DEATH
Before noon of the next day Buck joined
the crowd which had been growing for hours around
Tully’s saloon. Men gave way before him,
whispering. He was a marked man—the
friend of Whistling Dan Barry. Cowpunchers who
had known him all his life now avoided his eyes, but
caught him with side glances. He smiled grimly
to himself, reading their minds. He was more
determined than ever to stand or fall with Whistling
Dan that day.
There was not an officer of the law
in sight. If one were present it would be his
manifest duty to apprehend the outlaws as soon as they
appeared, and the plan was to allow them to fight out
their quarrel and perhaps kill each other.
Arguments began to rise among separate
groups, where the crimes attributed to Whistling Dan
Barry were numbered and talked over. It surprised
Buck to discover the number who believed the stories
which he and Haines had told. They made a strong
faction, though manifestly in the minority.
Hardly a man who did not, from time
to time, nervously fumble the butt of his six-gun.
As three o’clock drew on the talk grew less and
less. It broke out now and again in little uneasy
bursts. Someone would tell a joke. Half
hysterical laughter would greet it, and die suddenly,
as it began. These were all hard-faced men of
the mountain-desert, warriors of the frontier.
What unnerved them was the strangeness of the thing
which was about to happen. The big wooden clock
on the side of the long barroom struck once for half-past
two. All talk ceased.
Men seemed unwilling to meet each
other’s eyes. Some of them drummed lightly
on the top of the bar and strove to whistle, but the
only sound that came through their dried lips was
a whispering rush of breath. A grey-haired cattle
ranger commenced to hum a tune, very low, but distinct.
Finally a man rose, strode across the room, shook the
old fellow by the shoulder with brutal violence, and
with a curse ordered him to stop his “damned
death song!”
Everyone drew a long breath of relief.
The minute hand crept on towards three o’clock.
Now it was twenty minutes, now fifteen, now ten, now
five; then a clatter of hoofs, a heavy step on the
porch, and the giant form of Jim Silent blocked the
door. His hands rested on the butts of his two
guns. Buck guessed at the tremendous strength
of that grip. The eyes of the outlaw darted about
the room, and every glance dropped before his, with
the exception of Buck’s fascinated stare.
For he saw a brand on the face of
the great long rider. It lay in no one thing.
It was not the unusual hollowness of eyes and cheeks.
It was not the feverish brightness of his glance.
It was something which included all of these.
It was the fear of death by night! His hands
fell away from the guns. He crossed the room to
the bar and nodded his head at the bartender.
“Drink!” he said, and
his voice was only a whisper without body of sound.
The bartender, with pasty face, round
and blank, did not move either his hand or his fascinated
eyes. There was a twitch of the outlaw’s
hand and naked steel gleamed. Instantly revolvers
showed in every hand. A youngster moaned.
The sound seemed to break the charm.
Silent put back his great head and
burst into a deep-throated laughter. The gun
whirled in his hand and the butt crashed heavily on
the bar.
“Drink, damn you!” he
thundered. “Step up an’ drink to the
health of Jim Silent!”
The wavering line slowly approached
the bar. Silent pulled out his other gun and
shoved them both across the bar.
“Take ’em,” he said.
“I don’t want ’em to get restless
an’ muss up this joint.”
The bartender took them as if they
were covered with some deadly poison, and the outlaw
stood unarmed! It came suddenly to Buck what
the whole manoeuvre meant. He gave away his guns
in order to tempt someone to arrest him. Better
the hand of the law than the yellow glare of those
following eyes. Yet not a man moved to apprehend
him. Unarmed he still seemed more dangerous than
six common men.
The long rider jerked a whisky bottle
upside down over a glass. Half the contents splashed
across the bar. He turned and faced the crowd,
his hand dripping with the spilled liquor.
“Whose liquorin’?” he bellowed.
Not a sound answered him.
“Damn your yaller souls! Then all by myself
I’ll drink to—”
He stopped short, his eyes wild, his
head tilted back. One by one the cowpunchers
gave back, foot by foot, softly, until they stood close
to the opposite wall of the saloon. All the bar
was left to Silent. The whisky glass slipped
from his hand and crashed on the floor. In his
face was the meaning of the sound he heard, and now
it came to their own ears—a whistle thin
with distance, but clear.
Only phrases at first, but now it
rose more distinct, the song of the untamed; the terror
and beauty of the mountain-desert; a plea and a threat.
The clock struck, sharp, hurried,
brazen—one, two, three! Before the
last quick, unmusical chime died out Black Bart stood
in the entrance to the saloon. His eyes were
upon Jim Silent, who stretched out his arms on either
side and gripped the edge of the bar. Yet even
when the wolf glided silently across the room and
crouched before the bandit, at watch, his lips grinned
back from the white teeth, the man had no eyes for
him. Instead, his stare held steadily upon that
open door and on his raised face there was still the
terror of that whistling which swept closer and closer.
It ceased. A footfall crossed
the porch. How different from the ponderous stride
of Jim Silent! This was like the padding step
of the panther. And Whistling Dan stood in the
door. He did not fill it as the burly shoulders
of Silent had done. He seemed almost as slender
as a girl, and infinitely boyish in his grace—a
strange figure, surely, to make all these hardened
fighters of the mountain-desert crouch, and stiffen
their fingers around the butts of their revolvers!
His eyes were upon Silent, and how they lighted!
His face changed as the face of the great god Pan
must have altered when he blew into the instrument
of reeds and made perfect music, the first in the world.
“Bart,” said the gentle voice, “go
out to Satan.”
