“You are my girl!”
Mr. Anthony Harding
was pacing back and forth the length of the veranda
of the ranchhouse at El Orobo waiting for some word
of hope from those who had ridden out in search of
his daughter, Barbara. Each swirling dust devil
that eddied across the dry flat on either side of
the river roused hopes within his breast that it might
have been spurred into activity by the hoofs of a
pony bearing a messenger of good tidings; but always
his hopes were dashed, for no horseman emerged from
the heat haze of the distance where the little dust
devils raced playfully among the cacti and the greasewood.
But at last, in the northwest, a horseman,
unheralded by gyrating dust column, came into sight.
Mr. Harding shook his head sorrowfully. It
had not been from this direction that he had expected
word of Barbara, yet he kept his eyes fastened upon
the rider until the latter reined in at the ranchyard
and loped a tired and sweating pony to the foot of
the veranda steps. Then Mr. Harding saw who
the newcomer was.
“Bridge!” he exclaimed.
“What brings you back here? Don’t
you know that you endanger us as well as yourself by
being seen here? General Villa will think that
we have been harboring you.”
Bridge swung from the saddle and ran
up onto the veranda. He paid not the slightest
attention to Anthony Harding’s protest.
“How many men you got here that
you can depend on?” he asked.
“None,” replied the Easterner. “What
do you mean?”
“None!” cried Bridge,
incredulity and hopelessness showing upon his countenance.
“Isn’t there a Chinaman and a couple
of faithful Mexicans?”
“Oh, yes, of course,”
assented Mr. Harding; “but what are you driving
at?”
“Pesita is on his way here to
clean up El Orobo. He can’t be very far
behind me. Call the men you got, and we’ll
get together all the guns and ammunition on the ranch,
and barricade the ranchhouse. We may be able
to stand ’em off. Have you heard anything
of Miss Barbara?”
Anthony Harding shook his head sadly.
“Then we’ll have to stay
right here and do the best we can,” said Bridge.
“I was thinking we might make a run for it
if Miss Barbara was here; but as she’s not we
must wait for those who went out after her.”
Mr. Harding summoned the two Mexicans
while Bridge ran to the cookhouse and ordered the
Chinaman to the ranchhouse. Then the erstwhile
bookkeeper ransacked the bunkhouse for arms and ammunition.
What little he found he carried to the ranchhouse,
and with the help of the others barricaded the doors
and windows of the first floor.
“We’ll have to make our
fight from the upper windows,” he explained
to the ranch owner. “If Pesita doesn’t
bring too large a force we may be able to stand them
off until you can get help from Cuivaca. Call
up there now and see if you can get Villa to send
help—he ought to protect you from Pesita.
I understand that there is no love lost between the
two.”
Anthony Harding went at once to the
telephone and rang for the central at Cuivaca.
“Tell it to the operator,”
shouted Bridge who stood peering through an opening
in the barricade before a front window; “they
are coming now, and the chances are that the first
thing they’ll do is cut the telephone wires.”
The Easterner poured his story and
appeal for help into the ears of the girl at the other
end of the line, and then for a few moments there
was silence in the room as he listened to her reply.
“Impossible!” and “My
God! it can’t be true,” Bridge heard the
older man ejaculate, and then he saw him hang up the
receiver and turn from the instrument, his face drawn
and pinched with an expression of utter hopelessness.
“What’s wrong?” asked Bridge.
“Villa has turned against the
Americans,” replied Harding, dully. “The
operator evidently feels friendly toward us, for she
warned me not to appeal to Villa and told me why.
Even now, this minute, the man has a force of twenty-five
hundred ready to march on Columbus, New Mexico.
Three Americans were hanged in Cuivaca this afternoon.
It’s horrible, sir! It’s horrible!
We are as good as dead this very minute. Even
if we stand off Pesita we can never escape to the
border through Villa’s forces.”
“It looks bad,” admitted
Bridge. “In fact it couldn’t look
much worse; but here we are, and while our ammunition
holds out about all we can do is stay here and use
it. Will you men stand by us?” he addressed
the Chinaman and the two Mexicans, who assured him
that they had no love for Pesita and would fight for
Anthony Harding in preference to going over to the
enemy.
