In Hal Dozier there was a belief that
the end justified the means. When Hank Rainer
sent word to Tomo that the outlaw was in his cabin,
and, if the posse would gather, he, Hank, would come
out of his cabin that night and let the posse rush
the sleeping man who remained, Hal Dozier was willing
and eager to take advantage of the opportunity.
A man of action by nature and inclination, Dozier
had built a great repute as a hunter of criminals,
and he had been known to take single-handed chances
against the most desperate; but when it was possible
Hal Dozier played a safe game. Though the people
of the mountain desert considered him invincible,
because he had run down some dozen notorious fighters,
Hal himself felt that this simply increased the chances
that the thirteenth man, by luck or by cunning, would
strike him down.
Therefore he played safe always.
On this occasion he made surety doubly sure.
He could have taken two or three known men, and they
would have been ample to do the work. Instead,
he picked out half a dozen. For just as Henry
Allister had recognized that indescribable element
of danger in the new outlaw, so the manhunter himself
had felt it. Hal Dozier determined that he would
not tempt Providence. He had his commission as
a deputy marshal, and as such he swore in his men and
started for the cabin of Hank Rainer.
When the news had spread, others came
to join him, and he could not refuse. Before
the cavalcade entered the mouth of the canyon he had
some thirty men about him. They were all good
men, but in a fight, particularly a fight at night,
Hal Dozier knew that numbers to excess are apt to
simply clog the working parts of the machine.
All that he feared came to pass. There was one
breathless moment of joy when the horse of Andrew
was shot down and the fugitive himself staggered under
the fire of the posse. At that moment Hal had
poised his rifle for a shot that would end this long
trail, but at that moment a yelling member of his
own group had come between him and his target, and
the chance was gone. When he leaped to one side
to make the shot, Andrew was already among the trees.
Afterward he had sent his men in a
circle to close in on the spot from which the outlaw
made his stand, but they had closed on empty shadows—the
fugitive had escaped, leaving a trail of blood.
However, it was hardly safe to take that trail in
the night, and practically impossible until the sunlight
came to follow the sign. So Hal Dozier had the
three wounded men taken back to the cabin of Hank Rainer.
The stove was piled with wood until
the top was white hot, and then the posse sat about
on the floor, crowding the room and waiting for the
dawn. The three wounded men were made as comfortable
as possible. One had been shot through the hip,
a terrible wound that would probably stiffen his leg
for life; another had gone down with a wound along
the shin bone which kept him in a constant torture.
The third man was hit cleanly through the thigh, and,
though he had bled profusely for some time, he was
now only weak, and in a few weeks he would be perfectly
sound again. The hard breathing of the three was
the only sound in that dim room during the rest of
the night. The story of Hank Rainer had been
told in half a dozen words. Lanning had suspected
him, stuck him up at the point of a gun, and then-refused
to kill him, in spite of the fact that he knew he
was betrayed. After his explanation Hank withdrew
to the darkest corner of the room and was silent.
From time to time looks went toward that corner, and
one thought was in every mind. This fellow, who
had offered to take money for a guest, was damned for
life and branded. Thereafter no one would trust
him, no one would change words with him; he was an
outcast, a social leper. And Hank Rainer knew
it as well as any man.
A cloud of tobacco smoke became dense
in the room, and a halo surrounded the lantern on
the wall. Then one by one men got up and muttered
something about being done with the party, or having
to be at work in the morning, and stamped out of the
room and went down the ravine to the place where the
horses had been tethered. The first thrill of
excitement was gone. Moreover, it was no particular
pleasure to close in on a wounded man who lay somewhere
among the rocks, without a horse to carry him far,
and too badly wounded to shift his position. Yet
he could lie in his shelter, whatever clump of boulders
he chose, and would make it hot for the men who tried
to rout him out. The heavy breathing of the three
wounded men gave point to these thoughts, and the men
of family and the men of little heart got up and left
the posse.
The sheriff made no attempt to keep
them. He retained his first hand-picked group.
In the gray of the morning he rallied these men again.
They went first to the dead, stiff body of the chestnut
gelding and stripped it of the saddle and the pack
of Lanning. This, by silent consent, was to be
the reward of the trapper. This was his in lieu
of the money which he would have earned if they had
killed Lanning on the spot. Hal Dozier stiffly
invited Hank to join them in the manhunt; he was met
by a solemn silence, and the request was not repeated.
