The peace of Sunday evening merged
into the calm of night. Service was long since
over in the old Meeting House. The traveling parson
had come and gone. He had done his duty.
He had read the service to the lounging, unkempt congregation,
he had prayed over them, he had preached at them.
He had done all these things because it was his duty
to do so, but he had done them without the least hope
of improving the morals of his unworthy flock, or
of penetrating one single fraction through their crime-stained
armor of self-satisfaction. Rocky Springs was
one of the shadowed corners upon his tour, into which,
he felt, it was beyond his power to impart light.
There were those in the valley who
viewed the Sabbath calm with a derisive smile.
There were those who sat upon their little verandas
and smoked, and talked in hushed voices, lest listening
ears might catch the ominous purport of their words.
There were others who went to their beds with a shrug
of pretended indifference, feeling glad that for once,
at least, their homes were a haven of safety for themselves.
Rocky Springs as a whole knew that
something was afoot some play in which
some one was to be worsted, in which, maybe, a life
or two would be lost. Anyway, the players were
Law versus Outlaw, and those who were not actually
concerned with the game felt glad that they still
had another night under their own roofs.
It was truly extraordinary how unspoken
news spread. It was extraordinary the scent of
battle, the scent of a struggle against the law, that
was possessed by this people. Everybody seemed
to know that to-night something like history was to
be made in the annals of the crime of the valley.
So the peace of the valley was almost
remarkable. An undoubted air of studied indifference
prevailed, but surely it was carefully studied.
Neither Fyles nor any of his police
had been seen the whole day. None of them had
attended divine service. It was almost as if they
had entirely vanished from the precincts of the valley.
So the sun sank, and the ruddy clouds
rose up from the west like the fiery splash of the
molten contents of the cauldron into which the great
ball of fire had plunged. They rose up, and then
dispersed, vanishing into thin air, and making way
for the soft sheen of a myriad stars, and leaving
clear a perfect night for the great summer moon to
illuminate.
Two by two a large number of horsemen
rode out of the valley of Leaping Creek. Once
away from the starting point, their movements, their
figures became elusive and shadowy. They passed
out from among the trees, on to the wide plains above,
and each couple split up, taking their individual
ways with a certainty which displayed their perfect
prairie craft.
Far out into the night they rode,
each with clear instructions filling his mind, each
with the certainty that one or more of their number
must be brought face to face with a crisis before morning,
which would need all their nerve and wit to bring
to a successful issue.
The moon rose up, a great golden globe,
slowly changing to a cold silvery light as it mounted
the starlit vault. Then came a change. Instead
of leaving a starry track behind it, a bank of cloud
followed hard upon its heels, threatening to overtake
it and hide its splendor behind a pall of summer storm.
Stanley Fyles watched with satisfaction
the signs of the night.
A solitary horseman sat leaning forward
upon the horn of his saddle, his eyes searching, searching,
with aching intensity, that dim, shadowed skyline
now almost lost against its backing of cloud.
He was half-hidden in the shadow of a small bluff
of spruce, with the depths of the valley hard behind
him.
Not only were his eyes searching with
an almost unblinking watchfulness, but his ears, too,
were busy with that intense, nerve-racking straining
which leaves them ever ready to carry the phantom
sounds of imagination to the impatient brain above.
It was a long, intense vigil, and
a hundred times the waiting man saw movements and
heard sounds which set him ready to give the final
signal which was to complete the carefully laid plans
of his chief. But, in each case, he was spared
the false alarm to which tricks of imagination so
nearly drove him.
Midnight came and passed. The
sky grew more threatening. The man’s eyes
were upon that distant, southern upland which marked
the skyline. Something seemed to be moving in
the hazy distance, but as yet there was no sound accompanying
the movement.
Was there not? Hark, what was that?
The man sighed. It was the rustle
of the trees about him, stirred by a gentle rising
breeze. But was it? Hark! That sounded
like a footfall. But a footfall was not wanted.
It was the sound of wheels for which his ears were
straining. Ah, that was surely the wind.
And yes listen. A rumble.
It might be the wheels at last, or was it thunder?
He sat up. The strain was hard to bear. It
was thunder. And his eyes, for a moment, left
the horizon for the clouds above. He regretted
the absence of the moon. It left his work doubly
difficult. He wondered
But his wonder ceased, and he fell
like a stone out of the saddle. He struggled
fiercely, but his arms were held to his sides immovable.
He had a vague recollection of a swift whirring sound,
but that was all. Then he found himself struggling
furiously on the ground with his horse vanished.
Inspector Fyles was thinking of many
things. His post was at a point overlooking the
Fort Alberton trail, which wound its way in the wide
trough of two great, still waves of prairieland directly
in front of him. Nothing could pass that way
and remain unobserved, excepting under cover of the
storm which seemed to be gathering.