“Good!” exclaimed Bridge,
“and now for upstairs. They’ll be
howling around here in about five minutes, and we want
to give them a reception they won’t forget.”
He led the way to the second floor,
where the five took up positions near the front windows.
A short distance from the ranchhouse they could see
the enemy, consisting of a detachment of some twenty
of Pesita’s troopers riding at a brisk trot
in their direction.
“Pesita’s with them,”
announced Bridge, presently. “He’s
the little fellow on the sorrel. Wait until they
are close up, then give them a few rounds; but go
easy on the ammunition —we haven’t
any too much.”
Pesita, expecting no resistance, rode
boldly into the ranchyard. At the bunkhouse
and the office his little force halted while three
or four troopers dismounted and entered the buildings
in search of victims. Disappointed there they
moved toward the ranchhouse.
“Lie low!” Bridge cautioned
his companions. “Don’t let them
see you, and wait till I give the word before you fire.”
On came the horsemen at a slow walk.
Bridge waited until they were within a few yards
of the house, then he cried: “Now!
Let ’em have it!” A rattle of rifle fire
broke from the upper windows into the ranks of the
Pesitistas. Three troopers reeled and slipped
from their saddles. Two horses dropped in their
tracks. Cursing and yelling, the balance of the
horsemen wheeled and galloped away in the direction
of the office building, followed by the fire of the
defenders.
“That wasn’t so bad,”
cried Bridge. “I’ll venture a guess
that Mr. Pesita is some surprised—and sore.
There they go behind the office. They’ll
stay there a few minutes talking it over and getting
up their courage to try it again. Next time
they’ll come from another direction. You
two,” he continued, turning to the Mexicans,
“take positions on the east and south sides
of the house. Sing can remain here with Mr.
Harding. I’ll take the north side facing
the office. Shoot at the first man who shows
his head. If we can hold them off until dark
we may be able to get away. Whatever happens
don’t let one of them get close enough to fire
the house. That’s what they’ll try
for.”
It was fifteen minutes before the
second attack came. Five dismounted troopers
made a dash for the north side of the house; but when
Bridge dropped the first of them before he had taken
ten steps from the office building and wounded a second
the others retreated for shelter.
Time and again as the afternoon wore
away Pesita made attempts to get men close up to the
house; but in each instance they were driven back,
until at last they desisted from their efforts to
fire the house or rush it, and contented themselves
with firing an occasional shot through the windows
opposite them.
“They’re waiting for dark,”
said Bridge to Mr. Harding during a temporary lull
in the hostilities, “and then we’re goners,
unless the boys come back from across the river in
time.”
“Couldn’t we get away
after dark?” asked the Easterner.
“It’s our only hope if
help don’t reach us,” replied Bridge.
But when night finally fell and the
five men made an attempt to leave the house upon the
side away from the office building they were met with
the flash of carbines and the ping of bullets.
One of the Mexican defenders fell, mortally wounded,
and the others were barely able to drag him within
and replace the barricade before the door when five
of Pesita’s men charged close up to their defenses.
These were finally driven off and again there came
a lull; but all hope of escape was gone, and Bridge
reposted the defenders at the upper windows where
they might watch every approach to the house.
As the hours dragged on the hopelessness
of their position grew upon the minds of all.
Their ammunition was almost gone—each
man had but a few rounds remaining—and it
was evident that Pesita, through an inordinate desire
for revenge, would persist until he had reduced their
fortress and claimed the last of them as his victim.
It was with such cheerful expectations
that they awaited the final assault which would see
them without ammunition and defenseless in the face
of a cruel and implacable foe.
It was just before daylight that the
anticipated rush occurred. From every side rang
the reports of carbines and the yells of the bandits.
There were scarcely more than a dozen of the original
twenty left; but they made up for their depleted numbers
by the rapidity with which they worked their firearms
and the loudness and ferocity of their savage cries.
