BUCK FINDS OUT SOMETHING
When the fact is chronicled that no
less than three times in the succeeding eight days
Buck Stratton was strongly tempted to put an end to
the whole puzzling business by the simple expedient
of declaring his identity and taking possession of
the Shoe-Bar as his own, something may be guessed
of the ingenuity of Tex Lynch in making life unpleasant
for the new hand.
Buck told himself more than once that
if he had really been a new hand and nothing more,
he wouldn’t have lasted forty-eight hours.
Any self-respecting cow-man would have promptly demanded
his time and betaken himself to another outfit, and
Stratton sometimes wondered whether his mere acceptance
of the persecution might not rouse the foreman’s
suspicion that he had motives for staying which did
not appear on the surface.
He had to admit that Lynch’s
whole course of action was rather cleverly worked
out. It consisted mainly in giving Stratton the
most difficult and arduous work to do, and keeping
him at it longer than anyone else, not only on the
round-up, but while driving the herd to Paloma Springs
and right up to the point where the steers were loaded
on cattle-cars and the job was over.
That, broadly speaking, was the scheme;
but there were delicate touches of refinement and
ingenuity in the process which wrung from Stratton,
in rare intervals when he was not too furious to judge
calmly, a grudging measure of admiration for the wily
foreman. Frequently, for instance, Stratton would
be assigned to night-herd duty with promise of relief
at a certain hour. Almost always that relief
failed to materialize, and Buck, unable to leave the
herd, reeling with fatigue and cursing impotently,
had to keep at it till daybreak. The erring puncher
generally had an excellent excuse, which might have
passed muster once, but which grew threadbare with
repetition.
Then, after an hour or two of sleep,
the victim was more likely than not to be dragged
out of bed and ordered to take the place of Peters,
Kreeger, or one of the others, who had been sent to
the ranch or elsewhere on so-called necessary business.
More than once the others got started on a meal ahead
of him, and what food remained was cold, unappetizing,
and scant in quantity. There were other little
things Lynch thought of from time to time to make
Buck’s life miserable, and he quite succeeded,
though it must be said that Stratton’s hard-won
self-control prevented the foreman from enjoying the
full measure of his triumph.
What chiefly influenced Buck in holding
back his big card and scoring against them all was
the feeling that Mary Thorne would be the one to suffer
most. He would be putting an abrupt finish to
Lynch’s game, whatever that was, but his action
would also involve the girl in deep and bitter humiliation,
if not something worse. Moreover, he was not quite
ready to stop Lynch’s scheming. He wanted
to find out first what it was all about, and he felt
he had a better chance of success by continuing to
play his present part, hedged in and handicapped though
he was, than by coming out suddenly in his own proper
person.
So he stuck it out to the end, successfully
suppressing all evidence of the smouldering rage that
grew steadily within him against the whole crowd.
Returning to the ranch for the first time in more than
a week, he went to bed directly after supper and slept
like a log until breakfast. Rising, refreshed
and fit, he decided that the time had come to abandon
his former haphazard methods of getting information,
and to launch a campaign of active detective work
without further delay.
Since the night of Bemis’s accident,
Buck had scarcely had a word with Bud Jessup, who
he felt could give him some information, though he
was not counting much on the importance of what the
youngster was likely to know. Through the day
there was no chance of getting the fellow apart.
But Buck kept his eyes and ears open, and at supper-time
Bud’s casual remark to Lynch that he “s’posed
he’d have to fix that busted saddle-girth before
he hit the hay” did not escape him.
The meal over, Stratton left the kitchen
and headed for the bunk-house with a purposeful air,
soon leaving the others well in the rear. Presently
one of them snickered.
“Looks like the poor rube’s
goin’ to tear off some more sleep,” commented
Kreeger in a suppressed tone, evidently not thinking
Stratton was near enough to hear.
But Buck’s ears were sharp,
and his lips twitched in a grim smile as he moved
steadily on, shoulders purposely sagging. When
he had passed through the doorway his head went up
abruptly and his whole manner changed. Darting
to his bunk, he snatched the blankets out and unrolled
them with a jerk. Scrambling his clothes and
other belongings into a rough mound, he swiftly spread
the blankets over them, patted down a place or two
to increase the likeness to a human body, dropped
his hat on the floor beside the bunk, and then made
a lightning exit through a window at the rear.
