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"I knowed how it had to end," he would repeat when he had rambled again around all aspects of the mysterious encounter. "I knowed if they kept after Jim how it _had_ to end. Why, h.e.l.l, gentlemen," he would aver, planting a hob-nailed barn boot on the foot-rail, while swinging on one elbow from the polished face of the mahogany, "I've _seen_ the boy stop a coyote on the go, at 900 yards--what could you expect? No, no, not again. What? Well, go ahead; just a dash o' bitters in mine, Luke.
Thank you.
"Well, boys, accordin' to my notion, there's two men never would be missed in this country, anyway, if n.o.body ever seen 'em again. 'N' if my count is anywhere near right, n.o.body ever will see 'em again. They chased Laramie one foot too far--just one foot--'n' it looks as if they got what was comin' to 'em. I won't name 'em--they won't bother no more in this country."
He had become so absorbed in his recital that the entrance into the bar-room from the barber shop of a booted and spurred man escaped him.
The man, advancing deliberately, heard the last of McAlpin's words. He got fairly close to the unsuspecting barn boss un.o.bserved. A few in the listening circle, noting the approach of the new arrival, stepped back a little--for, of all men that might be expected, after McAlpin's dark intimations, to appear, then and there, alive and aggressive, was Tom Stone.
Freshly barbered, head forward, keen eyes peering from under staring, sandy brows; thumbs stuck in his belt and his face framing a confident leer. Stone sauntering forward, listened to McAlpin. So intent was McAlpin on impressing his hearers that the foreman elbowed his way, before McAlpin saw him, directly to the front.
"So you won't name 'em?" grinned Stone, confronting the startled speaker. McAlpin caught his breath. The wiry Scotchman was not a coward, but he knew the merciless cruelty of Stone. Armed, McAlpin would have been no man to affront his deadly skill; he now faced him unarmed.
Stone, leaving his right hand hooked by the thumb in his belt, rested his left elbow on the bar. The bartender, Luke, just back of him, leaning forward, mopped the bar more slowly and, listening, moved a little farther down the bar until his fingers rested on an electric b.u.t.ton underneath connecting with Tenison's office in the hotel.
"Name the two men, McAlpin," said Stone, ominously, "while you're able to talk."
McAlpin exhausted his ingenuity in his efforts to evade his danger, but Stone drew the noose about him tighter and tighter. He played the unlucky man with all the malice of an executioner. He baited him and toyed with him. McAlpin, white, stood his ground. His fighting blood was all there and he broke at length into a torrent of abuse of the man that he realized was bent on murdering him.
Made eloquent by desperation, McAlpin never rose to greater heights of profane candor. It was as if he were making his last will and testament of hatred and contempt for his murderer, and when he had showered on his enemy every epithet stored in a retentive memory he struck his empty gla.s.s on the bar and shouted:
"Now, you h.e.l.lcat, shoot!"
It might have been thought Stone would check such a public castigation.
He did not. Impervious to abuse, because master of the situation, he seemed to enjoy his victim's fury. "I'm finis.h.i.+ng up with your gang around here, McAlpin," he snarled, never losing his grin. "You've run a rustler's barn in Sleepy Cat long enough. I've warned you and I've warned Kitchen. It didn't do no good. Fill up your gla.s.s, McAlpin."
"Stone, I'd never fill up a gla.s.s with you if I was in h.e.l.l 'n' you could pull me out."
Stone's grin deepened: "Fill up your gla.s.s, McAlpin."
Onlookers, knowing what a refusal would mean, held their breaths. But McAlpin, white and stubborn, with another oath, again refused.
"Fill it, McAlpin," urged a quiet voice behind the bar. Looking quickly, like a hunted animal, around, McAlpin saw Harry Tenison, white-faced and cold, pus.h.i.+ng the bottle in friendly fas.h.i.+on toward him. Every man, save one, watching, hoped he would humor at least that much his expectant murderer. But the barn-boss had reached a state of fear and anger that inflamed every stubborn drop in his blood. He swore he would not fill his gla.s.s.
Tenison spoke grimly: "Will you drink it if I fill it, you mule?" he demanded, picking up the bottle and pouring into both gla.s.ses in front of him.
In the dead silence McAlpin's brain was in a storm. He collected a few of his wildly flying thoughts. Perhaps he remembered the wife and Loretta and the babies; at all events he stared at the liquor, gulped to see whether he could swallow, and, reaching forward, picked up the gla.s.s. Stone lifted his own. The two men, their gla.s.ses poised, eyed each other.
Stone barbed a taunt for his victim: "Goin' to drink, air you?" he sneered, wreathing his eyes in leering wrinkles.