And this time they reached the shelter
of the veranda and commenced battering at the door.
At the report of the rifle so close
to them Billy Byrne shoved Barbara quickly to one
side and leaped forward to close with the man who
barred their way to liberty.
That they had surprised him even more
than he had them was evidenced by the wildness of
his shot which passed harmlessly above their heads
as well as by the fact that he had permitted them
to come so close before engaging them.
To the latter event was attributable
his undoing, for it permitted Billy Byrne to close
with him before the Indian could reload his antiquated
weapon. Down the two men went, the American
on top, each striving for a death-hold; but in weight
and strength and skill the Piman was far outclassed
by the trained fighter, a part of whose daily workouts
had consisted in wrestling with proficient artists
of the mat.
Barbara Harding ran forward to assist
her champion but as the men rolled and tumbled over
the ground she could find no opening for a blow that
might not endanger Billy Byrne quite as much as it
endangered his antagonist; but presently she discovered
that the American required no assistance. She
saw the Indian’s head bending slowly forward
beneath the resistless force of the other’s
huge muscles, she heard the crack that announced the
parting of the vertebrae and saw the limp thing which
had but a moment before been a man, pulsing with life
and vigor, roll helplessly aside—a harmless
and inanimate lump of clay.
Billy Byrne leaped to his feet, shaking
himself as a great mastiff might whose coat had been
ruffled in a fight.
“Come!” he whispered.
“We gotta beat it now for sure. That
guy’s shot’ll lead ’em right down
to us,” and once more they took up their flight
down toward the valley, along an unknown trail through
the darkness of the night.
For the most part they moved in silence,
Billy holding the girl’s arm or hand to steady
her over the rough and dangerous portions of the path.
And as they went there grew in Billy’s breast
a love so deep and so resistless that he found himself
wondering that he had ever imagined that his former
passion for this girl was love.
This new thing surged through him
and over him with all the blind, brutal, compelling
force of a mighty tidal wave. It battered down
and swept away the frail barriers of his new-found
gentleness. Again he was the Mucker—hating
the artificial wall of social caste which separated
him from this girl; but now he was ready to climb
the wall, or, better still, to batter it down with
his huge fists. But the time was not yet—
first he must get Barbara to a place of safety.
On and on they went. The night
grew cold. Far ahead there sounded the occasional
pop of a rifle. Billy wondered what it could
mean and as they approached the ranch and he discovered
that it came from that direction he hastened their
steps to even greater speed than before.
“Somebody’s shootin’
up the ranch,” he volunteered. “Wonder
who it could be.”
“Suppose it is your friend and
general?” asked the girl.
Billy made no reply. They reached
the river and as Billy knew not where the fords lay
he plunged in at the point at which the water first
barred their progress and dragging the girl after
him, plowed bull-like for the opposite shore.
Where the water was above his depth he swam while
Barbara clung to his shoulders. Thus they made
the passage quickly and safely.
Billy stopped long enough to shake
the water out of his carbine, which the girl had carried
across, and then forged ahead toward the ranchhouse
from which the sounds of battle came now in increased
volume.
And at the ranchhouse “hell
was popping.” The moment Bridge realized
that some of the attackers had reached the veranda
he called the surviving Mexican and the Chinaman to
follow him to the lower floor where they might stand
a better chance to repel this new attack. Mr.
Harding he persuaded to remain upstairs.
Outside a dozen men were battering
to force an entrance. Already one panel had
splintered, and as Bridge entered the room he could
see the figures of the bandits through the hole they
had made. Raising his rifle he fired through
the aperture. There was a scream as one of
the attackers dropped; but the others only increased
their efforts, their oaths, and their threats of vengeance.
The three defenders poured a few rounds
through the sagging door, then Bridge noted that the
Chinaman ceased firing.
“What’s the matter?” he asked.
“Allee gonee,” replied
Sing, pointing to his ammunition belt.
