“Phew! I’m shore
hungry,” said Hopalong, as he and Red dismounted
at the ranch the next morning for breakfast.
“Wonder what’s good for it?”
“They’s three things that’s
good for famine,” said Red, leading the way
to the bunk house. “Yu can pull in yore
belt, yu can drink, an yu can eat. Yore getting
as bad as Johnny but he’s young yet.”
The others met their entrance with
a volley of good-humored banter, some of which was
so personal and evoked such responses that it sounded
like the preliminary skirmish to a fight. But
under all was that soft accent, that drawl of humorous
appreciation and eyes twinkling in suppressed merriment.
Here they were thoroughly at home and the spirit of
comradeship manifested itself in many subtle ways;
the wit became more daring and sharp, Billy lost some
of his pessimism, and the alertness disappeared from
their manner.
Skinny left off romping with Red and
yawned. “I wish that cook’ud wake
up an’ git breakfast. He’s the cussedest
hombre I ever saw he kin go to sleep standin’
up an’ not know it. Johnny’s th’
boy that worries him th’ kid comes
in an’ whoops things up till he’s gorged
himself.”
“Johnny’s got th’
most appallin’ feel for grub of anybody I knows,”
added Red. “I wonder what’s keepin’
him he’s usually hangin’ around
here bawlin’ for his grub like a spoiled calf,
long afore cookie’s got th’ fire goin’.”
“Mebby he rustled some grub
out with him I saw him tip-toein’
out of th’ gallery this mornin’ when I
come back for my cigs,” remarked Hopalong, glancing
at Billy.
Billy groaned and made for the gallery.
Emerging half a minute later he blurted out his tale
of woe: “Every time I blows myself an’
don’t drink it all in town some slab-sided maverick
freezes to it. It’s gone,” he added,
dismally.
“Too bad, Billy but what is it?”
asked Skinny.
“What is it? Wha’d
yu think it was, you emaciated match? Jewelry?
Cayuses? It’s whisky two simoleons’
worth. Some-thin’s allus wrong.
This here whole yearth’s wrong, just like that
cross-eyed sky pilot said over to
“Will yu let up?” Yelled
Red, throwing a sombrero at the grumbling unfortunate.
“Yu ask Buck where yore tanglefoot is.
“I’d shore look nice askin’
th’ boss if he’d rustled my whisky, wouldn’t
I? An’ would yu mind throwin’ somebody
else’s hat? I paid twenty wheels for that
eight years ago, and I don’t want it mussed none.”
“Gee, yore easy! Why, Ah
Sing, over at Albuquerque, gives them away every time
yu gits yore shirt washed,” gravely interposed
Hopalong as he went out to cuss the cook.
“Well, what’d yu think
of that?” Exclaimed Billy in an injured tone.
“Oh, yu needn’t be hikin’
for Albuquerque WasheeWashee’ud charge
yu double for washin’ yore shirt. Yu ought
to fall in di’ river some day then
he might talk business,” called Hopalong over
his shoulder as he heaved an old boot into the gallery.
“Hey, yu hibernatin’ son of morphine,
if yu don’t git them flapjacks in here pretty
sudden-like I’ll scatter yu all over di’
landscape, sabe? Yu just wait till Johnny comes!”
“Wonder where th’ kid
is?” asked Lanky, rolling a cigarette. “Off
somewhere lookin’ at di’ sun through
di’ bottom of my bottle,” grumbled
Billy.
Hopalong started to go out, but halted
on the sill and looked steadily off toward the northwest.
“That’s funny. Hey, fellows, here
comes Buck an’ Johnny ridin’ double on
a walk, too!” he exclaimed. “Wonder
what th’ thunder! Red, Buck’s
carryun’ him! Somethin’s busted!”
he yelled, as he dashed for his pony and made for
the newcomers.
“I told yu he was hittin’
my bottle,” pertly remarked Billy, as he followed
the rest outside.
“Did yu ever see Johnny drunk?
Did yu ever see him drink more’n two glasses?
