By
Frank Harris
One afternoon in July, 1869, I was
seated at my desk in Locock’s law-office in
the town of Kiota, Kansas. I had landed in New
York from Liverpool nearly a year before, and had
drifted westwards seeking in vain for some steady
employment. Lawyer Locock, however, had promised
to let me study law with him, and to give me a few
dollars a month besides, for my services as a clerk.
I was fairly satisfied with the prospect, and the
little town interested me. An outpost of civilization,
it was situated on the border of the great plains,
which were still looked upon as the natural possession
of the nomadic Indian tribes. It owed its importance
to the fact that it lay on the cattle-trail which led
from the prairies of Texas through this no man’s
land to the railway system, and that it was the first
place where the cowboys coming north could find a
bed to sleep in, a bar to drink at, and a table to
gamble on. For some years they had made of Kiota
a hell upon earth. But gradually the land in
the neighbourhood was taken up by farmers, emigrants
chiefly from New England, who were determined to put
an end to the reign of violence. A man named
Johnson was their leader in establishing order and
tranquillity. Elected, almost as soon as he came
to the town, to the dangerous post of City Marshal,
he organized a vigilance committee of the younger
and more daring settlers, backed by whom he resolutely
suppressed the drunken rioting of the cowboys.
After the ruffians had been taught to behave themselves,
Johnson was made Sheriff of the County, a post which
gave him a house and permanent position. Though
married now, and apparently “settled down,”
the Sheriff was a sort of hero in Kiota. I had
listened to many tales about him, showing desperate
determination veined with a sense of humour, and I
often regretted that I had reached the place too late
to see him in action. I had little or nothing
to do in the office. The tedium of the long days
was almost unbroken, and Stephen’s “Commentaries”
had become as monotonous and unattractive as the bare
uncarpeted floor. The heat was tropical, and
I was dozing when a knock startled me. A negro
boy slouched in with a bundle of newspapers:
“This yer is Jedge Locock’s, I guess?”
“I guess so,” was my answer as I lazily
opened the third or fourth number of the “Kiota
Weekly Tribune.” Glancing over the sheet
my eye caught the following paragraph:
“Highwayrobbery with violence.
Judge Shannon
stopped.
The Outlaw
escapes. He knows Sheriff
Johnson.
“Information has just reached
us of an outrage perpetrated on the person of one
of our most respected fellow-citizens. The crime
was committed in daylight, on the public highway within
four miles of this city; a crime, therefore, without
parallel in this vicinity for the last two years.
Fortunately our County and State authorities can be
fully trusted, and we have no sort of doubt that they
can command, if necessary, the succour and aid of
each and every citizen of this locality in order to
bring the offending miscreant to justice.
“We now place the plain recital
of this outrage before our readers.
“Yesterday afternoon, as Ex-Judge
Shannon was riding from his law-office in Kiota towards
his home on Sumach Bluff, he was stopped about four
miles from this town by a man who drew a revolver on
him, telling him at the same time to pull up.
The Judge, being completely unarmed and unprepared,
obeyed, and was told to get down from the buckboard,
which he did. He was then ordered to put his
watch and whatever money he had, in the road, and
to retreat three paces.
“The robber pocketed the watch
and money, and told him he might tell Sheriff Johnson
that Tom Williams had ‘gone through him,’
and that he (Williams) could be found at the saloon
in Osawotamie at any time. The Judge now hoped
for release, but Tom Williams (if that be the robber’s
real name) seemed to get an afterthought, which he
at once proceeded to carry into effect. Drawing
a knife he cut the traces, and took out of the shafts
the Judge’s famous trotting mare, Lizzie D.,
which he mounted with the remark:
“’Sheriff Johnson, I reckon,
would come after the money anyway, but the hoss’ll
fetch him sure pop.’
“These words have just been
given to us by Judge Shannon himself, who tells us
also that the outrage took place on the North Section
Line, bounding Bray’s farm.
“After this speech the highway
robber Williams rode towards the township of Osawotamie,
while Judge Shannon, after drawing the buckboard to
the edge of the track, was compelled to proceed homewards
on foot.
“The outrage, as we have said,
took place late last evening, and Judge Shannon, we
understand, did not trouble to inform the County authorities
of the circumstance till to-day at noon, after leaving
our office. What the motive of the crime may
have been we do not worry ourselves to inquire; a
crime, an outrage upon justice and order, has been
committed; that is all we care to know. If anything
fresh happens in this connection we propose to issue
a second edition of this paper. Our fellow-citizens
may rely upon our energy and watchfulness to keep them
posted.
