From all over the Malpais country,
from the water-sheds where Bear and Elk and Cow creeks
head, from the halfway house far out in the desert
where the stage changes horses, men and women dribbled
to the Frying Pan for the big dance after the round-up.
Great were the preparations. Many cakes and pies
and piles of sandwiches had been made ready. Also
there was a wash boiler full of coffee and a galvanized
tub brimming with lemonade. For the Frying Pan
was doing itself proud.
Phil and his sister drove over together.
The boy had asked Bess to go with him, but Cuffs had
beaten him to it. The distance was only twenty-five
miles, a neighborly stroll in that country of wide
spaces and desert stretches filled with absentees.
When Phyllis came into the big room
where the dancing was in progress, her dark eye swept
the room without finding him for whom she looked.
There were many there she knew, not more than two or
three whom she had never met, but among them all she
looked at none who was a magnet for her eyes.
Keller had not yet arrived.
Before she had taken her seat she
had three engagements to dance. Jim Yeager had
waylaid her; so, too, had Slim and Curly. She
waltzed first with Phil, and after he had done his
duty he left her to the besiegings of half a score
of riders for various ranches who came and went and
came again. She joked with them, joined the merry
banter that went on, laughed at them when they grew
sentimental, always with a sprightly devotion to the
matter in hand.
Nevertheless, though they did not
know it, her mind was full of him who had not yet
appeared. Why was he late? Could he have
missed the way by any chance? And later - as
the hours passed without bringing him - could
anything have happened to him? More than once
her troubled gaze fell upon Brill Healy with a brooding
question in it. The man had received only the
day before his party’s nomination for sheriff,
and he was doing the gracious to all the women and
children.
He had many of the qualities that
make for popularity, even though he was often overbearing,
revengeful, and sullen. When he chose he could
be hail fellow well met in a way Malpais found flattering
to its vanity. Now he was apparently having the
time of his life. Wherever he moved an eddy of
laughter and gayety went with him. The eyes of
men as well as women admiringly followed his dark,
lithe, picturesque figure.
Phyllis had declined to dance with
him, giving as an excuse a full programme, and for
an instant his face had blazed with the suppressed
rage in him. He had bowed and swaggered away with
a malicious sneer. Her judgment told her it was
folly to connect this man with the absence of her
lover, but that look of malevolent triumph had none
the less shaken her heart. What had he meant?
It seemed less a threat for the future than a gloating
over some evil already done.
When she could endure them no longer
she carried her fears to Jim Yeager. They were
dancing, but she made an excuse of fatigue to drop
out.
“First time I ever knew you
to play out at a dance, Phyl,” he rallied her.
“It isn’t that. I
want to say something to you,” she whispered.
He had a guess what it was, for his
own mind was not quite easy.
“Do you think anything could
have happened, Jim?” she besought pitifully
when for a moment they were alone in a corner.
“What could have happened,
Phyllie? Do you reckon he fell off his hawss,
and him a full-size man?” he scoffed.
“Yes, but - you don’t
know how Brill looked at me. I’m afraid.”
“Oh, Brill!” His voice
held an edge of scorn, but none the less it concealed
a real fear. He was making as much concession
to it as to her when he added lightly: “Tell
you what I’ll do, Phyl. I’ll saddle
up and take a look back over the Bear Creek trail.
Likely I’ll meet him, and we’ll come in
together.”
Her eyes met his, and he needed no
other thanks. “You’ll lose the dance,”
was her only comment.
Jim followed the road until it branched
off to join the Bear Creek trail. Here he deflected
toward the mountains, taking the zigzag path that
ran like a winding thread among the rocks as it mounted.
Now for the first time there came to him the faint
rhythmic sound of a galloping horse’s hoofs.
He did not stop, and as he picked his way among the
rocks he heard for some time no more of it.
“Mr. Hurry-up-like-hell kept
the road, I reckon,” Jim ruminated aloud, and
even as he spoke he caught again the echo of an iron
shoe striking a rock.
He stopped and listened. Some
one was climbing the trail behind him.
“Mebbe he’s a friend,
and then mebbe he isn’t. We’ll let
him have the whole road to himself, eh, Keno?”
Yeager guided his pony to the left,
and took up a position behind some huge bowlders from
whence he could see without being seen. The pursuer
toiled into sight, a slim, wiry youth on a buckskin.
