The Mimbres Pass narrows toward the
southern exit where Point o’ Rocks juts into
the canon and commands it like a sentinel. Toward
this column of piled boulders slowly moved a cloud
of white dust, at the base of which crept a band of
hard-driven cattle. Swollen tongues were out,
heads stretched forward in a bellow for water taken
up by one as another dropped it. The day was
still hot, though the sun had slipped down over the
range, and the drove had been worked forward remorselessly.
Every inch that could be sweated out of them had been
gained.
For those that pushed them along were
in desperate hurry. Now and again a rider would
twist round in his saddle to sweep back a haggard glance.
Dust enshrouded them, lay heavy on every exposed inch;
but through it seams of anxiety crevassed their leathern
faces. Iron men they were, with one exception.
Fight they could and would to the last ditch.
But behind the jaded, stony eyes lay a haunting fear,
the never-ending dread of a pursuit that might burst
upon them at any moment. Driven to the wall,
they would have faced the enemy like tigers, with a
fierce, exultant hate. It was the never-ending
possibility of disaster that lay heavily upon them.
Just as they entered the pass, a man
came spurring up the steep trail behind them.
The drag drivers shouted a warning to those in front
and waited alertly with weapons ready. The man
trying to overtake them waved a sombrero as a flag
of truce.
“Keep an eye on him, Tom.
If he makes a move that don’t look good to you,
plug him!” ordered the keen-eyed man beside one
of the drag drivers.
“I’m bridle wise, boss.”
But though he spoke with bravado Dixon shook like
an aspen in a breeze.
The man he had called boss looked
every inch a leader. He rode with the loose seat
and the straight back of the Westerner to the saddle
born. Just now he was looking back with impassive,
reddened eyes at the approaching figure.
“Hold on, Tom! Don’t
shoot! It’s Brad,” he decided.
“And I wonder what in Mexico he is doing here.”
The leader of the outlaws was soon
to learn. Irwin told the story of the strategy
that had changed him from jailer to prisoner and of
the way he had later freed himself from the rope that
bound him.
Healy unloaded his sentiments with
an emphasis that did the subject justice. Nevertheless
he could not see that their plans were seriously affected.
“It’s a leetle premature,
but his getaway doesn’t cut any ice. What
we want to do is to nail him, clamp the evidence home,
and put him out of business before his friends can
say Jack Robinson. The story now is that he was
caught driving a little bunch of cows to met the big
bunch his pals were rustling, and that we left him
in charge of Brad while we tried to run down the other
waddies. Understand, boys?”
They did, and admired the more the
versatility of a leader who could make plans on the
spur of the moment to meet any emergency.
“We’ll push right on,
boys. Once we get through the pass it will trouble
anybody to find us. Before mo’ning you’ll
be across the line.”
“And you, Brill?”
“I’m going back to settle
accounts for good and all with Mr. Keller,”
answered Healy grimly between set teeth. “I’ve
got a notion about him. I believe he’s
a spy.”
Just before Point o’ Rocks a
defile runs into the Mimbres Pass at right angles.
The leaders of the cattle, pushed forward by the pressure
from behind, stopped for a moment, and stood bawling
at the junction. A rider spurred forward to keep
them from attempting the gulch. Suddenly he dragged
his pony to its haunches, so quickly did he stop it.
For a clear voice had called down a warning as if
from the heavens:
“You can’t go this way! The Pass
is closed!”
The rider looked up in amazement,
and beheld a man standing on the ledge above with
a rifle resting easily across his forearm.
“By Heaven, it’s Keller!” the rustler
muttered.
He wheeled as on a half dollar, pushed
his way back along the edge of the wall past the cattle,
and shouted to his chief:
“We’re trapped, Brill!”
None of the outlaws needed that notification.
Five pair of eyes had lifted to the ledge upon which
Keller stood. The shock of the surprise paralyzed
them for an instant. For it occurred to none of
the five that this man would be standing there so
quietly unless he were backed by a posse sufficient
to overpower them. He had not the manner of a
man taking a desperate chance. The situation
was as dramatic as life and death, but the voice that
had come down to them had been as matter-of-fact as
if it had asked some one to pass him a cup of coffee
at the breakfast table.
The temper of the outlaws’ metal
showed instantly. Dixon dropped his rifle, threw
up his hands, and ran bleating to the cover of some
large rocks, imploring the imagined posse not to shoot.
Others found silently what shelter they could.
Healy alone took reckless counsel of his hate.