Dozier had done a disagreeable duty, and the whole
posse was glad to be free of the traitor. In
the meantime the morning was brightening rapidly, and
Dozier led out his men.
They went to their horses, and, coming
back to the place where Andrew had made his halt and
fired his three shots, they took up the trail.
It was as easy to read as a book.
The sign was never wanting for more than three steps
at a time, and Hal Dozier, reading skillfully, watched
the decreasing distance between heel indentations,
a sure sign that the fugitive was growing weak from
the loss of the blood that spotted the trail.
Straight on to the doorstep of Pop’s cabin went
the trail. Dozier rapped at the door, and the
old man himself appeared. The bony fingers of
one hand were wrapped around the corncob, which was
his inseparable companion, and in the other he held
the cloth with which he had been drying dishes.
Jud turned from his pan of dishwater to cast a frightened
glance over his shoulder. Pop did not wait for
explanations.
“Come in, Dozier,” he
invited. “Come in, boys. Glad to see
you. Ain’t particular comfortable for an
oldster like me when they’s a full-grown, man-eatin’
outlaw layin’ about the grounds. This Lanning
come to my door last night. Me and Jud was sittin’
by the stove. He wanted to get us to bandage
him up, but I yanked my gun off’n the wall and
ordered him away.”
“You got your gun on Lanning—off
the wall—before he had you covered?”
asked Hal Dozier with a singular smile.
“Oh, I ain’t so slow with
my hands,” declared Pop. “I ain’t
half so old as I look, son! Besides, he was bleedin’
to death and crazy in the head. I don’t
figure he even thought about his gun just then.”
“Why didn’t you shoot him down, Pop?
Or take him? There’s money in him.”
“Don’t I know it?
Ain’t I seen the posters? But I wasn’t
for pressin’ things too hard. Not me at
my age, with Jud along. I ordered him away and
let him go. He went down yonder. Oh, you
won’t have far to go. He was about all
in when he left. But I ain’t been out lookin’
around yet this morning. I know the feel of a
forty-five slug in your inwards.”
He placed a hand upon his stomach,
and a growl of amusement went through the posse.
After all, Pop was a known man. In the meantime
someone had picked up the trail to the cliff, and
Dozier followed it. They went along the heel
marks to a place where blood had spurted liberally
over the ground. “Must have had a hemorrhage
here,” said Dozier. “No, we won’t
have far to go. Poor devil!”
And then they came to the edge of
the cliff, where the heel marks ended. “He
walked straight over,” said one of the men.
“Think o’ that!”
“No,” exclaimed Dozier,
who was on his knees examining the marks, “he
stood here a minute or so. First he shifted to
one foot, and then he shifted his weight to the other.
And his boots were turning in. Queer. I
suppose his knees were buckling. He saw he was
due to bleed to death and he took a shorter way!
Plain suicide. Look down, boys! See anything?”
There was a jumble of sharp rocks
at the base of the cliff, and the water of the stream
very close. Nothing showed on the rocks, nothing
showed on the face of the cliff. They found a
place a short distance to the right and lowered a
man down with the aid of a rope. He looked about
among the rocks. Then he ran down the stream for
some distance. He came back with a glum face.
There was no sign of the body of Andrew
Lanning among the rocks. Looking up to the top
of the cliff, from the place where he stood, he figured
that a man could have jumped clear of the rocks by
a powerful leap and might have struck in the swift
current of the stream. There was no trace of
the body in the waters, no drop of blood on the rocks.
But then the water ran here at a terrific rate; the
scout had watched a heavy boulder moved while he stood
there. He went down the bank and came at once
to a deep pool, over which the water was swirling.
He sounded that pool with a long branch and found
no bottom.
“And that makes it clear,”
he said, “that the body went down the water,
came to that pool, was sucked down, and got lodged
in the rocks. Anybody differ? No, gents,
Andrew Lanning is food for the trout. And I say
it’s the best way out of the job for all of
us.”
But Hal Dozier was a man full of doubts.
“There’s only one other thing possible,”
he said. “He might have turned aside at
the house of Pop. He may be there now.”
“But don’t the trail come
here? And is there any back trail to the house?”
one of the men protested.
“It doesn’t look possible,”
nodded Hal Dozier, “but queer things are apt
to happen. Let’s go back and have a look.”