The place, seen from within, was a
smoky inferno, lighted precariously by oil lanterns
hung from the poles that supported a canvas roof and
sides. Rows of grommets and snap hasps indicated
that pack tarpaulins had been largely used in the
construction. To a height of about five feet
the walls were of hastily hewn slabs, logs in the rough,
pieces of packing cases, joined or laid haphazard,
with chinks and gaps through which the wind blew,
making rivulets of chill in a stifling atmosphere
of smoke, reeking alcohol, sweat and oil fumes.
The building was a rough rectangle about twenty feet
by fifty. At one end boards laid across barrels
formed a semblance of a counter, behind which two
burly men in red undershirts dispensed liquor.
Pieces of packing cases nailed to
lengths of logs made crazy tables scattered here and
there. Shorter logs upended formed the chairs.
There was no floor. Sand had been thrown on the
ground after the snow had been shoveled off, but the
scuffling feet had beaten and trampled it into the
sodden surface and had hashed it into mud.
Ankle-deep in the reeking slush stood
thirty or forty men, clad mostly in laced boots, corduroys
or overalls, canvas or Mackinaw jackets; woolen-shirted,
slouch-hatted. Rough of face and figure, they
stood before the bar or lounged at the few tables,
talking in groups, or shouting and carousing joyously.
There was a faro layout on one of the tables where
a man in a black felt hat, smoking a cigar, dealt
from the box, while a wrinkle-faced man with a mouth
like a slit cut in parchment sat beside him on a high
log, as lookout. Half a dozen men played silently.
Perhaps half of those present milled
promiscuously among the groups, hail-fellow-well-met,
drunk, blasphemous, and loud. These shouted,
sang and cursed with vivid impartiality. The other
half, keener-eyed, stern of face, capable, drew together
in small groups of two or three or four, talking more
quietly and ignoring all others except as they kept
a general alert watch on what was going on. These
were the old-timers, experienced men, who trusted
no strangers and had no mind to allow indiscreet familiarities
from the more reckless and ignorant.
When the door opened to admit Solange,
straight and slim in her plain leather tunic and breeches,
stained dark with melted snow, the drunken musicians
perched on upended logs were the first to see her.
They stopped their playing and stared, and slowly
a grin came upon one of them.
“Oh, mamma! Look who’s here!”
he shouted.
Half a hundred pairs of eyes swung
toward the door and silence fell upon the place.
Stepping heedlessly into the ankle-deep muck, Solange
walked forward. Her flat-brimmed hat was pulled
low over her face and the silk bandanna hid her hair.
Behind her Sucatash walked uncertainly, glaring from
side to side at the gaping men.
The groups that kept to themselves
cast appraising eyes on the cow-puncher and then turned
them away. They pointedly returned to their own
affairs as though to say that, however strange, the
advent of this girl accompanied by the lean rider,
was none of their business. Again spoke experience
and the wariness born of it.
But the tenderfeet, the drunken roisterers,
were of different clay. A chorus of shouts addressed
to “Sister” bade her step up and have a
drink. A wit, in a falsetto scream, asked if he
might have the next dance. Jokes, or what passed
in that crew for them, flew thickly, growing more
ribald and suggestive as the girl stood, indifferent,
and looked about her.
Then Sucatash strode between her and
the group near the bar from which most of the noise
emanated. He hitched his belt a bit and faced
them truculently.
“You-all had better shut up,”
he announced in a flat voice. His words brought
here and there a derisive echo, but for the most part
the mirth died away. The loudest jibers turned
ostentatiously back to the bar and called for more
liquor. The few hardy ones who would have carried
on their ridicule felt that sympathy had fled from
them, and muttered into silence. Yet half of
the crew carried weapons hung in plain sight, and
others no doubt were armed, although the tools were
not visible, while Sucatash apparently had no weapon.
Behind the fervid comradeship and
affection, the men were strangers each to the other.
None knew whom he could trust; none dared to strike
lest the others turn upon him.