“Just before going to press
we learn that Sheriff Johnson was out of town attending
to business when Judge Shannon called; but Sub-Sheriff
Jarvis informs us that he expects the Sheriff back
shortly. It is necessary to add, by way of explanation,
that Mr. Jarvis cannot leave the jail unguarded, even
for a few hours.”
As may be imagined this item of news
awakened my keenest interest. It fitted in with
some things that I knew already, and I was curious
to learn more. I felt that this was the first
act in a drama. Vaguely I remembered some one
telling in disconnected phrases why the Sheriff had
left Missouri, and come to Kansas:
“’Twas after a quor’ll
with a pardner of his, named Williams, who kicked
out.”
Bit by bit the story, to which I had
not given much attention when I heard it, so casually,
carelessly was it told, recurred to my memory.
“They say as how Williams cut
up rough with Johnson, and drawed a knife on him,
which Johnson gripped with his left while he pulled
trigger. Williams, I heerd, was in the wrong;
I hain’t perhaps got the right end of it; anyhow,
you might hev noticed the Sheriff hes lost the
little finger off his left hand. Johnson,
they say, got right up and lit out from Pleasant Hill.
Perhaps the folk in Mizzoori kinder liked Williams
the best of the two; I don’t know. Anyway,
Sheriff Johnson’s a square man; his record here
proves it. An’ real grit, you bet your
life.”
The narrative had made but a slight
impression on me at the time; I didn’t know
the persons concerned, and had no reason to interest
myself in their fortunes. In those early days,
moreover, I was often homesick, and gave myself up
readily to dreaming of English scenes and faces.
Now the words and drawling intonation came back to
me distinctly, and with them the question: Was
the robber of Judge Shannon the same Williams who
had once been the Sheriff’s partner? My
first impulse was to hurry into the street and try
to find out; but it was the chief part of my duty to
stay in the office till six o’clock; besides,
the Sheriff was “out of town,” and perhaps
would not be back that day. The hours dragged
to an end at last; my supper was soon finished, and,
as night drew down, I hastened along the wooden side-walk
of Washington Street towards the Carvell House.
This hotel was much too large for the needs of the
little town; it contained some fifty bedrooms, of
which perhaps half-a-dozen were permanently occupied
by “high-toned” citizens, and a billiard-room
of gigantic size, in which stood nine tables, as well
as the famous bar. The space between the bar,
which ran across one end of the room, and the billiard-tables,
was the favourite nightly resort of the prominent
politicians and gamblers. There, if anywhere,
my questions would be answered.
On entering the billiard-room I was
struck by the number of men who had come together.
Usually only some twenty or thirty were present, half
of whom sat smoking and chewing about the bar, while
the rest watched a game of billiards or took a “life”
in pool. This evening, however, the billiard-tables
were covered with their slate-coloured “wraps,”
while at least a hundred and fifty men were gathered
about the open space of glaring light near the bar.
I hurried up the room, but as I approached the crowd
my steps grew slower, and I became half ashamed of
my eager, obtrusive curiosity and excitement.
There was a kind of reproof in the lazy, cool glance
which one man after another cast upon me, as I went
by. Assuming an air of indecision I threaded my
way through the chairs uptilted against the sides
of the billiard-tables. I had drained a glass
of Bourbon whisky before I realized that these apparently
careless men were stirred by some emotion which made
them more cautious, more silent, more warily on their
guard than usual. The gamblers and loafers, too,
had taken “back seats” this evening, whilst
hard-working men of the farmer class who did not frequent
the expensive bar of the Carvell House were to be
seen in front. It dawned upon me that the matter
was serious, and was being taken seriously.
The silence was broken from time to
time by some casual remark of no interest, drawled
out in a monotone; every now and then a man invited
the “crowd” to drink with him, and that
was all. Yet the moral atmosphere was oppressive,
and a vague feeling of discomfort grew upon me.
These men “meant business.”
Presently the door on my left opened Sheriff
Johnson came into the room.
“Good evenin’,”
he said; and a dozen voices, one after another, answered
with “Good evenin’! good evenin’,
Sheriff!” A big frontiersman, however, a horse-dealer
called Martin, who, I knew, had been on the old vigilance
committee, walked from the centre of the group in front
of the bar to the Sheriff, and held out his hand with:
“Shake, old man, and name the
drink.” The Sheriff took the proffered
hand as if mechanically, and turned to the bar with
“Whisky straight.”
