Delphi Collected Works of Max Brand US

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Delphi Collected Works of Max Brand US Page 339

by Max Brand


  Big George did not move.

  “I been sent, mister,” he said mildly. “I been sent for enough mint to make a julep.”

  “You been sent to the wrong place,” declared Andy, hitching at his cartridge belt. “Ain’t you seen that sign?”

  And he pointed to the one which eliminated colored patrons.

  “Signs don’t mean nothin’ to my boss,” said George.

  “Who’s he?”

  “Donnegan.”

  “And who’s Donnegan?”

  It puzzled George. He scratched his head in bewilderment seeking for an explanation. “Donnegan is — Donnegan,” he explained.

  “I heard Gloster talk about him,” offered someone in the rapidly growing group. “He’s the gent that rented the two places on the hill.”

  “Tell him to come himse’f,” said Andy Lewis. “We don’t play no favorites at Milligan’s.”

  “Mister,” said big George, “I don’t want to bring no trouble on this heah place, but — don’t make me go back and bring Donnegan.”

  Even Andy Lewis was staggered by this assurance.

  “Rules is rules,” he finally decided. “And out you go.”

  Big George stepped from the doorway and mounted his horse.

  “I call on all you gen’lemen,” he said to the assembled group, “to say that I done tried my best to do this peaceable. It ain’t me that’s sent for Donnegan; it’s him!”

  He rode away, leaving Scar-faced Lewis biting his long mustaches in anxiety. He was not exactly afraid, but he waited in the suspense which comes before a battle. Moreover, an audience was gathering. The word went about as only a rumor of mischief can travel. New men had gathered. The few day gamblers tumbled out of Lebrun’s across the street to watch the fun. The storekeepers were in their doors. Lebrun himself, withered and dark and yellow of eye, came to watch. And here and there through the crowd there was a spot of color where the women of the town appeared. And among others, Nelly Lebrun with Jack Landis beside her. On the whole it was not a large crowd, but what it lacked in size it made up in intense interest.

  For though The Corner had had its share of troubles of fist and gun, most of them were entirely impromptu affairs. Here was a fight in the offing for which the stage was set, the actors set in full view of a conveniently posted audience, and all the suspense of a curtain rising. The waiting bore in upon Andy Lewis. Without a doubt he intended to kill his man neatly and with dispatch, but the possibility of missing before such a crowd as this sent a chill up and down his spine. If he failed now his name would be a sign for laughter ever after in The Corner.

  A hum passed down the street; it rose to a chuckle, and then fell away to sudden silence, for Donnegan was coming.

  He came on a prancing chestnut horse which sidled uneasily on a weaving course, as though it wished to show off for the benefit of the rider and the crowd at once. It was a hot afternoon and Donnegan’s linen riding suit shone an immaculate white. He came straight down the street, as unaware of the audience which awaited him as though he rode in a park where crowds were the common thing. Behind him came George Green, just a careful length back. Rumor went before the two with a whisper on either side.

  “That’s Donnegan. There he comes!”

  “Who’s Donnegan?”

  “Gloster’s man. The one who bluffed out Gloster and three others.”

  “He pulled his shooting iron and trimmed the whiskers of one of ’em with a chunk of lead.”

  “D’you mean that?”

  “What’s that kind of a gent doing in The Corner?”

  “Come to buy, I guess. He looks like money.”

  “Looks like a confounded dude.”

  “We’ll see his hand in a minute.”

  Donnegan was now opposite the dance hall, and Andy Lewis had his hand touching the butt of his gun, but though Donnegan was looking straight at him, he kept his reins in one hand and his heavy riding crop in the other. And without a move toward his own gun, he rode straight up to the door of the dance hall, with Andy in front of it. George drew rein behind him and turned upon the crowd one broad, superior grin.

  As who should say: “I promised you lightning; now watch it strike!”

  If the crowd had been expectant before, it was now reduced to wire-drawn tenseness.

  “Are you the fellow who turned back my man?” asked Donnegan.

  His quiet voice fell coldly upon the soul of Andy. He strove to warm himself by an outbreak of temper.

  “They ain’t any poor fool dude can call me a fellow!” he shouted.