At one of the rude tables not far
from the entrance, sat three men. They had a
bottle of pale and poisonous liquor before them from
which they took frequent and deep drinks. They
talked loudly, advertising their presence above the
quieter groups. One or two men stood at the table,
examining a heap of dirty particles of crushed rock
spread upon the boards. They would look at it,
finger it and then pass on, generally without other
comment than a muttered word or two. But the
three seated men, one of whom was the gray, weasel-faced
Jim Banker, boasted loudly, and profanely calling
attention to the “color” and the exceeding
richness of the ore. Important, swaggering, and
braggart, they assumed the airs of an aristocracy,
as of men set apart and elevated by success.
Outside, in the lull occasioned by
Solange’s dramatic entrance, noises of the camp
could be heard through the flimsy walls. Far down
the canyon faint shouts could be heard. Some one
was calling to animals of some sort, apparently.
A faint voice, muffled by snow, raised a yell.
“H’yar comes the fust
dog sled in from the No’th,” he cried.
“That’s the sour doughs for yuh!
He’s comin’ right!”
They could hear the faint snarls and
barks of dogs yelping far down the canyon.
Then the noise swelled up again and
drowned the alien sounds.
Dimly through the murk Solange saw
the evil face of the desert rat, now flushed with
drink and greed, and, with a sudden resolution, she
turned and walked toward him. He saw her coming
and stared, his face growing sallow and his yellow
teeth showing. He gave the impression of a cornered
rat at the moment.
Then his eyes fell on Sucatash, who
followed her, and he half rose from his seat, fumbling
for a gun. Sucatash paid no heed to him, not
noticing his wild stare nor the slight slaver of saliva
that sprang to his lips. His companions were
busy showing the ore to curious spectators and were
too drunk to heed him.
Slowly Banker subsided into his seat
as he saw that neither Solange nor Sucatash apparently
had hostile intentions. He tried to twist his
seamed features into an ingratiating grin, but the
effort was a failure, producing only a grimace.
“W’y, here’s ole
French Pete’s gal!” he exclaimed, cordially,
though there was a quaver in his voice. “Da’tter
of my old friend what diskivered this here mine an’
then lost it. Killed, he was, by a gunman, twenty
years gone. Gents, say howdy to the lady!”
His two companions gaped and stared
upward at the strange figure. The standing men,
awkwardly and with a muttered word or two, backed away
from the table, alert and watchful. Women meant
danger in such a community. Under the deep shadow
of her hat brim, Solange’s eyes smoldered, dim
and mysterious.
“You are Monsieur Banker!”
she asserted, tonelessly. “You need not
be frightened. I have not come to ask you for
an accounting yet. It is for another
purpose that I am here.”
“Shore! Anything I kin
do fer old Pete’s gal all yuh
got to do is ask me, honey! Old Jim Banker; that’s
me! White an’ tender an’ faithful
to a friend, is Jim Banker, ma’am. Set
down, now, and have a nip!”
He rose and waved awkwardly to his
log. One of the others, with a grin that was
almost a leer, also rose and reached for another log
at a neighboring table from which a man had risen.
All about that end of the shack, the seated or standing
men, mostly of the silent and aloof groups, drifted
casually aside, leaving the table free.
Solange sat down and Sucatash put
out a hand to restrain her.
“Mad’mo’selle!”
he remonstrated. “This ain’t no place
fer yuh! Yuh don’t want to hang around
here with this old natural! He’s plum poisonous,
I’m tellin’ yuh!”
Solange made an impatient gesture.
“Some one quiet him!” she exclaimed.
“Am I not my own mistress, then!”
“Yuh better be keerful what
yuh call me, young feller,” said Banker, belligerently.
“Yuh can’t rack into this here camp and
get insultin’ that a way.”
“Aw, shut up!” retorted
Sucatash, flaming. “Think yuh can bluff
me when I’m a-facin’ yuh? Yuh damn’,
cowardly horned toad!”
He half drew back his fist to strike
as Banker rose, fumbling at his gun. But one
of the other men suddenly struck out, with a fist like
a ham, landing beneath the cow-puncher’s ear.
He went down without a groan, completely knocked out.
The man got up, seized him by the
legs, dragged him to the door and threw him into the
road outside. Then he came back, laughing loudly,
and swaggering as though his feat had been one to be
proud of. Solange had shuddered and shrunk for
a moment, but almost at once she shook herself as
though casting off her repulsion and after that was
stonily composed.
On his way to the table the man who
had struck Sucatash down, called loudly for another
bottle of liquor, and one of the red-shirted men behind
the bar left his place to bring it to them.