Sheriff Johnson was a man of medium
height, sturdily built. A broad forehead, and
clear, grey-blue eyes that met everything fairly,
testified in his favour. The nose, however, was
fleshy and snub. The mouth was not to be seen,
nor its shape guessed at, so thickly did the brown
moustache and beard grow; but the short beard seemed
rather to exaggerate than conceal an extravagant out
jutting of the lower jaw, that gave a peculiar expression
of energy and determination to the face. His
manner was unobtrusively quiet and deliberate.
It was an unusual occurrence for Johnson
to come at night to the bar-lounge, which was beginning
to fall into disrepute among the puritanical or middle-class
section of the community. No one, however, seemed
to pay any further attention to him, or to remark the
unusual cordiality of Martin’s greeting.
A quarter of an hour elapsed before anything of note
occurred. Then, an elderly man whom I did not
know, a farmer, by his dress, drew a copy of the “Kiota
Tribune” from his pocket, and, stretching it
towards Johnson, asked with a very marked Yankee twang:
“Sheriff, hev yeou read this ’Tribune’?”
Wheeling half round towards his questioner, the Sheriff
replied:
“Yes, sir, I hev.”
A pause ensued, which was made significant to me by
the fact that the bar-keeper suspended his hand and
did not pour out the whisky he had just been asked
to supply a pause during which the two
faced each other; it was broken by the farmer saying:
“Ez yeou wer out of town
to-day, I allowed yeou might hev missed seein’
it. I reckoned yeou’d come straight hyar
before yeou went to hum.”
“No, Crosskey,” rejoined
the Sheriff, with slow emphasis; “I went home
first and came on hyar to see the boys.”
“Wall,” said Mr. Crosskey,
as it seemed to me, half apologetically, “knowin’
yeou I guessed yeou ought to hear the facks,”
then, with some suddenness, stretching out his hand,
he added, “I hev some way to go, an’ my
old woman ‘ull be waitin’ up fer me.
Good night, Sheriff.” The hands met while
the Sheriff nodded: “Good night, Jim.”
After a few greetings to right and
left Mr. Crosskey left the bar. The crowd went
on smoking, chewing, and drinking, but the sense of
expectancy was still in the air, and the seriousness
seemed, if anything, to have increased. Five
or ten minutes may have passed when a man named Reid,
who had run for the post of Sub-Sheriff the year before,
and had failed to beat Johnson’s nominee Jarvis,
rose from his chair and asked abruptly:
“Sheriff, do you reckon to take
any of us uns with you to-morrow?”
With an indefinable ring of sarcasm
in his negligent tone, the Sheriff answered:
“I guess not, Mr. Reid.”
Quickly Reid replied: “Then
I reckon there’s no use in us stayin’;”
and turning to a small knot of men among whom he had
been sitting, he added, “Let’s go, boys!”
The men got up and filed out after
their leader without greeting the Sheriff in any way.
With the departure of this group the shadow lifted.
Those who still remained showed in manner a marked
relief, and a moment or two later a man named Morris,
whom I knew to be a gambler by profession, called
out lightly:
“The crowd and you’ll
drink with me, Sheriff, I hope? I want another
glass, and then we won’t keep you up any longer,
for you ought to have a night’s rest with to-morrow’s
work before you.”
The Sheriff smiled assent. Every
one moved towards the bar, and conversation became
general. Morris was the centre of the company,
and he directed the talk jokingly to the account in
the “Tribune,” making fun, as it seemed
to me, though I did not understand all his allusions,
of the editor’s timidity and pretentiousness.
Morris interested and amused me even more than he
amused the others; he talked like a man of some intelligence
and reading, and listening to him I grew light-hearted
and careless, perhaps more careless than usual, for
my spirits had been ice-bound in the earlier gloom
of the evening.
“Fortunately our County and
State authorities can be fully trusted,” some
one said.
“Mark that ‘fortunately’,
Sheriff,” laughed Morris. “The editor
was afraid to mention you alone, so he hitched the
State on with you to lighten the load.”
“Ay!” chimed in another
of the gamblers, “and the ’aid and succour
of each and every citizen,’ eh, Sheriff, as
if you’d take the whole town with you.
I guess two or three’ll be enough fer Williams.”
This annoyed me. It appeared
to me that Williams had addressed a personal challenge
to the Sheriff, and I thought that Johnson should
so consider it. Without waiting for the Sheriff
to answer, whether in protest or acquiescence, I broke
in:
“Two or three would be cowardly.
One should go, and one only.” At once I
felt rather than saw the Sheriff free himself from
the group of men; the next moment he stood opposite
to me.
“What was that?” he asked
sharply, holding me with keen eye and out-thrust chin repressed
passion in voice and look.