Shut yore wailin’ face they’s
somethin’ worse’n that in this here,”
said Red, his temper rising. “Hopalong an’
me took yore cheap liquor it’s under
Pete’s bunk,” he added.
The trio approached on a walk and
Johnny, delirious and covered with blood, was carried
into the bunk house. Buck waited until all had
assembled again and then, his face dark with anger,
spoke sharply and without the usual drawl: “Skragged
from behind, blast them! Get some grub an’
water an’ be quick. We’ll see who
the gent with th’ grudge is.”
At this point the expostulations of
the indignant cook, who, not understanding the cause,
regarded the invasion of china shop bulls as sacrilegious,
came to his ears. Striding quickly to the door,
he grabbed the pan the Mexican was about to throw
and, turning the now frightened man around, thundered,
“Keep quiet an’ get ’em some grub.”
When rifles and ammunition had been
secured they mounted and followed him at a hard gallop
along the back trail. No words were spoken, for
none were necessary. All knew that they would
not return until they had found the man for whom they
were looking, even if the chase led to Canada.
They did not ask Buck for any of the particulars, for
the foreman was not in the humor to talk, and all,
save Hopalong, whose curiosity was always on edge,
recognized only two facts and cared for nothing else:
Johnny had been ambushed and they were going to get
the one who was responsible.
They did not even conjecture as to
who it might be, because the trail would lead them
to the man himself, and it mattered nothing who or
what he was there was only one course to
take with an assassin. So they said nothing,
but rode on with squared jaws and set lips, the seven
ponies breast to breast in a close arc.
Soon they came to an arroyo which
they took at a leap. As they approached it they
saw signs in the dust which told them that a body had
lain there huddled up; and there were brown spots on
the baked alkali. The trail they followed was
now single, Buck having ridden along the bank of the
arroyo when hunting for Johnny, for whom he had orders.
This trail was very irregular, as if the horse had
wandered at will. Suddenly they came upon five
tracks, all pointing one way, and four of these turned
abruptly and disappeared in the northwest. Half
a mile beyond the point of separation was a chaparral,
which was an important factor to them.
Each man knew just what had taken
place as if he had been an eyewitness, for the trail
was plain. The assassins had waited in the chaparral
for Johnny to pass, probably having seen him riding
that way. When he had passed and his back had
been turned to them they had fired and wounded him
severely at the first volley, for Johnny was of the
stuff that fights back and his revolvers had showed
full chambers and clean barrels when Red had examined
them in the bunk house. Then they had given chase
for a short distance and, from some inexplicable motive,
probably fear, they had turned and ridden off without
knowing how bad he was hit. It was this trail
that led to the northwest, and it was this trail that
they followed without pausing.
When they had covered fifty miles
they sighted the Cross Bar O ranch where they hoped
to secure fresh mounts. As they rode up to the
ranch house the owner, Bud Wallace, came around the
corner and saw them.
“Hullo, boys! What deviltry
are yu up to now?” he asked. Buck leaped
from his mount, followed by the others, and shoved
his sombrero back on his head as he started to remove
the saddle.
“We’re trailin’
a bunch of murderers. They ambushed Johnny an’
blame near killed him. I stopped here to get
fresh cayuses.”
“Yu did right!” replied
Wallace heartily. Then raising his voice he shouted
to some of his men who were near the corral to bring
up the seven best horses they could rope. Then
he told the cook to bring out plenty of food and drink.
“I got four punchers what ain’t
doin’ nothin’ but eat,” he suggested.
“Much obliged, Wallace, but
there’s only four of ’em, an’ we’d
rather get ’em ourselves Johnny’ud
feel better,” replied Buck, throwing his saddle
on the horse that was led up to him.
“How’s yore cartridges got
plenty?” Persisted Wallace.
“Two hundred apiece,”
responded Buck, springing into his saddle and riding
off. “So long,” he called.
“So long, an’ plug blazes
out of them,” shouted Wallace as the dust swept
over him.
