Man to Man

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Man to Man Page 11

by Jackson Gregory


  CHAPTER XI

  THE TEMPTING OF YELLOW BARBEE

  "Here's where I get down," said Steve after a very long silence duringwhich he watched Terry's pretty, puckered face while Terry, grippingher wheel, recklessly assumed the responsibilities of their threelives, hurling the car on through the moonlit night.

  Iki, breathing every now and then a long quivering sigh and forgettingto breathe betweenwhiles, held on tightly with both hands.

  "Here's where I get down," said Steve again. Here the road followedthe line of his north fence; less than a mile to the southward he couldsee a light like a fallen star, gleaming cheerfully through the trees.

  He sensed rather than saw a quick stiffening of Terry's already tenselittle body; fancied that the car was steadily taking on greater speed,read Terry's purpose in a flash. If he forced her to carry him, whythen she would take him as far out of his way as possible.

  "Terry Temple!" he cried sharply, leaning in a little toward her."What's the matter with you anyway? What if we're not friends exactly?I never did you any harm, did I? Why, good Lord, girl, when a mantells you his horse has been shot under him; when he is trying tooverhaul the crook at the bottom of the whole mess whom you hate aswell as I do-- Oh, I mean Blenham and you know it----"

  "Liar!" cried Terry, flashing her eyes at him, and back to the roadalternately white with the moon and black with shadows. "Liar on twocounts! Didn't I see your horse this afternoon? Tied in front ofWimble's whiskey joint? Oh, it's where I'd expect him! Well--and youneedn't think I looked to see or cared, either--when I came by justnow, leaving town, I saw your horse standing there yet. So youneedn't----"

  "That couldn't be," muttered Steve. "And yet-- Anyhow, I've got toget off here. Will you stop, please?"

  "No, I won't stop please! Nobody asked you to ride that I know of.Get off the same way you got on!"

  Packard realized two things very clearly then:

  If he jumped with the car going at its present speed he would probablybreak his neck; if he gave any considerable time to arguing the matterwith her he would be carried as far in five minutes as he could walk inan hour.

  "I mean business to-night," he told her bluntly. "If you don't slowdown before I count ten I am going to lean out a little--like this--andshoot a hole in your tire. Then, if you keep on, I'll shoot a hole inthe other tire. Understand?"

  Terry laughed mockingly.

  "You wouldn't dare!" she told him serenely. "That would be some kindof a crime; they could put you in jail for it. You'd be scared to."

  "One, two, three, four, five," he counted briskly.

  "I would seek to interrupt to advise, oh, Miss Lady!" chattered Iki."His voice has the sound of bloodthirstiness."

  "Six, seven, eight, nine--ten," counted Packard.

  Terry sniffed. He leaned out, she saw the glint of the moon upon hisrevolver.

  She threw out her clutch and jammed down both brakes, hard. Steveswung out and down to the ground. The car, as though it had gainedfresh power from the fact of being freed of his weight, shot forward,stopped again.

  "Not exactly friends?" cried Terry, and he marked a new trembling inher voice. "I should say not. You--you darned snake, you!"

  And she was gone, spinning along into the night, hidden from him by thefirst hill around whose base the road curved. He stared after her amoment, shrugged, turned his back, and strode rapidly toward the RanchNumber Ten corrals.

  He had planned correctly; he had correctly measured Blenham's impulsesand desires. Further, he had come in time, just in time.

  The light was in the ranch-house. Though but little after eleveno'clock it was dark within the bunk-house, the men long ago asleep.But Barbee was awake, his wits about him; his voice and Blenham's, bothquiet, met Steve's ears as he slipped about the corner of the house,coming under the window where the light was.

  Blenham was talking now. He sat loosely in a chair, his hands one uponthe other, idle in his lap. Barbee, his eyes narrowed and watchful,stood at the far side of the room. On the floor, near his feet, was arevolver; from its position Steve guessed that Barbee had just kickedit safely out of Blenham's reach. Barbee's own gun was in the boy'shand.

  "You're a pretty foxy kid, Barbee," Blenham was saying tonelessly."You got the drop on me; you're the firs' man as ever did that littletrick. Yes; you're a pretty foxy kid!"