The antagonism of his bearing excited
and angered me not a little. I replied:
“I think it would be cowardly
to take two or three against a single man. I
said one should go, and I say so still.”
“Do you?” he sneered.
“I guess you’d go alone, wouldn’t
you? to bring Williams in?”
“If I were paid for it I should,”
was my heedless retort. As I spoke his face grew
white with such passion that I instinctively put up
my hands to defend myself, thinking he was about to
attack me. The involuntary movement may have
seemed boyish to him, for thought came into his eyes,
and his face relaxed; moving away he said quietly:
“I’ll set up drinks, boys.”
They grouped themselves about him
and drank, leaving me isolated. But this, now
my blood was up, only added to the exasperation I felt
at his contemptuous treatment, and accordingly I walked
to the bar, and as the only unoccupied place was by
Johnson’s side I went there and said, speaking
as coolly as I could:
“Though no one asks me to drink
I guess I’ll take some whisky, bar-keeper, if
you please.”
Johnson was standing with his back
to me, but when I spoke he looked round, and I saw,
or thought I saw, a sort of curiosity in his gaze.
I met his eye defiantly. He turned to the others
and said, in his ordinary, slow way:
“Wall, good night, boys; I’ve
got to go. It’s gittin’ late, an’
I’ve had about as much as I want.”
Whether he alluded to the drink or
to my impertinence I was unable to divine. Without
adding a word he left the room amid a chorus of “Good
night, Sheriff!” With him went Martin and half-a-dozen
more.
I thought I had come out of the matter
fairly well until I spoke to some of the men standing
near. They answered me, it is true, but in monosyllables,
and evidently with unwillingness. In silence I
finished my whisky, feeling that every one was against
me for some inexplicable cause. I resented this
and stayed on. In a quarter of an hour the rest
of the crowd had departed, with the exception of Morris
and a few of the same kidney.
When I noticed that these gamblers,
outlaws by public opinion, held away from me, I became
indignant. Addressing myself to Morris, I asked:
“Can you tell me, sir, for you
seem to be an educated man, what I have said or done
to make you all shun me?”
“I guess so,” he answered
indifferently. “You took a hand in a game
where you weren’t wanted. And you tried
to come in without ever having paid the ante,
which is not allowed in any game at least
not in any game played about here.”
The allusion seemed plain; I was not
only a stranger, but a foreigner; that must be my
offence. With a “Good night, sir; good night,
barkeeper!” I left the room.
The next morning I went as usual to
the office. I may have been seated there about
an hour it was almost eight o’clock when
I heard a knock at the door.
“Come in,” I said, swinging
round in the American chair, to find myself face to
face with Sheriff Johnson.
“Why, Sheriff, come in!”
I exclaimed cheerfully, for I was relieved at seeing
him, and so realized more clearly than ever that the
unpleasantness of the previous evening had left in
me a certain uneasiness. I was eager to show
that the incident had no importance:
“Won’t you take a seat?
and you’ll have a cigar? these are
not bad.”
“No, thank you,” he answered.
“No, I guess I won’t sit nor smoke jest
now.” After a pause, he added, “I
see you’re studyin’; p’r’aps
you’re busy to-day; I won’t disturb you.”
“You don’t disturb me,
Sheriff,” I rejoined. “As for studying,
there’s not much in it. I seem to prefer
dreaming.”
“Wall,” he said, letting
his eyes range round the walls furnished with Law
Reports bound in yellow calf, “I don’t
know, I guess there’s a big lot of readin’
to do before a man gets through with all those.”
“Oh,” I laughed, “the
more I read the more clearly I see that law is only
a sermon on various texts supplied by common sense.”
“Wall,” he went on slowly,
coming a pace or two nearer and speaking with increased
seriousness, “I reckon you’ve got all Locock’s
business to see after: his clients to talk to;
letters to answer, and all that; and when he’s
on the drunk I guess he don’t do much. I
won’t worry you any more.”
“You don’t worry me,”
I replied. “I’ve not had a letter
to answer in three days, and not a soul comes here
to talk about business or anything else. I sit
and dream, and wish I had something to do out there
in the sunshine. Your work is better than reading
words, words nothing but words.”
“You ain’t busy; hain’t
got anything to do here that might keep you?
Nothin’?”
“Not a thing. I’m
sick of Blackstone and all Commentaries.”
Suddenly I felt his hand on my shoulder
(moving half round in the chair, I had for the moment
turned sideways to him), and his voice was surprisingly
hard and quick:
“Then I swear you in as a Deputy-Sheriff
of the United States, and of this State of Kansas;
and I charge you to bring in and deliver at the Sheriff’s
house, in this county of Elwood, Tom Williams, alive
or dead, and there’s your fee, five
dollars and twenty-five cents!” and he laid
the money on the table.
