by Max Brand
But the glow of the fire prevented, no doubt, blinding the watchers, as little Davey had pointed out before.
It was not so much of a blaze, now, but the glow was intensely bright, as it struck up from the masses of embers. When a gust of wind struck it, the light pulsed brighter, and took on a more yellow and penetrating color.
And the first of those brighter pulses showed her, at the right of the fire, the group for which she was looking. It was very close at hand. She could see every feature of every man that faced her.
The Kid stood there with his hands and feet lashed, his back to her. Facing him was a loose semicircle of Dixon’s men; and just in front of him was Shay, his long, white face inhumanly ugly as he balanced a revolver in his right hand.
“I’m going to hold up a minute, Kid,” said he. “If you got anything to say, we’ll try to remember it for you.”
The Kid answered, and his voice was clear, free, and almost joyous.
“I can talk for quite a while, Billy, but I don’t want you to make your wrist ache, holding that heavy gun so long.”
“Don’t worry about me,” said Billy Shay. “Just talk your heart out, if you want to, Kid.”
“Well, there are only two or three things. You know Bud Trainor, some of you?”
“Yeah, I know the sucker,” said a voice.
“Well, tell Bud to forget about this. Tell him that was one of my last wishes. He might have an idea that something was expected of him.”
“Not if he’s got sense,” said the other. “But I’ll pass your word along to him.”
“Another thing,” said the Kid, “is that I’d like to have my name scratched on a rock, and the rock put at my head, so that if the Milmans get around to burying me, they’ll know who is lying here. My name is Benjamin Chapin, alias a lot of things.”
“What makes you tell us?” said Billy Shay, curiously. “After you’ve covered it up for so long, too!”
“I’ll tell you why,” said the Kid. “There’s one person in the world that I wish to learn it, and this is the only way I can make sure that the news will travel.”
“It’s a girl, Kid, I suppose?” said Shay.
“Billy,” said the Kid, “a warm, sensitive, proud heart like yours is sure to get at the truth of things. Yes, Billy, it’s a girl.”
“Yeah, you been a heartbreaker all your days,” said Billy Shay. “I’m supposin’ that she’ll bust hers when she learns how you dropped.”
“Thank you, Billy,” said the Kid. “There’s one other thing. I think that Bud Trainor may do as I want and keep his hands off you. But there’s another who won’t. Boys, watch out for him, when little Davey gets man-size.”
“Is that all?” asked Shay.
“Yes, that’s all, Billy. Go ahead.”
“No prayin’, nor nothin’ like that?”
“Prayers won’t help a man like me,” said the Kid cheerfully. “I’ve done too much that was wrong. You boys will know when you come to my place. You’ll understand what I mean when I say the prayers don’t help. Excuse me for talking a little bit like Sunday school. All right, Billy.”
“Now for you,” said Shay, stepping a little closer, and his face twisting into more consummate ugliness. “You’ve hounded me, and you’ve dogged nie. You blamed your partner’s death on me. You’re right. I plugged him and the reason that I plugged him was because he was your friend. You done me shame in Dry Creek. It ain’t a thing for me to live down. But I’ll have the taste of this to make me feel better. Kid, you’re gonna see the devil in another quarter of a second!”
And, with this, he jerked up the gun until it was level with the head of the Kid.
A report sounded, but no smoke issued from the revolver in Billy Shay’s hand. It was a sound closer to the girl, and with a wild glance, she saw that a rifle was couched against the shoulder of Bud Trainor, as he sat his saddle in the dust cloud near the fence.
The head of Billy Shay jerked back. He leaned. It was as though he wished to recoil from his victim, the Kid, but could not move his feet. Back he leaned. His body was stiff. He reached an absurd angle. It seemed as though he must be sustained by the counterpoise of some other weight.
And then he slumped heavily to the ground, with a distinct impact.
There were guns in the hands of the entire semicircle of Dixon’s men, but, with amazed, uncomprehending faces, they stared into the dust fog, and could see nothing. The firelight which made them easy targets had blinded them thoroughly.
Then Dolly Smith leaped to the side of the Kid.
“Drop, Kid, drop!” he screamed, in a voice femininely high.
And, beside the Kid, he slumped to the ground, where the fallen body of Shay lay like a shallow bulwark between them and the other guns.
CHAPTER 42
Heroes
The girl, watching with fascinated eyes, frozen in her saddle, saw the gleam of a knife in the hands of Dolly Smith as it made the two quick slashes which turned the Kid into a free, fighting man.
Then she heard the cry of her father’s voice, as he shouted: “Charge them, boys! Blow them off the face of the earth! Charge ’em! Charge ’em!”
And there, behold, black and huge between her and the firelight, appeared the form of John Milman as his horse rose for the leap and then sailed over the top strand of the barbed wire.
“Charge ’em!” shrieked the higher, more piercing voice, and she saw little Davey go over the fence a short distance away, an old revolver exploding blindly, uselessly in his hand.
Bud Trainor shouted also. It was the whoop of a wild Indian. And he, too, had taken that fence with a bound of his horse.
How the silver stallion shone as it sailed across the rose hue of the firelight!
And Dixon’s twenty heroes?
