A RESCUE AND A VIGILANCE COMMITTEE
At the end of an hour, or so, the
lion withdrew and Wade thought he had seen the last
of it. He began to pace up and down the fissure
once more, for now that his thin shirt was damp with
perspiration, set flowing by the nervous strain he
had been under, he began to get chilly again.
He had just begun to warm up, when he heard the animal
returning. He crouched back against the cavern
wall, but the lion had evidently lost the zest for
such impossible prey. It walked about and sniffed
at the edges of the fissure for some minutes; then
it sneaked off into the timber with a cat-like whimper.
The exhausted ranchman kept his feet
as long as he could, but when the first rays of the
morning sun cast purple shadows into the depths of
the hole, he could no longer keep awake. With
his hands, he drifted the loose sand about him, as
travelers do when exposed to a snow-blizzard, and
slept until Goat Neale aroused him, in broad daylight.
The Texan performed this service by deftly dropping
a small stone upon the sleeping man’s face.
“I just stepped over to inquire
what you-all’d like for breakfast this mornin’,”
he said with a grin. “Not that it matters
much, ’cause the dumb-waiter down to where you
be ain’t waitin’ to-day, but it’s
manners, kinder, to ask.”
Wade looked up at him grimly, but
said nothing. Just awake as he was, his healthy
stomach clamored for food, but since none would be
given him, he knew that he might as well try to be
patient.
“Mebbe you’d like to step
over to our hotel an’ take your meals, eh?”
The Texan went on, after a short pause. “I’ve
got a pot of coffee bilin’ an’ a mess
o’ bacon fryin’. No?” He grinned
sardonically. “How’d you like me
to give you some o’ this here cabareet stuff,
while you’re waitin’? I ain’t
no great shucks as a entertainer, but I’ll do
what I can. Mebbe, you’d like to know how
I happened to catch you that clump on the head yesterday.
Huh?
“I was up in the low branches
of a thick pine, where you was moseyin’ along.
You was that busy watchin’ the ground, you never
thought to raise them eyes o’ yourn. I
just reached down and lammed you good with a piece
of stick, an’ here you be, safe an’ sound
as a beetle in a log. Here you’ll stay,
too, likely, on-less you get some sense, and I don’t
know when that there dumbwaiter’ll get to runnin’.
It’s a shame, too, if you ask me, ’cause
a man needs his three or four squares a day in this
here climate.”
“How much do you want to give
me a hand out of here, Neale?” the cattleman
demanded abruptly, tired of listening to the fellow’s
monotonous drawl; and after all the chance was worth
taking.
The eyes of the Texan glittered.
“Got the money on you?”
“You’d get the money all right.”
“Sure, son, I know that if
you had it! I’d just hold my gun on you,
an’ you’d toss the roll up here, without
puttin’ me to the trouble o’ givin’
you no hand.” He chuckled in appreciation
of his own humor. “But I know you ain’t
got it on you we frisked you down yonder
in the timber an’ I don’t deal
in no promises. This here is a cash game.
If I thought tha....”
He whirled about suddenly, looking
behind him and seemed to listen for an instant; then
his hand dropped to the gun at his hip. He never
drew the weapon, however, for with a horrible facial
grimace, as his body contorted under the impact of
a bullet, he threw his arms into the air and reeled
over the edge of the hole. A second afterward
the report of a rifle came to Wade’s ears.
“Hello!” the rancher shouted,
springing from under the Texan’s falling body.
The instant it struck the sand, Wade snatched Neale’s
revolver from its holster and waited for him to try
to rise; but he did not move. A bloody froth
stained his lips, while a heavier stain on his shirt,
just under the heart, told where the bullet had struck.
The man was dead.
“Hello! Hello!” Wade
shouted repeatedly, and discharged the revolver into
the sand. He realized that, although a friend
must have fired the rifle, there was nothing to show
where he was. “Hello!”
“Hello!” The hail was
answered by the newcomer, who, thus guided, approached
the spot until his voice was near at hand. “Hello!”
“Hello! Come on!”
The prisoner threw his hat up out of the hole.