Before the singular speech was half
ended I had swung round facing him, with a fairly
accurate understanding of what he meant But the moment
for decision had come with such sharp abruptness, that
I still did not realize my position, though I replied
defiantly as if accepting the charge:
“I’ve not got a weapon.”
“The boys allowed you mightn’t
hev, and so I brought some along. You ken suit
your hand.” While speaking he produced two
or three revolvers of different sizes, and laid them
before me.
Dazed by the rapid progress of the
plot, indignant, too, at the trick played upon me,
I took up the nearest revolver and looked at it almost
without seeing it. The Sheriff seemed to take
my gaze for that of an expert’s curiosity.
“It shoots true,” he said
meditatively, “plumb true; but it’s too
small to drop a man. I guess it wouldn’t
stop any one with grit in him.”
My anger would not allow me to consider
his advice; I thrust the weapon in my pocket:
“I haven’t got a buggy. How am I
to get to Osawotamie?”
“Mine’s hitched up outside. You ken
hev it.”
Rising to my feet I said: “Then we can
go.”
We had nearly reached the door of
the office, when the Sheriff stopped, turned his back
upon the door, and looking straight into my eyes said:
“Don’t play foolish.
You’ve no call to go. Ef you’re busy,
ef you’ve got letters to write, anythin’
to do I’ll tell the boys you sed
so, and that’ll be all; that’ll let you
out.”
Half-humorously, as it seemed to me,
he added: “You’re young and a tenderfoot.
You’d better stick to what you’ve begun
upon. That’s the way to do somethin’. I
often think it’s the work chooses us, and we’ve
just got to get down and do it.”
“I’ve told you I had nothing
to do,” I retorted angrily; “that’s
the truth. Perhaps” (sarcastically) “this
work chooses me.”
The Sheriff moved away from the door.
On reaching the street I stopped for
a moment in utter wonder. At that hour in the
morning Washington Street was usually deserted, but
now it seemed as if half the men in the town had taken
up places round the entrance to Locock’s office
stairs. Some sat on barrels or boxes tipped up
against the shop-front (the next store was kept by
a German, who sold fruit and eatables); others stood
about in groups or singly; a few were seated on the
edge of the side-walk, with their feet in the dust
of the street. Right before me and most conspicuous
was the gigantic figure of Martin. He was sitting
on a small barrel in front of the Sheriff’s
buggy.
“Good morning,” I said
in the air, but no one answered me. Mastering
my irritation, I went forward to undo the hitching-strap,
but Martin, divining my intention, rose and loosened
the buckle. As I reached him, he spoke in a low
whisper, keeping his back turned to me:
“Shoot off a joke quick.
The boys’ll let up on you then. It’ll
be all right. Say something for God’s sake!”
The rough sympathy did me good, relaxed
the tightness round my heart; the resentment natural
to one entrapped left me, and some of my self-confidence
returned:
“I never felt less like joking
in my life, Martin, and humour can’t be produced
to order.”
He fastened up the hitching-strap,
while I gathered the reins together and got into the
buggy. When I was fairly seated he stepped to
the side of the open vehicle, and, holding out his
hand, said, “Good day,” adding, as our
hands clasped, “Wade in, young un; wade in.”
“Good day, Martin. Good day, Sheriff.
Good day, boys!”
To my surprise there came a chorus
of answering “Good days!” as I drove up
the street.
A few hundred yards I went, and then
wheeled to the right past the post office, and so
on for a quarter of a mile, till I reached the descent
from the higher ground, on which the town was built,
to the river. There, on my left, on the verge
of the slope, stood the Sheriffs house in a lot by
itself, with the long, low jail attached to it.
Down the hill I went, and across the bridge and out
into the open country. I drove rapidly for about
five miles more than halfway to Osawotamie and
then I pulled up, in order to think quietly and make
up my mind.
I grasped the situation now in all
its details. Courage was the one virtue which
these men understood, the only one upon which they
prided themselves. I, a stranger, a “tenderfoot,”
had questioned the courage of the boldest among them,
and this mission was their answer to my insolence.
The “boys” had planned the plot; Johnson
was not to blame; clearly he wanted to let me out
of it; he would have been satisfied there in the office
if I had said that I was busy; he did not like to
put his work on any one else. And yet he must
profit by my going. Were I killed, the whole
country would rise against Williams; whereas if I shot
Williams, the Sheriff would be relieved of the task.
