“Ostrich, n. A large bird to
which (for its sins, doubtless) nature
“Fare
you well:
Hereafter, in a better world than this,
I shall desire more love and knowledge of you.”
-As
You Like It.
Mr. Benjamin Attlebury Wade paced
a narrow beat on the matted floor. Johnny Dines,
shirt-sleeved, in the prisoners’ box, leaned
forward in his chair to watch, delighted. Mr.
Benjamin Attlebury Wade was prosecuting attorney,
and the mat was within the inclosure of the court
room, marked off by a wooden rail to separate the law’s
machinery from the materi-That has an unpleasant
sound. To separate the taxpayer from-No,
that won’t do. To separate the performers
from the spectators-that is much better.
But even that has an offensive sound. Unintentionally
so; groping, we near the heart of the mystery; the
rail was to keep back the crowd and prevent confusion.
That it has now become a sacramental barrier, a symbol
and a sign of esoteric mystery, is not the rail’s
fault; it is the fault of the people on each side
of the rail. Mr. Wade had been all the long forenoon
examining Caney and Weir, and was now searching the
deeps of his mind for a last question to put to Mr.
Hales, his last witness. Mr. Wade’s brow
was furrowed with thought; his hands were deep in his
own pockets. Mr. Wade’s walk was leisurely
important and fascinating to behold. His foot
raised slowly and very high, very much as though those
pocketed hands had been the lifting agency. When
he reached the highest point of each step his toe
turned up, his foot paused, and then felt furtively
for the floor-quite as if he were walking
a rope, or as if the floor might not be there at all.
The toe found the floor, the heel followed cautiously,
they planted themselves on the floor and took a firm
grip there; after which the other foot ventured forward.
With such stealthy tread the wild beast of prey creeps
quivering to pounce upon his victim. But Mr.
Wade never leaped. And he was not wild.
The court viewed Mr. Wade’s
constitutional with some impatience, but Johnny Dines
was charmed by it; he felt a real regret when Mr. Wade
turned to him with a ferocious frown and snapped:
“Take the witness!”
Mr. Wade parted his coat tails and
sat down, performing that duty with the air of a sacrament.
Johnny did not rise. He settled back comfortably
in his chair and looked benevolently at the witness.
“Now, Mr. Hales, about that
yearling I branded in Redgate canyon-what
color was it?”
Mr. Wade rose, indignant.
“Your honor, I object!
The question is irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial.
Aside from its legal status, such a question is foolish
and absurd, and an insult to the court.”
“Why, now, I didn’t object
to any of your foolish and absurd questions all morning.”
Johnny’s eyes widened with gentle reproach.
“I let you ask all the questions you wanted.”
Mr. Wade’s nose twisted to a triumphant sneer.
“‘He who is his own lawyer has a fool
for a client!’”
“I didn’t want to take any unfair advantage,”
explained Johnny.
“Gentlemen! Gentlemen!” expostulated
the court.
“You gallows meat!” snarled Wade.
“You dirty-”
Johnny shook his head in a friendly
warning. “He means you, too,” he
whispered.
The gavel fell heavily. The court
rose up and the court’s eyes narrowed.
“This bickering has got to stop!
It is disgraceful. I don’t want to see
any more of it. Mr. Wade, for that last remark
of yours you ought to pay a heavy fine, and you know
it very well. This prisoner is being tried for
murder. That does not make him a murderer.
Your words were unmanly, sir.”
“May it please the court,”
said Wade, white faced and trembling with rage, “I
acknowledge myself entirely wrong, and I beg the court’s
pardon. I own that I was exasperated. The
prisoner insulted me grossly.”
“You insulted him first.
You have been doing it right along. You lawyers
are always browbeating witnesses and prisoners.
You get ’em where they can’t talk back
and then you pelt ’em with slurs and hints and
sneers and insults. You take a mean advantage
of your privileged position to be overbearing and
arrogant. I’ve watched you at it. I
don’t think it is very sporting to say in the
court room what you wouldn’t dare say on the
street. But when someone takes a whack at you-wow!
that’s different! Then you want the court
to protect you.” He paused to consider.
The justice of the peace-Judge
Hinkle, Andy Hinkle-was a slim, wizened
man, brown handed, brown faced, lean and wrinkled,
with thin gray hair and a thin gray beard and faded
blue eyes, which could blaze blue fire on occasion.
Such fire, though a mild one, now died away from those
old eyes, and into them crept a slightly puzzled expression.
He looked hard at Mr. Wade and he looked hard at Mr.
Dines. Then he proceeded.
“Mr. Wade, this court-Oh,
let’s cut out the court-that makes
me tired! ’This court fines you twenty-five
dollars for contempt of court.’ How would
that sound?”
Wade managed a smile, and bowed, not
ungracefully. “It would sound unpleasant-perhaps
a little severe, sir.”
The court twinkled. “I
was only meaning how silly it seemed to a plain man
for him to have to refer to himself as the court.
I’m not going to fine you, Mr. Wade-not
this time. I could, of course, but I won’t.
