BARBARA AGAIN
Captain Billy Byrne
rode out of the hills the following afternoon upon
a pinto pony that showed the whites of its eyes in
a wicked rim about the iris and kept its ears perpetually
flattened backward.
At the end of a lariat trailed the
Brazos pony, for Billy, laughing aside Bridge’s
pleas, was on his way to El Orobo Rancho to return
the stolen horse to its fair owner.
At the moment of departure Pesita
had asked Billy to ride by way of Jose’s to
instruct the old Indian that he should bear word to
one Esteban that Pesita required his presence.
It is a long ride from the retreat
of the Pesitistas to Jose’s squalid hut, especially
if one be leading an extra horse, and so it was that
darkness had fallen long before Billy arrived in sight
of Jose’s. Dismounting some distance from
the hut, Billy approached cautiously, since the world
is filled with dangers for those who are beyond the
law, and one may not be too careful.
Billy could see a light showing through
a small window, and toward this he made his way.
A short distance from Jose’s is another, larger
structure from which the former inhabitants had fled
the wrath of Pesita. It was dark and apparently
tenantless; but as a matter of fact a pair of eyes
chanced at the very moment of Billy’s coming
to be looking out through the open doorway.
The owner turned and spoke to someone behind him.
“Jose has another visitor,”
he said. “Possibly this one is less harmless
than the other. He comes with great caution.
Let us investigate.”
Three other men rose from their blankets
upon the floor and joined the speaker. They
were all armed, and clothed in the nondescript uniforms
of Villistas. Billy’s back was toward
them as they sneaked from the hut in which they were
intending to spend the night and crept quietly toward
him.
Billy was busily engaged in peering
through the little window into the interior of the
old Indian’s hovel. He saw an American
in earnest conversation with Jose. Who could
the man be? Billy did not recognize him; but
presently Jose answered the question.
“It shall be done as you wish,
Senor Grayson,” he said.
“Ah!” thought Billy; “the
foreman of El Orobo. I wonder what business
he has with this old scoundrel—and at night.”
What other thoughts Billy might have
had upon the subject were rudely interrupted by four
energetic gentlemen in his rear, who leaped upon him
simultaneously and dragged him to the ground.
Billy made no outcry; but he fought none the less
strenuously for his freedom, and he fought after the
manner of Grand Avenue, which is not a pretty, however
effective, way it may be.
But four against one when all the
advantages lie with the four are heavy odds, and when
Grayson and Jose ran out to investigate, and the ranch
foreman added his weight to that of the others Billy
was finally subdued. That each of his antagonists
would carry mementos of the battle for many days was
slight compensation for the loss of liberty.
However, it was some.
After disarming their captive and
tying his hands at his back they jerked him to his
feet and examined him.
“Who are you?” asked Grayson.
“What you doin’ sneakin’ ‘round
spyin’ on me, eh?”
“If you wanna know who I am,
bo,” replied Billy, “go ask de Harlem
Hurricane, an’ as fer spyin’ on youse,
I wasn’t; but from de looks I guess youse need
spyin, yuh tinhorn.”
A pony whinnied a short distance from the hut.
“That must be his horse,”
said one of the Villistas, and walked away to investigate,
returning shortly after with the pinto pony and Brazos.
The moment Grayson saw the latter
he gave an exclamation of understanding.
“I know him now,” he said.
“You’ve made a good catch, Sergeant.
This is the fellow who robbed the bank at Cuivaca.
I recognize him from the descriptions I’ve had
of him, and the fact that he’s got the Brazos
pony makes it a cinch. Villa oughter promote
you for this.”
“Yep,” interjected Billy,
“he orter make youse an admiral at least; but
youse ain’t got me home yet, an’ it’ll
take more’n four Dagos an’ a tin-horn
to do it.”
“They’ll get you there
all right, my friend,” Grayson assured him.
“Now come along.”
They bundled Billy into his own saddle,
and shortly after the little party was winding southward
along the river in the direction of El Orobo Rancho,
with the intention of putting up there for the balance
of the night where their prisoner could be properly
secured and guarded. As they rode away from
the dilapidated hut of the Indian the old man stood
silhouetted against the rectangle of dim light which
marked the open doorway, and shook his fist at the
back of the departing ranch foreman.
“El cochino!” he cackled,
and turned back into his hut.
At El Orobo Rancho Barbara walked
to and fro outside the ranchhouse. Within her
father sat reading beneath the rays of an oil lamp.
