Even though he was taken utterly by
surprise, habit made Arizona go for his own gun, as
the sheriff whipped out his weapon. But under
those conditions he was beaten badly to the draw.
Before his weapon was half out of the holster, the
sheriff had the drop.
Arizona paused, but, for a moment,
his eyes fought Kern, figuring chances. It was
only the hesitation of an instant. The battle
was lost before it had begun, and Arizona was clever
enough to know it. Swiftly he turned on a new
tack. He shoved his revolver back into the holster
and smiled benevolently on the sheriff.
“What’s the new game, Kern?”
“It ain’t new,”
said the sheriff joylessly. “It’s
about the oldest game in the world. Arizona,
you sure killed Sandersen.”
“Sandersen?” Arizona laughed.
“Why, man, I ain’t hardly seen him more
than once. How come that I would kill him?”
“Get your hands up, Arizona.”
“Oh, sure.” He obeyed
with apparent willingness. “But don’t
let anybody see you making this fool play, sheriff.”
“Maybe not so foolish.
I’ll tell you why you killed him. You’re
broke, Arizona. Ten days ago Mississippi Slim
cleaned you out at dice. Well, when Sinclair
told me where Cold Feet was, you listened through the
door, but you didn’t stay to find out that Jig
wasn’t wanted no more. You beat it up to
the mountain, and there you found Sandersen was ahead
of your time. You drilled Sandersen, hoping to
throw the blame on Cold Feet. Then you come down,
but on the way Cold Feet gives you the slip and gets
away. And that’s why you’re here.”
Arizona blinked. So much of this
tale was true that it shook even his iron nerve.
He managed to smile.
“That’s a wild yarn, sheriff.
D’you think it’ll go down with a jury?”
“It’ll go down with any
jury around these parts. What’s more, Arizona,
I ain’t going to rest on what I think. I’m
going to find out. And, if I send down to the
south inquiring about you, I got an idea that I’ll
find out enough to hang ten like you, eh?”
Once more Arizona received a vital
blow, and he winced under the impact. Moreover,
he was bewildered. His own superior intelligence
had inclined him to despise the sheriff, whom he put
down as a fellow of more bulldog power than mental
agility. All in a moment it was being borne in
upon him that he had underrated his man. He could
not answer. His smooth tongue was chained.
“Not that I got any personal
grudge agin’ you,” went on the sheriff,
“but it’s gents like you that I’m
after, Arizona, and not one like Sinclair. You
ain’t clean, Arizona. You’re slick,
and they ain’t elbowroom enough in the West
for slick gents. Besides, you got a bad way with
your gun. I can tell you this, speaking private
and confidential, I’m going to hang you, Arizona,
if there’s any way possible!”
He said all this quietly, but the
revolver remained poised with rocklike firmness.
He drew out a pair of manacles.
“Stand up, Arizona.”
Listlessly the fat man got up.
He had been changing singularly during the last speech
of the sheriff. Now he dropped a hand on the edge
of the table, as if to support himself. The sheriff
saw that hand grip the wood until the knuckles went
white. Arizona moistened his colorless lips.
“Not the irons, sheriff,” he said softly.
“Not them!”
If it had been any other man, Kern
would have imagined that he was losing his nerve;
but he knew Arizona, had seen him in action, and he
was certain that his courage was above question.
Consequently he was amazed. As certainly as he
had ever seen them exposed, these were the horrible
symptoms of cowardice that make a brave man shudder
to see.
“Can’t trust you,”
he said wonderingly. “Wouldn’t trust
you a minute, Arizona, without the irons on you.
You’re a bad actor, son, and I’ve seen
you acting up. Don’t forget that.”
“Sheriff, I give you my word
that I’ll go quiet as a lamb.”
A moment elapsed before Kern could
answer, for the voice of Arizona had trembled as he
spoke. The sheriff could not believe his ears.
“Well, I’m sorry, Arizona,”
he said more gently, because he was striving to banish
this disgusting suspicion from his own mind. “I
can’t take no chances. Just turn around,
will you. And keep them hands up!”
He barked the last words, for the
arms of Arizona had crooked suddenly. They stiffened
at the sharp command of the sheriff. Slowly, trembling,
as if they possessed a volition of their own hardly
controlled by the fat man, those hands fought their
way back to their former position, and then Arizona
gradually turned his back on the sheriff. A convulsive
shudder ran through him as Kern removed his gun and
then seized one of the raised hands, drew it down,
and fastened one part of the iron on it. The
other hand followed, and, as the sheriff snapped the
lock, he saw a singular transformation in the figure
of his captive. The shoulders of Arizona slouched
forward, his head sank. From the erect, powerful
figure of the moment before, he became, in comparison,
a flabby pile of flesh, animated by no will.
“What’s the matter?”
asked the sheriff. “You ain’t lost
your nerve, have you, Fatty?”
