It was not yet noon when he entered
the gulch, he was part way up the ravine when something
moved at the top of the high wall to his right.
He guessed at once that it was a lookout signaling
the main party of the approach of a stranger, so Andrew
stopped Sally with a word and held his hand high above
his head, facing the point from which he had seen the
movement. There was a considerable pause; then
a man showed on the top of the cliff, and Andrew recognized
Jeff Rankin by his red hair. Yet they were at
too great a distance for conversation, and after waving
a greeting, Rankin merely beckoned Andrew on his way
up the valley. Around the very next bend of the
ravine he found the camp. It was of the most
impromptu character, and the warning of Rankin had
caused them to break it up precipitately, as Andrew
could see by one length of tarpaulin tossed, without
folding, over a saddle. Each of the four was
ready, beside his horse, for flight or for attack,
as their outlook on the cliff should give signal.
But at sight of Andrew and the bay mare a murmur,
then a growl of interest went among them. Even
Larry la Roche grinned a skull-like welcome, and Henry
Allister actually ran forward to receive the newcomer.
Andrew dropped out of the saddle and shook hands with
him.
“I’ve done as you said
I would,” said Andrew. “I’ve
run in a circle, Allister, and now I’m back
to make one of you, if you still want me.”
Allister, laughing joyously, turned
to the other three and repeated the question to them.
There was only one voice in answer.
“Want you?” said Allister,
and his smile made Andrew almost forget the scar which
twisted the otherwise handsome face. “Want
you? Why, man, if we’ve been beyond the
law up to this time, we can laugh at the law now.
Sit down. Hey, Scottie, shake up the fire and
put on some coffee, will you? We’ll take
an hour off.”
Larry la Roche was observed to make a dour face.
“Who’ll tell me it’s
lucky,” he said, “to have a gent that starts
out by makin’ us all stop on the trail?
Is that a good sign?”
But Scottie, with laughter, hushed
him. Yet Larry la Roche remained of all the rest
quite silent during the making of the coffee and the
drinking of it. The others kept up a running fire
of comments and questions, but Larry la Roche, as
though he had never forgiven Andrew for their first
quarrel, remained with his long, bony chin dropped
upon his breast and followed the movements of Andrew
Lanning with restless eyes.
The others were glad to see him, as
Andrew could tell at a glance, but also they were
a bit troubled, and by degrees he made out the reason.
Strange as it seemed, they regretted that he had not
been able to make his break across the mountains.
His presence made them more impregnable than they
had ever been under the indomitable Allister, and yet,
more than the aid of his fighting hand, they would
have welcomed the tidings of a man who had broken
away from the shadow of the law and made good.
For each of the fallen wishes to feel that his exile
is self-terminable.
And therefore Andrew, telling his
story to them in brief, found that they were not by
any means filled with unmixed pleasure. Joe Clune,
with his bright brown hair of youth and his lined,
haggard face of worn middle age, summed up their sentiments
at the end of Andrew’s story: “You’re
what we need with us, Lanning. You and Allister
will beat the world, and it means high times for the
rest of us, but God pity you—that’s
all!”
The pause that followed this solemn
speech was to Andrew like an amen. He glanced
from face to face, and each stern eye met his in gloomy
sympathy.
Then something shot through him which
was to his mind what red is to the eye; it was a searing
touch of reckless indifference, defiance.
“Forget this prayer-meeting
talk,” said Andrew. “I came up here
for action, not mourning. I want something to
do with my hands, not something to think about with
my head!”
Something to think about! It
was like a terror behind him. If he should have
long quiet it would steal on him and look at him over
his shoulder like a face. A little of this showed
in his face; enough to make the circle flash significant
glances at one another.
“You got something behind you,
Andy,” said Scottie. “Come out with
it. It ain’t too bad for us to hear.”
“There’s something behind
me,” said Andrew. “It’s the
one really decent part of my life. And I don’t
want to think about it. Allister, they say you
never let the grass grow under you. What’s
on your hands now?”
“Somebody has been flattering
me,” said the leader quietly, and all the time
he kept studying the face of Andrew. “We
have a little game ahead, if you want to come in on
it. We’re shorthanded, but I’d try
it with you. That makes us six all told.
Six enough, boys?”
“Count me half of one,”
said Larry la Roche. “I don’t feel
lucky about this little party.”
“We’ll count you two times
two,” replied the leader. He added:
“You boys play a game; I’m going to break
in Lanning to our job.”
Taking his horse, he and Andrew rode
at a walk up the ravine. On the way the leader
explained his system briefly and clearly. Told
in short, he worked somewhat as follows: Instead
of raiding blindly right and left, he only moved when
he had planned every inch of ground for the advance
and the blow and the retreat. To make sure of
success and the size of his stakes he was willing
to invest heavily.
“Big business men sink half
a year’s income in their advertising. I
do the same.”
It was not public advertising; it
was money cunningly expended where it would do most
good. Fifty per cent of the money the gang earned
was laid away to make future returns surer. In
twenty places Allister had his paid men who, working
from behind the scenes, gained priceless information
and sent word of it to the outlaw. Trusted officials
in great companies were in communication with him.
