Charlie Bryant urged his horse at
a dangerous pace along the narrow, winding cattle
tracks which threaded the upper reaches of the valley.
He gave no heed to anything the lacerating
thorns, the great, knotty roots, with which the paths
were studded, the overhanging boughs. His sole
object seemed to be a desperate desire to reach his
destination.
His horse often floundered and tripped,
the man’s own clothes were frequently ripped
by the thorns, and the bleeding flesh beneath laid
bare, while it seemed a miracle that he successfully
dodged the threatening boughs overhead.
There was a hunted look in his dark
eyes, too. It was a look of concern, almost of
terror. His gaze was alert and roving. Now,
he was looking ahead, straining with anxiety, now
he was turning this way and that in response to the
mysterious woodland sounds which greeted his ears.
Again, with a nervous jerk, he would rein in his horse
and sit listening, with eyes staring back over the
way he had come, as though fearing pursuit.
Once he thrust a hand into an inside
pocket as though to reassure himself that something
was there which he valued and feared to lose, and
with every movement, every look of his eyes, every
turn of the head, he displayed an unusual nervousness
and apprehension.
At last his horse swept into the clearing
of the hidden corral, and he reined it up with a jerk,
and leaped from the saddle. Then he stood listening,
and the apprehension in his eyes deepened. But
presently it lessened, and he moved forward, and flung
his reins over one of the corral fence posts.
Every woodland sound, every discordant note from the
heart of the valley was accounted for in his mind,
so he hurried toward the flat-roofed hut, that mysterious
relic of a bygone age.
He thrust the creaking door open and
waited while the flight of birds swarmed past him.
Then he made his way within. Once inside he paused
again with that painful look of expectancy and fear
in his eyes. Again this passed, and he went on
quickly to the far corner of the room, and laid his
hands upon the wooden lining of the wall. Then
he abruptly seemed to change his mind. He removed
his hands, and withdrew a largish, morocco pocketbook
from an inner pocket.
It was a rather fine case, bound in
embossed silver, and ornamented with a silver monogram.
For some moments he looked at it as though in doubt.
He seemed to be definitely making up his mind, and
his whole attitude suggested his desire for its safety.
While he was still gazing at it a
startled look leaped into his eyes, and his head turned
as though at some suspicious sound. A moment later
he reached out and slid the wooden lining of the wall
up, revealing the cavity behind it, which still contained
its odd assortment of garments. Without hesitation
he reached up to a dark jacket and thrust the pocketbook
into an inner pocket. Then, with a swift movement,
he replaced the paneling and turned about.
It was the work of a moment, and as
he turned about his right hand was gripping the butt
of a revolver, ready and pointing at the door.
“Charlie!”
The revolver was slipped back into
the man’s pocket, and Charlie Bryant’s
furious face was turned toward the window opening,
which now framed the features of his great blundering
brother.
“You, Bill?” he cried
angrily. “What in hell are you doing here?”
But Bill ignored the challenge, he
ignored the tone of it. His big eyes were full
of excitement.
“Come out of there quick!”
he cried sharply.
Charlie’s dark eyes had lost
some of their anger in the inquiry now replacing it.
“Why?” But he moved toward the doorway.
“Why? Because Fyles is behind me.
I’ve seen him in the distance.”
Charlie came around the corner of
the building with the door firmly closed behind him.
Bill left the window and moved across to his horse,
which was standing beside that of his brother.
Charlie followed him.
Neither spoke again until the horses
were reached, and Bill had unhitched his reins from
the corral fence. Then he turned his great blue
eyes, so full of trouble, upon the small figure beside
him, and he answered the other’s half-angry,
half-curious challenge with a question.
“What’s this place?”
he demanded. Then he added, “And what’s
that cupboard in there?” He jerked his head
in the direction of the hut, “I saw you close
it.”
Charlie seemed to have recovered from
the apprehension which had caused him to obey his
brother unquestioningly. There was an angry sparkle
in his eyes as he gazed steadily into Bill’s
face.
“That’s none of your damn
business,” he said, in a low tone of surly truculence.
“I’m not here to answer any questions till
you tell me the reason why you’ve had the impertinence
to hunt me down. How did you know where to find
me?”
Just for one moment a hot retort leaped
to the other’s lips. But he checked his
rising temper. His journey in pursuit of his brother
had been taken after deep reflection and consultation
with Helen. But the mystery of that hut, that
cupboard, did more to keep him calm than anything
else. His curiosity was aroused. Not mere
idle curiosity, but these things, this place, were
a big link in the chain of evidence that had been
forged about his brother, and he felt he was on the
verge of a discovery. Then there was Fyles somewhere
nearby in the neighborhood. This last thought,
and all it portended, destroyed his feelings of resentment.
“I s’pose you think I
followed you for sheer curiosity. Guess I might
well enough do so, seeing we bear the same name, and
that name’s liable to stink through
you. But I didn’t, anyway. I came out
here to tell you something I heard this morning, and
it’s about last night. Fyles
says that the result of last night is that the gang,
their leader, is now wanted for an armed attack on
the police, and that the penalty is anything
up to twenty years in the penitentiary.”
Charlie’s intense regard never wavered for one
moment.
“Who told you I was here?” he demanded
angrily.
“No one.”
There was a sting in the sharpness
of Bill’s reply. The big blue eyes were
growing hot again.
“Then how did you know where
to find me?” Charlie’s deep voice was
full of suppressed fury.
“I didn’t know just where
to find you,” Bill protested, with rising heat.
“The kid told me you’d gone up the valley,
but didn’t say where. I set out blindly
and stumbled on your horse’s tracks. I chanced
those tracks, and they led me here. Will that
satisfy you?”
Charlie’s eyes were still glittering.
