Events of no apparent moment have
extensive issues now and then, and while cattle-man
and homesteader braced themselves for the conflict
which they felt would come, the truce might have lasted
longer but for the fact that one night Muller slept
indifferently in the new house he had built. He
was never quite sure what made him restless, or prompted
him to open and lean out of his window; and, when
he had done this, he saw and heard nothing unusual
for a while.
On one hand the birch bluff rose,
a dusky wall, against the indigo of the sky, and in
front of him the prairie rolled away, silent and shadowy.
There was scarcely a sound but the low ripple of the
creek, until, somewhere far off in the distance, a
coyote howled. The drawn-out wail had in it something
unearthly, and Muller, who was by no means an imaginative
man, shivered a little. The deep silence of the
great empty land emphasized by the sound reacted upon
him and increased his restlessness.
Scarcely knowing why he did so, except
that he felt he could not sleep, he slipped on a few
garments, and moved softly to the door, that he might
not disturb his daughter. There was no moon when
he went out, but the stars shone clearly in the great
vault of blue, and the barns and stables he had built
rose black against the sky. Though Grant had lent
him assistance and he had hewn the lumber on the spot,
one cannot build a homestead and equip it for nothing,
and when he had provided himself with working horses,
Muller had sunk the last of his scanty capital in the
venture. It was perhaps this fact which induced
him to approach the stable, moving noiselessly in
his slippers, and glance within.
The interior was black and shadowy,
but there was no doubting the fact that the beasts
were moving restlessly. Muller went in, holding
his breath as he peered about him, and one broncho
backed away as he approached its stall. Muller
patted it on the flank, and the horse stood still,
as though reassured, when it recognized him, which
was not without its meaning. He listened, but
hearing nothing groped round the stable, and taking
a hayfork went out as softly as he had entered, and
took up his post in the deepest shadow, where he commanded
outbuildings and house. There was, he knew, nobody
but Grant dwelling within several leagues of him, and
as yet property was at least as safe in that country
as it was in Chicago or New York; but as he leaned,
impassively watchful, against the wall, he remembered
an episode which had happened a few weeks earlier.
He had been overtaken by a band of
stockriders when fording the creek with his daughter,
and one who loitered behind them reined his horse in
and spoke to the girl. Muller never knew what
his words had been; but he saw the sudden colour in
the fraeulein’s face, and seized the man’s
bridle. An altercation ensued, and when the man
rejoined his comrades, who apparently did not sympathize
with him, his bridle hand hung limp and the farmer
was smiling as he swung a stick. Muller attached
no especial importance to the affair; but Grant, who
did not tell him so, differed in this when he heard
of it. He knew that the cattle-rider is usually
rather chivalrous than addicted to distasteful gallantries.
In any case, Muller heard nothing
for a while, and felt tempted to return to his bed
when he grew chilly. He had, however, spent bitter
nights stalking the franc tireurs in the snow, and
the vigilance taught and demanded by an inflexible
discipline had not quite deserted him, though he was
considerably older and less nimble now. At last,
however, a dim, moving shadow appeared round a corner
of the building, stopped a moment, and then slid on
again towards the door. So noiseless was it that
Muller could almost have believed his eyes had deceived
him until he heard the hasp rattle. Still, he
waited until the figure passed into the stable, and
then very cautiously crept along the wall. Muller
was not so vigorous as he had been when proficiency
in the use of the bayonet had been drilled into him;
but while his fingers tightened on the haft of the
fork he fancied that he had still strength enough
to serve his purpose. He had also been taught
to use it to the best advantage.
He straightened himself a little when
he stood in the entrance and looked about him.
There was a gleam of light in the stable now, for a
lantern stood upon a manger and revealed by its uncertain
glimmer a pile of prairie hay, with a kerosene-can
upon it, laid against the logs. Muller was not
wholly astonished, but he was looking for more than
that, and the next moment he saw a shadowy object
apparently loosing the nearest horse’s halter.
It was doubtless a merciful deed, but it was to cost
the incendiary dear; for when, perhaps warned by some
faint sound, he looked up suddenly, he saw a black
figure between him and the door.
On the instant he dropped the halter,
and the hand that had held it towards his belt; but,
as it happened, the horse pinned him against the stall,
and his opportunity had passed when it moved again.
Muller had drawn his right leg back with his knee
bent a trifle, and there was a rattle as he brought
the long fork down to the charge. Thus, when the
man was free the deadly points twinkled in a ray from
the lantern within a foot of his breast. It was
also unpleasantly evident that a heave of the farmer’s
shoulder would bury them in the quivering flesh.
“Hands oop!” a stern voice said.
The man delayed a second. The
butt of the pistol that would equalize the affair
was almost within his grasp, and Muller stood in the
light, but he saw an ominous glint in the pale blue
eyes and the farmer’s fingers tighten on the
haft. There was also a suggestive raising of one
shoulder; and his hands went up above his head.