When large shipments of gold were to be made, for
instance, he was often warned beforehand. Every
dollar of the consignment was known to him, the date
of its shipment, its route, and the hands to which
it was supposed to fall. Or, again, in many a
bank and prosperous mercantile firm in the mountain
desert he had inserted his paid spies, who let him
know when the safe was crammed with cash and by what
means the treasure was guarded.
Not until he had secured such information
did the leader move. And he still delayed until
every possible point of friction had been noted, every
danger considered, and a check appointed for it, every
method of advance and retreat gone over.
“A good general,” Allister
was fond of saying, “plans in two ways:
for an absolute victory and for an absolute defeat.
The one enables him to squeeze the last ounce of success
out of a triumph; the other keeps a failure from turning
into a catastrophe.”
With everything arranged for the stroke,
he usually posted himself with the band as far as
possible from the place where the actual work was to
be done. Then he made a feint in the opposite
direction—he showed himself or a part of
his gang recklessly. The moment the alarm was
given—even at the risk of having an entire
hostile countryside around him—he started
a whirlwind course in the opposite direction from which
he was generally supposed to be traveling. If
possible, at the ranches of adherents, or at out-of-the-way
places where confederates could act, he secured fresh
horses and dashed on at full speed all the way.
Then, at the very verge of the place
for attack, he gathered his men, rehearsed in detail
what each man was to do, delivered the blow, secured
the spoils, and each man of the party split away from
the others and fled in scattering directions, to assemble
again at a distant point on a comparatively distant
date. There they sat down around a council table,
and there they divided the spoils. No matter how
many were employed, no matter how vast a proportion
of the danger and scheming had been borne by the leader,
he took no more than two shares. Then fifty per
cent of the prize was set aside. The rest was
divided with an exact care among the remaining members
of the gang. The people who had supplied the
requisite information for the coup were always given
their share.
From this general talk Allister descended
to particulars. He talked of the gang itself.
They were quite a fixed quantity. In the last
half dozen years there had not been three casualties.
For one thing, he chose his men with infinite care;
in the second place, he saw to it that they remained
in harmony, and to that end he was careful never to
be tempted into forming an unwieldy crew, no matter
how large the prize. Of the present organization
each was an expert. Larry la Roche had been a
counterfeiter and was a consummate penman. His
forgeries were works of art. “Have you
noticed his hands?”
Scottie Macdougal was an eminent advance
agent, whose smooth tongue was the thing for the very
dangerous and extremely important work of trying out
new sources of information, noting the dependability
of those sources, and understanding just how far and
in what line the tools could be used. Joe Clune
was a past expert in the blowing of safes; not only
did he know everything that was to be known about means
of guarding money and how to circumvent them, but
he was an artist with the “soup,” as Allister
called nitroglycerin.
Jeff Rankin, without a mental equipment
to compare with his companions, was often invaluable
on account of his prodigious strength. Under the
strain of his muscles, iron bars bent like hot wax.
In addition he had more than his share of an ability
which all the members of the gang possessed—an
infinite cunning in the use of weapons and a star-storming
courage and self-confidence.
“And where,” said Andrew
at the end of this long recital, “do I fit in?”
“You begin,” said Allister,
“as the least valuable of my men; before six
months you will be worth the whole set of ’em.
You’ll start as my lieutenant, Lanning.
The boys expect it. You’ve built up a reputation
that counts. They admit your superiority without
question. Larry la Roche squirms under the weight
of it, but he admits it like the rest of’ em.
In a pinch they would obey you nearly as well as they
obey me. It means that, having you to take charge,
I can do what I’ve always wanted to do—I
can give the main body the slip and go off for advance-guard
and rear-guard duty. I don’t dare to do
it now.
“Do you know why? Those
fellows yonder, who seem so chummy, would be at each
other’s throats in ten seconds if I weren’t
around to keep them in order. I know why you’re
here, Lanning. It isn’t the money.
It’s the cursed fear of loneliness and the fear
of having time to think. You want action, action
to fill your mind and blind you. That’s
what I offer you. You’re the keeper of
the four wildcats you see over there. You start
in with their respect. Let them lose their fear
of you for a moment and they’ll go for you.
Treat them like men; think of them as wild beasts.
That’s what they are. The minute they know
you’re without your whip they go for you like
tigers at a wounded trainer. One taste of meat
is all they need to madden them. It’s different
with me. I’m wild, too.”
His eyes gleamed at Andrew.
“And, if they raise you, I think
they’ll find you’ve more iron hidden away
in you than I have. But the way they’ll
find it out will be in an explosion that will wipe
them out. You’ve got to handle them without
that explosion, Lanning. Can you do it?”
The younger man moistened his lips.
“I think this job is going to prove worth while,”
he returned.
“Very well, then. But there
are penalties in your new position. In a pinch
you’ve got to do what I do—see that
they have food enough—go without sleep
if one of them needs your blankets—if any
of ’em gets in trouble, even into a jail, you’ve
got to get him out.”
“Better still,” smiled Andrew.
“And now,” said the leader,
“I’ll tell you about our next job as we
go back to the boys.”