NOTICE IS SERVED
Taterleg was finding things easier
on his side of the ranch. Nick Hargus was lying
still, no hostile acts had been committed. This
may have been due to the fierce and bristling appearance
of Taterleg, as he humorously declared, or because
Hargus was waiting reenforcements from the penal institutions
of his own and surrounding states.
Taterleg had a good many nights to
himself, as a consequence of the security which his
grisly exterior had brought. These he spent at
Glendora, mainly on the porch of the hotel in company
of Alta Wood, chewing gum together as if they wove
a fabric to bind their lives in adhesive amity to
the end.
Lambert had a feeling of security
for his line of fence, also, as he rode home on the
evening of his adventurous day. He had left a
note on the pieced wire reminding Grace Kerr of his
request that she ease her spite by unhooking it there
instead of cutting it in a new place. He also
added the information that he would be there on a certain
date to see how well she carried out his wish.
He wondered whether she would read
his hope that she would be there at the same hour,
or whether she might be afraid to risk Vesta Philbrook’s
fury again. There was an eagerness in him for
the hastening of the intervening time, a joyous lightness
which tuned him to such harmony with the world that
he sang as he rode.
Taterleg was going to Glendora that
night. He pressed Lambert to join him.
“A man’s got to take a
day off sometimes to rest his face and hands,”
he argued. “Them fellers can’t run
off any stock tonight, and if they do they can’t
git very far away with ’em before we’d
be on their necks. They know that; they’re
as safe as if we had ’em where they belong.”
“I guess you’re right
on that, Taterleg. I’ve got to go to town
to buy me a pair of clothes, anyhow, so I’ll
go you.”
Taterleg was as happy as a cricket,
humming a tune as he went along. He had made
liberal application of perfume to his handkerchief
and mustache, and of barber’s pomatum to his
hair. He had fixed his hat on carefully, for
the protection of the cowlick that came down over his
left eyebrow, and he could not be stirred beyond a
trot all the way to Glendora for fear of damage that
might result.
“I had a run-in with that feller
the other night,” he said.
“What feller do you mean?”
“Jedlick, dern him.”
“You did? I didn’t notice any of
your ears bit off.”
“No, we didn’t come to
licks. He tried to horn in while me and Alta was
out on the porch.”
“What did you do?”
“I didn’t have a show
to do anything but hand him a few words. Alta
she got me by the arm and drug me in the parlor and
slammed the door. No use tryin’ to break
away from that girl; she could pull a elephant away
from his hay if she took a notion.”
“Didn’t Jedlick try to hang on?”
“No, he stood out in the office
rumblin’ to the old man, but that didn’t
bother me no more than the north wind when you’re
in bed under four blankets. Alta she played me
some tunes on her git-tar and sung me some songs.
I tell you, Duke, I just laid back and shut my eyes.
I felt as easy as if I owned the railroad from here
to Omaha.”
“How long are you going to keep it up?”
“Which up, Duke?”
“Courtin’ Alta. You’ll
have to show off your tricks pretty regular, I think,
if you want to hold your own in that ranch.”
Taterleg rode along considering it.
“Ye-es, I guess a feller’ll
have to act if he wants to hold Alta. She’s
young, and the young like change. ’Specially
the girls. A man to keep Alta on the line’ll
have to marry her and set her to raisin’ children.
You know, Duke, there’s something new to a girl
in every man she sees. She likes to have him
around till she leans ag’in’ him and rubs
the paint off, then she’s out shootin’
eyes at another one.”
“Are there others besides Jedlick?”
“That bartender boards there
at the ho-tel. He’s got four gold
teeth, and he picks ’em with a quill. Sounds
like somebody slappin’ the crick with a fishin’-pole.
But them teeth give him a standin’ in society;
they look like money in the bank. Nothing to
his business, though, Duke; no sentiment or romance
or anything.”
“Not much. Who else is there sitting in
this Alta game?”
“Young feller with a neck like
a bottle, off of a ranch somewhere back in the hills.”
Taterleg mentioned him as with consideration.
Lambert concluded that he was a rival to be reckoned
with, but gave Taterleg his own way of coming to that.
“That feller’s got a watch
with a music box in the back of it, Duke. Ever
see one of ’em?”
“No, I never did.”
“Well, he’s got one of
’em, all right. He starts that thing up
about the time he hits the steps, and comes in playin’
‘Sweet Vilelets’ like he just couldn’t
help bustin’ out in music the minute he comes
in sight of Alta. That feller gives me a pain!”
