It was a truth long after wondered
at, when the story of Andrew Lanning was told and
retold, that he had lain in perfect security within
a six-hour ride from Tomo, while Hal Dozier himself
combed the mountains and hundreds more were out hunting
fame and fortune. To be sure, when a stranger
approached, Andrew always withdrew into the horse shed;
but, beyond keeping up a steady watch during the day,
he had little to do and little to fear.
Indeed, at night he made no pretense
toward concealment, but slept quite openly on the
floor on the bed of hay and blankets, just as Hank
Rainer slept on the farther side of the room.
And the great size of the reward was the very thing
that kept him safe. For when men passed the cabin,
as they often did, they were riding hard to get away
from Tomo and into the higher mountains, where the
outlaw might be, or else they were coming back to
rest up, and their destination in such a case was always
Tomo. The cabin of the trapper was just near
enough to the town to escape being used as a shelter
for the night by stray travelers. If they got
that close, they went on to the hotel.
But often they paused long enough
to pass a word with Hank, and Andrew, from his place
behind the door of the horse shed, could hear it all.
He could even look through a crack and see the faces
of the strangers. They told how Tomo was wrought
to a pitch of frenzied interest by this manhunt.
Well-to-do citizens, feeling that the outlaw had insulted
the town by so boldly venturing into it, had raised
a considerable contribution toward the reward.
Other prominent miners and cattlemen of the district
had come forward with similar offers, and every day
the price on the head of Andrew mounted to a more
tempting figure.
It was a careless time for Andrew.
After that escape from Tomo he was not apt to be perturbed
by his present situation, but the suspense seemed
to weigh more and more heavily upon the trapper.
Hank Rainer was so troubled, indeed, that Andrew sometimes
surprised a half-guilty, half-sly expression in the
eyes of his host. He decided that Hank was anxious
for the day to come when Andrew would ride off and
take his perilous company elsewhere. He even
broached the subject to Hank, but the mountaineer
flushed and discarded the suggestion with a wave of
his hand. “But if a gang of ’em should
ever hunt me down, even in your cabin, Hank,”
said Andrew one day—it was the third day
of his stay—“I’ll never forget
what you’ve done for me, and one of these days
I’ll see that Uncle Jasper finds out about it.”
The little, pale-blue eyes of the
trapper went swiftly to and fro, as if he sought escape
from this embarrassing gratitude.
“Well,” said he, “I’ve
been thinkin’ that the man that gets you, Andy,
won’t be so sure with his money, after all.
He’ll have your Uncle Jasper on his trail pronto,
and Jasper used to be a killer with a gun in the old
days.”
“No more,” smiled Andrew.
“He’s still steady as a rock, but he hasn’t
the speed any more. He’s over seventy, you
see. His joints sort of creak when he tries to
move with a snap.”
“Ah,” muttered the trapper,
and again, as he started through the open door, “Ah!”
Then he added: “Well, son,
you don’t need Jasper. If half what they
say is true, you’re a handy lad with the guns.
I suppose Jasper showed you his tricks?”
“Yes, and we worked out some
new ones together. Uncle Jasper raised me with
a gun in my hand, you might say.”
“H’m!” said Hank Rainer.
When they were sitting at the door
in the semidusk, he reverted to the idea. “You
been seein’ that squirrel that’s been runnin’
across the clearin’?”
“Yes.”
“I’d like to see you work
your gun, Andy. It was a sight to talk about
to watch Jasper, and I’m thinkin’ you could
go him one better. S’pose you stand up
there in the door with your back to the clearin’.
The next time that squirrel comes scootin’ across
I’ll say, ‘Now!’ and you try to
turn and get your gun on him before he’s out
of sight. Will you try that?”
“Suppose some one hears it?”
“Oh, they’re used to me pluggin’
away for fun over here. Besides, they ain’t
anybody lives in hearin’.”
And Andrew, falling into the spirit
of the contest, stood up in the door, and the old
tingle of nerves, which never failed to come over him
in the crisis, was thrilling through his body again.
Then Hank barked the word, “Now!” and
Andrew whirled on his heel. The word had served
to alarm the squirrel as well. As he heard it,
he twisted about like the snapping lash of a whip
and darted back for cover, three yards away. He
covered that distance like a little gray streak in
the shadow, but before he reached it the gun spoke,
and the forty-five-caliber slug struck him in the
middle and tore him in two. Andrew, hearing a
sharp crackling, looked down at his host and observed
that the trapper had bitten clean through the stem
of his corncob.
“That,” said the red man huskily, “is
some shootin’.”
But he did not look up, and he did
not smile. And it troubled Andrew to hear this
rather grudging praise.
In the meantime, three days had put
the gelding in very fair condition. He was enough
mustang to recuperate swiftly, and that morning he
had tried with hungry eagerness to kick the head from
Andrew’s shoulders. This had decided the
outlaw. Besides, in the last day there had been
fewer and fewer riders up and down the ravine, and
apparently the hunt for Andrew Lanning had journeyed
to another part of the mountains. It seemed an
excellent time to begin his journey again, and he told
the trapper his decision to start on at dusk the next
day.
The announcement brought with it a
long and thoughtful pause.
“I wisht I could send you on
your way with somethin’ worthwhile,” said
Hank Rainer at length. “But I ain’t
rich. I’ve lived plain and worked hard,
but I ain’t rich. So what I can give you,
Andy, won’t be much.”
Andrew protested that the hospitality
had been more than a generous gift, but Hank Rainer,
looking straight out the door, continued: “Well,
I’m goin’ down the road to get you my little
gift, Andy. Be back in an hour maybe.”
“I’d rather have you here
to keep me from being lonely,” said Andrew.
“I’ve money enough to buy what I want,
but money will never buy me the talk of an honest
man, Hank.”
The other started. “Honest
enough, maybe,” he said bitterly. “But
honesty don’t get you bread or bacon, not in
this world!”
And presently he stamped into the
shed, saddled his pony, and after a moment was scattering
the pebbles on the way down the ravine. The dark
and silence gathered over Andrew Lanning. He had
little warmth of feeling for Hank Rainer, to be sure,
but the hush of the cabin he looked forward to many
a long evening and many a long day in a silence like
this, with no man near him. For the man who rides
outside the law rides alone.
He could have embraced the big man,
therefore, when Hank finally came back, and Andrew
could hear the pony panting in the shed, a sure sign
that it had been ridden hard.
“It ain’t much,”
said Hank, “but it’s yours, and I hope
you get a chance to use it in a pinch.”
And he dumped down a case of .45 cartridges.
After all, there could have been no
gift more to the point, but it gave Andrew a little
chill of distaste, this reminder of the life that lay
ahead of him. And in spite of himself he could
not break the silence that began to settle over the
cabin again. Finally Hank announced that it was
bedtime for him, and, preparing himself by the simple
expedient of kicking off his boots and then drawing
off his trousers, he slipped into his blankets, twisted
them tightly around his broad shoulders with a single
turn of his body, and was instantly snoring. Andrew
followed that example more slowly. Not since
he left Martindale, however, had he slept soundly.
Take a tame dog into the wilderness and he learns to
sleep like a wolf quickly enough; and Andrew, with
mind and nerve constantly set for action like a cocked
revolver, had learned to sleep like a wild thing in
turn. And accordingly, when he wakened in the
middle of the night, he was alert on the instant.
He had a singular feeling that someone had been looking
at him while he slept.