BILLY TO THE RESCUE
It was nearly ten o’clock
the following morning when Barbara, sitting upon the
veranda of the ranchhouse, saw her father approaching
from the direction of the office. His face wore
a troubled expression which the girl could not but
note.
“What’s the matter, Papa?”
she asked, as he sank into a chair at her side.
“Your self-sacrifice of last
evening was all to no avail,” he replied.
“Bridge has been captured by Villistas.”
“What?” cried the girl.
“You can’t mean it—how did
you learn?”
“Grayson just had a phone message
from Cuivaca,” he explained. “They
only repaired the line yesterday since Pesita’s
men cut it last month. This was our first message.
And do you know, Barbara, I can’t help feeling
sorry. I had hoped that he would get away.”
“So had I,” said the girl.
Her father was eyeing her closely
to note the effect of his announcement upon her; but
he could see no greater concern reflected than that
which he himself felt for a fellow-man and an American
who was doomed to death at the hands of an alien race,
far from his own land and his own people.
“Can nothing be done?” she asked.
“Absolutely,” he replied
with finality. “I have talked it over
with Grayson and he assures me that an attempt at intervention
upon our part might tend to antagonize Villa, in which
case we are all as good as lost. He is none too
fond of us as it is, and Grayson believes, and not
without reason, that he would welcome the slightest
pretext for withdrawing the protection of his favor.
Instantly he did that we should become the prey of
every marauding band that infests the mountains.
Not only would Pesita swoop down upon us, but those
companies of freebooters which acknowledge nominal
loyalty to Villa would be about our ears in no time.
No, dear, we may do nothing. The young man
has made his bed, and now I am afraid that he will
have to lie in it alone.”
For awhile the girl sat in silence,
and presently her father arose and entered the house.
Shortly after she followed him, reappearing soon
in riding togs and walking rapidly to the corrals.
Here she found an American cowboy busily engaged
in whittling a stick as he sat upon an upturned cracker
box and shot accurate streams of tobacco juice at
a couple of industrious tumble bugs that had had the
great impudence to roll their little ball of provender
within the whittler’s range.
“O Eddie!” she cried.
The man looked up, and was at once
electrified into action. He sprang to his feet
and whipped off his sombrero. A broad smile
illumined his freckled face.
“Yes, miss,” he answered. “What
can I do for you?”
“Saddle a pony for me, Eddie,”
she explained. “I want to take a little
ride.”
“Sure!” he assured her
cheerily. “Have it ready in a jiffy,”
and away he went, uncoiling his riata, toward the little
group of saddle ponies which stood in the corral against
necessity for instant use.
In a couple of minutes he came back
leading one, which he tied to the corral bars.
“But I can’t ride that
horse,” exclaimed the girl. “He
bucks.”
“Sure,” said Eddie. “I’m
a-goin’ to ride him.”
“Oh, are you going somewhere?” she asked.
“I’m goin’ with you, miss,”
announced Eddie, sheepishly.
“But I didn’t ask you,
Eddie, and I don’t want you— today,”
she urged.
“Sorry, miss,” he threw
back over his shoulder as he walked back to rope a
second pony; “but them’s orders.
You’re not to be allowed to ride no place without
a escort. ‘Twouldn’t be safe neither,
miss,” he almost pleaded, “an’ I
won’t hinder you none. I’ll ride
behind far enough to be there ef I’m needed.”
Directly he came back with another
pony, a sad-eyed, gentle-appearing little beast, and
commenced saddling and bridling the two.
“Will you promise,” she
asked, after watching him in silence for a time, “that
you will tell no one where I go or whom I see?”
“Cross my heart hope to die,” he assured
her.
“All right, Eddie, then I’ll
let you come with me, and you can ride beside me,
instead of behind.”