Flinging his rifle to his shoulder,
he blazed away at the figure on the ledge - once,
twice, three times. When the smoke cleared the
ranger was no longer to be seen. He was lying
flat on his rock like a lizard, where he had dropped
just as his enemy whipped up his weapon to fire.
Cold as chilled steel, in spite of the fire of passion
that blazed within him, Healy slid to the ground on
the far side of his horse and, without exposing himself,
slowly worked to the loose boulders bordering the edge
of the canon bed.
The bawling of the cattle and the
faint whimpering of Dixon alone disturbed the silence.
Healy and his confederates were waiting for the other
side to show its hand. Meanwhile the leader of
the outlaws was thinking out the situation.
“I believe there’s only
two of them, Bart,” he confided in a low voice
to the big fellow lying near. “Keller must
have heard us when we talked it over at the shack.
I reckon he and Phil hit the trail for here immediate.
They hadn’t time to go back and rustle help and
still get here before us.
“We’ll make Mr. Keller
table his cards. I’m going to try to rush
the cattle through. We’ll see at once what’s
doing. If they are too many for us to do that
we’ll break for the gulch and fight our way out - that
is, if we find we’re hemmed in behind, too.”
He called to the rest of the bandits
and gave crisp instructions. At sound of his
sharp whistle four men leaped into sight, each making
for his horse. Dixon alone did not answer to
the call. He lay white and trembling behind the
rock that sheltered him, physically unable to rise
and face the bullets that would rain down upon him.
Keller, watching alertly from above,
guessed what they would be at. His rifle cracked
twice, and two of the horses staggered, one of them
collapsing slowly. He had to show himself, and
for three heartbeats stood exposed to the fire of
four rifles. One bullet fanned his cheek, a second
plunged through his coat sleeve, a third struck the
rock at his feet. While the echoes were still
crashing, he was flat on his rock again, peering over
the edge to see their next move.
“He’s alone,” cried
Healy jubilantly. “Must have sent the kid
back for help. Bart, get Dixon’s gun, steal
up the ravine, and take him in the rear. I’d
go myself, but I can’t leave the boys now.”
Slowly the cattle felt the impetus
from behind, and began to move forward. The voice
above shouted a second warning. Healy answered
with a derisive yell. Keller again stood exposed
on the ledge.
Rifles cracked.
This time the cattle detective was
firing at men and not at horses, and they in turn
were pumping at him fast as they could work the levers.
One man went down, torn through and through by a rifle
slug in his vitals. Healy’s horse twitched
and staggered, but the rider was unhurt. The
officer on the ledge, a perfect target, was the heart
of a very hail of lead, but when he sank again to
cover he was by some miracle still unhurt.
“They’ll try a flank attack
next time,” Keller told himself.
Up to date the honors were easily
his. He had put three horses out of commission
and disabled one of the outlaws so badly that he would
prove negligible in the attack. Peering down,
he could see Healy, with superb contempt for the marksman
above, slowly and carefully carry his wounded comrade
to shelter. The other men were already driven
back to cover. The cattle, excited by the firing,
were milling round and round uneasily.
Healy laid the wounded man down, knelt
beside him, and gave him water from his flask.
The man was plainly hard hit, though he was not bleeding
much.
“Where is it, Duke? Can
I do anything for you, old fellow?”
The dying man shook his head and whispered
hoarsely: “I’ve got mine, Brill.
Shot to pieces. I’m dying right now.
Get out while you can. Don’t mind me.”
His chief swore softly. “We’ll
get him right, Duke. Brad’s after him now.
Buck up, old pard. You’ll worry through
yet.”
“Not this time, Brill.
I’ve played rustler once too often.”
Keller, far up on the precipice, became
aware of approaching riders long before the outlaws
below could see them. He counted eight - nine - ten
men, still black dots in a cloud of dust. This
he knew must be Phil’s posse.
If he could hold the rustlers for
ten minutes more they would be caught like rats in
a trap. Once or twice he glanced behind him as
a precaution against some one of the enemy climbing
Point o’ Rocks from the defile, but he gave
this little consideration. He had not seen Brad
when he disappeared into the mesquite, and he supposed
all of the rustlers were still in the Pass five hundred
feet below him.
What he had expected was that they
would force their way up the defile for a quarter
of a mile and strike the easy trail that ran from the
rear to the top of the Point. He wondered that
this had not occurred to Healy.
In point of fact it had, but the outlaw
leader knew that as they picked their way among the
broken boulders of the gulch bottom the enemy would
have them in the open for more than a hundred yards
of slow going. He had chosen the alternative
of sending Brad quietly up the rough face of the cliff.
