There was no further attempt at challenging
his authority. When he ordered Clune and La Roche
to bring in boughs for bedding—since they
were to stop in the shack overnight—they
went silently. But it was such a silence as comes
when the wind falls at the end of a day and in a silent
sky the clouds pile heavily, higher and higher.
Andrew took the opportunity to speak to Scottie Macdougal.
He told Scottie simply that he needed him, and with
him at his back he could handle the others, and more,
too. He was surprised to see a twinkle in the
eye of the Scotchman.
“Why, Andy,” said the
canny fellow, “didn’t you see me pass you
the wink? I was with you all the time!”
Andrew thanked him and went into the
cabin to arrange for lights. He had no intention
of shirking a share in the actual work of the camp;
even though Allister had set that example for his
following. He took some lengths of pitchy pine
sticks and arranged them for torches. One of them
alone would send a flare of yellow light through the
cabin; two made a comfortable illumination. But
he worked cheerlessly. The excitement of the
robbery and the chase was over, and then the conflict
with the men was passing. He began to see things
truly by the drab light of retrospection. The
bullets of Allister and Clune might have gone home—
they were intended to kill, not to wound. And
if there had been two deaths he, Andrew Lanning, would
have been equally guilty with the men who handled
the guns, for he had been one of the forces which made
that shooting possible.
It was an ugly way to look at it—very
ugly. It kept a frown on Andrew’s face,
while he arranged the torches in the main room of the
shack and then put one for future reference in the
little shed which leaned against the rear of the main
structure. He arranged his own bed in this second
room, where the saddles and other accouterments were
piled. It was easily explained, since there was
hardly room for five men in the first room. But
he had another purpose. He wanted to separate
himself from the others, just as Allister always did.
Even in a crowded room Allister would seem aloof,
and Andrew determined to make the famous leader his
guide.
Above all he was troubled by what
Scottie had said. He would have felt easy at
heart if the Scotchman had met him with an argument
or with a frown or honest opposition or with a hearty
handshake, to say that all was well between them.
But this cunning lie—this cunning protestation
that he had been with the new leader from the first,
put Andrew on his guard. For he knew perfectly
well that Scottie had not been on his side during
the crisis with La Roche. Macdougal sat before
the door, his metal flask of whisky beside him.
It was a fault of Allister, this permitting of whisky
at all times and in all places, after a job was finished.
And while it made the other men savage beasts, it turned
Scottie Macdougal into a wily, smiling snake.
He had bit the heel of more than one man in his drinking
bouts.
Presently La Roche and Clune came
in. They had been talking together again.
Andrew could tell by the manner in which they separated,
as soon as they entered the room, and by their voices,
which they made loud and cheerful; and, also, by the
fact that they avoided looking at each other.
They were striving patently to prove that there was
nothing between them; and if Andrew had been on guard,
now he became tinglingly so.
They arranged their bunks; Larry la
Roche took from his vest a pipe with a small bowl
and a long stem and sat down cross-legged to smoke.
Andrew suggested that Larry produce the contents of
his saddlebag and share the spoils of war.
He brought it out willingly enough
and spilled it out on the improvised table, a glittering
mass of gold trinkets, watches, jewels. He picked
out of the mass a chain of diamonds and spread it out
on his snaky fingers so that the light could play
on it. Andrew knew nothing about gems, but he
knew that the chain must be worth a great deal of money.
“This,” said Larry, “is
my share. You gents can have the rest and split
it up.”
“A nice set of sparklers,”
nodded Clune, “but there’s plenty left
to satisfy me.”
“What you think,” declared
Scottie, “ain’t of any importance, Joe.
It’s what the chief thinks that counts.
Is it square, Lanning?”
Andrew flushed at the appeal and the
ugly looks which La Roche and Clune cast toward him.
He could have stifled Scottie for that appeal, and
yet Scottie was smiling in the greatest apparent good
nature and belief in their leader. His face was
flushed, but his lips were bloodless. Alcohol
always affected him in that manner.
“I don’t know the value of the stones,”
said Andrew.
“Don’t you?” murmured
Scottie. “I forgot. Thought maybe you
would. That was something that Allister did know.”
The new leader saw a flash of glances toward Scottie,
but the latter continued to eye the captain with a
steady and innocent look.
“Scottie,” decided Andrew instantly, “is
my chief enemy.”
If he could detach one man to his
side all would be well. Two against three would
be a simple thing, as long as he was one of the two.
But four against one—and such a four as
these—was hopeless odds. There seemed
little chance of getting Joe Clune. There remained
only Jeff Rankin as his possibly ally, and already
he had stepped on Jeff’s toes sorely, by making
the tired giant stand guard. He thought of all
these things, of course, in a flash. And then
in answer to his thoughts Jeff Rankin appeared.
His heavy footfall crashed inside the door. He
stopped, panting, and, in spite of his news, paused
to blink at the flash of jewels.
“It’s comin’,”
said Jeff. “Boys, get your guns and scatter
out of the cabin. Duck that light! Hal Dozier
is comin’ up the valley.”
There was not a single exclamation,
but the lights went out as if by magic; there were
a couple of light, hissing sounds, such as iron makes
when it is whipped swiftly across leather.
“How’d you know him by
this light?” asked Larry la Roche, as they went
out of the door. Outside they found everything
brilliant with the white moonshine of the mountains.
“Nobody but Hal Dozier rides
twistin’ that way in the saddle. I’d
tell him in a thousand. It’s old wounds
that makes him ride like that. We got ten minutes.
He’s takin’ the long way up the canyon.
And they ain’t anybody with him.”
“If he’s come alone,”
said Andrew, “he’s come for me and not
for the rest of you.”
