BATTLE LIGHT
O’Brien pressed close to Barry.
“Partner,” he said rapidly,
“you’re clear now—you’re
clear of more hell that you ever dream. Now climb
that hoss of yours and feed him leather till you get
clear of Brownsville—and if I was you I’d
never come within a day’s ride of the Three
B’s again.”
The mild, brown eyes widened.
“I don’t like crowds,” murmured
Barry.
“You’re wise, kid,”
grinned the bartender—“a hell of a
lot wiser than you know right now. On your way!”
And he turned to follow the crowd
into the saloon. But Jerry Strann stood at the
swinging doors, watching, and he saw Barry linger behind.
“Are you coming?” he called.
“I got an engagement,” answered the meek
voice.
“You got another engagement here,” mocked
Strann. “Understand?”
The other hesitated for an instant,
and then sighed deeply. “I suppose I’ll
stay,” he murmured, and walked into the bar.
Jerry Strann was smiling in the way that showed his
teeth. As Barry passed he said softly: “I
see we ain’t going to have no trouble, you and
me!” and he moved to clap his strong hand on
the shoulder of the smaller man. Oddly enough,
the hand missed, for Barry swerved from beneath it
as a wolf swerves from the shadow of a falling branch.
No perceptible effort—no sudden start of
tensed muscles, but a movement so smooth that it was
almost unnoticeable. But the hand of Strann fell
through thin air.
“You’re quick,”
he said. “If you was as quick with your
hands as you are with your feet——”
Barry paused and the melancholy brown
eyes dwelt on the face of Strann.
“Oh, hell!” snorted the
other, and turned on his heel to the bar. “Drink
up!” he commanded.
A shout and a snarl from the further end of the room.
“A wolf, by God!” yelled one of the men.
The owner of the animal made his way
with unobtrusive swiftness the length of the room
and stood between the dog and a man who fingered the
butt of his gun nervously.
“He won’t hurt you none,” murmured
that softly assuring voice.
“The hell he wont!” responded
the other. “He took a pass at my leg just
now and dam’ near took it off. Got teeth
like the blades of a pocket-knife!”
“You’re on a cold trail,
Sam,” broke in one of the others. “That
ain’t any wolf. Look at him now!”
The big, shaggy animal had slunk to
the feet of his master and with head abased stared
furtively up into Barry’s face. A gesture
served as sufficient command, and he slipped shadow-like
into the corner and crouched with his head on his
paws and the incandescent green of his eyes glimmering;
Barry sat down in a chair nearby.
O’Brien was happily spinning
bottles and glasses the length of the bar; there was
the chiming of glass and the rumble of contented voices.
“Red-eye all ’round,”
said the loud voice of Jerry Strann, “but there’s
one out. Who’s out? Oh, it’s
him. Hey O’Brien, lemonade for the
lady.”
It brought a laugh, a deep, good-natured
laugh, and then a chorus of mockery; but Barry stepped
unconfused to the bar, accepted the glass of lemonade,
and when the others downed their fire-water, he sipped
his drink thoughtfully. Outside, the wind had
risen, and it shook the hotel and carried a score
of faint voices as it whirred around corners and through
cracks. Perhaps it was one of those voices which
made the big dog lift its head from its paws and whine
softly! surely it was something he heard which caused
Barry to straighten at the bar and cant his head slightly
to one side—but, as certainly, no one else
in the barroom heard it. Barry set down his glass.
“Mr. Strann?” he called.
And the gentle voice carried faintly down through
the uproar of the bar.
“Sister wants to speak to you,” suggested
O’Brien to Strann.
“Well?” roared the latter, “what
d’you want?”
The others were silent to listen; and they smiled
in anticipation.
“If you don’t mind, much,”
said the musical voice, “I think I’ll be
moving along.”
There is an obscure little devil living
in all of us. It makes the child break his own
toys; it makes the husband strike the helpless wife;
it makes the man beat the cringing, whining dog.
The greatest of American writers has called it the
Imp of the Perverse. And that devil came in Jerry
Strann and made his heart small and cold. If he
had been by nature the bully and the ruffian there
would have been no point in all that followed, but
the heart of Jerry Strann was ordinarily as warm as
the yellow sunshine itself; and it was a common saying
in the Three B’s that Jerry Strann would take
from a child what he would not endure from a mountain-lion.
Women loved Jerry Strann, and children would crowd
about his knees, but this day the small demon was
in him.
“You want to be moving along”
mimicked the devil in Jerry Strann. “Well,
you wait a while. I ain’t through with you
yet. Maybe—” he paused and searched
his mind. “You’ve given me a fall,
and maybe you can give the rest of us—a
laugh!”
The chuckle of appreciation went up
the bar and down it again.
“I want to ask you,” went
on the devil in Jerry Strann, “where you got
your hoss?”
“He was running wild,”
came the gentle answer. “So I took a walk,
one day, and brought him in.”
A pause.
“Maybe,” grinned the big man, “you
creased him?”
