By one thing he knew the utter desperation
of Hal Dozier. For the man had fired while Andrew’s
back was turned. The bullet had followed the
warning cry as swiftly as the strike of a snake follows
its rattle. Luck and his sudden leap forward
had unbalanced the nice aim of Dozier, and perhaps
his mental agitation had contributed to it. But,
at any rate, Andrew was troubled as he cleared the
edge of the trees and cantered Sally not too swiftly
along the Little Silver River toward Las Casas mountains,
a little east of south.
He did not hurry her, partly because
he wished to stay close and make sure of the number
and force of his pursuers, and partly because he already
had a lead sufficient to keep out of any but chance
rifle shots.
He had not long to wait. Men
boiled out of the village like hornets out of a shaken
nest. He could see them buckling on belts while
they were riding with the reins in their teeth.
And they came like the wind, yelling at the sight
of their quarry. Who would not kill a horse for
the sake of saying that he had been within pistol
range of the great outlaw? But, fast as their
horses ran, Dozier, on Gray Peter, was able to keep
up with them and also to range easily from group to
group. Truly, Gray Peter was a glorious animal!
If he were allowed to stretch out after the mare,
what would the result be?
The pursuers, under the direction
of Dozier, spread across the river bottom and, having
formed so that no tricky doubling could leave them
in the lurch on a blind trail, they began to use a
new set of tactics.
Dozier kept Gray Peter at a steady
pace, never varying his gait. But, on either
side of him groups of his followers urged their horses
forward at breakneck speed. Three or four would
send home the spurs and rush up the river bottom after
Andrew. If he did not hurry on they opened fire
with their rifles from a short distance and sent a
hail of random bullets, but Andrew knew that a random
bullet carries just as much force as a well-aimed
one, and chance might be on the side of one of those
shots. He dared not allow them to come too close.
Yet his heart rejoiced as he watched the manner in
which Sally accepted these challenges. She never
once had to lurch into her racing gait; she took the
rushes of the cow ponies behind her by merely lengthening
her stride until the horses behind her were winded
and had to fall back.
If Andrew had let out Sally she would
have walked away from them all, but he dared not do
that. For, after he had run the heart out of the
commoner ones, there remained Gray Peter in reserve,
never changing his pace, never hurrying, falling often
far back, as the groups one after another pushed close
to Sally and made her spurt, gaining again when the
spurts ended one by one.
There were two hours of daylight;
there was one hour of dusk; and all that time the
crowd kept thrusting out its small groups, one after
the other, reaching after Sally like different arms,
and each time she answered the spurt, and always slipped
away into a greater lead at the end of it. And
then, while the twilight was turning into dark, Andrew
looked back and saw the whole crowd rein in their horses
and turn back. There remained a single figure
following him, and that figure was easily seen, because
it was a man on a gray horse. And then Andrew
grasped the plan fully. The posse had played
its part; the thing for which the mountain desert
had waited was come at last, and Hal Dozier was going
on to find his man single-handed and pull him down.
Twice, before complete darkness set in, Andrew had
been on the verge of turning and going back to accept
the challenge of Hal Dozier. Always two things
stopped him. There was first the fear of the
man which he frankly admitted, and more than that
was the feeling that one thing lay before him to be
done before he could meet Dozier and end the long
trail. He must see Anne Withero. She was
about to be married and be drawn out of his world and
into a new one. He felt it was more important
than life or death to see her before that transformation
took place. They would go East, no doubt.
Two thousand miles, the law and the mountains would
fence him away from her after that.
During the last months he accepted
her as he accepted the stars—something
far away from him. Now, by some pretext, by some
wile, he must live to see her once more. After
that let Hal Dozier meet him when he would.
But with this in mind, as soon as
the utter dark shut down, he swerved Sally to the
right and worked slowly up through the mountains, heading
due southwest and out of the valley of the Little Silver.
He kept at it, through a district where the mare could
not even trot a great deal of the time, for two or
more hours. Then he found a little plateau thick
with good grazing for Sally and with a spring near
it. There he camped for the night, without food,
without fire.
And not once during the hours before
morning did he close his eyes. When the first
gray touched the sky he was in the saddle again; before
the sun was up he had crossed the Las Casas and was
going down the great shallow basin of the Roydon River.
A fine, drizzling rain was falling, and Sally, tired
from her hard work of the day before and the long duels
with the horses of the posse, went even more down-heartedly
moody than usual, shuffling wearily, but recovering
herself with her usual catlike adroitness whenever
her footing failed on the steep downslope.
For all her dullness, it was a signal
from Sally that saved Andrew. She jerked up her
head and turned; he looked in the same direction and
saw a form like a gray ghost coming over the hills
to his left, a dim shape through the rain. Gloomily
Andrew watched Hal Dozier come. Gray Peter had
been fresher than Sally at the end of the run of the
day before. He was fresher now. Andrew could
tell that easily by the stretch of his gallop and
the evenness of his pace as he rushed across the slope.
He gave the word to Sally. She tossed up her
head in mute rebellion at this new call for a race,
and then broke into a canter whose first few strides,
by way of showing her anger, were as choppy and lifeless
as the stride of a plow horse.
That was the beginning of the famous
ride from the Las Casas mountains to the Roydon range,
and all the distance across the Roydon valley.
It started with a five-mile sprint—literally
five miles of hot racing in which each horse did its
best. And in that five miles Gray Peter would
most unquestionably have won had not one bit of luck
fallen the mare. A hedge of young evergreen streaked
before Sally, and Andrew put her at the mark; she
cleared it like a bird, jumping easily and landing
in her stride. It was not the first time she
had jumped with Andrew.
But Gray Peter was not a steeplechaser.
He had not been trained to it, and he refused.
