THE LONG RIDE
A cheer of triumph came from the lynchers.
In fifty yards the fugitives learned the reason, for
they glimpsed a high set of bars blocking the lane.
Dan pulled back beside Haines.
“Can the bay make it?” he called.
“No. I’m done for.”
For answer Dan caught the bridle of
Lee’s horse close to the bit. They were
almost to the bars. A dark shadow slid up and
over them. It was Black Bart, with his head turned
to look back even as he jumped, as if he were setting
an example which he bid them follow. Appallingly
high the bars rose directly in front of them.
“Now!” called Dan to the tall bay, and
jerked up on the bit.
Satan rose like a swallow to the leap.
The bay followed in gallant imitation. For an
instant they hung poised in air. Then Satan pitched
to the ground, landing safely and lightly on four cat-like
feet. A click and a rattle behind them—the
bay was also over, but his hind hoofs had knocked
down the top bar. He staggered, reeled far to
one side, but recovering, swept on after Satan and
Dan. A yell of disappointment rang far behind.
Glancing back Haines saw the foremost
of the pursuers try to imitate the feat of the fugitives,
but even with the top bar down he failed. Man
and horse pitched to the ground.
For almost a mile the lane held straight
on, and beyond stretched the open country. They
were in that free sweep of hills before the pursuers
remounted beyond the bars. In daytime a mile would
have been a small handicap, but with the night and
the hills to cover their flight, and with such mounts
as Satan and the tall bay, they were safe. In
half an hour all sound of them died out, and Haines,
following Dan’s example, slowed his horse to
an easy gallop.
The long rider was puzzled by his
companion’s horsemanship, for Dan rode leaning
far to the right of his saddle, with his head bowed.
Several times Haines was on the verge of speaking,
but he refrained. He commenced to sing in the
exultation of freedom. An hour before he had
been in the “rat-trap” with a circle of
lynchers around him, and only two terror-stricken
guards to save him from the most horrible of deaths.
Then came Fate and tore him away and gave him to the
liberty of the boundless hills. Fate in the person
of this slender, sombre man. He stared at Dan
with awe.
At the top of a hill his companion
drew rein, reeling in the saddle with the suddenness
of the halt. However, in such a horseman, this
could not be. It must be merely a freak feature
of his riding.
“Move,” said Dan, his
breath coming in pants. “Line out and get
to her.”
“To who?” said Haines, utterly bewildered.
“Delilah!”
“What?”
“Damn you, she’s waitin’ for you.”
“In the name of God, Barry,
why do you talk like this after you’ve saved
me from hell?”
He stretched out his hand eagerly, but Dan reined
Satan back.
“Keep your hand. I hate
you worse’n hell. There ain’t room
enough in the world for us both. If you want
to thank me do it by keepin’ out of my path.
Because the next time we meet you’re goin’
to die, Haines. It’s writ in a book.
Now feed your hoss the spur and run for Kate Cumberland.
But remember—I’m goin’ to get
you again if I can.”
“Kate—” began Haines.
“She sent you for me?”
Only the yellow blazing eyes made
answer and the wail of a coyote far away on the shadowy
hill.
“Kate!” cried Haines again,
but now there was a world of new meaning in his voice.
He swung his horse and spurred down the slope.
At the next hill-crest he turned in
the saddle, saw the motionless rider still outlined
against the sky, and brought the bay to a halt.
He was greatly troubled. For a reason mysterious
and far beyond the horizon of his knowledge, Dan was
surrendering Kate Cumberland to him.
“He’s doing it while he
still loves her,” muttered Haines, “and
am I cur enough to take her from him after he has
saved me from God knows what?”
He turned his horse to ride back,
but at that moment he caught the weird, the unearthly
note of Dan’s whistling. There was both
melancholy and gladness in it. The storm wind
running on the hills and exulting in the blind terror
of the night had such a song as this to sing.
