THE STORM
When they rode out of the town the
wet sand squashed under the feet of their horses and
splashed up on their riding boots and their slickers.
It even spotted their faces here and there, and a light
brown spray darted out to right and left of the falling
hoofs. For all the streets of Elkhead were running
shallow rivers, with dark, swift currents, and when
they left the little town the landscape was shut out
by the falling torrents. It made a strange and
shifting panorama, for the rain varied in its density
now and again, and as it changed hills which had been
quite blotted out leaped close upon them, like living
things, and then sprang back again into the mist.
So heavy was that tropical fall of
water that the horses were bothered by the beating
of the big drops, and shook their heads and stamped
fretfully under the ceaseless bombardment. Indeed,
when one stretched out his hand the drops stung him
as if with lashes of tiny whips. There was no
wind, no thunder, no flash of lightning, only the tremendous
downpour which blended earth and sky in a drab, swift
river.
The air was filled with parallel lines,
as in some pencil drawings—not like ordinary
rain, but as if the sky had changed into a vast watering-spout
and was sending down a continuous flood from a myriad
holes. It was hard to look up through the terrific
downpour, for it blinded one and whipped the face
and made one breathless, but now and again a puff
of the rare wind would lift the sodden brim of the
sombrero and then one caught a glimpse of the low-hanging
clouds, with the nearest whiffs of black mist dragging
across the top of a hill. Without noticeable
currents of wind, that mass of clouds was shifting
slowly—with a sort of rolling motion, across
the sky. And the weight of the rain forced the
two to bend their heads and stare down to where the
face of the earth was alive with the gliding, brown
waters, whose surface was threshed into a continual
foam. To speak to each other through the uproar,
they had to cup their hands about their lips and shout.
Then again the rainfall around them fell away to a
drizzling mist and the beating of the downpour sounded
far away, and they were surrounded by distant walls
of noise. So they came to the McDuffy place.
It was a helpless ruin, long abandoned.
Not an iota of the roof remained. The sheds for
the horses had dropped to the earth; but the walls
of the house still remained standing, in part, with
the empty windows looking out with a mocking promise
of the shelter which was not within. Upon this
hollow shack the rain beat with redoubled fury, and
even before they could make out the place through the
blankets of rain, they heard the hollow drumming.
For there were times, oddly enough, when any sound
would carry a great distance through the crashing of
the rain.
A wind now sprung up and at once veered
the rain from its perpendicular fall. It slashed
them in the face under the drooping brims of their
sombreros, so they drew into the shelter of the highest
part of the standing wall. Still some of the
rain struck them, but the major part of it was shunted
over their heads. Moreover, the wall acted as
a sort of sounding board, catching up every odd noise
from the storm-beaten plain beyond. They could
speak to each other now without effort.
“D’you think,” asked
Haw-Haw Langley, pressing his reeking horse a little
closer to Mac Strann, “that he’ll come
out after us in a rain like this?”
But simple-minded Mac Strann lifted
his head and peered through the thick curtains of
rain.
“D’you think,” he
parried, “that Jerry could maybe look through
all this and see what I’m doin’ to-day?”
It made Haw-Haw Langley grin, but
peering more closely and observing that there was
no mockery in the face of the giant, he wiped out his
grin with a scrubbing motion of his wet hand and peered
closely into the face of his companion.
“They ain’t any doubt
of it,” he said reassuringly. “He’ll
know what you do, Mac. What was it that Pale
Annie said to you?”
“Wanted me not to meet Barry.
Said that Barry had once cleaned up a gang of six.”
“And here we are only two.”
“You ain’t to fight!”
warned Mac Strann sharply. “It’ll
be man to man, Haw-Haw.”
“But he might not notice that,”
cried Haw-Haw, and he caressed his scrawny neck as
though he already felt fingers closing about his windpipe.
“Him bein’ used to fight crowds, Mac.
Did you think of that?”
“I never asked you to come,” responded
Mac Strann.
“Mac,” cried Haw-Haw in
a sudden alarm, “s’pose you wasn’t
to win. S’pose you wasn’t able to
keep him away from me?”
The numb lips of Mac Strann sprawled
in an ugly smile, but he made no other answer.
“You don’t think
you’ll lose,” hurried on Haw-Haw, “but
neither did them six that Pale Annie was tellin’
about, most like. But they did! They lost;
but if you lose what’ll happen to me?”
“They ain’t no call for
you to stay here,” said Mac Strann with utter
indifference.
Haw-Haw answered quickly: “I
wouldn’t go—I wouldn’t miss
it for nothin’. Ain’t I come all
this way to see it—I mean to help?
Would I fall down on you now, Mac? No, I wouldn’t!”
And twisting those bony fingers together
he burst once more into that rattling, unhuman laughter
which all the Three B’s knew so well and dreaded
as the dying dread the sight of the circling buzzard
above.
