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"Not at all."
"But you might. In that case----" He drew Lounsbury close, and spoke with his lips to the storekeeper's ear. "But you understand," he said aloud as he concluded, "that I know nothing about it. If I hear of it, I shall be very displeased, _very_."
Lounsbury was wringing his hand, and ready to bolt.
"All the same, John, I wish the civil authorities could get at the man."
"I wish so, too." He leaned over Jamieson.
"Good luck!" said Colonel c.u.mmings, going back to his maps.
"Thank you."
And just at that moment, as Lounsbury swung round on his heel, there rang out from the river a single pistol-shot. It echoed sharply against the barracks and went dying away upon the bluffs.
CHAPTER XI
A LITTLE STRATEGY
Fraser's shot drew many eyes to the river. For, in the winter time, any occurrence, however trifling, could get the instant attention of the lonely garrison. Troopers in various stages of dress came tumbling out upon the long porch at barracks; others looked from the many windows of the big frame structure; the washer-women and their hopefuls blocked the doorways of "Clothes-Pin Row"; officers everywhere--at headquarters, at the sutler's, in their homes--and their wives and families, up and down the "Line," remarked the signal. But when Lounsbury brought up beside Fraser, and the two seemed to be occupying themselves with nothing in particular, the onlookers laid the shot to an over-venturesome water-rat, and so withdrew from their points of vantage.
"What is it?" was the storekeeper's first breathless demand.
The young officer, hands on hips, nodded straight ahead. "You see those willows just below the cut?" he asked. "Well, there's a queer, black bunch in 'em."
"Yes. Is it a man?"
"I think so."
"Moved?"
"Not yet."
"Come on, then. Maybe he's aiming for the coulee mouth, so's to sneak up to the Lancasters' from behind."
They charged away across the mile of ice.
"If it's Matthews, why didn't he wing me as I went by," panted Lounsbury.
"Look, look!" cried Fraser. "Now, he's moving!"
They stopped to loosen their revolvers, after which they started again, cautiously.
The tops of the willows were shaking. Presently, they spread outward, and the "black bunch" lengthened. Then it emerged, and was resolved into a blanketed Indian.
"Charley!" exclaimed the officer. As he spoke, the outcast, shouldering a bundle of sticks, began to climb the cut.
The two men looked at each other and burst into a laugh.
"Fraser," said Lounsbury, "did you ever hear of the fellow that stalked a deer all day and then found it was a speck on his gla.s.ses?"
"That's one on me," admitted the lieutenant, sheepishly. "I knew n.o.body had come out of that door--but you see we were in the stable a while."
"'Charley,'--that squaw Indian they told me about, eh? Pretty good to them."
"Yes. From what I understand, they're pretty good to him."
They followed leisurely, and took up a stand in the cottonwoods above the landing to discuss the situation. At the very outset, Lounsbury determined not to speak of the plan that included Mrs. Martin's aid, the rebuff he had suffered from the section-boss having decided him against it.
"By George!" he said regretfully, "I wish when I had Matthews covered that I'd just marched him up the coulee and on to Clark's."
"Good idea; too bad you didn't."
"But I'll tell you this: I'm not going to stay out here all night just to shoo him off. I've a good mind to happen in down there, sort him out, and do the marching act anyhow."
"Now, look here," reminded Fraser; "that wouldn't do. You don't want to kill Matthews, and you don't want to be killed. It'd be one or the other if you poked your nose in there."
"What _do_ you advise?"
"Lie low till you see a good opportunity. I think the chap'll come out."
"But suppose he doesn't?"
"You'll have to stay here, that's all. I'll divide the watch with you."
"Oh, I don't like to ask you to do that, old man. We ought to be able to think up some kind of a scheme."
The sun was fast declining. Soon it disappeared behind the river-bluffs, when the boom of the evening-gun swelled the last note of "retreat."
Fraser sighed. The trumpet had suggested a certain dire possibility.
"I don't care for the cold," he declared, "but--but"--ruefully--"do you suppose the K. O.'ll give me more than a month in quarters for this?
There's that dance at the Major's next week; I'd like awfully to go. If I'm under arrest, I can't. And who'll feed my horse and my rattlesnakes!"
"Some sa.s.sy sergeant'll shoot your fiend of a nag," said the storekeeper, "and the rattlers'll be requested to devour one another.
When that's over, I'll break it gently to you (and you must be mum) that the K. O. is disciplining you simply to keep his face. He knows--suggested it himself--that I'm to be helped out by some of you fellows."
"Well, that's better!" returned Fraser, relieved. And while they walked back and forth, he launched into a defence of his pets.
"'Fiend of a nag,'" he quoted. "Why, Buckskin's a tactician; knows what the trumpet says better than I do."
Night settled swiftly. Despite Lounsbury's prophecy, the temperature was not unbearable. The wind died with the glow in the west, leaving the air so still that, to the watchers among the trees, sounds from Brannon mingled distinctly with the near laughter and talk of Shanty Town. No moon rose. Only a few stars burned their faint way through the quickly hidden rents of the sheltering cloud-covering that, knitting here, breaking there, again, overlapping in soft folds before an urgent sky breeze, swagged low above the ground.
With darkness, the two left the grove for the ledge upon which was Shanty Town, and stationed themselves where they could still see whoever went in or out of The Trooper's Delight. Matthews did not appear.
Numerous men in uniform did. They made noisy exits, and went brawling along to other shanties; they skulked out of the willows, flitted across the bit of snow-crusted beach below the saloons, and scrambled up to hurry in.