The other plan would do as a last resource if this
failed.
Healy believed that his enemy had
been delivered into his hands. After Keller had
been killed they would toss his body down into the
Pass, and while his companions continued the drive
to Mexico, Healy would return to get help for Duke
and spread the story he wanted to get out. The
main features of that tale would be that he and Duke
had cut their trail by accident, suspected rustling,
and followed as far as the Mimbres Pass, where Keller
had shot Duke and been in turn shot by Healy.
It was a neat plan, and one that would
have been fairly sure of success but for one unforeseen
contingency - the approach of Yeager’s
posse a half hour too soon. Healy heard them
coming, knew he was trapped, and attempted to force
an escape through the narrows in front of Point o’
Rocks.
The milling cattle had jammed the
gateway. Keller, shooting down one or two of
them, blocked the exit still more. Healy and his
confederates could not get through, and turned to
try the defile just as the first of the posse came
flying down the Pass.
Young Sanderson was in the van, a
hundred yards in front of Yeager, dashing over the
uneven ground in a reckless haste that Jim’s
slower horse could not match. Loose shale was
flying from his pony’s hoofs as it pounded forward.
The outlaws just beat him to the mouth of the intersecting
gulch. Dragging his broncho to a slithering
halt, he fired twice at the retreating men. He
had taken no time to aim, and his bullets went wild.
Brill laughed in mockery, covered
him deliberately with his rifle, and just as deliberately
raised the barrel and fired into the air. The
distance was scarce a hundred yards. Phil could
not doubt that his former friend had purposely spared
his life. The boy’s rifle dropped from
his shoulder.
“Brill wouldn’t shoot
at me! I couldn’t kill him!” he shouted
to Weaver, as the latter rode up.
Buck nodded. “Let me have
him!” And he plunged into the gorge after the
men that had disappeared.
Twice Keller’s rifle spat at
Healy and his companion as they plowed forward across
the boulder bed, but the difficulty of shooting from
far above at moving figures almost directly below
saved the rustlers. They reached a thick growth
of aspens and disappeared. Healy parted company
with his ally at the place where the trail to the summit
of Point o’ Rocks led up.
“Break south when you get out
of the gulch, Sam. In half an hour it will be
night, and you’ll be safe. So-long.”
“Where you going, Brill?”
“I’m going to settle accounts
with that dashed spy!” answered Healy, with
an epithet. “Inside of half an hour either
Keller or I will be down and out!”
The outlaw took the stiff incline
leisurely, for he knew Keller could come down only
this way, and he had no mind to let himself get so
breathed as to disturb the sureness of his aim.
The aspen grove ran like a forked tongue up the ridge
for a couple of hundred yards. As Healy emerged
from it he saw a rider just disappearing over the shoulder
of the hill in front of him. For an instant he
had an amazed impression that the figure was that
of a woman, but he dismissed this as absurd.
He went the more cautiously, for he now knew that there
would be two for him to deal with on the Point instead
of one - unless Brad reached the scene in
time to assist him.
The sound of a shot drifted down to
him, followed presently by a far, faint cry of terror.
What had happened was this:
Keller, turning away from the overhanging
ledge from which he had seen the outlaws vanish into
the grove, looked down the long slope preliminary
to descending. He was surprised to see a horse
and rider halfway between him and the aspen tongue.
To him, too, there came a swift impression that it
was a woman, and almost at once something in the poise
of the gallant figure told him what woman. His
heart leaped to meet her. He waved a hand, and
broke into a run.
But only for two strides. For
there had come to him a warning. He swung on
his heel and waited. Again he heard the light
rumble of shale, and before that had died away a sinister
click. Alert in every fiber, his gaze swept the
bluff - and stopped when it met a pair of
beady eyes peering at him over the edge of the precipice.
The two pair of eyes fastened for
what seemed like an eternity, but could have been
no longer than four ticks of a clock. Neither
of the men spoke. The outlaw fired first - wildly,
for the arm which held the rifle was cramped for space.
Keller’s revolver flashed an answer which tore
through Irwin’s teeth and went out beneath his
ear. With a furious oath the man dropped his
weapon and flung himself upward and forward, landing
in a heap almost at the feet of the detective.
“Don’t move!” ordered the latter.
Brad writhed forward awkwardly, knew
the shock of another heavy bullet in his shoulder,
and catching his foe by the legs dragged him from his
feet. Keller’s revolver was jerked over
the edge of the precipice as he let go of it to close
with the burly ruffian.