At five in the afternoon they forded
the Black River at a point where it crossed the state
line from New Mexico, and at dusk camped at the base
of the Guadalupe Mountains. At daybreak they took
up the chase, grim and merciless, and shortly afterward
they passed the smoldering remains of a camp fire,
showing that the pursued had been in a great hurry,
for it should have been put out and masked. At
noon they left the mountains to the rear and sighted
the Barred Horeshoe, which they approached.
The owner of the ranch saw them coming,
and from their appearance surmised that something
was wrong.
“What is it?” He shouted. “Rustlers?”
“Nope. Murderers. I wants to swap
cayuses quick,” answered Buck.
“There they are. Th’
boys just brought ’em in. Anything else
I can let yu have?”
“Nope,” shouted Buck as they galloped
off.
“Somebody’s goin’
to get plugged full of holes,” murmured the ranch
owner as he watched them kicking up the dust in huge
clouds.
After they had forded a tributary
of the Rio Penasco near the Sacramento Mountains and
had surmounted the opposite bank, Hopalong spurred
his horse to the top of a hummock and swept the plain
with Pete’s field glasses, which he had borrowed
for the occasion, and returned to the rest, who had
kept on without slacking the pace. As he took
up his former position he grunted, “War-whoops,”
and unslung his rifle, an example followed by the
others.
The ponies were now running at top
speed, and as they shot over a rise their riders saw
their quarry a mile and a half in advance. One
of the Indians looked back and discharged his rifle
in defiance, and it now became a race worthy of the
name Death fled from Death. The fresher
mounts of the cowboys steadily cut down the distance
and, as the rifles of the pursuers began to speak,
the hard-pressed Indians made for the smaller of two
knolls, the plain leading to the larger one being too
heavily strewn with bowlders to permit speed.
As the fugitives settled down behind
the rocks which fringed the edge of their elevation
a shot from one of them disabled Billy’s arm,
but had no other effect than to increase the score
to be settled. The pursuers rode behind a rise
and dismounted, from where, leaving their mounts protected,
they scattered out to surround the knoll.
Hopalong, true to his curiosity, finally
turned up on the highest point of the other knoll,
a spur of the range in the west, for he always wanted
to see all he could. Skinny, due to his fighting
instinct, settled one hundred yards to the north and
on the same spur. Buck lay hidden behind an enormous
bowlder eight hundred yards to the northeast of Skinny,
and the same distance southeast of Buck was Red Connors,
who was crawling up the bed of an arroyo. Billy,
nursing his arm, lay in front of the horses, and Pete,
from his position between Billy and Hopalong, was
crawling from rock to rock in an endeavor to get near
enough to use his Colts, his favorite and most effective
weapons. Intermittent puffs of smoke arising
from a point between Skinny and Buck showed where
Lanky Smith was improving each shining hour.
There had been no directions given,
each man choosing his own position, yet each was of
strategic worth. Billy protected the horses, Hopalong
and Skinny swept the knoll with a plunging fire, and
Lanky and Buck lay in the course the besieged would
most likely take if they tried a dash. Off to
the east Red barred them from creeping down the arroyo,
and from where Pete was he could creep up to within
sixty yards if he chose the right rocks. The
ranges varied from four hundred yards for Buck to sixty
for Pete, and the others averaged close to three hundred,
which allowed very good shooting on both sides.
Hopalong and Skinny gradually moved
nearer to each other for companionship, and as the
former raised his head to see what the others were
doing he received a graze on the ear.
“Wow!” he yelled, rubbing the tingling
member.
Two puffs of smoke floated up from the knoll, and
Skinny swore.
“Where’d he get yu, Fat?” asked
Hopalong.
“G’wan, don’t get funny, son,”
replied Skinny.
Jets of smoke arose from the north
and east, where Buck and Red were stationed, and Pete
was half way to the knoll. So far he hadn’t
been hit as he dodged in and out, and, emboldened
by his luck, he made a run of five yards and his sombrero
was shot from his head. Another dash and his
empty holster was ripped from its support. As
he crouched behind a rock he heard a yell from Hopalong,
and saw that interested individual waving his sombrero
to cheer him on. An angry pang! from the knoll
caused that enthusiastic rooter to drop for safety.