  The crowd blinked; but when it opened its eyes the gunplay had not occurred. The hand of Andy was relaxing from the butt of his gun and an expression of astonishment and contempt was growing upon his face.

  “I haven’t come to curse you,” said the rider, still occupying his hands with crop and reins. “I’ve come to ask you a question and get an answer. Are you the fellow who turned back my man?”

  “I guess you ain’t the kind I was expectin’ to call on me,” drawled Andy, his fear gone, and he winked at the crowd. But the others were not yet ready to laugh. Something about the calm face of Donnegan had impressed them. “Sure, I’m the one that kicked him out. He ain’t allowed in there.”

  “It’s the last of my thoughts to break in upon a convention in your city,” replied the grave rider, “but my man was sent on an errand and therefore he had a right to expect courtesy. George, get off your horse and go into Milligan’s place. I want that mint!”

  For a moment Andy was too stunned to answer. Then his voice came harshly and he swayed from side to side, gathering and summoning his wrath.

  “Keep out boy! Keep out, or you’re buzzard meat. I’m warnin’—”

  For the first time his glance left the rider to find George, and that instant was fatal. The hand of Donnegan licked out as the snake’s tongue darts — the loaded quirt slipped over in his hand, and holding it by the lash he brought the butt of it thudding on the head of Andy.

  Even then the instinct to fight remained in the stunned man; while he fell, he was drawing the revolver; he lay in a crumpling heap at the feet of Donnegan’s horse with the revolver shoved muzzle first into the sand.

  Donnegan’s voice did not rise.

  “Go in and get that mint, George,” he ordered. “And hurry. This rascal has kept me waiting until I’m thirsty.”

  Big George hesitated only one instant — it was to sweep the crowd for the second time with his confident grin — and he strode through the door of the dance hall. As for Donnegan, his only movement was to swing his horse around and shift riding crop and reins into the grip of his left hand. His other hand was dropped carelessly upon his hip. Now, both these things were very simple maneuvers, but The Corner noted that his change of face had enabled Donnegan to bring the crowd under his eye, and that his right hand was now ready for a more serious bit of work if need be. Moreover, he was probing faces with his glance. And every armed man in that group felt that the eye of the rider was directed particularly toward him.

  There had been one brief murmur; then the silence lay heavily again, for it was seen that Andy had been only slightly stunned — knocked out, as a boxer might be. Now his sturdy brains were clearing. His body stiffened into a human semblance once more; he fumbled, found the butt of his gun with his first move. He pushed his hat straight: and so doing he raked the welt which the blow had left on his head. The pain finished clearing the mist from his mind; in an instant he was on his feet, maddened with shame. He saw the semicircle of white faces, and the whole episode flashed back on him. He had been knocked down like a dog.

  For a moment he looked into the blank faces of the crowd; someone noted that there was no gun strapped at the side of Donnegan. A voice shouted a warning.

  “Stop, Lewis. The dude ain’t got a gun. It’s murder!”

  It was now that Lewis saw Donnegan sitting the saddle directly behind him, and he whirled with a moan of fury. It was a twist of his body — in
his eagerness — rather than a turning upon his feet. And he was half around before the rider moved. Then he conjured a gun from somewhere in his clothes. There was the flash of the steel, an explosion, and Scar-faced Lewis was on his knees with a scream of pain holding his right forearm with his left hand.

  The crowd hesitated still for a second, as though it feared to interfere; but Donnegan had already put up his weapon. A wave of the curious spectators rushed across the street and gathered around the injured man. They found that he had been shot through the fleshy part of the thumb, and the bullet, ranging down the arm, had sliced a furrow to the bone all the way to the elbow. It was a grisly wound.

  Big George Washington Green came running to the door of the dance hall with a sprig of something green in his hand; one glance assured him that all was well; and once more that wide, confident grin spread upon his face. He came to the master and offered the mint; and Donnegan, raising it to his face, inhaled the scent deeply.

  “Good,” he said. “And now for a julep, George! Let’s go home!”

  Across the street a dark-eyed girl had clasped the arm of her companion in hysterical excitement.