The wolf turned and slipped from the
room. It was a little thing, but, to the men
who saw it, it was terrible to watch an untamed beast
obey the voice of a man.
Still with that light, panther-step
he crossed the barroom, and now he was looking up
into the face of the giant. The huge long rider
loomed above Dan. That was not terror which set
his face in written lines—it was horror,
such as a man feels when he stands face to face with
the unearthly in the middle of night. This was
open daylight in a room thronged with men, yet in
it nothing seemed to live save the smile of Whistling
Dan. He drew out the two revolvers and slipped
them onto the bar. They stood unarmed, yet they
seemed no less dangerous.
Silent’s arms crept closer to
his sides. He seemed gathering himself by degrees.
The confidence in his own great size showed in his
face, and the blood-lust of battle in his eyes answered
the yellow light in Dan’s.
Dan spoke.
“Silent, once you put a stain
of blood on me. I’ve never forgot the taste.
It’s goin’ to be washed out today or else
made redder. It was here that you put the stain.”
He struck the long rider lightly across
the mouth with the back of his hand, and Silent lunged
with the snarl of a beast. His blow spent itself
on thin air. He whirled and struck again.
Only a low laughter answered him. He might as
well have battered away at a shadow.
“Damnation!” he yelled,
and leaped in with both arms outspread.
The impetus of his rush drove them
both to the floor, where they rolled over and over,
and before they stopped thin fingers were locked about
the bull neck of the bandit, and two thumbs driven
into the hollow of his throat. With a tremendous
effort he heaved himself from the floor, his face
convulsed.
He beat with both fists against the
lowered head of Dan. He tore at those hands.
They were locked as if with iron. Only the laughter,
the low, continual laughter rewarded him.
He screamed, a thick, horrible sound.
He flung himself to the floor again and rolled over
and over, striving to crush the slender, remorseless
body. Once more he was on his feet, running hither
and thither, dragging Dan with him. His eyes
swelled out; his face blackened. He beat against
the walls. He snapped at the wrists of Dan like
a beast, his lips flecked with a bloody froth.
That bull-dog grip would not unlock.
That animal, exultant laughter ran on in demoniac
music. In his great agony the outlaw rolled his
eyes in appeal to the crowd which surrounded the struggling
two. Every man seemed about to spring forward,
yet they could not move. Some had their fingers
stiffly extended, as if in the act of gripping with
hands too stiff to close.
Silent slipped to his knees.
His head fell back, his discoloured tongue protruding.
Dan wrenched him back to his feet. One more convulsive
effort from the giant, and then his eyes glazed, his
body went limp. The remorseless hands unlocked.
Silent fell in a shapeless heap to the floor.
Still no one moved. There was
no sound except the deadly ticking of the clock.
The men stared fascinated at that massive, lifeless
figure on the floor. Even in death he was terrible.
Then Dan’s hand slid inside his shirt, fumbled
a moment, and came forth again bearing a little gleaming
circle of metal. He dropped it upon the body of
Jim Silent, and turning, walked slowly from the room.
Still no one moved to intercept him. Passing
through the door he pushed within a few inches of
two men. They made no effort to seize him, for
their eyes were upon the body of the great lone rider.
The moment Dan was gone the hypnotic
silence which held the crowd, broke suddenly.
Someone stirred. Another cursed beneath his breath.
Instantly all was clamour and a running hither and
thither. Buck Daniels caught from the body of
Jim Silent the small metal circle which Dan had dropped.
He stood dumbfounded at the sight of it, and then
raised his hand, and shouted in a voice which gathered
the others swiftly around him. They cursed deeply
with astonishment, for what they saw was the marshal’s
badge of Tex Calder. The number on it was known
throughout the mountain-desert, and seeing it, the
worst of Dan’s enemies stammered, gaped, and
could not speak. There were more impartial men
who could. In five minutes the trial of Whistling
Dan was under way. The jury was every cowpuncher
present. The judge was public opinion. It
was a grey-haired man who finally leaped upon the
bar and summed up all opinion in a brief statement.
“Whatever Whistlin’ Dan
has done before,” he said, “this day he’s
done a man-sized job in a man’s way. Morris,
before he died, said enough to clear up most of this
lad’s past, particular about the letter from
Jim Silent that talked of a money bribe. Morris
didn’t have a chance to swear to what he said,
but a dying man speaks truth. Lee Haines had
cleared up most of the rest. We can’t hold
agin Dan what he done in breakin’ jail with
Haines. Dan Barry was a marshal. He captured
Haines and then let the outlaw go. He had a right
to do what he wanted as long as he finally got Haines
back. And Haines has told us that when he was
set free Barry said he would get him again. And
Barry did get him again. Remember that, and he
got all the rest of Silent’s gang, and now there
lies Jim Silent dead. They’s two things
to remember. The first is that Whistlin’
Dan has rid away without any shootin’ irons on
his hip. That looks as if he’s come to the
end of his long trail. The second is that he
was a bunkie of Tex Calder, an’ a man Tex could
trust for the avengin’ of his death is good enough
for me.”
There was a pause after this speech,
and during the quiet the cowpunchers were passing
from hand to hand the marshal’s badge which
Calder, as he died, had given to Dan. The bright
small shield was a more convincing proof than a hundred
arguments. The bitterest of Dan’s enemies
realized that the crimes of which he was accused were
supported by nothing stronger than blind rumour.
The marshal’s badge and the dead body of Jim
Silent kept them mute. So an illegal judge and
one hundred illegal jurymen found Whistling Dan “not
guilty.”
Buck Daniels took horse and galloped
for the Cumberland house with the news of the verdict.
He knew that Whistling Dan was there.