FOUR IN THE AIR
Dan looked from Morgan to Silent and
back again for understanding. He felt that something
was wrong, but what it was he had not the slightest
idea. For many years old Joe Cumberland had patiently
taught him that the last offence against God and man
was to fight. The old cattleman had instilled
in him the belief that if he did not cross the path
of another, no one would cross his way. The code
was perfect and satisfying. He would let the
world alone and the world would not trouble him.
The placid current of his life had never come to “white
waters” of wrath.
Wherefore he gazed bewildered about
him. They were laughing—they were
laughing unpleasantly at him as he had seen men laugh
at a fiery young colt which struggled against the
rope. It was very strange. They could not
mean harm. Therefore he smiled back at them rather
uncertainly. Morgan slapped at his shoulder by
way of good-fellowship and to hearten him, but Dan
slipped away under the extended hand with a motion
as subtle and swift as the twist of a snake when it
flees for its hole. He had a deep aversion for
contact with another man’s body. He hated
it as the wild horse hates the shadow of the flying
rope.
“Steady up, pal,” said
Morgan, “the lads mean no harm. That tall
man is considerable riled; which he’ll now bet
his sombrero agin you when it comes to shootin’.”
He turned back to Silent.
“Look here, partner,”
he said, “this is the man I said could nail the
four dollars before they hit the dust. I figger
you don’t think how it can be done, eh?”
“Him?” said Silent in
deep disgust. “Send him back to his ma before
somebody musses him all up! Why, he don’t
even pack a gun!”
Morgan waited a long moment so that
the little silence would make his next speech impressive.
“Stranger,” he said, “I’ve
still got somewhere in the neighbourhood of five hundred
dollars in that cash drawer. An’ every cent
of it hollers that Dan can do what I said.”
Silent hesitated. His code was
loose, but he did not like to take advantage of a
drunk or a crazy man. However, five hundred dollars
was five hundred dollars. Moreover that handsome
fellow who had just taken water from Hal Purvis and
was now smiling foolishly at his own shame, had actually
ridden Red Peter. The remembrance infuriated Silent.
“Hurry up,” said Morgan
confidently. “I dunno what you’re
thinkin’, stranger. Which I’m kind
of deaf an’ I don’t understand the way
anything talks except money.”
“Corral that talk, Morgan!”
called a voice from the crowd, “you’re
plumb locoed if you think any man in the world can
get away with a stunt like that! Pick four in
the air!”
“You keep your jaw for yourself,”
said Silent angrily, “if he wants to donate
a little more money to charity, let him do it.
Morgan, I’ve got five hundred here to cover
your stake.”
“Make him give you odds, Morgan,”
said another voice, “because——”
A glance from Silent cut the suggestion
short. After that there was little loud conversation.
The stakes were large. The excitement made the
men hush the very tones in which they spoke. Morgan
moistened his white lips.
“You c’n see I’m
not packin’ any shootin’ irons,”
said Dan. “Has anybody got any suggestions?”
Every gun in the crowd was instantly
at his service. They were heartily tempted to
despise Dan, but as one with the courage to attempt
the impossible, they would help him as far as they
could. He took their guns one after the other,
weighed them, tried the action, and handed them back.
It was almost as if there were a separate intelligence
in the ends of his fingers which informed him of the
qualities of each weapon.
“Nice gun,” he said to
the first man whose revolver he handled, “but
I don’t like a barrel that’s quite so
heavy. There’s a whole ounce too much in
the barrel.”
“What d’you mean?”
asked the cowpuncher. “I’ve packed
that gun for pretty nigh eight years!”
“Sorry,” said Dan passing
on, “but I can’t work right with a top-heavy
gun.”
The next weapon he handed back almost at once.
“What’s the matter with that?” asked
the owner aggressively.
“Cylinder too tight,”
said Dan decisively, and a moment later to another
man, “Bad handle. I don’t like the
feel of it.”
Over Jim Silent’s guns he paused
longer than over most of the rest, but finally he
handed them back. The big man scowled.
Dan looked back to him in gentle surprise.
“You see,” he explained
quietly, “you got to handle a gun like a horse.