The burly bruiser sat down beside
Solange with every appearance of self-satisfaction.
He leered at her as though expecting her to flame
at his prowess. But she gave no heed to him.
“Yuh might lift up that hat
and let us git a look at yuh,” he said, reaching
out as though to tilt the brim. She jerked sharply
away from him.
“In good time, monsieur,” she said.
“Have patience.”
Then she turned to Banker, who had
been eying her with furtive, speculative eyes, cautious
and suspicious.
“Monsieur Banker,” she
said, “it is true that you have known this man
who killed my father this Louisiana?”
“Me! Shore, I knowed him.
A murderin’ gunman he was, ma’am.
A bad hombre!”
“And did you recognize him that
time he came when you played that little joke upon
me?”
Banker turned sallow once more, as
though the recollection frightened him.
“I shore did,” he assented
fervently. “He plumb give me a start.
Thought he was a ghost, that a way, you ”
He leaned forward, grinning, his latent
lunacy showing for a moment in his red eyes.
Confidentially, he unburdened himself to his companions.
“This lady you’ll
see she’s a kind o’ witch like.
This here feller racks in, me thinkin’ him dead
these many years, an’ I misses him clean when
I tries to down him. I shore thinks he’s
a ha’nt, called up by the lady. Haw, haw!”
His laughter was evil, chuckling and
cunning. It was followed by cackling boasts:
“But they all dies all
but old Jim. Louisiana, he dies too, even if I
misses him that a way with old Betsy that ain’t
missed nary a one fer nigh twenty year.”
Under her hat brim Solange’s
eyes gleamed with a fierce light as the bloodthirsty
old lunatic sputtered and mouthed. But the other
two grinned derisively at each other and leered at
the girl.
“Talks like that all the time,
miss,” said one. “Them old-timers
likes to git off the Deadwood Dick stuff. Me,
I’m nothin’ but a p’fessional pug
and all the gun fightin’ I ever seen was in little
old Chi. But I ain’t a damn’ bit
afraid to say I could lick a half dozen of these here
hicks that used to have a reputation in these parts.
Fairy tales; that’s wot they are!”
He swigged his drink and sucked in
his breath with vast self-satisfaction. The other
man, of a leaner, quieter, but just as villainous
a type, grinned at him.
“Oh, I don’t know,”
he said. “I ain’t never seen no one
could juggle a six-gun like they say these birds could
do, but I reckon there’s some truth in it.
Leastways, there are some that can shoot pretty good.”
He, too, leaned back, with an air
of self-satisfaction. Banker chuckled again.
“You’re both good ones,”
he said. “This gent can shoot some, ma’am.
He comes from Arkansas. But I ain’t a-worryin’
none about that. Old Jim’s luck’s
still holdin’ good. I found this here mine,
now, although you wouldn’t tell me where it
was. Didn’t I?”
“I suppose so,” said Solange
indifferently. “I do not care about the
mine, monsieur. It is yours. But there is
something that I wish and I have money ”
The instant light of greed that answered
this announcement convinced her that she had struck
the right note. If the mine had been as rich
as Golconda these men would have coveted additional
money.
“You got money, ma’am?” Banker spoke
whiningly.
“Money to pay for your service.
You are brave men; men who would help a woman, I feel
sure. You, Monsieur Banker, knew my father and
would help his daughter if she paid you.”
The irony escaped him.
“I sure would,” he answered,
eagerly. “What’s it you want, ma’am,
and what you goin’ to pay fer it?”
She spoke quite calmly, almost casually.
“I want you to kill a man,” she answered.
The three of them stared at her and then the big bruiser
laughed.
“Who d’you want scragged?” he said,
derisively.
Solange looked steadily at Banker.
“Louisiana!” she answered, clearly.
But old Jim turned pale and showed his rat’s
teeth.
The others merely chuckled and nudged each other.
Solange sensed that two considered
her request merely a wild joke while the other was
afraid. She slowly drew from her bag the yellow
poster that De Launay had sent back to her by Sucatash.
“You would be within the law,”
she pleaded, spreading it out before them. As
they bent over it, reading it slowly: “See.
He is a fugitive with a price on his head. Any
one may slay him and collect a reward. It is
a good deed to shoot him down.”
