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"Rathburn!" he exclaimed.
"The same," said the man with the gun. "What's all the disturbance down there?"
"Bob Long is chasing us," the other answered with a nervous grin.
"As I remember it," drawled Rathburn, "Bob Long is the sheriff of Mesquite County. You boys sure ain't been misbehaving?"
"It's worse than that," said the fugitive, staring doubtfully at his questioner. "The stage driver's dead. Had a notion the boss was foolin' when he told him to reach up for the bugs in the air."
"Who does the boss happen to be in this case?"
The man hesitated.
"Take your time," said Rathburn sarcastically; "there's n.o.body after you but the sheriff, an' he probably won't be along for a minute or two."
"It won't do _you_ no good for him to find us here," said the other boldly.
Rathburn's eyes blazed. "I reckon you're forgettin' that Bob Long knows I travel alone," he said hotly. "He savvys I don't travel with a crowd. I ain't found it necessary so far, an' I ain't aiming to start.
I counted eight in your gang--to hold up one stage, eh?" He concluded with a sneer, while the other s.h.i.+fted nervously in his saddle and cast a quick look back over his shoulder. There seemed no one there.
"You needn't be lookin' around," Rathburn said coldly. "You're goin'
to stay here till you answer my question, if all the sheriffs in Arizona come ridin' up meanwhile. Who's headin' your gang?"
"That ain't professional," the fugitive grumbled. "You're just the same as one of us."
Then, seeing the look that came into Rathburn's eyes, he said hastily: "Mike Eagen planned the lay."
"I guessed it," said Rathburn in a tone of contempt. "Well, you better slope while you've still got a chance."
He motioned to the man to go, and the latter rode at a gallop up the arroyo and out of sight. Rathburn's face wore a worried scowl, as he slid his gun into its holster, whirled his horse, and speedily climbed the east side of the arroyo.
From a vantage point he caught sight again of the hors.e.m.e.n racing up from the south. They were much nearer, and he could readily make out the members of the sheriff's posse. He had had experience with posses before.
Striking around the crest of the high ground which formed the east side of the arroyo, he again raced toward the range of mountains in the east, taking advantage of every bit of cover which offered concealment from the riders approaching at top speed from the south.
Occasional glances made it plain that the sheriff was sending, or personally bringing, most of his posse east in the direction of the mountains, presumably in the hope of cutting off the outlaws from seeking refuge in the hills. But the mountains were Rathburn's goal as well as the goal of a majority of Mike Eagen's band, though for totally different reasons. He refused to change his direction, although by going north, the stout, speedy dun could doubtless outdistance the posse before the afternoon was spent.
Rathburn's teeth snapped shut, his jaw squared, and his eyes narrowed, as he saw indubitable signs that he had been detected. Two of the posse were waving their arms and das.h.i.+ng in his direction. At that distance they could not identify him, but under the circ.u.mstances such identification was unnecessary. His presence there, riding like mad, was certain to convince the pursuers that he was one of the gang responsible for the stage job. This was obvious.
For good reasons, Rathburn did not want it generally known that he was back in a country where he had spent most of his life, and where he was branded as a desperate outlaw with a big price on his head.
Consequently, seeing that the sheriff's men were out to get him, he abandoned all attempt at concealment, drove in his spurs, gave the dun horse its head, and raced for the mountains.
Other members of the posse who were farther to the east caught the signals of the two who were in hot pursuit of Rathburn, and they dashed north to cut him off. The outlaws had disappeared, and Rathburn shook his head savagely, as he realized they had sought cover when they saw the chase was directed at one man. Without having had a hand in the holdup of the stage, he had arrived on the spot just in time to draw the fire of the authorities. And fire it was now; for the men behind him had begun shooting in the hope of a chance hit at the distance.
A scant mile separated him from his goal. He came to a level stretch which was almost a ma.s.s of green because of the clumps of palo verde.
Here he urged the dun to its utmost, outdistanced the pair in his rear, and gained on the men riding from the south, almost ahead of him. He swerved a bit to the north and cut straight for a notch in the mountains. He smiled, as he approached it, and saw a narrow defile leading into the hills. He gained it in a final, heartbreaking burst of speed on the part of his mount. As he dashed into the canon, bullets sang past him and over his head. Then a cry of amazement came to his ears.
"It's The Coyote!" a man was yelling. "Rathburn's back!"
He dashed into the shelter of the defile, a grim smile playing on his lips. He had been recognized. His face hardened. He rounded a huge boulder, checked his horse, and dismounted. He could hear the pound of hoofs in the entrance of the narrow canon. A rider came into view below.
Rathburn leaned out from the protection of the boulder. His lips were pressed into a fine, white line, and there was a look of haunted worry in his eyes. His gun flashed in his hand. The rider saw him and yelled, spurring his horse. Then Rathburn's gun swung quickly upward.
