THE PANTHER’S PAW
Evening came and still they had not
sighted the outlaws. As dark fell they drew near
a house snuggled away among a group of cottonwoods.
Here they determined to spend the night, for Calder’s
pony was now almost exhausted. A man of fifty
came from the house in answer to their call and showed
them the way to the horse-shed. While they unsaddled
their horses he told them his name was Sam Daniels,
yet he evinced no curiosity as to the identity of
his guests, and they volunteered no information.
His eyes lingered long and fondly over the exquisite
lines of Satan. From behind, from the side, and
in front, he viewed the stallion while Dan rubbed
down the legs of his mount with a care which was most
foreign to the ranges. Finally the cattleman
reached out a hand toward the smoothly muscled shoulders.
It was Calder who stood nearest and
he managed to strike up Daniels’s extended arm
and jerk him back from the region of danger.
“What’n hell is that for?” exclaimed
Daniels.
“That horse is called Satan,”
said Calder, “and when any one save his owner
touches him he lives up to his name and raises hell.”
Before Daniels could answer, the light
of his lantern fell upon Black Bart, hitherto half
hidden by the deepening shadows of the night, but
standing now at the entrance of the shed. The
cattleman’s teeth clicked together and he slapped
his hand against his thigh in a reach for the gun
which was not there.
“Look behind you,” he said to Calder.
“A wolf!”
He made a grab for the marshal’s gun, but the
latter forestalled him.
“Go easy, partner,” he
said, grinning, “that’s only the running
mate of the horse. He’s not a wolf, at least
not according to his owner—and as for being
wild—look at that!”
Bart had stalked calmly into the shed
and now lay curled up exactly beneath the feet of
the stallion.
The two guests received a warmer welcome
from Sam Daniels’ wife when they reached the
house. Their son, Buck, had been expected home
for supper, but it was too late for them to delay the
meal longer. Accordingly they sat down at once
and the dinner was nearly over when Buck, having announced
himself with a whoop as he rode up, entered, banging
the door loudly behind him. He greeted the strangers
with a careless wave of the hand and sat down at the
table. His mother placed food silently before
him. No explanations of his tardiness were asked
and none were offered. The attitude of his father
indicated clearly that the boy represented the earning
power of the family. He was a big fellow with
broad, thick wrists, and a straight black eye.
When he had eaten, he broke into breezy conversation,
and especially of a vicious mustang he had ridden
on a bet the day before.
“Speakin’ of hosses, Buck,”
said his father, “they’s a black out in
the shed right now that’d make your eyes jest
nacherally pop out’n their sockets. No
more’n fifteen hands, but a reg’lar picture.
Must be greased lightnin’.”
“I’ve heard talk of these
streaks of greased lightnin’,” said Buck,
with a touch of scorn, “but I’ll stack
old Mike agin the best of them.”
“An’ there’s a dog
along with the hoss—a dog that’s the
nearest to a wolf of any I ever seen.”
There was a sudden change in Buck—a
change to be sensed rather than definitely noted with
the eye. It was a stiffening of his body—an
alertness of which he was at pains to make no show.
For almost immediately he began to whistle softly,
idly, his eyes roving carelessly across the wall while
he tilted back in his chair. Dan dropped his
hand close to the butt of his gun. Instantly,
the eyes of Buck flashed down and centered on Dan
for an instant of keen scrutiny. Certainly Buck
had connected that mention of the black horse and the
wolf-dog with a disturbing idea.
When they went to their room—a
room in which there was no bed and they had to roll
down their blankets on the floor—Dan opened
the window and commenced to whistle one of his own
wild tunes. It seemed to Calder that there was
a break in that music here and there, and a few notes
grouped together like a call. In a moment a shadowy
figure leaped through the window, and Black Bart landed
on the floor with soft padding feet.
Recovering from his start Calder cursed softly.
“What’s the main idea?” he asked.
Dan made a signal for a lower tone.
“There ain’t no idea,”
he answered, “but these Daniels people—do
you know anything about them?”
“No. Why?”
“They interest me, that’s all.”
“Anything wrong?”
“I guess not.”