Both of them were unarmed save for
the weapons nature had given them. The detailed
purpose of the struggle defined itself at once.
Irwin meant by main strength to fling the detective
into the gulf that descended sheer for five hundred
feet. The other fought desperately to save himself
by dragging his infuriated antagonist back from the
edge.
They grappled in silence, save for
the heavy panting that evidenced the tension of their
efforts. Each tried to bear the other to the ground,
to establish a grip against which his foe would be
helpless. Now they were on their knees, now on
their sides. Over and over they rolled, first
one and then the other on top, shifting so fast that
neither could clinch any temporary advantage.
Yet Keller, with a flying glance at
the cliff, knew that he was being forced nearer the
gulf by sheer strength of muscle. Irwin, his jaw
shattered and his shoulder torn, was not fighting to
win, but to kill. He cared not whether he himself
also went to death. He was obsessed by the old
primeval lust to crush the life out of this lusty
antagonist, and his whole gigantic force was concentrated
to that end. He scarce knew that he was wounded,
and he cared not at all. Backward and forward
though the battle went, on the whole it moved jerkily
toward the chasm.
The end came with a suddenness of
which Larrabie had but an instant’s warning
in the swift flare of joy that lit the madman’s
face. His foot, searching for a brace as he was
borne back, found only empty space. Plunged downward,
the nester clung viselike to the man above, dragged
him after, and by the very fury of Irwin’s assault
flung him far out into the gulf head-first.
It was Phyl Sanderson’s cry
of horror that Healy heard. She had put her horse
up the steep at a headlong gallop, had seen the whole
furious struggle and the tragic end of it that witnessed
two men hurled over the precipice into space.
She slipped from the saddle, and sank dizzily to the
ground, not daring to look over the cliff at what she
would see far below. Waves of anguish shot through
her and shook her very being.
A man bent over her, and gave a startled cry.
“My heaven, it’s Phyl!” he cried.
“Yes.” She spoke
in a flat, lifeless voice he could not have recognized
as hers.
“Where is he? What’s become of him?”
Healy demanded.
She told him with a gesture, then
flung herself on the turf, and broke down helplessly.
The outlaw went to the edge and looked over. The
gulf of air told no story except the obvious one.
No wingless living creature could make that descent
without forfeiture of life. He stepped back to
the girl and touched her on the shoulder.
“Come.”
She looked up, shuddering, and asked, “Where?”
“With me.”
“With you? It was you that drove him to
his death, and I loved him!”
“Never mind that now. Come.”
“I hate you! I should kill
you when I got a chance! Why should I go with
you?” she asked evenly.
He did not know why. He had no
definite plan. All he knew was that his old world
lay in ruins at his feet, that he must fly through
the night like a hunted wolf, and that the girl he
loved was beside him, forever free from the rival
who lay crushed and lifeless at the foot of the cliff.
He could not give her up now. He would not.
The old savage instinct of ownership
rose strong in him. She was his. He had
won her by the fortune of war. He would keep her
against all comers so long as he had life to fight.
Night was falling softly over the hills. They
would go forth into it together to a new heaven and
a new earth.
He lifted her to her feet and brought
up her horse. She looked at him in a silence
that stripped him of his dreams.
“Come!” he said again, between clenched
teeth.
“Not with you. I don’t
know you. Leave me alone. You killed him!
You’re a murderer!”
He stretched hands toward her, but
she shrank from him, still in the dull stupor of horror
that was on her spirit.
“Go away! Don’t touch
me! You and your miscreants killed him!”
And with that she flung herself down again, and buried
her face from the sight of him.
He waited doggedly, helpless against
her grief and her hatred of him, but none the less
determined to take her with him. Across the border
he would not be a hunted man with a price on his head.
They could be married by a padre in Sonora, and perhaps
some day he would make her love him and forget this
man that had come between them. At all events,
he would be her master and would tie her life inextricably
to his. He stooped and caught her shoulder.
She had fainted.
A footfall set rolling a pebble.
He looked up quickly, and almost of its own volition,
as it seemed, the rifle leaped to both of his hands.
A man stood looking at him across the plateau of the
summit. He, too, held a rifle ready for instant
action.
“So it’s you!” Healy cried with
an oath.
“Have you killed him?”
The outlaw lied, with swift, unblazing
passion: “Yes, Buck Weaver, and tossed
his body to the buzzards. Your turn now!”
“Then who is that with you there?”
“The woman you love, the woman
that turned you and him down for me,” taunted
his rival. “After I’ve killed you
we’re going off to be married.”