“Not quite. I’ll
ask you to get out of my ranch. And remember this,
you’ve seen me at this shack, and you’ve
seen that cupboard. If you’d been anybody
but my brother I’d have shot you down in your
tracks. Fyles anybody. That cupboard
is my secret, and if anyone learns of it through you well,
I’ll forget you’re my brother and treat
you as though you were Fyles.”
A sudden blaze of wrath flared up
in the bigger man’s eyes. But, almost as
it kindled, it died out and he laughed. However,
when he spoke there was no mirth in his voice.
“My God, Charlie,” he
cried, holding out his big hands, “I could almost
take you in these two hands and and wring
your foolish, obstinate, wicked neck. You stand
there talking blasted melodrama like a born actor
on the one-night stands. Your fool talk don’t
scare me a little. What in the name of all that’s
sacred do you think I want to send you to the penitentiary
for? Haven’t I come here to warn you?
Man, the rye whisky’s turned you crazy.
I’m here to help, help, do you understand?
Just four letters, ‘help,’ a verb which
means ‘support,’ not ‘destroy.’”
Charlie’s cold regard never wavered.
“When will you clear out of my ranch?”
Bill started. The brothers’
eyes met in a long and desperate exchange of regard.
Then the big man brought his fist down upon the high
cantle of his saddle with startling force.
“When I choose, not before,”
he cried fiercely. “Do you understand?
Here, you foolish man. I know what I’m up
against. I know what you’re up against,
and I tell you right here that if Fyles is going to
hunt you into the penitentiary he can hunt me, too.
I’m not smart, like you, on these crook games,
but I’m determined that the man who lags you
will get it good and plenty. I sort of hate you,
you foolish man. I hate you and like you.
You’ve got grit, and, by God, I like you for
it, and I don’t stand to see you go down for
any twenty years alone. If Fyles gets
you that way, you’re the last man he ever will
get. Damn you!”
Charlie drew a deep breath. It
was a sigh of pent feeling. He averted his gaze,
and it wandered over the old corral inside which the
wagon with its hay-rack was still standing, though
its position was changed slightly. His eyes rested
upon it, and passed on to the hut, about which the
birds were once more gathering. They paused for
some silent moments in this direction. Then they
came back to the angry, waiting brother.
“I wish you weren’t such
a blunderer, Bill,” he said, and his manner
had become peevishly gentle. “Can’t
you see I’ve got to play my own game in my own
way? You don’t know all that’s back
of my head. You don’t know a thing.
All you know is that Fyles wants to send me down,
by way of cleaning up this valley. I want him
to if he can. But he can’t.
Not as long as the grass grows. He’s beaten beaten
before he starts. I don’t want help.
I don’t want help from anybody. Now, for
God’s sake, can’t you leave me alone?”
The tension between the two was relaxed.
Bill gave an exclamation of impatience.
“You want him to send you down?”
The warp of this man was too much for his common sense.
“If he can.”
Charlie smiled now. It was a
smile of perfect confidence. Bill threw up his
hands.
“Well, you’ve got me beat to a rag.
I ”
“The same as I have Fyles. But say ”
Charlie broke off, and his smile vanished.
“Maybe I’m a crook.
Maybe I’m anything you, or anybody else likes
to call me. There’s one thing I’m
not. I’m no bluff. You know of that
cupboard in that shack. The thought’s poison
to me. If any other man had found it, he wouldn’t
be alive now to listen to me. Do you understand
me? Forget it. Forget you ever saw it.
If you dream of it, fancy it’s a nightmare and turn
over. Bill, I solemnly swear that I’ll
shoot the man dead, on sight, who gives that away,
or dares to look inside it. Now, we’ll
get away from here.”
He sprang into the saddle and waited
while his brother mounted. Then he held out his
hand.
“Do you get me?” he asked.
Bill nodded, and took the outstretched hand in solemn
compact.
“What you say goes,” he
said easily. “But your threat of shooting
doesn’t worry me a little bit.”
He gathered up his reins and the two men rode out
of the clearing.
The last sound of speeding hoofs died
away, and the clearing settled once more to its mysterious
quiet. Only the twittering of the swarming birds
on the thatched roof of the hut disturbed the silence,
but, somehow, even their chattering voices seemed
really to intensify it.
Thus a few minutes passed.
Then a breaking of bush and rustling
of leaves gave warning of a fresh approach. A
man’s head and shoulders were thrust forward,
out from amid the boughs of a wild cherry bush.
His dark face peered cautiously around,
and his keen eyes took in a comprehensive survey of
both corral and hut. A moment later he stood
clear of the bush altogether.
Stanley Fyles swiftly crossed the
intervening space and entered the corral. He
strode up to the wagon and examined it closely, studying
its position and the wheel tracks, with a minuteness
that left him in possession of every available fact.
Having satisfied himself in this direction, he passed
out of the corral and went over to the hut.
The screaming birds promptly protested,
and flew once more from their nesting quarters in
panicky dudgeon. Fyles watched them go with thoughtful
eyes. Then he passed around to the door of the
building and thrust it open. Another rush of
birds swept past him, and he passed within. Again
his searching eyes were brought into play. Not
a detail of that interior escaped him. But ten
minutes later he left the half-lit room for the broad
light of day outside disappointed.
For a long time he moved around the
building, examining the walls, their bases and foundations.
His disappointment remained, however, and, finally,
with strong discontent in his expression, and an unmistakable
shrug of his shoulders, he moved away.
Finally, he paused and gave a long,
low whistle. He repeated it at intervals, three
times, and, after awhile, for answer, the wise face
of Peter appeared from among the bushes. The creature
solemnly contemplated the scene. It was almost
as if he were assuring himself of the safety of revealing
himself. Then, with measured gait, he made his
way slowly toward his master.