The Duke smiled. To every man
his own affair is romance; every other man’s
a folly or a diverting comedy, indeed.
“She’s a little too keen
on that feller to suit me, Duke. She sets out
there with him, and winds that fool watch and plays
them two tunes over till you begin to sag, leanin’
her elbow on his shoulder like she had him paid for
and didn’t care whether he broke or not.”
“What is the other tune?”
“It’s that one that goes:
A heel an’ a toe
and a po’ky-o,
A heel an’ a toe
and a po’ky-o
you know that one.”
“I’ve heard it. She’ll get
tired of that watch after a while, Taterleg.”
“Maybe. If she don’t, I guess I’ll
have to figger some way to beat it.”
“What are Jedlick’s attractions?
Surely not good looks.”
“Money, Duke; that’s the
answer to him money. He’s got
a salt barrel full of it; the old man favors him for
that money.”
“That’s harder to beat than a music box
in a watch.”
“You can’t beat
it, Duke. What’s good looks by the side
of money? Or brains? Well, they don’t
amount to cheese!”
“Are you goin’ to sidestep
in favor of Jedlick? A man with all your experience
and good clothes!”
“Me? I’m a-goin’ to lay that
feller out on a board!”
They hitched at the hotel rack, that
looking more respectable, as Taterleg said, than to
leave their horses in front of the saloon. Alta
was heard singing in the interior; there were two railroad
men belonging to a traveling paint gang on the porch
smoking their evening pipes.
Lambert felt that it was his duty
to buy cigars in consideration of the use of the hitching-rack.
Wood appeared in the office door as they came up the
steps, and put his head beyond the jamb, looking this
way and that, like a man considering a sortie with
enemies lying in wait.
Taterleg went into the parlor to offer
the incense of his cigar in the presence of Alta,
who was cooing a sentimental ballad to her guitar.
It seemed to be of parting, and the hope of reunion,
involving one named Irene. There was a run in
the chorus accompaniment which Alta had down very
neatly.
The tinkling guitar, the simple, plaintive
melody, sounded to Lambert as refreshing as the plash
of a brook in the heat of the day. He stood listening,
his elbow on the show case, thinking vaguely that Alta
had a good voice for singing babies to sleep.
Wood stood in the door again, his
stump of arm lifted a little with an alertness about
it that made Lambert think of a listening ear.
He looked up and down the street in that uneasy, inquiring
way that Lambert had remarked on his arrival, then
came back and got himself a cigar. He stood across
the counter from Lambert a little while, smoking, his
brows drawn in trouble, his eyes shifting constantly
to the door.
“Duke,” said he, as if
with an effort, “there’s a man in town
lookin’ for you. I thought I’d tell
you.”
“Lookin’ for me? Who is he?”
“Sim Hargus.”
“You don’t mean Nick?”
“No; he’s Nick’s brother. I
don’t suppose you ever met him.”
“I never heard of him.”
“He’s only been back from
Wyoming a week or two. He was over there some
time several years, I believe.”
“In the pen over there?”
Wood took a careful survey of the
door before replying, working his cigar over to the
other side of his mouth in the way that a one-armed
man acquires the trick.
“I they say he got mixed up in a
cattle deal down there.”
Lambert smoked in silence a little
while, his head bent, his face thoughtful. Wood
shifted a little nearer, standing straight and alert
behind his counter as if prepared to act in some sudden
emergency.
“Does he live around here?” Lambert asked.
“He’s workin’ for
Berry Kerr, foreman over there. That’s the
job he used to have before he left.”
Lambert grunted, expressing that he
understood the situation. He stood in his leaning,
careless posture, arm on the show case, thumb hooked
in his belt near his gun.
“I thought I’d tell you,” said Wood
uneasily.
“Thanks.”
Wood came a step nearer along the
counter, leaned his good arm on it, watching the door
without a break.
“He’s one of the old gang
that used to give Philbrook so much trouble he’s
carryin’ lead that Philbrook shot into him now.
So he’s got it in for that ranch, and everybody
on it. I thought I’d tell you.”
“I’m much obliged to you,
Mr. Wood,” said Lambert heartily.
“He’s one of these kind
of men you want to watch out for when your back’s
turned, Duke.”
“Thanks, old feller; I’ll keep in mind
what you say.”
“I don’t want it to look
like I was on one side or the other, you understand,
Duke; but I thought I’d tell you. Sim Hargus
is one of them kind of men that a woman don’t
dare to show her face around where he is without the
risk of bein’ insulted. He’s a foul-mouthed,
foul-minded man, the kind of a feller that ought to
be treated like a rattlesnake in the road.”