If you don’t treat it right it won’t treat
you right. That’s all I know about it.
Your gun ain’t very clean, stranger, an’
a gun that ain’t kept clean gets off feet.”
Silent glanced at his weapons, cursed
softly, and restored them to the holsters.
“Lee,” he muttered to
Haines, who stood next to him, “what do you
think he meant by that? D’ you figger he’s
got somethin’ up his sleeve, an’ that’s
why he acts so like a damned woman?”
“I don’t know,”
said Haines gravely, “he looks to me sort of
queer—sort of different—damned
different, chief!”
By this time Dan had secured a second
gun which suited him. He whirled both guns, tried
their actions alternately, and then announced that
he was ready. In the dead silence, one of the
men paced off the twenty yards.
Dan, with his back turned, stood at
the mark, shifting his revolvers easily in his hands,
and smiling down at them as if they could understand
his caress.
“How you feelin’, Dan?” asked Morgan
anxiously.
“Everything fine,” he answered.
“Are you gettin’ weak?”
“No, I’m all right.”
“Steady up, partner.”
“Steady up? Look at my hand!”
Dan extended his arm. There was not a quiver
in it.
“All right, Dan. When you’re
shootin’, remember that I got pretty close to
everything I own staked on you. There’s
the stranger gettin’ his four dollars ready.”
Silent took his place with the four dollars in his
hand.
“Are you ready?” he called.
“Let her go!” said Dan, apparently without
the least excitement.
Jim Silent threw the coins, and he
threw them so as to increase his chances as much as
possible. A little snap of his hand gave them
a rapid rotary motion so that each one was merely
a speck of winking light. He flung them high,
for it was probable that Whistling Dan would wait
to shoot until they were on the way down. The
higher he threw them the more rapidly they would be
travelling when they crossed the level of the markman’s
eye.
As a shout proclaimed the throwing
of the coins, Dan whirled, and it seemed to the bystanders
that a revolver exploded before he was fully turned;
but one of the coins never rose to the height of the
throw. There was a light “cling!”
and it spun a dozen yards away. Two more shots
blended almost together; two more dollars darted away
in twinkling streaks of light. One coin still
fell, but when it was a few inches from the earth
a six-shooter barked again and the fourth dollar glanced
sidewise into the dust. It takes long to describe
the feat. Actually, the four shots consumed less
than a second of time.
“That last dollar,” said
Dan, and his soft voice was the first sound out of
the silence, “wasn’t good. It didn’t
ring true. Counterfeit?”
It seemed that no one heard his words.
The men were making a wild scramble for the dollars.
They dived into the dust for them, rising white of
face and clothes to fight and struggle over their prizes.
Those dollars with the chips and neat round holes in
them would confirm the truth of a story that the most
credulous might be tempted to laugh or scorn.
A cowpuncher offered ten dollars for one of the relics—but
none would part with a prize.
The moment the shooting was over Dan
stepped quietly back and restored the guns to the
owners. The first man seized his weapon carelessly.
He was in the midst of his rush after one of the chipped
coins. The other cowpuncher received his weapon
almost with reverence.
“I’m thankin’ you
for the loan,” said Dan, “an here’s
hopin’ you always have luck with the gun.”
“Luck?” said the other.
“I sure will have luck with it. I’m
goin’ to oil her up and put her in a glass case
back home, an’ when I get grandchildren I’m
goin’ to point out that gun to ’em and
tell ’em what men used to do in the old days.
Let’s go in an’ surround some red-eye
at my expense.”
“No thanks,” answered Dan, “I ain’t
drinkin’.”
He stepped back to the edge of the
circle and folded his arms. It was as if he had
walked out of the picture. He suddenly seemed
to be aloof from them all.
Out of the quiet burst a torrent of
curses, exclamations, and shouts. Chance drew
Jim Silent and his three followers together.
“My God!” whispered Lee
Haines, with a sort of horror in his voice, “it
wasn’t human! Did you see? Did you
see?”
“Am I blind?” asked Hal
Purvis, “an’ think of me walkin’
up an’ bracin’ that killer like he was
a two-year-old kid! I figger that’s the
nearest I ever come to a undeserved grave, an’
I’ve had some close calls! ‘That
last dollar wasn’t good! It didn’t
ring true,’ says he when he finished. I
never seen such nerve!”
