There were two reasons for the happiness
which lightened the step of Bull Hunter as he strode
back for the town. In the first place he saw
a hope of liberating Reeve from jail and accomplishing
his own mission of killing the man. In the second
place he felt a peculiar joy at the thought of freeing
such a man from the imputation of a cowardly murder.
Yet he had small grounds for his hopes.
Two little dark marks on the white, friable stone,
marks that the first small shower of rain would wash
away, marks that the first keen sandstorm would rub
off — this was his only proof. And with
this to free one man from danger of the rope and place
the head of another under the noose — it was
a task to try the resources of a cleverer man than
Bull.
Indeed, the high spirits of Bull in
some measure left him as he drew nearer and nearer
to the village. How could he convict the sheriff?
How, with his clumsy wits and his clumsy tongue, could
he bring the truth to light? Had he possessed
the keen eyes of his uncle he felt that a single glance
would have made the guilt stand up in the face of
Anderson. But his own eyes, alas, were dull and
clouded.
Thoughtfully, with bowed head, he
held his course. A strange picture, surely, this
man who so devoutly wished to free another from the
danger of the law in order that he might take a life
into his own hands. But the contrast did not
strike home to Bull. To him everything that he
did was as clear as day. But how to go to work?
If the man were like himself it would be an easy matter.
More than once he remembered how his cousins had shifted
the blame for their own boyish pranks upon him.
In the presence of their father they would accuse
Bull with a well-planned lie, and the very fact that
he had been accused made Bull blush and hang his head.
Before he could be heard in his own behalf the cruel
eye of his uncle had grown stern, and Bull was condemned
as a culprit.
“The only time you show any
sense,” his uncle had said more than once, “is
when you want to do something you hadn’t ought
to do!”
Steadily through the years he had
served as a scapegoat for his cousins. They set
a certain value upon him for his use in this respect.
Ah, if only he had that keen, embarrassing eye of Bill
Campbell with which to pierce to the guilty heart of
the sheriff and make him speak! The eye of his
uncle was like the eye of a crowd. It was an
audience in itself and condemned or praised with the
strength of numbers.
It was this thought of numbers that
brought the clue to a possible solution to Bull Hunter.
When it came to him he stopped short in the road,
threw back his head and laughed.
“And what’s all the celebration
about?” asked a voice behind him.
He turned and found Sheriff Anderson
on his horse directly behind him. The soft loam
of the trail had covered the sound of the sheriffs
approach. Bull blushed with a sudden sense of
shame. Moreover, the sheriff seemed unapproachably
stern and dignified. He sat erect in the saddle,
a cavalier figure with his long, well-drilled mustaches.
“I dunno,” said Bull vaguely,
pushing his hat back to scratch his thatch of blond
hair. “I didn’t know I was celebrating,
particular.”
The sheriff watched him with small,
evil eyes. “You been snooping around, son,”
he said coldly. “And we folks in this part,
we don’t like snoopers. Understand?”
“No,” said Bull frankly,
“I don’t exactly figure what you mean.”
Then he dropped his hand to his hip.
“Git your hand off that gun!”
said the sheriff, his own weapon flashing instantly
in the light.
It had been a move like lightning.
Its speed stunned and baffled Bull Hunter. Something
cold formed in his throat, choking him, and he obediently
drew his hand away. He did more. He threw
both immense arms above his head and stood gaping
at the sheriff.
The latter eyed him for a moment with
stern amusement, and then he shoved the gun back into
its holster. “I guess they ain’t much
harm in you,” he said more to himself than to
Bull. “But I hate a snooper worse than
I do a rat. You can take them arms down.”
Bull lowered them cautiously.
“You hear me talk?” asked the sheriff.
“I hear,” said Bull obediently.
“I don’t like snoopers.
Which means that I don’t like you none too well.
Besides, who in thunder are you? A wanderin’
vagrant you look to me, and we got a law agin’
vagrants. You amble along on your trail pretty
pronto, and no harm’ll come to you. But
if you’re around town tomorrow — well,
you’ve heard me talk!”
It was very familiar talk to Bull;
not the words, but the commanding and contemptuous
tone in which they were spoken. Crestfallen, he
submitted. Of one thing he must make sure:
that no harm befell him before he faced Pete Reeve
and Pete Reeve’s gun. Then he could only
pray for courage to attack. But the effect of
the sheriff’s little gunplay entirely disheartened
Bull at the prospect of facing Pete.
With a noncommittal rejoinder he started
down the road, and the sheriff put the spurs to his
horse and plunged by at a full gallop, flinging the
dust back into the face of the big man. Bull wiped
it out of his eyes and went on gloomily. He had
been trodden upon in spirit once more. But, after
all, that was so old a story that it made little difference.
It convinced him, however, of one thing; he could never
do anything with the sheriff man to man. Certainly
he would need the help of a crowd before he faced
the tall man and his cavalier mustaches.