  “Did you see?” she asked of her tall companion.

  “I saw a murderer shoot down a man; he ought to be hung for it!”

  “But the mint! Did you see him smile over it? Oh, what a devil he is; and what a man!”

  Jack Landis flashed a glance of suspicion down at her, but her dancing eyes had quite forgotten him. They were following the progress of Donnegan down the street. He rode slowly, and George kept that formal distance, just a length behind.

  CHAPTER 18

  BEFORE MILLIGAN’S THE crowd began to buzz like murmuring hornets around a nest that has been tapped, when they pour out and cannot find the disturber. It was a rather helpless milling around the wounded man, and Nelly Lebrun was the one who worked her way through the crowd and came to Andy Lewis. She did not like Andy. She had been known to refer to him as a cowardly hawk of a man; but now she bullied the crowd in a shrill voice and made them bring water and cloth. Then she cleansed and bandaged the wound in Andy Lewis’ arm and had some of them take him away.

  By this time the outskirts of the crowd had melted away; but those who had really seen all parts of the little drama remained to talk. The subject was a real one. Had Donnegan aimed at the hand of Andy and risked his own life on his ability to disable the other without killing him? Or had he fired at Lewis’ body and struck the hand and arm only by a random lucky chance?

  If the second were the case, he was only a fair shot with plenty of nerve and a great deal of luck. If the first were true, then this was a nerve of ice- tempered steel, an eye vulture-sharp, and a hand, miraculous, fast, and certain. To strike that swinging hand with a snap shot, when a miss meant a bullet fired at his own body at deadly short range — truly it would take a credulous man to believe that Donnegan had coldly planned to disable his man without killing him.

  “A murderer by intention,” exclaimed Milligan. He had hunted long and hard before he found a man with a face like that of Lewis, capable of maintaining order by a glance; now he wanted revenge. “A murder by intention!” he cried to the crowd, standing beside the place where the imprint of Andy’s knees was still in the sand. “And like a murderer he ought to be treated. He aimed to kill Andy; he had luck and only broke his hand. Now, boys, I say it ain’t so much what he’s done as the way he’s done it. He’s given us the laugh. He’s come in here in his dude clothes and tried to walk over us. But it don’t work. Not in The Corner. If Andy was dead, I’d say lynch the dude. But he ain’t, and all I say is: Run him out of town.”

  Here there was a brief outburst of applause, but when it ended, it was observed that there was a low, soft laughter. The crowd gave way between Milligan and the mocker. It was seen that he who laughed was old Lebrun, rubbing his olive-skinned hands together and showing his teeth in his mirth. There was no love lost between Lebrun and Milligan, even if Nelly was often in the dance hall and the center of its merriment.

  “It takes a thief to catch a thief,” said Lebrun enigmatically, when he saw that he had the ear of the crowd, “and it takes a man to catch a man.”

  “What the devil do you mean by that?” a dozen voices asked.

  “I mean, that if you got men enough to run out this man Donnegan, The Corner is a better town than I think.”

  It brought a growl, but no answer. Lebrun had never been seen to lift his hand, but he was more dreaded than a rattler.

  “We’ll try,” said Milligan dryly. “I ain’t much of a man myself” — there were dark rumors about Milligan’s past and the crowd chuckled at this modesty— “but I’ll try my hand agin’ him with a bit of backing. And first I want to tell you boys that they ain’t any danger of him having aimed at Andy’s hand. I tell you, it ain’t possible, hardly, for him to have planned to hit a swingin’ target like that. Maybe some could do it. I dunno.”

  “How about Lord Nick?”

  “Sure, Lord Nick might do anything. But Donnegan ain’t Lord Nick.”

  “Not by twenty pounds and three inches.”

  This brought a laugh. And by comparison with the terrible and familiar name of Lord Nick, Donnegan became a smaller danger. Besides, as Milligan said, it was undoubtedly luck. And when he called for volunteers, three or four stepped up at once. The others made a general milling, as though each were trying to get forward and each were prevented by the crowd in front. But in the background big Jack Landis was seriously trying to get to the firing line. He was encumbered with the clinging weight of Nelly Lebrun.