Muller advanced the points an inch or two, stiffening
his right leg, and smiled grimly. The other man
stared straight in front of him with dilated eyes,
and a little grey patch growing larger in either cheek.
“Are you going to murder me,
you condemned Dutchman?” he said.
“Yes,” said Muller tranquilly,
“if you der movement make. So!
It is done without der trouble when you
have der bayonet exercise make.”
The points gleamed as they swung forward,
and the man gasped; but they stopped at the right
second, and Muller, who had hove his burly form a
trifle more upright, sank back again, bringing his
foot down with a stamp. The little demonstration
was more convincing than an hour of argument.
“Well,” said the man hoarsely,
“I’m corralled. Throw that thing away,
and I’ll give you my pistol.”
Muller laughed, and then raised his
great voice in what was to the other an unknown tongue.
“Lotta,” he said, “Come quick, and
bring the American rifle.”
There was silence for perhaps five
minutes, and the men watched each other, one white
in the face and quivering a little, his adversary
impassive as a statue, but quietly observant.
Then there was a patter of hasty footsteps, and the
fraeulein stood in the lantern light with a flushed,
plump face and somewhat scanty dress. She apparently
recognized the man, and her colour deepened, but that
was the only sign of confusion she showed; and it
was evident that the discipline of the fatherland had
not been neglected in Muller’s household.
“Lotta,” he said in English,
“open der little slide. You feel
der cartridge? Now, der butt to der
shoulder, und der eye on der sight,
as I have teach you. Der middle of him is der
best place. I shout, und you press quite
steady.”
He spoke with a quiet precision that
had its effect; and, whatever the girl felt, she obeyed
each command in rotation. There was, however,
one danger which the stranger realized, and that was
that with an involuntary contraction of the forefinger
she might anticipate the last one.
“She’ll shoot me before
she means to,” he said, with a little gasp.
“Come and take the condemned pistol.”
“Der middle of him!” said
Muller tranquilly. “No movement make, you!”
Dropping the fork he moved forward,
not in front of the man, but to his side, and whipped
the pistol from his belt.
“One turn make,” he said.
“So! Your hand behind you. Lotta, you
will now a halter get.”
The girl’s loose bodice rose
and fell as she laid down the rifle, but she was swift,
and in less than another minute Muller had bound his
captive’s hands securely behind his back and
cross-lashed them from wrist to elbow. He inspected
the work critically and then nodded, as if contented.
“Lotta,” he said, “put
der saddle on der broncho horse.
Then in der house you der cordial find,
und of it one large spoonful mit der
water take. My pipe you bring me also, und
then you ride for Mr. Grant.”
The girl obeyed him; and when the
drumming of horse-hoofs died away Muller sat down
in front of his prisoner, who now lay upon a pile of
prairie hay, and with his usual slow precision lighted
his big meerschaum. The American watched him
for a minute or two, and then grew red in the face
as a fit of passion shook him.
“You condemned Dutchman!” he said.
Muller laughed. “Der combliment,”
he said, “is nod of much use to-night.”
It was an hour later when Grant and
several horsemen arrived, and he nodded as he glanced
at the prisoner.
“I figured it was you.
There’s not another man on the prairie mean enough
for this kind of work,” he said, pointing to
the kerosene-can. “You didn’t even
know enough to do it decently, and you’re about
the only American who’d have let an old man
tie his hands.”
The prisoner winced perceptibly.
“Well,” he said hoarsely, glancing towards
the hayfork, rifle, and pistol, which still lay at
Muller’s feet, “if you’re astonished,
look at the blamed Dutchman’s armoury.”
“I’ve one thing to ask
you,” Grant said sternly. “It’s
going to pay you to be quite straight with me.
Who hired you?”
There was defiance in the incendiary’s
eyes, but Grant was right in his surmise that he was
resolute only because that of the two fears which
oppressed him he preferred to bear the least.
“You can ask till you get sick
of it, but you’ll get nothing out of me,”
he said.
“Take him out,” said Grant.
“Put him on to the led horse. If you’ll
come round to my place for breakfast, I’ll be
glad to see you, Muller.”
“I come,” said Muller.
“Mit der franc tireur it is finish
quicker, but here in der Republic we reverence
have for der law.”
Grant laughed a little. “Well,”
he said drily, “I’m not quite sure.”
He swung himself to the saddle, swept
off his hat to the girl, who stood with the lantern
light upon her in the doorway, smiling but flushed,
and shook his bridle. Then there was a jingle
that was lost in the thud of hoofs, and the men vanished
into the shadowy prairie. Half an hour later
the homestead was once more dark and silent; but three
men sent out by Grant were riding at a reckless gallop
across the great dusky levels, and breakfast was not
finished when those whom they had summoned reached
Fremont ranch.
They were young men for the most part,
and Americans, though there were a few who had only
just become so among them, and two or three whose grim
faces and grey hair told of a long struggle with adversity.