Arizona did not answer. Kern
stepped to one side and glanced at the face of his
captive. It was strangely altered. The mouth
had become trembling, loose, uncertain. The head
had fallen, and the bright, keen eyes were dull.
The man looked up with darting side-glances.
The sheriff stood back and wiped a
sudden perspiration from his forehead. Under
his very eyes the spirit of this gunfighter was disintegrating.
The sheriff felt a cold shame pour through him.
He wanted to hide this man from the eyes of the others.
It was not right that he should be seen. His
weakness was written too patently.
Kern was no psychologist, but he knew
that some men out of their peculiar element are like
fish out of water. He shook his head.
“Walk out that back door, will you?” he
asked softly.
“We ain’t going down the street?”
demanded Arizona.
“No.”
“Thanks, sheriff.”
Again Kern shuddered, swallowed, and
then commanded: “Start along, Arizona.”
Slinking through the door, the fat
man hesitated on the little porch and cast a quick
glance up and down.
“No one near!” he said. “Hurry
up, sheriff.”
Quickly they skirted down behind the
houses — not unseen, however. A small
boy playing behind his father’s house raised
his head to watch the hurrying pair, and when he saw
the glitter of the irons, they heard him gasp.
He was old enough to know the meaning of that.
Irons on Arizona, who had been a town hero the night
before! They saw the youngster dart around the
house.
“Blast him!” groaned Arizona. “He’ll
spread it everywhere. Hurry!”
He was right. The sheriff hurried
with a will, but, as they crossed the street for the
door of the jail, voices blew down to them. Looking
toward the hotel, they saw men pouring out into the
street, pointing, shouting to one another. Then
they swept down on the pair.
But the sheriff and his prisoner gained
the door of the jail first, and Kern locked it behind
him. His deputy on guard rose with a start, and
at the same time there was a hurried knocking on the
door and a clamor of voices without. Arizona
shrank away from that sound, scowling over his shoulder,
but the sheriff nodded good-humoredly.
“Take it easy, Arizona.
I ain’t going to make a show of you!”
“Sure, that’s like you,
sheriff,” said a hurried, half-whining voice.
“You’re square. I’ll sure show
you one of these days now I appreciate the way you
treat me!”
Kern was staggered. It seemed
to him that a new personality had taken possession
of the body of the fat man. He led the way past
his gaping deputy. The jail was not constructed
for a crowd. It was merely a temporary abiding
place before prisoners were taken to the larger institution
at Woodville. Consequently there was only one
big cell. The sheriff unlocked the door, slipped
the manacles from the wrists of Arizona, and jabbed
the muzzle of a revolver into his back!
The last act was decidedly necessary,
for the moment his wrists were released from the grip
of the steel, Arizona twitched halfway round toward
the sheriff. The scrape of the gunmuzzle against
his ribs, however, convinced him. Over his shoulder
he cast one murderous glance at the sheriff and then
slouched forward into the cell.
“Company for you, Riley,”
said the sheriff, as the tall cowpuncher rose.
The other’s back was turned,
and thereby the sheriff was enabled to pass a significant
gesture and look to Sinclair. With that he left
them. In the outer room he found his deputy much
alarmed.
“You ain’t turned them
two in together?” he asked. “Why,
Sinclair’ll kill that gent in about a minute.
Ain’t it Arizona that nailed him?”
“Sinclair will play square,”
Kern insisted, “and Arizona won’t fight!”
Leaving the other to digest these
mysterious tidings, the sheriff went out to disperse
the crowd.
In the meantime Sinclair had received
the newcomer in perfect silence, his head raised high,
his thin mouth set in an Ugly line — very
much as an eagle might receive an owl which floundered
by mistake onto the same crag, far above his element.
The eagle hesitated between scorn of the visitor and
a faint desire to pounce on him and rend him to pieces.
That glittering eye, however, was soon dull with wonder,
when he watched the actions of Arizona.
The fat man paused in the center of
the cell, regarded Sinclair with a single flash of
the eyes, and then glanced uneasily from side to side.
That done, he slipped away to a corner and slouched
down on a stool, his head bent down on his breast.
Apparently he had fallen into a profound
reverie, but Sinclair found that the eyes of Arizona
continually whipped up and across to him. Once
the newcomer shifted his position a little, and Sinclair
saw him test the weight of the stool beneath him with
his hand. Even in the cell Arizona had found
a weapon.
Gradually Sinclair understood the
meaning of that glance and the gesture of the sheriff,
as the latter left; he read other things in the gray
pallor of Arizona, and in the fallen head. The
man was unnerved. Sinclair’s reaction was
very much what that of the sheriff had been — a
sinking of the heart and a momentary doubt of himself.
But he was something more of a philosopher than Kern.
He had seen more of life and men and put two and two
together.
