“LAUGH, DAMN IT!”
She brushed her father’s anxious
arms aside and ran to Buck.
“Shut up!” said Buck.
“Talk soft. Better still, don’t say
nothin’!”
“Kate,” stammered her father, “what
has happened?”
“Listen an’ you’ll
learn,” said Buck. “But get busy first.
I got to get you out of here tonight. You’ll
need strength for the work ahead of you. You
got to eat. Get me some eggs. Eggs and ham.
Got ’em? Good. You, there!”
(This to Joe.) “Rake down them ashes. On
the jump, Kate. Some wood here. I got only
ten minutes!”
In three minutes the fire was going,
and the eggs in the pan, while Joe set out some tin
dishes on the rickety table, under orders from Buck,
making as much noise as possible. While they worked
Buck talked. By the time Kate’s plate was
ready his tale was done. He expected hysterics.
She was merely white and steady-eyed.
“You’re ready?” he concluded.
“Yes.”
“Then begin by doin’ what
I say an’ ask no questions. Silent an’
his crew’ll be lookin’ through the window
over there pretty soon. You got to be eatin’
an’ appearin’ to enjoy talkin’ to
me. Get that an’ don’t forget it.
Mix in plenty of smiles. Cumberland, you get back
into the shadow an’ stay there. Don’t
never come out into the light. Your face tells
more’n a whole book, an’ believe me, Jim
Silent is a quick reader.”
Joe retreated to a corner of the room
into which the light of the lamp did not penetrate.
“Sit down at that table!”
ordered Buck, and he placed a generous portion of
fried eggs and ham before her.
“I can’t eat. Is Dan—”
“I hear ’em at the window!”
He slipped onto a box on the opposite
side of the table and leaned towards her, supporting
his chin in his hands. Kate began to eat hurriedly.
“No! no!” advised Buck.
“You eat as if you was scared. You want
to be slow an’ deliberate. Watch out!
They’ve moved the board that covers the window!”
For he saw a group of astonished faces outside.
“Smile at me!”
Her response made even Buck forget
her pallor. Outside the house there was a faint
buzz of whispers.
“Keep it up!”
“I’ll do my best,” she said faintly.
Buck leaned back and burst into uproarious laughter.
“That’s a good one!”
he cried, slamming the broad palm of his hand against
the table so that the tin dishes jumped. “I
never heard the beat of it!” And in a whispered
tone aside: “Laugh, damn it!”
Her laughter rang true enough, but
it quavered perilously close to a sob towards the
close.
“I always granted Jim Silent
a lot of sense,” he said, “an’ has
he really left you alone all this time? Damn
near died of homesickness, didn’t you?”
She laughed again, more confidently
this time. The board was suddenly replaced at
the window.
“Now I got to go out to them,”
he said. “After what Silent has seen he’ll
trust me with you. He’ll let me come back.”
She dropped her soft hands over his clenched fist.
“It will be soon? Minutes are greater than
hours.”
“I ain’t forgot. Tonight’s
the time.”
Before he reached the door she ran
to him. Two arms went round his neck, two warm
lips fluttered against his.
“God bless you!” she whispered.
Buck ran for the door. Outside
he stood bareheaded, breathing deeply. His face
was hot with shame and delight, and he had to walk
up and down for a moment before he could trust himself
to enter the ranch house. When he finally did
so he received a greeting which made him think himself
a curiosity rather than a man. Even Jim Silent
regarded him with awe.
“Buck,” said Jordan, “you
don’t never need to work no more. All you
got to do is to walk into a town, pick out the swellest
heiress, an’ marry her.”
“The trouble with girls in town,”
said Buck, “is that there ain’t no room
for a man to operate. You jest nacherally can’t
ride a hoss into a parlour.”
Lee Haines drew Buck a little to one side.
“What message did you bring to her, Buck?”
he said.
“What d’you mean?”
“Look here, friend, these other
boys are too thick-headed to understand Kate Cumberland,
but I know her kind.”
“You’re a little peeved,
ain’t you Lee?” grinned Buck. “It
ain’t my fault that she don’t like you.”
