HELL STARTS
Between twilight and dark Whistling
Dan entered Elkhead. He rose in the stirrups,
on his toes, stretching the muscles of his legs.
He was sensing his strength. So the pianist before
he plays runs his fingers up and down the keys and
sees that all is in tune and the touch perfect.
Two rival saloons faced each other
at the end of the single street. At the other
extremity of the lane stood the house of deputy sheriff
Rogers, and a little farther was the jail. A crowd
of horses stood in front of each saloon, but from
the throngs within there came hardly a sound.
The hush was prophetic of action; it was the lull before
the storm. Dan slowed his horse as he went farther
down the street.
The shadowy figure of a rider showed
near the jail. He narrowed his eyes and looked
more closely. Another, another, another horseman
showed—four in sight on his side of the
jail and probably as many more out of his vision.
Eight cattlemen guarded the place from which he must
take Lee Haines, and every one of the eight, he had
no doubt, was a picked man. Dan pulled up Satan
to a walk and commenced to whistle softly. It
was like one of those sounds of the wind, a thing
to guess at rather than to know, but the effect upon
Satan and Black Bart was startling.
The ears of the stallion dropped flat
on his neck. He began to slink along with a gliding
step which was very like the stealthy pace of Black
Bart, stealing ahead. His footfall was as silent
as if he had been shod with felt. Meantime Dan
ran over a plan of action. He saw very clearly
that he had little time for action. Those motionless
guards around the jail made his task difficult enough,
but there was a still greater danger. The crowds
in the two saloons would be starting up the street
for Haines before long. Their silence told him
that.
A clatter of hoofs came behind him.
He did not turn his head, but his hand dropped down
to his revolver butt. The fast riding horseman
swept and shot on down the street, leaving a pungent
though invisible cloud of dust behind him. He
stopped in front of Rogers’s house and darted
up the steps and through the door. Acting upon
a premonition, Dan dismounted a short distance from
Rogers’s house and ran to the door. He
opened it softly and found himself in a narrow hall
dimly lighted by a smoking lamp. Voices came
from the room to his right.
“What d’you mean, Hardy?”
the deputy sheriff was saying.
“Hell’s startin’!”
“There’s a good many kinds
of hell. Come out with it, Lee. I ain’t
no mind reader.”
“They’re gettin’ ready for the big
bust!”
“What big bust?”
“It ain’t no use bluffin’.
Ain’t Silent told you that I’m on the
inside of the game?”
“You fool!” cried Rogers. “Don’t
use that name!”
Dan slipped a couple of paces down
the hall and flattened himself against the wall just
as the door opened. Rogers looked out, drew a
great breath of relief, and went back into the room.
Dan resumed his former position.
“Now talk fast!” said Rogers.
“About time for you to drop
that rotten bluff. Why, man, I could even tell
you jest how much you’ve cost Jim Silent.”
Rogers growled: “Tell me what’s up.”
“The boys are goin’ for
the jail tonight. They’ll get out Haines
an’ string him up.”
“It’s comin’ to him. He’s
played a hard game for a long time.”
“An’ so have you, Rogers, for a damn long
time!”
Rogers swallowed the insult, apparently.
“What can I do?” he asked
plaintively. “I’m willin’ to
give Silent and his gang a square deal.”
“You should of done something
while they was only a half-dozen cowpunchers in town.
Now the town’s full of riders an’ they’re
all after blood.”
“An’ my blood if they don’t get
Haines!” broke in the deputy sheriff.
Hardy grunted.
“They sure are,” he said.
“I’ve heard ’em talk, an’ they
mean business. All of ’em. But how’d
you answer to Jim Silent, Rogers? If you let
’em get Haines—well, Haines is Silent’s
partner an’ Jim’ll bust everything wide
to get even with you.”
“I c’n explain,”
said Rogers huskily. “I c’n show Silent
how I’m helpless.”
Footsteps went up and down the room.
“If they start anything,”
said Rogers, “I’ll mark down the names
of the ringleaders and I’ll give ’em hell
afterwards. That’ll soothe Jim some.”
“You won’t know ’em. They’ll
wear masks.”
Dan opened the door and stepped into
the room. Rogers started up with a curse and
gripped his revolver.
“I never knew you was so fond
of gun play,” said Dan. “Maybe that
gun of yours would be catchin’ cold if you was
to leave it out of the leather long?”
The sheriff restored his revolver
slowly to the holster, glowering.
“An’ Rogers won’t
be needin’ you for a minute or two,” went
on Dan to Hardy.
They seemed to fear even his voice.
The Wells Fargo agent vanished through the door and
clattered down the steps.
“How long you been standin’
at that door?” said Rogers, gnawing his lips.
“Jest for a breathin’ space,” said
Dan.
Rogers squinted his eyes to make up for the dimness
of the lamplight.
“By God!” he cried suddenly. “You’re
Whistlin’ Dan Barry!”
He dropped into his chair and passed
a trembling hand across his forehead.
He stammered: “Maybe you’ve
changed your mind an’ come back for that five
thousand?”
“No, I’ve come for a man, not for money.”
“A man?”
“I want Lee Haines before the crowd gets him.”
“Would you really try to take
Haines out?” asked Rogers with a touch of awe.
“Are there any guards in the jail?”
“Two. Lewis an’ Patterson.”
“Give me a written order for Haines.”
The deputy wavered.
“If I do that I’m done for in this town!”
“Maybe. I want the key for Haines’s
handcuffs.”
“Go over an’ put your
hoss up in the shed behind the jail,” said Rogers,
fighting for time, “an’ when you come back
I’ll have the order written out an’ give
it to you with the key.”
“Why not come over with me now?”
“I got some other business.”
“In five minutes I’ll be back,”
said Dan, and left the house.
Outside he whistled to Satan, and
the stallion trotted up to him. He swung into
the saddle and rode to the jail. There was not
a guard in sight. He rode around to the other
side of the building to reach the stable. Still
he could not sight one of those shadowy horsemen who
had surrounded the place a few minutes before.
Perhaps the crowd had called in the guards to join
the attack.
He put Satan away in the stable and
as he led him into a stall he heard a roar of many
voices far away. Then came the crack of half
a dozen revolvers. Dan set his teeth and glanced
quickly over the half-dozen horses in the little shed.
He recognized the tall bay of Lee Haines at once and
threw on its back the saddle which hung on a peg directly
behind it. As he drew up the cinch another shout
came from the street, but this time very close.
When he raced around the jail he saw
the crowd pouring into the house of the deputy sheriff.
He ran on till he came to the outskirts of the mob.
Every man was masked, but in the excitement no one
noticed that Dan’s face was bare. Squirming
his way through the press, Dan reached the deputy’s
office. It was almost filled. Rogers stood
on a chair trying to argue with the cattlemen.
“No more talk, sheriff,”
thundered one among the cowpunchers, “we’ve
had enough of your line of talk. Now we want some
action of our own brand. For the last time:
Are you goin’ to order Lewis an’ Patterson
to give up Haines, or are you goin’ to let two
good men die fightin’ for a damn lone rider?”
“What about the feller who’s
goin’ to take Lee Haines out of Elkhead?”
cried another.
The crowd yelled with delight.
“Yes, where is he? What about him?”
Rogers, glancing down from his position
on the chair, stared into the brown eyes of Whistling
Dan. He stretched out an arm that shook with
excitement.
“That feller there!” he
cried, “that one without a mask! Whistlin’
Dan Barry is the man!”