One thing stared him plainly in the
face. The Arizona who skulked in the corner had
relapsed eight years. He was the same sneak thief
whom Sinclair had first met in the lumber camp, and
he knew instinctively that this was the first time
since that unpleasant episode that Arizona had been
cornered. The loathing left Sinclair, and in its
place came pity. He had no fondness of Arizona,
but he had seen him in the rôle of a strong man, which
made the contrast more awful. It reminded Sinclair
of the wild horse which loses its spirit when it is
broken. Such was Arizona. Free to come and
go, he had been a danger. Shut up helplessly
in a cell, he was as feeble as a child, and his only
strength was a sort of cunning malice. Sinclair
turned quietly to the fat man.
“Arizona,” he said, “you
look sort of underfed today. Bring your stool
a bit nearer and let’s talk. I been hungry
for a chat with someone.”
In reply Arizona rolled back his head
and for a moment glared thoughtfully at Sinclair.
He made no answer. Presently his glance fell,
like that of a dog. Sinclair shivered. He
tried brutality.
“Looks to me, Arizona, as though you’d
lost your nerve.”
The other moistened his lips, but said nothing.
“But the point is,” said
the tall cowpuncher, “that you’ve given
up before you’re beaten.”
Riley Sinclair’s words brought
a flash from Arizona, a sudden lifting of the head,
as if he had not before thought of hoping. Then
he began to slump back into his former position, without
a reply. Sinclair followed his opening advantage
at once.
“What you in for?”
“Murder!”
“Great guns! Of whom?”
“Sandersen.”
It brought Sinclair stiffly to his
feet. Sandersen! His trail was ended; Hal
was avenged at last!
“And you done it? Fatty,
you took that job out of my hands. I’m
thanking you. Besides, it ain’t nothing
to be downhearted about. Sandersen was a skunk.
Can they prove it on you?”
The need to talk overwhelmed Arizona.
It burst out of him, not to Sinclair, but rather at
him. His shifting eyes made sure that no one
was near.
“Kern is going to send south
for the dope. I’m done for. They can
hang me three times on what they’ll learn, and — ”
“Shut up,” snapped Sinclair.
“Don’t talk foolish. The south is
a tolerable big place to send to. They don’t
know where you come from. Take ’em a month
to find out, and by that time, you won’t be at
hand.”
“Eh?”
“Because you and me are going to bust out of
this paper jail they got!”
He had not the slightest hope of escape.
But he tried the experiment of that suggestion merely
to see what the fat man’s reaction would be.
The result was more than he could have dreamed.
Arizona whirled on him with eyes ablaze.
“What d’you mean, Sinclair?”
“Just what I say. D’you
think they can keep two like us in here? No,
not if you come to your old self.”
The need to confide again fell on
Arizona. He dragged his stool nearer. His
voice was a whisper.
“Sinclair, something’s
busted in me. When them irons grabbed my arms
they took everything out of me. I got no chance.
They got me cornered.”
“And you’ll fight like
a wildcat to the end of things. Sure you will!
Buck up, man! You think you’ve turned yaller.
You ain’t. You’re just out of place.
Take a gent that’s used to a forty-foot rope
and a pony, give him sixty feet on a sixteen-hand
hoss, and ain’t he out of place? Sure!
He looks like a clumsy fool. And the other way
around it works the same way. A trout may be
a flash of light in water, but on dry land he ain’t
worth a damn. Same way with you, Fatty. While
you got a free foot you’re all right, but when
they put you behind a wall and say they’re going
to keep you there, you darned near bust down.
Why? Because it looks to you like you ain’t
got a chance to fight back. So you quit altogether.
But you’ll come back to yourself, Arizona.
You — ”
Arizona raised his hand. He was
sitting erect now, drinking in the words of Sinclair,
as if they were air to a stifling man. His face
worked.
“Why are you doing this for
me, Sinclair — after I landed you here?”
“Because I made a man out of
you once,” answered the tall man evenly, “and
I ain’t going to see you backslide. Why,
Arizona, you’re one of the fastest-thinkin’,
quickest-handed gents that ever buckled on a gun,
and here you are lying down like a kid that ain’t
never faced trouble before. Come alive, man.
You and me are going to bust this ol’ jail to
smithereens, and when we get outside I’ll blow
your head off if I can!”
Riley’s words had carried Arizona
with him. Suddenly an olive-skinned hand shot
out and clutched his own bony, strong fingers.
The hand was fat and cold, but it gripped that of
Riley Sinclair with a desperate energy.
“Sinclair, you mean it? You’ll play
in with me?”
“I will — sure!”
He had to drag the words out, but
after he had spoken he was glad. New life shone
in the face of Arizona.
“A man with you for a partner
ain’t done, Sinclair — not if he had
a rope around his neck. Listen! D’you
know why I come in town?”
“Well?”
“To get you out.”
“I believe you, Arizona,” lied Sinclair.
“Not for your sake — but hers.”
Sinclair’s face suddenly went white.
“Who?”
“The girl!” whispered
Arizona. “I cached her away outside of town
to wait for — us! Sinclair, she loves
you.”
Riley Sinclair sat as one stunned and dragged the
hat from his head.