Only one man in the crowd was old
enough to recognize that yell, and the one man was
Jasper Lanning. A great, singing happiness filled
his heart and his throat. But the shouting of
the men as they tumbled into their saddles cleared
his brain. He called to Deputy Bill Dozier, who
was kneeling beside the prostrate form of Buck Heath:
“Call ’em off, Bill. Call ’em
off, or, by the Lord, I’ll take a hand in this!
He done it in self-defense. He didn’t even
pull a gun on Buck. Bill, call ’em off!”
And Bill did it most effectually.
He straightened, and then got up. “Some
of you fools get some sense, will you?” he called.
“Buck ain’t dead; he’s just knocked
out!”
It brought them back, a shamefaced
crew, laughing at each other. “Where’s
a doctor?” demanded Bill Dozier.
Someone who had an inkling of how
wounds should be cared for was instantly at work over
Buck. “He’s not dead,” pronounced
this authority, “but he’s danged close
to it. Fractured skull, that’s what he’s
got. And a fractured jaw, too, looks to me.
Yep, you can hear the bone grate!”
Jasper Lanning was in the midst of
a joyous monologue. “You seen it, boys?
One punch done it. That’s what the Lannings
are—the one-punch kind. And you seen
him get to his gun? Handy! Lord, but it done
me good to see him mosey that piece of iron off’n
his hip. And see him take that saddle? Where
was you with your gal, Joe? Nowhere! Looked
to me like—”
The voice of Bill Dozier broke in:
“I want a posse. Who’ll ride with
Bill Dozier tonight?”
It sobered Jasper Lanning. “What
d’you mean by that?” he asked. “Didn’t
the boy fight clean?”
“Maybe,” admitted Dozier.
“But Buck may kick out. And if he dies they’s
got to be a judge talk to your boy. Come on.
I want volunteers.”
“Dozier, what’s all this fool talk?”
“Don’t bother me, Lanning.
I got a duty to perform, ain’t I? Think
I’m going to let ’em say later on that
anybody done this and then got away from Bill Dozier?
Not me!”
“Bill,” said Jasper, “I
read in your mind. You’re lookin’
for action, and you want to get it out of Andy.”
“I want nothin’ but to get him back.”
“Think he’ll let you come
close enough to talk? He’ll think you want
him for murder, that’s what. Keep off of
this boy, Bill. Let him hear the news; then he’ll
come back well enough.”
“You waste my time,” said
Bill, “and all the while a man that the law
wants is puttin’ ground between him and Martindale.
Now, boys, you hear me talk. Who’s with
Bill Dozier to bring back this milk-fed kid?”
It brought a snarl from Jasper Lanning.
“Why don’t you go after him by yourself,
Dozier? I had your job once and I didn’t
ask no helpers on it.”
But Bill Dozier apparently had no
liking for a lonely ride. He made his demand
once more, and the volunteers came out. In five
minutes he had selected five sturdy men, and every
one of the five was a man whose name was known.
They went down the street of Martindale
without shouting and at a steady lope which their
horses could keep up indefinitely. Old Jasper
followed them to the end of the village and kept on
watching through the dusk until the six horsemen loomed
on the hill beyond against the sky line. They
were still cantering, and they rode close together
like a tireless pack of wolves. After this old
Jasper went back to his house, and when the door closed
behind him a lonely echo went through the place.
“Bah!” said Jasper. “I’m
getting soft!”
In the meantime the posse went on,
regardless of direction. There were only two
possible paths for a horseman out of Martindale; east
and west the mountains blocked the way, and young
Lanning had started north. Straight ahead of
them the mountains shot up on either side of Grant’s
Pass, and toward this natural landmark Bill Dozier
led the way. Not that he expected to have to
travel as far as this. He felt fairly certain
that the fugitive would ride out his horse at full
speed, and then he would camp for the night and make
a fire.
Andrew Lanning was town bred and soft
of skin from the work at the forge. When the
biting night air got through his clothes he would need
warmth from a fire.
