AN INDIAN’S TREACHERY
The Brazos pony had traveled
far that day but for only a trifle over ten miles
had he carried a rider upon his back. He was,
consequently, far from fagged as he leaped forward
to the lifted reins and tore along the dusty river
trail back in the direction of Orobo.
Never before had Brazos covered ten
miles in so short a time, for it was not yet five
o’clock when, reeling with fatigue, he stopped,
staggered and fell in front of the office building
at El Orobo.
Eddie Shorter had sat in the chair
as Barbara and Billy had last seen him waiting until
Byrne should have an ample start before arousing Grayson
and reporting the prisoner’s escape.
Eddie had determined that he would give Billy an hour.
He grinned as he anticipated the rage of Grayson
and the Villistas when they learned that their bird
had flown, and as he mused and waited he fell asleep.
It was broad daylight when Eddie awoke,
and as he looked up at the little clock ticking against
the wall, and saw the time he gave an exclamation
of surprise and leaped to his feet. Just as
he opened the outer door of the office he saw a horseman
leap from a winded pony in front of the building.
He saw the animal collapse and sink to the ground,
and then he recognized the pony as Brazos, and another
glance at the man brought recognition of him, too.
“You?” cried Eddie.
“What are you doin’ back here? I
gotta take you now,” and he started to draw his
revolver; but Billy Byrne had him covered before ever
his hand reached the grip of his gun.
“Put ’em up!” admonished
Billy, “and listen to me. This ain’t
no time fer gunplay or no such foolishness. I
ain’t back here to be took—get that
out o’ your nut. I’m tipped off that
a bunch o’ siwashes was down here last night
to swipe Miss Harding. Come! We gotta
go see if she’s here or not, an’ don’t
try any funny business on me, Eddie. I ain’t
a-goin’ to be taken again, an’ whoever
tries it gets his, see?”
Eddie was down off the porch in an
instant, and making for the ranchhouse.
“I’m with you,”
he said. “Who told you? And who done
it?”
“Never mind who told me; but
a siwash named Esteban was to pull the thing off for
Grayson. Grayson wanted Miss Harding an’
he was goin’ to have her stolen for him.”
“The hound!” muttered Eddie.
The two men dashed up onto the veranda
of the ranchhouse and pounded at the door until a
Chinaman opened it and stuck out his head, inquiringly.
“Is Miss Harding here?” demanded Billy.
“Mlissy Hardie Kleep,”
snapped the servant. “Wally wanee here
flo blekfas?”, and would have shut the door in
their faces had not Billy intruded a heavy boot.
The next instant he placed a large palm over the
celestial’s face and pushed the man back into
the house. Once inside he called Mr. Harding’s
name aloud.
“What is it?” asked the
gentleman a moment later as he appeared in a bedroom
doorway off the living-room clad in his pajamas.
“What’s the matter? Why, gad man,
is that you? Is this really Billy Byrne?”
“Sure,” replied Byrne
shortly; “but we can’t waste any time
chinnin’. I heard that Miss Barbara was
goin’ to be swiped last night—I heard
that she had been. Now hurry and see if she
is here.”
Anthony Harding turned and leaped
up the narrow stairway to the second floor four steps
at a time. He hadn’t gone upstairs in
that fashion in forty years. Without even pausing
to rap he burst into his daughter’s bedroom.
It was empty. The bed was unruffled.
It had not been slept in. With a moan the man
turned back and ran hastily to the other rooms upon
the second floor—Barbara was nowhere to
be found. Then he hastened downstairs to the
two men awaiting him.
As he entered the room from one end
Grayson entered it from the other through the doorway
leading out upon the veranda. Billy Byrne had
heard footsteps upon the boards without and he was
ready, so that as Grayson entered he found himself
looking straight at the business end of a sixshooter.
The foreman halted, and stood looking in surprise
first at Billy Byrne, and then at Eddie Shorter and
Mr. Harding.
“What does this mean?”
he demanded, addressing Eddie. “What
you doin’ here with your prisoner? Who
told you to let him out, eh?”
“Can the chatter,” growled
Billy Byrne. “Shorter didn’t let
me out. I escaped hours ago, and I’ve just
come back from Jose’s to ask you where Miss
Harding is, you low-lived cur, you. Where is
she?”
“What has Mr. Grayson to do
with it?” asked Mr. Harding. “How
should he know anything about it? It’s
all a mystery to me—you here, of all men
in the world, and Grayson talking about you as the
prisoner. I can’t make it out. Quick,
though, Byrne, tell me all you know about Barbara.”
Billy kept Grayson covered as he replied
to the request of Harding.