He came forward out of the shadows into the fretted
moonlight.
Yeager gave a glad whoop of recognition. “Hi-yi,
Phil!”
“You’re there, are you? Did I scare
you off the trail, Jim?”
“That’s whatever, boy. What are you
doing here?”
“Sis sent me. She got worried
again, and we figured I’d better join you.”
“I reckon there’s nothing
serious the matter. Still, it ain’t like
Larry to say he would come and then not show up.”
“Brill is back there bragging
about it.” Phil nodded his head toward the
lights of the Frying Pan glimmering far below.
“Says he knew the waddy wouldn’t show
his head. You don’t reckon, Jim, he’s
turned a trick on Keller, do you?”
“That’s what we have got to find out,
Phil.”
“Looks funny he’d be so
durned sure when we all know how game Keller is,”
the boy reflected aloud.
“I don’t expect you’re
armed, Phil?” Jim put the statement as a question.
“Nope. Are you?”
“No, I ain’t. Didn’t
think of it when I started. Oh, well, we’ll
make out. Like enough there will be no need of
guns.”
A gray light was sifting into the
sky, and still they rode, winding up toward the peaks
of the divide. Jim, leading the way, drew rein
and pointed to a cactus bush beside the trail.
Among its spines lay a gray felt hat. From it
his eye wandered to the very evident signs of a struggle
that had taken place. Moss and cactus had been
trampled down by boot heels. To the cholla hung
here and there scraps of cloth. A blood splash
stared at them from an outcropping slope of rock.
Jim swung from the saddle and rescued
the hat from the spines. Inside the sweat band
were the initials L.K. Silently he handed the
hat to Phil.
“It’s his hat,” the boy cried.
“It’s his hat,”
Jim agreed. “They must have laid for him
here. He put up a good scrap. Notice how
that cholla is cut to ribbons. Point is, what
did they do to him?”
They searched the ground thoroughly,
and discovered no body hidden in the brush.
“They’ve taken him away.
Likely he’s alive,” Yeager decided aloud
at last.
“Brill couldn’t have been
in this. He was at the Frying Pan before I was.”
“I reckon he ordered it done.
If that’s correct they will be holding Larry
till Brill gets there to give further orders.”
Phil entered an objection. “That
doesn’t look to me like Brill’s way.
He’s not scared of any man that lives. When
he squares accounts with Keller he’ll be on
the job himself.”
“That’s so, too,”
admitted Yeager. “Still, I figure this is
Healy’s work. Maybe he gave out there was
to be no killing. He was at the ranch himself,
big as coffee, so as to be sure of his alibi.”
“What does he care about an
alibi? When he gets ready to go gunnin’
after Keller he won’t care if the whole Malpais
sees him. There’s something in this I don’t
sabe.”
“There sure is. We’ve
got to run the thing down muy pronto. No
use both of us going ahead without arms, Phil.
My notion is this: You burn a shuck back to the
Frying Pan and round up some of our friends on the
q.t. Don’t let Brill get a notion of what’s
in the air. Better make straight for Gregory’s
Pass. I’m going to follow this trail we’ve
cut and see what’s doing. Once I find out
I’ll double back to the Pass and meet you.
Bring along an extra gun for me.”
“I don’t reckon I will,
Jim. What’s the matter with me going on
instead of you? I can follow this trail good
as you can. I announce right here that I’m
not going back. I’ve got first call on this
job. Keller went into the fire after me.
I’m going to follow this trail to hell if I have
to.”
Yeager tried persuasion, argument,
appeal. The lad was as fixed as Gibraltar.
“I’m not going to go buttin’
in where I’m not wanted any more than you would,
Jim. I’ll play this hand out with a cool
head, but I’m going to play it my ownself.”
“All right. It’s
your say-so. I’ll admit you’ve got
a claim. But you want to remember one thing - if
anything happens to you I cayn’t square it with
Phyl. Go slow, boy!”
Without more words they parted, Jim
to ride swiftly back for help, and young Sanderson
to push on up the trail with his eyes glued to it.
Ever since he could swing himself to a saddle he had
been a vaquero in the cow country.
He was therefore an expert at reading
the signs left by travellers. What would have
been invisible to a tenderfoot offered evidence to
him as plain as the print on a primer. Mile after
mile he covered with a minute scrutiny that never
wavered.