Across the flat they rode, following
the windings of the river road, one mile, two, five,
ten. Eddie had long since been wondering what
the purpose of so steady a pace could be. This
was no pleasure ride which took the boss’s daughter—
“heifer,” Eddie would have called her—ten
miles up river at a hard trot. Eddie was worried,
too. They had passed the danger line, and were
well within the stamping ground of Pesita and his
retainers. Here each little adobe dwelling, and
they were scattered at intervals of a mile or more
along the river, contained a rabid partisan of Pesita,
or it contained no one—Pesita had seen
to this latter condition personally.
At last the young lady drew rein before
a squalid and dilapidated hut. Eddie gasped.
It was Jose’s, and Jose was a notorious scoundrel
whom old age alone kept from the active pursuit of
the only calling he ever had known—brigandage.
Why should the boss’s daughter come to Jose?
Jose was hand in glove with every cutthroat in Chihuahua,
or at least within a radius of two hundred miles of
his abode.
Barbara swung herself from the saddle,
and handed her bridle reins to Eddie.
“Hold him, please,” she
said. “I’ll be gone but a moment.”
“You’re not goin’
in there to see old Jose alone?” gasped Eddie.
“Why not?” she asked.
“If you’re afraid you can leave my horse
and ride along home.”
Eddie colored to the roots of his
sandy hair, and kept silent. The girl approached
the doorway of the mean hovel and peered within.
At one end sat a bent old man, smoking. He
looked up as Barbara’s figure darkened the doorway.
“Jose!” said the girl.
The old man rose to his feet and came toward her.
“Eh? Senorita, eh?” he cackled.
“You are Jose?” she asked.
“Si, senorita,” replied
the old Indian. “What can poor old Jose
do to serve the beautiful senorita?”
“You can carry a message to
one of Pesita’s officers,” replied the
girl. “I have heard much about you since
I came to Mexico. I know that there is not another
man in this part of Chihuahua who may so easily reach
Pesita as you.” She raised her hand for
silence as the Indian would have protested. Then
she reached into the pocket of her riding breeches
and withdrew a handful of silver which she permitted
to trickle, tinklingly, from one palm to the other.
“I wish you to go to the camp of Pesita,”
she continued, “and carry word to the man who
robbed the bank at Cuivaca—he is an American—that
his friend, Senor Bridge has been captured by Villa
and is being held for execution in Cuivaca.
You must go at once— you must get word
to Senor Bridge’s friend so that help may reach
Senor Bridge before dawn. Do you understand?”
The Indian nodded assent.
“Here,” said the girl,
“is a payment on account. When I know
that you delivered the message in time you shall have
as much more. Will you do it?”
“I will try,” said the
Indian, and stretched forth a clawlike hand for the
money.
“Good!” exclaimed Barbara.
“Now start at once,” and she dropped
the silver coins into the old man’s palm.
It was dusk when Captain Billy Byrne
was summoned to the tent of Pesita. There he
found a weazened, old Indian squatting at the side
of the outlaw.
“Jose,” said Pesita, “has word for
you.”
Billy Byrne turned questioningly toward the Indian.
“I have been sent, Senor Capitan,”
explained Jose, “by the beautiful senorita of
El Orobo Rancho to tell you that your friend, Senor
Bridge, has been captured by General Villa, and is
being held at Cuivaca, where he will doubtless be shot—if
help does not reach him before tomorrow morning.”
Pesita was looking questioningly at
Byrne. Since the gringo had returned from Cuivaca
with the loot of the bank and turned the last penny
of it over to him the outlaw had looked upon his new
captain as something just short of superhuman.
To have robbed the bank thus easily while Villa’s
soldiers paced back and forth before the doorway seemed
little short of an indication of miraculous powers,
while to have turned the loot over intact to his chief,
not asking for so much as a peso of it, was absolutely
incredible.
Pesita could not understand this man;
but he admired him greatly and feared him, too.
Such a man was worth a hundred of the ordinary run
of humanity that enlisted beneath Pesita’s banners.