There were not more than a dozen of them in that group, in the first place. Others were off guarding the fence lines. But of the dozen who were there, it seemed that not one took any care of standing up to fight the thing out.
The surprise was complete.
They had seen that one of their best men, in the crisis, had gone over to the enemy. And then there was the spectacle of the riders plunging over the fence, shouting, calling out as if to a host, and looking greater than human in that fantastic-like haze as they rushed through the dust fog.
Dixon’s crowd did not lack leadership.
It was Champ Dixon himself who turned with a yell of fear and showed the way. But he was fairly passed by most of the others in the flight that followed.
Perhaps half a dozen wild shots plowed up the ground or uselessly whirred through the air. And all in a trice the ground was vacant.
The Kid and Dolly Smith—for Smith had armed the Kid in the first moment the latter’s hands were free—had not had to fire a shot.
It was mysterious; it was almost ludicrous. And as the formidable Dixon mob vanished into the dark of the night, Bud Trainor, his nerves giving way under the strain, began to laugh hysterically.
It seemed ridiculously easy, a thing that children could have done as well, but the girl, sitting quietly there in the dark of the night, understood perfectly. None but heroes could have done such a feat—and heroes they were, little Davey Trainor most of all, and Bud, and her own father. A tremor went through her, pulsing as if from the sound of a deep, friendly voice at her ear.
There were other men of the Dixon-Shay outfit to be accounted for, and, above all, there was the imminent danger that the fugitives, learning how small a force had struck at them, would return to blot out this insolent little group.
What could they do?
The inspiration came to her, then.
She drew the wire nippers from her pocket. Three clicks, three sounds like the snapping of bowstrings, and there was a gateway made. Like piled-up water at a breaking dam, the cattle poured through. Three more clicks and another gate. And then—for the guards had fled from this side of the fence line—the other cattle, maddened by the sight of their compansions get
ting through toward the water, pressed forward in masses. They put their tough chests against the barbs. Down they went. There were cuts and gashes, but what of that? Water was more precious than blood to these starved creatures, and sweeping in hordes through a dozen gaps, they galloped for the water. The creek was black with them!
That was not all.
The stroke at the center of the Dixon camp had dissolved all its force, it appeared. Even from the other fence line to the west of the creek, the guards had withdrawn, and the cattle, inspired by the sight of their fellows drinking on the opposite, shore, pressed in on the fence, and it also went down in great sections.
Down they rushed. A vast bellowing arose. It sounded to the gir! like the shouting of triumphant armies, legion on legion. Armies of right, which had conquered, and the wrong had gone down!
She reined her horse away from a threatening rush of the cattle. In so doing, she was forced into the small group which had taken shelter from the invading beasts behind a specially strong section of the fencing.
Davey and Bud were secure in another spot.
And here she found herself with her father, and with the Kid. Dolly Smith was near the fire itself, for the brightness of it turned the cows easily, while they still were at a considerable distance.
The Kid was on one side of her now, and her father on the other, and silently they watched the cows flooding down to the river, whose silver, star-freckled face became all black and full of strange movements.
The bellowing died down. There were clashing of horns, and clacking of hurrying, split hoofs. That was all. Even this disturbance grew less. Even for all the thousands on the ranch, there was ample water in Hurry Creek, and the starved animals were rapidly drinking to repletion.
Some of them, filled to bursting, lay down on the bank, unable to move farther. And a quiet, profound joy and trust grew up in the girl as she watched the thirsty cattle.
“Chapin,” said her father, “I’ve promised to tell Georgia. I want to tell you, also. That day when you were six years old and the thieves came at you out of the night—”
“Milman,” said the Kid, “you don’t need to tell me. Tonight has told me by itself. When I saw you jump your horse over that fence, then I knew that I was wrong.”
“Do you think that?”
“I know it.”
“I’ll tell you this much more. I’d gone north to buy cattle for the ranch. We had a chance at a bargain in a big sale, up there. I made the purchase. I started south on horseback, to see a huge section of the range, and look out for likely places to buy grazing lands for the southern drive. And, on the way, I made a fool of myself at a small town; I met those fellows you found me with. I drank too much. And that same night I rode south with them. They blundered onto your little outfit. I think I was half foolish with liquor. It merely seemed to me a silly practical joke. Then, the next morning, I realized. There was one of the thieves named Turk Reming. He seemed a decent sort of a fellow. I had to go on south. But I bought the entire lot of the cattle they had stolen, and Reming swore that he could get the money back to the man who had been plundered. I can only give you my word for that, my lad; and that I left the cattle with a dealer in the next village, and that I went on south, taking the mule along to carry my pack and make the going lighter for my horse. I can’t really ask you to believe such a cock-and-bull story. It’s the truth, but I know that no jury in the world ever would believe it!”
“Georgia,” said the Kid, “how about you, if you were on that jury?”
“She’s a prejudiced juror,” said Milman, “but—”
“I’m prejudiced, too,” said the Kid. “Georgia, have I got a good reason to be?”
John Milman grew suddenly hot with discomfort, and very tense, and then he heard his daughter say clearly, and in such a voice as he had never heard from her before:
“Ben, you have all the reason in the world. All the reason that I can give you!”