Dawn found him over the first crest;
at noon he was struggling up the slope of the second
range, whose rise was not half so sharp as the upward
plunge out of the Asper, but in spite of that easier
ground Grey Molly could not gain. She went with
shorter steps, now, and her head hung lower and lower,
yet when a down stretch opened before her she went
at it with a gallop as light, almost, as her race
out of Murphy’s Pass. Not once had she offered
to stop; not once had she winced from the labor of
some sharp up-pitch; but still six horsemen hung behind
her, and at their head rode a little dusty man on
a little dusty roan. It was the lack of training
as well as the rough going which held Molly back.
Beyond that second range, however,
the down slope stretched smoothly, evenly, for mile
on mile and mile on mile; perfect going for Grey Molly
over easy hills with patches of forest here and there
where he might double, or where he might stop with
the hunt sweeping past. All this the sheriff
must have known perfectly well, for he no longer kept
back with his pack of five, but skirted on ahead,
hunting alone. Again and again Vic heard the
little shrill whistle with which Pete Glass encouraged
the roan. Vic used the spurs twice, and then
he desisted from the useless brutality for Molly was
doing her best and no power on earth could make her
do more. After all, her best would be good enough,
for now Vic looked up and his heart leaped into his
throat; there was only one more rise above him, and
beyond lay the easy ground and a running chance for
Molly’s slender legs. Even as he raised
his head something whined evilly over him, followed
by a sound like two heavy hammers swung together,
face to face, and shattered by the stroke. A
rifle!
He looked back, saw the roan standing
broadside towards him, watched the sun waver and then
flash in a straight steady line along the barrel of
the sheriff’s gun. The line of light jerked
up, and before the sound reached him a blow on his
right shoulder sent Vic lurching forward against the
pommel. Afterwards the voice of the rifle rang
around him and a sharp pain twitched up and down his
side, then ran tingling to his fingertips.
It was the stunning blow which saved
him, for the sheriff had the range and his third bullet
would have clipped Vic between the shoulders, but Glass
had seen his quarry pitch forward in the saddle and
he would not waste ammunition. The thrift of
his New England ancestry spoke in Pete now and then
and he could only grit his teeth when he saw Vic, disappearing
on the other side of the crest, straighten in the
saddle; the next instant the top of the hill shielded
the fugitive.
Well and nobly, then, Grey Molly repaid
all the praise, all the tenderness and care which
Vic had lavished upon her in the past years, for with
her legs shaking from the struggle of that last climb,
with a rider who wobbled crazily in his seat, with
reins hanging loose on her neck, with not even a voice
to guide or to encourage her, she swept straight across
the falling ground, gaining strength and courage at
every stride. By the time Vic had regained his
self-control and rallied a little from that first terrible
falling of the heart, the dusty roan was over the crest
and streaking after the game. Grey Molly gained
steadily, yet even when he gathered the reins in his
left hand Vic knew that the fight was done, in effect.
How could he double or dodge when his own blood spotted
the trail he kept, and how long could he keep the
saddle with the agony which tore like saw teeth at
his shoulder?
Grey Molly plunged straight into the
shadow of pine trees, and the cool gloom fell like
a blessing upon Vic in his torment; it was heaven to
be sheltered even for a few moments from the eyes
of the posse. At the opposite edge of the wood
he drew rein with a groan. Some devil had prompted
Gus Reeve and some devil had poured Reeve’s horse
full of strength, for yonder down the valley, not
a hundred yards away, galloped a rider on a black
horse; yet Vic could have sworn that when he looked
back from the crest he had seen Gus riding the very
last in the posse. An instant later the illusion
vanished, for the black horse of Gus was never an
animal such as this, never had this marvelous, long
gait. Its feet flicked the earth and shot it
along with a reaching stride so easy, so flowing that
only the fluttered mane and the tail stretching straight
behind gave token of the speed. For the rest,
it carried its head high, with pricking ears, the
sure sign of a horse running well within his strength,
yet Grey Molly, fresh and keen for racing, could hardly
have kept pace with the black as it slid over the
hills. God in heaven, if such a horse were his
a thousand sheriffs on a thousand dusty roans could
never take him; five minutes would sweep him out of
sight and reach.
Before the horseman ran a tall dog,
wolfish in head and wolfish in the gait which carried
it like a cloud shadow over the ground, but it was
over-large for any wolf Vic had ever seen. It
turned its head now, and leaped aside at sight of
the stranger, but the rider veered from his course
and swept down on Vic. He came to a halt close
up without either a draw at the reins or a spoken
word, probably controlling his mount with pressure
of the knees, and Gregg found himself facing a delicately
handsome fellow. He was neither cowpuncher nor
miner, Vic knew at a glance, for that face had never
been haggard with labor. A tenderfoot, probably,
in spite of his dress, and Vic felt that if his right
arm were sound he could take that horse at the point
of his gun and leave the rider thanking God that his
life had been spared; but his left hand was useless
on the butt of a revolver, and three minutes away
came the posse, racing. There was only time for
one desperate appeal.