It was all accomplished with such
celerity that before the dawdling punchers had entered
the bunk-house, Buck was out of sight among the bushes
which thickly lined the creek. From here he had
no difficulty in making his way unseen around to the
back of the barns and other out-buildings, one of
which he entered through a rear door. A moment
or two later he found Jessup, as he expected, squatting
on the floor of the harness-room, busily mending his
broken saddle-girth.
“Hello, Bud,” he grinned,
as the youngster looked up in surprise. “Thought
I’d come up and have a chin with you.”
“But how the deuce I thought they yuh ”
“You thought right,” replied
Stratton, as Jessup hesitated. “Tex and
his friends have been sticking around pretty close
for the past week or so, but I gave ’em the
slip just now.”
Briefly he explained what he had done,
and then paused, eying the young fellow speculatively.
“There’s something queer
going on here, old man,” he began presently.
“You’ll say it’s none of my business,
maybe, and I reckon it isn’t. But unless
I’ve sized ’em up wrong, Lynch and his
gang are a bunch of crooks, and I’m not the
sort to sit back quietly and leave a lady like Miss
Thorne to their mercy.”
Jessup’s eyes widened.
“What do yuh know?” he demanded. “What
have yuh found out?”
Buck shrugged his shoulders.
“Found out? Why, nothing, really. But
I’ve seen enough to know that bunch is up to
some deviltry, and naturally the owner of the outfit
is the one who’ll suffer, in pocket, if not something
worse. It’s a dirty deal, taking advantage
of a girl’s ignorance and inexperience, as that
gang sure is doing some way specially a
girl who’s as decent and white as she is.
I thought maybe you and me might get together and
work out something. You don’t act like you
were for ’em any more than I am.”
“I’ll tell a man I ain’t!”
declared Jessup emphatically. “They’re
a rotten bunch. Yuh can go as far’s you
like, an’ I’ll stick with yuh. Have
yuh got anything on ’em?”
“Not exactly, but we may have
if we put our heads together and talk it over.”
He glanced questioningly around the dusty room.
“They’ll likely find out the trick I played
on ’em, and come snooping around here before
long. Suppose we slip out and go down by the creek
where we can talk without being interrupted.”
Jessup agreed readily and followed
Buck into the barn and out through the back door,
where they sought a secluded spot down by the stream,
well shielded by bushes.
“You’ve been here longer
than I have and noticed a lot more,” Stratton
remarked when they were settled. “I wish
you’d tell me what you think that bunch is up
to. They haven’t let me out of their sight
for over a week. What’s the idea, anyhow?”
“They don’t want yuh should
find out anythin’,” returned Bud promptly.
“That’s what I s’posed,
but what’s there to find out? That’s
what I can’t seem to get at. Bemis says
they’re in with the rustlers, but even he seems
to think there’s something else in the wind besides
that.”
Jessup snorted contemptuously.
“Bemis huh! I’m through
with him. He’s a quitter. I was in
chinnin’ with him last night an’ he’s
lost his nerve. Says he’s through, an’
is goin’ to take his time the minute he’s
fit to back a horse. Still an’ all,”
he added, forehead wrinkling thoughtfully, “he’s
right in a way. There is somethin’ doin’
beside rustling, but I’m hanged if I can find
out what. The only thing I’m dead sure of
is that it’s crooked. Look at the way they’re
tryin’ to get rid of us Rick an’
me an’ you. Whatever they’re up to
they want the ranch to themselves before they go any
further. Now Rick’s out of the way, I s’pose
I’ll be next. They’re tryin’
their best to make me quit, but when they find out
that won’t work, I reckon they’ll try
somethin’ worse.”
“Why don’t Lynch just
up an’ fire you?” Buck asked curiously.
“He’s foreman.”
Bud’s young jaw tightened stubbornly.
“He can’t get nothin’ on me,”
he stated. “It’s this way. When
help begun to get shy a couple of months ago that’s
when he started his business of gittin’ rid of
the men one way or another Tex must of
hinted around to Miss Mary that I was goin’ to
quit, for she up an’ asked me one day if it was
true, an’ said she hoped me an’ Rick wasn’t
goin’ to leave like the rest of ’em.”
He paused, a faint flush darkening
his tan. “I dunno as you’ve noticed
it,” he went on, plucking a long spear of grass
and twisting it between his brown fingers, “but
Miss Mary’s got a way about her that that
sort of gets a man. She’s so awful young,
an’ an’ earnest,
an’ though she don’t know one thing hardly
about ranchin’, she’s dead crazy about
this place, an’ mighty anxious to make it pay.