He patted Peter’s arched neck,
and the well-mannered, amiable creature responded
by champing its bit impatiently. Fyles smiled.
He knew that Peter loved to be traveling far and fast.
He turned his eyes skywards.
Perhaps it was not a storm. There were breaks
here and there, and occasionally a star peeped out
and twinkled mockingly at him. Still, he must
hope for the best. A storm would favor his quarry,
besides being . Hark!
A shot rang out in the distance, away
to the east. One two! Wait.
A third! There it was. To the east.
They were coming on over the southern trail, and that
was in McBain’s section!
He lifted his reins, and Peter promptly
laid his swift heels to the ground. Three shots.
Fyles hoped the fourth would not be fired until he
was within striking distance of the spot.
Four horsemen were converging upon
the bluff whence the shots had proceeded. Each
of the four had heard the three shots fired, each was
executing the tactical arrangement agreed upon, and
each was waiting as he rode, laboring under a high
nervous tension, for the fourth shot, which was to
confirm the alarm and notify the definite discovery
of the contraband.
It was withheld.
Fyles was the first to reach the bluff,
but, almost at the same moment, McBain’s great
horse drew up with a jolt. The inspector saw
the approach of his subordinate while his eyes were
still searching the skirts of the bluff for the patrol
who had given the signal.
“He should be on the southeast
side,” said McBain, and rode off in that direction.
Fyles followed hard upon his heels.
They had gone less than two hundred
yards when the officer saw the shadowy form of the
Scot throw itself back in the saddle, and pull his
great horse back upon its haunches. Fyles swept
up on the swift-footed Peter. He, too, reined
up with a jolt and leaped out of the saddle.
McBain was on his knees beside the
prostrate form of the sentry. The man was bound
hand and foot, and a heavy gag was secured in his widely
forced open mouth.
At that moment two troopers dashed
up. And the sounds of others foregathering could
be plainly heard.
As Fyles regarded the prostrate man
he realized that once more he had been defeated.
He did not require to wait for the gag to be removed.
He understood.
He leaped into the saddle, as McBain
cut the gag from the man’s mouth. A sharp
inquiry broke the silence.
“Say, did you fire that alarm?”
Fyles cried almost fiercely.
The man had struggled to a sitting
posture, and began to explain.
“No, sir. I was dragged ”
“Never mind what happened. You didn’t
give the alarm?”
“No, sir.”
“Quick, McBain!” Fyles
almost shouted. “They’ve done us.
Cut him loose, and follow me. They’re on
the Fort Allerton trail or my name’s
not Fyles.”
Peter led the race for the Fort Allerton
trail. The dark night clouds were breaking when
they reached the spot where the inspector had originally
stationed himself. They passed on, and a glimmer
of moonlight peeped out at them as they reached the
trail side.
Fyles and McBain leaped from their
saddles and examined the sandy surface of it.
Two of the troopers joined them.
At length the officer spoke, and his
voice had lost something of its sharp tone of authority.
“They’ve beaten us, McBain,”
he cried. “God’s curse on them, they’ve
played us at our own game, and beaten us.
A wagon and team’s passed here less than five
minutes ago. Look at the dust track they’ve
left.”
Fyles stood up. Then he started,
and an angry glitter shone in his gray eyes.
A horseman was silently looking on at the group of
dismounted men, deliberately watching their movements.
In the heat of the hunt no one had heard his approach.
He sat there looking on in absolute silence.
Fyles moved clear of his men and strode
up to the horseman. He halted within a yard of
him, while the rest of the party looked on in amazement.
McBain was the only one to make any move. He followed
hard on his chief’s heels.
Fyles looked up into the horseman’s
face. The sky had cleared and the moon was shining
once more. A sudden fury leaped to the officer’s
brain, and, for a moment, all discretion was very nearly
flung to the winds. By a great effort, however,
he checked his mad impulse.
“What are you doing here, Mr.
Bryant?” he demanded sharply.
Charlie Bryant leaned forward upon
the horn of his saddle. His dark eyes were smiling,
but it was not a pleasant smile.
“Why, wondering what you fellows
are doing here,” he said calmly.
Fyles stared, and again his fury nearly
got the better of him.
“That’s no answer to my question,”
he snapped.
“Isn’t it?” A subtle
change was in Charlie Bryant’s manner. His
smile remained, but it was full of a burning dislike,
and even insolence. “Guess it’s all
you’ll get from a free citizen. I’ve
as much right here looking on at the escapades of
the police, as they have to indulge in
’em. Guess I’ve had a mighty long
day and need to get home. Say, I’m tired.
So long.”
He urged his horse forward and passed
on down the trail. And as he went a trooper followed
him, with orders to track him till daylight.