“WEREWOLF”
Buck’s cattle pony broke from
the lope into a steady dog-trot. Now and then
Buck’s horse tossed his head high and jerked
his ears quickly back and forth as if he were trying
to shake off a fly. As a matter of fact he was
bothered by his master’s whistling. The
only sound which he was accustomed to hear from the
lips of his rider was a grunted curse now and then.
This whistling made the mustang uneasy.
Buck himself did not know what the
music meant, but it brought into his mind a thought
of strong living and of glorious death. He had
heard it whistled several times by Dan Barry when the
latter lay delirious. It seemed to Buck, while
he whistled this air, that the spirit of Dan travelled
beside him, nerving him to the work which lay ahead,
filling the messenger with his own wild strength.
As Buck dropped into a level tract
of country he caught sight of a rider coming from
the opposite direction. As they drew closer the
other man swung his mount far to one side. Buck
chuckled softly, seeing that the other evidently desired
to pass without being recognized. The chuckle
died when the stranger changed direction and rode
straight for Buck. The latter pulled his horse
to a quick stop and turned to face the on-comer.
He made sure that his six-gun was loose in the holster,
for it was always well to be prepared for the unusual
in these chance meetings in the mountain-desert.
“Hey, Buck!” called the galloping horseman.
The hand of Daniels dropped away from
his revolver, for he recognized the voice of Hal Purvis,
who swiftly ranged alongside.
“What’s the dope?”
asked Buck, producing his tobacco and the inevitable
brown papers.
“Jest lookin’ the landscape
over an’ scoutin’ around for news,”
answered Purvis.
“Pick up anything?”
“Yeh. Ran across some tenderfoot squatters
jest out of Elkhead.”
Buck grunted and lighted his cigarette.
“Which you’ve been sort
of scarce around the outfit lately,” went on
Purvis.
“I’m headin’ for the bunch now,”
said Buck.
“D’you bring along that gun of mine I
left at your house?”
“Didn’t think of it.”
“Let’s drop back to your
house an’ get it. Then I’ll ride up
to the camp with you.”
Buck drew a long puff on his cigarette.
He drew a quick mental picture of Purvis entering
the house, finding Dan, and then—
“Sure,” he said, “you
c’n go back to the house an’ ask pa for
the gun, if you want to. I’ll keep on for
the hills.”
“What’s your hurry?
It ain’t more’n three miles back to your
house. You won’t lose no time to speak
of.”
“It ain’t time I’m
afraid of losin’,” said Buck significantly.
“Then what the devil is it?
I can’t afford to leave that gun.”
“All right,” said Buck,
forcing a grin of derision, “so long, Hal.”
Purvis frowned at him with narrowing eyes.
“Spit it out, Buck. What’s
the matter with me goin’ back for that gun?
Ain’t I apt to find it?”
“Sure. That’s the
point. You’re apt to find lots of
guns. Here’s what I mean, Hal. Some
of the cowpunchers are beginnin’ to think I’m
a little partial to Jim Silent’s crowd.
An’ they’re watchin’ my house.”
“The hell!”
“You’re right. It
is. That’s one of the reasons I’m
beatin’ it for the hills.”
He started his horse to a walk.
“But of course if you’re bound to have
that gun, Hal—”
Purvis grinned mirthlessly, his lean
face wrinkling to the eyes, and he swung his horse
in beside Buck.
“Anyway,” said Buck, “I’m
glad to see you ain’t a fool. How’s
things at the camp?”
“Rotten. They’s a girl up there—”
“A girl?”
“You look sort of pleased.
Sure they’s a girl. Kate Cumberland, she’s
the one. She seen us hold up the train, an’
now we don’t dare let her go. She’s
got enough evidence to hang us all if it came to a
show-down.”
“Kate! Delilah.”
“What you sayin’?”
“I say it’s damn queer that Jim’ll
let a girl stay at the camp.”
“Can’t be helped.
