Against the alert, the effective blow
is a sudden blow. Secrecy, and a surprise, were
the only hope of success in what the cattlemen were
now attempting in the Falling Wall. Of the men
on whom they could count to organize and carry through
such a raid, they had just one capable of energizing
every detail Harry Van Horn. Laramie,
the man Doubleday and Pettigrew would have chosen,
they had failed to enlist, and what was more serious though
this, perhaps, Doubleday did not realize they
had likewise failed to rid themselves of; Tom Stone
had bungled.
But Doubleday in especial was not
a man to lose time over a failure. He knew that
Van Horn had “go” enough in him to clean
out a whole county if he were given the men and backing,
and that he stood high in the councils of the range.
When Van Horn spoke, men listened. His eye
flashed with his words and his long, straight hair
shook defiance at opposition. He swore with
a staccato that really meant things and cut like a
knife. When once started, mercy was not in him.
In the Falling Wall park there lived
a mere handful of men, and these widely scattered;
but Van Horn was the last man to underestimate the
handful he was after. He knew them every one,
and knew that no better men ever rode the range than
Stormy Gorman, Dutch Henry, Yankee Robinson and Abe
Hawk, and their associates if, indeed, for
a man that never mixed with other men, Hawk could
be said to have associates.
But the four named were the men to
whom the lesser rustlers of the park looked; the men
whose exploits they imitated, and these were the men
on whose heads a price had, in effect, been set.
Van Horn assembled his men, earlier
than Lefever had been informed. An old trail
from Doubleday’s ranch to the Falling Wall crosses
the road to the Fort some distance north of Sleepy
Cat. The party from the ranch Tom
Stone with some of the most reckless cowboys and Doubleday waited
there for the Texans whom Van Horn was bringing from
Pettigrew’s. Both parties were at the rendezvous
that night by twelve o’clock, and within thirty
minutes were headed north by way of the Crazy Woman
for Falling Wall park.
The night for the raid had been chosen.
The sky was overcast, and when the party left the
crossing between twelve and one o’clock their
exact destination was still a secret to the greater
number. Small ranchers along the creek might
have wakened at the smart clatter of so many horses,
but men to and from the Fort traveled late at times
and made even more noise. This night there were
riders abroad; but there was no singing.
Dawn was whitening the eastern sky
when the raiding party halted near a clump of trees
on the south fork of the Turkey. The valley into
which they had ridden during the night was very broken,
but offered good grazing. Along the tortuous
water course, Stormy Gorman, the old prize-fighter,
and Dutch Henry, the ex-soldier, had preempted two
of the very few pieces of land that did not stand
directly on edge and built for themselves cabins.
Gorman’s cabin lay a mile above the fork where
the raiders had halted; Henry’s lay a few miles
farther up the creek.
During the long night ride it had
been decided to strike at Gorman’s ranch first;
thence to follow the creek trail up to Dutch Henry’s,
despatch him in turn, to cross rapidly a narrow rough
divide beyond which they could reach Hawk’s
cabin on the east fork of the Turkey and thence sweep
into the northwest to clean out the smaller fry the
“chicken feed” rustlers as Van
Horn called them. But toward morning, following
much ill-natured dispute between Stone and Van Horn,
the tactics were changed. It was decided to
go after Dutch Henry first as the more
alert and slippery of the two and as quietly
as possible the silent invaders rode slowly along
the creek past Gorman’s place up to Henry’s.
Day was breaking as the riders, dismounting
and leaving their horses on the creek bottom, crept
noiselessly, under Stone’s guidance, up a wash
to the bench on which Henry’s cabin stood.
Hiding just below a shallow bank at the head of a
draw, they lay awaiting developments. Where
Stone had posted them they commanded the cabin perfectly.
He had lived part of one year with Henry when they
two preyed jointly on the range and he knew the ground
well.
They had hardly disposed of themselves
in this manner and were beginning, in the gray dusk,
to distinguish objects with some certainty, when the
door of the distant cabin opened and a mongrel collie
bounded out followed by a man who left the door ajar.