From the quarters of the men came the strains of
guitar music, and an occasional loud laugh indicated
the climax of some of Eddie Shorter’s famous
Kansas farmer stories.
Barbara was upon the point of returning
indoors when her attention was attracted by the approach
of a half-dozen horsemen. They reined into the
ranchyard and dismounted before the office building.
Wondering a little who came so late, Barbara entered
the house, mentioning casually to her father that
which she had just seen.
The ranch owner, now always fearful
of attack, was upon the point of investigating when
Grayson rode up to the veranda and dismounted.
Barbara and her father were at the door as he ascended
the steps.
“Good news!” exclaimed
the foreman. “I’ve got the bank
robber, and Brazos, too. Caught the sneakin’
coyote up to— up the river a bit.”
He had almost said “Jose’s;” but
caught himself in time. “Someone’s
been cuttin’ the wire at the north side of the
north pasture, an’ I was ridin’ up to see
ef I could catch ’em at it,” he explained.
“He is an American?” asked the boss.
“Looks like it; but he’s
got the heart of a greaser,” replied Grayson.
“Some of Villa’s men are with me, and
they’re a-goin’ to take him to Cuivaca
tomorrow.”
Neither Barbara nor her father seemed
to enthuse much. To them an American was an
American here in Mexico, where every hand was against
their race. That at home they might have looked
with disgust upon this same man did not alter their
attitude here, that no American should take sides against
his own people. Barbara said as much to Grayson.
“Why this fellow’s one
of Pesita’s officers,” exclaimed Grayson.
“He don’t deserve no sympathy from us
nor from no other Americans. Pesita has sworn
to kill every American that falls into his hands,
and this fellow’s with him to help him do it.
He’s a bad un.”
“I can’t help what he
may do,” insisted Barbara. “He’s
an American, and I for one would never be a party
to his death at the hands of a Mexican, and it will
mean death to him to be taken to Cuivaca.”
“Well, miss,” said Grayson,
“you won’t hev to be responsible—I’ll
take all the responsibility there is and welcome.
I just thought you’d like to know we had him.”
He was addressing his employer. The latter nodded,
and Grayson turned and left the room. Outside
he cast a sneering laugh back over his shoulder and
swung into his saddle.
In front of the men’s quarters
he drew rein again and shouted Eddie’s name.
Shorter came to the door.
“Get your six-shooter an’
a rifle, an’ come on over to the office.
I want to see you a minute.”
Eddie did as he was bid, and when
he entered the little room he saw four Mexicans lolling
about smoking cigarettes while Grayson stood before
a chair in which sat a man with his arms tied behind
his back. Grayson turned to Eddie.
“This party here is the slick
un that robbed the bank, and got away on thet there
Brazos pony thet miserable bookkeepin’ dude
giv him. The sergeant here an’ his men
are a-goin’ to take him to Cuivaca in the mornin’.
You stand guard over him ’til midnight, then
they’ll relieve you. They gotta get a
little sleep first, though, an’ I gotta get some
supper. Don’t stand fer no funny business
now, Eddie,” Grayson admonished him, and was
on the point of leaving the office when a thought
occurred to him. “Say, Shorter,”
he said, “they ain’t no way of gettin’
out of the little bedroom in back there except through
this room. The windows are too small fer a big
man to get through. I’ll tell you what,
we’ll lock him up in there an’ then you
won’t hev to worry none an’ neither will
we. You can jest spread out them Navajos there
and go to sleep right plump ag’in the door,
an’ there won’t nobody hev to relieve
you all night.”
“Sure,” said Eddie, “leave
it to me—I’ll watch the slicker.”
Satisfied that their prisoner was
safe for the night the Villistas and Grayson departed,
after seeing him safely locked in the back room.
At the mention by the foreman of his
guard’s names— Eddie and Shorter—Billy
had studied the face of the young American cowpuncher,
for the two names had aroused within his memory a
tantalizing suggestion that they should be very familiar.
Yet he could connect them in no way with anyone he
had known in the past and he was quite sure that he
never before had set eyes upon this man.
Sitting in the dark with nothing to
occupy him Billy let his mind dwell upon the identity
of his jailer, until, as may have happened to you,
nothing in the whole world seemed equally as important
as the solution of the mystery. Even his impending
fate faded into nothingness by comparison with the
momentous question as to where he had heard the name
Eddie Shorter before.
As he sat puzzling his brain over
the inconsequential matter something stirred upon
the floor close to his feet, and presently he jerked
back a booted foot that a rat had commenced to gnaw
upon.