“Here I am!”
The next moment Bill Santry, with
tears streaming down his weather-beaten cheeks, was
bending over the edge of the fissure with down-stretched
hands. Beneath his self-control the old man was
soft-hearted as a woman, and in his delight he now
made no attempt to restrain himself.
“Thank Gawd for this minute!”
he exclaimed. “Give me your hands, boy.
I can just reach ’em if I stretch a little an’
you jump.” Wade did so and was drawn up
out of the hole. “Thank Gawd! Thank
Gawd!” the old fellow kept exclaiming, patting
his employer on the back. “Didn’t
hurt you much, did they?”
Before Wade could answer, a patter
of hoofs caused him to turn, as Dorothy slipped from
Gypsy’s bare back and ran toward him. She
stumbled when she had almost reached him, and he caught
her in his arms.
“Are you all right? Oh,
your head! It’s hurt see, the
blood?” She clung to him and searched his face
with her eyes, while he tried to soothe her.
“It’s nothing, just a
bad bruise, but how ?” He checked the
question upon his lips. “We mustn’t
stay here. Moran may have....”
“There ain’t nobody here.
I wish to Gawd he was here. I’d....”
Santry’s face was twisted with rage. “’Course,”
he added, “I knew it was him, so’d Lem
Trowbridge. But we come right smack through their
camp, and there was nobody there. This here skunk
that I plugged, he must be the only one. I got
him, I reckon.”
“Yes,” Wade answered simply,
as he watched three men from the Trowbridge ranch
ride up to them. “Where’s Lem?”
Dorothy explained that she had set
out to find him in company with the man she had met
at the big pine; but on the way they had met Santry
and the three cowboys. One of the men had then
ridden on to Bald Knob after Trowbridge, while the
rest had come straight to Coyote Springs. She
tried to speak quietly, but she could not keep the
song of happiness out of her voice, or the love out
of her eyes.
“Then you did this, too?”
Wade wrung her hands and looked at her proudly.
“But how I don’t understand?”
“I’ll tell you, when we’re
in the saddle,” she said shyly. “There’s
so much to tell.”
“Santry!” The ranch owner
threw his arm fondly across the shoulders of his foreman.
“You, too, and Lem. I’ve got all my
friends to thank. Say, dig a grave for this fellow,
Neale. There was a lion around here last night,
and I’d hate to have him get Neale, bad as he
was. Then ” His voice became
crisp with determination. “Hunt up Trowbridge
and ask him to pass the word for everybody to meet
at the ranch, as soon as possible. There’s
going to be open war here in the valley from now on.”
He turned again to Dorothy. “Dorothy, I’m
going to take you right on home with me.”
“Oh, but....” The
gleam in his eyes made her pause. She was too
glad to have found him safe, besides, to wish to cross
him in whatever might be his purpose.
“No buts about it.
I’ll send for your mother, too, of course.
Town won’t be any place for either of you until
this business is settled. George!” he called
to one of the three cowmen, who rode over to him.
“I suppose it’ll be all right for you
to take orders from me?”
“I reckon so.”
“I want you to ride into Crawling
Water. Get a buckboard there and bring Mrs. Purnell
out to my place. Tell her that her daughter is
there, and she’ll come. Come now, little
girl.” He caught Dorothy in his arms and
lifted her on to Gypsy’s back. “All
right, boys, and much obliged.” He waved
the little cavalcade on its way, and swung into the
saddle on the extra horse, which Santry had provided.
On the way down through the timber,
Dorothy modestly told him of the part she had played,
with the help of Lem Trowbridge. He listened with
amazement to the story of her generalship, and was
relieved to hear that the Rexhills were probably already
out of Crawling Water, for that left him a free hand
to act against Moran. This time the agent must
suffer the penalty of his misdeeds, but greater even
than his pleasure at that thought, was Wade’s
gratitude to Dorothy for all she had done for him.
