SILENT SHOOTS
It was a great day and also a sad
one for Morgan. His general store and saloon
had been bought out by old Joe Cumberland, who declared
a determination to clear up the landscape, and thereby
plunged the cowpunchers in gloom. They partially
forgave Cumberland, but only because he was an old
man. A younger reformer would have met armed
resistance. Morgan’s place was miles away
from the next oasis in the desert and the closing
meant dusty, thirsty leagues of added journey to every
man in the neighbourhood. The word “neighbourhood,”
of course, covered a territory fifty miles square.
If the day was very sad for this important
reason, it was also very glad, for rustling Morgan
advertised the day of closing far and wide, and his
most casual patrons dropped all business to attend
the big doings. A long line of buckboards and
cattle ponies surrounded the place. Newcomers
gallopped in every few moments. Most of them did
not stop to tether their mounts, but simply dropped
the reins over the heads of the horses and then went
with rattling spurs and slouching steps into the saloon.
Every man was greeted by a shout, for one or two of
those within usually knew him, and when they raised
a cry the others joined in for the sake of good fellowship.
As a rule he responded by ordering everyone up to
the bar.
One man, however, received no more
greeting than the slamming of the door behind him.
He was a tall, handsome fellow with tawny hair and
a little smile of habit rather than mirth upon his
lips. He had ridden up on a strong bay horse,
a full two hands taller than the average cattle pony,
and with legs and shoulders and straight back that
unmistakably told of a blooded pedigree. When
he entered the saloon he seemed nowise abashed by
the silence, but greeted the turned heads with a wave
of the hand and a good-natured “Howdy, boys!”
A volley of greetings replied to him, for in the mountain-desert
men cannot be strangers after the first word.
“Line up and hit the red-eye,”
he went on, and leaning against the bar as he spoke,
his habitual smile broadened into one of actual invitation.
Except for a few groups who watched the gambling in
the corners of the big room, there was a general movement
towards the bar.
“And make it a tall one, boys,”
went on the genial stranger. “This is the
first time I ever irrigated Morgan’s place, and
from what I have heard today about the closing I suppose
it will be the last time. So here’s to
you, Morgan!”
And he waved his glass towards the
bartender. His voice was well modulated and his
enunciation bespoke education. This, in connection
with his careful clothes and rather modish riding-boots,
might have given him the reputation of a dude, had
it not been for several other essential details of
his appearance. His six-gun hung so low that he
would scarcely have to raise his hand to grasp the
butt. He held his whisky glass in his left hand,
and the right, which rested carelessly on his hip,
was deeply sunburned, as if he rarely wore a glove.
Moreover, his eyes were marvellously direct, and they
lingered a negligible space as they touched on each
man in the room. All of this the cattlemen noted
instantly. What they did not see on account of
his veiling fingers was that he poured only a few
drops of the liquor into his glass.
In the meantime another man who had
never before “irrigated” at Morgan’s
place, rode up. His mount, like that of the tawny-haired
rider, was considerably larger and more finely built
than the common range horse. In three days of
hard work a cattle pony might wear down these blooded
animals, but would find it impossible to either overtake
or escape them in a straight run. The second stranger,
short-legged, barrel-chested, and with a scrub of
black beard, entered the barroom while the crowd was
still drinking the health of Morgan. He took a
corner chair, pushed back his hat until a mop of hair
fell down his forehead, and began to roll a cigarette.
The man of the tawny hair took the next seat.
“Seems to be quite a party,
stranger,” said the tall fellow nonchalantly.
“Sure,” growled he of
the black beard, and after a moment he added:
“Been out on the trail long, pardner?”
“Hardly started.”
“So’m I.”
“As a matter of fact, I’ve got a lot of
hard riding before me.”
“So’ve I.”
“And some long riding, too.”
Perhaps it was because he turned his
head suddenly towards the light, but a glint seemed
to come in the eyes of the bearded man.
“Long rides,” he said more amiably, “are
sure hell on hosses.”
“And on men, too,” nodded the other, and
tilted back in his chair.
The bearded man spoke again, but though
a dozen cowpunchers were close by no one heard his
voice except the man at his side. One side of
his face remained perfectly immobile and his eyes
stared straight before him drearily while he whispered
from a corner of his mouth: “How long do
you stay, Lee?”
“Noon,” said Lee.