Byrne had but to ask a favor to have it granted, and
now, when he called upon Pesita to furnish him with
a suitable force for the rescue of Bridge the brigand
enthusiastically acceded to his demands.
“I will come,” he exclaimed,
“and all my men shall ride with me. We
will take Cuivaca by storm. We may even capture
Villa himself.”
“Wait a minute, bo,” interrupted
Billy Byrne. “Don’t get excited.
I’m lookin’ to get my pal outen’
Cuivaca. After that I don’t care who you
capture; but I’m goin’ to get Bridgie out
first. I ken do it with twenty-five men—if
it ain’t too late. Then, if you want
to, you can shoot up the town. Lemme have the
twenty-five, an’ you hang around the edges with
the rest of ’em ’til I’m done.
Whaddaya say?”
Pesita was willing to agree to anything,
and so it came that half an hour later Billy Byrne
was leading a choice selection of some two dozen cutthroats
down through the hills toward Cuivaca. While
a couple of miles in the rear followed Pesita with
the balance of his band.
Billy rode until the few remaining
lights of Cuivaca shone but a short distance ahead
and they could hear plainly the strains of a grating
graphophone from beyond the open windows of a dance
hall, and the voices of the sentries as they called
the hour.
“Stay here,” said Billy
to a sergeant at his side, “until you hear a
hoot owl cry three times from the direction of the
barracks and guardhouse, then charge the opposite end
of the town, firing off your carbines like hell an’
yellin’ yer heads off. Make all the racket
you can, an’ keep it up ’til you get ’em
comin’ in your direction, see? Then turn
an’ drop back slowly, eggin’ ’em
on, but holdin’ ’em to it as long as you
can. Do you get me, bo?”
From the mixture of Spanish and English
and Granavenooish the sergeant gleaned enough of the
intent of his commander to permit him to salute and
admit that he understood what was required of him.
Having given his instructions Billy
Byrne rode off to the west, circled Cuivaca and came
close up upon the southern edge of the little village.
Here he dismounted and left his horse hidden behind
an outbuilding, while he crept cautiously forward
to reconnoiter.
He knew that the force within the
village had no reason to fear attack. Villa
knew where the main bodies of his enemies lay, and
that no force could approach Cuivaca without word
of its coming reaching the garrison many hours in advance
of the foe. That Pesita, or another of the several
bandit chiefs in the neighborhood would dare descend
upon a garrisoned town never for a moment entered
the calculations of the rebel leader.
For these reasons Billy argued that
Cuivaca would be poorly guarded. On the night
he had spent there he had seen sentries before the
bank, the guardhouse, and the barracks in addition
to one who paced to and fro in front of the house in
which the commander of the garrison maintained his
headquarters. Aside from these the town was unguarded.
Nor were conditions different tonight.
Billy came within a hundred yards of the guardhouse
before he discovered a sentinel. The fellow
lolled upon his gun in front of the building—an
adobe structure in the rear of the barracks.
The other three sides of the guardhouse appeared to
be unwatched.
Billy threw himself upon his stomach
and crawled slowly forward stopping often. The
sentry seemed asleep. He did not move.
Billy reached the shadow at the side of the structure
and some fifty feet from the soldier without detection.
Then he rose to his feet directly beneath a barred
window.
Within Bridge paced back and forth
the length of the little building. He could
not sleep. Tomorrow he was to be shot!
Bridge did not wish to die. That very morning
General Villa in person had examined him. The
general had been exceedingly wroth—the
sting of the theft of his funds still irritated him;
but he had given Bridge no inkling as to his fate.
It had remained for a fellow-prisoner to do that.
This man, a deserter, was to be shot, so he said,
with Bridge, a fact which gave him an additional twenty-four
hours of life, since, he asserted, General Villa wished
to be elsewhere than in Cuivaca when an American was
executed. Thus he could disclaim responsibility
for the act.
The general was to depart in the morning.