“Stranger,” he burst out,
“I’m follered. I got to have your
hoss. Take this one in exchange; it’s the
best I ever threw a leg over. Here’s two
hundred bucks—” he flung his wallet
on the ground and swung himself out of the saddle.
The wolfish dog, which had growled
softly all this time and roughed up the hair of its
neck, now slunk forward on its belly.
“Heel, Bart!” commanded
the stranger sharply, and the dog whipped about and
stood away, whining with eagerness.
The moment Gregg’s feet struck
the ground his legs buckled like saplings in a wind
for the long ride had sapped his strength, and the
flow of blood told rapidly on him now. The hills
and trees whirled around him until a lean, strong
hand caught him under either armpit. The stranger
stood close.
“You could have my hoss if you
could ride him,” said he. His voice was
singularly unhurried and gentle. “But you’d
drop out of the saddle in ten minutes. Who’s
after you?”
A voice shouted far off beyond the
wood; another voice answered, nearer, and the whole
soul of Gregg turned to the stallion. Grey Molly
was blown, she stood now with hanging head and her
flanks sunk in alarmingly at every breath, but even
fresh from the pasture she was not a rag, not a straw
compared to the black.
“For God’s sake,” groaned Vic, “loan
me your hoss!”
“You couldn’t stick the
saddle. Come in here out of sight; I’m going
to take ’em off your trail.”
While he spoke, he led, half carried
Vic, into a thicket of shrubs with a small open space
at the center. The black and the wolf-dog followed
and now the stranger pulled at the bridle rein.
The stallion kneeled like a trained dog, and lying
thus the shrubbery was high enough to hide him.
Closer, sweeping through the wood, Vic heard the crash
of the pursuit, yet the other was maddeningly slow
of speech.
“You stay here, partner, and
sit over there. I’m borrowin’ your
gun”—a swift hand appropriated it
from Vic’s holster and his own fingers were too
paralyzed to resist—“and don’t
you try to ride my hoss unless you want them teeth
in your throat. Lie quiet and tie up your hurt.
Bart, watch him!”
And there sat Gregg where he had slipped
down in his daze of weakness with the great dog crouched
at his feet and snarling ominously every time he raised
his hand. The voices came closer; the crashing
burst on his very ears, and now, through the interstices
of the shrubbery he saw the stranger swing into the
saddle on Grey Molly and urge her to a gallop.
He could follow them for only an instant with his
eyes, but it seemed to Vic that Molly cantered under
her new rider with strange ease and lightness.
It was partly the rest, no doubt, and partly the smaller
burden.
A deep beat of racing hoofs, and then
the dusty roan shot out of the trees close by with
the sheriff leaning forward, jockeying his horse.
It seemed that no living thing could escape from that
relentless rider. Then right behind Vic a horse
snorted and grunted—as it leaped a fallen
log, perhaps—and he watched in alarm to
see if the stallion would answer that sound with start
or whinney. The black lay perfectly still, and
instead of lifting up to answer or to look, the head
lowered with ears flat back until the long, outstretched
neck gave the animal a snaky appearance. The dog,
too, though it showed murderous fangs whenever Vic
moved, did not stir from his place, but lay flattening
into the ground.
“Cut to the right! Cut
to the right, Harry!” came the voice of the sheriff,
already piping from the distance as the last of the
posse brushed out from the trees. “Yo hoi!
Gus, take the left arroyo!”
Two answering yells, and then the
rush of hoofs fell away. They were cornering
the stranger, no doubt, and Vic struggled to lift himself
to his feet and watch until a faint sound from the
dog made him look down. Bart lay with his haunches
drawn up under him, his forepaws digging into the
soft loam, his eyes demoniac. Instinctively Vic
reached for his absent gun, and then, despairing,
relaxed to his former position. The wolf-dog lowered
his head to his paws and there remained with the eyes
following each intake of Gregg’s breath.
A rattle of gunshots flung back loosely from the hills,
and among them Vic winced at the sound of the sheriff’s
rifle, clear and ringing over the bark of the revolvers.
Had they nailed the stranger?
The firing recommenced, more faintly and prolonged,
so that it was plain the posse maintained a running
fusilade after the fugitive. After that fear
of his own growing weakness shut out all else from
the mind of Gregg as he felt his senses, his physical
strength, flowing out like an ebb tide to a sea which,
he knew, was death. He began to work desperately
to bind up the wound and stop the flow of blood and
it was fear which gave him momentary strength to tear
away his shirt and then with his teeth and left hand
rip it into strips. After that, heedless of the
pain, he constructed a rude bandage, very clumsily,
for he had to work over his shoulder. Here his
teeth, once more, were almost as useful as another
hand, and as the bandage grew tight the deadly, warm
trickle along his side lessened and his fingers fell
away from the last knot. He fainted.