Once more the shorter man spoke in
the manner which is learned in a penitentiary:
“Me too. We must be slated for the same
ride, Lee. Do you know what it is? It’s
nearly noon, and the chief ought to be here.”
There was a loud greeting for a newcomer,
and Lee took advantage of the noise to say quite openly:
“If Silent said he’ll come, he’ll
be here. But I say he’s crazy to come to
a place full of range riders, Bill.”
“Take it easy,” responded
Bill. “This hangout is away off our regular
beat. Nobody’ll know him.”
“His hide is his own and he
can do what he wants with it,” said Lee.
“I warned him before.”
“Shut up,” murmured Bill,
“Here’s Jim now, and Hal Purvis with him!”
Through the door strode a great figure
before whom the throng at the bar gave way as water
rolls back from the tall prow of a ship. In his
wake went a little man with a face dried and withered
by the sun and small bright eyes which moved continually
from side to side. Lee and Bill discovered their
thirst at the same time and made towards the newcomers.
They had no difficulty in reaching
them. The large man stood with his back to the
bar, his elbows spread out on it, so that there was
a little space left on either side of him. No
one cared to press too close to this sombre-faced
giant. Purvis stood before him and Bill and Lee
were instantly at his side. The two leaned on
the bar, facing him, yet the four did not seem to
make a group set apart from the rest.
“Well?” asked Lee.
“I’ll tell you what it
is when we’re on the road,” said Jim Silent.
“Plenty of time, Haines.”
“Who’ll start first?” asked Bill.
“You can, Kilduff,” said
the other. “Go straight north, and go slow.
Then Haines will follow you. Purvis next.
I come last because I got here last. There ain’t
any hurry—What’s this here?”
“I tell you I seen it!”
called an angry voice from a corner.
“You must of been drunk an’
seein’ double, partner,” drawled the answer.
“Look here!” said the
first man, “I’m willin’ to take that
any way you mean it!”
“An’ I’m willin’,”
said the other, “that you should take it any
way you damn please.”
Everyone in the room was grave except
Jim Silent and his three companions, who were smiling
grimly.
“By God, Jack,” said the
first man with ominous softness, “I’ll
take a lot from you but when it comes to doubtin’
my word——”
Morgan, with popping eyes and a very
red face, slapped his hand on the bar and vaulted
over it with more agility than his plumpness warranted.
He shouldered his way hurriedly through the crowd to
the rapidly widening circle around the two disputants.
They stood with their right hands resting with rigid
fingers low down on their hips, and their eyes, fixed
on each other, forgot the rest of the world.
Morgan burst in between them.
“Look here,” he thundered,
“it’s only by way of a favour that I’m
lettin’ you boys wear shootin’ irons today
because I promised old Cumberland there wouldn’t
be no fuss. If you got troubles there’s
enough room for you to settle them out in the hills,
but there ain’t none at all in here!”
The gleam went out of their eyes like
four candles snuffed by the wind. Obviously they
were both glad to have the tension broken. Mike
wiped his forehead with a rather unsteady hand.
“I ain’t huntin’
for no special brand of trouble,” he said, “but
Jack has been ridin’ the red-eye pretty hard
and it’s gotten into that dried up bean he calls
his brain.”
“Say, partner,” drawled
Jack, “I ain’t drunk enough of the hot
stuff to make me fall for the line you’ve been
handing out.”
He turned to Morgan.
“Mike, here, has been tryin’
to make me believe that he knew a feller who could
drill a dollar at twenty yards every time it was tossed
up.”
The crowd laughed, Morgan loudest of all.
“Did you anyways have Whistlin’ Dan in
mind?” he asked.
“No, I didn’t,”
said Mike, “an’ I didn’t say this
here man I was talkin’ about could drill them
every time. But he could do it two times out
of four.”
“Mike,” said Morgan, and
he softened his disbelief with his smile and the good-natured
clap on the shoulder, “you sure must of been
drinkin’ when you seen him do it. I allow
Whistlin’ Dan could do that an’ more,
but he ain’t human with a gun.”
“How d’you know?”
asked Jack, “I ain’t ever seen him packin’
a six-gun.”
“Sure you ain’t,”
answered Morgan, “but I have, an’ I seen
him use it, too. It was jest sort of by chance
I saw it.”
“Well,” argued Mike anxiously,
“then you allow it’s possible if Whistlin’
Dan can do it. An’ I say I seen a chap who
could turn the trick.”
“An’ who in hell is this
Whistlin’ Dan?” asked Jim Silent.