  “Don’t go, Jack,” she pleaded. “Please! Please! Be sensible. For my sake!”

  She backed this appeal with a lifting of her eyes and a parting of her lips, and Jack Landis paused.

  “You won’t go, dear Jack?”

  Now, Jack knew perfectly well that the girl was only half sincere. It is the peculiar fate of men that they always know when a woman is playing with them, but, from Samson down, they always go to the slaughter with open eyes, hoping each moment that the girl has been seriously impressed at last. As for Jack Landis, his slow mind did not readily get under the surface of the arts of Nelly, but he knew that there was at least a tinge of real concern in the girl’s desire to keep him from the posse which Milligan was raising.

  “But they’s something about him that I don’t like, Nelly. Something sort of familiar that I don’t like.” For naturally enough he did not recognize the transformed Donnegan, and the name he had never heard before. “A gunfighter, that’s what he is!”

  “Why, Jack, sometimes they call you the same thing; say that you hunt for trouble now and then!”

  “Do they say that?” asked the young quickly, flushing with vanity. “Oh, I aim to take care of myself. And I’d like to take a hand with this murdering Donnegan.”

  “Jack, listen! Don’t go; keep away from him!”

  “Why do you look like that? As if I was a dead one already.”

  “I tell you, Jack, he’d kill you!”

  Something in her terrible assurance whitened the cheeks of Landis, but he was also angered. When a very young man becomes both afraid and angry he is apt to be dangerous. “What do you know of him?” he asked suspiciously.

  “You silly! But I saw his face when he lifted that mint. He’d already forgotten about the man he had just shot down. He was thinking of nothing but the scent of the mint. And did you notice his giant servant? He never had a moment’s doubt of Donnegan’s ability to handle the entire crowd. I tell you, it gave me a chill of ghosts to see the big black fellow’s eyes. He knew that Donnegan would win. And Donnegan won! Jack, you’re a big man and a strong man and a brave man, and we all know it. But don’t be foolish. Stay away from Donnegan!”

  He wavered just an instant. If she could have sustained her pleading gaze a moment longer she would have won him, but at the critical instant her gaze became distant. She was seeing the calm face of Donnegan as he raised the mint. A
nd as though he understood, Jack Landis hardened.

  “I’m glad you don’t want me shot up, Nelly,” he said coldly. “Mighty good of you to watch out for me. But — I’m going to run this Donnegan out of town!”

  “He’s never harmed you; why—”

  “I don’t like his looks. For a man like me that’s enough!”

  And he strode away toward Milligan. He was greeted by a cheer just as the girl reached the side of her father.

  “Jack is going,” she said. “Make him come back!”

  But the old man was still rubbing his hands; there seemed to be a perpetual chill in the tips of the fingers.

  “He is a jackass. The moment I first saw his face I knew that he was meant for gun fodder — buzzard food! Let him go. Bah!”

  The girl shivered. “And then the mines?” she asked, changing her tactics.

  “Ah, yes. The mines! But leave that to Lord Nick. He’ll handle it well enough!”

  So Jack Landis strode up the hill first and foremost of the six stalwart men who wished to correct the stranger’s apparent misunderstandings of the status of The Corner. They were each armed to the teeth and each provided with enough bullets to disturb a small city. All this in honor of Donnegan.

  They found the shack wrapped in the warm, mellow light of the late afternoon; and on a flat-topped rock outside it big George sat whittling a stick into a grotesque imitation of a snake coiled. He did not rise when the posse approached. He merely rocked back upon the rock, embraced his knees in both of his enormous arms, and, in a word, transformed himself into a round ball of mirth. But having hugged away his laughter he was able to convert his joy into a vast grin. That smile stopped the posse. When a mob starts for a scene of violence the least exhibition of fear incenses it, but mockery is apt to pour water on its flames of anger.

  Decidedly the fury of the posse was chilled by the grin of George. Milligan, who had lived south of the Mason-Dixon line, stepped up to impress George properly.

  “Boy,” he said, frowning, “go in and tell your man that we’ve come for him. Tell him to step right out here and get ready to talk. We don’t mean him no harm less’n he can’t explain one or two things. Hop along!”

 

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