“This guy hires a bunch of Pimans
to steal Miss Barbara,” he said. “I
got it straight from the fellow he paid the money
to for gettin’ him the right men to pull off
the job. He wants her it seems,” and Billy
shot a look at the ranch foreman that would have killed
if looks could. “She can’t have been
gone long. I seen her after midnight, just before
I made my getaway, so they can’t have taken
her very far. This thing here can’t help
us none neither, for he don’t know where she
is any more’n we do. He thinks he does;
but he don’t. The siwashes framed it on
him, an’ they’ve doubled-crossed him.
I got that straight too; but, Gawd! I don’t
know where they’ve taken her or what they’re
goin’ to do with her.”
As he spoke he turned his eyes for
the first time away from Grayson and looked full in
Anthony Harding’s face. The latter saw
beneath the strong character lines of the other’s
countenance the agony of fear and doubt that lay heavy
upon his heart.
In the brief instant that Billy’s
watchful gaze left the figure of the ranch foreman
the latter saw the opportunity he craved. He
was standing directly in the doorway—a single
step would carry him out of range of Byrne’s
gun, placing a wall between it and him, and Grayson
was not slow in taking that step.
When Billy turned his eyes back the
Texan had disappeared, and by the time the former
reached the doorway Grayson was halfway to the office
building on the veranda of which stood the four soldiers
of Villa grumbling and muttering over the absence
of their prisoner of the previous evening.
Billy Byrne stepped out into the open.
The ranch foreman called aloud to the four Mexicans
that their prisoner was at the ranchhouse and as they
looked in that direction they saw him, revolver in
hand, coming slowly toward them. There was a
smile upon his lips which they could not see because
of the distance, and which, not knowing Billy Byrne,
they would not have interpreted correctly; but the
revolver they did understand, and at sight of it one
of them threw his carbine to his shoulder. His
finger, however, never closed upon the trigger, for
there came the sound of a shot from beyond Billy Byrne
and the Mexican staggered forward, pitching over the
edge of the porch to the ground.
Billy turned his head in the direction
from which the shot had come and saw Eddie Shorter
running toward him, a smoking six-shooter in his right
hand.
“Go back,” commanded Byrne; “this
is my funeral.”
“Not on your life,” replied
Eddie Shorter. “Those greasers don’t
take no white man off’n El Orobo, while I’m
here. Get busy! They’re comin’.”
And sure enough they were coming,
and as they came their carbines popped and the bullets
whizzed about the heads of the two Americans.
Grayson, too, had taken a hand upon the side of the
Villistas. From the bunkhouse other men were
running rapidly in the direction of the fight, attracted
by the first shots.
Billy and Eddie stood their ground,
a few paces apart. Two more of Villa’s
men went down. Grayson ran for cover. Then
Billy Byrne dropped the last of the Mexicans just as
the men from the bunkhouse came panting upon the scene.
There were both Americans and Mexicans among them.
All were armed and weapons were ready in their hands.
They paused a short distance from
the two men. Eddie’s presence upon the
side of the stranger saved Billy from instant death,
for Eddie was well liked by both his Mexican and American
fellow-workers.
“What’s the fuss?” asked an American.
Eddie told them, and when they learned
that the boss’s daughter had been spirited away
and that the ranch foreman was at the bottom of it
the anger of the Americans rose to a dangerous pitch.
“Where is he?” someone
asked. They were gathered in a little cluster
now about Billy Byrne and Shorter.
“I saw him duck behind the office
building,” said Eddie.
“Come on,” said another. “We’ll
get him.”
“Someone get a rope.”
The men spoke in low, ordinary tones—they
appeared unexcited. Determination was the most
apparent characteristic of the group. One of
them ran back toward the bunkhouse for his rope.
The others walked slowly in the direction of the
rear of the office building. Grayson was not
there. The search proceeded. The Americans
were in advance. The Mexicans kept in a group
by themselves a little in rear of the others—it
was not their trouble. If the gringos wanted
to lynch another gringo, well and good—that
was the gringos’ business. They would
keep out of it, and they did.
Down past the bunkhouse and the cookhouse
to the stables the searchers made their way.
Grayson could not be found. In the stables
one of the men made a discovery—the foreman’s
saddle had vanished. Out in the corrals they
went. One of the men laughed—the
bars were down and the saddle horses gone. Eddie
Shorter presently pointed out across the pasture and
the river to the skyline of the low bluffs beyond.
The others looked. A horseman was just visible
urging his mount upward to the crest, the two stood
in silhouette against the morning sky pink with the
new sun.
“That’s him,” said Eddie.
“Let him go,” said Billy
Byrne. “He won’t never come back
and he ain’t worth chasin’. Not while
we got Miss Barbara to look after. My horse
is down there with yours. I’m goin’
down to get him. Will you come, Shorter?