Haines ground his teeth.
“It was a very clever little
act that you did with her, but it couldn’t quite
deceive me. She was too pale when she laughed.”
“A jealous feller sees two things
for every one that really happens, Lee.”
“Who was the message from?”
“Did she ever smile at you like she done at
me?”
“Was it from Dan Barry that you brought word?”
“Did she ever let her eyes go big an’
soft when she looked at you?”
“Damn you.”
“Did she ever lean close to
you, so’s you got the scent of her hair, Lee?”
“I’ll kill you for this, Daniels!”
“When I left she kissed me good-bye, Lee.”
In spite of his bravado, Buck was
deeply anxious. He watched Haines narrowly.
Only two men in the mountain-desert would have had
a chance against this man in a fight, and Buck knew
perfectly well that he was not one of the two.
“Watch yourself, Daniels,”
said Haines. “I know you’re lying
and I’m going to keep an eye on you.”
“Thanks,” grinned Buck. “I
like to have a friend watchin’ out for me.”
Haines turned on his heel and went
back to the card table, where Buck immediately joined
the circle.
“Wait a minute, Lee,”
said Silent. “Ain’t it your turn to
stand guard on the Cumberlands tonight?”
“Right—O,”
answered Haines cheerfully, and rose from the table.
“Hold on,” said Buck.
“Are you goin’ to spoil all the work I
done today with that girl?”
“What’s the matter?” asked Silent.
“Everything’s the matter!
Are you goin’ to put a man she hates out there
watchin’ her.”
“Damn you, Daniels,” said
Haines fiercely, “you’re rolling up a long
account, but it only takes a bullet to collect that
sort of a bill!”
“If it hadn’t been for
Haines, would the girl’s father be here?”
asked Buck. “Besides, she don’t like
blonds.”
“What type does she like?”
asked Silent, enjoying the quarrel between his lieutenant
and the recruit.
“Likes ’em with dark hair
an’ eyes,” said Buck calmly. “Look
at me, for instance!”
Even Haines smiled, though his lips
were white with anger.
“D’you want to stand guard
over her yourself?” said the chief.
“Sure,” grinned Buck,
“maybe she’d come out an’ pass the
time o’ night with me.”
“Go ahead and take the job,”
nodded Silent. “I got an idea maybe she
will.”
“Silent,” warned Haines,
“hasn’t it occurred to you that there’s
something damned queer about the ease with which Buck
slid into the favour of the girl?”
“Well?”
“All his talk about manhandling
her is bunk. He had some message for her.
I saw him speak to her when she was struggling in his
arms. Then she conveniently fainted.”
Silent turned on Buck.
“Is that straight?”
“It is,” said Daniels easily.
The outlaws started and their expectant grins died
out.
“By God, Buck!” roared
Silent, “if you’re double crossin’
me—but I ain’t goin’ to be
hasty now. What happened? Tell it yourself!
What did you say to her?”
“While she was fightin’
with me,” said Buck, “she hollered:
’Let me go!’ I says: ‘I’ll
see you in hell first!’ Then she fainted.”
The roar of laughter drowned Haines’s further
protest.
“You win, Buck,” said Silent. “Take
the job.”
As Buck started for the door Haines called to him:
“Hold on, Buck, if you’re
aboveboard you won’t mind giving your word to
see that no one comes up the valley and that you’ll
be here in the morning?”
The words set a swirling blackness
before Buck’s eyes. He turned slowly.
“That’s reasonable,” said Silent.
“Speak up, Daniels.”
“All right,” said Buck,
his voice very low. “I’ll be here
in the morning, and I’ll see that no one comes
up the valley.”
There was the slightest possible emphasis on the word
“up.”
On a rock directly in front of the
shanty Buck took up his watch. The little house
behind him was black. Presently he heard the soft
call of Kate: “Is it time?”
His eyes wandered to the ranch house.
He could catch the drone of many voices. He made
no reply.
“Is it time?” she repeated.
Still he would not venture a reply,
however guarded. She called a third time, and
when he made no response he heard her voice break to
a moan of hopelessness. And yet he waited, waited,
until the light in the ranch house went out, and there
was not a sound.