It would be unfair to lecture you first and then fine
you. Besides, there is something else. You
have had great provocation and I feel compelled to
take that into consideration. Your apology is
accepted. I don’t know who began it-but
if you have been insulting the prisoner it is no less
true that the prisoner has been aggravating you.
I don’t know as I ever saw a more provoking
man. I been keepin’ an eye on him-his
eyebrows, the corners of his eyes, the corners of his
mouth, his shoulder-shrugging, and his elbows, and
his teeth and his toes. Mr. Wade, your moldy
old saw about a fool for a client was never more misplaced.
This man can out talk you and never open his mouth.
I’d leave him alone if I was you-he
might make a fool of you.”
Johnny half opened his mouth.
The judge regarded him sternly. The mouth closed
hastily. Johnny dimpled. The judge’s
hammer fell with a crash.
“I give you both fair notice
right now,” said Judge Hinkle, “if you
start any more of this quarreling I’m goin’
to slap on a fine that’ll bring a blister.”
Johnny rose timidly and addressed the court.
“Your Honor, I’m aimin’
to ‘tend strictly to my knittin’ from now
on. But if I should make a slip, and you do have
to fine me-couldn’t you make it a
jail sentence instead? I’m awful short of
money, Your Honor.”
He reached behind him and hitched
up the tail of his vest with both hands, delicately;
this accomplished, he sank into his chair, raised
his trousers gently at the knee and gazed about him
innocently.
“My Honor will be-”
The judge bit the sentence in two,
leaving the end in doubt; he regarded the prisoner
with baleful attention. The prisoner gazed through
a window. The judge beckoned to Mr. Gwinne, who
sat on the front seat between See and Hobby Lull.
Mr. Gwinne came forward. The judge leaned across
the desk.
“Mr. Gwinne, do you feed this prisoner well?”
“Yes, sir.”
“About what, now, for instance?”
“Oh-beefsteak, ham
and eggs, enchilados, canned stuff-most
anything.”
“Mr. Gwinne, if I told you to
put this prisoner on a strict ration, would you obey
orders?”
“I certainly would.”
“That’s all,” said
the judge. “Thank you. Mr. Dines, you
may go on with the case. The witness may answer
the question. Objection overruled. State
your question again, Mr. Dines.”
“Mr. Hales, will you tell His
Honor what color was the calf I branded in Redgate
Canyon, day before yesterday, about two o’clock
in the afternoon?”
“I don’t know,” answered Hales sulkily.
“Oh! You didn’t see it, then?”
“No.”
“Then you are not able to state
that it was a calf belonging to Adam Forbes?”
“No.”
Johnny’s eyes sought the window.
“Nor whether it was a calf or a yearling?”
“Of course not.”
“Did you see me brand the calf?”
“I did not!” Hales spat
out the words with venomous emphasis. Johnny
was unmoved.
“Will you tell the court if
the brand I put on this heifer calf or bull yearling
was my brand or Adam Forbes’ brand?”
The gavel fell.
“Objection!” barked Wade.
“Sustained. The question
is improperly put. The witness need not answer
it. The counsel for the defense need not continue
along these lines. I am quite able to distinguish
between evidence and surmise, between a stated fact
and unfair suggestion.”
“Does Your Honor mean to insinuate-”
“Sit down, Mr. Wade! Sit
down! My Honor does not mean to insinuate anything.
My Honor means to state that you have been trying to
throw dust in my eyes. My Honor wishes to state
that you should never have been allowed to present
your evidence in any such shape, and if the prisoner
had been represented by a competent lawyer you would
not have been allowed-”
The judge checked himself; his face
fell; he wheeled his chair slowly and glared at the
prisoner with awful solemnity. “Dines!
Is that why you made no objections? So the prosecuting
attorney would queer himself with this court by attempting
unfair tactics? Answer me, sir!”
“But is it likely, Your Honor,
that I could see ahead as far as that?”
“Humph!” snorted His Honor.
He turned back to the prosecuting attorney. “Mr.
Wade, I am keeping cases on you. Your questions
have been artfully framed to lead a simple old man
astray-to bewilder him until he is ready
to accept theory, surmise and suggestion as identical
with a statement of facts or statements purporting
to be facts. I’m simple and old, all right-but
I never did learn to lead.”
Mr. Benjamin Attlebury Wade sprang to his feet.
“Your Honor, I protest!
You have been openly hostile to the prosecution from
the first.”
“Ah!” said the judge mildly.
“You fear my remarks may unduly influence my
decision-is that it? Calm yourself,
Mr. Wade. I cannot say that I blame you much,
however. You see, I think United States, and when
I have to translate into the customary idiomcies of
the law I do a bum job.” He turned his
head and spoke confidentially to the delighted court
room. “Boys, it’s gettin’ me!”
he said. “Did you hear that chatter I put
out, when all I wanted to say was that I still knew
sugar from salt and sawdust from cornmeal-also,
in any case of extreme importance, as hereinbefore
mentioned, and taking in consideration the fine and
subtle nuisances of delicate thought, as it were,
whereas, being then and there loaded with shot and
slugs, I can still tell a hawk from a handsaw.