At the same instant the Mexican threw
down his carbine and rushed for a window on the opposite
side of the room. His ammunition was exhausted
and with it had departed his courage. Flight
seemed the only course remaining. Bridge made
no effort to stop him. He would have been glad
to fly, too; but he could not leave Anthony Harding,
and he was sure that the older man would prove unequal
to any sustained flight on foot.
“You better go, too, Sing,”
he said to the Chinaman, placing another bullet through
the door; “there’s nothing more that you
can do, and it may be that they are all on this side
now—I think they are. You fellows
have fought splendidly. Wish I could give you
something more substantial than thanks; but that’s
all I have now and shortly Pesita won’t even
leave me that much.”
“Allee light,” replied
Sing cheerfully, and a second later he was clambering
through the window in the wake of the loyal Mexican.
And then the door crashed in and half
a dozen troopers followed by Pesita himself burst
into the room.
Bridge was standing at the foot of
the stairs, his carbine clubbed, for he had just spent
his last bullet. He knew that he must die; but
he was determined to make them purchase his life as
dearly as he could, and to die in defense of Anthony
Harding, the father of the girl he loved, even though
hopelessly.
Pesita saw from the American’s
attitude that he had no more ammunition. He
struck up the carbine of a trooper who was about to
shoot Bridge down.
“Wait!” commanded the
bandit. “Cease firing! His ammunition
is gone. Will you surrender?” he asked
of Bridge.
“Not until I have beaten from
the heads of one or two of your friends,” he
replied, “that which their egotism leads them
to imagine are brains. No, if you take me alive,
Pesita, you will have to kill me to do it.”
Pesita shrugged. “Very
well,” he said, indifferently, “it makes
little difference to me—that stairway is
as good as a wall. These brave defenders of
the liberty of poor, bleeding Mexico will make an
excellent firing squad. Attention, my children!
Ready! Aim!”
Eleven carbines were leveled at Bridge.
In the ghastly light of early dawn the sallow complexions
of the Mexicans took on a weird hue. The American
made a wry face, a slight shudder shook his slender
frame, and then he squared his shoulders and looked
Pesita smilingly in the face.
The figure of a man appeared at the
window through which the Chinaman and the loyal Mexican
had escaped. Quick eyes took in the scene within
the room.
“Hey!” he yelled.
“Cut the rough stuff!” and leaped into
the room.
Pesita, surprised by the interruption,
turned toward the intruder before he had given the
command to fire. A smile lit his features when
he saw who it was.
“Ah!” he exclaimed, “my
dear Captain Byrne. Just in time to see a traitor
and a spy pay the penalty for his crimes.”
“Nothin’ doin’,”
growled Billy Byrne, and then he threw his carbine
to his shoulder and took careful aim at Pesita’s
face.
How easy it would have been to have
hesitated a moment in the window before he made his
presence known—just long enough for Pesita
to speak the single word that would have sent eleven
bullets speeding into the body of the man who loved
Barbara and whom Billy believed the girl loved.
But did such a thought occur to Billy Byrne of Grand
Avenue? It did not. He forgot every other
consideration beyond his loyalty to a friend.
Bridge and Pesita were looking at him in wide-eyed
astonishment.
“Lay down your carbines!”
Billy shot his command at the firing squad.
“Lay ’em down or I’ll bore Pesita.
Tell ’em to lay ’em down, Pesita.
I gotta bead on your beezer.”
Pesita did as he was bid, his yellow
face pasty with rage.
“Now their cartridge belts!”
snapped Billy, and when these had been deposited upon
the floor he told Bridge to disarm the bandit chief.
“Is Mr. Harding safe?”
he asked of Bridge, and receiving an affirmative he
called upstairs for the older man to descend.
As Mr. Harding reached the foot of
the stairs Barbara entered the room by the window
through which Billy had come—a window which
opened upon the side veranda.
“Now we gotta hike,” announced
Billy. “It won’t never be safe for
none of you here after this, not even if you do think
Villa’s your friend—which he ain’t
the friend of no American.”
“We know that now,” said
Mr. Harding, and repeated to Billy that which the
telephone operator had told him earlier in the day.