His rider had to whirl and go up the line of shrubs
until he found a place to break through. Then
he was after Sally again. But the moment that
Andrew saw the marshal had been stopped he did not
use the interim to push the mare and increase her lead.
Very wisely he drew her back to the long, rocking
canter which was her natural gait, and Sally got the
breath which Gray Peter had run out of her. She
also regained priceless lost ground, and when the
gray came in view of the quarry again his work was
all to do over again. Hal Dozier tried again
in straightaway running. It had been his boast
that nothing under the saddle in the mountain desert
could keep away from him in a stretch of any distance,
and he rode Gray Peter desperately to make his boast
good. He failed. If that first stretch had
been unbroken—but there his chance was
gone, and, starting the second spurt, Andrew came to
realize one greatly important truth—Sally
could not sprint for any distance, but up to a certain
pace she ran easily and without labor. He made
it his point to see that she was never urged beyond
that pace. He found another thing, that she took
a hill in far better style than Peter, and she did
far better in the rough, but on the level going he
ate up her handicap swiftly.
With a strength of his own found and
a weakness in his pursuer, Andrew played remorselessly
to that weakness with his strength. He sought
the choppy ground as a preference and led the stallion
through it wherever he could; he swung to the right,
where there was a stretch of rolling hills, and once
more Gray Peter had a losing space before him.
So they came to the river itself,
with Gray Peter comfortably in the rear, but running
well within his strength. Andrew paused in the
shallows to allow Sally one swallow; then he went on.
But Dozier did not pause for even this. It was
a grave mistake.
And so the miles wore on. Sally
was still running like a swallow for lightness, but
Andrew knew by her breathing that she was giving vital
strength to the effort. He talked to her constantly.
He told her how Gray Peter ran behind them. He
encouraged her with pet words. And Sally seemed
to understand, for she flicked one ear back to listen,
and then she pricked them both and kept at her work.
It was a heart-tearing thing to see
her run to the point of lather and then keep on.
They were in low hills, and Gray Peter
was losing steadily. They reached a broad flat,
and the stallion gained with terrible insistence.
Looking back, Andrew could see that the marshal had
stripped away every vestige of his pack. He followed
that example with a groan. And still Gray Peter
gained.
It was the last great effort for the
stallion. Before them rose the foothills of the
Roydon mountains; behind them the Las Casas range was
lost in mist. It seemed that they had been galloping
like this for an infinity of time, and Andrew was
numb from the shoulders down. If he reached those
hills Gray Peter was beaten. He knew it; Hal Dozier
knew it; and the two great horses gave all their strength
to the last duel of the race.
The ears of Sally no longer pricked.
They lay flat on her neck. The amazing lift was
gone from her gait, and she pounded heavily with the
forelegs. And still she struggled on. He
looked back, and Gray Peter still gained, an inch
at a time, and his stride did not seem to have abated.
The one bitter question now was whether Sally would
not collapse under the effort. With every lurch
of her feet, Andrew expected to feel her crumble beneath
him. And yet she went on. She was all heart,
all nerve, and running on it. Behind her came
Gray Peter, and he also ran with his head stretched
out.
He was within rifle range now.
Why did not Dozier fire? Perhaps he had set his
heart on actually running Sally down, not dropping
his prey with a distant shot.
And still they flew across the flat.
The hills were close now, and sometimes, when the
drizzling rain lifted, it seemed that the Roydon mountains
were exactly above them, leaning out over him like
a shadow. He called on Sally again and again.
He touched her for the first time in her life with
spurs, and she found something in the depths of her
heart and her courage to answer with. She ran
again with a ghost of her former buoyancy, and Gray
Peter was held even. Not an inch could he gain
after that. Andrew saw his pursuer raise his
quirt and flog. It was useless. Each horse
was running itself out, and no power could get more
speed out of the pounding limbs.
And with his head still turned, Andrew
felt a shock and flounder. Sally had almost fallen.
He jerked sharply up on the reins, and she broke into
a staggering trot. Then Andrew saw that they had
struck the slope of the first hill, a long, smooth
rise which she would have taken at full speed in the
beginning of the race, but now though she labored bitterly,
she could not raise a gallop. The trot was her
best effort.
There was a shrill yelling behind,
and Andrew saw Dozier, a hand brandished above his
head. He had seen Sally break down; Gray Peter
would catch her; his horse would win that famous duel
of speed and courage. Rifle? He had forgotten
his rifle. He would go in, he would overhaul
Sally, and then finish the chase with a play of revolvers.
And in expectation of that end, Andrew drew his revolver.
It hung the length of his arm; he found that his muscles
were numb from the cold and the cramped position from
the elbow down. Shoot? He was as helpless
as though he had no gun at all. He beat his hands
together to bring back the blood. He thrashed
his arms against the pommel of the saddle. There
was only a dull pain; it would take long minutes to
bring those hands back to the point of service, and
in the meantime Gray Peter galloped upon him from
behind!
Well, he would let Sally do her best.
For the last time he called on her; for the last time
she struggled to respond, and Andrew looked back and
grimly watched the stallion sweeping across the last
portion of the flat ground, closer, closer, and then,
at the very base of the slope, Gray Peter tossed up
his head, floundered, and went down, hurling his rider
over his head. Andrew, fascinated, let Sally fall
into a walk, while he watched the singular, convulsive
struggles of Gray Peter to gain his feet. Hal
Dozier was up again; he ran to his horse, caught his
head, and at the same moment the stallion grew suddenly
limp. The weight of his head dragged the marshal
down, and then Andrew saw that Dozier made no effort
to rise again.
He sat with the head of the horse
in his lap, his own head buried in his hands, and
Andrew knew then that Gray Peter was dead.