Why, I’m getting so I talk that jargon to my
jackass when I wallop him over the place made and
provided on him, the said jackass, with a curajo
pole! I’ll tell you what-the
first man I catch voting for me next year I’m
going to pat him over the head with a pickhandle.
You may proceed with the case, Mr. Dines.”
“This is an outrage!”
bawled the furious and red-faced prosecutor.
“This is an outrage! An outrage! These
proceedings are a mockery! This whole trial is
a travesty on justice!”
The gavel banged down.
“This court is now adjourned,” announced
Judge Hinkle.
He leaned back in his chair and sighed
luxuriously. He took out a pair of steel-rimmed
spectacles and polished them; he held them poised
delicately in one hand and beamed benevolently on the
crowded court room.
“We have had a very trying forenoon,”
observed Mr. Hinkle blandly. “Perhaps some
of us are ruffled a little. But I trust that nothing
which has happened in this court room will cause any
hard feeling of a lasting character. And I strongly
advise that under no circumstances will any of you
feel impelled to take any man and put his head under
a pump, and pump on his head.” The gavel
rapped smartly. “This court will now come
to order! Mr. Dines, as I remarked before recess,
you will now proceed with the case.”
“I’ll not detain you long,
Mr. Hales,” said Johnny. “I didn’t
bother to cross-examine the previous witnesses”-he
smiled upon Caney and Weir-“because
they are suffering from the results of an accident.
In the mines, as I hear. Mining is a dangerous
business. Very. Sometimes a man is just
one-sixteenth of a second slow-and it gets
him trouble. I understand, Mr. Hales, that you
three gentlemen were together when you found the murdered
man?”
“Yes.”
“You had been prospecting together?”
“Prospecting, and looking for saddle thieves.”
“Did you find the saddle thieves?”
“No; I told you once.”
“No,” said Johnny; “you told Mr.
Wade. Find any mines?”
“Yes.”
“Good prospect?”
“I think so.”
“Um-yes.”
Johnny hesitated, and fell silent. Hales fidgeted.
“And the murdered man,” began Johnny slowly,
and stopped. Hales heaved a sigh of relief.
Johnny darted a swift glance at the judge. “And
the murdered man had been shot three times?”
“Three times. In the back.”
“The shots were close together?”
“Yes. My hand would have covered all three.”
“Sure of that?”
“Positive.”
“In your opinion, these shots had been fired
at close range?”
An interruption came. Four men
trooped into the door, booted and spurred; three of
the John Cross men-Tom Ross, Frank Bojarquez,
Will Foster; with Hiram Yoast, of the Bar Cross:
four fit to stand by Cæsar. A stir ran through
the court room. They raised their hands to Johnny
in grave salute; they filed to a bench together.
Johnny repeated the question:
“You say, Mr. Hales, that these three shots
had been fired at close range?”
“The dead man’s shirt
was burned. The gun must have been almost between
his shoulder blades.”
“Was there any blood on Forbes’ saddle?”
“I didn’t see Forbes’ saddle,”
growled Hales; “or Forbes’ horse.”
“Oh, yes. But in your opinion, Forbes was
riding when he was killed?”
“In my opinion, he was.”
“What makes you think so?”
“We found the tracks where Forbes
was dragged, twenty feet or so, before his foot come
loose from the stirrup, and blood in the track all
the way. I told all this before.”
“So you did, so you did.
Now about these wounds. Did the path of the bullets
range up or down from where they entered the body?”
“Down.”
“Sure of that?”
“Yes.”
“Did you examine the body?”
“How else would I know? Of course I did.”
“Show the court, on your own
body, about where the wounds were located.”
“They went in about here”-indicating-“and
come out about here.”
“Thank you. Then the shots
passed obliquely through the body, entering behind,
somewhere near the left shoulder blade, and coming
out at a point slightly lower, and under the right
breast?”
“About that, yes.”
“All indicating that the murderer
rode at his victim’s left hand, and a little
behind him, when these shots were fired?”
“I think so, yes.”
“And that the gun muzzle must
have been a little higher than the wounds made by
the entering bullets, because the bullets passed through
the body with a slightly downward trend?”
“That is right.”
“How big was the murdered man?”
“He was a very large man.”
“Very heavy or very tall?”
“Both, I should say. It
is hard to judge a dead man’s height. He
was very heavily built.”
“You lifted him?”
“I turned him over.”
“How tall was he, would you say?”
“I tell you, I don’t know.”
Hales was visibly more impatient with each question.
“Of course you don’t know.
But you can make a guess. Come, give the court
your estimate.”
“Not less than six feet, I should say.
Probably more.”
“Did you see Adam Forbes’
horse-no, you told us that. But you
saw my horse when you arrested me?”
“Yes.”
“Was my horse a small horse or a large one?”
“A small one.”
Johnny rose and strolled to the window.
“Well, about how high?”
“About fourteen hands. Possibly an inch
more.”
“Would you know my horse again?”
“Certainly.”
“So you could swear to him?”
“Yes.”
“What color was he?”
“A grullo-a
very peculiar shade of grullo-a sleek
glossy, velvety blue.”
“Was he thin or fat?”
“Neither. Smooth-not fat.”
“Did you notice his brand?”
