LAUGHTER
“Mr. Lee,” she said, “I
am going to ask you to do me a favour. Will you?”
His smile was a sufficient answer,
and it was in her character that she made no pretext
of misunderstanding it.
“You have noticed Dan among
the crowd?” she asked, “Whistling Dan?”
“Yes,” he said, “I saw him do some
very nice shooting.”
“It’s about him that I
want to speak to you. Mr. Lee, he knows very
little about men and their ways. He is almost
a child among them. You seem—stronger—than
most of the crowd here. Will you see that if
trouble comes he is not imposed upon?”
She flushed a little, there was such
a curious yearning in the eyes of the big man.
“If you wish it,” he said
simply, “I will do what I can.”
As he walked beside her towards her
horse, she turned to him abruptly.
“You are very different from
the men I have met around here,” she said.
“I am glad,” he answered.
“Glad?”
“If you find me different, you
will remember me, whether for better or worse.”
He spoke so earnestly that she grew
grave. He helped her to the saddle and she leaned
a little to study him with the same gentle gravity.
“I should like to see you again,
Mr. Lee,” she said, and then in a little outburst,
“I should like to see you a lot! Will
you come to my house sometime?”
The directness, the sudden smile,
made him flinch. His voice was a trifle unsteady
when he replied.
“I shall!” He paused
and his hand met hers. “If it is possible.”
Her eyebrows raised a trifle.
“Is it so hard to do?”
“Do not ask me to explain,” he said, “I
am riding a long way.”
“Oh, a ’long-rider’!”
she laughed, “then of course—”
She stopped abruptly. It may have been imagination,
but he seemed to start when she spoke the phrase by
which outlaws were known to each other. He was
forcing his eyes to meet hers.
He said slowly: “I am going
on a long journey. Perhaps I will come back.
If I am able to, I shall.”
He dropped his hand from hers and
she remained silent, guessing at many things, and
deeply moved, for every woman knows when a man speaks
from his soul.
“You will not forget me?”
“I shall never forget you,” she answered
quietly. “Good-bye, Mr. Lee!”
Her hand touched his again, she wheeled,
and rode away. He remained standing with the
hand she had grasped still raised. And after a
moment, as he had hoped, she turned in the saddle and
waved to him. His eyes were downward and he was
smiling faintly when he re-entered the saloon.
Silent sat at a table with his chin
propped in his hand—his left hand, of course,
for that restless right hand must always be free.
He stared across the room towards Whistling Dan.
The train of thoughts which kept those ominous eyes
so unmoving must be broken. He sat down at the
side of his chief.
“What the hell?” said
the big man, “ain’t you started yet?”
“Look here, Jim,” said
Haines cautiously, “I want you to lay off on
this kid, Whistling Dan. It won’t meant
anything to you to raise the devil with him.”
“I tell you,” answered
Silent, “it’ll please me more’n anything
in the world to push that damned girl face of his
into the floor.”
“Silent, I’m asking a personal favour
of you!”
The leader turned upon him that untamed stare.
Haines set his teeth.
“Haines,” came the answer,
“I’ll stand more from you than from any
man alive. I know you’ve got guts an’
I know you’re straight with me. But there
ain’t anything can keep me from manhandlin’
that kid over there.” He opened and shut
his fingers slowly. “I sort of yearn to
get at him!”
Haines recognized defeat.
“But you haven’t another
gun hidden on you, Jim? You won’t try to
shoot him up?”
“No,” said Silent.
“If I had a gun I don’t know—but
I haven’t a gun. My hands’ll be enough!”
All that could be done now was to
get Whistling Dan out of the saloon. That would
be simple. A single word would suffice to send
the timid man helter-skelter homewards.
The large, lazy brown eyes turned
up to Haines as the latter approached.
“Dan,” he said, “hit
for the timbers—get on your way—there’s
danger here for you!”
To his astonishment the brown eyes
did not vary a shade.
“Danger?” he repeated wonderingly.
“Danger! Get up and get out if you want
to save your hide!”