“Helluva place to stick a guy,”
mused Billy, “in wit a bunch o’ man-eatin’
rats. Hey!” and he turned his face toward
the door. “You, Eddie! Come here!”
Eddie approached the door and listened.
“Wot do you want?” he
asked. “None o’ your funny business,
you know. I’m from Shawnee, Kansas, I am,
an’ they don’t come no slicker from nowhere
on earth. You can’t fool me.”
Shawnee, Kansas! Eddie Shorter!
The whole puzzle was cleared in Billy’s mind
in an instant.
“So you’re Eddie Shorter
of Shawnee, Kansas, are you?” called Billy.
“Well I know your maw, Eddie, an’ ef I
had such a maw as you got I wouldn’t be down
here wastin’ my time workin’ alongside
a lot of Dagos; but that ain’t what I started
out to say, which was that I want a light in here.
The damned rats are tryin’ to chaw off me kicks
an’ when they’re done wit them they’ll
climb up after me an’ old man Villa’ll
be sore as a pup.”
“You know my maw?” asked
Eddie, and there was a wistful note in his voice.
“Aw shucks! you don’t know her—
that’s jest some o’ your funny, slicker
business. You wanna git me in there an’
then you’ll try an’ git aroun’ me
some sort o’ way to let you escape; but I’m
too slick for that.”
“On the level Eddie, I know
your maw,” persisted Billy. “I ben
in your maw’s house jest a few weeks ago.
’Member the horsehair sofa between the windows?
’Member the Bible on the little marble-topped
table? Eh? An’ Tige? Well,
Tige’s croaked; but your maw an’ your
paw ain’t an’ they want you back, Eddie.
I don’t care ef you believe me, son, or not;
but your maw was mighty good to me, an’ you
promise me you’ll write her an’ then go
back home as fast as you can. It ain’t
everybody’s got a swell maw like that, an’
them as has ought to be good to ’em.”
Beyond the closed door Eddie’s
jaw was commencing to tremble. Memory was flooding
his heart and his eyes with sweet recollections of
an ample breast where he used to pillow his head,
of a big capable hand that was wont to smooth his
brow and stroke back his red hair. Eddie gulped.
“You ain’t joshin’
me?” he asked. Billy Byrne caught the
tremor in the voice.
“I ain’t kiddin’
you son,” he said. “Wotinell do you
take me fer—one o’ these greasy Dagos?
You an’ I’re Americans— I
wouldn’t string a home guy down here in this
here Godforsaken neck o’ the woods.”
Billy heard the lock turn, and a moment
later the door was cautiously opened revealing Eddie
safely ensconced behind two six-shooters.
“That’s right, Eddie,”
said Billy, with a laugh. “Don’t
you take no chances, no matter how much sob stuff
I hand you, fer, I’ll give it to you straight,
ef I get the chanct I’ll make my get-away; but
I can’t do it wit my flippers trussed, an’
you wit a brace of gats sittin’ on me.
Let’s have a light, Eddie. That won’t
do nobody any harm, an’ it may discourage the
rats.”
Eddie backed across the office to
a table where stood a small lamp. Keeping an
eye through the door on his prisoner he lighted the
lamp and carried it into the back room, setting it
upon a commode which stood in one corner.
“You really seen maw?” he asked.
“Is she well?”
“Looked well when I seen her,”
said Billy; “but she wants her boy back a whole
lot. I guess she’d look better still ef
he walked in on her some day.”
“I’ll do it,” cried
Eddie. “The minute they get money for
the pay I’ll hike. Tell me your name.
I’ll ask her ef she remembers you when I get
home. Gee! but I wish I was walkin’ in
the front door now.”
“She never knew my name,”
said Billy; “but you tell her you seen the bo
that mussed up the two yeggmen who rolled her an’
were tryin’ to croak her wit a butcher knife.
I guess she ain’t fergot. Me an’
my pal were beatin’ it—he was on the
square but the dicks was after me an’ she let
us have money to make our get-away. She’s
all right, kid.”
There came a knock at the outer office
door. Eddie sprang back into the front room,
closing and locking the door after him, just as Barbara
entered.
“Eddie,” she asked, “may
I see the prisoner? I want to talk to him.”
“You want to talk with a bank
robber?” exclaimed Eddie. “Why
you ain’t crazy are you, Miss Barbara?”
“No, I’m not crazy; but
I want to speak with him alone for just a moment,
Eddie—please.”