“Of course.”
“Describe it to the court.”
“He was branded K I M on the left hip.”
“On which side did his mane hang?”
“On the left.”
“Thank you. Now, Mr. Hales,
would you describe me as a large man or a small one?”
Hales looked an appeal to the prosecutor.
“I object to that question-improper,
irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial. And that
is not all. This man, this man Dines, is arguing
the case as he goes along, contrary to all rule.”
“I like it that way,”
observed the judge placidly. “If he makes
his point as the evidence is given, I’m not
likely to miss any bets, as I might do if he waited
for the summing up.”
“I objected to the question,”
snapped the prosecutor. “I demand your
ruling.”
“Has the defense anything to
offer? That question would certainly seem to
be superfluous on the face of it,” said the court,
mildly.
“Your Honor,” said Johnny,
“I want to get this down on the record in black
and white. Someone who has never seen me may have
to pass on this evidence before we get done.
I want that person to be sure of my size.”
“Objection overruled.”
“Please describe me-as to size-Mr.
Hales.”
“A very small man,” answered Hales sulkily.
“In your opinion, when I shot
Adam Forbes did I stand on my saddle? Or could
I have inflicted a wound such as you have described
by simply kneeling on my saddle-”
“I object!”
“-if Adam Forbes
rode a horse big enough to carry his weight, and I
rode a horse fourteen hands high?”
Wade leaped to his feet and flung
out his hands. “I object!” he shrilled.
“Objection sustained. The
question is most improper. I shall instruct myself
to disregard it in making my decision.”
“That’s all,” said Johnny Dines;
and sat down.
“Any more witnesses for the prosecution, Mr.
Wade?”
“No, sir. The prosecution rests.”
The judge turned back to Johnny. “Witnesses
for the defense?”
“Call my horse,” said Johnny Dines.
“Your Honor, I object!
This is preposterous-unheard of! We
will admit the height of this accursed horse as being
approximately fourteen hands, if that is what he wants
to prove. I ask that you keep this buffoon in
order. The trial has degenerated into farce-comedy.”
“Do you know, Mr. Wade, I seem
to observe some tragic elements in this trial,”
observed Hinkle. “I am curious to hear Mr.
Dines state his motive in making so extraordinary
a request from the court.”
“He’s trying to be funny!”
“No,” said the judge;
“I do not think Mr. Dines is trying to be funny.
If such is his idea, I shall find means to make him
regret it. Will you explain, Mr. Dines?
You are entitled to make a statement of what you expect
to prove.”
Johnny rose.
“Certainly. Let me outline
my plan of defense. I could not call witnesses
until I heard the evidence against me. Now that
I have heard the evidence, it becomes plain that,
except for a flat denial by myself, no living man
can speak for me. I was alone. When I take
the stand presently, I shall state under oath precisely
what I shall now outline to you briefly.
“On the day in question I was
sent by Cole Ralston to Hillsboro to execute his orders,
as I will explain in full, later. I came through
MacCleod’s Park, started up a Bar Cross cow and
her unbranded yearling, and I caught the yearling
at the head of Redgate. While I was branding
it, a big man-I have every reason to believe
that this man was Adam Forbes-came down
the canyon. He rode up where I was branding the
yearling, talked to me, smoked a cigarette, gave me
a letter to mail, and went back the way he came.
I went to Garfield. My horse had lost a shoe,
as the witnesses have stated. I nailed on a fresh
shoe in Garfield, and came on. I was arrested
about dark that night while on the road to Hillsboro.
That is all my story. True or false, I shall
not vary from it for any cross-examination.
“I shall ask Your Honor to consider
that my story may be true. I shall ask Your Honor
to consider that if my story is true no man may speak
for me. I saw no other man between Upham and the
Garfield ditch-twenty-five miles.
“You have heard the prosecution’s
theory. It is that I was stealing a calf belonging
to the dead man-branding it; that he caught
me in the act, and that I foully murdered him.
If I can prove the first part of that theory to be
entirely false; if I can demonstrate that even if I
killed Adam Forbes I certainly did not kill him in
the manner or for the motive set forth by the theory
of the prosecution-then you may perhaps
believe my unsupported statement as to the rest of
it. And that is what I can do, if allowed the
opportunity. I cannot, by myself, now or at any
other time, absolutely prove my statement to be true.
I can and will prove the theory of the prosecution
to be absolutely false. To do that I rely upon
myself-not upon my statement, but upon
myself, my body, so much flesh and blood and bone,
considered as an exhibit in this case, taken in connection
with all known or alleged facts; on myself and my
horse; on Adam Forbes’ dead body and on the
horse Adam Forbes rode that day; on the Bar Cross
yearling I branded day before yesterday, a yearling
that I can describe in detail, a yearling that can
be found and must be found, a yearling that will be
found following a Bar Cross cow. I have no fancy
to be hanged by a theory. I demand to test that
theory by facts. I demand that my horse be called
to testify to the facts.”
“Mr. Gwinne, you may call the
prisoner’s horse,” said the justice.
“Spinal, you may act as the court’s officer
while Gwinne is gone.”