Marching Pesita and his men ahead
of them Billy and the others made their way to the
rear of the office building where the horses of the
bandits were tethered. They were each armed
now from the discarded weapons of the raiders, and
well supplied with ammunition. The Chinaman
and the loyal Mexican also discovered themselves when
they learned that the tables had been turned upon
Pesita. They, too, were armed and all were mounted,
and when Billy had loaded the remaining weapons upon
the balance of the horses the party rode away, driving
Pesita’s live stock and arms ahead of them.
“I imagine,” remarked
Bridge, “that you’ve rather discouraged
pursuit for a while at least,” but pursuit came
sooner than they had anticipated.
They had reached a point on the river
not far from Jose’s when a band of horsemen
appeared approaching from the west. Billy urged
his party to greater speed that they might avoid a
meeting if possible; but it soon became evident that
the strangers had no intention of permitting them to
go unchallenged, for they altered their course and
increased their speed so that they were soon bearing
down upon the fugitives at a rapid gallop.
“I guess,” said Billy,
“that we’d better open up on ’em.
It’s a cinch they ain’t no friends of
ours anywhere in these parts.”
“Hadn’t we better wait
a moment,” said Mr. Harding; “we do not
want to chance making any mistake.”
“It ain’t never a mistake
to shoot a Dago,” replied Billy. His
eyes were fastened upon the approaching horsemen, and
he presently gave an exclamation of recognition.
“There’s Rozales,” he said.
“I couldn’t mistake that beanpole nowheres.
We’re safe enough in takin’ a shot at
’em if Rosie’s with ’em.
He’s Pesita’s head guy,” and he drew
his revolver and took a single shot in the direction
of his former comrades. Bridge followed his
example. The oncoming Pesitistas reined in.
Billy returned his revolver to its holster and drew
his carbine.
“You ride on ahead,” he
said to Mr. Harding and Barbara. “Bridge
and I’ll bring up the rear.”
Then he stopped his pony and turning
took deliberate aim at the knot of horsemen to their
left. A bandit tumbled from his saddle and the
fight was on.
Fortunately for the Americans Rozales
had but a handful of men with him and Rozales himself
was never keen for a fight in the open.
All morning he hovered around the
rear of the escaping Americans; but neither side did
much damage to the other, and during the afternoon
Billy noticed that Rozales merely followed within
sight of them, after having dispatched one of his
men back in the direction from which they had come.
“After reinforcements,” commented Byrne.
All day they rode without meeting
with any roving bands of soldiers or bandits, and
the explanation was all too sinister to the Americans
when coupled with the knowledge that Villa was to
attack an American town that night.
“I wish we could reach the border
in time to warn ’em,” said Billy; “but
they ain’t no chance. If we cross before
sunup tomorrow morning we’ll be doin’
well.”
He had scarcely spoken to Barbara
Harding all day, for his duties as rear guard had
kept him busy; nor had he conversed much with Bridge,
though he had often eyed the latter whose gaze wandered
many times to the slender, graceful figure of the
girl ahead of them.
Billy was thinking as he never had
thought before. It seemed to him a cruel fate
that had so shaped their destinies that his best friend
loved the girl Billy loved. That Bridge was
ignorant of Billy’s infatuation for her the latter
well knew. He could not blame Bridge, nor could
he, upon the other hand, quite reconcile himself to
the more than apparent adoration which marked his
friend’s attitude toward Barbara.
As daylight waned the fugitives realized
from the shuffling gait of their mounts, from drooping
heads and dull eyes that rest was imperative.
They themselves were fagged, too, and when a ranchhouse
loomed in front of them they decided to halt for much-needed
recuperation.
Here they found three Americans who
were totally unaware of Villa’s contemplated
raid across the border, and who when they were informed
of it were doubly glad to welcome six extra carbines,
for Barbara not only was armed but was eminently qualified
to expend ammunition without wasting it.
Rozales and his small band halted
out of range of the ranch; but they went hungry while
their quarry fed themselves and their tired mounts.