She’s makin’ us more miserable than a whole
army of men. We had her in the house for a while,
an’ then Silent rigged up the little shack that
stands a short ways—”
“I know the one you mean.”
“She an’ her dad is in
that. We have to guard ’em at night.
She ain’t had no good word for any of us since
she’s been up there. Every time she looks
at a feller she makes you feel like you was somethin’
low-down—a snake, or somethin’.”
“D’you mean to say none
of the boys please her?” asked Buck curiously.
He understood from Dan’s delirious ravings that
the girl was in love with Lee Haines and had deserted
Barry for the outlaw. “Say, ain’t
Haines goodlookin’ enough to please her?”
Purvis laughed unpleasantly.
“He’d like to be, but
he don’t quite fit her idea of a man. We’d
all like to be, for that matter. She’s
a ravin’ beauty, Buck. One of these blue-eyed,
yaller-haired kind, see, with a voice like silk.
Speakin’ personal, I’m free to admit she’s
got me stopped.”
Buck drew so hard on the diminishing
butt of his cigarette that he burned his fingers.
“Can’t do nothin’ with her?”
he queried.
“What you grinnin’ about?”
said Purvis hotly. “D’you think you’d
have any better luck with her?”
Buck chuckled.
“The trouble with you fellers,”
he said complacently, “is that you’re
all too damned afraid of a girl. You all treat
’em like they was queens an’ you was their
slaves. They like a master.”
The thin lips of Purvis curled.
“You’re quite a man, ain’t you?”
“Man enough to handle any woman that ever walked.”
Purvis broke into loud laughter.
“That’s what a lot of
us thought,” he said at last, “but she
breaks all the rules. She’s got her heart
set on another man, an’ she’s that funny
sort that don’t never love twice. Maybe
you’ll guess who the man is?”
Buck frowned thoughtfully to cover his growing excitement.
“Give it up, Buck,” advised
Purvis. “The feller she loves is Whistlin’
Dan Barry. You wouldn’t think no woman would
look without shiverin’ at that hell-raiser.
But she’s goin’ on a hunger strike on account
of him. Since yesterday she wouldn’t eat
none. She says she’ll starve herself to
death unless we turn her loose. The hell of it
is that she will. I know it an’ so does
the rest of the boys.”
“Starve herself to death?”
said Buck exuberantly. “Wait till I get
hold of her!”
“You?”
“Me!”
Purvis viewed him with compassion.
“Me bein’ your friend,
Buck,” he said, “take my tip an’
don’t try no fool stunts around that girl.
Which she once belongs to Whistlin’ Dan Barry
an’ therefore she’s got the taboo mark
on her for any other man. Everything he’s
ever owned is different, damned different!”
His voice lowered to a tone which was almost awe.
“Speakin’ for myself,
I don’t hanker after his hoss like Bill Kilduff;
or his girl, like Lee Haines; or his life, like the
chief. All I want is a shot at that wolf-dog,
that Black Bart!”
“You look sort of het up, Hal.”
“He come near puttin’
his teeth into my leg down at Morgan’s place
the day Barry cleaned up the chief.”
“Why, any dog is apt to take a snap at a feller.”
“This ain’t a dog. It’s a wolf.
An’ Whistlin’ Dan—” he
stopped.
“You look sort of queer, Hal. What’s
up?”
“You won’t think I’m loco?”
“No.”
“They’s some folks away
up north that thinks a man now an’ then turns
into a wolf.”
Buck nodded and shrugged his shoulders.
A little chill went up and down his back.
“Here’s my idea, Buck.
I’ve been thinkin’—no, it’s
more like dreamin’ than thinkin’—that
Dan Barry is a wolf turned into a man, an’ Black
Bart is a man turned into a wolf.”
“Hal, you been drinkin’.”
“Maybe.”
“What made you think—”
began Buck, but the long rider put spurs to his horse
and once more broke into a fast gallop.