“Kate!” he said, gauging
his voice carefully so that it could not possibly
travel to the ranch house, which all the while he carefully
scanned.
For answer the front door of the shanty squeaked.
“Back!” he called. “Go back!”
The door squeaked again.
“They’re asleep in the ranch house,”
she said. “Aren’t we safe?”
“S—sh!” he
warned. “Talk low! They aren’t
all asleep. There’s one in the ranch house
who’ll never take his eyes off me till morning.”
“What can we do?”
“Go out the back way. You
won’t be seen if you’re careful. Haines
has his eyes on me, not you. Go for the stable.
Saddle your horses. Then lead them out and take
the path on the other side of the house. Don’t
mount them until you’re far below the house.
Go slow all the way. Sounds travel far up this
canyon.”
“Aren’t you coming with us?”
“No.”
“But when they find us gone?”
“Think of Dan—not me!”
“God be merciful to you!”
In a moment the back door of the shanty
creaked. They must be opening it by inches.
When it was wide they would run for the stable.
He wished now that he had warned Kate to walk, for
a slow moving object catches the eye more seldom than
one which travels fast. If Lee Haines was watching
at that moment his attention must be held to Buck for
one all important minute. He stood up, rolled
a cigarette swiftly, and lighted it. The spurt
and flare of the match would hold even the most suspicious
eye for a short time, and in those few seconds Kate
and her father might pass out of view behind the stable.
He sat down again. A muffled
sneeze came from the ranch house and Buck felt his
blood run cold. The forgotten cigarette between
his fingers burned to a dull red and then went out.
In the stable a horse stamped. He leaned back,
locked his hands idly behind his head, and commenced
to whistle. Now there was a snort, as of a horse
when it leaves the shelter of a barn and takes the
first breath of open air.
All these sounds were faint, but to
Buck, straining his ears in an agony of suspense,
each one came like the blast of a trumpet. Next
there was a click like that of iron striking against
rock. Evidently they were leading the horses
around on the far side of the house. With a trembling
hand he relighted his cigarette and waited, waited,
waited. Then he saw them pass below the house!
They were dimly stalking figures in the night, but
to Buck it seemed as though they walked in the blaze
of ten thousand searchlights. He held his breath
in expectancy of that mocking laugh from the house—that
sharp command to halt—that crack of the
revolver.
Yet nothing happened. Now he
caught the click of the horses’ iron shoes against
the rocks farther and farther down the valley.
Still no sound from the ranch house. They were
safe!
It was then that the great temptation seized on Buck.
It would be simple enough for him
to break away. He could walk to the stable, saddle
his horse, and tear past the ranch house as fast as
his pony could gallop. By the time the outlaws
were ready for the pursuit, he would be a mile or
more away, and in the hills such a handicap was enough.
One thing held him. It was frail and subtle like
the invisible net of the enchanter—that
word he had passed to Jim Silent, to see that nothing
came up the valley and to appear in the ranch house
at sunrise.
In the midst of his struggle, strangely
enough, he began to whistle the music he had learned
from Dan Barry, the song of The Untamed, those who
hunt for ever, and are for ever hunted. When his
whistling died away he touched his hand to his lips
where Kate had kissed him, and then smiled. The
sun pushed up over the eastern hills.
When he entered the ranch house the
big room was a scene of much arm stretching and yawning
as the outlaws dressed. Lee Haines was already
dressed. Buck smiled ironically.
“I say, Lee,” he said,
“you look sort of used up this mornin’,
eh?”
The long rider scowled.
“I’d make a guess you’ve
not had much sleep, Haines,” went on Buck.
“Your eyes is sort of hollow.”
“Not as hollow as your damned lying heart!”
“Drop that!” commanded
Silent. “You hold a grudge like a woman,
Lee! How was the watch, Buck? Are you all
in?”
“Nothin’ come up the valley,
an’ here I am at sunrise,” said Buck.
“I reckon that speaks for itself.”
“It sure does,” said Silent,
“but the gal and her father are kind of slow
this mornin’. The old man generally has
a fire goin’ before dawn is fairly come.