  Barbee shrugged and spat and answered Blenham with a curse and agrunted:

  "Nobody's askin' your opinion, Blenham."

  But Steve saw and Blenham must have seen the gleam of triumph inBarbee's eye.

  "What are you goin' to do with me?" asked Blenham presently.

  "Nothin'," replied Barbee. "Jus' keep you where I got you until StevePackard comes back. Which ought to be mos' any time now."

  "He'll be late," said Blenham. "He won't be here for two or threehours. Suppose while we wait, let's me an' you talk!" he said sharply,sitting forward in his chair.

  "Well?" said Barbee. "Talk an' be damned to you, Blenham. Only youdon't talk yourself out'n the hole you're in right now. An', I promiseyou, you make a quick jump for a get-away, an' I'll shoot you dead."

  "I know," Blenham nodded. "You'd do it. But I ain't goin' to try anyfool thing like that. I'm jus' goin'-- Like I said to you, let'stalk. What's Packard payin' you for this night's work?"

  "He's no tightwad, if that's what you're drivin' at. I'd of doneto-night's job an' glad of the chance an' you know it, Blenham, an'never asked pay for it. But I'm drawin' down a whole month's payextra, if I've got you like you are when he comes in."

  Blenham laughed softly. Then he moved the hands resting in his lap.Packard saw that they were folded loosely about an old leather wallet.

  "He's sure payin' you generous, Barbee," jeered Blenham. "You know it!Why, look here: This is yours an' more to trail it if you jus' pocketyour gun an' let me go! I ain't askin' much an' I'm payin' my way.Look it over, kid!"

  Packard saw how he stripped a bank-note from a thin sheaf of itsfellows; how he tossed it toward Barbee. It fell to the floor; alittle draft set it drifting; Blenham set his foot upon it.

  "Look at it!" he snapped, for the first time giving sign of the strainhe was laboring under. "It's yours--if you ain't a fool."

  Barbee, not to be tricked were this some ruse to snare his attention,said crisply:

  "Put you' han's up while I get it!"

  Blenham obeyed; Barbee stooped swiftly, all the while with eyes rivetedon his prisoner. Then, the muzzle of his gun raised another inch, helooked at what he held. When he looked back at Blenham his eyes wereround, his mouth stood a little open.

  "My God!" he gasped. "It's a thousan' dollars!"

  "Yes," said Blenham quietly. "It's a thousan' dollars. That's quite alittle wad, Barbee; it's more, anyhow, than an extra month's wages,ain't it? An' it's yours if you want it! Think of the times you cango on, think of the way you could make Red Creek open its eyes! An'there's more to come if you take that an' let me go an' jus' watch myplay an' take a chance with me when I say so. What's the word, Barbee?"

  Packard, having held back thus long, remained motionless, glimpsingunexpectedly something of Barbee's soul; watching a little human drama,become spectator to the battle royal of the two contending factionswhich made up a man's self.

  It seemed to him that young Barbee was pale and grew paler; that ashiver ran through him; that he was, for the moment, like one drugged.And, side by side, two emotions, both primal and unmistakable, peeredout of his eyes: a savage hatred of Blenham, a leaping greed of gold.

  Thus for a little forgetting his own interest in this scene, Packardwatched, wondering what the outcome would be. Blenham tempted. Barbeehesitated.

  "Right here in my hand," Blenham was saying coldly, "are nine more likethat, Barbee. Ten thousan' dollars in all. One thousan' to go to youfor jus' keepin' out of my way. I said once you're a foxy kid. Nowlet's see if you are. Tie to a man like me that's out to make a pile,a damn
big pile, Barbee--or hang to a fool like Steve Packard an' takehis pay in dribbles an' let him be the one that gathers in all the bigkale. Him an' me when I get things goin' right; him an' me with youjus' gettin' the scraps. Which is it? Eh, kid? Which way're yougoin'?"

  Barbee held the bank-note in his left hand; slowly his callousedfingers closed tightly about it, crumpling it, clutching it as thoughthey would never release it. And then slowly the fingers opened sothat the wrinkled bit of paper lay in his palm under his eyes. Barbeeran his tongue back and forth between his dry lips. Steve, staring inat him through the window, saw in his eyes the two lights, that ofhate, that of covetousness; they burned side by side as a yellow candleand a red might have done.