“What’s the trouble?”
said Dan, and his eyes were surprised, but not afraid.
“The biggest man in this room is after your
blood.”
“Is he?” said Dan wonderingly.
“I’m sorry I don’t feel like leavin’,
but I’m not tired of this place yet.”
“Friend,” said Haines,
“if that tall man puts his hands on you, he’ll
break you across his knee like a rotten stick of wood!”
It was too late. Silent evidently
guessed that Haines was urging his quarry to flee.
“Hey!” he roared, so that
all heads turned towards him, “you over there.”
Haines stepped back, sick at heart.
He knew that it would be folly to meet his chief hand
to hand, but he thought of his pledge to Kate, and
groaned.
“What do you want of me?”
asked Dan, for the pointed arm left no doubt as to
whom Silent intended.
“Get up when you’re spoke
to” cried Silent. “Ain’t you
learned no manners? An’ git up quick!”
Dan rose, smiling his surprise.
“Your friend has a sort of queer way of talkin’,”
he said to Haines.
“Don’t stan’ there
like a fool. Trot over to the bar an’ git
me a jolt of red-eye. I’m dry!” thundered
Silent.
“Sure!” nodded Whistling
Dan amiably, “glad to!” and he went accordingly
towards the bar.
The men about the room looked to each
other with sick smiles. There was an excuse for
acquiescence, for the figure of Jim Silent contrasted
with Whistling Dan was like an oak compared with a
sapling. Nevertheless such bland cowardice as
Dan was showing made their flesh creep. He asked
at the bar for the whisky, and Morgan spoke as Dan
filled a glass nearly to the brim.
“Dan,” he whispered rapidly,
“I got a gun behind the bar. Say the word
an’ I’ll take the chance of pullin’
it on that big skunk. Then you make a dive for
the door. Maybe I can keep him back till you get
on Satan.”
“Why should I beat it?”
queried Dan, astonished. “I’m jest
beginnin’ to get interested in your place.
That tall feller is sure a queer one, ain’t
he?”
With the same calm and wide-eyed smile
of inquiry he turned away, taking the glass of liquor,
and left Morgan to stare after him with a face pale
with amazement, while he whispered over and over to
himself: “Well, I’ll be damned!
Well, I’ll be damned!”
Dan placed the liquor before Silent.
The latter sat gnawing his lips.
“What in hell do you mean?”
he said. “Did you only bring one glass?
Are you too damn good to drink with me? Then drink
by yourself, you white-livered coyote!”
He dashed the glass of whisky into
Dan’s face. Half blinded by the stinging
liquor, the latter fell back a pace, sputtering, and
wiping his eyes. Not a man in the room stirred.
The same sick look was on each face. But the
red devil broke loose in Silent’s heart when
he saw Dan cringe. He followed the thrown glass
with his clenched fist. Dan stood perfectly still
and watched the blow coming. His eyes were wide
and wondering, like those of a child. The iron-hard
hand struck him full on the mouth, fairly lifted him
from his feet, and flung him against the wall with
such violence that he recoiled again and fell forward
onto his knees. Silent was making beast noises
in his throat and preparing to rush on the half-prostrate
figure. He stopped short.
Dan was laughing. At least that
chuckling murmur was near to a laugh. Yet there
was no mirth in it. It had that touch of the maniacal
in it which freezes the blood. Silent halted
in the midst of his rush, with his hands poised for
the next blow. His mouth fell agape with an odd
expression of horror as Dan stared up at him.
That hideous chuckling continued. The sound defied
definition. And from the shadow in which Dan
was crouched his brown eyes blazed, changed, and filled
with yellow fires.
“God!” whispered Silent,
and at that instant the ominous crouched animal with
the yellow eyes, the nameless thing which had been
Whistling Dan a moment before, sprang up and forward
with a leap like that of a panther.
Morgan stood behind the bar with a
livid face and a fixed smile. His fingers still
stiffly clutched the whisky bottle from which the last
glass had been filled. Not another man in the
room stirred from his place. Some sat with their
cards raised in the very act of playing. Some
had stopped midway a laugh. One man had been tying
a bootlace. His body did not rise. Only
his eyes rolled up to watch.
