. I had about twenty years of the other
and only one of hers, and twenty to one is a long
shot—more apt to lose than win.”
“‘She,’ I take it,
is Penelope,” mused Bridge, half to himself.
“She must have been a fine girl.”
“‘Fine’ isn’t
the right word,” Billy corrected him. “If
a thing’s fine there may be something finer,
and then something else finest. She was better
than finest. She—she was—why,
Bridge, I’d have to be a walking dictionary to
tell you what she was.”
Bridge made no reply, and the two
trudged on toward the whitewashed hut in silence for
several minutes. Then Bridge broke it:
And you, my sweet Penelope, out there somewhere
you wait for me
With buds of roses in your hair and kisses on
your mouth.
Billy sighed and shook his head.
“There ain’t no such luck
for me,” he said. “She’s married
to another gink now.”
They came at last to the hut, upon
the shady side of which they found a Mexican squatting
puffing upon a cigarette, while upon the doorstep
sat a woman, evidently his wife, busily engaged in
the preparation of some manner of foodstuff contained
in a large, shallow vessel. About them played
a couple of half-naked children. A baby sprawled
upon a blanket just within the doorway.
The man looked up, suspiciously, as
the two approached. Bridge saluted him in fairly
understandable Spanish, asking for food, and telling
the man that they had money with which to pay for
a little—not much, just a little.
The Mexican slowly unfolded himself
and arose, motioning the strangers to follow him into
the interior of the hut. The woman, at a word
from her lord and master, followed them, and at his
further dictation brought them frijoles and tortillas.
The price he asked was nominal; but
his eyes never left Bridge’s hands as the latter
brought forth the money and handed it over.
He appeared just a trifle disappointed when no more
money than the stipulated purchase price was revealed
to sight.
“Where you going?” he asked.
“We’re looking for work,”
explained Bridge. “We want to get jobs
on one of the American ranches or mines.”
“You better go back,”
warned the Mexican. “I, myself, have nothing
against the Americans, senor; but there are many of
my countrymen who do not like you. The Americans
are all leaving. Some already have been killed
by bandits. It is not safe to go farther.
Pesita’s men are all about here. Even
Mexicans are not safe from him. No one knows
whether he is for Villa or Carranza. If he finds
a Villa ranchero, then Pesita cries Viva Carranza!
and his men kill and rob. If, on the other hand,
a neighbor of the last victim hears of it in time,
and later Pesita comes to him, he assures Pesita that
he is for Carranza, whereupon Pesita cries Viva Villa!
and falls upon the poor unfortunate, who is lucky
if he escapes with his life. But Americans!
Ah, Pesita asks them no questions. He hates
them all, and kills them all, whenever he can lay his
hands upon them. He has sworn to rid Mexico
of the gringos.”
“Wot’s the Dago talkin’ about?”
asked Billy.
Bridge gave his companion a brief
synopsis of the Mexican’s conversation.
“Only the gentleman is not an
Italian, Billy,” he concluded. “He’s
a Mexican.”
“Who said he was an Eyetalian?” demanded
Byrne.
As the two Americans and the Mexican
conversed within the hut there approached across the
dusty flat, from the direction of the nearer hills,
a party of five horsemen.
They rode rapidly, coming toward the
hut from the side which had neither door nor window,
so that those within had no warning of their coming.
They were swarthy, ragged ruffians, fully armed,
and with an equipment which suggested that they might
be a part of a quasi-military organization.
Close behind the hut four of them
dismounted while the fifth, remaining in his saddle,
held the bridle reins of the horses of his companions.
The latter crept stealthily around the outside of
the building, toward the door—their carbines
ready in their hands.
It was one of the little children
who first discovered the presence of the newcomers.
With a piercing scream she bolted into the interior
and ran to cling to her mother’s skirts.
Billy, Bridge, and the Mexican wheeled
toward the doorway simultaneously to learn the cause
of the girl’s fright, and as they did so found
themselves covered by four carbines in the hands of
as many men.
As his eyes fell upon the faces of
the intruders the countenance of the Mexican fell,
while his wife dropped to the floor and embraced his
knees, weeping.
“Wotinell?” ejaculated Billy Byrne.
“What’s doin’?”
“We seem to have been made prisoners,”
suggested Bridge; “but whether by Villistas
or Carranzistas I do not know.”
Their host understood his words and
turned toward the two Americans.
“These are Pesita’s men,” he said.
“Yes,” spoke up one of
the bandits, “we are Pesita’s men, and
Pesita will be delighted, Miguel, to greet you, especially
when he sees the sort of company you have been keeping.
You know how much Pesita loves the gringos!”
“But this man does not even
know us,” spoke up Bridge. “We
stopped here to get a meal. He never saw us before.
We are on our way to the El Orobo Rancho in search
of work. We have no money and have broken no
laws. Let us go our way in peace. You
can gain nothing by detaining us, and as for Miguel
here—that is what you called him, I believe—I
think from what he said to us that he loves a gringo
about as much as your revered chief seems to.”
Miguel looked his appreciation of
Bridge’s defense of him; but it was evident
that he did not expect it to bear fruit. Nor
did it. The brigand spokesman only grinned sardonically.
“You may tell all this to Pesita
himself, senor,” he said. “Now
come—get a move on—beat it!”
The fellow had once worked in El Paso and took great
pride in his “higher English” education.
As he started to herd them from the
hut Billy demurred. He turned toward Bridge.
“Most of this talk gets by me,”
he said. “I ain’t jerry to all the
Dago jabber yet, though I’ve copped off a little
of it in the past two weeks. Put me wise to
the gink’s lay.”
“Elementary, Watson, elementary,”
replied Bridge. “We are captured by bandits,
and they are going to take us to their delightful
chief who will doubtless have us shot at sunrise.”
“Bandits?” snapped Billy,
with a sneer. “Youse don’t call
dese little runts bandits?”
“Baby bandits, Billy, baby bandits,” replied
Bridge.
“An’ you’re goin’
to stan’ fer lettin’ ’em pull off
this rough stuff without handin’ ’em a
come-back?” demanded Byrne.
“We seem to be up against just
that very thing,” said Bridge. “There
are four carbines quite ready for us. It would
mean sudden death to resist now. Later we may
find an opportunity—I think we’d
better act simple and wait.” He spoke
in a quick, low whisper, for the spokesman of the
brigands evidently understood a little English and
was on the alert for any trickery.
Billy shrugged, and when their captors
again urged them forward he went quietly; but the
expression on his face might have perturbed the Mexicans
had they known Billy Byrne of Grand Avenue better—he
was smiling happily.
Miguel had two ponies in his corral.
These the brigands appropriated, placing Billy upon
one and Miguel and Bridge upon the other. Billy’s
great weight rendered it inadvisable to double him
up with another rider.
As they were mounting Billy leaned
toward Bridge and whispered:
“I’ll get these guys, pal—watch
me,” he said.
“I am with thee, William!—horse,
foot, and artillery,” laughed Bridge.
“Which reminds me,” said
Billy, “that I have an ace-in-the-hole —the
boobs never frisked me.”
“And I am reminded,” returned
Bridge, as the horses started off to the yank of hackamore
ropes in the hands of the brigands who were leading
them, “of a touching little thing of Service’s:
Just think! Some night the stars
will gleam
Upon a cold gray stone,
And trace a name with silver beam,
And lo! ’twill be your
own.
“You’re a cheerful guy,” was Billy’s
only comment.