When she asks yuh to do somethin’, yuh jest
natu’ally feel like yuh wanted to oblige.
I felt like that, anyhow, an’ I was hot under
the collar at Tex for lyin’ about me like he
must of done. So I tells her straight off I wasn’t
thinkin’ of anythin’ of the sort.
‘Fu’thermore,’ I says, ’I’ll
stick to the job as long as yuh like if you’ll
do one thing.’ She asks what’s that,
an’ I told her that some folks, namin’
no names, was tryin’ to make out to her I wasn’t
doin’ my work good, an’ doin’ their
best to get me in bad.
“‘Oh, but I think you’re
mistaken,’ she says, catchin’ on right
away who I meant. ‘Tex wouldn’t do
anythin’ like that. He needs help too bad,
for one thing.’
“‘Well,’ I says,
‘let it go at that. Only, if yuh hear anythin’
against me, I’d like for yuh not to take anybody
else’s word for it. It’s got to be
proved I ain’t capable, or I’ve done somethin’
I oughta be fired for. An’ if things gets
so I got to go, I’ll come to yuh an’ ask
for my time myself. Fu’thermore, I’ll
get Rick to promise the same thing.’
“Well, to make a long story
short, she said she’d do it, though I could
see she was still thinkin’ me mistaken about
Tex doin’ anythin’ out of the way.
He’s a rotten skunk, but you’d better believe
he don’t let her see it. He’s got
her so she believes every darn word he says is gospel.”
He finished in an angry key.
Stratton’s face was thoughtful.
“How long has he been here?” he asked.
“Who? Tex? Oh, long
before I come. The old man made him foreman pretty
near a year ago in place of Bloss, who run the outfit
for Stratton, that fellow who was killed in the war
that old Thorne bought the ranch off from.”
“What sort of a man was this
Thorne?” Buck presently inquired.
“Pretty decent, though kinda
stand-offish with us fellows. He was awful thick
with Tex, though, an’ mebbe that’s the
reason Miss Mary thinks so much of him. She took
his death mighty hard, believe me!”
With a mind groping after hidden clues,
Stratton subconsciously disentangled the various “hes”
and “hims” of Jessup’s slightly involved
remark.
“Pop Daggett told me about his
being thrown and breaking his neck,” he said
presently. “You were here then, weren’t
you? Was there anything queer about it?
I mean, like the two punchers who were killed later
on?”
Jessup’s eyes widened.
“Queer?” he repeated. “Why,
I I never thought about it that way.
I wasn’t around when it happened. Nobody
was with him but but Tex.”
He stared at Buck. “Yuh don’t mean
to say ”
“I don’t say anything,”
returned Stratton, as he paused. “How can
I, without knowing the facts? Was the horse a
bad one?”
“He was new jest
been put in the remuda. I never saw him
rid except by Doc Peters, who’s a shark.
I did notice, afterward, he was sorta mean, though
I’ve seen worse. We was on the spring round-up,
jest startin’ to brand over in the middle pasture.”
Bud spoke slowly with thoughtfully wrinkled brows.
“It was right after dinner when the old man rode
up on Socks, the horse he gen’ally used.
He seemed pretty excited for him. He got hold
of Tex right away, an’ the two of them went off
to one side an’ chinned consid’able.
Then they changed the saddle onto this here paint
horse, Socks bein’ sorta tuckered out, an’
rode off together. It was near three hours before
Tex came gallopin’ back alone with word that
the old man’s horse had stepped in a hole an’
throwed him, breakin’ his neck.”
“Was that part of it true?”
asked Buck, who had been listening intently.
“About his neck? Sure.
They had Doc Blanchard over right away. He’d
been throwed, all right, too, from the scratches on
his face.”
“Where did it happen?”
“Yuh got me. I wasn’t
one of the bunch that brought him in. I never
thought to ask afterwards, neither. It must of
been somewhere up to the north end of the ranch, though,
if they kep’ on goin’ the way they started.”
For a moment or two Stratton sat silent,
staring absently at the sloping bank below him.
Was there anything back of the ranch-owner’s
tragic death save simple accident? The story
was plausible enough. Holes were plentiful, and
it wouldn’t be the first time a horse’s
stumble had resulted fatally to the rider. On
the other hand, it is quite possible, by an abrupt
though seemingly accidental thrust or collision, to
stir a horse of uncertain temper into sudden, vehement
action. At length Buck sighed and abandoned his
cogitations as fruitless. Short of a miracle,
that phase of the problem was never likely to be answered.
