It was just after the hot hour of
the afternoon. The shadows from the hills to
the west were beginning to drop across the village;
people who had kept to their houses during the early
afternoon now appeared on their porches. Small
boys and girls, returning from school, were beginning
to play. Their mothers were at the open doors
exchanging shouted pieces of news and greetings, and
Andrew picked his way with care along the street.
It was a town flung down in the throat of a ravine
without care or pattern. There was not even one
street, but rather a collection of straggling paths
which met about a sort of open square, on the sides
of which were the stores and the inevitable saloons
and hotel.
But the narrow path along which Andrew
rode was a gantlet to him. For all he knew, the
placards might be already out, one of the least of
those he passed might have recognized him. He
noticed that one or two women, in their front door,
stopped in the midst of a word to watch him curiously.
It seemed to Andrew that a buzz of comment and warning
preceded him and closed behind him. He felt sure
that the children stood and gaped at him from behind,
but he dared not turn in his saddle to look back.
And he kept on, reining in the gelding,
and probing every face with one swift, resistless
glance that went to the heart. He found himself
literally taking the brains and hearts of men into
the palm of his hand and weighing them. Yonder
old man, so quiet, with the bony fingers clasped around
the bowl of his corncob, sitting under the awning by
the watering trough—that would be an ill
man to cross in a pinch—that hand would
be steady as a rock on the barrel of a gun. But
the big, square man with the big, square face who
talked so loudly on the porch of yonder store—there
was a bag of wind that could be punctured by one threat
and turned into a figure of tallow by the sight of
a gun.
Andrew went on with his lightning
summary of the things he passed. But when he
came to the main square, the heart of the town, it
was quite empty. He went across to the hotel,
tied the gelding at the rack, and sat down on the
veranda. He wanted with all his might to go inside,
to get a room, to be alone and away from this battery
of searching eyes. But he dared not. He
must mingle with these people and learn what they
knew.
He went in and sought the bar.
It should be there, if anywhere, the poster with the
announcement of Andrew Lanning’s outlawry and
the picture of him. What picture would they take?
The old snapshot of the year before, which Jasper
had taken? No doubt that would be the one.
But much as he yearned to do so, he dared not search
the wall. He stood up to the bar and faced the
bartender. The latter favored him with one searching
glance, and then pushed across the whisky bottle.
“Do you know me?” asked
Andrew with surprise. And then he could have
cursed his careless tongue.
“I know you need a drink,”
said the bartender, looking at Andrew again.
Suddenly he grinned. “When a man’s
been dry that long he gets a hungry look around the
eyes that I know. Hit her hard, boy.”
Andrew brimmed his glass and tossed
off the drink. And to his astonishment there
was none of the shocking effect of his first drink
of whisky. It was like a drop of water tossed
on a huge blotter. To his tired nerves the alcohol
was a mere nothing. Besides, he dared not let
it affect him. He filled a second glass, pushing
across the bar one of the gold pieces of Henry Allister.
Then, turning casually, he glanced along the wall.
There were other notices up—many written
ones—but not a single face looked back
at him. All at once he grew weak with relief.
But in the meantime he must talk to this fellow.
“What’s the news?”
“What kind of news?”
“Any kind. I’ve been
talkin’ more to coyotes than to men for a long
spell.”
Should he have said that? Was
not that a suspicious speech? Did it not expose
him utterly?
“Nothin’ to talk about
here much more excitin’ than a coyote’s
yap. Not a damn thing. Which way you come
from?”
“South. The last I heard
of excitin’ news was this stuff about Lanning,
the outlaw.”
It was out, and he was glad of it.
He had taken the bull by the horns.
“Lanning? Lanning?
Never heard of him. Oh, yes, the gent that bumped
off Bill Dozier. Between you and me, they won’t
be any sobbin’ for that. Bill had it comin’.
But they’ve outlawed Lanning, have they?”
“That’s what I hear.”
But sweet beyond words had been this
speech from the bartender. They had barely heard
of Andrew Lanning in this town; they did not even know
that he was outlawed. Andrew felt hysterical
laughter bubbling in his throat. Now for one
long sleep; then he would make the ride across the
mountains and into safety.
He went out of the barroom, put the
gelding away in the stables behind the hotel, and
got a room. In ten minutes, pausing only to tear
the boots from his feet, he was sound asleep under
the very gates of freedom.
And while he slept the gates were
closing and barring the way. If he had wakened
even an hour sooner, all would have been well and,
though he might have dusted the skirts of danger,
they could never have blocked his way. But, with
seven days of exhausting travel behind him, he slept
like one drugged, the clock around and more. It
was morning, mid-morning, when he wakened.
Even then he was too late, but he
wasted priceless minutes eating his breakfast, for
it was delightful beyond words to have food served
to him which he had not cooked with his own hands.
And so, sauntering out onto the veranda of the hotel,
he saw a compact crowd on the other side of the square
and the crowd focused on a man who was tacking up a
sign. Andrew, still sauntering, joined the crowd,
and looking over their heads, he found his own face
staring back at him; and, under the picture of that
lean, serious face, in huge black type, five thousand
dollars reward for the capture, dead or alive—
The rest of the notice blurred before his eyes.
Some one was speaking. “You
made a quick trip, Mr. Dozier, and I expect if you
send word up to Hallowell in the mountains they can—”
So Hal Dozier had brought the notices himself.
Andrew, in that moment, became perfectly
calm. He went back to the hotel, and, resting
one elbow on the desk, he looked calmly into the face
of the clerk and the proprietor. Instantly he
saw that the men did not suspect—as yet.
“I hear Mr. Dozier’s here?” he asked.
“Room seventeen,” said the clerk.
“Hold on. He’s out in the square now.”
“’S all right. I’ll
wait in his room.” He went to room seventeen.
The door was unlocked. And drawing a chair into
the farthest corner, Andrew sat down, rolled a cigarette,
drew his revolver, and waited.