“Locoed son-of-a-gun,”
complained Pete. “He’ll shore git
potted.” Then he glanced at Billy, who
was the center of several successive spurts of dust.
“How’s business, Billy?” he called
pleasantly.
“Oh, they’ll git me yet,”
responded the pessimist. “Yu needn’t
git anxious. If that off buck wasn’t so
green he’d ‘a’ had me long ago.”
“Ya-hoo! Pete! Oh,
Pete!” called Hopalong, sticking his head out
at one side and grinning as the wondering object of
his hail craned his neck to see what the matter was.
“Huh?” grunted Pete, and
then remembering the distance he shouted, “What’s
th’ matter?”
“Got any cigarettes?” asked Hopalong.
“Yu poor sheep!” said
Pete, and turning back to work he drove a .45 into
a yellow moccasin.
Hopalong began to itch and he saw
that he was near an ant hill. Then the cactus
at his right boomed out mournfully and a hole appeared
in it. He fired at the smoke and a yell informed
him that he had made a hit. “Go ’way!”
he complained as a green fly buzzed past his nose.
Then he scratched each leg with the foot of the other
and squirmed incessantly, kicking out with both feet
at once. A warning metallic whir-r-r! on his
left caused to yank them in again, and turning his
head quickly he the pleasure of lopping off the head
of a rattlesnake with his Colt’s.
“Glad yu wasn’t a copperhead,”
he exclaimed. “Somebody had ought ‘a’
shot that fool Noah. Blast the ants!” He
drowned with a jet of tobacco juice a Gila monster
that was staring at him and took a savage delight
in its frantic efforts to bury itself.
Soon he heard Skinny swear and he
sung out: “What’s the matter, Skinny?
Git plugged again?”
“Naw, bugs ain’t
they mean?” Plaintively asked his friend.
“They ain’t none over here. What
kind of bugs?”
“Sufferin’ Moses, I ain’t no bugologist!
All kinds!”
But Hopalong got it at last.
He had found tobacco and rolled a cigarette, and in
reaching for a match exposed his shoulder to a shot
that broke his collar bone. Skinny’s rifle
cracked in reply and the offending brave rolled out
from behind a rock. From the fuss emanating from
Hopalong’s direction Skinny knew that his neighbor
had been hit.
“Don’t yu care, Hoppy.
I got th’ cuss,” he said consolingly.
“Where’d he git yu?” he asked.
“In di’ heart,
yu pie-faced nuisance. Come over here an’
corral this cussed bandage an’ gimme some water,”
snapped the injured man.
Skinny wormed his way through the
thorny chaparral and bound up the shoulder. “Anything
else?” he asked.
“Yes. Shoot that bunch
of warts an’ blow that tobacco-eyed Gila to
Cheyenne. This here’s worse than the time
we cleaned out th’ C 80 outfit!” Then
he kicked the dead toad and swore at the sun.
“Close yore yap; yore worse
than a kid! Anybody’d think yu never got
plugged afore,” said Skinny indignantly.
“I can cuss all I wants,”
replied Hopalong, proving his assertion as he grabbed
his gun and fired at the dead Indian. A bullet
whined above his head and Skinny fired at the smoke.
He peeped out and saw that his friends were getting
nearer to the knoll.
“They’s closin’
in now. We’ll soon be gittin’ home,”
he reported.
Hopalong looked out in time to see
Buck make a dash for a bowlder that lay ten yards
in front of him, which he reached in safety. Lanky
also ran in and Pete added five more yards to his
advance. Buck made another dash, but leaped into
the air, and, coming down as if from an intentional
high jump, staggered and stumbled for a few paces and
then fell flat, rolling over and over toward the shelter
of a split rock, where he lay quiet. A leering
red face peered over the rocks on the knoll, but the
whoop of exultation was cut short, for Red’s
rifle cracked and the warrior rolled down the steep
bank, where another shot from the same gun settled
him beyond question.
Hopalong choked and, turning his face
away, angrily dashed his knuckles into his eyes.
