by Unknown
Luck grinned. "Your notion of a compromise and mine don't tally, José. Your idea is for me to give you the apple and stand by while you eat it. Trouble is that both parties to this quarrel are grabbers."
"True, but Señor Cullison must remember his hands are tied behind him. He will perhaps not find the grabbing good," his opponent suggested politely.
"Come to that, your hands are tied too, my friend. You can't hold me here forever. Put me out of business and the kid will surely settle your hash by proving up on the claim. What are you going to do about it?"
"Since you ask me, I can only say that it depends on you. Sign the relinquishment, give us your word not to prosecute, and you may leave in three hours."
Cullison shook his head. "That's where you get in wrong. Buck up against the law and you are sure to lose."
"If we lose you lose too," Dominguez answered significantly.
The tinkle of hoofs from the river bed in the gulch below rose through the clear air. The Mexican moved swiftly to the door and presently waved a handkerchief.
"What gent are you wig-wagging to now?" Luck asked from the bed. "Thought I knew all you bold bad bandits by this time. Or is it Cass back again?"
"Yes, it's Cass. There's someone with him too. It is a woman," the Mexican discovered in apparent surprise.
"A woman!" Luck took the cigar from his mouth in vague unease. "What is he doing here with a woman?"
The Mexican smiled behind his open hand. "Your question anticipates mine, Señor. I too ask the same."
The sight of his daughter in the doorway went through the cattleman with a chilling shock. She ran forward and with a pathetic cry of joy threw herself upon him where he stood. His hands were tied behind him. Only by the turn of his head and by brushing his unshaven face against hers could he answer her caresses. There was a look of ineffable tenderness on his face, for he loved her more than anything else on earth.
"Mr. Fendrick brought me," she explained when articulate expression was possible.
"He brought you, did he?" Luck looked across her shoulder at his enemy, and his eyes grew hard as jade.
"Of my own free will," she added.
"I promised you a better argument than those I'd given you. Miss Cullison is that argument," Fendrick said.
The cattleman's set face had a look more deadly than words. It told Fendrick he would gladly have killed him where he stood. For Luck knew he was cornered and must yield. Neither Dominguez nor Blackwell would consent to let her leave otherwise.
"He brought me here to have a talk with you, Dad. You must sign any paper he wants you to sign."
"And did he promise to take you back home after our talk?"
"Miss Cullison would not want to leave as long as her father was here," Fendrick answered for her glibly with a smile that said more than the words.
"I'm going to hold you responsible for bringing her here."
Fendrick could not face steadily the eyes of his foe. They bored into him like gimlets.
"And responsible for getting her back home just as soon as I say the word," Luck added, the taut muscles standing out in his clenched jaw.
"I expect your say-so won't be final in this matter, Luck. But I'll take the responsibility. Miss Cullison will get home at the proper time."
"I'm not going home till you do," the girl broke in. "Oh, Dad, we've been so worried. You can't think."
"You've played a rotten trick on me, Fendrick. I wouldn't have thought it even of a sheepman."
"No use you getting crazy with the heat, Cullison. Your daughter asked me to bring her here, and I brought her. Of course I'm not going to break my neck getting her home where she can 'phone Bolt or Bucky O'Connor and have us rounded up. That ain't reasonable to expect. But I aim to do what's right. We'll all have supper together like sensible folks. Then José and I will give you the cabin for the night if you'll promise not to attempt to escape. In the morning maybe you'll see things different."
Fendrick calculated not without reason that the best thing to do would be to give Kate a chance for a long private talk with her father. Her influence would be more potent than any he could bring to bear.
After supper the door of the cabin was locked and a sentry posted. The prisoners were on parole, but Cass did not on that account relax his vigilance. For long he and his partner could hear a low murmur of voices from within the cabin. At length the lights went out and presently the voices died. But all through the night one or the other of the sheepmen patroled a beat that circled around and around the house.
Fendrick did not broach the subject at issue next morning till after breakfast.
"Well, what have you decided?" he asked at last.
"Let's hear about that compromise. What is it you offer?" Luck demanded gruffly.
"You sign the relinquishment and agree not to make us any trouble because we brought you here, and you may go by two o'clock."
"You want to reach Saguache with the relinquishment in time to file it before I could get to a 'phone. You don't trust me."
Fendrick smiled. "When we let you go we're trusting you a heap more than we would most men. But of course you're going to be sore about this and we don't want to put temptation in your way."
"I see. Well, I accept your terms. I'll make you no legal trouble. But I tell you straight this thing ain't ended. It's only just begun. I'm going to run you out of this country before I'm through with you."
"Go to it. We'll see whether you make good."
"Where is that paper you want me to sign?"