“His name is Twilight,”
added Johnny, “and he is over at the Gans stables.”
“I protest! Your Honor,
I protest against such unmitigated folly,” stormed
Mr. Benjamin Attlebury Wade, in a hot fury of exasperation.
“You are making a mockery of the law! There
is no precedent on record for anything like this.”
“Here’s where we make
a new precedent, then,” observed the court cheerfully.
“I have given my instructions, and I’d
be willing to place a small bet on going through with
my folly. I don’t know much about the law,
but the people who put me here knew I didn’t
know much about the law when they elected me-so
I guess they aimed to have me get at the rights of
things in my own way.” He twisted his scanty
beard for a moment; his faded blue eyes peered over
the rims of his glasses. “Not that it would
make any great difference,” he added.
A little wearied from the strain of
focalized effort, Johnny looked out across the blur
of faces. Hobby Lull smiled at him, and Charlie
See looked hardihood like his own. There were
other friendly faces, many of them; and beyond and
above them all shone the faces of his straining mates,
Hiram and the three John Cross men.
“Judge, may I speak to the prisoner?”
asked Hiram Yoast. He tugged at a grizzled foretop.
“You may.”
“Old-timer,” said Hiram,
“we didn’t hear of you till late last night.
We had moved on from Hermosa. That’s all,
Your Honor. Thank you.”
“Will the learned counsel for
the defense outline the rest of his program?”
inquired the judge, with respectful gentleness.
“He will,” said Johnny.
“I’ll have to ask you to continue the case
until to-morrow, or maybe later-till I can
get some of the Garfield men who can swear to the
size of the horse Adam Forbes rode. Then I want-”
Charlie See rose.
“I offer my evidence. I
slept with Adam Forbes the night before he was killed;
and I saw him start. He rode a big horse.”
“Thank you,” said Johnny.
“I’ll call you after a while. Get
yourself a reserved seat inside here. I knew
Adam Forbes rode a big horse, and I can describe that
horse-if Adam Forbes was the man I met in
Redgate, which I’ve never doubted. A big
blaze-faced bay with a Heart-Diamond brand. This
way.” He traced on the wall a heart with
an inscribed diamond. “But I want to call
the men who brought in Adam Forbes. I want to
question them about all the tracks they saw, before
it rained. So you see, Your Honor, I’ll
have to ask for a continuation. I can’t
afford to be hanged to save the county a little money.”
“You’ll get your continuation.”
“But that isn’t all.
That yearling I branded-he was from the
river bosques, for he had his tail full of
sand burs, and the bunch he was with was sure snaky.
His mammy’s a Bar Cross cow and he’s a
Bar Cross bull-and so branded by me.
He’ll be back with her by this time. He
had all the Hereford markings, just about perfect.
His mammy wasn’t marked so good. She had
a bald face and a line back, all right, and white
feet and a white belly. But one of her stockings
was outsize-run clear up her thigh-and
she had two big white spots on her ribs on the nigh
side. I didn’t see the other side.
And one of her horns drooped a little-the
right one. I would like to have you appoint a
commission to bring them into court, or at any rate
to interview them and get a statement of facts.”
“That’s reasonable,”
said the judge. “Application granted.”
He called to Tom Ross. “Tom, that’s
your job. You and your three peelers find that
Bar Cross cow-objection overruled-and
that bull yearling. Mr. Clerk, you may so enter
it, at the charge of Sierra County.”
Wade was on his feet again.
“But, Your Honor,” he
gasped, “those men are the prisoner’s especial
friends!”
“Exactly. That’s
why they’ll find that calf. Results are
what I’m after, and I don’t care a hang
about methods.” He frowned. “Look
here, Mr. Wade-am I to understand that
you want this prisoner convicted whether he’s
guilty or not?”
“No, no, certainly not.
But why appoint those four men in particular?
There is always the possibility of collusion.”
Judge Hinkle’s face became bleak
and gray. He rose slowly. The court room
grew suddenly still. Hinkle walked across the
little intervening space and faced the prosecutor.
“Collision, perhaps you mean,”
he said. His quiet, even voice was cutting in
its contempt. “What do you think this is-a
town full of thugs? I want you to know that those
four men stand a damn sight higher in this community
than you do. Sit down-you’re
making an indecent exposure of your soul!”
As he went back to his desk, an oldish
man came to the door and caught Hobby Lull’s
eye. He beckoned. Hobby rose and went to
the door. They held a whispered council in the
anteroom.
Judge Hinkle busied himself with the
papers on his desk for a moment. When he looked
up his face had regained its wonted color.
“Here comes Gwinne with the
horse,” announced Hobby Lull from the anteroom.
“Mr. Dines, how does your client
propose to question that horse, if I may ask?”
inquired the judge.
“I propose to prove by my horse,”
said Johnny, “that though I may have murdered
this man I certainly did not shoot him while I was
riding this horse. And I depend on the evidence
of the prosecution’s witnesses”-he
smiled at the prosecution’s witnesses-“to
establish that no one rode in Redgate that day except
me-and them! If the court will appoint
some man known to be a rider and a marksman, and will
instruct him to ride my horse by the courthouse windows,
we can get this testimony over at once. It has
been shown here that I carried a .45. Set up
a box out there where we can see from the windows;
give your man a gun and tell him to ride as close
as he likes and put three shots in that box.
