THE LAMP
The bluff was ended. It was as
if the wind blew a cloud suddenly from the face of
the sun and let the yellow sunlight pour brightly over
the world; so everyone in the room at the voice of
Sally knew that the time had come for action.
There was no vocal answer to her, but each man rose
slowly in his place, his gun naked in his hand, and
every face was turned to Bard.
“Gentlemen,” he said in
his soft voice, “I see that my friend Lawlor
has not wasted his lessons in manners. At least
you know enough to rise when a lady enters the room.”
His gun, held at the hip, pointed
straight down the table to the burly form of Jansen,
but his eyes, like those of a pugilist, seemed to be
taking in every face at the table, and each man felt
in some subtle manner that the danger would fall first
on him. They did not answer, but hands were tightening
around revolver butts.
Lawlor moved back, pace by pace, his
revolver shaking in his hand.
“But,” went on Bard, “you
are all facing me. Is it possible?”
He laughed.
“I knew that Mr. Drew was very
anxious to receive me with courtesy; I did not dream
that he would be able to induce so many men to take
care of me.”
And Sally Fortune, bracing herself
against the wall with one hand, and in the capable
grasp of the other a six-gun balanced, stared in growing
amazement on the scene, and shuddered at the silences.
“Bard,” she called, “what have I
done?”
“You’ve started a game,”
he answered, “which I presume we’ve all
been waiting to play. What about it, boys?
I hope you’re well paid; I’d hate to die
a cheap death.”
A voice, deep and ringing, sounded
close at hand, almost within the room, and from a
direction which Bard could not locate.
“Don’t harm him if you
can help it. But keep him in that room!”
Bard stepped back a pace till his
shoulders touched the wall.
“Sirs,” he said, “if
you keep me here you will most certainly have to harm
me.”
A figure ran around the edge of the
crowd and stood beside him.
“Stand clear of me, Sally,”
he muttered, much moved. “Stand away.
This is a man’s work.”
“The work of a pack of coyotes!”
she cried shrilly. “What d’ye mean?”
She turned on them fiercely.
“Are you goin’ to murder
a tenderfoot among you? One that ain’t done
no real harm? I don’t believe my eyes.
You, there, Shorty Kilrain, I’ve waited on you
with my own hands. You’ve played the man
with me. Are you goin’ to play the dog
now? Jansen, you was tellin’ me about a
blue-eyed girl in Sweden; have you forgot about her
now? And Calamity Ben! My God, ain’t
there a man among you to step over here and join the
two of us?”
They were shaken, but the memory of Drew quelled them.
“They’s no harm intended
him, on my honour, Sally,” said Lawlor.
“All he’s got to do is give up his gun—and—and”—he
finished weakly—“let his hands be
tied.”
“Is that all?” said Sally scornfully.
“Don’t follow me, Sally,”
said Bard. “Stay out of this. Boys,
you may have been paid high, but I don’t think
you’ve been paid high enough to risk taking
a chance with me. If you put me out with the first
shot that ends it, of course, but the chances are
that I’ll be alive when I hit the floor, and
if I am, I’ll have my gun working—and
I won’t miss. One or two of you are going
to drop.”
He surveyed them with a quick glance
which seemed to linger on each face.
“I don’t know who’ll
go first. But now I’m going to walk straight
for that door, and I’m going out of it.”
He moved slowly, deliberately toward
the door, around the table. Still they did not
shoot.
“Bard!” commanded the
voice which had spoken from nowhere before. “Stop
where you are. Are you fool enough to think that
I’ll let you go?”
“Are you William Drew?”
“I am, and you are——”
“The son of John Bard. Are you in this
house?”
“I am; Bard, listen to me for thirty seconds——”
“Not for three. Sally, go out of this room
and through that door.”
There was a grim command in his voice.
It started her moving against her will. She paused
and looked back with an imploring gesture.
“Go on,” he repeated.
And she passed out of the door and
stood there, a glimmering figure against the night.
Still there was not a shot fired, though all those
guns were trained on Bard.
“You’ve got me Drew,”
he called, “but I’ve got you, and your
hirelings—all of you, and I’m going
to take you to hell with me—to hell!”
He jerked his gun up and fired, not
at a man, for the bullet struck the thin chain which
held the gasoline lamp suspended, struck it with a
clang, and it rushed down to the table. It struck,
but not with the loud explosion which Bard had expected.
There was a dull report, as of a shot fired at a great
distance, the scream of Sally from the door, and then
liquid fire spurted from the lamp across the table,
whipped in a flare to the ceiling, and licked against
the walls. It shot to all sides but it shot high,
and every man was down on his face.
Anthony, scarcely believing that he
was still alive, rushed for the door, with a cry of
agony ringing in his ears from the voice beyond the
room. One man in all that crowd was near enough
or had the courage to obey the master even to the
uttermost. The gaunt form of Calamity Ben blocked
the doorway in front of Bard, blocked it with poised
revolver.
“Halt!” he yelled.
But the other rushed on. Calamity
whipped down the gun and fired, but even before the
trigger was pulled he was sagging toward the floor,
for Bard had shot to kill. Over the prostrate
form of the cowpuncher he leaped, and into the night,
where the white face of Sally greeted him.
Outside the red inferno of that room,
as if the taste of blood had maddened him, he raised
his arms and shouted, like one crying a wild prayer:
“William Drew! William Drew! Come out
to me!”
Small, strong hands gripped his wrists
and turned him away from the house.
“You fool!” cried Sally.
“Ride for it! You’ve raised your hell
at last—I knew you would!”
Red light flared in all the windows
of the dining-room; shouts and groans and cursing
poured out of them. Bard turned and followed her
out toward the stable on the run, and he heard her
moaning as she ran: “I knew! I knew!”
She mounted her horse, which was tethered
near the barn. He chose at random the first horse
he reached, a grey, threw on his back the saddle which
hung from the peg behind, mounted, and they were off
through the night. No thought, no direction;
but only in blind speed there seemed to be the hope
of a salvation.
A mile, two miles dropped behind them,
and then in an open stretch, for he had outridden
her somewhat, Anthony reined back, caught the bridle
of her horse, and pulled it down to a sharp trot.
“Why have you come?”
Their faces were so close that even
through the night he could see the grim set of her
lips.
“Ain’t you raised your
hell—the hell you was hungry to raise?
Don’t you need help?”
“What I’ve done is my
own doing. I’ll take the burden of it.”
“You’ll take a halter
for it, that’s what you’ll take. The
whole range’ll rise for this. You’re
marked already. Everywhere you’ve gone
you’ve made an enemy. They’ll be out
to get you—Nash—Boardman—the
whole gang.”
“Let ’em come. I’d do this
all over again.”
“Born gunman, eh? Bard, you ain’t
got a week to live.”
It was fierceness; it was a reproach rather than sorrow.
“Then let me go my own way. Why do you
follow, Sally?”
“D’you know these mountains?”
“No, but——”
“Then they’d run you down in twelve hours.
Where’ll you head for?”
He said, as the first thought entered
his mind: “I’ll go for the old house
that Drew has on the other side of the range.”
“That ain’t bad. Know the short cut?”
“What cut?”
“You can make it in five hours
over one trail. But of course you don’t
know. Nobody but old Dan and me ever knowed it.
Let go my bridle and ride like hell.”
She jerked the reins away from him
and galloped off at full speed. He followed.
“Sally!” he called.
But she kept straight ahead, and he
followed, shouting, imploring her to go back.
Finally he settled to the chase, resolved on overtaking
her. It was no easy task, for she rode like a
centaur, and she knew the way.