For it is one of the most difficult
things in the world to capture a wild horse, and some
hunters, in their desperation at seeing the wonderful
animals escape, have tried to “crease”
them. That is, they strive to shoot so that the
bullet will barely graze the top of the animal’s
vertebrae, just behind the ears, stunning the horse
and making it helpless for the capture. But necessarily
such shots are made from a distance, and little short
of a miracle is needed to make the bullet strike true—for
a fraction of an inch too low means death. So
another laugh of appreciation ran around the barroom
at the mention of creasing.
“No,” answered Barry,
“I went out with a halter and after a while Satan
got used to me and followed me home.”
They waited only long enough to draw
deep breath; then came a long yell of delight.
But the obscure devil was growing stronger and stronger
in Strann. He beat on the bar until he got silence.
Then he leaned over to meet the eyes of Barry.
“That,” he remarked through
his teeth, “is a damned—lie!”
There is only one way of answering
that word in the mountain-desert, and Barry did not
take it. The melancholy brown eyes widened; he
sighed, and raising his glass of lemonade sipped it
slowly. Came a sick silence in the barroom.
Men turned their eyes towards each other and then flashed
them away again. It is not good that one who has
the eyes and the tongue of a man should take water
from another—even from a Jerry Strann.
And even Jerry Strann withdrew his eyes slowly from
his prey, and shuddered; the sight of the most grisly
death is not so horrible as cowardice.
And the devil which was still strong
in Strann made him look about for a new target; Barry
was removed from all danger by an incredible barrier.
He found that new target at once, for his glance reached
to the corner of the room and found there the greenish,
glimmering eyes of the dog. He smote upon the
bar.
“Is this a damned kennel?”
he shouted. “Do I got to drink in a barnyard?
What’s the dog doin’ here?”
And he caught up the heavy little
whiskey glass and hurled it at the crouching dog.
It thudded heavily, but it brought no yelp of pain;
instead, a black thunderbolt leaped from the corner
and lunged down the room. It was the silence
of the attack that made it terrible, and Strann cursed
and pulled his gun. He could never have used it.
He was a whole half second too late, but before the
dog sprang a voice cut in: “Bart!”
It checked the animal in its very
leap; it landed on the floor and slid on stiffly extended
legs to the feet of Strann.
“Bart!” rang the voice again.
And the beast, flattening to the floor,
crawled backwards, inch by inch; it was slavering,
and there was a ravening madness in its eyes.
“Look at it!” cried Strann. “By
God, it’s mad!”
And he raised his gun to draw the bead.
“Wait!” called the same
voice which had checked the spring of the dog.
Surely it could not have come from the lips of Barry.
It held a resonance of chiming metal; it was not loud,
but it carried like a brazen bell. “Don’t
do it, Strann!”
And it came to every man in the barroom
that it was unhealthy to stand between the two men
at that instant; a sudden path opened from Barry to
Strann.
“Bart!” came the command again. “Heel!”
The dog obeyed with a slinking swiftness;
Jerry Strann put up his gun and smiled.
“I don’t take a start
on no man,” he announced quite pleasantly.
“I don’t need to. But—you
yaller hearted houn’—get out from
between. When I make my draw I’m goin’
to kill that damn wolf.”
Now, the fighting face of Jerry Strann
was well known in the Three B’s, and it was
something for men to remember until they died in a
peaceful bed. Yet there was not a glance, from
the bystanders, for Strann. They stood back against
the wall, flattening themselves, and they stared,
fascinated, at the slender stranger. Not that
his face had grown ugly by a sudden metamorphosis.
It was more beautiful than ever, for the man was smiling.
It was his eyes which held them. Behind the brown
a light was growing, a yellow and unearthly glimmer
which one felt might be seen on the darkest night.
There was none of the coward in Jerry
Strann. He looked full into that yellow, glimmering,
changing light—he looked steadily—and
a strange feeling swept over him. No, it was
not fear. Long experience had taught him that
there was not another man in the Three B’s, with
the exception of his own terrible brother, who could
get a gun out of the leather faster than he, but now
it seemed to Jerry Strann that he was facing something
more than mortal speed and human strength and surety.
He could not tell in what the feeling was based.
But it was a giant, dim foreboding holding dominion
over other men’s lives, and it sent a train
of chilly-weakness through his blood.
“It’s a habit of mine,”
said Jerry Strann, “to kill mad dogs when I see
’em.” And he smiled again.
They stood for another long instant,
facing each other. It was plain that every muscle
in Strann’s body was growing tense; the very
smile was frozen on his lips. When he moved,
at last, it was a convulsive jerk of his arm, and
it was said, afterward, that his gun was all clear
of the leather before the calm stranger stirred.
No eye followed what happened. Can the eye follow
such speed as the cracking lash of a whip?
There was only one report. The
forefinger of Strann did not touch his trigger, but
the gun slipped down and dangled loosely from his hand.
He made a pace forward with his smile grown to an
idiotic thing and a patch of red sprang out in the
centre of his breast. Then he lurched headlong
to the floor.