The prisoner’s good humor impressed
Bull immensely. Here was a man talking commonplaces
in the face of death. A greater man than Uncle
Bill, he felt at once — a far greater man.
It was impossible to conceive of that keen, sharp
eye and that clawlike hand sending a bullet far from
the center of the target.
He gave his eyes long sight of that
face, and then turned from the bars and went out with
the sheriff.
“Is that your man?” asked the sheriff.
“I dunno,” said Bull,
fencing for time as they stood in front of the jail.
“What’d he do?”
“You mean why he’s in
jail? I’ll tell you that, son, but first
I want to know what you got agin’ him — and
your proofs — mostly your proofs!”
The distaste which Bull had felt for
the sheriff from the first now became overpowering.
That he should be the means of bringing that terrible
and active little man to an end seemed, as a matter
of fact, absurd. Guile must have played a part
in that capture.
Suppose he were to tell the sheriff
about the shooting of Uncle Bill? That would
be enough to convince men that Pete Reeve was capable
of murder, for the shooting of Uncle Bill had been
worse than murder. It spared the life and ruined
it at the same time. But suppose he added his
evidence and allowed the law to take its course with
Pete Reeve? Where would be his own reward for
his long march south and all the pain of travel and
the crossing of the mountains at the peril of his
life? There would be nothing but scorn from Uncle
Bill when he returned, and not that moment of praise
for which he yearned. To gain that great end
he must kill Pete Reeve, but not by the aid of the
law.
“I dunno,” he said to
the sheriff who waited impatiently. “I figure
that what I know wouldn’t be no good to you.”
The sheriff snorted. “You
been letting me waste all this time on you?”
he asked Bull. “Why didn’t you tell
me that in the first place?”
Bull scratched his head in perplexity.
But as he raised the great arm and put his hand behind
his head, the sheriff winced back a little. “I’m
sorry,” said Bull.
The sheriff dismissed him with a grunt
of disgust, and strode off.
Bull started out to find information.
This idea was growing slowly in his mind. He
must kill Pete Reeve, and to accomplish that great
end he must first free him from the jail. He
went back to the hotel and went into the kitchen to
find food. The proprietor himself came back to
serve him. He was a pudgy little man with a dignified
pointed beard of which he was inordinately proud.
“It’s between times for
meals,” he declared, “but you being the
biggest man that ever come into the hotel, I’ll
make an exception.” And he began to hunt
through the cupboard for cold meat.
“I seen Pete Reeve,” began
Bull bluntly. “How come he’s in jail?”
“Him?” asked the other. “Ain’t
you heard?”
“No.”
The little man sighed with pleasure;
he had given up hope of finding a new listener for
that oft-told tale. “It happened last night,”
he confided. “Along late in the afternoon
in rides Johnny Strange. He tells us he was out
to Dan Armstrong’s place when, about noon, a
little gray-headed man that give the name of Pete Reeve
came in and asked for chow. Of course Johnny
Strange pricks up his ears when he hears the name.
We all heard about Pete Reeve, off and on, as about
the slickest gunman that the ranges ever turned out.
So he looks Pete over and wonders at finding such
a little man.”
The proprietor drew himself up to
his full height. “He didn’t know
that size don’t make the man! Well, Armstrong
trotted out some chuck for Reeve, and after Pete had
eaten, Johnny Strange suggested a game. They
sat in at three-handed stud poker.
“Things went along pretty good
for Johnny. He made a considerable winning.
Then it come late in the afternoon, and he seen he’d
have to be getting back home. He offered to bet
everything he’d won, or double or nothing, and
when the boys didn’t want to do that, it give
him a clean hand to stand up and get out. He
got up and said good-bye and hung around a while to
see how the next hands went. So far as he could
make out, Pete Reeve was losing pretty steady.
Then he come on in.
“Well, when Johnny Strange told
about Pete being out there, Sheriff Anderson was in
the room and he rises up.
“‘Don’t look good
to me,’ he says. ’If a gunfighter
is losing money, most like he’ll fight to win
it back. Maybe I’ll go out and look that
game over.’
“And saying that he slopes out of the room.
“Well, none of us took much
stock in the sheriff going out to take care of Armstrong.
You see Armstrong was the old sheriff, and he give
Anderson a pretty stiff run for his money last election.
They both been spending most of their time and energy
the last few years hating each other. When one
of ’em is in office the other goes around saying
that the gent that has the plum is a crook; and then
Anderson goes out, and Armstrong comes in, and Anderson
says the same thing about Armstrong. Take ’em
general and they always had the boys worried when
they was together, for fear of a gunfight and bullets
flying. And so, when Anderson stands up and says
he’s going out to see that Reeve don’t
do no harm to Armstrong, we all sat back and kind of
laughed.