I wondered whether the fact of his having married
made any difference to the Sheriff. Possibly and
yet it was not the Sheriff; it was the “boys”
who had insisted on giving me the lesson. Public
opinion was dead against me. “I had come
into a game where I was not wanted, and I had never
even paid the ante” that was
Morris’s phrase. Of course it was all clear
now. I had never given any proof of courage,
as most likely all the rest had at some time or other.
That was the ante Morris meant....
My wilfulness had got me into the
scrape; I had only myself to thank. Not alone
the Sheriff but Martin would have saved me had I profited
by the door of escape which he had tried to open for
me. Neither of them wished to push the malice
to the point of making me assume the Sheriff’s
risk, and Martin at least, and probably the Sheriff
also, had taken my quick, half-unconscious words and
acts as evidence of reckless determination. If
I intended to live in the West I must go through with
the matter.
But what nonsense it all was!
Why should I chuck away my life in the attempt to
bring a desperate ruffian to justice? And who
could say that Williams was a ruffian? It was
plain that his quarrel with the Sheriff was one of
old date and purely personal He had “stopped”
Judge Shannon in order to bring about a duel with
the Sheriff. Why should I fight the Sheriff’s
duels? Justice, indeed! justice had nothing to
do with this affair; I did not even know which man
was in the right. Reason led directly to the
conclusion that I had better turn the horse’s
head northwards, drive as fast and as far as I could,
and take the train as soon as possible out of the
country. But while I recognized that this was
the only sensible decision, I felt that I could not
carry it into action. To run away was impossible;
my cheeks burned with shame at the thought.
Was I to give my life for a stupid
practical joke? “Yes!” a
voice within me answered sharply. “It would
be well if a man could always choose the cause for
which he risks his life, but it may happen that he
ought to throw it away for a reason that seems inadequate.”
“What ought I to do?” I questioned.
“Go on to Osawotamie, arrest
Williams, and bring him into Kiota,” replied
my other self.
“And if he won’t come?”
“Shoot him you are
charged to deliver him ‘alive or dead’
at the Sheriff’s house. No more thinking,
drive straight ahead and act as if you were a representative
of the law and Williams a criminal. It has to
be done.”
The resolution excited me, I picked
up the reins and proceeded. At the next section-line
I turned to the right, and ten or fifteen minutes
later saw Osawotamie in the distance.
I drew up, laid the reins on the dashboard,
and examined the revolver. It was a small four-shooter,
with a large bore. To make sure of its efficiency
I took out a cartridge; it was quite new. While
weighing it in my hand, the Sheriff’s words
recurred to me, “It wouldn’t stop any
one with grit in him.” What did he mean?
I didn’t want to think, so I put the cartridge
in again, cocked and replaced the pistol in my right-side
jacket pocket, and drove on. Osawotamie consisted
of a single street of straggling frame-buildings.
After passing half-a-dozen of them I saw, on the right,
one which looked to me like a saloon. It was
evidently a stopping-place. There were several
hitching-posts, and the house boasted instead of a
door two green Venetian blinds put upon rollers the
usual sign of a drinking-saloon in the West.
I got out of the buggy slowly and
carefully, so as not to shift the position of the
revolver, and after hitching up the horse, entered
the saloon. Coming out of the glare of the sunshine
I could hardly see in the darkened room. In a
moment or two my eyes grew accustomed to the dim light,
and I went over to the bar, which was on my left.
The bar-keeper was sitting down; his head and shoulders
alone were visible; I asked him for a lemon squash.
“Anythin’ in it?” he replied, without
lifting his eyes.
“No; I’m thirsty and hot.”
“I guessed that was about the
figger,” he remarked, getting up leisurely and
beginning to mix the drink with his back to me.
I used the opportunity to look round
the room. Three steps from me stood a tall man,
lazily leaning with his right arm on the bar, his fingers
touching a half-filled glass. He seemed to be
gazing past me into the void, and thus allowed me
to take note of his appearance. In shirt-sleeves,
like the bar-keeper, he had a belt on in which were
two large revolvers with white ivory handles.
His face was prepossessing, with large but not irregular
features, bronzed fair skin, hazel eyes, and long
brown moustache. He looked strong and was lithe
of form, as if he had not done much hard bodily work.
There was no one else in the room except a man who
appeared to be sleeping at a table in the far corner
with his head pillowed on his arms.
As I completed this hasty scrutiny
of the room and its inmates, the bar-keeper gave me
my squash, and I drank eagerly. The excitement
had made me thirsty, for I knew that the crisis must
be at hand, but I experienced no other sensation save
that my heart was thumping and my throat was dry.