I may need help—I ain’t much with
a rope yet.”
He started off without waiting for
a reply, and all the Americans followed. Together
they circled the horses and drove them back to the
corral. When Billy had saddled and mounted he
saw that the others had done likewise.
“We’re goin’ with
you,” said one of the men. “Miss
Barbara b’longs to us.”
Billy nodded and moved off in the
direction of the ranchhouse. Here he dismounted
and with Eddie Shorter and Mr. Harding commenced circling
the house in search of some manner of clue to the
direction taken by the abductors. It was not
long before they came upon the spot where the Indians’
horses had stood the night before. From there
the trail led plainly down toward the river.
In a moment ten Americans were following it, after
Mr. Harding had supplied Billy Byrne with a carbine,
another six-shooter, and ammunition.
Through the river and the cut in the
barbed-wire fence, then up the face of the bluff and
out across the low mesa beyond the trail led.
For a mile it was distinct, and then disappeared
as though the riders had separated.
“Well,” said Billy, as
the others drew around him for consultation, “they’d
be goin’ to the hills there. They was
Pimans—Esteban’s tribe. They
got her up there in the hills somewheres. Let’s
split up an’ search the hills for her.
Whoever comes on ’em first’ll have to do
some shootin’ and the rest of us can close in
an’ help. We can go in pairs—then
if one’s killed the other can ride out an’
lead the way back to where it happened.”
The men seemed satisfied with the
plan and broke up into parties of two. Eddie
Shorter paired off with Billy Byrne.
“Spread out,” said the
latter to his companions. “Eddie an’
I’ll ride straight ahead—the rest
of you can fan out a few miles on either side of us.
S’long an’ good luck,” and he started
off toward the hills, Eddie Shorter at his side.
Back at the ranch the Mexican vaqueros
lounged about, grumbling. With no foreman there
was nothing to do except talk about their troubles.
They had not been paid since the looting of the bank
at Cuivaca, for Mr. Harding had been unable to get
any silver from elsewhere until a few days since.
He now had assurances that it was on the way to
him; but whether or not it would reach El Orobo was
a question.
“Why should we stay here when
we are not paid?” asked one of them.
“Yes, why?” chorused several others.
“There is nothing to do here,”
said another. “We will go to Cuivaca.
I, for one, am tired of working for the gringos.”
This met with the unqualified approval
of all, and a few moments later the men had saddled
their ponies and were galloping away in the direction
of sun-baked Cuivaca. They sang now, and were
happy, for they were as little boys playing hooky
from school—not bad men; but rather irresponsible
children.
Once in Cuivaca they swooped down
upon the drinking-place, where, with what little money
a few of them had left they proceeded to get drunk.
Later in the day an old, dried-up
Indian entered. He was hot and dusty from a
long ride.
“Hey, Jose!” cried one
of the vaqueros from El Orobo Rancho; “you old
rascal, what are you doing here?”
Jose looked around upon them.
He knew them all—they represented the
Mexican contingent of the riders of El Orobo.
Jose wondered what they were all doing here in Cuivaca
at one time. Even upon a pay day it never had
been the rule of El Orobo to allow more than four
men at a time to come to town.
“Oh, Jose come to buy coffee
and tobacco,” he replied. He looked about
searchingly. “Where are the others?”
he asked, “—the gringos?”
“They have ridden after Esteban,”
explained one of the vaqueros. “He has
run off with Senorita Harding.”
Jose raised his eyebrows as though
this was all news.
“And Senor Grayson has gone
with them?” he asked. “He was very
fond of the senorita.”
“Senor Grayson has run away,”
went on the other speaker. “The other
gringos wished to hang him, for it is said he has
bribed Esteban to do this thing.”
Again Jose raised his eyebrows.
“Impossible!” he ejaculated. “And
who then guards the ranch?” he asked presently.
“Senor Harding, two Mexican
house servants, and a Chinaman,” and the vaquero
laughed.
“I must be going,” Jose
announced after a moment. “It is a long
ride for an old man from my poor home to Cuivaca, and
back again.”
The vaqueros were paying no further
attention to him, and the Indian passed out and sought
his pony; but when he had mounted and ridden from
town he took a strange direction for one whose path
lies to the east, since he turned his pony’s
head toward the northwest.
Jose had ridden far that day, since
Billy had left his humble hut. He had gone to
the west to the little rancho of one of Pesita’s
adherents who had dispatched a boy to carry word to
the bandit that his Captain Byrne had escaped the Villistas,
and then Jose had ridden into Cuivaca by a circuitous
route which brought him up from the east side of the
town.
Now he was riding once again for Pesita;
but this time he would bear the information himself.
He found the chief in camp and after begging tobacco
and a cigarette paper the Indian finally reached the
purpose of his visit.