“But we laughed at the wrong
thing. Long about an hour or so after dark we
hear two men come walking up on the veranda, and one
of ’em we knowed by the sound was the sheriff.”
“How could you tell by the sound?”
asked Bull innocently.
“Well, you see the sheriff always
wears steel rims on his heels like he was a horse.
He’s kind of close with his money is old Anderson,
I’ll tell a man! We hear the ring of them
heels on the porch, and pretty soon in comes the sheriff,
herding a gent in ahead of him. And who d’you
think that gent was? It was Reeve! Yes, sir,
the old sheriff had stepped out and grabbed his man.
He wasn’t there quick enough to stop the killing
of Armstrong, but he got there fast enough to nab
Reeve. Seems that when he was riding up to the
house he heard a shot fired, and then he seen a man
run out of the house and jump on his hoss, and the
sheriff didn’t stop to ask no questions.
He just out with his gat and drills the gent’s
hoss. And while Reeve was struggling on the ground,
with the hoss flopping around and dying, the sheriff
runs up and sticks the irons on Reeve. Then he
goes into the house and finds Armstrong lying shot
through the heart. Clear as day! Reeve loses
a lot of money, and when it comes to a pinch he hates
to see that money gone when he could get it back for
the price of one slug. So he outs with his gun
and shoots Armstrong. And the worst part of it
was that Armstrong didn’t have no gun on at the
time. The sheriff found Armstrong’s gun
hanging on the wall along with his cartridge belt.
Yep, it was plain murder, and Pete Reeve’ll hang
as high as the sky — and a good thing, too!”
This story was a shock to Bull for
a reason that would not have affected most men.
That a man who had had the courage to stand up and
face Uncle Bill in a fair duel should have been so
cowardly, so venomous as to take a mean advantage
of a gambling companion seemed to Bull altogether
too strange to be reasonable. Certainly, if he
had had a difference with this fellow, thought Bull,
Pete Reeve was the man to let the other use his own
weapons before he fought. But to shoot him down
across a table, unwarned — this was too much
to believe! And yet it was the truth, and Pete
Reeve was to hang for it.
The big man sat shaking his head.
“And they found the money on Pete Reeve?”
he asked gloomily. “They found the money
he took off this Armstrong?”
“There’s the funny part
of the yarn,” said the proprietor glibly.
“Pete had the nerve to shoot the gent down in
cold blood, but when he seen him fall he lost his
nerve. He didn’t wait to grab the money,
but ran out and jumped on his hoss and tried to get
away. So there you are. But it pretty often
happens that way! Take the oldest gunfighter
in the world, and, if his stomach ain’t resting
just right, it sort of upsets him to see a crimson
stain. I seen it happen that way with the worst
of ’em, and in the old days they used to be a
rough crowd in my barroom. They don’t turn
out that style of gent no more!” He sighed as
his mind flickered back into the heroic past.
“And Reeve — he admits
he done the killing?” Bull asked hopelessly.
“Him? Nope, he’s
too foxy for that. But the only story he told
was so foolish that we laughed at him, and he ain’t
had the nerve to try to bluff us ever since.
He says that he was sitting peaceable with Armstrong
when all at once without no warning they was a shot
from the window — the east window, I remember
he was particular to say — and Armstrong
dropped forward on the table, shot through the heart.
“Reeve says that he didn’t
wait to ask no questions. He blew the candle
out, and having got the darkness on his side, he made
a jump through the door and got onto his hoss.
He says that he wanted to break away to the trees
and try to get a shot at the murderer from cover,
but the minute he got onto his hoss, he had his hoss
shot from under him.”
“Was they any shots fired then?”
“Yep. Reeve says that he
fired a couple of times when he fell. But the
sheriff says that Reeve only fired once, as his hoss
was falling, and that the other shot that was found
fired out of Reeve’s gun was fired into the
heart of Armstrong. Oh, they ain’t any doubt
about it. All Reeve has got is a cock-and-bull
yarn that would make a fool laugh!”
Although Bull had been many times
assured by his uncle and his cousins that he was a
fool of the first magnitude, he was in no mood for
laughter. Somewhere in the tale there was something
wrong, for his mind refused to conjure up the picture
of Reeve pulling his gun and shooting across the table
into the breast of a helpless, unwarned man.