Yawning as a sign of indifference (I had resolved to
be as deliberate as the Sheriff) I put my hand in my
pocket on the revolver. I felt that I could draw
it out at once.
I addressed the bar-keeper:
“Say, do you know the folk here in Osawotamie?”
After a pause he replied:
“Most on ’em, I guess.”
Another pause and a second question:
“Do you know Tom Williams?”
The eyes looked at me with a faint
light of surprise in them; they looked away again,
and came back with short, half suspicious, half curious
glances.
“Maybe you’re a friend of his’n?”
“I don’t know him, but I’d like
to meet him.”
“Would you, though?” Turning
half round, the bar-keeper took down a bottle and
glass, and poured out some whisky, seemingly for his
own consumption. Then: “I guess he’s
not hard to meet, isn’t Williams, ef you and
me mean the same man.”
“I guess we do,” I replied; “Tom
Williams is the name.”
“That’s me,” said
the tall man who was leaning on the bar near me, “that’s
my name.”
“Are you the Williams that stopped Judge Shannon
yesterday?”
“I don’t know his name,”
came the careless reply, “but I stopped a man
in a buck-board.”
Plucking out my revolver, and pointing
it low down on his breast, I said:
“I’m sent to arrest you; you must come
with me to Kiota.”
Without changing his easy posture,
or a muscle of his face, he asked in the same quiet
voice:
“What does this mean, anyway? Who sent
you to arrest me?”
“Sheriff Johnson,” I answered.
The man started upright, and said, as if amazed, in
a quick, loud voice:
“Sheriff Johnson sent you to arrest me?”
“Yes,” I retorted, “Sheriff
Samuel Johnson swore me in this morning as his deputy,
and charged me to bring you into Kiota.”
In a tone of utter astonishment he
repeated my words, “Sheriff Samuel Johnson!”
“Yes,” I replied, “Samuel Johnson,
Sheriff of Elwood County.”
“See here,” he asked suddenly,
fixing me with a look of angry suspicion, “what
sort of a man is he? What does he figger like?”
“He’s a little shorter
than I am,” I replied curtly, “with a brown
beard and bluish eyes a square-built sort
of man.”
“Hell!” There was savage
rage and menace in the exclamation.
“You kin put that up!”
he added, absorbed once more in thought. I paid
no attention to this; I was not going to put the revolver
away at his bidding. Presently he asked in his
ordinary voice:
“What age man might this Johnson be?”
“About forty or forty-five, I should think.”
“And right off Sam Johnson swore
you in and sent you to bring me into Kiota an’
him Sheriff?”
“Yes,” I replied impatiently, “that’s
so.”
“Great God!” he exclaimed,
bringing his clenched right hand heavily down on the
bar. “Here, Zeke!” turning to the
man asleep in the corner, and again he shouted “Zeke!”
Then, with a rapid change of manner, and speaking
irritably, he said to me:
“Put that thing up, I say.”
The bar-keeper now spoke too:
“I guess when Tom sez you kin put it up, you
kin. You hain’t got no use fur it.”
The changes of Williams’ tone
from wonder to wrath and then to quick resolution
showed me that the doubt in him had been laid, and
that I had but little to do with the decision at which
he had arrived, whatever that decision might be.
I understood, too, enough of the Western spirit to
know that he would take no unfair advantage of me.
I therefore uncocked the revolver and put it back
into my pocket. In the meantime Zeke had got
up from his resting-place in the corner and had made
his way sleepily to the bar. He had taken more
to drink than was good for him, though he was not
now really drunk.
“Give me and Zeke a glass, Joe,”
said Williams; “and this gentleman, too, if
he’ll drink with me, and take one yourself with
us.”
“No,” replied the bar-keeper
sullenly, “I’ll not drink to any damned
foolishness. An’ Zeke won’t neither.”
“Oh, yes, he will,” Williams
returned persuasively, “and so’ll you,
Joe. You aren’t goin’ back on me.”
“No, I’ll be just damned
if I am,” said the barkeeper, half-conquered.
“What’ll you take, sir?” Williams
asked me.
“The bar-keeper knows my figger,”
I answered, half-jestingly, not yet understanding
the situation, but convinced that it was turning out
better than I had expected.
“And you, Zeke?” he went on.
“The old pizen,” Zeke replied.
“And now, Joe, whisky for you
and me the square bottle,” he continued,
with brisk cheerfulness.