He was filled with a wonderful tenderness for her,
which made him see in the play of her facial expression;
the shy lowering of her lashes; the color which ebbed
and flowed in her cheeks; the free use which she made
of her red lips, a greater fascination than she had
ever before exerted over him. There, in the fissure,
he had expected never to be at her side again, and
now that he was so, and knew what she had come to mean
to him, the old friendship between them seemed no
longer possible; certainly not from his side.
He felt, in its place, all the confusion of a lover,
anxious to speak and yet struck dumb with clumsiness
and the fear, never absent no matter what the degree
of encouragement, that his suit might not find favor
with the lady when put into words.
“You’re a wonderful girl,”
he burst out, at last, with a heartiness that, in
bringing a flush to her cheeks, made the old phrase
seem new to her ears.
“I’m not at all,”
she denied shyly. “I just had to do it,
that was all. People always do what they have
to do.”
“They do not. Lots of them
can’t, but you you’re always
capable; that’s what makes you so wonderful,
Dorothy!” He pulled his horse closer to hers,
meaning to put his arm around her, but he dared not
attempt it, when her dress brushed his sleeve.
“Yes?” She was trembling
now far more than when she had faced the Rexhills.
“What is it?”
His arm dropped to his side, and he
suddenly became acutely conscious of his appearance,
what with his blood-matted hair; his blood-stained
and soiled face; his generally woe-begone and desperate
state. At least, before he risked his future
on such a question, he ought to make himself as presentable
as he could.
“Nothing.”
“But ” She
looked at him curiously. “You were going
to say something, weren’t you?”
“Yes; but I’m not going
to do it until I can get to a hair-brush, and a wash-basin,
and a clean shirt,” he answered lugubriously.
“What I’ve got on my mind is a church-going
sentiment and I want to be in church-going clothes.”
The expression of his countenance contributed more
than his words to the humor he strove for, and she
laughed at him, merrily with her mouth, very tenderly
with her eyes.
“There’s the house.”
She pointed ahead. “Even though I’m
riding bareback, I can beat you to it. Come on!”
Once Wade was within reach of food,
his hunger became insistent, and he could not wait
for the cook to prepare a meal of fried chicken.
He foraged in the larder beforehand, and then did
full justice to the meal put before him. By the
time this was over, Mrs. Purnell arrived, and he had
no chance to get into his “church-going clothes,”
as he called them. He had to tell the old lady
all that had befallen him.
“I never would have thought
it of that Miss Rexhill,” Mrs. Purnell declared.
“It wasn’t Miss Rexhill,
it was her father and Race Moran,” Dorothy interposed.
“Or the Senator either, speaking
merely from the looks of him,” her mother retorted.
“And think of the position he holds, a Senator
of the United States!”
“That’s no hall-mark of virtue these days,”
Wade laughed.
“Well, it should be. If
we’re to have people like him running the Nation,
there’s no telling where we’ll end.”
“It just goes to show how an
honest man, for I think Rexhill was an honest man
when I first knew him, can go wrong by associating
with the wrong people,” said Wade. He could
not forget his earlier friendship for the Rexhills,
and to him the word friendship meant much. “He
not only got in with a bad crowd, but he got going
at a pace that wrung money out of him every time he
moved. Then, in the last election, he was hit
hard, and I suppose he felt that he had to recoup,
even if he had to sacrifice his friends to do it.
We mustn’t judge a man like that too hard.
We live differently out here, and maybe we don’t
understand those temptations. I’m mighty
glad they’ve gone away. I can get right
down to work now, without any qualms of conscience.”
“But think of you, Dorothy,
out all night in those mountains!” Mrs. Purnell
exclaimed.
“Mother ” Dorothy
smiled tenderly. “You always think backward
to yesterday, instead of forward to to-morrow.”
By then, the first of the neighboring
ranchers were drifting in, in response to Wade’s
summons. When all were present, and Trowbridge
had wrung Wade’s hand in a hearty pressure of
congratulation, they were asked into the living-room,
where Santry stood in a corner, munching slowly on
a mouthful of tobacco and smiling grimly to himself.
