MAC STRANN DECIDES TO KEEP THE LAW
It was hours later that night when
Haw-Haw Langley and Mac Strann sat their horses on
the hill to the south. Before them, on the nearest
rise of ground, a clump of tall trees and the sharp
triangle of a roof split the sky, while down towards
the right spread a wide huddle of sheds and barns.
“That’s where the trail
ends,” said Mac Strann, and started his horse
down the slope. Haw-Haw Langley urged his little
mount hurriedly alongside the squat bulk of his companion.
He looked like the skeleton reality, and Mac Strann
the blunt, deformed shadow.
“You ain’t going into
the house lookin’ for him, Mac?” he asked,
and he lowered his voice to a sharp whisper in spite
of the distance. “Maybe there’s a
pile of men in that house. It’s got room
for a whole army. You ain’t going in there
by yourself, Mac?”
“Haw-Haw,” explained the
big man quietly, “I ain’t going after Barry.
I’m going to make him come after me.”
Haw-Haw considered this explanation
for a dazed moment. It was far too mysterious
for his comprehension.
“What you goin’ to do?” he asked
again.
“Would you know that black hoss agin if you
seen him?” asked Mac Strann.
“In a thousand.”
“That hoss has had a long ride;
and Barry has put him in one of them barns, they ain’t
no doubt. Most like, the dog is with the hoss.”
“It looks a considerable lot
like a wolf,” muttered Langley. “I
wouldn’t choose meetin’ up with that dog
in the dark. Besides, what good is it goin’
to do you to find the dog?”
“If you hurt a man’s dog,”
explained Mac Strann calmly, “you’re hurting
the man, ain’t you? I’m going to hurt
this man’s dog; afterwards the dog’ll
bring the man to me. They ain’t no doubt
of that. I ain’t goin’ to kill the
dog. I’m goin’ to jest nick him so’s
he’ll get well and then hit my trail.”
“What sense is they in that?”
“If Barry comes to me, ain’t
he the one that’s breakin’ the law?
If I kill him then, won’t it be in self-defense?
I ain’t no law-breaker, Haw-Haw. It ain’t
any good bein’ a law-breaker. Them lawyers
can talk a man right into a grave. They’s
worse nor poison. I’d rather be caught in
a bear trap a hundred miles from my shack than have
a lawyer fasten onto my leg right in the middle of
Brownsville. No, Haw-Haw, I ain’t going
to break any law. But I’m going to fix
the wolf so’s he’ll know me; and when
he gets well he’ll hit my trail, and when he
hits my trail he’ll have Barry with him.
And when Barry sees me, then——”
he raised his arms above him in the dark. “Then!”
breathed Mac Strann, “Jerry can start sleepin’
sound for the first time!”
Haw-Haw Langley wrapped his long arms about himself.
“An’ I’ll be there
to watch. I’ll be there to see fair play,
don’t you never doubt it, Mac. Why didn’t
I never go with you before? Why, Jerry never
done anything to touch this! But be careful, Mac.
Don’t make no slip up to-night. If they’s
trouble—I ain’t a fighting man, Mac.
I ain’t no ways built for it.”
“Shut your mouth,” said
Mac Strann bluntly. “I need quiet now.”
For they were now close to the house.
Mac Strann brought his horse to a jog trot and cast
a semi-circle skirting the house and bringing him
behind the barns. Here he retreated to a little
jutting point of land from behind which the house
was invisible, and there dismounted.
Haw-Haw Langley followed example reluctantly.
He complained: “I ain’t never heard
before of a man leavin’ his hoss behind him!
It ain’t right and it ain’t policy.”
His leader, however, paid no attention
to this grumbling. He skirted back behind the
barns, walking with a speed which extended even the
long legs of Haw-Haw Langley. Most of the stock
was turned out in the corrals. Now and then a
horse stamped, or a bull snorted from the fenced enclosures,
but from the barns they heard not a sound. Now
Mac Strann paused. They had reached the largest
of the barns, a long, low structure.
“This here,” said Mac
Strann, “is where that hoss must be. They
wouldn’t run a hoss like that with others.
They’d keep him in a big stall by himself.
We’ll try this one, Haw-Haw.”
But Haw-Haw drew back at the door.
The interior was black as the hollow of a throat as
soon as Mac Strann rolled back the sliding door, and
Haw-Haw imagined evil eyes glaring and twinkling at
him along the edges of the darkness.
“The wolf!” he cautioned,
grasping the shoulder of his companion. “You
ain’t goin’ to walk onto that wolf, Mac?”
The latter struck down Haw-Haw’s hand.
“A wolf makes a noise before
it jumps,” he whispered, “and that warnin’
is all the light I need.”
Now their eyes grew somewhat accustomed
to the dark and Haw-Haw could make out, vaguely, the
posts of the stalls to his right. He could not
tell whether or not some animal might be lying down
between the posts, but Mac Strann, pausing at every
stall, seemed to satisfy himself at a glance.