Shortly after, Bridge and the deserter would be led
out and blindfolded before a stone wall—if
there was such a thing, or a brick wall, or an adobe
wall. It made little difference to the deserter,
or to Bridge either. The wall was but a trivial
factor. It might go far to add romance to whomever
should read of the affair later; but in so far as
Bridge and the deserter were concerned it meant nothing.
A billboard, thought Bridge, bearing the slogan:
“Eventually! Why not now?” would
have been equally as efficacious and far more appropriate.
The room in which he was confined
was stuffy with the odor of accumulated filth.
Two small barred windows alone gave means of ventilation.
He and the deserter were the only prisoners.
The latter slept as soundly as though the morrow
held nothing more momentous in his destiny than any
of the days that had preceded it. Bridge was
moved to kick the fellow into consciousness of his
impending fate. Instead he walked to the south
window to fill his lungs with the free air beyond
his prison pen, and gaze sorrowfully at the star-lit
sky which he should never again behold.
In a low tone Bridge crooned a snatch
of the poem that he and Billy liked best:
And you, my sweet Penelope, out there
somewhere you wait for me,
With buds of roses in your hair and kisses
on your mouth.
Bridge’s mental vision was concentrated
upon the veranda of a white-walled ranchhouse to the
east. He shook his head angrily.
“It’s just as well,”
he thought. “She’s not for me.”
Something moved upon the ground beyond
the window. Bridge became suddenly intent upon
the thing. He saw it rise and resolve itself
into the figure of a man, and then, in a low whisper,
came a familiar voice:
“There ain’t no roses
in my hair, but there’s a barker in my shirt,
an’ another at me side. Here’s one
of ’em. They got kisses beat a city block.
How’s the door o’ this thing fastened?”
The speaker was quite close to the window now, his
face but a few inches from Bridge’s.
“Billy!” ejaculated the condemned man.
“Surest thing you know; but about the door?”
“Just a heavy bar on the outside,” replied
Bridge.
“Easy,” commented Billy,
relieved. “Get ready to beat it when I
open the door. I got a pony south o’ town
that’ll have to carry double for a little way
tonight.”
“God bless you, Billy!” whispered Bridge,
fervently.
“Lay low a few minutes,”
said Billy, and moved away toward the rear of the
guardhouse.
A few minutes later there broke upon
the night air the dismal hoot of an owl. At
intervals of a few seconds it was repeated twice.
The sentry before the guardhouse shifted his position
and looked about, then he settled back, transferring
his weight to the other foot, and resumed his bovine
meditations.
The man at the rear of the guardhouse
moved silently along the side of the structure until
he stood within a few feet of the unsuspecting sentinel,
hidden from him by the corner of the building.
A heavy revolver dangled from his right hand.
He held it loosely by the barrel, and waited.
For five minutes the silence of the
night was unbroken, then from the east came a single
shot, followed immediately by a scattering fusillade
and a chorus of hoarse cries.
Billy Byrne smiled. The sentry
resumed indications of quickness. From the barracks
beyond the guardhouse came sharp commands and the
sounds of men running. From the opposite end
of the town the noise of battle welled up to ominous
proportions.
Billy heard the soldiers stream from
their quarters and a moment later saw them trot up
the street at the double. Everyone was moving
toward the opposite end of the town except the lone
sentinel before the guardhouse. The moment seemed
propitious for his attempt.
Billy peered around the corner of
the guardhouse. Conditions were just as he had
pictured they would be. The sentry stood gazing
in the direction of the firing, his back toward the
guardhouse door and Billy.
With a bound the American cleared
the space between himself and the unsuspecting and
unfortunate soldier. The butt of the heavy revolver
fell, almost noiselessly, upon the back of the sentry’s
head, and the man sank to the ground without even
a moan.
Turning to the door Billy knocked
the bar from its place, the door swung in and Bridge
slipped through to liberty.
“Quick!” said Billy.