“Why did you whistle for this
infernal wolf? It makes me nervous to have him
around. Get out, Bart.”
The wolf turned a languid eye upon the marshal.
“Let him be,” said Dan.
“I don’t feel no ways nacheral without
havin’ Bart around.”
The marshal made no farther objections,
and having rolled himself in his blankets was almost
immediately asleep and breathing heavily. The
moment Dan heard his companion draw breath with a telltale
regularity, he sat up again in his blankets.
Bart was instantly at his side. He patted the
shaggy head lightly, and pointed towards the door.
“Guard!” he whispered.
Then he lay down and was immediately
asleep. Bart crouched at his feet with his head
pointed directly at the door.
In other rooms there was the sound
of the Daniels family going to bed—noises
distinctly heard throughout the flimsy frame of the
house. After that a deep silence fell which lasted
many hours, but in that darkest moment which just
precedes the dawn, a light creaking came up the hall.
It was very faint and it occurred only at long intervals,
but at the first sound Black Bart raised his head from
his paws and stared at the door with those glowing
eyes which see in the dark.
Now another sound came, still soft,
regular. There was a movement of the door.
In the pitch dark a man could never have noticed it,
but it was plainly visible to the wolf. Still
more visible, when the door finally stood wide, was
the form of the man who stood in the opening.
In one hand he carried a lantern thoroughly hooded,
but not so well wrapped that it kept back a single
ray which flashed on a revolver. The intruder
made a step forward, a step as light as the fall of
feathers, but it was not half so stealthy as the movement
of Black Bart as he slunk towards the door. He
had been warned to watch that door, but it did not
need a warning to tell him that a danger was approaching
the sleeping master. In the crouched form of the
man, in the cautious step, he recognized the unmistakable
stalking of one who hunts. Another soft step
the man made forward.
Then, with appalling suddenness, a
blacker shadow shot up from the deep night of the
floor, and white teeth gleamed before the stranger’s
face. He threw up his hand to save his throat.
The teeth sank into his arm—a driving weight
hurled him against the wall and then to the floor—the
revolver and the lantern dropped clattering, and the
latter, rolling from its wrapping, flooded the room
with light. But neither man nor wolf uttered
a sound.
Calder was standing, gun in hand,
but too bewildered to act, while Dan, as if he were
playing a part long rehearsed, stood covering the
fallen form of Buck Daniels.
“Stand back from him, Bart!” he commanded.
The wolf slipped off a pace, whining
with horrible eagerness, for he had tasted blood.
Far away a shout came from Sam Daniels. Dan lowered
his gun.
“Stand up,” he ordered.
The big fellow picked himself up and
stood against the wall with the blood streaming down
his right arm. Still he said nothing and his keen
eyes darted from Calder to Whistling Dan.
“Give me a strip of that old
shirt over there, will you, Tex?” said Dan,
“an’ keep him covered while I tie up his
arm.”
Before Calder could move, old Daniels
appeared at the door, a heavy Colt in his hand.
For a moment he stood dumbfounded, but then, with a
cry, jerked up his gun—a quick movement,
but a fraction of a second too slow, for the hand
of Dan darted out and his knuckles struck the wrist
of the old cattleman. The Colt rattled on the
floor. He lunged after his weapon, but the voice
of Buck stopped him short.
“The game’s up, Dad,”
he growled, “that older feller is Tex Calder.”
The name, like a blow in the face,
straightened old Daniels and left him white and blinking.
Whistling Dan turned his back on the father and deftly
bound up the lacerated arm of Buck.
“In the name o’ God, Buck,”
moaned Sam, “what you been tryin’ to do
in here?”
“What you’d do if you
had the guts for it. That’s Tex Calder an’
this is Dan Barry. They’re on the trail
of big Jim. I wanted to put ’em off that
trail.”
“Look here,” said Calder, “how’d
you know us?”
“I’ve said my little say,”
said Buck sullenly, “an’ you’ll get
no more out of me between here an’ any hell
you can take me to.”
“He knew us when his father
talked about Satan an’ Black Bart,” said
Dan to Tex. “Maybe he’s one of Silent’s.”
