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"He sure looks like the bad man from Coyote Gulch," remarked one who stood in front of "The Last Chance" saloon.
"He ain't heeled," a.s.serted the speaker's companion.
"Heeled! Do you reckon Jim's plumb loco? Jim took care of that."
All of which was music to Sundown. He was making an impression, yet he was not altogether happy. He did not object to being cla.s.sed as a bad man so long as he knew at heart that he was anything but that. Still, he was rather proud of his instant notoriety.
They stopped in front of a square, one-story building. Sundown's companion unlocked the door. "Come on in," he said. "We'll have a smoke and talk things over."
"But I was to see Mr. Kennedy the lawyer," a.s.serted Sundown.
"So? Well, it ain't quite time to see him yet."
Sundown's back became cold and he stared at the stranger with eyes that began to see the drift of things. "You ain't a cop, be you?" he asked timorously.
"They call it 'sheriff' here."
"Well, I call it kind o' warm and I'm goin' outside."
"I wouldn't. One of my deputies is sitting just across the street.
He's a mighty good shot. Can beat me hands down. Suppose you drop back in your chair and tell me what you know about the shooting of Fadeaway."
"Me? You ain't jos.h.i.+n', be you?"
"Never more serious in my life! I'm interested in this case."
"Well, I ain't!" was Sundown's prompt remark. "And I got to go. I'm goin' on privut business for me boss and confidensh.e.l.l. Me and Chance."
"That's all right, my friend. But I have some private and confidential business that can't wait."
"But I ain't done nothin'," whined Sundown, lapsing into his old att.i.tude toward the law.
"Maybe not. Mr. Loring telephoned me that Fadeaway had been shot and that a man answering your description--a tramp, he said--seemed to know something about it. You never was a puncher. You don't get on or off a cayuse like one. From what I learn you were a Hobo when Jack Corliss gave you a job. That's none of my business. I arrest you as a suspicious character, and I guess I'll have to keep you here till I find out more about Fadeaway's case. Have a cigar?"
"Huh! Say, don't you ever get mad?" queried Sundown, impressed by the other's most genial att.i.tude.
The sheriff laughed. "Doesn't pay in my business. Now, you just ease up and tell me what you know. It will save time. Did you ever have trouble with Fadeaway?"
"Not on your life! I give him all the room he wanted."
"Did you know Fernando---one of Loring's herders?"
"I seen him onct. He saved me life from bein' killed by a steer. Did he say I done it?" parried Sundown.
The sheriff's opinion of Sundown's ac.u.men was disturbed. Evidently this queer individual posing as a cowboy was not such a fool, after all.
"No. Have you seen him lately?"
"Nope. Chance and me was over to his camp, but he was gone. We kind o' tracked back there from the place where we found Fadeaway."
"That so?"
"Uhuh. It was like this." And Sundown gave a detailed account of his explorations.
When he had finished, the sheriff made a note on the edge of a newspaper. Then he turned to Sundown. "You're either the deepest hand I've tackled yet, or you're just a plain fool. You don't act like a killer."
"Killer! Say, mister, I wouldn't kill a bug that was bitin' me 'less'n he wouldn't let go. Why, ask Chance there!"
"I wish that dog could talk," said the sheriff, smiling. "Did you know that old Fernando had left the country--crossed the line into New Mexico?"
"What? Him?"
"Yes. I know about where he is."
"Guess his boss fired him for lettin' all the sheep get killed. Guess he had to go somewhere."
The sheriff nodded. "So you were going to take a little trip yourself, were you?"
"For me boss. You ask him. He can tell you."
"I reckon when he finds out where you are he'll come in."
"And you're goin' to pinch me?"
"You're pinched."
"Well, I'm dum clost to gettin' mad. You look here! Do you think I'd be ridin' to Antelope if I done anything like shoot a man? Do you think I'd hand you me gun without sayin' a word? And if you think I didn't shoot Fadeaway, what in h.e.l.l you pinchin' me for? Ain't a guy got a right to live?"
"Yes. Fadeaway had a right to live."
"Well, I sure never wanted to see him cross over. That's the way with you cops. If a fella is a Bo, he gets pinched, anyhow. If he quits bein' a Bo and goes to workin' at somethin', then he gets pinched for havin' been a Bo onct. I been livin' honest and peaceful-like and straight--and I get pinched. Do you wonder a Bo gets tired of tryin'
to brace up?"
"Can't say that I do. Got to leave you now. I'll fix you up comfortable in here." And the sheriff unlocked the door leading to the one-room jail. "I'll talk it over with you in the morning. The wife and kid will sure be surprised to see me back, so I'll mosey down home before somebody scares her to death telling her I'm back in town.
So-long."
Sundown sat on the narrow bed and gazed at the four walls of the room.
"Wife and kid!" he muttered. "Well, I reckon he's got a right to have 'em. Gee Gos.h.!.+ Wonder if he'll feed Chance!"
CHAPTER XVIII
THE SHERIFF AND OTHERS
Chance, disconsolate, wandered about Antelope, returning at last to lie before the door of the sheriff's office. The sheriff, having reestablished himself, for the nonce, in the bosom of his family, strolled out to the street. He called to Chance, who dashed toward him, then stopped with neck bristling.