“Gentlemen,” began Wade,
facing the little group of stern-faced men, “you
all know why we are here. To a greater or lesser
extent, we’ve all suffered from Race Moran’s
depredations, although until lately none of us knew
his motive. Now, however, we know that there is
gold here in the valley on our land which
Moran is trying to get possession of. He has
proved that he is willing to resort to any villainy
to get what he wants, and while he and his men are
at large our lives and most of our ranches are in
danger.
“We have tried the law, but
it has not helped us. Such little law as we have
here is entirely in the hands of the enemy. We
must now assume the direction of our own affairs.
Many of you have already served in a vigilance committee,
and you all know the purpose of such an organization.
My idea is to form one now to take possession of Crawling
Water and run Moran and his hired bullies out of the
county. Between us, we can muster about a hundred
men; more than enough to turn the trick, and the quicker
we get to work the sooner we’ll be able to go
about our business affairs without fear of being shot
in the back. My plan is this: Let us assemble
our force quietly, ride into Crawling Water, capture
Moran and his followers, and escort them out of the
county. There must be no lynching or unnecessary
bloodshed; but if they resist, as some of them will,
we must use such force as is needed to overcome them.”
He stopped speaking, and for some
minutes silence prevailed. Then Bill Santry shifted
the quid in his cheek, spat unerringly through the
open window, and began to talk. His loose-jointed
figure had suddenly become tense and forceful; his
lean face was determined and very grim.
“Being as I’ve suffered
some from this skunk, and have lived here some while,
so to say, mebbe I can horn in?” he began.
“Go ahead!” said Wade heartily.
“Gordon here has stated the
gist o’ this business a whole lot better’n
I could, but I’d like to make a few additional
remarks. We’ve all been neighbors for some
years, and in the natural course of things we’ve
been pretty good friends. Until this feller,
Moran, got to monkeyin’ around here, there wasn’t
no trouble to talk about, and we was all able to carry
on our work calm and peaceful like. But since
this skunk camped among us, we ain’t hardly
knowed what a decent sleep is like; he’s grabbed
our range, butchered our stock, shot up our men, lied,
and carried on high, in general. We’ve
given the law a chance to do the square thing by us.
All we asked was a fair shake, and we turned the other
cheek, as the Bible says, hopin’ that we could
win through without too much fightin’, but we’ve
been handed the muddy end of the stick every time.
It’s come to a showdown, gents. We either
got to let Moran do as he damn pleases ’round
here, or show him that he’s tackled a buzz-saw.
Most of us was weaned some earlier than the day before
yisterday. We gradooated from the tenderfoot class
some time back, and it’s up to us to prove it.”
He paused and looked around him earnestly
for a moment; then, as his audience remained silent,
he went on:
“I’m older’n you
men, an’ I’ve lived a heap in my time.
For nearly forty years I’ve been knockin’
’round this Western country without no nurse
or guardeen to look after me. I’ve mixed
with all kinds, and I’ve been in some scrapes;
there’s notches on my gun handles to prove that
I ain’t been no quitter. I’ve rode
with the vigilantes more’n once, and the vigilantes
has rode after me more’n once; in
my young days I wa’n’t exactly what you’d
call a nickel-plated saint. But I never killed
a man, ‘cept in a fair fight, an’ I don’t
believe in violence unless it’s necessary.
It’s necessary right now, fellers! Moran’s
gone too far! Things have drawed to a point where
we’ve got to fight or quit. In my experience,
I ain’t never seen but one judge that couldn’t
be bought; money an’ influence don’t count
a whoop with him. It’s Judge Colt, gents!
You all know him; an’ with him on our side we
can round up Moran an’ his crew of gun-fighters,
an’ ship ’em out of the country for keeps.
Now’s the time! The quicker we get busy,
the quicker the air in these hills will be fit for
a white man to breathe.”
“It’s a go with me,”
Lem Trowbridge declared grimly. “That’s
what I’m here for. How about the rest of
you?”
When the other stock men assented,
Wade smiled, for he knew their type. Honest,
hard-working, peace-loving men though they were, when
aroused they possessed the courage and tenacity of
bull-dogs. They were aroused now, and they would
carry on to the end, with a step as firm and relentless
as the march of Time. Woe to whoever attempted
to thwart them in their purpose!
