News of the Killing at Alder, as they
call that night’s slaughter to this day in the
mountain-desert, traveled swiftly, and lost nothing
of bulk and burden on the way; so that two days later,
when Lee Haines went down for mail to the wretched
little village in the valley, he heard the store-keeper
retailing the story to an awe-stricken group.
How the tale had crossed all the wild mountains which
lay between in so brief a space no man could say,
but first there ran a whisper and then a stir, and
then half a dozen men came in at once, each with an
elaboration of the theme more horrible than the last.
The store-keeper culled the choicest fragments from
every version, strung them together with a narrative
of his own fertile invention, polished off the tale
by a few rehearsals in his home, and then placed his
product on the open market. The very first day
he kept the store-room well filled from dawn until
dark.
And this was the creation to which
Lee Haines had to listen, impatient, sifting the chaff
from the grains of truth. Down upon Alder, exactly
at midnight, had ridden a cavalcade headed by that
notorious, half-legendary man-slayer, Dan Barry—Whistling
Dan. While his crew of two-score hardened ruffians
held the doors and the windows with leveled rifles,
Barry had entered with a gun and a wolf—a
wild wolf, and had butchered ten men, wantonly.
To add to the mystery, there was no motive of robbery
for the crime. One sweeping visitation of death,
and then the night-riders had rushed away. Nor
was this all, for Sheriff Pete Glass, hearing of the
tragedy, had ridden to Rickett, the county seat, and
from this strategic point of vantage he was sending
out a call for the most practised fighters on the
mountain-desert. He wanted twenty men proved beyond
the shadow of question for courage, endurance, speed,
and surety in action.
“And,” concluded the store-keeper,
fixing his eye upon Lee Haines, “if you want
a long ride free of charge, and ten bucks a day with
chow thrown in— some of you gents ought
to go to Rickett and chin with Pete.”
Haines waited to hear no more.
He even forgot to ask for the Barry mail, swung into
his saddle, and rode with red spurs back to the cabin
in the mountains. There he drew Buck Daniels
aside, and they walked among the rocks while Haines
told his story. When it was ended they sat on
adjoining boulders and chucked pebbles aimlessly into
the emptiness beyond the cliff.
“Maybe,” said Buck suddenly,
“it wasn’t Dan at all. He sure wouldn’t
be ridin’ with no crowd of gents like that.”
“A fool like that store-keeper
could make a crowd of Indians out of one papoose,”
answered Haines. “It was Dan. Who else
would be traipsing around with a dog that looks like
a wolf—and hunts men?”
“I remember when Dan cornered
Jim Silent in that cabin, and all Jim’s gang
was with him. Black Bart—”
“Buck,” cut in Haines, “you’ve
remembered plenty.”
After a moment: “When are you going in
to break the news to Kate?”
Buck Daniels regarded him with angry astonishment.
“Me?” he cried. “I’d
sooner cut my tongue out!” He drew a great breath.
“I feel like—like Dan was dead!”
“The best thing for Kate if he were.”
“That’s a queer thing
to say, Lee. The meat would be rotted off your
bones six years ago in Elkhead if it hadn’t
been for Whistlin’ Dan.”
“I know it, Buck. But I’ll
tell you straight that I could never feel towards
Dan as if he were a human being, but a wolf in the
hide of a man. He turned my blood cold; he always
has.”
Buck Daniels groaned aloud as thoughts poured back
on him.
“Of all the pals that ever a
man had,” he said sadly, “there never was
a partner like Whistlin’ Dan. There was
never another gent that would go through hell for
you jest because you’d eaten meat with him.
The first time I met him I tried to double-cross him,
because I had my orders from Silent. And Dan
played clean with me—by God, he shook hands
with me when he left.”
He straightened a little.
“So help me God, Lee, I’ve
never done a crooked thing more since I shook hands
with Dan that day.” He sat silent, but breathing
hard. “Well, this is the end of Whistlin’
Dan. The law will never let up on him now; but
I tell you, Haines, I’m sick inside and I’d
give my right hand plumb to the wrist to set him straight
and bring him back to Kate. Go in and tell her,
Lee. I—I’ll wait for you here.”