He waited until after the supper at
the hotel. It was a miserable meal for Bull;
he had already eaten, and he could not find a way of
refusing the invitation of the proprietor to sit down
again. Seated at the end of the long table he
looked miserably up and down it. Nobody had a
look for him except one of contempt. The sheriff,
it seemed, had spread a story around about his lack
of spirit, and if Bull remained long in the village,
he would be treated with little more respect than
he had been in the house of his uncle. Even now
they held him in contempt. They could not understand,
for instance, why he sat so far forward. He was
resting most of his weight on his legs, for fear of
the weakness of the chair under his full bulk.
But that very bulk made them whisper their jokes and
insults to one another.
When the long nightmare of that meal
was ended, Bull began making his rounds. He had
chosen his men. Every man he picked was sharp-eyed
like Uncle Bill Campbell. They were the men whose
inlooking eyes would baffle the sheriff; they were
the men capable of suspicions, and such men Bull needed — not
dull-glancing people like himself.
He went first to the proprietor of
the hotel. “I got something to say to the
sheriff,” he declared. “And I want
to have a few important gents around town to be there
to listen and hear what I got to say. I wonder,
could you be handy?”
He was surprised at the avidity with
which his invitation was accepted. It was a long
time since the hotel owner had been referred to as
an “important man.”
Then he went with the same talk to
five others — the blacksmith, the carpenter
and odd-jobber, the storekeeper, and two men whom he
had marked when he first halted near the hotel veranda.
To his invitation each of them gave a quick assent.
There had been something mysterious in the manner
in which this timid-eyed giant had descended upon the
town from nowhere, and now they felt that they were
about to come to the heart of the reason of his visit.
The invitation to the sheriff was
delivered by the proprietor of the hotel, and he said
just enough — and no more — to bring
the sheriff straight to the hotel. Anderson arrived
with his best pair of guns in his holsters, for the
sheriff was a two-gun man of the best variety.
He came with the aggressive manner of one ready to
beat down all opposition, but when he stepped into
the room, his manner changed. For he found sitting
about the table in the dining room, which was to be
the scene of the conference, the six most influential
men of the town — men strong enough to reelect
him next year, or to throw him permanently out of
office.
At the lower end of the table stood
Bull Hunter, his arms folded, his face blank.
Standing with the light from the lamp shining upon
his face, the others seated, he seemed a man among
pygmies.
“Shall I lock the door?”
asked the proprietor, and he turned to Bull, as if
the latter had the right to dictate.
Bull nodded.
“All right, sheriff,”
the proprietor went on to explain. “Our
young friend yonder says that he’s got something
to say to you. He’s asked each of us to
hang around and be a witness. Are you ready?”
“Jud,” burst out the sheriff,
“you’re an idiot! This overgrown booby
needs a horsewhipping, and that’s the sort of
an answer I’d like to make to him.”
Having delivered this broadside he
strode up and confronted Bull. It was a very
poor move. In the first place, the sheriff had
insulted one of the men who was about to act as his
official judge. In the second place, by putting
himself so close to Bull, he made himself appear a
trifle ludicrous. Also, if he expected to throw
Bull out of the poise with this blustering, he failed.
It was not that Bull did not feel fear, but he had
seen a curious thing — the sinewy, long neck
of the sheriff — and he was wondering what
would happen if one of his hands should grip that
throat for a single instant. He grew so fascinated
by this study that he forgot his fear of the sheriff’s
guns.
Anderson hastened to retreat from
his false position. “Gents,” he said,
“excuse me for getting edgy. But, if you
want me to listen to this fellow’s talk — ”
“Hunter is his name — Bull Hunter,”
said the proprietor.
The sheriff took his place at the
far end of the long table. Like Bull, he preferred
to stand. “Start in your talk,” he
commanded.
“It looks to me,” said
Bull gently, “that they’s only one gent
here that’s wearing a gun.” He had
thrown his own belt on a chair; and now he fixed his
eyes on the weapons of Anderson.
The sheriff glared. “You
want me to take off my guns? Son, I’d rather
go naked!”
Jud, the hotel man, had already been
insulted once by the sheriff, and he had been biding
his time. This seemed an excellent opening.
“Looks to me,” he remarked, “like
Mr. Hunter was right. He’s got something
pretty serious to say, and he don’t want to take
no chances on your cutting him short with a bullet!”
The sheriff glared at Bull and then
cast a swift glance over the faces of the others.
He read upon them only one expression — a
cold curiosity. Plainly they agreed with Jud,
and the sheriff gave way. He took off his belt
and tossed it upon a chair near him. Then he faced
Bull again, but he faced the big man with half his
confidence destroyed. As he had said, he felt
worse than naked without his revolvers under his touch,
but now he attempted to brave out the situation.
“Well,” he said jocularly,
“what you going to accuse me of, Bull Hunter?”
“I’m just going to tell
a little story that I been thinking about,”
said Bull.
“Story — nothing!” exclaimed
Anderson.
“Wait a minute,” broke
in Jud. “Let him tell this his own way — I
think you’d best, sheriff!”
Bull was looking at the sheriff and
through him into the distance. After all, it
was a story, as distinctly a story as if he had it
in a book. As he began to tell it, he forgot
Sheriff Anderson at the farther end of the table.
He talked slowly, bringing the words out one by one,
as if what he said were coming to him by inspiration — a
kind of second sight.
