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"Yes, I do," averred Van Horn. "But everybody doesn't know you as well as I do. And your name suffers because you don't get along with the cattlemen--Doubleday, Pettigrew and the rest."
"What then?"
"What then?" echoed Van Horn, feeling the up-hill pull. "Why, line up with us against these rustlers. We're going to have a big get-together barbecue this summer and when it's pulled we want you there. You'll have a friend in every man on the range--however some of 'em feel now. They know the stuff you're made of, Jim; they know if you put your hand to your gun with them, you'll stay; and if you do it, they know it's good-by to the rustlers."
Closely as Van Horn, while speaking, watched the effect of his words, it was impossible to gather from Laramie's face the slightest clue as to the impression they were making. Laramie sat quite relaxed, his back to the corner, his legs crossed, listening. He looked straight ahead without so much as blinking. Van Horn, nervous and impatient, scrutinized him: "That's my hand, Jim," he said flatly. "What have you got?"
Laramie paused. After a moment he turned his eyes on his questioner: "No hand. This is not my game."
"Make it your game and your game in this country is made. Doubleday and Dan Pettigrew want you. They're the men that run this country--what do you say?"
"The men that run this country can't run me."
Van Horn, in spite of his a.s.surance, felt the blow. But he put on a front. "What makes you talk that way?" he flared.
"This is the same bunch," continued Laramie evenly, "that sent two different men to get me two years ago--and when I defended myself--had me indicted. That indictment is still hanging for all I know. This is the bunch that owns the district court."
Van Horn made a violent gesture. "What's the use raking up old sores?
That's past and gone. That indictment's been quashed long ago."
"This is the bunch," and Laramie spoke even more deliberately; he looked directly, almost disconcertingly at Van Horn himself, "that sent the men to rip off my wire just a while ago. I tracked 'em to Doubleday's and if I'd found Doubleday or you or Stone there that day--if I'd got my eyes on Barb Doubleday that day--you'd 've turned the men that pulled that wire over to me or I'd known the reason why.
"Now these same critters and you have the gall to talk to me about joining hands. h.e.l.l, I'd quicker join hands with a bunch of rattlesnakes. When that crowd want me let them come and get me. I'm not chiding. They talk about cattle thieves! Why, your outfit would steal the spurs off a rustler's heels. And when men like Hawk and Yankee Robinson and German set up a little ranch with a few head of cows for themselves your bunch blacklists them, refuses 'em work anywhere on the range. Where did Dutch Henry learn to steal? Working for Barb Doubleday; he branded mavericks for him, played dummy for his land entries, swore to false affidavits for him. Now when he turns around and steals the steers he stole for Barb, Barb has the nerve to ask me to round him up at my proper risk and run him out of the country!"
Van Horn rose: "That's the answer, is it?"
Laramie sat still. He looked dead ahead: "What did it sound like?" he asked, as Van Horn stood looking at him.
"Just the same, Jim," muttered Van Horn, "the rustlers have got to go."
Laramie looked across the office: "That all may be," he observed, rising.
And he repeated as Van Horn started away: "That all may be. And the men that ripped off my wire have got to put it back. Tell 'em I said so."
Van Horn whirled in a flash of anger: "You talk as if you think I'd ripped it off myself."
"I do think so."
For one instant the two men, confronting, eyed each other, Van Horn's face aflame. Both carried Colt's revolvers in hip holsters; Van Horn's gun slung at his right hip, Laramie's slung at his left. Both were known capable of extremes. Then the critical moment pa.s.sed. Van Horn broke into a laugh; without a yellow drop in his veins, as far as personal courage went, he had thought twice before attempting to draw where no man had yet drawn successfully. He put out his hand in frank fas.h.i.+on: "Jim, you wrong yourself as much as me when you talk that way."
He made his peace as well as it could be made in words. But when his protestations were ended Laramie only said: "That all may be, Harry. But whoever pulled my wire--and left it in the creek--will put it back--if it's ten years from now."
The two men, Van Horn still talking, made their way back to the billiard hall--Laramie refusing to drink, and halting for brief greetings when a.s.sailed by acquaintances. After they parted, Van Horn, as soon as he could escape notice, pa.s.sed again through the door leading to the hotel office. He walked up the main stairway to the second floor, thence to the third floor and following a corridor stopped in front of the last room, slipped a pa.s.s key into the lock and, opening the door, entered and closed it behind him.