“Blast ’em! Blast ’em!
They’ve got Buck! They’ve got Buck,
blast ’em! They’ve got Buck, Skinny!
Good old Buck! They’ve got him! Jimmy’s
gone, Johnny’s plugged, and now Buck’s
gone! Come on!” he sobbed in a frenzy of
vengeance. “Come on, Skinny! We’ll
tear their cussed hides into a deeper red than they
are now! Oh, blast it, I can’t see where’s
my gun?” He groped for the rifle and fought Skinny
when the latter, red-eyed but cool, endeavored to
restrain him. “Lemme go, curse yu!
Don’t yu know they got Buck? Lemme go!”
“Down! Red’s got
di’ skunk. Yu can’t do nothin’ they’d
drop yu afore yu took five steps. Red’s
got him, I tell yu! Do yu want me to lick yu?
We’ll pay ’em back with interest if yu’ll
keep yore head!” exclaimed Skinny, throwing
the crazed man heavily.
Musical tones, rising and falling
in weird octaves, whining pityingly, diabolically,
sobbing in a fascinating monotone and slobbering in
ragged chords, calling as they swept over the plain,
always calling and exhorting, they mingled in barbaric
discord with the defiant barks of the six-shooters
and the inquiring cracks of the Winchesters. High
up in the air several specks sailed and drifted, more
coming up rapidly from all directions. Buzzards
know well where food can be found.
As Hopalong leaned back against a
rock he was hit in the thigh by a ricochet that tore
its way out, whirling like a circular saw, a span
above where it entered. The wound was very nasty,
being ripped twice the size made by an ordinary shot,
and it bled profusely. Skinny crawled over and
attended to it, making a tourniquet of his neckerchief
and clumsily bandaging it with a strip torn from his
shirt.
“Yore shore lucky, yu are,”
he grumbled as he made his way back to his post, where
he vented his rancor by emptying the semi-depleted
magazine of his Winchester at the knoll.
Hopalong began to sing and shout and
he talked of Jimmy and his childhood, interspersing
the broken narrative with choice selections as sung
in the music halls of Leavenworth and Abilene.
He wound up by yelling and struggling, and Skinny
had his hands full in holding him.
“Hopalong! Cassidy!
Come out of that! Keep quiet yu’ll
shore git plugged if yu don’t stop that plungin’.
For gosh sake, did yu hear that?” A bullet viciously
hissed between them and flattened out on a near-by
rock; others cut their way through the chaparral to
the sound of falling twigs, and Skinny threw himself
on the struggling man and strapped Hopalong with his
belt to the base of a honey mesquite that grew at his
side.
“Hold still, now, and let that
bandage alone. Yu allus goes off di’
range when yu gets plugged,” he complained.
He cut down a cactus and poured the sap over the wounded
man’s face, causing him to gurgle and look around.
His eyes had a sane look now and Skinny slid off his
chest.
“Git that belt loose;
I ain’t no cow,” brokenly blazed
out the picketed Hopalong. Skinny did so, handed
the irate man his Colts and returned to his own post,
from where he fired twice, reporting the shots.
“I’m tryin’ to get
him on th’ glance’ first one went high
an’ th’ other fell flat,” he explained.
Hopalong listened eagerly, for this
was shooting that he could appreciate. “Lemme
see,” he commanded. Skinny dragged him over
to a crack and settled down for another try.
“Where is he, Skinny?” Asked Hopalong.
“Behind that second big one.
No, over on this here side. See that smooth granite?
If I can get her there on th’ right spot he’ll
shore know it.” He aimed carefully and
fired.
Through Pete’s glasses Hopalong
saw a leaden splotch appear on the rock and he notified
the marksman that he was shooting high. “Put
her on that bump closer down,” he suggested.
Skinny did so and another yell reached their ears.
“That’s a dandy.
Yore shore all right, yu old cuss,” complimented
Hopalong, elated at the success of the experiment.
Skinny fired again and a brown arm
flopped out into sight. Another shot struck it
and it jerked as though it were lifeless.