Eddie hesitated. He knew that
Grayson would be angry if he let the boss’s
daughter into that back room alone with an outlaw
and a robber, and the boss himself would probably be
inclined to have Eddie drawn and quartered; but it
was hard to refuse Miss Barbara anything.
“Where is he?” she asked.
Eddie jerked a thumb in the direction
of the door. The key still was in the lock.
“Go to the window and look at
the moon, Eddie,” suggested the girl.
“It’s perfectly gorgeous tonight.
Please, Eddie,” as he still hesitated.
Eddie shook his head and moved slowly
toward the window.
“There can’t nobody refuse
you nothin’, miss,” he said; “’specially
when you got your heart set on it.”
“That’s a dear, Eddie,”
purred the girl, and moved swiftly across the room
to the locked door.
As she turned the key in the lock
she felt a little shiver of nervous excitement run
through her. “What sort of man would he
be—this hardened outlaw and robber—this
renegade American who had cast his lot with the avowed
enemies of his own people?” she wondered.
Only her desire to learn of Bridge’s
fate urged her to attempt so distasteful an interview;
but she dared not ask another to put the question
for her, since should her complicity in Bridge’s
escape—provided of course that he had escaped—become
known to Villa the fate of the Americans at El Orobo
would be definitely sealed.
She turned the knob and pushed the
door open, slowly. A man was sitting in a chair
in the center of the room. His back was toward
her. He was a big man. His broad shoulders
loomed immense above the back of the rude chair.
A shock of black hair, rumpled and tousled, covered
a well-shaped head.
At the sound of the door creaking
upon its hinges he turned his face in her direction,
and as his eyes met hers all four went wide in surprise
and incredulity.
“Billy!” she cried.
“Barbara!—you?”
and Billy rose to his feet, his bound hands struggling
to be free.
The girl closed the door behind her
and crossed to him.
“You robbed the bank, Billy?”
she asked. “It was you, after the promises
you made me to live straight always—for
my sake?” Her voice trembled with emotion.
The man could see that she suffered, and yet he felt
his own anguish, too.
“But you are married,”
he said. “I saw it in the papers.
What do you care, now, Barbara? I’m
nothing to you.”
“I’m not married, Billy,”
she cried. “I couldn’t marry Mr.
Mallory. I tried to make myself believe that
I could; but at last I knew that I did not love him
and never could, and I wouldn’t marry a man
I didn’t love.
“I never dreamed that it was
you here, Billy,” she went on. “I
came to ask you about Mr. Bridge. I wanted to
know if he escaped, or if—if—oh,
this awful country! They think no more of human
life here than a butcher thinks of the life of the
animal he dresses.”
A sudden light illumined Billy’s
mind. Why had it not occurred to him before?
This was Bridge’s Penelope! The woman
he loved was loved by his best friend. And she
had sent a messenger to him, to Billy, to save her
lover. She had come here to the office tonight
to question a stranger—a man she thought
an outlaw and a robber—because she could
not rest without word from the man she loved.
Billy stiffened. He was hurt to the bottom
of his heart; but he did not blame Bridge—it
was fate. Nor did he blame Barbara because she
loved Bridge. Bridge was more her kind anyway.
He was a college guy. Billy was only a mucker.
“Bridge got away all right,”
he said. “And say, he didn’t have
nothin’ to do with pullin’ off that safe
crackin’. I done it myself. He didn’t
know I was in town an’ I didn’t know he
was there. He’s the squarest guy in the
world, Bridge is. He follered me that night
an’ took a shot at me, thinkin’ I was
the robber all right but not knowin’ I was me.
He got my horse, an’ when he found it was me,
he made me take your pony an’ make my get-away,
fer he knew Villa’s men would croak me sure
if they caught me. You can’t blame him
fer that, can you? Him an’ I were good
pals—he couldn’t do nothin’
else. It was him that made me bring your pony
back to you. It’s in the corral now, I
reckon. I was a-bringin’ it back when
they got me. Now you better go. This ain’t
no place fer you, an’ I ain’t had no sleep
fer so long I’m most dead.” His
tones were cool. He appeared bored by her company;
though as a matter of fact his heart was breaking with
love for her—love that he believed unrequited—and
he yearned to tear loose his bonds and crush her in
his arms.
It was Barbara’s turn now to
be hurt. She drew herself up.
“I am sorry that I have disturbed
your rest,” she said, and walked away, her head
in the air; but all the way back to the ranchhouse
she kept repeating over and over to herself: “Tomorrow
they will shoot him! Tomorrow they will shoot
him! Tomorrow they will shoot him!”