Lambert thanked him again for his
friendly information, understanding at once his watchful
uneasiness and the absence of Alta from the front of
the house. He was familiar with that type of man
such as Wood had described Hargus as being; he had
met some of them in the Bad Lands. There was
nothing holy to them in the heavens or the earth.
They did not believe there was any such thing as a
virtuous woman, and honor was a word they never had
heard defined.
“I’ll go out and look
him up,” Lambert said. “If he happens
to come in here askin’ about me, I’ll
be in either the store or the saloon.”
“There’s where he is, Duke in
the saloon.”
“I supposed he was.”
“You’ll kind of run into
him natural, won’t you, Duke, and not let him
think I tipped you off?”
“Just as natural as the wind.”
Lambert went out. From the hitching-rack
he saw Wood at his post of vigil in the door, watching
the road with anxious mien. It was a Saturday
night; the town was full of visitors. Lambert
went on to the saloon, hitching at the long rack in
front where twenty or thirty horses stood.
The custom of the country made it
almost an obligatory courtesy to go in and spend money
when one hitched in front of a saloon, an excuse for
entering that Lambert accepted with a grim feeling
of satisfaction. While he didn’t want it
to appear that he was crowding a quarrel with any
man, the best way to meet a fellow who had gone spreading
it abroad that he was out looking for one was to go
where he was to be found. It wouldn’t look
right to leave town without giving Hargus a chance
to state his business; it would be a move subject
to misinterpretation, and damaging to a man’s
good name.
There was a crowd in the saloon, which
had a smoky, blurred look through the open door.
Some of the old gambling gear had been uncovered and
pushed out from the wall. A faro game was running,
with a dozen or more players, at the end of the bar;
several poker tables stretched across the gloomy front
of what had been the ballroom of more hilarious days.
These players were a noisy outfit. Little money
was being risked, but it was going with enough profanity
to melt it.
Lambert stood at the end of the bar
near the door, his liquor in his hand, lounging in
his careless attitude of abstraction. But there
was not a lax fiber in his body; every faculty was
alert, every nerve set for any sudden development.
The scene before him was disgusting, rather than diverting,
in its squalid imitation of the rough-and-ready times
which had passed before many of these men were old
enough to carry the weight of a gun. It was just
a sporadic outburst, a pustule come to a sudden head
that would burst before morning and clear away.
Lambert ran his eye among the twenty-five
or thirty men in the place. All appeared to be
strangers to him. He began to assort their faces,
as one searches for something in a heap, trying to
fix on one that looked mean enough to belong to a
Hargus. A mechanical banjo suddenly added its
metallic noise to the din, fit music, it seemed, for
such obscene company. Some started to dance lumberingly,
with high-lifted legs and ludicrous turkey struts.
Among these Lambert recognized Tom
Hargus, the young man who had made the ungallant attempt
to pass Vesta Philbrook’s gate with his father.
He had more whisky under his dark skin than he could
take care of. As he jigged on limber legs he
threw his hat down with a whoop, his long black hair
falling around his ears and down to his eyes, bringing
out the Indian that slept in him sharper than the
liquor had done it.
His face was flushed, his eyes were
heavy, as if he had been under headway a good while.
Lambert watched him as he pranced about, chopping
his steps with feet jerked up straight like a string-halt
horse. The Indian was working, trying to express
itself in him through this exaggerated imitation of
his ancestral dances. His companions fell back
in admiration, giving him the floor.
A cowboy was feeding money into the
music box to keep it going, giving it a coin, together
with certain grave, drunken advice, whenever it showed
symptom of a pause. Young Hargus circled about
in the middle of the room, barking in little short
yelps. Every time he passed his hat he kicked
at it, sometimes hitting, oftener missing it, at last
driving it over against Lambert’s foot, where
it lodged.
Lambert pushed it away. A man
beside him gave it a kick that sent it spinning back
into the trodden circle. Tom was at that moment
rounding his beat at the farther end. He came
face about just as the hat skimmed across the floor,
stopped, jerked himself up stiffly, looked at Lambert
with a leap of anger across his drunken face.
Immediately there was silence in the
crowd that had been assisting on the side lines of
his performance. They saw that Tom resented this
treatment of his hat by any foot save his own.
The man who had kicked it had fallen back with shoulders
to the bar, where he stood presenting the face of
innocence. Tom walked out to the hat, kicked it
back within a few feet of Lambert, his hand on his
gun.