The Clark brothers and their cousin,
a man by the name of Mason, who were the sole inhabitants
of the ranch counseled a long rest—two
hours at least, for the border was still ten miles
away and speed at the last moment might be their sole
means of salvation.
Billy was for moving on at once before
the reinforcements, for which he was sure Rozales
had dispatched his messenger, could overtake them.
But the others were tired and argued, too, that upon
jaded ponies they could not hope to escape and so
they waited, until, just as they were ready to continue
their flight, flight became impossible.
Darkness had fallen when the little
party commenced to resaddle their ponies and in the
midst of their labors there came a rude and disheartening
interruption. Billy had kept either the Chinaman
or Bridge constantly upon watch toward the direction
in which Rozales’ men lolled smoking in the
dark, and it was the crack of Bridge’s carbine
which awoke the Americans to the fact that though
the border lay but a few miles away they were still
far from safety.
As he fired Bridge turned in his saddle
and shouted to the others to make for the shelter
of the ranchhouse.
“There are two hundred of them,”
he cried. “Run for cover!”
Billy and the Clark brothers leaped
to their saddles and spurred toward the point where
Bridge sat pumping lead into the advancing enemy.
Mason and Mr. Harding hurried Barbara to the questionable
safety of the ranchhouse. The Mexican followed
them, and Bridge ordered Sing back to assist in barricading
the doors and windows, while he and Billy and the
Clark boys held the bandits in momentary check.
Falling back slowly and firing constantly
as they came the four approached the house while Pesita
and his full band advanced cautiously after them.
They had almost reached the house when Bridge lunged
forward from his saddle. The Clark boys had
dismounted and were leading their ponies inside the
house. Billy alone noted the wounding of his
friend. Without an instant’s hesitation
he slipped from his saddle, ran back to where Bridge
lay and lifted him in his arms. Bullets were
pattering thick about them. A horseman far in
advance of his fellows galloped forward with drawn
saber to cut down the gringos.
Billy, casting an occasional glance
behind, saw the danger in time to meet it—just,
in fact, as the weapon was cutting through the air
toward his head. Dropping Bridge and dodging
to one side he managed to escape the cut, and before
the swordsman could recover Billy had leaped to his
pony’s side and seizing the rider about the
waist dragged him to the ground.
“Rozales!” he exclaimed,
and struck the man as he had never struck another
in all his life, with the full force of his mighty
muscles backed by his great weight, with clenched fist
full in the face.
There was a spurting of blood and
a splintering of bone, and Captain Guillermo Rozales
sank senseless to the ground, his career of crime
and rapine ended forever.
Again Billy lifted Bridge in his arms
and this time he succeeded in reaching the ranchhouse
without opposition though a little crimson stream
trickled down his left arm to drop upon the face of
his friend as he deposited Bridge upon the floor of
the house.
All night the Pesitistas circled the
lone ranchhouse. All night they poured their
volleys into the adobe walls and through the barricaded
windows. All night the little band of defenders
fought gallantly for their lives; but as day approached
the futility of their endeavors was borne in upon
them, for of the nine one was dead and three wounded,
and the numbers of their assailants seemed undiminished.
Billy Byrne had been lying all night
upon his stomach before a window firing out into the
darkness at the dim forms which occasionally showed
against the dull, dead background of the moonless
desert.
Presently he leaped to his feet and
crossed the floor to the room in which the horses
had been placed.
“Everybody fire toward the rear
of the house as fast as they can,” said Billy.
“I want a clear space for my getaway.”
“Where you goin?” asked one of the Clark
brothers.
“North,” replied Billy,
“after some of Funston’s men on the border.”
“But they won’t cross,”
said Mr. Harding. “Washington won’t
let them.”
“They gotta,” snapped
Billy Byrne, “an’ they will when they
know there’s an American girl here with a bunch
of Dagos yappin’ around.”
“You’ll be killed,”
said Price Clark. “You can’t never
get through.”
“Leave it to me,” replied
Billy. “Just get ready an’ open
that back door when I give the word, an’ then
shut it again in a hurry when I’ve gone through.”