Right down the length of the barn they passed until
they reached a wall at the farther end.
“He ain’t here,”
sighed Haw-Haw, with relief. “Mac, if I
was you, I’d wait till they was light before
I went huntin’ that wolf.”
“He ought to be here,”
growled Mac Strann, and lighted a match. The
flame spurted in a blinding flash from the head of
the match and then settled down into a steady yellow
glow. By that brief glow Mac Strann looked up
and down the wall. The match burned out against
the calloused tips of his fingers.
“That wall,” mused Strann,
“ain’t made out of the same timber as the
side of the barn. That wall is whole years newer.
Haw-Haw, that ain’t the end of the barn.
They’s a holler space beyond it.”
He lighted another match, and then cursed softly in
delight. “Look!” he commanded.
At the farther side of the wall was
the glitter of metal—the latch of a door
opening in the wooden wall. Mac Strann set it
ajar and Haw-Haw peered in over the big man’s
shoulder. He saw first a vague and formless glimmer.
Then he made out a black horse lying down in the centre
of a box stall. The animal plunged at once to
its feet, and crowding as far as possible away against
the wall, turned its head and stared at them with
flashing eyes.
“It’s him!” whispered
Haw-Haw. “It’s Barry’s black.
They ain’t another hoss like him on the range.
An’ the wolf—thank God!—ain’t
with him.”
But Mac Strann closed the door of
the stall, frowning thoughtfully, and thought on the
face of Strann was a convulsion of pain. He dropped
the second match to his feet, where it ignited a wisp
of straw that sent up a puff of light.
“Ah-h!” drawled Mac Strann.
“The wolf ain’t here, but we’ll soon
have him here. And the thing that brings him
here will get rid of the black hoss.”
“Are you goin’ to steal the hoss?”
“Steal him? He couldn’t
carry me two mile, a skinny hoss like that. But
if Barry ever gets away agin on that hoss I ain’t
never goin’ to catch him. That hoss has
got to die.”
Haw-Haw Langley caught his breath
with a harsh gurgle. For men of the mountain-desert
sometimes fall very low indeed, but in their lowest
moments it is easier for him to kill a man than a horse.
There is the story, for instance, of the cattleman
who saw the bull-fight in Juarez, and when the bull
gored the first horse the cowpuncher rose in the crowd
and sent a bullet through the picador to square the
deal. So Haw-Haw sighed.
“Mac,” he whispered, “has
it got to be done? Ain’t there any other
way? I’ve seen that hoss. When the
sun hits him it sets him on fire, he’s that
sleek. And his legs is like drawn-iron, they’re
that fine. And he’s got a head that’s
finer than a man’s head, Mac.”
“I’ve seen him close enough,”
answered Mac Strann grimly. “An’ I’ve
follered him for a day and a half, damn near.
S’pose Barry finds out I’m on his trail;
s’pose he won’t foller the wolf when the
wolf tries to lead him to me. S’pose he
gets on this hoss and cuts away? Can I foller
the wind, Haw-Haw? This hoss has got to die!”
From the manger he threw out several
armfuls of hay, wrenched down from behind the manger
several light boards, and tossed them on the hay.
He lighted a match and was approaching the small flame
to the pile of inflammables when Haw-Haw Langley cried
softly: “Hark, Mac!”
The big man instantly extinguished
the match. For a moment they could distinguish
nothing, but then they heard the sharp, high chorus
of the wild geese flying north. Haw-Haw Langley
snickered apologetically.
“That was what I heard a minute
ago!” he said. “And it sounded like
voices comin’.”
A snarl of contempt from Mac Strann;
then he scratched another match and at once the flame
licked up the side of the hay and cast a long arm up
the wooden wall.
“Out of this quick!” commanded
Mac Strann, and they started hastily down the barn
towards the door. The fire behind them, after
the puff of flame from the hay, had died away to a
ghastly and irregular glow with the crackle of the
slowly catching wood. It gave small light to guide
them; only enough, indeed, to deceive the eye.
The posts of the stalls grew into vast, shadowy images;
the irregularities of the floor became high places
and pits alternately. But when they were half
way to the door Haw-Haw Langley saw a form too grim
to be a shadow, blocking their path. It was merely
a blacker shape among the shades, but Haw-Haw was aware
of the two shining eyes, and stopped short in his
tracks.
“The wolf!” he whispered
to Mac Strann. “Mac, what’re we goin’
to do?”
The other had not time to answer,
for the shadow at the door of the barn now leaped
towards them, silently, without growl or yelp or snarl.
As if to guide the battle, the kindling wood behind
them now ignited and sent up a yellow burst of light.
By it Haw-Haw Langley saw the great beast clearly,
and he leaped back behind the sheltering form of Mac
Strann. As for Mac, he did not move or flinch
from the attack. His revolver was in his hand,
levelled, and following the swift course of Black
Bart.