“If he was a man,” Haines
argued briefly with himself, “I’d do it.
But he isn’t a man. He’s a devil.
He has no more heart than the wolf which owns him
as master. Shall I give a girl like Kate Cumberland
to that wild panther? She’s mine—all
mine!”
Once more he turned his horse and
this time galloped steadily on into the night.
When Haines dropped out of sight,
Dan’s whistling stopped. He looked up to
the pitiless glitter of the stars. He looked down
to the sombre sweep of black hills. The wind
was like a voice saying over and over again:
“Failure.” Everything was lost.
He slipped from the saddle and took
off his coat. From his left shoulder the blood
welled slowly, steadily. He tore a strip from
his shirt and attempted to make a bandage, but he
could not manage it with one hand.
The world thronged with hostile forces
eager to hunt him to the death. He needed all
his strength, and now that was ebbing from a wound
which a child could have staunched for him, but where
could he find even a friendly child? Truly all
was lost! The satyr or the black panther once
had less need of man’s help than had Dan, but
now he was hurt in body and soul. That matchless
co-ordination of eye with hand and foot was gone.
He saw Kate smiling into the eyes of Haines; he imagined
Bill Kilduff sitting on the back of Satan, controlling
all that glorious force and speed; he saw Hal Purvis
fighting venomously with Bart for the mastery which
eventually must belong to the man.
He turned to the wild pair. Vaguely
they sensed a danger threatening their master, and
their eyes mourned for his hurt. He buried his
face on the strong, smooth shoulder of Satan, and
groaned. There came the answering whinny and
the hot breath of the horse against the side of his
face. There was the whine of Black Bart behind
him, then the rough tongue of the wolf touched the
dripping fingers. Then he felt a hot gust of
the wolf’s breath against his hand.
Too late he realized what that meant.
He whirled with a cry of command, but the snarl of
Black Bart cut it short. The wolf stood bristling,
trembling with eagerness for the kill, his great white
fangs gleaming, his snarl shrill and guttural with
the frenzy of his desire, for he had tasted blood.
Dan understood as he stared into the yellow green
fury of the wolf’s eyes, yet he felt no fear,
only a glory in the fierce, silent conflict.
He could not move the fingers of his left hand, but
those of his right curved, stiffened. He desired
nothing more in the world than the contact with that
great, bristling black body, to leap aside from those
ominous teeth, to set his fingers in the wolf’s
throat. Reason might have told him the folly of
such a strife, but all that remained in his mind was
the love of combat—a blind passion.
His eyes glowed like those of the wolf, yellow fire
against the green. Black Bart crouched still lower,
gathering himself for the spring, but he was held
by the man’s yellow gleaming eyes. They
invited the battle. Fear set its icy hand on the
soul of the wolf.
The man seemed to tower up thrice
his normal height. His voice rang, harsh, sudden,
unlike the utterance of man or beast: “Down!”
Fear conquered Black Bart. The
fire died from his eyes. His body sank as if
from exhaustion. He crawled on his belly to the
feet of his master and whined an unutterable submission.
And then that hand, warm and wet with
the thing whose taste set the wolf’s heart on
fire with the lust to kill, was thrust against his
nose. He leaped back with bared teeth, growling
horribly. The eyes commanded him back, commanded
him relentlessly. He howled dismally to the senseless
stars, yet he came; and once more that hand was thrust
against his nose. He licked the fingers.
That blood-lust came hotter than before,
but his fear was greater. He licked the strange
hand again, whining. Then the master kneeled.
Another hand, clean, and free from that horrible warm,
wet sign of death, fell upon his shaggy back.
The voice which he knew of old came to him, blew away
the red mist from his soul, comforted him.
“Poor Bart!” said the
voice, and the hand went slowly over his head.
“It weren’t your fault.”
The stallion whinnied softly.
A deep growl formed in the throat of the wolf, a mighty
effort at speech. And now, like a gleam of light
in a dark room, Dan remembered the house of Buck Daniels.