“Five hundred dollars looks
good,” said the lean man from Arkansas, “but
it ain’t hardly enough to set me gunnin’
for a feller I don’t know. Is this a pretty
bad actor?”
“Bad?” screamed Banker,
suddenly. “Bad! I’ve seen him
keep a chip in the air fer two or three
seconds shootin’ under it with a six-shooter!
I’ve seen him roll a bottle along the ground
as if you was a-kickin’ it, shootin’ between
it and the ground and never chippin’ the glass.
Bad! You ask Snake Murphy if he’s bad.
Snake was drunk an’ starts a fuss with him an’
his hand was still on his gun butt an’ the gun
in the holster when Louisiana shoots him in the wrist
an’ never looks at him while he’s a-doin’
it! Bad! I’ll say he’s bad!”
He was shivering and almost sick in
his sudden fright at the idea of facing Louisiana.
The others, however, were skeptical and contemptuous.
“Same old Buffalo Bill and Alkali
Ike stuff!” said the pugilist sneeringly.
“I ain’t afraid of this guy!”
“Well neither am
I,” said the man from Arkansas, complacently.
“He ain’t the only one that can shoot,
I reckon.”
Banker fairly fawned upon them.
“Yes,” he cried. “You-all are
good fellers and you ain’t afraid. You’ll
down Louisiana if he comes. But he won’t
come, I reckon.”
“He is coming,”
said Solange. “Not many hours ago I heard
him say that he was going to ‘jump your claim,’
which he said did not belong to you. And he intimated
that there would be a fight and that he would welcome
it.”
The three men were startled, looking
at one another keenly. Banker licked his lips
and was unmistakably frightened more than ever.
But in his red eyes the flame of lunacy was slowly
mounting.
“If I had old Betsy here ”
he muttered.
“He ain’t goin’
to jump this mine,” said the man from Arkansas,
grimly. “Me and Slugger, here, has an interest
in that mine. We works it on shares with Jim.
If this shootin’ sport comes round, we’ll
know what to do with him.”
“Slugger,” however, was
more practical. “We’ll take care of
him,” he agreed, slapping his side where a pistol
hung. “But if there’s money in gettin’
him, I want to know how much. What’ll you
pay, ma’am?”
“A a thousand dollars
is all I have,” said Solange. “You
shall have that, messieurs.”
But, somehow, her voice had faltered
as though she, now, were frightened at what she had
done and regretted it. Some insistent doubt,
hitherto buried under her despair and rage, was struggling
to the surface. As she watched these sinister
scoundrels muttering together and concerting the downfall
of the man who was her husband and perhaps
something more, to her she felt a panic
growing in her, an impulse to spring up and rush out,
back on the trail to warn De Launay. But she
suppressed it, cruelly scourging herself to remembrance
of her dead father and her vow of vengeance. She
tried to whip the flagging sense of outrage at the
trick that the brutal Louisiana had played upon her
in allowing her to marry him.
“If he lights around here,”
she heard Banker cackling, “we’ll down
him, we will! I’ll add a thousand more to
what the lady gives. We’ll keep a lookout,
boys, an’ when he shows up, he dies!”
Then his shrill, evil cry arose again
and men turned from their pursuits to look at him.
The foam stood on his lips, writhen into a snarl over
yellow fangs and his red eyes flamed with insanity.
“He’ll die! They
all dies! Only old Jim don’t die. French
Pete dies; Panamint dies; that there young Dave dies!
But old Jim don’t die!”
Solange turned pale as he half rose,
leaning on the table with one hand while the other
rested on the butt of his six-shooter. A great
terror surged over her as she saw what she had let
loose on her lover.
Her lover! For the first time
she realized that he was her lover and that, despite
crime and insult and deadly injury, he could be nothing
else. She staggered to her feet, shoving back
the brim of her hat, her wonderful eyes showing for
the first time as she turned them on these grim wolves
who faced her.
“My God!” said the bruiser,
in a sudden burst of awe as he was caught by the fathomless
depths. The man from Arkansas could not see them
so clearly, but he sensed something disturbing and
unusual. Banker faced her and tried to tear his
own eyes from her.
Then, as they stood and sat in tableau,
the flimsy door to the shack flew open and Louisiana
stood on the threshold, holsters sagging on each hip
and tied down around his thighs.