Far away in the western sky Andy Lanning
saw a black dot that moved in wide circles and came
up across the heavens slowly, and he knew it was a
buzzard that scented carrion and was coming up the
wind toward that scent. He had seen them many
a time before on their gruesome trails, and the picture
which he carried was not a pleasant one.
But now the picture that drifted through
his mind was still more horrible. It was a human
body lying face downward in the sand with the wind
ruffling in the hair and the hat rolled a few paces
off and the gun close to the outstretched hand.
He knew from Uncle Jasper that no matter how far the
trail led, or how many years it was ridden, the end
of the outlaw was always the same—death
and the body left to the buzzards. Or else, in
some barroom, a footfall from behind and a bullet through
the back.
The flesh of Andy crawled. It
was not possible for him to relax in vigilance for
a moment, lest danger come upon him when he least expected
it. Perhaps, in some open space like this.
He went on until the sun was low in the west and all
the sky was rimmed with color.
Dusk had come over the hills in a
rush, when he saw a house half lost in the shadows.
It was a narrow-fronted, two-storied, unpainted, lonely
place, without sign of a porch. Here, where there
was no vestige of a town near, and where there was
no telephone, the news of the deaths of Bill Dozier
and Buck Heath could not have come. Andy accepted
the house as a blessing and went straight toward it.
But the days of carelessness were
over for Andy, and he would never again approach a
house without searching it like a human face.
He studied this shack as he came closer. If there
were people in the building they did not choose to
show a light.
Andy went around to the rear of the
house, where there was a low shed beside the corral,
half tumbled down; but in the corral were five or six
fine horses—wild fellows with bright eyes
and the long necks of speed. Andy looked upon
them wistfully. Not one of them but was worth
the price of three of the pinto; but as for money
there was not twenty dollars in the pocket of Andy.
Stripping the saddle from the pinto,
he put it under the shed and left the mustang to feed
and find water in the small pasture. Then he went
with the bridle, that immemorial sign of one who seeks
hospitality in the West, toward the house. He
was met halfway by a tall, strong man of middle age
or more. There was no hat on his head, which was
covered with a shock of brown hair much younger than
the face beneath it. He beheld Andy without enthusiasm.
“You figure on layin’
over here for the night, stranger?” he asked.
“That’s it,” said Andy.
“I’ll tell you how it
is,” said the big man in the tone of one who
is willing to argue a point. “We ain’t
got a very big house—you see it—and
it’s pretty well filled right now. If you
was to slope over the hills there, you’d find
Gainorville inside of ten miles.”
Andy explained that he was at the
end of a hard ride. “Ten more miles would
kill the pinto,” he said. “But if
you don’t mind, I’ll have a bit of chow
and then turn in out there in the shed. That won’t
crowd you in your sleeping quarters, and it’ll
be fine for me.”
The big man opened his mouth to say
something more, then turned on his heel.
“I guess we can fix you up,” he said.
“Come on along.”
At another time Andy would have lost
a hand rather than accept such churlish hospitality,
but he was in no position to choose. The pain
of hunger was like a voice speaking in him.
It was a four-room house; the rooms
on the ground floor were the kitchen, where Andy cooked
his own supper of bacon and coffee and flapjacks,
and the combination living room, dining room, and,
from the bunk covered with blankets on one side, bedroom.
Upstairs there must have been two more rooms of the
same size.
Seated about a little kitchen table
in the front room, Andy found three men playing an
interrupted game of blackjack, which was resumed when
the big fellow took his place before his hand.
The three gave Andy a look and a grunt, but otherwise
they paid no attention to him. And if they had
consulted him he could have asked for no greater favor.
Yet he had an odd hunger about seeing them. They
were the last men in many a month, perhaps, whom he
could permit to see him without a fear. He brought
his supper into the living room and put his cup of
coffee on the floor beside him. While he ate
he watched them.
They were, all in all, the least prepossessing
group he had ever seen. The man who had brought
him in was far from well favored, but he was handsome
compared with the others. Opposite him sat a tall
fellow very erect and stiff in his chair. A candle
had recently been lighted, and it stood on the table
near this man. It showed a wan face of excessive
leanness. His eyes were deep under bony brows,
and they alone of the features showed any expression
as the game progressed, turning now and again to the
other faces with glances that burned; he was winning
steadily. A red-headed man was on his left, with
his back to Andy; but now and again he turned, and
Andy saw a heavy jowl and a skin blotched with great,
rusty freckles. His shoulders over-flowed the
back of his chair, which creaked whenever he moved.
The man who faced the redhead was as light as his
companion was ponderous. His voice was gentle,
his eyes large and soft, and his profile was exceedingly
handsome. But in the full view Andy saw nothing
except a grisly, purple scar that twisted down beneath
the right eye of the man. It drew down the lower
lid of that eye, and it pulled the mouth of the man
a bit awry, so that he seemed to be smiling in a smug,
half-apologetic manner. In spite of his youth
he was unquestionably the dominant spirit here.
Once or twice the others lifted their voices in argument,
and a single word from him cut them short. And
when he raised his head, now and again, to look at
Andy, it gave the latter a feeling that his secret
was read and all his past known.
These strange fellows had not asked
his name, and neither had they introduced themselves,
but from their table talk he gathered that the redhead
was named Jeff, the funereal man with the bony face
was Larry, the brown-haired one was Joe, and he of
the scar and the smile was Henry. It occurred
to Andy as odd that such rough boon companions had
not shortened that name for convenience.
They played with the most intense
concentration. As the night deepened and the
windows became black slabs Joe brought another candle
and reenforced this light by hanging a lantern from
a nail on the wall. This illuminated the entire
room, but in a partial and dismal manner. The
game went on. They were playing for high stakes;
Andrew Lanning had never seen so much cash assembled
at one time. They had stacks of unmistakable
yellow gold before them—actually stacks.
The winner was Larry. That skull-faced gentleman
was fairly barricaded behind heaps of money.
Andy estimated swiftly that there must be well over
two thousand dollars in those stacks.
He finished his supper, and, having
taken the tin cup and plate out into the next room
and cleaned them, he had no sooner come back to the
door, on the verge of bidding them good night, then
Henry invited him to sit down and take a hand.