If he hits that box more than once-”
“Gun-shy?” said Judge Hinkle.
“Watch him!” said Johnny rapturously.
The judge’s eye rested on Mr. Wade with frank
distaste.
“We will now have another gross
instance of collusion,” he announced. “I
will call on Frank Bojarquez to assist the court.”
Francisco Bojarquez upreared his straight
length at the back of the hall.
“Excuse, please, if I seem to
tell the judge what he is to do. But what Mistair
Wade says, it is true a little-or it might
seem true to estrangers. For us in Hillsboro,
frien’s togethair, eet does not mattair; we
know. But because the worl’ ees full of
estrangers-theenk, Judge Hinkle, eef it
is not bes’ that it ees not a great frien’
of the preesoner who is to examine that horse-what?
That no estranger may have some doubts? There
are so many estrangers.”
“Humph! There is something
in that.” The justice scratched his ear.
“Very well. George Scarboro, stand up.
Are you acquainted with this prisoner?”
“No, sir.”
“You are one of the Arizona Rangers?”
“I am.”
“Slip your saddle on that blue horse. You
know what you have to do?”
“Yes, sir.”
Scarboro departed, and half the court
room went with him. Five minutes later he rode
the Twilight horse, prancing daintily, under the courthouse
windows. The windows were lined with faces.
Johnny, the judge and Wade had a window to themselves,
within the sacred railing. But Spinal Maginnis
did not look from any window. Spinal was looking
elsewhere-at Caney, Weir and Hales.
The ranger wore a loose and sagging
belt; his gun swung low on his thigh, just at the
reach of his extended arm. As he came abreast
of the destined box Scarboro’s arm flashed down
and up. So did Twilight.
A pistol shot, a long blue streak,
and a squeal of anguish ascended together, hopelessly
mingled and indiscriminate, spurning the spinning
earth. It launched toward outer space in a complex
of motion upward, sidewise, forward and inside out,
shaming the orbit of the moon, nodes, perturbations,
apsides, syzygies and other symptoms too
luminous to mention; but perhaps apogee and acceleration
were the most prominent. A clatter, a pitch,
an agonized bawl, a sailing hat, a dust cloud, a desperate
face above it, with streaming hair; the marvel fell
away down the hill and left a stunned silence behind.
And presently a gun came down.
“Do you want to cross-examine
the witness?” inquired Johnny.
Wade threw up his hands.
“Well!” he said.
“Well!” His jaw dropped. He drew Johnny
aside and whispered, “See here, damn you-did
you kill that man?”
“No, I didn’t,”
whispered Johnny. “But you keep it dark.
It’s a dead secret.”
The roaring crowd came in with laughter
and shouts. As they found seats and the tumult
quieted Johnny addressed the judge.
“Shall I take the stand now,
Your Honor, or wait till after dinner? It’s
late, I know-but you’d believe me
better right now-”
“Wait a minute, Andy!”
A man rose in the crowd-a
tall old man with a melancholy face-the
same who had summoned Hobby Lull to the door.
“Why, hello, Pete! I didn’t
see you come!” said the judge.
“That’s funny, too.
I have been here half an hour. You’re getting
old, Andy-getting old!”
“Oh, you go to thunder!
Say, can you straighten up this mess?”
“I can help, at least-or
so I believe. I was with the search party.”
“Well, who calls this witness-the
defense or the prosecution?” inquired the court.
“Oh, let me call myself-as
the friend of the court, amicus curiae, just
as they used to do in England-do yet, for
all I know. I’ve not heard your evidence-though
I saw some just now, outside. But I’ve got
a few facts which you may be able to fit in somewhere.
I don’t know the defendant, and am not for or
against the prosecutor or for anybody or anything
except justice. So I’ll take it kindly if
you’d let me tell my story in my own way-as
the friend of justice. I’ll get over the
ground quicker and tell it straighter. If anyone
is not satisfied they can cross-examine me afterwards,
just as if I had been called by one side or the other.”
Judge Hinkle turned to Wade. “Any objections?”
“No,” said Wade.
“I guess justice is what we all want-results,
as you said yourself.”
He was a subdued man. His three
witnesses stirred uneasily, with sidelong glances.
Spinal Maginnis kept a corner of his eye on those
witnesses.
“Suits me,” said Johnny.
“I got to get me a drink,”
whispered Caney, and rose, tiptoeing. But Maginnis
rose with him.
“Sit down, Mr. Caney,”
he said. “You look poorly. I’ll
fetch you some water.”
Pete Harkey took the stand and was
duly sworn. He crossed his legs and addressed
the judge.
“Well, we went up in Redgate,
Dan Fenderson and I and a bunch. We thought there
was no use of more than one coming here to-day, because
we all saw just the same things.”
Hinkle nodded. “All right, Pete. Tell
us about it.”
“Well, now, Andy-Your
Honor-if it’s just the same to everybody,
I’ll skip the part about the tracks and finding
Adam until cross-examination. It’s just
going over the same old ground again. I’ve
been talking to Hobby, and we found everything just
about as you heard it from these boys.”