“Jose has just come from Cuivaca,”
he said, “and there he drank with all the Mexican
vaqueros of El Orobo Rancho— all,
my general, you understand. It seems that Esteban
has carried off the beautiful senorita of El Orobo
Rancho, and the vaqueros tell Jose that all the
American vaqueros have ridden in search of her—all,
my general, you understand. In such times of
danger it is odd that the gringos should leave El
Orobo thus unguarded. Only the rich Senor Harding,
two house servants, and a Chinaman remain.”
A man lay stretched upon his blankets
in a tent next to that occupied by Pesita. At
the sound of the speaker’s voice, low though
it was, he raised his head and listened. He heard
every word, and a scowl settled upon his brow.
Barbara stolen! Mr Harding practically alone
upon the ranch! And Pesita in possession of
this information!
Bridge rose to his feet. He
buckled his cartridge belt about his waist and picked
up his carbine, then he crawled under the rear wall
of his tent and walked slowly off in the direction
of the picket line where the horses were tethered.
“Ah, Senor Bridge,” said
a pleasant voice in his ear; “where to?”
Bridge turned quickly to look into
the smiling, evil face of Rozales.
“Oh,” he replied, “I’m
going out to see if I can’t find some shooting.
It’s awfully dull sitting around here doing
nothing.”
“Si, senor,” agreed Rozales;
“I, too, find it so. Let us go together—I
know where the shooting is best.”
“I don’t doubt it,”
thought Bridge; “probably in the back;”
but aloud he said: “Certainly, that will
be fine,” for he guessed that Rozales had been
set to watch his movements and prevent his escape,
and, perchance, to be the sole witness of some unhappy
event which should carry Senor Bridge to the arms
of his fathers.
Rozales called a soldier to saddle
and bridle their horses and shortly after the two
were riding abreast down the trail out of the hills.
Where it was necessary that they ride in single file
Bridge was careful to see that Rozales rode ahead,
and the Mexican graciously permitted the American
to fall behind.
If he was inspired by any other motive
than simple espionage he was evidently content to
bide his time until chance gave him the opening he
desired, and it was equally evident that he felt as
safe in front of the American as behind him.
At a point where a ravine down which
they had ridden debauched upon a mesa Rozales suggested
that they ride to the north, which was not at all
the direction in which Bridge intended going.
The American demurred.
“But there is no shooting down
in the valley,” urged Rozales.
“I think there will be,”
was Bridge’s enigmatical reply, and then, with
a sudden exclamation of surprise he pointed over Rozales’
shoulder. “What’s that?” he
cried in a voice tense with excitement.
The Mexican turned his head quickly
in the direction Bridge’s index finger indicated.
“I see nothing,” said Rozales, after a
moment.
“You do now, though,”
replied Bridge, and as the Mexican’s eyes returned
in the direction of his companion he was forced to
admit that he did see something—the dismal,
hollow eye of a six-shooter looking him straight in
the face.
“Senor Bridge!” exclaimed
Rozales. “What are you doing? What
do you mean?”
“I mean,” said Bridge,
“that if you are at all solicitous of your health
you’ll climb down off that pony, not forgetting
to keep your hands above your head when you reach
the ground. Now climb!”
Rozales dismounted.
“Turn your back toward me,”
commanded the American, and when the other had obeyed
him, Bridge dismounted and removed the man’s
weapons from his belt. “Now you may go,
Rozales,” he said, “and should you ever
have an American in your power again remember that
I spared your life when I might easily have taken
it—when it would have been infinitely safer
for me to have done it.”
The Mexican made no reply, but the
black scowl that clouded his face boded ill for the
next gringo who should be so unfortunate as to fall
into his hands. Slowly he wheeled about and
started back up the trail in the direction of the
Pesita camp.
“I’ll be halfway to El
Orobo,” thought Bridge, “before he gets
a chance to tell Pesita what happened to him,”
and then he remounted and rode on down into the valley,
leading Rozales’ horse behind him.
It would never do, he knew, to turn
the animal loose too soon, since he would doubtless
make his way back to camp, and in doing so would have
to pass Rozales who would catch him. Time was
what Bridge wanted—to be well on his way
to Orobo before Pesita should learn of his escape.
Bridge knew nothing of what had happened
to Billy, for Pesita had seen to it that the information
was kept from the American. The latter had,
nevertheless, been worrying not a little at the absence
of his friend for he knew that he had taken his liberty
and his life in his hands in riding down to El Orobo
among avowed enemies.
Far to his rear Rozales plodded sullenly
up the steep trail through the mountains, revolving
in his mind various exquisite tortures he should be
delighted to inflict upon the next gringo who came
into his power.