He led a horse from the side room, and mounted it.
“Open her up, boes!” he shouted, and “S’long
everybody!”
Price Clark swung the door open.
Billy put spurs to his mount and threw himself forward
flat against the animal’s neck. Another
moment he was through and a rattling fusillade of
shots proclaimed the fact that his bold feat had not
gone unnoted by the foe.
The little Mexican pony shot like
a bolt from a crossbow out across the level desert.
The rattling of carbines only served to add speed
to its frightened feet. Billy sat erect in the
saddle, guiding the horse with his left hand and working
his revolver methodically with his right.
At a window behind him Barbara Harding
stood breathless and spellbound until he had disappeared
into the gloom of the early morning darkness to the
north, then she turned with a weary sigh and resumed
her place beside the wounded Bridge whose head she
bathed with cool water, while he tossed in the delirium
of fever.
The first streaks of daylight were
piercing the heavens, the Pesitistas were rallying
for a decisive charge, the hopes of the little band
of besieged were at low ebb when from the west there
sounded the pounding of many hoofs.
“Villa,” moaned Westcott
Clark, hopelessly. “We’re done for
now, sure enough. He must be comin’ back
from his raid on the border.”
In the faint light of dawn they saw
a column of horsemen deploy suddenly into a long,
thin line which galloped forward over the flat earth,
coming toward them like a huge, relentless engine
of destruction.
The Pesitistas were watching too.
They had ceased firing and sat in their saddles forgetful
of their contemplated charge.
The occupants of the ranchhouse were
gathered at the small windows.
“What’s them?” cried
Mason—“them things floating over
’em.”
“They’re guidons!”
exclaimed Price Clark “—the guidons
of the United States cavalry regiment. See ’em!
See ’em? God! but don’t they look
good?”
There was a wild whoop from the lungs
of the advancing cavalrymen. Pesita’s
troops answered it with a scattering volley, and a
moment later the Americans were among them in that
famous revolver charge which is now history.
Daylight had come revealing to the
watchers in the ranchhouse the figures of the combatants.
In the thick of the fight loomed the giant figure
of a man in nondescript garb which more closely resembled
the apparel of the Pesitistas than it did the uniforms
of the American soldiery, yet it was with them he
fought. Barbara’s eyes were the first to
detect him.
“There’s Mr. Byrne,”
she cried. “It must have been he who brought
the troops.”
“Why, he hasn’t had time
to reach the border yet,” remonstrated one of
the Clark boys, “much less get back here with
help.”
“There he is though,”
said Mr. Harding. “It’s certainly
strange. I can’t understand what American
troops are doing across the border—especially
under the present administration.”
The Pesitistas held their ground for
but a moment then they wheeled and fled; but not before
Pesita himself had forced his pony close to that of
Billy Byrne.
“Traitor!” screamed the
bandit. “You shall die for this,”
and fired point-blank at the American.
Billy felt a burning sensation in
his already wounded left arm; but his right was still
good.
“For poor, bleeding Mexico!”
he cried, and put a bullet through Pesita’s
forehead.
Under escort of the men of the Thirteenth
Cavalry who had pursued Villa’s raiders into
Mexico and upon whom Billy Byrne had stumbled by chance,
the little party of fugitives came safely to United
States soil, where all but one breathed sighs of heartfelt
relief.
Bridge was given first aid by members
of the hospital corps, who assured Billy that his
friend would not die. Mr. Harding and Barbara
were taken in by the wife of an officer, and it was
at the quarters of the latter that Billy Byrne found
her alone in the sitting-room.
The girl looked up as he entered,
a sad smile upon her face. She was about to
ask him of his wound; but he gave her no opportunity.
“I’ve come for you,”
he said. “I gave you up once when I thought
it was better for you to marry a man in your own class.
I won’t give you up again. You’re
mine—you’re my girl, and I’m
goin’ to take you with me. Were goin’
to Galveston as fast as we can, and from there we’re
goin’ to Rio. You belonged to me long
before Bridge saw you. He can’t have you.