His eye shifted toward the witness bench. “All
except one little thing about the tracks, and that
was done after the murder, and might have been happen-so.
And I was wanting to hurry up and get back to Garfield
to-night. We’re going to bury Adam at sundown.”
“All right, Pete. But we’ll
cross-examine you-if not to-day, then to-morrow.
It pays to work tailings, sometimes.”
“That’s queer, too.
I was just coming to that-in a way.
Mining. Adam went up there to prospect for gold-placer
gold. When the big rain came, the night he was
killed, all tracks were washed out, of course.
We hadn’t got far when dark came-and
then the rain. But yesterday I went combing out
the country to look for Adam’s outfit of camp
stuff, and also to see if perhaps he had found any
claims before he was killed. And I found this.”
He handed to the judge a small paper
packet, folded and refolded, and wrapped round with
a buckskin string. The judge opened it.
“Coarse gold!” he said.
“Like the Apache gold in the seventies!
Pete, you’ve got a rich mine if there’s
much of this.”
“It is rich dirt,” said
Pete. “I got that from less than a dozen
pans. But it is not my mine.”
“How so?”
“I got home late last night.
This morning I looked in all the pockets in the clothes
Adam was wearing. Here is what I found in his
vest.” He handed to Hinkle a small tobacco
sack, rolled to a tiny cylinder.
“The same kind of gold-big
as rice!” said Hinkle. “So Adam Forbes
found this?”
Caney’s hand crept under his coat.
“Judge for yourself. I
found three claims located. Three. But no
name of Adam Forbes to any notice. One claim
was called the ’Goblin Gold-’”
Charlie See rose up as if he were
lifted by the hair of his head. “The other
names, Pete! Not the locators. The claims-give
me the names of the other two claims!”
“‘Nine Bucks’ was one-and
the ‘Please Hush.’”
Charlie turned and took one step,
his tensed weight resting on the balls of his feet,
his left arm lashed out to point. All eyes turned
to the witness bench-and two witnesses looked
at one.
“Caney!” thundered Charlie See.
Leaping, Caney’s arm came from
his coat. See’s hand was swifter, unseen.
In flashes of fire and smoke, Caney, even as he leaped
up, pitched forward on his face. His arm reached
out on the floor, holding a smoking gun, and See’s
foot was on the gun.
A dozen men had pulled down Toad Hales
and Jody Weir. Gwinne’s gun was out.
“Stand back! The next man
over the rails gets it!” Maginnis jumped beside
him. The shouting crowd recoiled.
“Sit down! Sit down, everybody!”
shouted the judge. He pounded on his desk.
“Bojarquez! Ross! Foster! Come
up here. I make you deputies. Get this crowd
out or get order.”
The deafening turmoil stopped as suddenly
as it had begun.
“Gwinne, arrest those two men
for the murder of Adam Forbes,” ordered Hinkle.
“Well, gee-whiz, I’d say
they was under arrest now. Here, gimme them.”
He reached down and handcuffed Weir and Hales together.
“How’s Caney, Dines? Dead?”
Johnny knelt by the fallen man.
“Dead as a door nail. Three shots.
Did he get you anywhere, See?”
“No. He was just one-sixteenth
of a second too late.” Charlie See looked
hard at the cylinder of his gun. He had fired
only two shots. “Pete, it’s a wonder
he didn’t hit you. You was right in line.”
“I wasn’t there,”
said Pete dryly. “Not when the bullets got
there. Not good enough.”
Gwinne and Maginnis took the two prisoners
to jail, by the back door.
“Now for a clearing up,”
said Judge Hinkle. “You seem to have inside
information, Mr. See. Suppose you tell us about
it?”
“No chance for a mistake, judge.
I had a long talk with Adam the night before, about
a lost gold mine at Mescalero. And three of the
phrases that we used back and forth-it
seems he picked them out to name his find. ‘Goblin
Gold.’ I used the word ‘gobbling’
gold-joking, you know. And the story
was about ‘nine bucks’; and it wound up
with an old Mescalero saying ‘Won’t you
please hush?’ It wasn’t possible that
those three names had reached the papers Pete found,
except through the dead man’s mind. Adam
called these three men to witness for him, likely.
Then they killed him for his mines. They destroyed
his location papers, but they kept the names.
Easier than to make up new ones. That’ll
hang ’em.”
“Sounds good. But how are
you going to prove it? Suppose they get a good
lawyer and stick to their story? They found a
mine, and you got in a shooting match with Caney.
That don’t prove anything.”
“Well, I’ll bet I can
prove it,” said Johnny Dines. “Ten
to one, that letter Forbes gave me to mail was his
location papers. He seemed keen about it.”
“Did he say anything about location
papers? Was the letter addressed to the recorder?”
demanded Pete.
“Look now!” said Johnny.
“If this theory of See’s is correct, and
if that really was location papers in the letter I
mailed-why, that letter won’t get
here till two o’clock this afternoon, whether
it is the location papers or what. And the postmaster
and the recorder are both here in this court room,
judge. Gwinne was pointing out everybody to me,
before you called court. So they can mosey along
down to the post office together-the postmaster
and the recorder. And when that letter comes
you’ll know all about it.”