“I wonder what took him off
like that?” he pondered aloud. “Have
you any notion? Is there anything particular
up that way?”
“Why, no. Nobody hardly
ever goes there. They call it the north pasture,
but it’s never used. There’s nothin’
there but sand an’ cactus an’ all that;
a goat couldn’t hardly keep body an’ soul
together. Except once lookin’ for strays
that got through the fence, I never set foot in it
myself.”
Down in the shallow gully where they
sat, the shadows were gathering, showing that dusk
was rapidly approaching. With a shake of his head
and a movement of his wide shoulders, Buck mentally
dismissed that subject.
“It’s getting dark,”
he said briskly. “We’ll have to hustle,
or there’ll be a searching party out after us.
Have you noticed anything else particularly about
Lynch, I mean, or any of the others?”
“Nothin’ I can make sense
of,” returned Jessup. “Tex has been
off the ranch a lot. Two or three times he’s
stayed away over night. It might of been reg’lar
business, I s’pose, but once Bill Harris, over
to the Rockin’-R, said he’d seen him in
Tucson with some guys in a big automobile. That
rustlin’, of course, yuh know about. On
the evidence, I dunno as yuh could swear he was in
it, but it’s a sure thing that any foreman worth
his salt would of stopped the business before now,
or else get the sheriff on the job if he couldn’t
handle it himself.”
“That’s one thing I’ve
wondered,” commented Buck. “Why doesn’t
he? What’s his excuse for holding off?”
Bud gave a short, brittle laugh.
“I’ll tell yuh. He says the sheriff’s
a crook! What do you know about that? I
heard him tellin’ it to Miss Mary the other
day when he come in from Paloma about dinner-time.
She was askin’ him the same question, an’
he up an’ tells her it wouldn’t be worth
while; tells her the man is a half-breed an’
always plays in with the greasers, so he wouldn’t
be no use. I never met up with Jim Hardenberg,
but he sure ain’t a breed, an’ he’s
got a darn good rep as sheriff.” He groaned.
“Wimmin sure is queer. Think of anybody
believin’ that sort of rot.”
“Did Lynch know you were listening?”
Jessup reddened a little. “No.
They were talkin’ in the big room, an’
I was standin’ to one side of the open window.
I don’t call it sneakin’ to try an’
get the drop on a coyote like him.”
“I don’t either,”
smiled Stratton, getting on his feet. The swift,
southern darkness had fallen so quickly that they could
barely see each other’s faces. “It’s
one of their own little tricks, and turn about is
fair play. Our job, I reckon, is to keep our eyes
open every minute and not let anything slip.
We’ll find a way to get together again if anything
should turn up. I’ll be going back.”
He turned away and took a few steps
along the bank. Then all at once he stopped and
walked back.
“Say, Bud, how big is that north
pasture place you were telling about?” he asked.
“I don’t seem to remember going over it
when I was ”
He broke off abruptly, and a sudden
flush burned into his cheeks at the realization that
he had almost betrayed himself. Fortunately Jessup
did not seem to notice the slip.
“I don’t know exactly,”
replied the youngster. “About two miles
square, maybe. Why?”
“Oh, I just wondered,” shrugged Stratton.
“Well, so-long.”
Again they parted, Bud returning to
the harness-room, where he would have to finish his
work by lantern-light.
“Gee, but that was close!”
murmured Bud, feeling his way through the darkness.
“Just about one more word and I’d have
given away the show completely.”
He paused under a cottonwood as a
gleam of light from the open bunk-house door showed
through the leaves.
“I wonder?” he mused thoughtfully.
A waste of sand, cactus, and scanty
desert growth! In Arizona nothing is more ordinary
or commonplace, more utterly lacking in interest and
significance. Yet Stratton’s mind returned
to it persistently as he considered one by one the
scanty details of Jessup’s brief narrative.
What was there about a spot like that
to rouse excitement in the breast of the usually phlegmatic
Andrew Thorne? Why had he been in such haste to
drag Lynch thither, and what had passed between the
two before the older man came to his sudden and tragic
end? Was it possible that somewhere within that
four square miles of desolate wilderness might lie
the key to the puzzling mystery Buck had set himself
to solve?
“I wonder?” he murmured
again, and leaving the margin of the creek, he moved
slowly toward the open bunk-house door.