The cavalrymen
Let us rejoin Dick Arbuckle at the
time that the incensed cavalryman, Tucker, was about
to attack the hapless lad with his heavy Sabra.
Had the cruel blow fallen as intended
it is beyond dispute that Dick would have been severely
injured.
“Don’t!” cried the
boy, and then closed his eyes at the terrible thought
of such dire punishment so close at hand.
But just at that instant an interruption
came from out of the darkness of the brush.
“Hello, there! What are you up to?”
Tucker started, and the Sabra was
turned aside to bury itself in the exposed roots of
a tree.
“If it ain’t Pawnee Brown!”
muttered another cavalryman, Ross by name.
“Pawnee Brown!” burst
from Dick’s lips, joyfully, and, rising, he
attempted to rush toward his friend.
“Not so fast, boy!” howled
Tucker, and caught the youth by the collar.
“What’s the meaning of
this? What are you doing to that boy?” asked
Pawnee Brown as he rode closer, with Rasco beside him.
“He’s a horse thief, and
we are going to take him to our camp,” answered
Tucker, somewhat uneasily, for he had seen Pawnee Brown
before and knew he had a man of strong character with
whom to deal.
“A horse thief!” ejaculated
Jack Rasco. “Say, sod’ger, yer crazy!
Thet boy a thief! Wall, by gum!”
“That boy is no thief,”
put in Pawnee Brown. “He belongs to our
camp, and is as square as they make them I’ll
vouch for it.”
“I ain’t taking the word
of any boomer,” muttered Tucker sourly.
“That kid hold on! Don’t
shoot!”
And he dropped back in terror, for
the great scout had drawn his pistol like a flash.
“You’ll take my word or
take something else,” came the stiff response.
“Be quick, now, and say which you choose.”
“I didn’t mean any harm,
Pawnee. Maybe you don’t know it, but the
boy is a thief just the same. We just caught
him riding my horse this bay. My comrades
can prove it.”
“It’s true,” said Ross.
“True as gospel,” added
Skimmy, the third cavalryman. “We caught
him less than half an hour ago.”
Without answering to this, Pawnee
Brown turned to the youth.
“Tell me your yarn, Dick.
I know there is some mistake here.”
“There is not much to tell,
Major. When the lariat broke up at the Devil’s
Chimney and I couldn’t make you reply to my calls
I ran off to get help and a rope. I intended
to ride your mare back to camp, but when I got to
where the mare had been tethered I found her gone and
this bay loafing around in her place. I got on
the bay, but, instead of riding to camp, the animal
ran away with me and brought me here. These fellows
were mighty rough on me, and that man was going to
split my head open when you came along in the nick
of time.”
“That’s a neat fairy tale,”
sneered Tucker. “This horse was stolen four
hours ago. More than likely the boy couldn’t
manage him and lost his way and the horse tried to
get back to where he belonged.”
“That doesn’t connect
with what I know,” answered Pawnee Brown, quietly.
“My mare was tethered where he went to look for
her. I might as well accuse you of riding down
there, taking Bonnie Bird and leaving this nag in
her place.”
“Do you mean to insinuate we
are horse thieves?” cried Ross hotly.
“I’m giving you as good
as you send, that’s all. Dick, have you
any idea where Bonnie Bird is?”
“Not the slightest, sir.”
The great scout heaved a sigh.
The little racing mare was the very apple of his eye.
“I’ll not give up the
hunt until I have found her.” He turned
again to the cavalrymen. “If the finest
little black mare, with a white blaze, that you ever
saw strays into your camp remember she belongs to me,”
he went on. “I want her returned at once,
and if anybody attempts to keep her there will be
a hotter time than this Territory has seen for many
a day. Dick, hop up behind me,” and he
turned to his horse.
“That boy is to remain here,”
blustered Tucker, growing red in the face.
“Hardly, my bantam. Hop
up, Dick, and we’ll strike back for camp before
the sun comes up and see if the others who are on the
search have seen anything of your father. I saw
nothing of him at the bottom of the Devil’s
Chimney.”
“I’m not going to have
a lazy, good-for-nothing boomer lay it over me ”
began Tucker, when once more the sight of Pawnee Brown’s
pistol silenced him.
No more was said as the scout, Dick
and Rasco rode away down the trail by which they had
come. But, once out of sight, Tucker raised his
fist and shook it savagely.
“I’ll get square with
you some day, Pawnee Brown, mark my words!” he
muttered between his set teeth.
“We’ll all get square,”
said Ross. “I hate the sight of that man.”
“I understand the boomers have
made him their leader,” broke in Skimmy.
“If they have, he’ll try to break through
to Oklahoma as sure as guns are guns.”
“And he’ll get shot, too,”
answered Tucker dryly. “The lieutenant is
having all of the boomers’ movements watched.”