“He’s cashed. See
how she jumped? Like a rope,” remarked Skinny
with a grin. The arm lay quiet.
Pete had gained his last cover and
was all eyes and Colts. Lanky was also very close
in and was intently watching one particular rock.
Several shots echoed from the far side of the knoll
and they knew that Red was all right. Billy was
covering a cluster of rocks that protruded above the
others and, as they looked, his rifle rang out and
the last defender leaped down and disappeared in the
chaparral. He wore yellow trousers and an old
boiled shirt.
“By an’-by, by all that’s
bad!” yelled Hopalong. “Th’
measly coyote! An’ me a-fillin’ his
ornery hide with liquor. Well, they’ll have
to find him all over again now,” he complained,
astounded by the revelation. He fired into the
chaparral to express his pugnacious disgust and scared
out a huge tarantula, which alighted on Skinny’s
chaps, crawling rapidly toward the unconscious man’s
neck. Hopalong’s face hardened and he slowly
covered the insect and fired, driving it into the sand,
torn and lifeless. The bullet touched the leathern
garment and Skinny remonstrated, knowing that Hopalong
was in no condition for fancy shooting.
“Huh!” exclaimed Hopalong.
“That was a tarantula what I plugged. He
was headin’ for yore neck,” he explained,
watching the chaparral with apprehension.
“Go ’way, was it?
Bully for yu!” exclaimed Skinny, tarantulas being
placed at par with rattlesnakes, and he considered
that he had been saved from a horrible death.
“Thought yu said they wasn’t no bugs over
here,” he added in an aggrieved tone.
“They wasn’t none.
Yu brought ’em. I only had th’ main
show Gilas, rattlers an’ toads,”
he replied, and then added, “Ain’t it cussed
hot up here?”
“She is. Yu won’t
have no cinch ridin’ home with that leg.
Yu better take my cayuse he’s busted
more’n yourn,” responded Skinny.
“Yore cayuse is at th’ Cross Bar O, yu
wall-eyed pirute.”
“Shore ’nuff. Funny
how a feller forgets sometimes. Lemme alone now,
they’s goin’ to git By-an’-by.
Pete an’ Lanky has just went in after him.”
That was what had occurred. The
two impatient punchers, had grown tired of waiting,
and risked what might easily have been death in order
to hasten matters. The others kept up a rapid
fire, directed at the far end of the chaparral on
the knoll, in order to mask the movements of their
venturesome friends, intending also to drive By-and-by
toward them so that he would be the one to get picked
off as he advanced.
Several shots rang out in quick succession
on the knoll and the chaparral became agitated.
Several more shots sounded from the depth of the thicket
and a mounted Indian dashed out of the northern edge
and headed in Buck’s direction. His course
would take him close to Buck, whom he had seen fall,
and would let him escape at a point midway between
Red and Skinny, as Lanky was on the knoll and the range
was very far to allow effective shooting by these
two.
Red saw him leave the chaparral and
in his haste to reload jammed the cartridge, and By-and-by
swept on toward temporary safety, with Red dancing
in a paroxysm of rage, swelling his vocabulary with
words he had forgotten existed.
By-and-by, rising to his full height
in the saddle, turned and wiggled his fingers at the
frenzied Red and made several other signs that the
cowboy was in the humor to appreciate to the fullest
extent. Then he turned and shook his rifle at
the marksmen on the larger knoll, whose best shots
kicked up the dust fully fifty yards too short.
The pony was sweeping toward the reservation and friends
only fifteen miles away, and By-and-by knew that once
among the mountains he would be on equal footing at
least with his enemies.
As he passed the rock behind which
Buck lay sprawled on his face he uttered a piercing
whoop of triumph and leaned forward on his pony’s
neck. Twenty leaps farther and the spiteful crack
of a rifle echoed from where the foreman was painfully
supporting himself on his elbows. The pony swept
on in a spurt of nerve-racking speed, but alone.
By-and-by shrieked again and crashed heavily to the
ground, where he rolled inertly and then lay still.
Men like Buck are dangerous until their hearts have
ceased to beat.