There ain’t no sign of smoke now.”
“Maybe he’s sleepin’
late after the excitement of yesterday,” said
Bill Kilduff. “You must of thrown some sensation
into the family, Buck.”
The eyes of Haines had not moved from the face of
Buck.
“I think I’ll go over
and see what’s keeping them so late in bed,”
he said, and left the house.
“He takes it pretty hard,”
said Jordan, his scarred face twisted with Satanic
mirth, “but don’t go rubbin’ it into
him, Buck, or you’ll be havin’ a man-sized
fight on your hands. I’d jest about as soon
mix with the chief as cross Haines. When he starts
the undertaker does the finishin’!”
“Thanks for remindin’
me,” said Buck drily. Through the window
he saw Haines throw open the door of the shanty.
The outcry which Buck expected did
not follow. For a long moment the long rider
stood there without moving. Then he turned and
walked slowly back to the house, his head bent, his
forehead gathered in a puzzled frown.
“What’s the matter, Lee?”
called Silent as his lieutenant entered the room again.
“You look sort of sick. Didn’t she
have a bright mornin’ smile for you?”
Haines raised his head slowly.
The frown was not yet gone.
“They aren’t there,” he announced.
His eyes shifted to Buck. Everyone
followed his example, Silent cursing softly.
“As a joker, Lee,” said
Buck coldly, “you’re some Little Eva.
I s’pose they jest nacherally evaporated durin’
the night, maybe?”
“Haines,” said Silent sharply, “are
you serious?”
The latter nodded.
“Then by God, Buck, you’ll
have to say a lot in a few words. Lee, you suspected
him all the time, but I was a fool!”
Daniels felt the colour leaving his
face, but help came from the quarter from which he
least expected it.
“Jim, don’t draw!” cried Haines.
The eyes of the chief glittered like
the hawk’s who sees the field mouse scurrying
over the ground far below.
“He ain’t your meat, Lee,”
he said. “It’s me he’s double
crossed.”
“Chief,” said Haines,
“last night while he watched the shanty, I watched
him!”
“Well?”
“I saw him keep his post in
front of the cabin all night without moving.
And he was wide awake all the time.”
“Then how in hell—”
“The back door of the cabin!” said Kilduff
suddenly.
“By God, that’s it!
They sneaked out there and then went down on the other
side of the house.”
“If I had let them go,” interposed Buck,
“do you suppose I’d be here?”
The keen glance of Silent moved from
Buck to Haines, and then back again. He turned
his back on them.
The quiet which had fallen on the
room was now broken by the usual clatter of voices,
cursing, and laughter. In the midst of it Haines
stepped close to Buck and spoke in a guarded voice.
“Buck,” he said, “I
don’t know how you did it, but I have an idea—”
“Did what?”
The eyes of Haines were sad.
“I was a clean man, once,”
he said quietly, “and you’ve done a clean
man’s work!”
He put out his hand and that of Buck’s advanced
slowly to meet it.
“Was it for Dan or Kate that you did it?”
The glance of Buck roamed far away.
“I dunno,” he said softly.
“I think it was to save my own rotten soul!”
On the other side of the room Silent beckoned to Purvis.
“What is it?” asked Hal, coming close.
“Speak low,” said Silent.
“I’m talking to you, not to the crowd.
I think Buck is crooked as hell. I want you to
ride down to the neighbourhood of his house.
Scout around it day and night. You may see something
worth while.”
Meanwhile, in that utter blackness
which precedes the dawn, Kate and her father reached
the mouth of the canyon.
“Kate,” said old Joe in
a tremulous voice, “if I was a prayin’
man I’d git down on my knees an’ thank
God for deliverin’ you tonight.”
“Thank Buck Daniels, who’s
left his life in pawn for us. I’ll go straight
for Buck’s house. You must ride to Sheriff
Morris and tell him that an honest man is up there
in the power of Silent’s gang.”
“But—” he began.
She waved her hand to him, and spurring
her horse to a furious gallop raced off into the night.
Her father stared after her for a few moments, but
then, as she had advised, rode for Gus Morris.