“Stop laughin’!”
cried Mac Strann with sudden anger. “Damn
you, stop laughin’!”
The other peered upon Mac Strann with
incredulous delight, his broad mouth gaping to that
thirsted grin of enjoyment.
“You ain’t gettin’
nervous, Mac?” he queried, and thrust his face
closer to make sure. “You ain’t bothered,
Mac? You ain’t doubtin’ how this’ll
turn out?” There was no answer and so he replied
to himself: “I know what done it to you.
I seen it myself. It was that yaller light in
his eyes, Mac. My God, it come up there out of
nothin’ and it wasn’t a light that ought
to come in no man’s eyes. It was like I’d
woke up at night with a cold weight on my chest and
found two snakes’ eyes glitterin’ close
to my face. Makes me shivery, like, jest to think
of it now. D’you notice that, Mac?”
“I’m tired of talkin’,”
said Mac Strann hoarsely, “damned tired!”
And so saying he swung his great head
slowly around and glared at Haw-Haw. The latter
shrank away with an undulatory motion in his saddle.
And when the head of Mac Strann turned away again the
broad mouth began gibbering: “It’s
gettin’ him like it done me. He’s
scared, scared, scared—even Mac Strann!”
He broke off, for Mac Strann had jerked
up his head and said in a strangely muffled voice:
“What was that?”
The bullet head of Haw-Haw Langley
leaned to one side, and his glittering eyes rolled
up while he listened.
“Nothin’!” he said, “I don’t
hear nothin’!”
“Listen again!” cried
Mac Strann in that same cautious voice, as of one
whispering in the night in the house of the enemy.
“It’s like a voice in the wind. It
comes down the wind. D’ye hear now—now—now?”
It was, indeed, the faintest of faint
sounds when Haw-Haw caught it. It was, in the
roar of the rain, as indistinct as some distant light
on the horizon which may come either from a rising
star or from the window of a house. But it had
a peculiar quality of its own, even as the house-light
would be tinged with yellow when the stars are cold
and white. A small and distant sound, and yet
it cut through the crashing of the storm more and
more clearly; someone rode through the rain whistling.
“It’s him!” gasped
Haw-Haw Langley. “My God A’mighty,
Mac, he’s whistlin’! It ain’t
possible!”
He reined his horse closer to the
wall, listening with mouth agape.
He shrilled suddenly: “What
if he should hit us both, seein’ us together?
They ain’t no heart in a feller that can whistle
in a storm like this!”
But Mac Strann had lowered his head,
bulldog-like, and now he listened and thrust out his
blunt jaw farther and farther and returned no answer.
“God gimme the grit to stick
it out,” begged Haw-Haw Langley in an agony
of desire. “God lemme see how it comes out.
God lemme watch ’em fight. One of ’em
is goin’ to die—may be two of ’em—nothin’
like it has ever been seen!”
The rain shifted, and the heart of
the storm rolled far away. For the moment they
could look far out across the shadow-swept hills, and
out of the heart of the desolate landscape the whistling
ran thrilling upon them. It was so loud and close
that of one accord the two listeners jerked their
heads about and stared at each other, and then turned
their eyes as hastily away, as though terrified by
what they had seen—each in the face of
the other. It was no idle tune which they heard
whistled. This was a rising, soaring pean of
delight. It rang down upon the wind—it
cut into their faces like the drops of the rain; it
branded itself like freezing cold into their foreheads.
And then, upon the crest of the nearest
hill, Haw-Haw Langley saw a dim figure through the
mist, a man on a horse and something else running in
front; and they came swiftly.
“It’s the wolf that’s
runnin’ us down!” screamed Haw-Haw Langley.
“Oh, God A’mighty, even if we was to want
to run, the wolf would come and pull us down.
Mac, will you save me? Will you keep the wolf
away?”
He clung to the arm of his companion,
but the other brushed him back with a violence which
almost unseated Haw-Haw.
“Keep off’n me,”
growled Mac Strann, “because when you touch me,
it feels like somethin’ dead was next to my
skin. Keep off’n me!”
Haw-Haw dragged himself back into
the saddle with effort, for it was slippery with rain.
His face convulsed with something black as hate.
“It ain’t long you’ll
do the orderin’ and be so free with your hands.
He’s comin’—soon! Mac,
I’d like to stay—I’d like to
see the finish——” he stopped,
his buzzard eyes glittering against the face of the
giant.
The rain blotted out the figure of
the coming horseman, and at the same instant the whistling
leaped close upon them. It was as if the whistling
man had disappeared at the place where the rain swallowed
his form, and had taken body again at their very side.
Mac Strann shrank back against the wall, bracing his
shoulders, and gripped the butts of his guns.
But Haw-Haw Langley cast a frightened glance on either
side; his head making birdlike, pecking notions, and
then he leaned over the pommel of his saddle with
a wail of despair and spurred off into the rain.