“Only a coyote would stand behind
a woman’s skirts and lie. I can’t
kill you there, and you know it.”
Healy asked nothing better than an
even break. He might have killed with impunity
from where he stood. Yet pantherlike, he swiftly
padded six paces to the left, never lifting his eyes
from his antagonist.
Buck waited, motionless. “Are you ready?”
The outlaw’s weapon flashed
to the level and cracked. Almost simultaneously
the other answered. Weaver felt a bullet fan his
cheek, but he knew that his own had crashed home.
The shock of it swung Healy half round.
The man hung in silhouette against the sky line, then
the body plunged to the turf at full length.
Buck moved forward cautiously, fearing a trick, his
eyes fastened on the other. But as he drew nearer
he knew it was no ruse. The body lay supine and
inert, as lifeless as the clay upon which it rested.
Once sure of this Buck turned immediately
to Phyllis. A faint crackling of bushes stopped
him. He waited, his eyes fixed on the edge of
the precipice from which the sound had come.
Next there came to him the slipping of displaced rubble.
He was all eyes and ears, tense and alert in every
pulse.
From out of the gulf a hand appeared
and groped for a hold. Weaver stepped noiselessly
to the edge and looked down. A torn and bleeding
face looked up into his.
“Good heavens, Keller!”
Buck was on his knees instantly.
He caught the ranger’s hand with both of his
and dragged him up. The rescued man sank breathless
on the ground and told his story in gasped fragments.
“ - caught on a ledge - hung
to some bushes growing there - climbed up - lay
still when Healy looked over - a near thing - makes
me sick still!”
“It was a millionth chance that
saved you - if it was a chance.”
“Where’s Healy?”
Weaver pointed to the body. “We fought
it out. The luck was with me.”
A faint, glad, terrified little cry
startled them both. Phyllis was staring with
dilated eyes at the man restored to her from the dead.
He got up and walked across to her with outstretched
hands.
“My little girl.”
“Oh, Larry! I don’t understand.
I thought - ”
He nodded. “I reckon God was good to us,
sweetheart.”
Her arms crept up and round his neck.
“Oh, boy - boy - boy.
I thought you were - I thought you were - ”
She broke down, but he understood.
“Well, I’m not,” he laughed happily.
Catching sight of Buck’s grim, set face, Larrabie
explained what scarce needed an explanation.
“You’ll have to excuse us, I reckon.
It’s my day for congratulations.”
Phyllis freed herself and walked across
to her other lover. “My friend, I know
the answer now,” she told him.
“I see you do.”
“Don’t - please don’t be
hurt,” she begged. “I have to care
for him.”
The hard, leathery face softened.
“I lose, girl. But who told you I was a
bad loser? The best man wins. I’ve
got no kick to register.”
“Not the best man,” Keller corrected,
shaking hands with his rival.
Phyllis summed it up in woman fashion:
“My man, whether he is the best or not.
It’s just that a girl goes where her heart goes.”
Weaver nodded. “Good enough.
Well, I’ll be going. I expect you’ll
not miss me.”
He turned and went down the hill alone.
At the foot of it he met Jim Yeager.
“What about Brill?” the younger man asked
quickly.
“He’ll never rustle another
cow,” Buck answered gravely. “I killed
him on the top of Point o’ Rocks after an even
break.”
“Duke has cashed in. Game
to the last. Wouldn’t say a word to implicate
his pals. But Tom has confessed everything.
The boys slipped a noose over his head, and he came
through right away.
“Says he and Duke and Irwin
helped Healy rob the Noches Bank and do a lot
of other deviltry. It was just like Keller figured.
The automobile was waiting for the bunch with the
showfer, and took them out the old Fort Lincoln Road.
Dixon knows where the gold is hidden, and is going
to show the boys.”
“That clears up everything,
then. I judge we’ve made a pretty thorough
gather.”
Jim looked up and indistinctly saw
the lovers coming slowly down through the grove.
Dusk had fallen and soon the cloak of night would be
over the mountains.
“Who is that?”
Buck did not look round. “I
reckon it’s Keller and his sweetheart. She
followed us here.”
“I told her not to come.”
“I expect she takes her telling
from Mr. Keller.” He changed the subject
abruptly. “We’ll go on down to the
boys and see what’s doing. They’ll
be some glad, I shouldn’t wonder, at making
a gather that cleans out the worst bunch of cutthroats
and rustlers in the Malpais. Don’t you
reckon?”
“I reckon,” answered Yeager briefly.