“He’s the man that caught
Satan, an’ rode him,” answered a bystander.
“Some man if he can ride the
devil,” laughed Lee Haines.
“I mean the black mustang that
ran wild around here for a couple of years. Some
people tell tales about him being a wonder with a gun.
But Morgan’s the only one who claims to have
seen him work.”
“Maybe you did see it, and maybe
you didn’t,” Morgan was saying to Mike
noncommittally, “but there’s some pretty
fair shots in this room, which I’d lay fifty
bucks no man here could hit a dollar with a six-gun
at twenty paces.”
“While they’re arguin’,”
said Bill Kilduff, “I reckon I’ll hit the
trail.”
“Wait a minute,” grinned
Jim Silent, “an’ watch me have some fun
with these short-horns.”
He spoke more loudly: “Are
you makin’ that bet for the sake of arguin’,
partner, or do you calculate to back it up with cold
cash?”
Morgan whirled upon him with a scowl,
“I ain’t pulled a bluff in my life that
I can’t back up!” he said sharply.
“Well,” said Silent, “I
ain’t so flush that I’d turn down fifty
bucks when a kind Christian soul, as the preachers
say, slides it into my glove. Not me. Lead
out the dollar, pal, an’ kiss it farewell!”
“Who’ll hold the stakes?” asked
Morgan.
“Let your friend Mike,”
said Jim Silent carelessly, and he placed fifty dollars
in gold in the hands of the Irishman. Morgan followed
suit. The crowd hurried outdoors.
A dozen bets were laid in as many
seconds. Most of the men wished to place their
money on the side of Morgan, but there were not a few
who stood willing to risk coin on Jim Silent, stranger
though he was. Something in his unflinching eye,
his stern face, and the nerveless surety of his movements
commanded their trust.
“How do you stand, Jim?”
asked Lee Haines anxiously. “Is it a safe
bet? I’ve never seen you try a mark like
this one!”
“It ain’t safe,”
said Silent, “because I ain’t mad enough
to shoot my best, but it’s about an even draw.
Take your pick.”
“Not me,” said Haines,
“if you had ten chances instead of one I might
stack some coin on you. If the dollar were stationary
I know you could do it, but a moving coin looks pretty
small.”
“Here you are,” called
Morgan, who stood at a distance of twenty paces, “are
you ready?”
Silent whipped out his revolver and
poised it. “Let ’er go!”
The coin whirled in the air.
Silent fired as it commenced to fall—it
landed untouched.
“As a kind, Christian soul,”
said Morgan sarcastically, “I ain’t in
your class, stranger. Charity always sort of interests
me when I’m on the receivin’ end!”
The crowd chuckled, and the sound infuriated Silent.
“Don’t go back jest yet,
partners,” he drawled. “Mister Morgan,
I got one hundred bones which holler that I can plug
that dollar the second try.”
“Boys,” grinned Morgan,
“I’m leavin’ you to witness that
I hate to do it, but business is business. Here
you are!”
The coin whirled again. Silent,
with his lips pressed into a straight line and his
brows drawn dark over his eyes, waited until the coin
reached the height of its rise, and then fired—missed—fired
again, and sent the coin spinning through the air
in a flashing semicircle. It was a beautiful
piece of gun-play. In the midst of the clamour
of applause Silent strode towards Morgan with his
hand outstretched.
“After all,” he said.
“I knowed you wasn’t really hard of heart.
It only needed a little time and persuasion to make
you dig for coin when I pass the box.”
Morgan, red of face and scowling,
handed over his late winnings and his own stakes.
“It took you two shots to do
it,” he said, “an’ if I wanted to
argue the pint maybe you wouldn’t walk off with
the coin.”
“Partner,” said Jim Silent
gently, “I got a wanderin’ hunch that
you’re showin’ a pile of brains by not
arguin’ this here pint!”
There followed that little hush of
expectancy which precedes trouble, but Morgan, after
a glance at the set lips of his opponent, swallowed
his wrath.
“I s’pose you’ll
tell how you did this to your kids when you’re
eighty,” he said scornfully, “but around
here, stranger, they don’t think much of it.
Whistlin’ Dan”—he paused, as
if to calculate how far he could safely exaggerate—“Whistlin’
Dan can stand with his back to the coins an’
when they’re thrown he drills four dollars easier
than you did one—an’ he wouldn’t
waste three shots on one dollar. He ain’t
so extravagant!”