“Follow me,” and turned at a rapid run
toward the south edge of the town. He made no
effort now to conceal his movements. Speed was
the only essential, and the two covered the ground
swiftly and openly without any attempt to take advantage
of cover.
They reached Billy’s horse unnoticed,
and a moment later were trotting toward the west to
circle the town and regain the trail to the north
and safety.
To the east they heard the diminishing
rifle fire of the combatants as Pesita’s men
fell steadily back before the defenders, and drew
them away from Cuivaca in accordance with Billy’s
plan.
“Like takin’ candy from
a baby,” said Billy, when the flickering lights
of Cuivaca shone to the south of them, and the road
ahead lay clear to the rendezvous of the brigands.
“Yes,” agreed Bridge;
“but what I’d like to know, Billy, is
how you found out I was there.”
“Penelope,” said Byrne, laughing.
“Penelope!” queried Bridge.
“I’m not at all sure that I follow you,
Billy.”
“Well, seein’ as you’re
sittin’ on behind you can’t be leadin’
me,” returned Billy; “but cuttin’
the kid it was a skirt tipped it off to me where you
was—the beautiful senorita of El Orobo
Rancho, I think Jose called her. Now are you
hep?”
Bridge gave an exclamation of astonishment.
“God bless her!” he said. “She
did that for me?”
“She sure did,” Billy
assured him, “an’ I’ll bet an iron
case she’s a-waitin’ for you there with
buds o’ roses in her hair an’ kisses on
her mouth, you old son-of-a-gun, you.”
Billy laughed happily. He was happy anyway at
having rescued Bridge, and the knowledge that his
friend was in love and that the girl reciprocated
his affection—all of which Billy assumed
as the only explanation of her interest in Bridge—only
added to his joy. “She ain’t a greaser
is she?” he asked presently.
“I should say not,” replied
Bridge. “She’s a perfect queen from
New York City; but, Billy, she’s not for me.
What she did was prompted by a generous heart.
She couldn’t care for me, Billy. Her
father is a wealthy man—he could have the
pick of the land—of many lands—if
she cared to marry. You don’t think for
a minute she’d want a hobo, do you?”
“You can’t most always
tell,” replied Billy, a trifle sadly. “I
knew such a queen once who would have chosen a mucker,
if he’d a-let her. You’re stuck
on her, ol’ man?”
“I’m afraid I am, Billy,”
Bridge admitted; “but what’s the use?
Let’s forget it. Oh, say, is this the
horse I let you take the night you robbed the bank?”
“Yes,” said Billy; “same
little pony, an’ a mighty well-behaved one,
too. Why?”
“It’s hers,” said Bridge.
“An’ she wants it back?”
“She didn’t say so; but
I’d like to get it to her some way,” said
Bridge.
“You ride it back when you go,” suggested
Billy.
“But I can’t go back,”
said Bridge; “it was Grayson, the foreman, who
made it so hot for me I had to leave. He tried
to arrest me and send me to Villa.”
“What for?” asked Billy.
“He didn’t like me, and
wanted to get rid of me.” Bridge wouldn’t
say that his relations with Billy had brought him into
trouble.
“Oh, well, I’ll take it
back myself then, and at the same time I’ll
tell Penelope what a regular fellow you are, and punch
in the foreman’s face for good luck.”
“No, you mustn’t go there.
They know you now. It was some of El Orobo’s
men you shot up day before yesterday when you took
their steers from them. They recognized the
pony, and one of them had seen you in Cuivaca the night
of the robbery. They would be sure to get you,
Billy.”
Shortly the two came in touch with
the retreating Pesitistas who were riding slowly toward
their mountain camp. Their pursuers had long
since given up the chase, fearing that they might
be being lured into the midst of a greatly superior
force, and had returned to Cuivaca.
It was nearly morning when Bridge
and Billy threw themselves down upon the latter’s
blankets, fagged.
“Well, well,” murmured
Billy Byrne; “li’l ol’ Bridgie’s
found his Penelope,” and fell asleep.