They were clad in blue shirts and jean, and the hard
brown hands of most betokened a close acquaintance
with plough stilt, axe, and bridle, though here and
there one had from his appearance evidently lived delicately.
All appeared quietly resolute, for they knew that
the law which had given them the right to build their
homes upon that prairie as yet left them to bear the
risks attached to the doing of it. Hitherto, the
fact that the great ranchers had made their own laws
and enforced them had been ignored or tacitly accepted
by the State.
When they were seated, one of the
men deputed to question the prisoner, stood up.
“You can take it that there’s nothing to
be got out of him,” he said.
“Still,” said another,
“we know he is one of Clavering’s boys.”
There was a little murmur, for of
all the cattle-barons Clavering was the only man who
had as yet earned his adversaries’ individual
dislike. They were prepared to pull down the
others because their interests, which they had little
difficulty in fancying coincided with those of their
country, demanded it; but Clavering, with his graceful
insolence, ironical contempt of them, and thinly-veiled
pride, was a type of all their democracy anathematized.
More than one of them had winced under his soft laugh
and lightly spoken jibes, which rankled more than
a downright injury.
“The question is what we’re
going to do with him,” said a third speaker.
Again the low voices murmured, until
a man stood up. “There’s one cure
for his complaint, and that’s a sure one, but
I’m not going to urge it now,” he said.
“Boys, we don’t want to be the first to
take up the rifle, and it would make our intentions
quite as plain if we dressed him in a coat of tar
and rode him round the town. Nobody would have
any use for him after that, and it would be a bigger
slap in Clavering’s face than anything else
we could do to him.”
Some of the men appeared relieved,
for it was evident they had no great liking for the
sterner alternative; and there was acclamation until
Grant rose quietly at the head of the table.
“I’ve got to move a negative,”
he said. “It would be better if you handed
him to the Sheriff.”
There was astonishment in most of
the faces, and somebody said, “The Sheriff!
He’d let him go right off. The cattle-men
have got the screw on him.”
“Well,” said Larry quietly,
“he has done his duty so far, and may do it
again. I figure we ought to give him the chance.”
Exclamations of dissent followed,
and a man with a grim, lean face stood up. He
spoke tolerable English, but his accent differed from
that of the rest.
“The first man put it straight
when he told you there was only one cure the
one they found out in France a hundred years ago,”
he said. “You don’t quite realize
it yet. You haven’t lived as we did back
there across the sea, and seen your women thrust off
the pavement into the gutter to make room for an officer,
or been struck with the sword-hilt if you resented
an insult before your fellow citizens. Will you
take off your hats to the rich men who are trampling
on you, you republicans, and, while they leave you
the right of speech, beg them to respect your rights
and liberties? Do that, and sit still a little,
and they’ll fasten the yoke we’ve groaned
under on your necks.”
“I don’t know that it
isn’t eloquent, but it isn’t business,”
said somebody.
The man laughed sardonically.
“That’s where you’re wrong,”
he said. “I’m trying to show you
that if you want your liberties you’ve got to
fight for them, and your leader doesn’t seem
to know when, by hanging one man, he can save a hundred
from misery. It’s not the man who laid the
kindling you’re striking at, but, through him,
those who employed him. Let them see you’ll
take your rights without leave of them. They’ve
sent you warning that if you stay here they’ll
burn your homesteads down, and they’re waiting
your answer. Hang their firebug where everyone
can see him, in the middle of the town.”
It was evident that the men were wavering.
They had come there with the law behind them, but,
from their youth up, some following visions that could
never be realized, had hated the bureaucrat, and the
rest, crippled by the want of dollars, had fought
with frost and drought and hail. It was also
plain that they felt the capture of the incendiary
had given them an opportunity. Then, when a word
would have turned the scale, Grant stood up at the
head of the table, very resolute in face.
“I still move a negative and
an amendment, boys,” he said. “First,
though that’s not the most important, because
I’ve a natural shrinking from butchering an
unarmed man. Secondly, it was not the cattle-men
who sent him, but one of them, and just because he
meant to draw you on it would be the blamedest bad
policy to humour him. Would Torrance, or Allonby,
or the others, have done this thing? They’re
hard men, but they believe they’re right, as
we do, and they’re Americans. Now for the
third reason: when Clavering meant to burn Muller’s
homestead, he struck at me, guessing that some of
you would stand behind me. He knew your temper,
and he’d have laughed at us as hot-blooded rabble you
know how he can do it when he’d put
us in the wrong. Well, this time we’ll give
the law a show.”
There was discussion, but Larry sat
still, saying nothing further, with a curious gravity
in his face, until a man stood up again.
“We think you’re right,”
he said. “Still, there’s a question.
What are you going to do if they try again?”
“Strike,” said Larry quietly.
“I’ll go with you to the hanging of the
next one.”
Nothing more was said, and the men
rode away with relief in their faces, though three
of them, girt with rifle and bandolier, trotted behind
the wagon in which the prisoner sat.