Luck dashed off his signature and pushed the document from him. He hated the necessity that forced him to surrender. For himself he would have died rather than give way, but he had to think of his daughter and of his boy Sam who was engaged in a plot to hold up a train.
His stony eyes met those of the man across the table. "No need for me to tell you what I think of this. A white man wouldn't have done such a trick. It takes sheepherders and greasers to put across a thing so damnable as dragging a woman into a feud."
Fendrick flushed angrily. "It's not my fault; you're a pigheaded obstinate chump. I used the only weapon left me."
Kate, standing straight and tall behind her father's chair, looked at their common foe with uncompromising scorn. "He is not to blame, Dad. He can't help it because he doesn't see how despicable a thing he has done."
Again the blood rushed to the face of the sheepman. "I reckon that will hold me hitched for the present, Miss Cullison. In the meantime I'll go file that homestead entry of mine. Nothing like living up to the opinion your friends have of you."
He wheeled away abruptly, but as he went out of the door one word came to him.
"Friends!" Kate had repeated, and her voice told fully the contempt she felt.
At exactly two o'clock Dominguez set the Cullisons on the homeward road. He fairly dripped apologies for the trouble to which he and his friends had been compelled to put them.
Blackwell, who had arrived to take his turn as guard, stood in the doorway and sulkily watched them go.
[Illustration: SHE WAS THANKING GOD THE AFFAIR WAS ENDED]
From the river bed below the departing guests looked up at the cabin hidden in the pines. The daughter was thanking God in her heart that the affair was ended. Her father was vowing to himself that it had just begun.
CHAPTER XII
AN ARREST
After half a week in the saddle Lieutenant Bucky O'Connor of the Arizona Rangers and Curly Flandrau reached Saguache tired and travel-stained. They had combed the Rincons without having met hide or hair of the men they wanted. Early next morning they would leave town again and this time would make for Soapy Stone's horse ranch.
Bucky O'Connor was not disheartened. Though he was the best man hunter in Arizona, it was all in the day's work that criminals should sometimes elude him. But with Curly the issue was a personal one. He owed Luck Cullison a good deal and his imagination had played over the picture of that moment when he could go to Kate and
tell her he had freed her father.
After reaching town the first thing each of them did was to take a bath, the second to get shaved. From the barber shop they went to the best restaurant in Saguache. Curly was still busy with his pie à la mode when Burridge Thomas, United States Land Commissioner for that district, took the seat opposite and told to O'Connor a most interesting piece of news.
They heard him to an end without interruption. Then Curly spoke one word. "Fendrick."
"Yes, sir, Cass Fendrick. Came in about one o'clock and handed me the relinquishment just as I've been telling you."
"Then filed on the claim himself, you said."
"Yes, took it up himself."
"Sure the signature to the relinquishment was genuine?"
"I'd take oath to it. As soon as he had gone I got out the original filing and compared the two. Couldn't be any possible mistake. Nobody could have forged the signature. It is like Luck himself, strong and forceful and decided."
"We're not entirely surprised, Mr. Thomas," Lieutenant O'Connor told the commissioner. "In point of fact we've rather been looking for something of the kind."
"Then you know where Luck is?" Thomas, a sociable garrulous soul, leaned forward eagerly.
"No, we don't. But we've a notion Fendrick knows." Bucky gave the government appointee his most blandishing smile. "Of course we know you won't talk about this, Mr. Thomas. Can we depend on your deputies?"
"I'll speak to them."
"We're much obliged to you. This clears up a point that was in doubt to us. By the way, what was the date when the relinquishment was signed?"
"To-day."
"And who was the notary that witnessed it?"
"Dominguez. He's a partner of Fendrick in the sheep business."
"Quite a family affair, isn't it. Well, I'll let you know how things come out, Mr. Thomas. You'll be interested to know. Have a cigar."
Bucky rose. "See you later, Curly. Sorry I have to hurry, Mr. Thomas, but I've thought of something I'll have to do right away."
Bucky followed El Molino Street to the old plaza and cut across it to the Hotel Wayland. After a sharp scrutiny of the lobby and a nod of recognition to an acquaintance he sauntered to the desk and looked over the register. There, among the arrivals of the day, was the entry he had hoped to see.
Cass Fendrick, C. F. Ranch, Arizona.
The room that had been assigned to him was 212.
"Anything you want in particular, Lieutenant?" the clerk asked.
"No-o. Just looking to see who came in to-day."
He turned away and went up the stairs, ignoring the elevator. On the second floor he found 212. In answer to his knock a voice said "Come in." Opening the door, he stepped in, closed it behind him, and looked at the man lying in his shirt sleeves on the bed.
"Evening, Cass."
Fendrick put down his newspaper but did not rise. "Evening, Bucky."
Their eyes held to each other with the level even gaze of men who recognize a worthy antagonist.