Wade’s neighbor to the north,
Dave Kelly, spoke up in his slow, nasal drawl.
“You say there’s to be no lynchin’,”
he remarked. “How about Tug Bailey, when
he gets here from Sheridan? According to what
Lem says, Bailey shot Jensen.”
“Sure, he did,” Trowbridge
put in. “We’ll just slip a noose over
his head and make him confess. That’ll
publicly clear Gordon and Bill. Then we’ll
give him a good coat of tar and feathers and run him
out of town.”
“That’s right,”
said Santry. “Jensen was only a Swede and
a sheepherder. This here committee’s to
protect men.”
Kelly chuckled. “Have it
your own way,” he said. “I’m
not particular. As it is, there’ll be plenty
doing.”
For an hour or more the cattlemen
went over the plan of their campaign, which worked
out into simplicity itself. Early the next evening
they would marshal their force outside of Crawling
Water, each man armed and mounted. After dark
they would ride up the main street, where they would
halt at each crossing, while a squad detailed for the
purpose searched each saloon and other gathering place
for members of Moran’s gang. After the
prisoners were rounded up they would be assembled in
a compact body and marched to the railroad where they
would be set free, under threat of instant death if
they ever returned to Crawling Water.
Although counting on superior numbers
and the morale of his men, Wade, who had been chosen
to command the little army, knew that there would be
considerable hard fighting. Moran’s people
would probably be scattered and otherwise unprepared
for the attack, but many of them would resist to the
death. If Moran should attempt an organized resistance,
the cattlemen meant to storm the town. Once the
first shot was fired, the fight would be to a finish,
for any other outcome than victory would spell ruin
for the cattle interests in that section.
The prospect was more than serious.
Moran had established himself in Crawling Water and
practically ruled it, surrounded as he was by some
sixty adherents, the off-scouring of a dozen lawless
communities. The decent citizens held aloof from
him, but on the other hand the lower element viewed
his reign with favor. The gamblers, particularly
Monte Joe, who proclaimed himself Moran’s lieutenant,
had welcomed him, as had the saloonkeepers, to all
of whom the presence of his men meant gainful trade.
The better class, in the town itself, was in the minority
and unable to restrain the unbridled license which
flourished everywhere.
No matter how stiff Moran’s
resistance proved, however, Wade felt very sure of
the final result. He knew the men in his party
and he knew that they meant business. He was
relieved to believe that Dorothy and her mother would
be safe at the ranch until after the trouble was over,
and that Helen and Senator Rexhill had left Crawling
Water. The two factions were now arrayed against
each other almost like opposing armies, and the cattleman
shuddered to think what his state of mind would have
been had Dorothy and Mrs. Purnell remained in Crawling
Water.
“You’ll be entirely safe
here,” he told them, when he was ready to leave
for Crawling Water on the following evening. “I
shall leave Barker to look after your wants, but you
won’t really need him. There isn’t
a sheepherder, or any of the Moran gang, between here
and Crawling Water. The fighting will all be
in town, thank goodness.”
At the word “fighting”
Dorothy caught her breath sharply, too proud to urge
him against his duty and yet afraid for him. He
had not been able to muster courage enough to speak
to her of what was in his heart, foolish though that
was in him, and he sat there in the saddle for a moment,
looking tenderly down on her as she stood smoothing
out his horse’s forelock.
“Do be careful of yourself,
Gordon,” Mrs. Purnell called to him from the
porch, but he did not hear her.
“I haven’t had a chance
yet to get into my church-going clothes, have I?”
he said whimsically to Dorothy, who flushed prettily
and looked away.
“I don’t see what clothes
have to do with talking to me,” she said half
coyly and half mischievously.
“Neither do I,” he agreed.
She had stepped aside and his horse’s head was
free. “I guess they haven’t a thing
to do with it, but I haven’t been seeing things
exactly straight lately. I reckon I’ve been
half locoed.”
Touching his horse with the spurs,
he loped away to join Santry, who was waiting for
him on ahead.