Nobody can have you but me, and if anyone tries to
keep me from taking you they’ll get killed.”
He took a step nearer that brought
him close to her. She did not shrink—only
looked up into his face with wide eyes filled with
wonder. He seized her roughly in his arms.
“You are my girl!” he cried hoarsely.
“Kiss me!”
“Wait!” she said.
“First tell me what you meant by saying that
Bridge couldn’t have me. I never knew that
Bridge wanted me, and I certainly have never wanted
Bridge. O Billy! Why didn’t you do
this long ago? Months ago in New York I wanted
you to take me; but you left me to another man whom
I didn’t love. I thought you had ceased
to care, Billy, and since we have been together here—since
that night in the room back of the office—you
have made me feel that I was nothing to you.
Take me, Billy! Take me anywhere in the world
that you go. I love you and I’ll slave
for you—anything just to be with you.”
“Barbara!” cried Billy
Byrne, and then his voice was smothered by the pressure
of warm, red lips against his own.
A half hour later Billy stepped out
into the street to make his way to the railroad station
that he might procure transportation for three to
Galveston. Anthony Harding was going with them.
He had listened to Barbara’s pleas, and had
finally volunteered to back Billy Byrne’s flight
from the jurisdiction of the law, or at least to a
place where, under a new name, he could start life
over again and live it as the son-in-law of old Anthony
Harding should live.
Among the crowd viewing the havoc
wrought by the raiders the previous night was a large
man with a red face. It happened that he turned
suddenly about as Billy Byrne was on the point of
passing behind him. Both men started as recognition
lighted their faces and he of the red face found himself
looking down the barrel of a six-shooter.
“Put it up, Byrne,” he
admonished the other coolly. “I didn’t
know you were so good on the draw.”
“I’m good on the draw
all right, Flannagan,” said Billy, “and
I ain’t drawin’ for amusement neither.
I gotta chance to get away and live straight, and
have a little happiness in life, and, Flannagan, the
man who tries to crab my game is goin’ to get
himself croaked. I’ll never go back to
stir alive. See?”
“Yep,” said Flannagan,
“I see; but I ain’t tryin’ to crab
your game. I ain’t down here after you
this trip. Where you been, anyway, that you
don’t know the war’s over? Why Coke
Sheehan confessed a month ago that it was him that
croaked Schneider, and the governor pardoned you about
ten days ago.”
“You stringin’ me?”
asked Billy, a vicious glint in his eyes.
“On the level,” Flannagan
assured him. “Wait, I gotta clippin’
from the Trib in my clothes somewheres that gives all
the dope.”
He drew some papers from his coat
pocket and handed one to Billy.
“Turn your back and hold up
your hands while I read,” said Byrne, and as
Flannagan did as he was bid Billy unfolded the soiled
bit of newspaper and read that which set him a-trembling
with nervous excitement.
A moment later Detective Sergeant
Flannagan ventured a rearward glance to note how Byrne
was receiving the joyful tidings which the newspaper
article contained.
“Well, I’ll be!”
ejaculated the sleuth, for Billy Byrne was already
a hundred yards away and breaking all records in his
dash for the sitting-room he had quitted but a few
minutes before.
It was a happy and contented trio
who took the train the following day on their way
back to New York City after bidding Bridge good-bye
in the improvised hospital and exacting his promise
that he would visit them in New York in the near future.
It was a month later; spring was filling
the southland with new, sweet life. The joy
of living was reflected in the song of birds and the
opening of buds. Beside a slow-moving stream
a man squatted before a tiny fire. A battered
tin can, half filled with water stood close to the
burning embers. Upon a sharpened stick the man
roasted a bit of meat, and as he watched it curling
at the edges as the flame licked it he spoke aloud
though there was none to hear:
Just for a con I’d like to know
(yes, he crossed over long ago;
And he was right, believe me, bo!) if somewhere
in the South,
Down where the clouds lie on the sea,
he found his sweet Penelope
With buds of roses in her hair and kisses on
her mouth.
“Which is what they will be
singing about me one of these days,” he commented.