He was all Indian now; the streak
of smoky white man was engulfed. His handsome
face was black with the surge of his lawless blood
as he stopped a little way in front of Lambert.
“Pick up that hat!” he
commanded, smothering his words in an avalanche of
profanity.
Lambert scarcely changed his position,
save to draw himself erect and stand clear of the
bar. To those in front of him he seemed to be
carelessly lounging, like a man with time on his hands,
peace before him.
“Who was your nigger last year,
young feller?” he asked, with good-humor in
his words. He was reading Tom’s eyes as
a prize fighter reads his opponent’s, watching
every change of feature, every strain of facial muscle.
Before young Hargus had put tension on his sinews to
draw his weapon, Lambert had read his intention.
The muzzle of the pistol was scarcely
free of the scabbard when Lambert cleared the two
yards between them in one stride. A grip of the
wrist, a twist of the arm, and the gun was flung across
the room. Tom struggled desperately, not a word
out of him, striking with his free hand. Sinewy
as he was, he was only a toy in Lambert’s hands.
“I don’t want to have
any trouble with you, kid,” said Lambert, capturing
Tom’s other hand and holding him as he would
have held a boy. “Put on your hat and go
home.”
Lambert released him, and turned as
if he considered the matter ended. At his elbow
a man stood, staring at him with insolent, threatening
eyes. He was somewhat lower of stature than Lambert,
thick in the shoulders, firmly set on the feet, with
small mustache, almost colorless and harsh as hog
bristles. His thin eyebrows were white, his hair
but a shade darker, his skin light for an outdoors
man. This, taken with his pale eyes, gave him
an appearance of bloodless cruelty which the sneer
on his lip seemed to deepen and express.
Behind Lambert men were holding Tom
Hargus, who had made a lunge to recover his gun.
He heard them trying to quiet him, while he growled
and whined like a wolf in a trap. Lambert returned
the stranger’s stare, withholding anything from
his eyes that the other could read, as some men born
with a certain cold courage are able to do. He
went back to the bar, the man going with him shoulder
to shoulder, turning his malevolent eyes to continue
his unbroken stare.
“Put up that gun!” the
fellow said, turning sharply to Tom Hargus, who had
wrenched free and recovered his weapon. Tom obeyed
him in silence, picked up his hat, beat it against
his leg, put it on.
“You’re the Duke of Chimney
Butte, are you?” the stranger inquired, turning
again with his sneer and cold, insulting eyes to Lambert,
who knew him now for Sim Hargus, foreman for Berry
Kerr.
“If you know me, there’s
no need for us to be introduced,” Lambert returned.
“Duke of Chimney Butte!”
said Hargus with immeasurable scorn. He grunted
his words with such an intonation of insult that it
would have been pardonable to shoot him on the spot.
Lambert was slow to kindle. He put a curb now
on even his naturally deliberate vehicle of wrath,
looking the man through his shallow eyes down to the
roots of his mean soul.
“You’re the feller that’s
come here to teach us fellers to take off our hats
when we see a fence,” Hargus said, looking meaner
with every breath.
“You’ve got it right, pardner,”
Lambert calmly replied.
“Duke of Chimney Butte!
Well, pardner, I’m the King of Hotfoot Valley,
and I’ve got travelin’ papers for you right
here!”
“You seem to be a little sudden
about it,” Lambert said, a lazy drawl to his
words that inflamed Hargus like a blow.
“Not half as sudden as you’ll
be, kid. This country ain’t no place for
you, young feller; you’re too fresh to keep in
this hot climate, and the longer you stay the hotter
it gits. I’ll give you just two days to
make your gitaway in.”
“Consider the two days up,”
said Lambert with such calm and such coolness of head
that men who heard him felt a thrill of admiration.
“This ain’t no joke!” Hargus corrected
him.
“I believe you, Hargus.
As far as it concerns me, I’m just as far from
this country right now as I’ll be in two days,
or maybe two years. Consider your limit up.”
It was so still in the barroom that
one could have heard a match burn. Lambert had
drawn himself up stiff and straight before Hargus,
and stood facing him with defiance in every line of
his stern, strong face.
“I’ve give you your rope,”
Hargus said, feeling that he had been called to show
his hand in an open manner that was not his style,
and playing for a footing to save his face. “If
you ain’t gone in two days you’ll settle
with me.”
“That goes with me, Hargus. It’s
your move.”
Lambert turned, contempt in his courageous
bearing, and walked out of the place, scorning to
throw a glance behind to see whether Hargus came after
him, or whether he laid hand to his weapon in the treachery
that Lambert had read in his eyes.