There, at least, they could not refuse him aid.
He drew on his coat, though the effort set him sweating
with agony, got his foot in the stirrup with difficulty,
and dragged himself to the saddle. Satan started
at a swift gallop.
“Faster, Satan! Faster, partner!”
What a response! The strong body
settled a little closer to the earth as the stride
increased. The rhythm of the pace grew quicker,
smoother. There was no adequate phrase to describe
the matchless motion. And in front—always
just a little in front with the plunging forefeet
of the horse seeming to threaten him at every stride,
ran Black Bart with his head turned as if he were
the guard and guide of the fugitive.
Dan called and Black Bart yelped in
answer. Satan tossed up his head and neighed
as he raced along. The two replies were like human
assurances that there was still a fighting chance.
The steady loss of blood was telling
rapidly now. He clutched the pommel, set his
teeth, and felt oblivion settle slowly and surely upon
him. As his senses left him he noted the black
outlines of the next high range of hills, a full ten
miles away.
He only knew the pace of Satan never
slackened. There seemed no effort in it.
He was like one of those fabled horses, the offspring
of the wind, and like the wind, tireless, eternal
of motion.
A longer oblivion fell upon Dan.
As he roused from it he found himself slipping in
the saddle. He struggled desperately to grasp
the saddlehorn and managed to draw himself up again;
but the warning was sufficient to make him hunt about
for some means of making himself more secure in the
saddle. It was a difficult task to do anything
with only one hand, but he managed to tie his left
arm to the bucking-strap. If the end came, at
least he was sure to die in the saddle. Vaguely
he was aware as he looked around that the black hills
were no longer in the distance. He was among them.
On went Satan. His breath was
coming more and more laboured. It seemed to Dan’s
dim consciousness that some of the spring was gone
from that glorious stride which swept on and on with
the slightest undulation, like a swallow skimming
before the wind; but so long as strength remained
he knew that Satan would never falter in his pace.
As the delirium swept once more shadow-like on his
brain, he allowed himself to fall forward, and wound
his fingers as closely as possible in the thick mane.
His left arm jerked horribly against the bonds.
Black night swallowed him once more.
Only his invincible heart kept Satan
going throughout that last stretch. His ears
lay flat on his neck, lifting only when the master
muttered and raved in his fever. Foam flew back
against his throat and breast. His breath came
shorter, harder, with a rasp; but the gibbering voice
of his rider urged him on, faster, and faster.
They topped a small hill, and a little to the left
and a mile away, rose a group of cottonwoods, and
Dan, recovering consciousness, knew the house of Buck.
He also knew that his last moment of consciousness
was come. Surges of sleepy weakness swept over
his brain. He could never guide Satan to the
house.
“Bart!” he called feebly.
The wolf whining, dropped back beside
him. Dan pointed his right arm straight ahead.
Black Bart leaped high into the air and his shrill
yelp told that he had seen the cottonwoods and the
house.
Dan summoned the last of his power
and threw the reins over the head of Satan.
“Take us in, Bart,” he
said, and twisting his fingers into Satan’s
mane fell across the saddlehorn.
Satan, understanding the throwing
of the reins as an order to halt, came to a sharp
stop, and the body of the senseless rider sagged to
one side. Black Bart caught the reins. They
were bitter and salt with blood of the master.
He tugged hard. Satan whinnied
his doubt, and the growl of Black Bart answered, half
a threat. In a moment more they were picking their
way through the brush towards the house of Buck Daniels.
Satan was far gone with exhaustion.
His head drooped; his legs sprawled with every step;
his eyes were glazed. Yet he staggered on with
the great black wolf pulling at the reins. There
was the salt taste of blood in the mouth of Black
Bart; so he stalked on, saliva dripping from his mouth,
and his eyes glazed with the lust to kill. His
furious snarling was the threat which urged on the
stallion.