“It starts in,” said Bull,
“the other night when the gent come in with
word that Pete Reeve was out playing cards with Armstrong
and losing money. When the sheriff heard that,
he started to thinking. He was remembering how
he’d hated Armstrong for a good many years, and
that made him think that maybe Armstrong would get
into trouble with Reeve, because Reeve is a pretty
good shot, and the sheriff hoped that, if it come
to a showdown, Reeve would shoot Armstrong full of
holes. And that started him wishing pretty strong
that Armstrong would get killed!”
“Do I have to stand here and
listen to this fool talk?” demanded the sheriff.
“I’m just supposing,”
said Bull. “Surely they ain’t any
harm in just supposing?”
“Not a bit,” decided Jud,
who had taken the position of main arbiter.
“Well, the sheriff got to wishing
Armstrong was dead so strong that it didn’t
seem he could stand to have him living much more.
He told the folks that he was going out to see that
no harm come to Armstrong from Reeve. Then he
got on his hoss and went out. All the way he was
thinking hard. Armstrong was the gent that was
sheriff before Anderson; Armstrong was the gent that
might get the job and throw him out again. Ain’t
that clear? Well, the sheriff gets close to the
cabin and — ”
He paused and slowly extended his
long arm toward the sheriff. “What’d
you do then?”
“Me? I heard a shot — ”
“You left your hoss standing
in the brush near the house,” interrupted Bull,
“and you went along on foot.”
“Does that sound reasonable,
a gent going on foot when he might ride?” demanded
the sheriff.
“You didn’t want to make
no noise,” said Bull, and his great voice swallowed
the protest of the sheriff.
Anderson cast another glance at the
listeners. Plainly they were fascinated by this
tale, and they were following it step by step with
nods.
“You didn’t make no noise,
either,” went on Bull Hunter. “You
slipped up to the cabin real soft, and you climbed
up on the east side of the house over some rocks.”
“Why in reason should a man
climb over rocks? Why wouldn’t he go right
to the door?”
“Because you didn’t want to be seen.”
“Then why not the west window, fool!”
“You tried that window first,
but they was some dry brush lying in front of it,
and you couldn’t come close enough to look in
without making a noise stepping on the dead wood.
So then you went around to the other side and climbed
over the rocks until you could look into the cabin.
Am I right?”
“I — no, curse you, no! Of course
you ain’t right!” shouted Anderson.
“Looking right through that
window,” said Bull heavily, “you seen
Armstrong, the man you hated, facing you, and, with
his back turned, was Pete Reeve. You said to
yourself, ’Drop Armstrong with a bullet, catch
Reeve, and put the blame on him!’ Then you pulled
your gun.”
He pushed aside the ponderous armchair
which stood beside him at the head of the table.
“Say,” shouted the sheriff,
paler than ever now, “what are you accusing
me of?”
“Murder!” thundered Bull Hunter.
The roar of Bull’s voice chained
every one in his place, the sheriff with staring eyes,
and Jud in the act of raising his hand.
“I’ll jail you for slander!”
said the sheriff, fighting to assurance and knowing
that he was betrayed by his pallor and by the icy
perspiration which he felt on his forehead.
“Anderson,” said Bull,
“I seen the marks of them iron heels of yours
on the rock!”
That was a little thing, of course.
As evidence it would not have convinced the most prejudiced
jury in the world, but Sheriff Anderson was not weighing
small points. Into his mind leaped one image — the
whiteness of those rocks on which he had stood and
the indelible mark his heels must have made against
that whiteness. He was lost, he felt, and he
acted on the impulse to fight for his life.
One last glance he cast at the six
listeners, and in their wide-eyed interest he read
his own damnation. Then Anderson whirled and leaped
for his belt with the guns.
Out of six throats came six yells
of fear; there was a noise of chairs being pushed
back and a wild scramble to find safety under the table.
Jud, risking a moment’s delay, knocked the chimney
off the lamp before he dived. The flame leaped
once and went out, but the pale moonshine poured through
the window and filled the room with a weird play of
shadows.
What Bull Hunter saw was not the escape
of the sheriff, but a sudden blind rage against everything
and everybody. It was a passion that set him
trembling through all of his great body. One touch
of trust, one word of encouragement had been enough
to make him a giant to tear up the stump in the presence
of Jessie and his cousins; how far more mighty he
was in the grip of this new emotion, this rage.
His own gun was far away, but guns
were not what he wanted. They were uncongenial
toys to his great hands. Instead, he reached down
and caught up that massive chair of oak, built to
resist time, built to bear even such a bulk as that
of Bull Hunter with ease. Yet he caught it up
in one hand, weighed it behind his head at the full
limit of his extended arm, and then, bending forward,
he catapulted the great missile down the length of
the table. It hit the lamp on the way and splintered
it to small bits, its momentum unimpeded. Hurtling
on across the table it shot at the sheriff as he whirled
with his guns in his hands.
Fast as the chair shot forward, the
hand of the sheriff was faster still. Bull saw
the big guns twitch up, silver in the moonshine.
They exploded in one voice, as if the flying mass
of wood were an animate object. Then the sheriff
was struck and hurled crashing along the floor.