"No," said a man, unnoticed until then by any except Tenison and Luke, and speaking as he pushed forward through the crowd to face both Stone and McAlpin. "He's not going to drink."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "No," said a man, . . . as he pushed forward to face both Stone and McAlpin. "He's not going to drink"]
Stone's gla.s.s was half-way up to his lips; he looked across it and saw himself face to face with Jim Laramie. Laramie who, unseen, had heard enough of the quarrel, stood with his coat slung over his right shoulder; one arm he carried in a sling, but as far as this concerned Stone, it was the wrong arm. Daring neither to raise the whisky to his lips nor to set the gla.s.s down, lest Laramie, suspecting he meant to draw, should shoot, Stone stood rooted. "McAlpin's not going to drink, Stone," repeated Laramie. "What are you going to do about it?"
The mere sight of Laramie would have been a vastly unpleasant surprise.
But to find himself faced by him in fighting trim after what had taken place in the morning was an upset.
"What am I going to do about it?" echoed Stone, lifting his eyebrows and grinning anew. "What are you going to do about it, Jim?" he demanded. "You and me used to bunk together, didn't we?"
"I bunked with a rattlesnake once. I didn't know it," responded Laramie dryly. "Next morning the rattlesnake didn't know it."
"Jim, I'll drink you just once for old times."
"I wouldn't drink with you, Stone. No man would drink with you if he wasn't afraid of you. And after tonight n.o.body's going to be afraid of you. You're a thief among thieves, Tom Stone: a bully, a coward, a skulker. You shoot from cover. When Barb made you foreman, you and Van Horn stole his cattle, and Dutch Henry sold 'em for you and divvied with you. Then, for fear Barb would get wise, you and Van Horn got up the raid and killed Dutch Henry, so he couldn't talk.
"Now you're going to quit this stuff. No more thieving, no more man-killing, no bullyragging, no nothing. Tenison will clear this room. Hold your gla.s.s right where it is, till the last man gets out.
When he gets out set down your gla.s.s; you'll have time enough allowed you. After that, draw where you stand. You're not ent.i.tled to a chance. G.o.d, Stone, I'd _rather_ bunk with a rattlesnake than with you. I'd rather kill one than kill a thing like you. Your head ought to be pounded with a rock. You're ent.i.tled to nothing. But you can have your chance. Get the boys out of here, Harry."
Not for one instant did he take his eye off Stone's eye, or raise his tone above a speaking voice, and Laramie's voice was naturally low. To catch his syllables, listeners crowded in and craned their necks. Few men withdrew but everyone courteously and sedulously got out of the prospective line of fire.
What it cost Laramie even to stand on his feet and talk, Tenison could most shrewdly estimate. From behind the bar he coldly regarded the wounded man. He knew that Laramie must have escaped Carpy and escaped Belle, to look for the men that had tried that morning to kill him.
Having found Stone he meant then and there to fight.
Tenison likewise realized that he was in no condition to do it, and promptly intervened: "Don't look at me, Jim," he said. "But I'm talking. There's no man in Sleepy Cat can clear this room now. Most of this crowd are your friends. They want to see this h.e.l.l-hound cleaned up. But you know what it means to some of 'em if two guns cut loose."
Stone saw the gate open. He welcomed a chance to dodge. Eyeing Laramie, he swallowed his drink, set his gla.s.s on the bar. With a voice dried and cracked, he cried: "Keep your hands off, Tenison. I'll give Jim Laramie all the fight he wants, here or anywhere."
Tenison was willing to bridge the crisis with abuse. "Shut up, you coyote," he remarked, with complete indifference.
"You'll throw a man down no matter how much of your whisky he drinks, won't you, Tenison?" cried Stone.
Tenison, both hands judicially spread on the bar, seemed to fail to hear. "McAlpin," he said contemptuously, "walk around behind Laramie and lift Stone's gun."
Stone started violently. "Look out, Tenison! I lift my gun when there's men to stand by and see fair play!"
A roar of laughter went up. "I don't lift it for no frame-up," he shouted, turning angrily toward the unsympathetic crowd. "Get out!"
cried one voice far enough back to be safe. "Send for Barb," shouted a second. "Page Van Horn," piped a barber, as Stone moved toward the door.
The baited foreman turned only for a parting shot at Laramie: "I'll see _you_ later."
"If I was your friend," retorted Laramie, unmoved, "I'd advise you not to. If you ride my trail don't expect anything more from me. And I make this town," he hammered home the point with his right forefinger indicating the floor, "and the Falling Wall range _my_ trail."
"Stone ought to have tried it tonight," observed Tenison at the cash register. He was speaking to his bartender long after Stone had disappeared, Laramie had been put to bed again and the billiard hall had been deserted. "He'll never get a chance again at Laramie half shot to pieces."
CHAPTER x.x.xVII
KATE BURNS THE STEAK
Laramie, held for a week in bed, learned from the Doctor of Belle's outburst at Kate, and, acting through him and with him, arranged peace.
Complaining of a cold, with her other troubles, Belle took to bed when Laramie was moved to the hotel and Kate turned in to nurse her.
"You won't starve while she stays, Belle," declared Carpy, leaving Kate in possession at the cottage, "and while I think of it," he added, turning to Kate, "Laramie says he wants to see you. You call him up on the telephone, will you?"
"What for, doctor?"