Dan darted under the outstretched
arms of Silent, fairly heaved him up from the floor
and drove him backwards. The big man half stumbled
and half fell, knocking aside two chairs. He
rushed back with a shout, but at sight of the white
face with the thin trickle of blood falling from the
lips, and at the sound of that inhuman laughter, he
paused again.
Once more Dan was upon him, his hands
darting out with motions too fast for the eye to follow.
Jim Silent stepped back a half pace, shifted his weight,
and drove his fist straight at that white face.
How it happened not a man in the room could tell, but
the hand did not strike home. Dan had swerved
aside as lightly as a wind-blown feather and his fist
rapped against Silent’s ribs with a force that
made the giant grunt.
Some of the horror was gone from his
face and in its stead was baffled rage. He knew
the scientific points of boxing, and he applied them.
His eye was quick and sure. His reach was whole
inches longer than his opponent’s. His
strength was that of two ordinary men. What did
it avail him? He was like an agile athlete in
the circus playing tag with a black panther.
He was like a child striking futilely at a wavering
butterfly. Sometimes this white-faced, laughing
devil ducked under his arms. Sometimes a sidestep
made his blows miss by the slightest fraction of an
inch.
And for every blow he struck four
rained home against him. It was impossible!
It could not be! Silent telling himself that he
dreamed, and those dancing fists crashed into his
face and body like sledgehammers. There was no
science in the thing which faced him. Had there
been trained skill the second blow would have knocked
Silent unconscious, and he knew it, but Dan made no
effort to strike a vulnerable spot. He hit at
anything which offered.
Still he laughed as he leaped back
and forth. Perhaps mere weight of rushing would
beat the dancing will-o’-the-wisp to the floor.
Silent bored in with lowered head and clutched at
his enemy. Then he roared with triumph.
His outstretched hand caught Dan’s shirt as the
latter flicked to one side. Instantly they were
locked in each other’s arms! The most meaning
part of the fight followed.
The moment after they grappled, Silent
shifted his right arm from its crushing grip on Dan’s
body and clutched at the throat. The move was
as swift as lightning, but the parry of the smaller
man was still quicker. His left hand clutched
Silent by the wrist, and that mighty sweep of arm
was stopped in mid-air! They were in the middle
of the room. They stood perfectly erect and close
together, embraced. Their position had a ludicrous
resemblance to the posture of dancers, but their bodies
were trembling with effort. With every ounce of
power in his huge frame Silent strove to complete
his grip at the throat. He felt the right arm
of Dan tightening around him closer, closer, closer!
It was not a bulky arm, but it seemed to be made of
linked steel which was shrinking into him, and promised
to crush his very bones. The strength of this
man seemed to increase. It was limitless.
His breath came struggling under that pressure and
the blood thundered and raged in his temples.
If he could only get at that soft throat!
But his struggling right hand was
held in a vice of iron. Now his numb arm gave
way, slowly, inevitably. He ground his teeth and
cursed. His curse was half a prayer. For
answer there was the unearthly chuckle just below
his ear. His hand was moved back, down, around!
He was helpless as a child in the arms of its father—no,
helpless as a sheep in the constricting coils of a
python.
An impulse of frantic horror and shame
and fear gave him redoubled strength for an instant.
He tore himself clear and reeled back. Dan planted
two smashes on Silent’s snarling mouth.
A glance showed the large man the mute, strained faces
around the room. The laughing devil leaped again.
Then all pride slipped like water from the heart of
Jim Silent, and in its place there was only icy fear,
fear not of a man, but of animal power. He caught
up a heavy chair and drove it with all his desperate
strength at Dan.
It cracked distinctly against his
head and the weight of it fairly drove him into the
floor. He fell with a limp thud on the boards.
Silent, reeling and blind, staggered to and fro in
the centre of the room. Morgan and Lee Haines
reached Dan at the same moment and kneeled beside
him.