“You’ll be damned,”
cried Haines. “I’ve done my share
by bringing the word this far. You can relay
it.”
Buck Daniels produced a silver dollar.
“Heads or tails?”
“Heads!” said Haines.
The dollar spun upwards, winking,
and clanked on the rocks, tails up. Haines stared
at it with a grisly face.
“Good God,” he muttered, “what’ll
I do, Buck, if she faints?”
“Faints?” echoed Daniels,
“there’s no fear of that! The first
thing you’ll have to do is to saddle her horse.”
“Now, what in hell are you driving at?”
“She’ll be thinkin’
of Joan. God knows she worried enough because
Dan hasn’t brought the kid back before this,
but when she hears what he’s done now, she’ll
know that he’s wild for keeps and she’ll
be on the trail to bring the young’un home.”
He turned his back cleanly on the house and set his
shoulders tense.
“Go on, Lee. Be a man.”
He heard the steps of Haines start
briskly enough for the house, but they trailed away,
slowly and more slowly, and finally there was a long
pause.
“He’s standing at the
door,” muttered Buck. “Thank God I
ain’t in his boots.”
He jerked out his papers and tobacco,
but in the very act of twisting the cigarette tight
the door slammed and he ripped the flimsy thing in
two. He started to take another paper, but his
fingers were so unsteady that he could not pull away
the single sheet of tissue which he wanted. Then
his hands froze in place.
A faint tapping came out to him.
“He—he’s rapping
on her door,” whispered Buck, and remained fixed
in place, his eyes staring straight before him.
The seconds slipped away.
“He’s turned yaller,”
murmured Buck. “He couldn’t do it.
It’ll be up to me!”
But he had hardly spoken the words
when a low cry came out to him from the house.
Then the silence again, but Buck Daniels began to mop
his forehead.
After that, once, twice, and again
he made the effort to turn towards the house, but
when he finally succeeded it was whole minutes later,
and Lee Haines was leading a saddled horse from the
coral. Kate stood beside the cabin, waiting.
When he reached her, she was already
mounted. He halted beside her, panting, his hand
on her bridle.
“Don’t do it, Kate!”
he pleaded. “Lemme go with you. Lemme
go and try to help.”
The brisk wind up the gulch set her
clothes fluttering, stirred the hair about the rim
of her hat, and she seemed to Buck more gracefully,
more beautifully young than he had ever seen her;
but her face was like stone.
“You’d be no help,”
she answered. “When I get to the place I
may have to meet him! Would you face him, Buck?”
His hand fell away from the bridle.
It was not so much what she said as the cold, steady
voice with which she spoke that unnerved him.
Then, without a farewell, she turned the brown horse
around and struck across the meadow at a swift gallop.
Buck turned to meet the sick face of Haines.
“Well?” he said.
“Let me have that flask.”
Buck produced a metal “life-saver,”
and Haines with nervous hands unscrewed the top and
lifted it to his lips. He lowered it after a long
moment and stood bracing himself against the wall.
“It was hell, Buck. God
help me if I ever have to go through a thing like
that again.”
“I see what you done,”
said Buck angrily. “You walked right in
and took your story in both hands and knocked her
down with it. Haines, of all the ornery, thick-headed
cayuses I ever see, you’re the most out-beatin’est!”
“I couldn’t help it.”
“Why not?”
“When I went in she took one
look at me and then jumped up and stood as straight
as a pine tree.
“‘Lee,’ she said, ‘what have
you heard?’”
“‘About what?’ I asked her, and
I looked sort of indifferent.”
“Dan!” snorted Buck.
“She could see death an’ hell written all
over your face, most like.”
“I suppose,” muttered Haines, “I—I
was sick!
“‘Tell me!’ she said, coming close
up.
“‘He’s gone wild again,’ was
all I could put my tongue to.
“Then I blurted it out.
I had to get rid of the damned story some way, and
the quickest way seemed the best—how Dan
rode into Alder and did the killing.
“When I got to that she gave one cry.”
“I know,” said Buck, shuddering.
“Like something dying.”
“Then she asked me to saddle
her horse. I begged her to let me go with her,
and she said to me what she just now said to you.
And so I stayed. What good could we do against
that devil?”