The man, carrying a water pail, set it down, yawned,
stretched himself and tucked his shirt slowly inside
his trousers. Wild with joy the dog danced,
leaped and barked about his master only
to be rewarded by a kick that sent him yelping to
a little distance, where turning, crouching with extended
paws, whining and frantically wagging his tail, the
poor beast tried to beg forgiveness for its half-starved
happiness. The man, giving this demonstration
no heed, picked up the pail and started for the creek.
His path took him in a direction roughly
parallel to the line along which his hidden enemy
lay.
“Don’t fire at that man,”
exclaimed Van Horn to his companions under cover of
the draw. “That’s not Dutch Henry,”
he whispered the next moment. “Don’t
fire. I’ll take care of him.”
The rustler, quite unconscious of
his deadly danger, tramped unevenly on. His
dog, no longer repulsed, dashed joyously back and forth,
scenting the trails of the night and barking wildly
at his master by turns. The man was walking
hardly three hundred yards from where Stone, rifle
in hand, lay, and had reached the footpath leading
from the bench to the creek bottom when Stone, half
rising, covered him slowly with point-blank sights.
In the path ahead, the dog had struck a fresh gopher
hole and, still yelping, was pawing madly into it,
when a rifle cracked. The man with the pail,
swung violently half around by the shock of a spreading
bullet, jerked convulsively and the pail flew clattering
from his hand. He struggled an instant to keep
his footing, then collapsing, fell prone across the
path and lay quite still.
Stone, followed by a man nearest him,
scrambling down the draw, hurried along the creek
bottom, and ran up to reach the path where the murdered
man lay. The dog, barking and dashing wildly
around his prostrate master, spied the foreman and
sprang furiously down the trail at him. Stone,
rifle in one hand and revolver in the other, was ready,
and, firing from the hip, broke the collie’s
back. With a howl the stricken brute turned,
and, dragging his helpless hindquarters along the ground
with incredible swiftness, pawed himself back to the
dying man’s head and yelping, licked frantically
at the hand of his master. Coming up into plain
sight, Stone got a good look at the man he had killed:
“Stormy Gorman!” he exclaimed, with an
oath of surprise. “Who’d ‘a’
thought,” he continued, “that big bum would
be up at Dutch Henry’s this morning!”
The old prize-fighter was struggling
in his last round. His heavy-lidded eyes, swollen
with drink and sleep, were closed, and from his mouth,
as his head hung to one side, a dark stream ran to
a little pool in the dust. Only a stertorous
breathing reflected his effort to live and even this
was fast failing. Van Horn hurried up the path
from the bottom, whither he had followed Stone; anger
was all over his face: “Kill that damned
dog,” he exclaimed, out of breath, to those about
him. Two of the three men drew revolvers and
shot the collie through the head.
“Damnation!” cried Van
Horn in a fury. “Stop your shooting.
Couldn’t you knock him in the head? Do
you want to start up the whole country?” he
demanded, as he saw the man who lay at his feet and
had taken the brief count for eternity was Gorman.
He turned on Stone with rage in his eyes and his
voice: “Now,” he cried, punctuating
his abuse with the fiercest gestures, “you’ve
done it, haven’t you!” Anger almost choked
him. “You’ve got Gorman with a brass
band and left Dutch Henry in the cabin waiting for
us, haven’t you? Why,” he roared,
“didn’t you obey orders, let this tank
get down to the bottom and knock him on the head into
the creek?” A violent recrimination between
Stone and Van Horn followed. But the milk was
spilt as well as the blood of the stubborn rustler,
and there was nothing for it but new dispositions.
Gorman’s presence indicated
that Henry was at home. If he were at home,
he was, no doubt, within the cabin; but just how, after
Stone’s blunder, to get at him, was a vexing
question.
Van Horn started down the foot trail
back to the bottom and around to the first hiding
place. Lingering with a companion to look at
Gorman in his blood, Stone turned for approval:
“See where I hit him?” he grinned.
“Poor light, too.”
A brief council was held in the draw.