“Pawnee Brown will do his level
best to give us the slip, see if he don’t,”
remarked Skimmy. “Four thousand boomers
wouldn’t make him their leader for nothing.”
Thus, talking among themselves, the
three cavalrymen mounted their horses and rode back
to their various picket stations along the boundary
line of the Indian Territory.
They were a detachment of the Seventh
United States Cavalry, and the lieutenant referred
to by Tucker was in command.
For over a month they had been watching
the boomers assembling in Kansas. Other portions
of the United States troops were watching the would-be
Oklahoma settlers in Arkansas and Texas.
There was every prospect of a lively
time ahead, and it was not far off.
Reaching his station, Tucker drew
from his pocket a briar-root pipe, filled and lit
it and began to puff away meditatively.
His face had been ugly before, but
now as he began to meditate it grew blacker than ever.
“Hang me, if everything ain’t
going wrong,” he muttered. “I won’t
stand it. I’ll make a kick, and when I
do ” He paused as a shadow
among the trees caught his eye. “Who goes
there?” he called out and drew his pistol.
“A friend. Tucker, is that you?”
“Vorlange!” cried the
cavalryman, and the next moment the newcomer and the
military man were face to face.
“It’s about time you showed
up,” growled Tucker, after a brief pause, during
which the newcomer looked at him anxiously. “Say,
Vorlange, when do you intend to settle up with me.
Give it to me straight, now.”
“That’s why I left the
trail to hunt you up, Tucker I knew you
were anxious about that five hundred dollars.”
“Why shouldn’t I be?
It took me a long time to save it a good
sight longer than it did for you to gamble it away.”
“Tucker, I didn’t gamble
that away I’ll swear it. I used
it in business.”
“Business? What business
have you got outside of your position as a land office
spy?”
“A good business, if you only
knew it. I’ve been following up a little
deal that started in the East in New York.
Out there I had to hire a fellow I could trust to
work for me, and that took most of the money.
But the whole thing is coming my way now, and I want
to talk things over with you. How would you like
to have a thousand back in return for the five hundred
you loaned me?”
“What sort of a game are you working on me now?”
“A square deal, Tucker.
I’ve been keeping my eye on you, and I reckon
you are the fellow to do what I want done.”
“And what do you want done?”
Vorlange stepped closer.
“The boomers are going to try
to cross into Oklahoma either to-morrow or day after.
There will be a fight, I am certain of it, and somebody
will be shot and killed. When you fire I want
you to pick out your man two men or,
rather, a man and a boy, if you can do it. I may
be on hand to take part myself, but there is a possibility
that I may be ordered elsewhere.”
“And you are willing to pay
me five hundred extra for picking out my target, Vorlange?”
“You’ve struck it.”
“Who is the man?”
“Can I trust you?”
“Yes.”
“Pawnee Brown.”
At the mention of the great scout’s name Tucker
started back.
“Why why do you want him knocked
over?”
“He is my enemy. I have
hated him from my boyhood!” cried Louis Vorlange.
“And there are other reasons he stands
in the way of my pushing the scheme I mentioned.”
“Pawnee Brown was here but a
short while ago. He insulted and abused me,”
growled Tucker. “I’ll put a bullet
through him quick enough if I get the chance that
is, in a skirmish. I don’t want to run any
risk of being strung up for you know.”
“The shooting will be O. K.,
Tucker, and I’ll help if I’m not ordered
away. Do it and the five hundred extra are yours,
I’ll give you my word.”
“What about that boy you mentioned?”
“His name is Dick Arbuckle. He is ”
“Dick Arbuckle? I know
him. He stole my horse. I captured him and
Pawnee Brown came to his rescue and made me, Ross
and Skimmy give him up,” and Tucker gave the
particulars in his own version of the affair.
“Then you bear the lad no love?”
“Love?” The cavalryman
grated his teeth. “I was wishing I could
get a shot at him.”
“Then keep that wish in mind, Tucker, when the
time for action arrives.”
“If it’s worth five hundred
to you to have Pawnee Brown knocked over it ought
to be worth more to have both of ’em laid low,”
suggested Tucker, who was naturally a grasping fellow.
“Five hundred in cold cash is
a good deal in these times,” was the slow answer.
“But I’ll tell you what I’ll do.
If, after a fight, you can bring me absolute proof
that Pawnee Brown and Dick Arbuckle are dead I’ll
give you an even twelve hundred dollars, the five hundred
I borrowed and seven hundred extra. There’s
my hand on it. What do you say?”
“Will you promise to give me
the money as soon as you have the proofs?”
“I will,” and Louis Vorlange
raised his right hand as though to make good such
a blasphemous promise.
“All right, then; I take you up,” answered
Tucker.