Bill Dozier led on his men for three
hours at a steady pace until they came to Sullivan’s
ranch house in the valley. The place was dark,
but the deputy threw a loose circle of his men around
the house, and then knocked at the front door.
Old man Sullivan answered in his bare feet. Did
he know of the passing of young Lanning? Not only
that, but he had sold Andrew a horse. It seemed
that Andrew was making a hurried trip; that Buck Heath
had loaned him his horse for the first leg of it, and
that Buck would call later for the animal. It
had sounded strange, but Sullivan was not there to
ask questions. He had led Andrew to the corral
and told him to make his choice.
“There was an old pinto in there,”
said Sullivan, “all leather in that hoss.
You know him, Joe. Well, the boy runs his eye
over the bunch, and then picks the pinto right off.
I said he wasn’t for sale, but he wouldn’t
take anything else. I figured a stiff price, and
then added a hundred to it. Lanning didn’t
wink. He took the horse, but he didn’t pay
cash. Told me I’d have to trust him.”
Bill Dozier bade Sullivan farewell,
gathered his five before the house, and made them
a speech. Bill had a long, lean face, a misty
eye, and a pair of drooping, sad mustaches. As
Jasper Lanning once said: “Bill Dozier
always looked like he was just away from a funeral
or just goin’ to one.” This night
the dull eye of Bill was alight.
“Gents,” he said, “maybe
you-all is disappointed. I heard some talk comin’
up here that maybe the boy had laid over for the night
in Sullivan’s house. Which he may be a
fool, but he sure ain’t a plumb fool. But,
speakin’ personal, this trail looks more and
more interestin’ to me. Here he’s
left Buck’s hoss, so he ain’t exactly a
hoss thief—yet. And he’s promised
to pay for the pinto, so that don’t make him
a crook. But when the pinto gives out, Andy’ll
be in country where he mostly ain’t known.
He can’t take things on trust, and he’ll
mostly take ’em, anyway. Boys, looks to
me like we was after the real article. Anybody
weakenin’?”
It was suggested that the boy would
be overtaken before the pinto gave out; it was even
suggested that this waiting for Andrew Lanning to
commit a crime was perilously like forcing him to become
a criminal. To all of this the deputy listened
sadly, combing his mustaches. The hunger for
the manhunt is like the hunger for food, and Bill Dozier
had been starved for many a day.
“Partner,” said Bill to
the last speaker, “ain’t we makin’
all the speed we can? Ain’t it what I want
to come up to the fool kid and grab him before he
makes a hoss thief or somethin’ out of himself?
You gents feed your hosses the spur and leave the
thinkin’ to me. I got a pile of hunches.”
There was no questioning of such a
known man as Bill Dozier. The six went rattling
up the valley at a smart pace. Yet Andy’s
change of horses at Sullivan’s place changed
the entire problem. He had ridden his first mount
to a stagger at full speed, and it was to be expected
that, having built up a comfortable lead, he would
settle his second horse to a steady pace and maintain
it.
All night the six went on, with Bill
Dozier’s long-striding chestnut setting the
pace. He made no effort toward a spurt now.
Andrew Lanning led them by a full hour’s riding
on a comparatively fresh horse, and, unless he were
foolish enough to indulge in another wild spurt, they
could not wear him down in this first stage of the
journey. There was only the chance that he would
build a fire recklessly near to the trail, but still
they came to no sign of light, and then the dawn broke
and Bill Dozier found unmistakable signs of a trotting
horse which went straight up the valley. There
were no other fresh tracks pointing in the same direction,
and this must be Andy’s horse. And the fact
that he was trotting told many things. He was
certainly saving his mount for a long grind.
Bill Dozier looked about at his men in the gray morning.
They were a hard-faced lot; he had not picked them
for tenderness. They were weary now, but the
fugitive must be still wearier, for he had fear to
keep him company and burden his shoulders.
And now they came to a surprising
break in the trail. It twisted from the floor
of the valley up a steep slope, crossed the low crest
of the hills, and finally came out above a broad and
open valley.
“What does he mean,” said
Bill Dozier aloud, “by breakin’ for Jack
Merchant’s house?”