He had time to burst from the hut
and race across the clearing through the darkness
which would surely shelter him from the snap-shot of
even such an expert as Red Jim, but in mind and body
Hervey was too paralyzed by the appearance of his
enemy to stir until he saw Perris slip from his horse,
slumping to the earth after the fashion of a weary
man, and drag off the saddle. He paid no attention
to tethering his pony, but started towards the shack,
down-headed, heavy of foot.
Hervey had gained the door of the
shack in the interim, and there he crouched at watch,
terrified at the thought of staying till the other
entered, still more terrified at the idea of bolting
across the open clearing. He could see Perris
clearly, in outline, for just behind him there was
a rift in the circle of trees which fenced the clearing
and Red Jim was thrown into somewhat bold relief against
the blue-black of the night sky far beyond. He
could even make out that a bandage circled the head
of Perris and with that sight a new thought leaped
into the brain of the foreman. The bandage, the
stumbling walk, the downward head, were all signs
of a badly injured and exhausted man. Suppose
he were to attack Perris, single-handed and destroy
him? The entire problem would be solved!
The respect of his men, the deathless gratitude of
Jordan were in the grip of his hand.
His fingers locked around the butt
of his gun and yet he hesitated to draw. One
could never be sure. How fast, how lightning fast
his mind plunged through thought after thought, image
after flocking image, while Red Jim made the last
dragging steps towards the door of the shack!
If he drew, Perris, despite his bent head might catch
the glimmer of steel and draw and fire at the glance
of the gun. There were tales of gun experts doing
more remarkable feats. Wild Bill, in his prime,
from the corner of his eye saw a man draw a white
hankerchief, thought it a gun, whirled on his heel,
and killed a harmless stranger.
He who stops to think can rarely act.
It was true of Hervey. Then Perris, at the very
door of the hut, dropped the flopping saddle to the
ground and the foreman saw that no holster swung at
the hip of his man. Joy leaped in him. There
was no thought for the cruel cowardice of his act
but only overmastering gratitude that the enemy should
be thus delivered helpless into his hand. Through
the split part of a second that thrill passed tingling
through and through him, then he shouted: “Perris!”
and at the same instant whipped out the gun and fired
pointblank.
A snake will rattle before it strikes
and a dog will snarl before it bares its teeth:
instinct forced Hervey to that exulting cry and even
as the gun came into his hand he saw Perris spin sideways.
He fired and the figure at the door lunged down at
him. The shoulder struck Hervey in the upturned
face and smashed him backwards so that his hand flew
out to break the force of the fall, knocked on the
floor, and the revolver shot from the unnerved fingers.
If he had any hope that his bullet
had gone home and that this was the fall of a dying
man, it was instantly removed. Lean arms, amazingly
swift, amazingly strong, coiled round him. Hands
gripped at him with a clutch so powerful that the
fingers burned into his flesh. And, most horrible
of all, Red Jim fought in utter silence, as a bull-terrier
fights when it goes for the throat.
The impetus of that unexpected attack,
half-stunned Lew Hervey. Then the spur of terror
gave him hysterical strength.
A hand caught at his throat and got
a choking hold. He whirled his heavy body with
all his might, tore lose, and broke to his feet.
Staggering back to the wall, he saw Red Perris crouch
in the door and then spring in again. Hervey
struck out with all his might but felt the blow glance
and then the coiling arms were around him again.
Once again, in the crashing fall to the floor, the
hold of Perris was broken and Hervey leaped away for
the door yelling: “Perris — it’s
a mistake — for God’s sake — ”
The catlike body sprang out of the
corner into which it had been flung by Hervey as the
foreman rose from the floor. As well attempt to
elude a panther by flight! Lew whirled with a
sobbing breath of despair and smashed out again with
clubbed fist. But the lithe shadow swerved as
a leaf whirls from a beating hand and again their bodies
crashed together.
But was it a dream that there was
less power in the arms of Perris now? Had the
foreman seen Red Jim lying prostrate and senseless
after his battle with Alcatraz on that day, he would
have understood this sudden failing of energy, but
as it was he dared not trust his senses. He only
knew that it was possible to tear the twining grip
away, to spring back till he crashed against the side
of the shanty, still pleading in a fear-maddened voice:
“Perris, d’you hear? I didn’t
mean — ”
As well appeal to a thunder-bolt.
The shadowy form came again but now, surely, it was
less swift and resistless. He was able to leap
from the path but in dodging his legs entangled in
a chair and he tumbled headlong. It was well
for Hervey then that his panic was not blind, but
with the surety that the end was come he whirled to
his knees with the chair which had felled him gripped
in both hands and straight at the lunging Perris he
hurled it with all his strength. The missile
went home with a crash and Red Jim slumped into a formless
shadow on the floor.