That would not be the method of a man who could stand
up to Uncle Bill. That would not be the method
of the man who had sat up on his bunk and looked so
calmly into the face of the sheriff.
Bull stood up and dragged his hat
firmly over his eyes. “I’d kind of
like to see the place where that shooting was done,”
he declared.
“You got lots of time before
night,” said the proprietor. “Ain’t
more’n a mile and a half out the north trail.
Take that path right out there, and you can ride out
inside of five minutes.”
There was no horse for Bull Hunter
to ride. But, having thanked his host, he stepped
out into the cooler sunshine of the late afternoon.
The trail led through scattering groves
of cottonwood most of the way, for it was bottom land,
partially flooded in the winter season of rain, and,
even in the driest and hottest part of the summer,
marshy in places. He followed the twisting little
trail through spots of shadow and stretches of open
sky until he reached the shack which was obviously
that of the dead Armstrong.
The moment he entered the little cabin
he received proof positive.
The furniture had not apparently been
disturbed since the shooting. The table still
leaned crazily, as though it had not recovered from
a violent shock on one side. One chair was overturned.
A box had been smashed to splinters, probably by having
someone put a foot through it.
Bull examined the deal table.
Across the center of it there was a dark stain, and
on the farther side, two hands were printed distinctly
into the wood, in the same dull color. The whole
scene rose revoltingly distinct in the mind of Bull.
Here sat Dan Armstrong playing his
cheerful game, laughing and jesting, because forsooth
he was the winner. And there, on the opposite
side of the table, sat Pete Reeve, the guest in the
house of his host, growing darker and darker as the
money was transferred from his pocket to the pocket
of the jovial Armstrong. Then, a sudden taking
of offense at some harmless jest, the cold flash of
steel as Reeve leaned and jumped to his feet, and
then the explosion of the revolver, with Armstrong
settling slowly, limply forward on the table.
There he lay with a stream pouring across the table
from the death wound, his helpless arms outstretched
on the wood.
Then Reeve, panic-stricken, perhaps
with a sudden stirring of remorse, started for the
door, struck the box on his way, smashing it to bits,
and as soon as he got outside, leaped for his horse.
Luckily retribution had overtaken the murderer in
the very moment of escape. Bull Hunter sighed.
Never had the strength of the arm of the law been
so vividly brought home to him as by this incident.
Suppose that he had fulfilled his purpose and killed
Reeve? Would not the law have reached for him
in the same fashion and taken and crushed him?
He shuddered, and looking up from
his broodings, he glanced through the opposite window
and saw that the woods were growing dark in that direction.
Night was approaching, and, with the feeling of night,
there was a ghostly sense of death, as though the spirit
of the dead man were returning to his old home.
On the other side of the house, however, the woods
showed brighter. This was the east window — the
east window through which Reeve declared that the
shot had been fired.
Bull shook his head. He stepped
out of the cabin and looked about. It was a prosperous
little stretch of meadow, cleared into the cottonwoods
and reclaiming part of the marshland — all
very rich soil, as one could see at a glance.
There was a field which had been recently upturned
by the plow, perhaps the work of yesterday. The
furrows were still black, still not dried out by the
sun. Today would have been the time for harrowing,
but that work was indefinitely postponed by the grim
visitor. No doubt this Armstrong was an industrious
man. The sense of a wasted life was brought home
to Bull; a bullet had ended it all!
Absent-mindedly he passed around the
side of the house and started for the east window
through which Reeve had said that the bullet was fired,
but he shook his head at once.
On the east side the house leaned
against a mass of white stone. It rose high,
rough, ragged. Certainly a man stalking a house
to fire a shot would never come up to it from this
side! His own words were convicting Reeve of
the murder!
Still he continued to clamber over
the stones until he stood by the window. To be
sure, if a man stood there, he could easily have fired
into the room and into the breast of a man sitting
on the far side of the table. Armstrong was found
there. Bull looked down to his feet as a thoughtful
man will do, and there, very clearly marked against
the white of the stone, he saw a dark streak — two
of them, side by side.
He bent and looked at them. Then
he rubbed the places with his fingertips and examined
the skin. A stain had come away from the rock.
It was as if the rocks had been rubbed with lead or
a soft iron. And then, strangely, into the mind
of Bull came the memory of what the hotel man had
said of the sheriff’s iron-shod heels.
The sheriff had gone for many a year
hating Armstrong. The truth rushed over the brain
of the big man. What a chance for a crafty mind!
To kill his enemy and place the blame on the shoulders
of one already known to be a man-killer! Bull
Hunter leaped from the rocks and started back for
the town with long, ground-devouring strides.