A sharp report sounded, like a crash of thunder in the narrow confines of the canon, and its echoes reverberated through the hills.
The rider toppled in his saddle and fell to the floor of the canon.
His horse came to a snorting stop, reins dangling, all four legs braced. The hoof-beats instantly were stilled. A silence, complete and sinister, reigned in the defile.
Rathburn slipped his smoking gun into his holster and mounted noiselessly. Then he walked his horse slowly up the canon, sitting sidewise in the saddle to keep a vigil on the trail behind. A minute later he heard a volley of shots below, the signal to all the scattered members of the posse to race to the entrance of the canon.
He increased his pace, broke his gun, extracted the empty sh.e.l.l, and inserted a fresh cartridge in its place.
CHAPTER XXVII
THE DESERT CODE
Keeping to the trail, Rathburn mounted higher and higher and spoke continually to his horse in a crooning tone of encouragement. His face was drawn in grim lines, his eyes were constantly alert, his very posture in the saddle showed that his nerves were at high tension.
He ignored dim paths which occasionally led off to the left or right in rifts in the sheer, black walls of the narrow canon. No sound came to him from below. He knew the posse would have to proceed with the utmost caution, for the sheriff and his men could not be sure that they would not encounter him at some bend in the trail. They would be expecting shots from every boulder; for Rathburn had let them know he had no intention of being taken easily or alive.
The afternoon wore on, with Rathburn steadily penetrating the very heart of Imagination Range. Finally he swung out of the canon trail and took a dim path to the right. He dismounted and walked back to rub off the scars left by his horse's shoes on the rock floor of the side trail. Satisfied that he would leave the members of the posse confused as to which side trail he had taken, he returned to his horse, mounted, and proceeded up the narrow trail leading to the top of the range to the south of the deep canon.
In the western sky the sun was low when he rode down the crest of the range. The mountains were devoid of vegetation, bleak and bare and black. The lava rock seemed to absorb the heat of the sun and throw it in the rider's face. But Rathburn didn't appear to mind it.
He crossed the backbone of the range and began the descent on the eastern side. But he descended only a short distance before he swung out of the saddle. From the slicker pack on the rear of his saddle he took a pair of heavy leather gloves. He cut these open in the palms with his pocketknife and then tied them about the shoes on his horse's hind feet. The dun was only shod behind.
Again he mounted, and this time he turned to the south and rode down a long slope of lava rock. He grunted with satisfaction, as he looked behind and saw that the leather prevented the shoes on his mount's hind feet from leaving their mark. He was completely obliterating his trail--leaving nothing for the posse to follow, if they should trace him to the top of the range.
He walked his horse slowly, for the dun did not like the idea of the leather tied to its hoofs. In less than two miles the leather was worn through upon the hard rock, and he got down and removed the remnants.
He straightened up and looked out over the vista of the desert.
The western sky was a sea of gold. Far to southward a curl of smoke rose upward, marking the course of a railroad and a town. Rathburn looked long in this direction, with a dreamy, wistful light in his eyes. Close at hand vegetation appeared upon the slopes of the hills.
His gaze darted here and there along the ridges below him, and his parted lips and eager att.i.tude showed unmistakably that he was familiar with every rod of the locality in which he found himself.
Again he climbed into the saddle and turned off to the left, entering a canon. For better than half a mile he proceeded down this way, then he rode eastward again, winding in and out in a network of canons until he came to the rock-ribbed crest of a ridge which overlooked an oasis in the desert hills. There was green vegetation where the water from a spring seeped into the floor of the canon below him. The spring was nothing more than a huge cup in the rock which had caught the water from the spring rains and filled. Above the spring was a small cabin, and Rathburn saw that the cabin door was open.
Hurriedly he rode down a trail to the right which circled around into the canon from its lower end. As he galloped toward the spring, a figure appeared in the doorway of the cabin. Rathburn waved an arm and dismounted at the spring. He led his horse to drink, as the man came walking toward him from the cabin. He compelled the dun to drink slowly; first a swallow, now two, then a few more; finally he drew the horse away from the water.
"You can have some more a little later," he said cheerfully. "h.e.l.lo, Joe Price!"
The man walked up to him without a great show of surprise and held out his hand. He was bareheaded, and the hair which hung down to his shoulders was snow-white. The face was seamed and lined, burned by the sun of three score Arizona summers, and the small, blue eyes twinkled.
"Hang me with a busted shoe string if it ain't Rathburn," said the old man. "Why, boy, you're just in time for supper. Put your horse up behind the cabin an' get in at the table. She's a big country, all full of cactus; but the old man's got grub left!"
Rathburn laughed, rinsed his mouth out with water he dipped from the spring in a battered tin cup, and took a swallow before he replied.