Only now that a chance for flight
was open to him did the strength of Hervey desert
him. A nightmare weakness was in his knees so
that he could hardly reel to his feet and he moved
with outstretched hands towards the door until his
toe clicked against his fallen revolver. He paused
to scoop it up and turning back through the door, he
realized suddenly that Red Jim had not moved.
The body lay spilled out where it had fallen, strangely
flat, strangely still.
With stumbling fingers, the foreman
lighted a match and by that wobbling light he saw
Perris lying on his face with his arms thrown out,
as a man lies when he is knocked senseless — as
a man lies when he is struck dead! Yet Hervey
stood drinking in the sight until his match burned
his fingers.
The old nightmare fear descended on
him the moment the darkness closed about him again.
He seemed to see the limp form collect itself and
prepare to rise. But he fought this fancy away.
He would stay and make light enough to examine the
extent of his victory.
He remembered having seen paper and
wood lying beside the stove. Now he scooped it
up, threw off the covers of the stove, and in a moment
white smoke was pouring up from the paper, then flickering
bursts of flame every one of which made the body of
Perris seem shuddering back to life. But presently
the fire rose and Hervey could clearly see the cabin,
sadly wrecked by the struggle, and the figure of Perris
still moveless.
Even now he went with gingerly steps,
the gun thrust out before him. It seemed a miracle
that this tigerish fighter should have been suddenly
reduced to the helplessness of a child. Holding
the gun ready, he slipped his left hand under the
fallen man and after a moment, faintly but unmistakably,
he felt the beating of the heart. Let it be ended,
then!
He pressed the muzzle of the revolver
into the back of Perris but his finger refused to
tighten around the trigger. No, the powder-burn
would prove he had shot his man from behind, and that
meant hanging. A tug of his left hand flopped
the limp body over, but then his hands were more effectually
tied than ever for the face of the unconscious man
worked strangely on him.
“It’s him now,” thought Hervey,
“or me later on.”
But still he could not shoot.
“Helpless as a child” — why had
that comparison entered his mind? He studied
the features, very pale beneath the bloody bandage
which Perris had improvised when he recovered from
his battle with the stallion. He was very young — terribly
young. Hervey was unnerved. But suppose he
let Perris come back to his senses, wakened those
insolent blue eyes, started that sharp tongue to life — then
it would be a very much easier matter to shoot.
So Lew went to the door, took the
rope from Red Jim’s saddle, and with it bound
the arms of Perris to his side. Then he lifted
the hanging body — how light a weight it
was! — and placed it in a chair, where it
doubled over, limp as a loosely stuffed scarecrow.
Hervey tossed more wood on the fire and when he turned
again, Perris was showing the first signs of returning
consciousness, a twitching of his fingers.
After that his senses returned with
astonishing speed. In the space of a moment or
two he had straightened in the chair, opened dead eyes,
groaned faintly, and then tugged against his bonds.
It seemed that that biting of the rope into his arm-muscles
cleared his mind. All in an instant he was staring
straight into the eyes and into the thoughts of Hervey
with full understanding.
“I see,” said Perris,
“it was the chair that turned the trick.
You’re lucky, Hervey.”
It seemed to Hervey a wonderful thing
that the red-headed man could be so quiet about it,
and most wonderful of all that Perris could look at
anything in the world rather than the big Colt which
hung in the hand of the victor. And then, realizing
that it was his own comparative cowardice that made
this seem strange, the foreman gritted his teeth.
Shame softens the heart sometimes, but more often it
hardens the spirit. It hardened the conqueror
against his victim, now, and made it possible for
him to look down on Red Jim with a cruel satisfaction.
“Well?” he said, and the
volume of his voice added to this determination.
“Well?” said Perris, as
calm as ever. “Waiting for me to whine?”
Hervey blinked.
“Who licked you?” he asked,
forced to change his thoughts. “Who licked
you — before I got at you?”
Perris smiled, and there was something
about the smile that made Hervey flush to the roots
of his grey hair.
“Alcatraz had the first innings,”
said Perris. “He cleaned me up. And
that, Hervey, was tolerably lucky for you.”
“Was it?” sneered the
victor. “You’d of done me up quick,
maybe, if Alcatraz hadn’t wore you out?”
He waited hungrily for a reply that
might give him some basis on which to act, for after
all, it was not going to be easy to fire pointblank
into those steady, steady eyes. And more than
all, he hungered to see some wavering of courage,
some blenching from the thing to come.
“Done you up?” echoed
Red Jim. And he ran his glance slowly, thoughtfully
over the body of the foreman. “I’d
of busted you in two, Hervey.”
A little chilly shiver ran through
Hervey but he managed to shrug the feeling away — the
feeling that someone was standing behind him, listening,
and looking into his shameful soul. But no one
could be near. It would be simple, perfectly
simple. What person in the world could doubt
his story of how he met Perris at the shack and warned
him again to leave the Valley of the Eagles and of
how Perris went for the gun but was beaten in fair
fight? Who could doubt it? An immense sense
of security settled around him.