“Buck, for God’s sake
tell ’em you know nothin’ of Silent,”
cried old Daniels. “Boy, boy, it’s
hangin’ for you if they get you to Elkhead an’
charge you with that!”
“Dad, you’re a fool,”
said Buck. “I ain’t goin’ down
on my knees to ’em. Not me.”
Calder, still keeping Buck covered
with his gun, drew Dan a little to one side.
“What can we do with this fellow,
Dan?” he said. “Shall we give up the
trail and take him over to Elkhead?”
“An’ break the heart of the ol’
man?”
“Buck is one of the gang, that’s certain.”
“Get Silent an’ there won’t be no
gang left.”
“But we caught this chap in red blood—”
“He ain’t very old, Tex.
Maybe he could change. I think he ain’t
been playin’ Silent’s game any too long.”
“We can’t let him go. It isn’t
in reason to do that.”
“I ain’t thinkin’ of reason.
I’m thinkin’ of old Sam an’ his wife.”
“And if we turn him loose?”
“He’ll be your man till he dies.”
Calder scowled.
“The whole range is filled with
these silent partners of the outlaws—but
maybe you’re right, Dan. Look at them now!”
The father was standing close to his
son and pouring out a torrent of appeal—evidently
begging him in a low voice to disavow any knowledge
of Silent and his crew, but Buck shook his head sullenly.
He had given up hope. Calder approached them.
“Buck,” he said, “I
suppose you know that you could be hung for what you’ve
tried to do tonight. If the law wouldn’t
hang you a lynching party would. No jail would
be strong enough to keep them away from you.”
Buck was silent, dogged.
“But suppose we were to let you go scot free?”
Buck started. A great flush covered his face.
“I’m taking the advice
of Dan Barry in doing this,” said Calder.
“Barry thinks you could go straight. Tell
me man to man, if I give you the chance will you break
loose from Silent and his gang?”
A moment before, Buck had been steeled
for the worst, but this sudden change loosened all
the bonds of his pride. He stammered and choked.
Calder turned abruptly away.
“Dan,” he said, “here’s
the dawn, and it’s time for us to hit the trail.”
They rolled their blankets hastily
and broke away from the gratitude which poured like
water from the heart of old Sam. They were in
their saddles when Buck came beside Dan. His
pride, his shame, and his gratitude broke his voice.
“I ain’t much on words,”
he said, “but it’s you I’m thankin’!”
His hand reached up hesitatingly,
and Dan caught it in a firm grip.
“Why,” he said gently,
“even Satan here stumbles now an’ then,
but that ain’t no reason I should get rid of
him. Good luck—partner!”
He shook the reins and the stallion
leaped off after Calder’s trotting pony.
Buck Daniels stood motionless looking after them, and
his eyes were very dim.
For an hour Dan and Tex were on the
road before the sun looked over the hills. Calder
halted his horse to watch.
“Dan,” he said at last,
“I used to think there were only two ways of
handling men—one with the velvet touch and
one with the touch of steel. Mine has been the
way of steel, but I begin to see there’s a third
possibility—the touch of the panther’s
paw—the velvet with the steel claws hid
beneath. That’s your way, and I wonder if
it isn’t the best. I think Buck Daniels
would be glad to die for you!”
He turned directly to Dan.
“But all this is aside from
the point, which is that the whole country is full
of these silent partners of the outlaws. The law
plays a lone hand in the mountain-desert.”
“You’ve played the lone
hand and won twenty times,” said Dan.
“Ay, but the twenty-first time
I may fail. The difference between success and
failure in this country is just the length of time
it takes to pull a trigger—and Silent is
fast with a gun. He’s the root of the outlaw
power. We may kill a hundred men, but till he’s
gone we’ve only mowed the weeds, not pulled
them. But what’s the use of talking?
One second will tell the tale when I stand face to
face with Jim Silent and we go for our six-guns.
And somewhere between that rising sun and those mountains
I’ll find Jim Silent and the end of things for
one of us.”
He started his cattle-pony into a
sudden gallop, and they drove on into the bright morning.