Buckskin was very hot; in fact it
was never anything else. Few people were on the
streets and the town was quiet. Over in the Houston
hotel a crowd of cowboys was lounging in the barroom.
They were very quiet a condition as rare
as it was ominous. Their mounts, twelve in all,
were switching flies from their quivering skins in
the corral at the rear. Eight of these had a
large C 80 branded on their flanks; the other four,
a Double Arrow.
In the barroom a slim, wiry man was
looking out of the dirty window up the street at Cowan’s
saloon. Shorty was complaining, “They shore
oughter be here now. They rounded up last week.”
The man nearest assured him that they would come.
The man at the window turned and said, “They’s
yer now.”
In front of Cowan’s a crowd
of nine happy-go-lucky, daredevil riders were sliding
from their saddles. They threw their reins over
the heads of their mounts and filed in to the bar.
Laughter issued from the open door and the clink of
glasses could be heard. They stood in picturesque
groups, strong, self-reliant, humorous, virile.
Their expensive sombreros were pushed far back
on their heads and their hairy chaps were covered
with the alkali dust from their ride.
Cowan, bottle in hand, pushed out
several more glasses. He kicked a dog from under
his feet and looked at Buck. “Rounded up
yet?” he inquired.
“Shore, day afore yisterday,”
came the reply. The rest were busy removing the
dust from their throats, and gradually drifted into
groups of two or three. One of these groups strolled
over to the solitary card table, and found Jimmy Price
resting in a cheap chair, his legs on the table.
“I wisht yu’d extricate
yore delicate feet from off’n this hyar table,
James,” humbly requested Lanky Smith, morally
backed up by those with him.
“Ya-as, they shore is delicate,
Mr. Smith,” responded Jimmy without moving.
“We wants to play draw, Jimmy,” explained
Pete.
“Yore shore welcome to play
if yu wants to. Didn’t I tell yu when yu
growed that mustache that yu didn’t have to ask
me any more?” queried the placid James, paternally.
“Call ’em off, sonny.
Pete sez he kin clean me out. Anyhow, yu kin have
the fust deal,” compromised Lanky.
“I’m shore sorry fer
Pete if he cayn’t. Yu don’t reckon
I has to have fust deal to beat yu fellers, do yu?
Go way an’ lemme alone; I never seed such
a bunch fer buttin’ in as yu fellers.”
Billy Williams returned to the bar.
Then he walked along it until he was behind the recalcitrant
possessor of the table. While his aggrieved friends
shuffled their feet uneasily to cover his approach,
he tiptoed up behind Jimmy and, with a nod, grasped
that indignant individual firmly by the neck while
the others grabbed his feet. They carried him,
twisting and bucking, to the middle of the street and
deposited him in the dust, returning to the now vacant
table.
Jimmy rested quietly for a few seconds
and then slowly arose, dusting the alkali from him.
“Th’ wall-eyed piruts,”
he muttered, and then scratched his head for a way
to “play hunk.” As he gazed sorrowfully
at the saloon he heard a snicker from behind him.
He, thinking it was one of his late tormentors, paid
no attention to it. Then a cynical, biting laugh
stung him. He wheeled, to see Shorty leaning
against a tree, a sneering leer on his flushed face.
Shorty’s right hand was suspended above his holster,
hooked to his belt by the thumb a favorite
position of his when expecting trouble.
“One of yore reg’lar habits?” he
drawled.
Jimmy began to dust himself in silence,
but his lips were compressed to a thin white line.
“Does they hurt yu?” pursued the onlooker.
Jimmy looked up. “I heard
tell that they make glue outen cayuses, sometimes,”
he remarked.
Shorty’s eyes flashed.
The loss of the horse had been rankling in his heart
all day.
“Does they git yu frequent?”
he asked. His voice sounded hard.
“Oh, ’bout as frequent
as yu lose a cayuse, I reckon,” replied Jimmy
hotly.
Shorty’s hand streaked to his
holster and Jimmy followed his lead. Jimmy’s
Colt was caught. He had bucked too much.
As he fell Shorty ran for the Houston House.
Pistol shots were common, for they
were the universal method of expressing emotions.
The poker players grinned, thinking their victim was
letting off his indignation. Lanky sized up his
hand and remarked half audibly, “He’s
a shore good kid.”
The bartender, fearing for his new
beveled, gilt-framed mirror, gave a hasty glance out
the window. He turned around, made change and
remarked to Buck, “Yore kid, Jimmy, is plugged.”
Several of the more credulous craned their necks to
see, Buck being the first. “Judas!”
he shouted, and ran out to where Jimmy lay coughing,
his toes twitching. The saloon was deserted and
a crowd of angry cowboys surrounded their chum-aboy.
Buck had seen Shorty enter the door of the Houston
House and he swore. “Chase them C 80 and
Arrow cayuses behind the saloon, Pete, an’ git
under cover.”
Jimmy was choking and he coughed up
blood. “He’s shore got
me. My gun stuck,” he added
apologetically. He tried to sit up, but was not
able and he looked surprised. “It’s
purty-damn hot-out here,” he suggested.
Johnny and Billy carried him in the saloon and placed
him by the table, in the chair he had previously vacated.
As they stood up he fell across the table and died.
Billy placed the dead boy’s
sombrero on his head and laid the refractory six-shooter
on the table. “I wonder who th’ dirty
killer was.” He looked at the slim figure
and started to go out, followed by Johnny. As
he reached the threshold a bullet zipped past him
and thudded into the frame of the door. He backed
away and looked surprised. “That’s
Shorty’s shootin’ he allus
misses ’bout that much.” He looked
out and saw Buck standing behind the live oak that
Shorty had leaned against, firing at the hotel.
Turning around he made for the rear, remarking to Johnny
that “they’s in th’ Houston.”
Johnny looked at the quiet figure in the chair and
swore softly. He followed Billy. Cowan, closing
the door and taking a buffalo gun from under the bar,
went out also and slammed the rear door forcibly.