Two men sat in the room, Doubleday and Stone. Stone was just out of the barber's chair, his hair parted and faultlessly plastered on both sides across his forehead, and his face shaven and powdered. His forehead drawn in horizontal wrinkles rather than vertical ones, looked lower and flatter because of them. To add to the truculence of his natural expression, he was now somewhat under the influence of liquor and looked perplexed.
Van Horn did not wait to be questioned; he walked directly to the table between the two men and took a cigar from the open box: "Can't do a thing with that fellow," he reported brusquely.
Doubleday, by means of questions, got the story of the fruitless interview. Stone listened. The slow movement of his eyes showed an effort but none of the story escaped him.
Van Horn, answering with some impatience, had lighted one cigar, and bunching half a dozen more in his hand stowed them in an upper waistcoat pocket. Doubleday, between heavy jaws and large teeth, s.h.i.+fted slowly or chewed savagely at a half-burned cigar and bored into Van Horn. Van Horn was in no mood for speculative comment: "You might as well talk to a wildcat," he said. "Pulling that wire has left him sore all over."
Doubleday looked at Stone vindictively: "That was your scheme."
"No more than it was Van Horn's," retorted Stone.
"What's the use squabbling over that now?" demanded Van Horn impatiently.
"I'm done, Barb. You've got to go ahead without him."
Doubleday chewed his cigar in silence. Van Horn, restless and humiliated, spoke angrily and thought fast. From time to time he looked quickly at Stone--the foreman was in condition to do anything.
"Look here, Tom," exclaimed Van Horn in low tones, "suppose you go downstairs and give him a talk yourself. What do you say, Barb?" He shot the words at Doubleday like bullets. Doubleday understood and his teeth clicked sharply. He said nothing---only stared at the foreman with his stony gray eyes. Stone drew his revolver from his hip and, breaking the gun, slipped out the cartridges and slipped the five mechanically back into place.
Laramie in the meantime had joined a group of men at the upper end of the bar in the billiard hall--McAlpin, Joe Kitchen's barn boss; Henry Sawdy, the big sporty stock buyer of the town, and the profane but always dependable druggist and railroad surgeon, Doctor Carpy. With one of these, Sawdy, Harry Tenison from behind the bar was talking. He interrupted himself to hold his hand over toward Laramie: "Been looking for you, scout," he said, in balanced tones. "Been looking for you," he repeated, releasing Laramie's hand and holding up his own. "If you'd failed me today, Jim----"
"I wouldn't fail you, Harry."
"It's well you didn't--champagne, Luke," he added, calling to a solemn-faced bartender who wore a forehead shade.
"No champagne for me, Harry," protested Laramie.
"What are you going to have?" asked the mild-voiced bartender, perfunctorily.
Laramie tilted his hat brim: "Why," he answered, after everybody had contributed advice, "if I've got to take something on this little boy, a little whisky, I suppose, Luke."
"No poison served here tonight, Jim," growled Sawdy, throwing his bloodshot eyes on Laramie.
"I don't want any, anyway, Henry," was the unmoved retort.
Luke, wrapping the cork of the champagne bottle under his long fingers, hesitated. Tenison, looking with his heavily-lidded eyes, did not waver: "You'll drink what I tell you tonight," he maintained coldly. "Open it, Luke."
Laramie stood sidewise while talking, one foot on the rail, his elbow resting on the bar, and with his head turned he was looking back at Tenison, who stood directly opposite him behind the bar. Laramie submitted to the dictation without further protest: "A man will try anything once," was his only comment.
As he uttered the words he felt a point pressed tightly against his right side and what was of greater import, heard the familiar click of a gun hammer.
It was too late to look around; too late to make the slightest move. All that Laramie could get out of the situation, without moving, he read, motionless, in Tenison's eyes, for Tenison was now looking straight at the a.s.sailant and with a frozen expression that told Laramie of his peril. The next instant Laramie heard rough words:
"Turn around here, Jim."
They told him all he needed to know, for in them he recognized the voice.
In the instant between hearing the words and obeying, a singular change took place in the Falling Wall ranchman's eyes. Looking over at Tenison his eyes had been keen and clear. Slowly and with a faint smile he turned his head. When his eyes met those of Tom Stone, who confronted him pressing the muzzle of a c.o.c.ked Colt's forty-five gun against his stomach, they were soft and glazed. Laramie had changed in an instant from a man that had not tasted liquor to a man half tipsy.
It was a feint, but a feint made with an accurate understanding of a dangerous enemy.
CHAPTER X
LARAMIE COUNTS FIVE