In silence the bar-keeper placed the
drinks before us. As soon as the glasses were
empty Williams spoke again, putting out his hand to
Zeke at the same time:
“Good-bye, old man, so long,
but saddle up in two hours. Ef I don’t come
then, you kin clear; but I guess I’ll be with
you.”
“Good-bye, Joe.”
“Good-bye, Tom,” replied
the bar-keeper, taking the proffered hand, still half-unwillingly,
“if you’re stuck on it; but the game is
to wait for ’em here anyway that’s
how I’d play it.”
A laugh and shake of the head and Williams addressed
me:
“Now, sir, I’m ready if
you are.” We were walking towards the door,
when Zeke broke in:
“Say, Tom, ain’t I to come along?”
“No, Zeke, I’ll play this
hand alone,” replied Williams, and two minutes
later he and I were seated in the buggy, driving towards
Kiota.
We had gone more than a mile before
he spoke again. He began very quietly, as if
confiding his thoughts to me:
“I don’t want to make
no mistake about this business it ain’t
worth while. I’m sure you’re right,
and Sheriff Samuel Johnson sent you, but, maybe, ef
you was to think you could kinder bring him before
me. There might be two of the name, the age,
the looks though it ain’t likely.”
Then, as if a sudden inspiration moved him:
“Where did he come from, this Sam Johnson, do
you know?”
“I believe he came from Pleasant
Hill, Missouri. I’ve heard that he left
after a row with his partner, and it seems to me that
his partner’s name was Williams. But that
you ought to know better than I do. By-the-bye,
there is one sign by which Sheriff Johnson can always
be recognized; he has lost the little finger of his
left hand. They say he caught Williams’
bowie with that hand and shot him with the right.
But why he had to leave Missouri I don’t know,
if Williams drew first.”
“I’m satisfied now,”
said my companion, “but I guess you hain’t
got that story correct; maybe you don’t know
the cause of it nor how it began; maybe Williams didn’t
draw fust; maybe he was in the right all the way through;
maybe but thar! the first hand
don’t decide everythin’. Your Sheriffs
the man that’s enough for me.”
After this no word was spoken for
miles. As we drew near the bridge leading into
the town of Kiota I remarked half-a-dozen men standing
about. Generally the place was deserted, so the
fact astonished me a little. But I said nothing.
We had scarcely passed over half the length of the
bridge, however, when I saw that there were quite twenty
men lounging around the Kiota end of it. Before
I had time to explain the matter to myself, Williams
spoke: “I guess he’s got out all the
vigilantes;” and then bitterly: “The
boys in old Mizzouri wouldn’t believe this ef
I told it on him, the dog-goned mean cuss.”
We crossed the bridge at a walk (it
was forbidden to drive faster over the rickety structure),
and toiled up the hill through the bystanders, who
did not seem to see us, though I knew several of them.
When we turned to the right to reach the gate of the
Sheriff’s house, there were groups of men on
both sides. No one moved from his place; here
and there, indeed, one of them went on whittling.
I drew up at the sidewalk, threw down
the reins, and jumped out of the buggy to hitch up
the horse. My task was done.
I had the hitching-rein loose in my
hand, when I became conscious of something unusual
behind me. I looked round it was the
stillness that foreruns the storm.
Williams was standing on the side-walk
facing the low wooden fence, a revolver in each hand,
but both pointing negligently to the ground; the Sheriff
had just come down the steps of his house; in his hands
also were revolvers; his deputy, Jarvis, was behind
him on the stoop.
Williams spoke first:
“Sam Johnson, you sent for me, and I’ve
come.”
The Sheriff answered firmly, “I did!”
Their hands went up, and crack! crack!
crack! in quick succession, three or four or five
reports I don’t know how many.
At the first shots the Sheriff fell forward on his
face. Williams started to run along the side-walk;
the groups of men at the corner, through whom he must
pass, closed together; then came another report, and
at the same moment he stopped, turned slowly half
round, and sank down in a heap like an empty sack.
I hurried to him; he had fallen almost
as a tailor sits, but his head was between his knees.
I lifted it gently; blood was oozing from a hole in
the forehead. The men were about me; I heard them
say:
“A derned good shot! Took
him in the back of the head. Jarvis kin shoot!”
I rose to my feet. Jarvis was
standing inside the fence supported by some one; blood
was welling from his bared left shoulder.
“I ain’t much hurt,”
he said, “but I guess the Sheriff’s got
it bad.”
The men moved on, drawing me with
them, through the gate to where the Sheriff lay.
Martin turned him over on his back. They opened
his shirt, and there on the broad chest were two little
blue marks, each in the centre of a small mound of
pink flesh.
4Th April, 1891.