“Ah, that reminds me,”
said the judge-“the case of the Territory
of New Mexico vs. John Dines is now dismissed.
This court is now adjourned. John Dines, I want
to be the first to congratulate you.”
“Thanks, Judge.-Hiram,”
said Johnny, “Cole told me to report to you.
He said I was to go to the John Cross pasture and pick
me a mount from the runaways there.”
“But, Johnny, you can’t
ride those horses,” said Bojarquez.
Johnny flushed. “Don’t
you believe it, old hand. You’re not the
only one that can ride.”
Bojarquez spread out his hands.
“But bareback? Where ees your saddle?
And the Twilight horse? The bridle, he ees broke.
Scarb’ro’s in Chihuahua by now.”
“Dinner’s on me,” said Johnny.
Charlie See drew Johnny aside and spoke to him in
confidence.
“How does it happen you know
so pat just when a letter gets to Hillsboro when it
is posted in Garfield?”
“A letter? Oh-Hobby Lull, he
told me.”
“Yes, yes. And what was
the big idea for keeping still about that letter while
they wove a rope to your neck?”
“Why, my dear man,” said
Johnny, “I can’t read through a sealed
envelope.”
Charlie sniffed. “You saw
a good many things mighty clear, I notice, but you
overlooked the one big bet-like fun you
did! Caney and Weir and Hales-don’t
you suppose they knew that letter was on the way?
And that it was never to reach the recorder?”
“Since you are so very shrewd,”
said Johnny, “I sometimes wonder that you are
not shrewder still.”
“And keep my mouth shut?
That’s how I shall keep it. But I just wanted
you to know. You may be deceiving me, but you’re
not fooling me any. Keep your secret.”
“Thank you,” said Johnny, “I will.”
“Good boy. All the same,
Hobby and I will be up at the post office. And
I know now what we’ll find in that letter you
mailed. We’ll find Adam’s location
papers, with them three murderers for witness.”
And they did. They found something
else too; a message from beyond the grave that in
his hour of fortune their friend did not forget his
friends.
They buried Adam Forbes at sundown
of that day. No thing was lacking; his friends
and neighbors gathered together to bid him Godspeed;
there were love and tears for him. And of those
friends, three were all road stained and weary; they
had ridden hard from Hillsboro for that parting; Lull
and Charlie See and old Pete. It was to one of
these that all eyes were turned when the rude coffin
was lowered into the grave.
“Pete?” said Jim-Ike-Jones.
And old Pete Harkey stepped forth
and spoke slowly, while his faded old eyes looked
past the open grave and rested on the hills beyond.
“More than at any other time
we strive to center and steady our thoughts, when
we stand by the loved and dead. It is an effort
as vain as to look full and steadily at the blinding
sun. I can tell you no thing here which you do
not know.
“You all knew Adam Forbes.
He was a simple and kindly man. He brought a
good courage to living, he was all help and laughter,
he joyed in the sting and relish of rushing life.
Those of you here who were most unfriends to him will
not soon forget that gay, reckless, tender-hearted
creature.
“You know his faults. He
was given to hasty wrath, to stubbornness and violence.
His hand was heavy. If there are any here who
have been wronged by this dead man-as I
think most like-let the memory of it be
buried in this grave. It was never his way to
walk blameless. He did many things amiss; he
took wrong turnings. But he was never too proud
to turn back, to admit a mistake or to right his wrongdoing.
He paid for what he broke.
“For the rest-he
fed the hungry, helped the weak, he nursed the sick
and dug graves for the dead. Now, in his turn,
it is fitting and just that no bought hand dug this
grave, but that his friends and his foes did him this
last service, and called pleasant dreams to his long
sleep.
“We have our dear dreams, too.
It can do no harm to dream that somewhere down the
skies that brightness and fire and light still flames-but
not for us.
“It is written that upon Mars
Hill the men of Athens built an altar ‘to the
Unknown God.’ It was well builded; and with
no misgiving we leave our friend to the care-and
to the honor-of the Unknown God.”
He stood back; and from the women
who wept came one who did not weep, dry-eyed and pale;
whose pitying hand dropped the first earth into the
grave.
“Stardust to Stardust,” said Edith Harkey.
That night Pete Harkey stood by the
big fireplace of the big lonesome house.
“Shall I light the fire, Edith?”
“Not to-night, father.”
In the dimness he groped for a chair;
he took her on his knee, her arms clung fast.
“Is it well with you, Edith?”
Then, in the clinging dusk she dared
the truth at last; to ears that did not hear.
For his thought was with the dead man. She knew
it well; yet once to tell her story-only
once! Her voice rang steady, prouder than any
pride: “I have loved Greatheart. It
is well with me.”
“Poor little girl,” he
said. “Poor little girl!” The proud
head sought his breast and now her tears fell fast.
And far away, Charlie See rode south
through the wizard twilight. There was no singing
now. For at the world’s edge some must fare
alone; through all their dreams one unforgotten face-laughing,
and dear, and lost.