No one spoke. Then Larry la Roche:
“He wants to make it man to man. That’s
clear. That’s why he pulled up his hoss
and waited for Allister to make the first move for
his gun. It’s a clean challenge to some
one of us.”
Andrew saw his chance and used it mercilessly.
“Which one of you is willing
to take the challenge?” he asked. “Which
one of you is willing to ride down the canyon and meet
him alone? La Roche, I’ve heard you curse
Dozier.”
But Larry la Roche answered:
“What’s this fool talk about takin’
a challenge? I say, string out behind the hills
and pot him with rifles.”
“One man, and we’re five,”
said Jeff Rankin. “It ain’t sportin’,
Larry. I hate to hear you say that. We’d
be despised all over the mountains if we done it.
He’s makin’ his play with a lone hand,
and we’ve got to meet him the same way.
Eh, chief?”
It was sweet to Andrew to hear that
appeal. And he saw them turn one by one toward
him in the moonlight and wait. It was his first
great tribute. He looked over those four wolfish
figures and felt his heart swelling.
“Wish me luck, boys,”
he said, and without another word he turned and went
down the hillside.
The others watched him with amazement.
He felt it rather than saw it, and it kept a tingle
in his blood. He felt, also, that they were spreading
out to either side to get a clear view of the fight
that was to follow, and it occurred to him that, even
if Hal Dozier killed him, there would not be one chance
in a thousand of Hal’s getting away. Four
deadly rifles would be covering him.
It must be that a sort of madness
had come on Dozier, advancing in this manner, unsupported
by a posse. Or, perhaps, he had no idea that the
outlaws could be so close. He expected a daylight
encounter high up the mountains.
But Andrew went swiftly down the ravine.
Broken cliffs, granite boulders jumped
up on either side of him, and the rocks were pale
and glimmering under the moon. This one valley
seemed to receive the light; the loftier mountains
rolling away on each side were black as jet, with
sharp, ragged outlines against the sky. It was
a cold light, and the chill of it went through Andrew.
He was afraid, afraid as he had been when Buck Heath
faced him in Martindale, or when Bill Dozier ran him
down, or when the famous Sandy cornered him.
His fingers felt brittle, and his breath came and went
in short gasps, drawn into the upper part of his lungs
only.
Behind him, like an electric force
pushing him on, the outlaws watched his steps.
They, also, were shuddering with fear, and he knew
it.
Dozier was coming, fresh from another kill.
“Only one man I’d think
twice about meeting,” Allister had said in the
old days, and he had been right. Yet there were
thousands who had sworn that Allister was invincible—that
he would never fall before a single man.
He thought, too, of the lean face
and the peculiar, set eye of Dozier. The man
had no fear, he had no nerves; he was a machine, and
death was his business.
And was he, Andrew Lanning, unknown
until the past few months, now going down to face
destruction, as full of fear as a girl trembling at
the dark? What was it that drew them together,
so unfairly matched?
He could still see only the white
haze of the moonshine before him, but now there was
the clicking of hoofs on the rock. Dozier was
coming. Andrew walked squarely out into the middle
of the ravine and waited. He had set his teeth.
The nerves on the bottom of his feet were twitching.
Something freezing cold was beginning at the tips of
his fingers. How long would it take Dozier to
come?
An interminable time. The hoofbeats
actually seemed to fade out and draw away at one time.
Then they began again very near him, and now they
stopped. Had Dozier seen him around the elbow
curve? That heartbreaking instant passed, and
the clicking began again. Then the rider came
slowly in view. First there was the nodding head
of the cow pony, then the foot in the stirrup, then
Hal Dozier riding a little twisted in the saddle—a
famous characteristic of his.
He came on closer and closer.
He began to seem huge on the horse. Was he blind
not to see the figure that waited for him?
A voice that was not his, that he
did not recognize, leaped out from between his teeth
and tore his throat: “Dozier!”
The cow pony halted with a start;
the rider jerked straight in his saddle; the echo
of the call barked back from some angling cliff face
down the ravine. All that before Dozier made his
move. He had dropped the reins, and Andrew, with
a mad intention of proving that he himself did not
make the first move toward his weapon, had folded his
arms.
He did not move through the freezing
instant that followed. Not until there was a
convulsive jerk of Dozier’s elbow did he stir
his folded arms. Then his right arm loosened,
and the hand flashed down to his holster.
Was Dozier moving with clogged slowness,
or was it that he had ceased to be a body, that he
was all brain and hair-trigger nerves making every
thousandth part of a second seem a unit of time?
It seemed to Andrew that the marshal’s hand
dragged through its work; to those who watched from
the sides of the ravine, there was a flash of fire
from his gun before they saw even the flash of the
steel out of the holster. The gun spat in the
hand of Dozier, and something jerked at the shirt of
Andrew beside his neck. He himself had fired
only once, and he knew that the shot had been too
high and to the right of his central target; yet he
did not fire again. Something strange was happening
to Hal Dozier. His head had nodded forward as
though in mockery of the bullet; his extended right
hand fell slowly, slowly; his whole body began to sway
and lean toward the right. Not until that moment
did Andrew know that he had shot the marshal through
the body.
He raced to the side of the cattle
pony, and, as the horse veered away, Hal Dozier dropped
limply into his arms. He lay with his limbs sprawling
at odd angles beside him. His muscles seemed paralyzed,
but his eyes were bright and wide, and his face perfectly
composed.
“There’s luck for you,”
said Hal Dozier calmly. “I pulled it two
inches to the right, or I would have broken your neck
with the slug—anyway, I spoiled your shirt.”
The cold was gone from Andrew, and
he felt his heart thundering and shaking his body.
He was repeating like a frightened child, “For
God’s sake, Hal, don’t die—don’t
die.”
The paralyzed body did not move, but
the calm voice answered him: “You fool!
Finish me before your gang comes and does it for you!”