Watched for more than an hour, not the slightest
sign of life about the lonely cabin could be detected.
Various expedients, none of them very novel, were
tried to draw Henry’s fire should he be within.
But these were of no avail. A dozen theories
were advanced as to where Henry might or might not
be. To every appearance there was not, so far
as the enemy could judge, a living man within miles
of the spot. The older heads, Pettigrew, Doubleday,
Van Horn, even Stone, talked less than the others;
but they were by no means convinced that the house
was empty.
One of the least patient of the cowboys
at length deliberately exposed himself to fire from
the sphinx-like cabin. He stood up and walked
up and down the edge of the draw. Nothing happened.
Emboldened, he started out into the open and toward
the cabin. No shot greeted him. A companion,
jumping up, hurried after him; a third, a Texas boy,
sprang up to join them. For those watching from
hiding it was a ticklish moment. Toward the
draw there was a considerable growth of mountain blue-stem,
none of it very high and gradually shortening nearer
the house. The three men were hastening through
the grass, separated by intervals of perhaps fifty
feet. The foremost got within a hundred yards
of the cabin door, which still stood open as Gorman
had left it, before Van Horn’s fear of an ambush
vanished. He himself, not to be too far behind
his followers, then rose to join the procession through
the blue stem and the crack of a rifle was heard.
Van Horn, with a shout of warning, dropped unhurt
into the draw. But the last man of the three
in the field stumbled as if struck by an ax.
Of the two men ahead of him, the hindermost dropped
into the grass and crawled snakelike back; the man
in front dropped his rifle and started at top speed
for safety; from the edge of the draw his companions
sent a fusillade of rifle fire at the cabin.
Apparently the diversion had no effect
on the marksman within. He fired again; this
time at the Texan crawling in the blue stem, and the
half-hidden man, almost lifted from the ground by the
blow of the bullet, dropped limp. Meantime the
first cowboy in his dash for safety was making a record
still unequaled in mountain story. He jumped
like a broncho and zig-zagged like a darting
bird, but faster than either. The efforts of
his companions to divert attention from him were constant.
Some of them poured bullets at the cabin. Others
jumped to their feet, and, yelling, sprang from point
to point to expose themselves momentarily and draw
the fire of the enemy. This was of no avail.
The hidden rifle with deliberate instancy cracked
once more. The fleeing cowboy, slammed as if
by a club, dashed on, but his right arm hung limp.
No snipe ever made half the race for life that he
put up in those fleeting seconds; and by his agility
he earned then and there the nickname of the bird
itself, for before the deadly sights could cover his
flight again he threw himself into a slight depression
that effectually hid him from the range of the enemy.
A swarm of hornets, roused, could
not have been more furious than the company under
the lee of the draw. Shooting, shouting, cursing
deep and loud, they made continual effort to keep
the deadly fire off their fallen companions.
They saw the half-open door of the cabin swing now
slowly shut and they riddled it with bullets.
They splintered the logs about it and, scattering
in as wide an arc as they dare, continued to pour
a fire into the silent cabin. At intervals they
paused to wait for a return. There was no return.
All ruses they had ever heard of they tried over
again to draw a fire and exhaust the besieged man’s
ammunition. Nothing moved the lone enemy if
he were, indeed, alone. The day wore into afternoon.
By shouting, the assailants learned that two of their
three hapless companions lying in the blue stem were
still alive the Snipe very much alive,
as his stentorian answers indicated. He called
vigorously for water but got none. His refuge
was too exposed.
How to get rid of Dutch Henry taxed
the wits of the invaders. The whole morning
and the early afternoon went to pot-luck firing from
the trench along the draw, but although it was often
asserted that Henry must long since be dead having
returned none of the shooting that was meant to call
his fire no one manifested the curiosity
necessary to prove the assertion by closing in on
the cabin. Stone was still sulking over Van
Horn’s sharp talk of the morning when Van Horn
came over to where the foreman had posted himself
to cover the cabin door: “We’ve got
to get that guy before dark, Tom, or he’ll slip
us.”
“All right,” replied Stone, “get
him.”