“You’re wrong as hell,”
said Silent, “a woman can shoot at a target,
but it takes a cold nerve to shoot at a man—an’
this feller is yellow all through!”
“Is he?” growled Bill
Kilduff, “well, I’d hate to take him by
surprise, so’s he’d forget himself.
He gets as much action out of a common six-gun as
if it was a gatling. He was right about that last
dollar, too. It was pure—lead!”
“All right, Haines,” said
Silent. “You c’n start now any time,
an’ the rest of us’ll follow on the way
I said. I’m leavin’ last. I got
a little job to finish up with the kid.”
But Haines was staring fixedly down the road.
“I’m not leaving yet,” said Haines.
“Look!”
He turned to one of the cowpunchers.
“Who’s the girl riding up the road, pardner?”
“That calico? She’s Kate Cumberland—old
Joe’s gal.”
“I like the name,” said Haines. “She
sits the saddle like a man!”
Her pony darted off from some imaginary
object in the middle of the road, and she swayed gracefully,
following the sudden motion. Her mount came to
the sudden halt of the cattle pony and she slipped
to the ground before Morgan could run out to help.
Even Lee Haines, who was far quicker, could not reach
her in time.
“Sorry I’m late,” said Haines.
“Shall I tie your horse?”
The fast ride had blown colour to
her face and good spirits into her eyes. She
smiled up to him, and as she shook her head in refusal
her eyes lingered a pardonable moment on his handsome
face, with the stray lock of tawny hair fallen low
across his forehead. She was used to frank admiration,
but this unembarrassed courtesy was a new world to
her. She was still smiling when she turned to
Morgan.
“You told my father the boys wouldn’t
wear guns today.”
He was somewhat confused.
“They seem to be wearin’
them,” he said weakly, and his eyes wandered
about the armed circle, pausing on the ominous forms
of Hal Purvis, Bill Kilduff, and especially Jim Silent,
a head taller than the rest. He stood somewhat
in the background, but the slight sneer with which
he watched Whistling Dan dominated the entire picture.
“As a matter of fact,”
went on Morgan, “it would be a ten man job to
take the guns away from this crew. You can see
for yourself.”
She glanced about the throng and started. She
had seen Dan.
“How did he come here?”
“Oh, Dan?” said Morgan,
“he’s all right. He just pulled one
of the prettiest shootin’ stunts I ever seen.”
“But he promised my father—”
began Kate, and then stopped, flushing.
If her father was right in diagnosing
Dan’s character, this was the most critical
day in his life, for there he stood surrounded by armed
men. If there were anything wild in his nature
it would be brought out that day. She was almost
glad the time of trial had come.
She said: “How about the guns, Mr. Morgan?”
“If you want them collected
and put away for a while,” offered Lee Haines,
“I’ll do what I can to help you!”
Her smile of thanks set his blood
tingling. His glance lingered a little too long,
a little too gladly, and she coloured slightly.
“Miss Cumberland,” said
Haines, “may I introduce myself? My name
is Lee.”
She hesitated. The manners she
had learned in the Eastern school forbade it, but
her Western instinct was truer and stronger. Her
hand went out to him.
“I’m very glad to know you, Mr. Lee.”
“All right, stranger,”
said Morgan, who in the meantime had been shifting
from one foot to the other and estimating the large
chances of failure in this attempt to collect the
guns, “if you’re going to help me corral
the shootin’ irons, let’s start the roundup.”
The girl went with them. They
had no trouble in getting the weapons. The cold
blue eye of Lee Haines was a quick and effective persuasion.
When they reached Jim Silent he stared
fixedly upon Haines. Then he drew his guns slowly
and presented them to his comrade, while his eyes
shifted to Kate and he said coldly: “Lady,
I hope I ain’t the last one to congratulate
you!”
She did not understand, but Haines
scowled and coloured. Dan, in the meantime, was
swept into the saloon by an influx of the cowpunchers
that left only Lee Haines outside with Kate. She
had detained him with a gesture.