All in a grim instant he saw the trap.
It closed upon his consciousness with a click, and
as he doubled Satan around he knew that the only escape
was in running southeast along the banks of the Asper.
Even that was a desperate, a forlorn chance, for if
that omnipotent voice could reach from Rickett to
Caswell City, fifty miles away, certainly it must have
warned the river towns of Ganton and Wilsonville and
Bly Falls where Tucker Creek ran into the Asper.
But this was no time for thinking. Already, looking
back, he saw the posse changing their saddles to fifteen
fresh mounts, and he headed Satan across the Wago
Hills, West and South.
It was hot work. Even the steel-wire
muscles of Black Bart were weakening under the tremendous
labors of that day, and as he scouted ahead his head
was low and his red tongue lolled, and surest sign
of all, the bushy tail drooped; yet it was time to
make a new call upon both wolf-dog and horse, for
the posse was racing after him as before, giving even
the fresh, willing mounts the urge of spurs and quirts.
He ran his hand down the dripping neck and shoulder
of Satan; he called to him; and with a snort the stallion
responded. He felt the quiver as the muscles tightened
for the work; he felt the settling as Satan lengthened
to racing speed.
Through the Wago Hills, then, with
Bart picking the way as before, and never a falter
in the sweep of Satan’s running. If his
head was a little lower, if his ears lay flat, only
the master knew the meaning, and still, when he spoke,
the glistening ears pricked up, and they bounded on
to a greater speed than before. The flight of
a gull on unstirring wings when the wind buoys it,
the glide of water over the descent of smooth rock,
with never a ripple, like all things effortless, swift,
and free, such was the gait of Satan as he fled.
Let them spur the fresh horses from Caswell City till
their flanks dripped red, they would never gain on
him.
On through the hills, and now the
heave of his great breaths told of the strain, down
like an arrow into the rolling ground, and now they
galloped beside the Asper banks. The master looked
darkly upon that water.
Ten days before, when the snows had
not yet reached the climax of melting, ten days later
when that climax was overpassed, the Asper would have
been fordable, but now a brown flood stormed along
the gully, ate away the banks, undermined the willows
here and there, and rolled stones larger than a man
could lift. It went with an angry shouting as
if it defied the fugitive. It was narrow, maddeningly
narrow, almost small enough to attempt a leap across
to the safety of the thickets on the farther side,
but the force of the water alone was enough to warn
the bravest swimmer away, and here and there, like
teeth in the mouth of the shark, jagged stones cut
the surface with white foam streaking out below them;
as if to prove its power, even while Dan turned South
along the bank a dead trunk shot down the stream and
split on one of the Asper’s teeth.
Even then he felt the temptation.
There lay the forest on the farther side, a forest
which would shelter him, and above the forest, hardly
a mile back, began the Grizzly Peaks. They lunged
straight up to snowy summits, and all along their
sides blue shadows of the afternoon drifted through
a network of ravines—a promise of peace,
a surety of safety if he could reach that labyrinth.
He was almost glad when he left the
mockery of the river’s noise to turn aside for
Ganton. There it lay in a bend of the Asper in
the low-lands, and every town where men lived was
an enemy. He could see them now gathered just
outside the village, twenty men, perhaps and fifteen
spare horses, the best they had, for the posse.
On past Ganton, and again a call upon
Satan to meet the first spurt of the posse on its
new horses. There was something in the stallion
to answer, some incredible reserve of nerve strength
and courage. There was a slight labor, now, and
something of the same heave and pitch which comes in
the gait of a common horse; also, when he put Satan
up the first slope beyond Ganton he noted a faltering,
a deeper lowering of the head. When his hoofs
struck a loose rock he no longer had the easy recoil
of the morning. He staggered like a graceful
yacht chopped by a cross-current. Now down the
slope, now back to the roar of the Asper once more,
for there the going was most level, but always the
strides were shortening, shortening, and the head
of the stallion nodded at his work.
All that was seen by Mark Retherton
through his glasses, though they were almost close
enough now to see details through the naked eye.
He turned in the saddle to the posse, grim faces,
sweat and dust clotted in their moustaches, their
faces drawn and gray with streaks over the nose and
under the eyes where perspiration ran. They rode
crookedly, now, for seventy miles at full speed had
racked them, twisted them, cramped their muscles.