  Which way would Barbee go? Did Barbee know? Blenham did not; Stevedid not. Suddenly, seeing how the two fires flickered in Barbee'seyes, Steve cried out within himself:

  "It's unfair! It's asking too much of Barbee!"

  And aloud, shoving the nose of a Colt .45 through the window-pane whichsplintered noisily:

  "Hands up there, Blenham! Good boy, Barbee. You've got him, allright! Watch him while I slip in."

  Blenham jumped to his feet, threw out his arms, and cursed savagely.Then, grown abruptly quiet, he dropped back into his chair, his two bighands loose about the wallet hidden under them. Steve threw a leg overthe window-sill and came in, his gun ready, his eyes taking stock ofBarbee while they appeared to be for Blenham only. And Barbee, whitenow as he had never been until now, shivered, filled his lungs with along sigh, and fell back a couple of paces, staring at Steve, atBlenham, but most of all at the thing in his hand.

  "You put it across, Barbee!" cried Steve heartily.

  He reached forward and snatched the wallet from Blenham's knee.Blenham's big hands, clenching slowly, fell to his sides; Blenham'seyes, sullen and evil, clung steadily to Packard's.

  "You've saved me my inheritance to-night; you've helped save me myranch. You've helped me square the game with a dirty dog namedBlenham!"

  Like a dog Blenham showed his teeth. His drawn face was stamped in theimage of fury.

  "You're a sweet picture of a dead game sport," he growled, shiftingnervously in his chair. "I ain't got a gun; you an' Barbee have; goahead an' call me all the names you like!"

  Steve counted the bank-notes in the wallet. Blenham had spoken truly;there were nine one-thousand-dollar bills. He put out his hand toBarbee for the tenth. Barbee, staring strangely like one rudelyawakened from sleep and not yet certain of his surroundings, let thebank-note go. His eyes, leaving it at last to rest steadily onBlenham, looked red and ugly. Packard slipped the wallet into hisshirt.

  "Barbee," he said quietly, while he busied his eyes with Blenham'sslightest movement, "this money was left to me by my father. He gaveit to Bill Royce to keep for me. You know all that Bill has stood fromBlenham; now you know why. There's quite a load of scoundrelism dumpedoff at Blenham's door. And, thanks to you, we've got the dead wood onhim at last!"

  "What are you goin' to do with him?" Barbee, speaking for the firsttime since Steve's entrance, was husky-voiced. Blenham shifted againin his chair; now there was only cold hatred in the boy's look. "We'dought to be able to put him in the pen for a good long time."

  Blenham laughed jeeringly.

  "Try it!" he blustered. "See what you can prove, actually prove to ajury an' a judge! Try it! You go to the law an' see----"

  "To hell with the law!" cut in Steve, and though his voice was notlifted for the imprecation Blenham shot a quick, startled look at him.

  And both Blenham and Barbee, listening wonderingly, understood thathere was a Packard talking; that in the shoes of the grandson, evennow, there might be standing the big bulk of the uncompromisinggrandfather.

  "What do I want with the law now? Blenham would wriggle out, Isuppose; or he would get a light sentence and trim that down to nothingwith good behavior. No, Blenham, if you ever go to jail it will besomebody's else doing; not mine. Is it just jail for the man who shotdown my old pardner in cold blood, just for the sake of a handful ofmoney? Is it to be just jail for the man who has made Bill Royce'slife a hell for six months? Just jail for the brute who had a horseshot under me to-night? Why, damn you--" and at last his voice brokethrough the ice of restraint and rang out angrily, full of menace--"doyou think I'm going to let you go out of my hands into the hands ofjudge and jury after all you've done?"

  Blenham sprang up, drawing back. The muzzle of Steve's .45 followedhim threateningly.

  "Barbee," said Packard, his voice once more under control, "go to thebunk-house and send Bill Royce here. Don't wake the other boys. Thenyou come back here with him. And bring a whip with you."

  "A whip?" repeated Barbee.

  "Yes; a whip. Any kind you can lay your hands to in a hurry; quirt orbuggy-whip or bull-whip!"

  Blenham watched Barbee go. Then, drawn back into a corner of the room,sullen and vigilant, he stood biting nervously at a big, clenched,hairy fist.

 

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