"I've come to ask a question or two."
"Kick them out."
"First, I would like to know what you paid Luck Cullison for his Del Oro claim."
"Thinking of buying me out?" was the ironical retort of the man on the bed.
"Not quite. I've got another reason for wanting to know."
"Then you better ask Cullison. The law says that if a man sells a relinquishment he can't file on another claim. If he surrenders it for nothing he can. Now Luck may have notions of filing on another claim. You can see that we'll have to take it for granted he gave me the claim."
It was so neat an answer and at the same time so complete a one that O'Connor could not help appreciating it. He smiled and tried again.
"We'll put that question in the discard. That paper was signed by Luck to-day. Where was he when you got it from him?"
"Sure it was signed to-day? Couldn't it have been ante-dated?"
"You know better than I do. When was it signed?"
Fendrick laughed. He was watching the noted officer of rangers with narrowed wary eyes. "On advice of counsel I decline to answer."
"Sorry, Cass. That leaves me only one thing to do. You're under arrest."
"For what?" demanded the sheepman sharply.
"For abducting Luck Cullison and holding him prisoner without his consent."
Lazily Cass drawled a question. "Are you right sure Cullison can't be found?"
"What do you mean?"
"Are you right sure he ain't at home attending to his business?"
"Has he come back?"
"Maybe so. I'm not Luck Cullison's keeper."
Bucky thought he understood. In return for the relinquishment Cullison had been released. Knowing Luck as he did, it was hard for him to see how pressure enough had been brought to bear to move him.
"May I use your 'phone?" he asked.
"Help yourself."
Fendrick pretended to have lost interest. He returned to his newspaper, but his ears were alert to catch what went on over the wires. It was always possible that Cullison might play him false and break the agreement. Cass did not expect this, for the owner of the Circle C was a man whose word was better than most men's bond. But the agreement had been forced upon him through a trick. How far he might feel this justified him in ignoring it the sheepman did not know.
O'Connor got the Circle C on long distance. It was the clear contralto of a woman that answered his "Hello!"
"Is this Miss Cullison?" he asked. Almost at once he added: "O'Connor of the rangers is speaking. I've heard your father is home again. Is that true?"
An interval followed during which the ranger officer was put into the role of a listener. His occasional "Yes----Yes----Yes" punctuated the rapid murmur that reached Fendrick.
Presently Bucky asked a question. "On his way to town now?"
Again the rapid murmur.
"I'll attend to that, Miss Cullison. I am in Fendrick's room now. Make your mind easy."
Bucky hung up and turned to the sheepman. The latter showed him a face of derision. He had gathered one thing that disquieted him, but he did not intend to let O'Connor know it.
"Well?" he jeered. "Find friend Cullison in tolerable health?"
"I've been talking with his daughter."
"I judged as much. Miss Spitfire well?"
"Miss Cullison didn't mention her health. We were concerned about yours."
"Yes?"
"Cullison is headed for town and his daughter is afraid he is on the warpath against you."
"You don't say."
"She wanted me to get you out of her father's way until he has cooled down."
"Very kind of her."
"She's right, too. You and Luck mustn't meet yet. Get out of here and hunt cover in the hills for a few days. You know why better than I do."
"How can I when I'm under arrest?" Fendrick mocked.
"You're not under arrest. Miss Cullison says her father has no charge to bring against you."
"Good of him."
"So you can light a shuck soon as you want to."
"Which won't be in any hurry."
"Don't make any mistake. Luck Cullison is a dangerous man when he is roused."
The sheepman looked at the ranger with opaque stony eyes. "If Luck Cullison is looking for me he is liable to find me, and he won't have to go into the hills to hunt me either."
Bucky understood perfectly. According to the code of the frontier no man could let himself be driven from town by the knowledge that another man was looking for him with a gun. There are in the Southwest now many thousands who do not live by the old standard, who are anchored to law and civilization as a protection against primitive passions. But Fendrick was not one of these. He had deliberately gone outside of the law in his feud with the cattleman. Now he would not repudiate the course he had chosen and hedge because of the danger it involved. He was an aspirant to leadership among the tough hard-bitted denizens of the sunbaked desert. That being
so, he had to see his feud out to a fighting finish if need be.
"There are points about this case you have overlooked," Bucky told him.
"Maybe so. But the important one that sticks out like a sore thumb is that no man living can serve notice on me to get out of town because he is coming on the shoot."
"Luck didn't serve any such notice. All his daughter knows is that he is hot under the collar. Look at things reasonably, Cass. You've caused that young lady a heap of trouble already. Are you going to unload a lot more on her just because you want to be pigheaded. Only a kid struts around and hollers 'Who's afraid?' No, it's up to you to pull out, not because of Luck Cullison but on account of his daughter."