Scotty kept his head tilted far back, for his spinal
column seemed about to snap. Walsh leaned to
his right side which a tormenting pain drew at every
stride, and Hendricks cursed in gasps through a wry
mouth. It had been an hour since Mark Retherton
last spoke, and when he attempted it now his voice
was as hoarse as a croaking frog.
“Boys, buck up! He’s
done! D’ye see the black laborin’.
D’ye see it? Hey, Lew, Garry, we’ve
got the best hosses among us three. Now’s
the time for a spurt, and by God, we’ll run
him down. I’m startin!”
He made his word good with an Indian
yell and a wave of his hat that sent his buckskin
leaping straight into the air, to land with stiff legs,
“swallowing its head,” but then it straightened
out in earnest. That buckskin had a name from
Bly Falls to Caswell City speed and courage, and it
lived up to the record in the time of need. Close
behind it came Lew and Garry ponies scarcely slower
than the buckskin, and they closed rapidly on Satan.
The plan of Retherton was plain: now that the
black was running on its nerve a spurt might bring
them within striking distance and if they could check
the flight for an instant by opening advance guard
fire, they might drive the fugitive into a corner
by the river and hold him there until the main body
the posse came up. The three of them running alone
the lead could do five yards for every four of the
slow horses, and the effect showed at once.
Going up a slope the trot of the stallion
maintained or even increased his lead, but when they
reached the easier ground beyond they drew rapidly
upon him. They saw Barry bend low; they saw the
stallion increase its pace.
“By God,” shouted Retherton
in involuntary admonition, “I’d rather
have that hoss than the ten thousand. But feed
’em the spurs, boys, and he’ll come back
to us inside a mile.”
And Retherton was right. Before
that mile was over the black slipped back inch by
inch, until at length Retherton called: “Now
grab your guns boys and see if you can salt him down
with lead. Give your hosses their heads and turn
loose!”
They pulled their guns to their shoulders
and sent a volley at the outlaw. One bullet clipped
a spark from the rocks just behind the stallion’s
feet; the other two must have gone wide. Once
more Barry flinched closer over the neck of Satan
and once again the horse answered with a fresh burst
of speed, but in a few moments he came back to them.
Flesh could not stand that pace after seventy-five
miles of running.
They saw the rider straighten and
look back; then the sun flashed on his rifle.
“Feed ’em the spur!”
shouted Retherton. “If we can’t hit
him shooting ahead, he ain’t got a chance to
hit us shootin’ backwards.” For it
is notoriously hard to turn in the saddle and accomplish
anything with a rifle. One is moving away from
the target instead of toward it, and every condition
of ordinary shooting is reversed; above all, the moment
a man turns his head he is completely out of touch
with his horse. Apparently the fugitive knew
this and made no attempt to place his shots. He
merely jerked his gun to the shoulder and blazed away
as soon as it was in place; half a dozen yards in
front of Retherton the bullet kicked up the dust.
“I told you,” he shouted.
“He can’t do nothin’ that way.
Close in, boys. Close in for God’s sake!”
He himself was flailing with his quirt,
and the buckskin grunted at every strike. Once
more the rifle pitched to the outlaw’s shoulder,
and this time the bullet clicked on a rock not ten
feet from Retherton, and again on a straight line
for him.
“Damned if that ain’t
shootin’!” called Garry, and Retherton,
alarmed, swung the buckskin out to one side to throw
the marksman out of line. He had turned again
in the saddle, and as though the episode were at an
end, restored his rifle to its case, but when they
poured in another volley about him, he swung sharply
roundabout again, gun in hand. Once more the
rifle went to his shoulder, and this time the bullet
knocked a puff of dust into the very nostrils of the
buckskin. Retherton reined in with an oath.
“He’s been warn in’
me, boys,” he called. “That devil
has the range like he was sitting in a rockin’
chair shooting at a tin-can. He’s warnin’
us back to the rest of the gang. And damned if
we ain’t goin’!”
It was quite patent that he was right,
for three bullets sent on a line for one horse, and
each of them closer, could mean only one thing.
They checked
their horses, and in a moment the
rest of the posse was clattering around them.
“It don’t make no difference,”
called Retherton, “savin’ in time.
Maybe he’ll last to Wilsonville, but he can’t
stay in three miles when we hang onto him with fresh
hosses. The black is runnin’ on nothin’
but guts right now.”