The excitement kept Andrew awake for
a little time, but then the hum of the wind, the roll
of voices below him, and the weariness of the long
ride rushed on him like a wave and washed him out into
an ebb of sleep.
When he wakened the aches were gone
from his limbs, and his mind was a happy blank.
Only when he started up from his blankets and rapped
his head against the slanting rafters just above him,
he was brought to a painful realization of where he
was. He turned, scowling, and the first thing
he saw was a piece of brown wrapping paper held down
by a shoe and covered with a clumsy scrawl.
These blankets are yours and the slicker
along with
them and heres wishin you luck while youre
beatin it
back to civlizashun. your friend, Jeff
Rankin.
Andy glanced swiftly about the room
and saw that the other bunks had been removed.
He swept up the blankets and went down the stairs to
the first floor. The house reeked of emptiness;
broken bottles, a twisted tin plate in which some
one had set his heel, were the last signs of the outlaws
of Henry Allister’s gang. A bundle stood
on the table with another piece of the wrapping paper
near it. The name of Andrew Lanning was on the
outside. He unfolded the sheet and read in a precise,
rather feminine writing:
Dear Lanning: We are, in a manner,
sneaking off. I’ve already said good-by,
and I don’t want to tempt you again.
Now you’re by yourself and you’ve got your
own way to fight. The boys agree with me.
We all want to see you make good. We’ll
all be sorry if you come back to us. But once
you’ve found out that it’s no go trying
to beat back to good society, we’ll be mighty
happy to have you with us. In the meantime,
we want to do our bit to help Andrew Lanning make
up for his bad luck.
For my part, I’ve put a chamois
sack on top of the leather coat with the fur lining.
You’ll find a little money in that purse.
Don’t be foolish. Take the money I leave
you, and, when you’re back on your feet, I know
that you’ll repay it at your own leisure.
And here’s best luck to you and
the girl.
Henry Allister.
Andrew lifted the chamois sack carelessly,
and out of its mouth tumbled a stream of gold.
One by one he picked up the pieces and replaced them;
he hesitated, and then put the sack in his pocket.
How could he refuse a gift so delicately made?
A broken kitchen knife had been thrust
through a bit of the paper on the box. He read
this next:
Your hoss is known. So I’m
leaving you one in place of the pinto. He goes
good and he dont need no spurring but when you come
behind him keep watching your step. your pal, Larry
la Roche.
Blankets and slicker, money, horse.
A flask of whisky stood on another slip of the paper.
And the writing on this was much more legible.
Here’s a friend in need. When
you come to a pinch,
use it. And when you come to a bigger
pinch send word
to your friend, Scottie Macdougal.
Andrew picked it up, set it down again,
and smiled. On the fur coat there was a fifth
tag. Not one of the five, then, had forgotten
him.
Its comin on cold, partner. Take
this coat and welcome. When the snows get on
the mountains if you aint out of the desert put
on this coat and think of your partner,
Joe Clune.
P.S.—I seen you first, and
I have first call on you over
the rest of these gents and you can figure
that you have
first call on me.
J.C.
When he had read all these little
letters, when he had gathered his loot before him,
Andrew lifted his head and could have burst into song.
This much thieves and murderers had done for him;
what would the good men of the world do? How
would they meet him halfway?
He went into the kitchen. They
had forgotten nothing. There was a quantity of
“chuck,” flour, bacon, salt, coffee, a
frying pan, a cup, a canteen.
It brought a lump in his throat.
He cast open the back door, and, standing in the little
pasture, he saw only one horse remaining. It was
a fine, young chestnut gelding with a Roman nose and
long, mulish ears. His head was not beautiful
to see from any angle, but every detail of the body
spelled speed, and speed meant safety.
What wonder, then, that Andrew began
to see the world through a bright mist? What
wonder that when he had finished his breakfast he sang
while he roped the chestnut, built the pack behind
the saddle, and filled the saddlebags. When he
was in the saddle, the gelding took at once the cattle
path with a long and easy canter.
With his head cleared by sleep, his
muscles and nerves relaxed, Andrew began to plan his
escape with more calm deliberation than before.
The first goal was the big blue cloud
on the northern horizon—a good week’s
journey ahead of him—the Little Canover
Mountains. Among the foothills lay the cordon
of small towns which it would be his chief difficulty
to pass. For, if the printed notices describing
him were circulated among them, the countryside would
be up in arms, prepared to intercept his flight.
Otherwise, there would be nothing but telephoned and
telegraphed descriptions of him, which, at best, could
only come to the ears of a few, and these few would
be necessarily put out by the slightest difference
between him and the description. Such a vital
difference, for instance, as the fact that he now rode
a chestnut, while the instructions called for a man
on a pinto.
Moreover, it was by no means certain
that Hal Dozier, great trailer though he was, would
know that the fugitive was making for the northern
mountains. With all these things in mind, in spite
of the pessimism of Henry Allister, Andrew felt that
he had far more than a fighting chance to break out
of the mountain desert and into the comparative safety
of the crowded country beyond.
He made one mistake in the beginning.
He pushed the chestnut too hard the first and second
days, so that on the third day he was forced to give
the gelding his head and go at a jarring trot most
of the day. On the fourth and fifth days, however,
he had the reward for his caution. The chestnut’s
ribs were beginning to show painfully, but he kept
doggedly at his work with no sign of faltering.
The sixth day brought Andrew Lanning in close view
of the lower hills. And on the seventh day he
put his fortune boldly to the touch and jogged into
the first little town before him.