“Well,” he said, “second
guessing is easy, even for a fool.”
“Right,” nodded Red Jim.
“I should of knifed you when I had you down.”
“If you’d had a knife,” said Hervey.
“Look at my belt, Lew.”
There it was, the stout handle of
a hunting knife. The same chill swept through
Hervey a second time and, for a moment, he wavered
in his determination. Then, with all his heart,
he envied that indefinable thing in the eyes of Perris,
the thing which he had hated all his life. Some
horses had it, creatures with high heads, and always
he had made it a point to take that proud gleam out.
“A hoss is made for work, not foolishness,”
he used to say.
Here it was, looking out at him from
the eyes of his victim. He hated it, he feared
and envied it, and from the very bottom of his heart
he yearned to destroy it before he destroyed Perris.
“You know,” he said with sudden savagery,
“what’s coming?”
“I’m a pretty good guesser,”
nodded Red Jim. “When a fellow tries to
shoot me in the dark, and then slugs me with a chair
and ties me up, I generally make it out that he figures
on murder, Hervey.”
He gave just the slightest emphasis
to the important word, and yet something in Hervey
grew tense. Murder it was, and of the most dastardly
order, no matter how he tried to excuse it by protesting
to himself his devotion to Oliver Jordan. The
lies we tell to our own souls about ourselves are
the most damning ones, as they are also the easiest.
But Hervey found himself so cornered that he dared
not think about his act. He stopped thinking,
therefore, and began to shout. This is logical
and human, as every woman knows who has found an irate
husband in the wrong. Hervey began to hate with
redoubled intensity the man he was about to destroy.
“You come here and try to play
the cock of the walk,” cried the foreman.
“It don’t work. You try to face me
out before all my men. You threaten me.
You show off your gun-fighting, damn you, and then
you call it murder when I beat you fair and square
and — ”
He found it impossible to continue.
The prisoner was actually smiling.
“Hound dogs always hunt in the dark,”
said Red Jim.
A quiver of fear ran through Hervey.
Indeed, he was haunted by chilly uneasiness all the
time. In vain he assured himself with reason that
his victim was utterly helpless. A ghostly dread
remained in the back of his mind that through some
mysterious agency the red-headed man would be liberated,
and then . Hervey shuddered in
vital earnest. What would happen to a crow that
dared trap an eagle.
“I’m due back at the ranch,”
said Hervey, “to tell ’em how you jumped
me here while I was waiting here quiet to warn you
again to get out of the Valley of the Eagles peaceable.
Before I go, Perris, is they anything you want done,
any messages you want to leave behind you?”
And he set his teeth when he saw that
Perris did not blench. He was perfectly quiet.
Nearness to death sometimes acts in this manner.
It reduces men to the unaffected simplicity of children.
“No message, thanks,”
said Red Jim. “Nobody to leave them to and
nothing to leave but a hoss that somebody else will
ride and a gun that somebody else will shoot.”
“And the girl?” said Lew Hervey.
And a thrill of consummate satisfaction
passed through him, for Red Perris had plainly been
startled out of his calm.
“A girl?”
“You know what I mean. Marianne Jordan.”
He smiled knowingly.
“Well?” said Perris, breathing hard.
“Why, you fool,” cried
the foreman, “don’t you know she’s
gone plumb wild about you? Didn’t she come
begging to me to get you out of trouble?”
“You lie!” burst out Perris.
But by his roving glance, by the sudden
outpouring of sweat which gleamed on his forehead,
Hervey knew that he had shaken his man to the soul.
By playing carefully on this string might he not reduce
even this care-free fighter to trembling love of life?
Might he not make Red Perris cringe! All cowards
feel that their own vice exists in others. Hervey,
in his entire life, had dreaded nothing saving Red
Jim, and now he felt that he had found the thing which
would make life too dear to Perris to be given up
with a smile.
“Begging? I’ll tell a man she did!”
nodded Hervey.
“It’s because she’s
plumb generous. She thought that might turn you.
Why — she don’t hardly know me!”
“Don’t she?” sneered
Hervey. “You don’t figure her right.
She’s one of the hit or miss kind. She
hated me the minute she laid eyes on me — hated
me for nothing! And you knocked her off her feet
the first shot. That’s all there is to
it. She’d give the Valley of the Eagles
for a smile from you.”
He saw the glance of Perris wander
into thin distance and soften. Then the eye of
Red Jim returned to his tormentor, desperately.
The blow had told better than Hervey could have hoped.
“And me a plain tramp — a
loafer — me!” said Perris to himself.
He added suddenly: “Hervey, let’s
talk man to man!”
“Go on,” said the foreman,
and set his teeth to keep his exultation from showing.
Five minutes more, he felt, and Perris
would be begging like a coward for his life.