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The Barrier

Page 21

by Beach, Rex Ellingwood


  "You'll get your share—"

  "Bah! You don't know what I mean. I don't want you; it's him I'm after, and when I'm done with him I'll take care of you; but I won't run any risk right now. I won't take a chance on losing what I've risked so much to gain, what I've lived these fifteen years to get. You might put me away—there's the possibility—and I won't let you or any other man—or woman either, not even my girl—cheat me out of Gale. Put up your gun."

  The soldier hesitated, then did as he was bidden, for this man knew him better than he knew himself.

  "I ought to treat you like a mad dog, but I can't do it while your hands are up. I'm going to fight for John Gale, however, and you can't take him."

  "I'll have his carcass hung to my ridge-pole before daylight."

  "No."

  "I say yes!" Stark turned to go, but paused at the door. "And you think you'll marry Necia, do you?"

  "I know it."

  "Like hell you will! Suppose you find her first."

  "What do you mean? Wait—"

  But his visitor was gone, leaving behind him a lover already sorely vexed, and now harassed by a new and sudden apprehension. What venom the man distilled! Could it be that he had sent Necia away? Burrell scouted the idea. She wasn't the kind to go at Stark's mere behest; and as for his forcing her, why, this was not an age of abductions! He might aim to take her, but it would require some time to establish his rights, and even then there were Gale and himself to be reckoned with. Still, this was no time for idling, and he might as well make certain, so the young man put on his coat hurriedly, knowing there was work to do There was no telling what this night would bring forth, but first he must warn his friend, after which they would fight this thing together, not as soldier and civilian, but as man and man, not for the law, but against it. He smiled as he realized the situation. Well, he was through with the army, anyhow; his path was strange and new from this time henceforth, and led him away from all he had known, taking him among other peoples; but he did not flinch, for it led to her. Behind him was that former life; to-night he began anew.

  Stark traced his way back to his cabin in a ten times fiercer mood than he had come, reviling, cursing, hating; back past the dark trading-post he went, pausing to shake his clenched fist and grind out an oath between his teeth; past the door of his own saloon, which was a-light, and whence came the sound of revelry, through the scattered houses, where he went more by feel than by sight, up to the door of his own shack. He fitted his key in the lock, but the door swung open without his aid, at which he remembered that he had only pulled it after him when he came away with Necia. He closed it behind him now, and locked it, for he had some thinking to do; then felt through his pockets for a match, and, striking it, bent over his lamp to adjust the wick. It flared up steady and strong at last, flooding the narrow place with its illumination; then he straightened up and turned towards the bed to throw off his coat, when suddenly every muscle of his body leaped with an uncontrollable spasm, as if he had uncovered a deadly serpent coiled and ready to spring. In spite of himself his lungs contracted as if with the grip of giant hands, and his breath came forth in a startled cry.

  John Gale was sitting at his table, barely an arm's-length away, his gray-blue eyes fixed upon him, and the deep seams of his heavy face set as if graven in stone. His huge, knotted hands were upon the table, and between them lay a naked knife.

  CHAPTER XVI

  JOHN GALE'S HOUR

  It was a heathenish time of night to arouse the girl, thought Burrell, as he left the barracks, but he must allay these fears that were besetting him, he must see Necia at once. The low, drifting clouds obscured what star-glow there was in the heavens, and he stepped back to light a lantern. By its light he looked at his watch and exclaimed, then held it to his ear. Five hours had passed since he left Gale's house. Well, the call was urgent, and Necia would understand his anxiety.

  A few moments later he stood above the squaw, who crouched on the trader's doorstep, wailing her death song into the night. He could not check her; she paid no heed to him, but only rocked and moaned and chanted that strange, weird song which somehow gave strength to his fears.

  "What's wrong; where is Necia? Where is she?" he demanded, and at last seized her roughly, facing her to the light, but Alluna only blinked owlishly at his lantern and shook her head.

  "Gone away," she finally informed him, and began to weave again in her despair, but he held her fiercely.

  "Where has she gone? When did she go?" He shook her to quicken her reply.

  "I don' know. I don' know. Long time she's gone now." She trailed off into Indian words he could not comprehend, so he pushed past her into the house to see for himself, and without knocking flung Necia's door open and stepped into her chamber. Before he had swept the unfamiliar room with his eyes he knew that she had indeed gone, and gone hurriedly, for the signs of disorder betrayed a reckless haste. Hanging across the back of a chair was what had once been the wondrous dress, Poleon's gift, now a damp and draggled ruin, and on the floor were two sodden satin slippers and a pair of wet silk stockings. He picked up the lace gown and saw that it was torn from shoulder to waist. What insanity had possessed the girl to rip her garment thus?

  "She take her 'nother dress; the one I make las' summer," said Alluna, who had followed him in and stood staring as he stared.

  "When did she go, Alluna? For God's sake, what does this mean?"

  "I don' know! She come and she go, and I don' see her; mebbe three, four hour ago."

  "Where's Gale? He'll know. He's gone after her, eh?"

  The upward glow of the lantern heightened the young man's pallor, and again the squaw broke into her sad lament.

  "John Gale—he's gone away with the knife of my father. I am afraid—I am afraid."

  Burrell forced himself to speak calmly; this was no time to let his wits stampede.

  "How long ago?"

  "Long time."

  "Did he come back here just now?"

  "No; he went to the jail-house, and he would not let me follow. He don' come back no more."

  This was confusing, and Meade cried, angrily:

  "Why didn't you give the alarm? Why didn't you come to me instead of yelling your lungs out around the house?"

  "He told me to wait," she said, simply.

  "Go find Poleon, quick."

  "He told me to wait," she repeated, stoically, and Burrell knew he was powerless to move her. He saw the image of a great terror in the woman's face. The night suddenly became heavy with the hint of unspeakable things, and he grew fearful, suspecting now that Gale had told him but a part of his story, that all the time he knew Stark's identity, and that his quarry was at hand, ready for the kill; or, if not, he had learned enough while standing behind that partition. Where was he now? Where was Necia? What part did she play in this? Stark's parting words struck Burrell again like a blow. This life-long feud was drawing swiftly to some tragic culmination, and somewhere out in the darkness those two strong, hate-filled men were settling their scores. All at once a fear for the trader's life came upon the young man, and he realized that a great bond held them together. He could not think clearly, because of the dread thing that gripped him at thought of Necia. Was he to lose her, after all? He gave up trying to think, and fled for Stark's saloon, reasoning that where one was the other must be near, and there would surely be some word of Necia. He burst through the door; a quick glance over the place showed it empty of those he sought, but, spying Poleon Doret, he dragged him outside, inquiring breathlessly:

  "Have you seen Gale?"

  "Have you seen Stark? Has he been about?"

  "Yes, wan hour, mebbe two hour ago. W'y? Wat for you ask?"

  "There's the devil to pay. Those two have come together, and Necia is gone."

  "Necia gone?" the Canadian jerked out. "Wat you mean by dat? Were she's gone to?"

  "I don't know—nobody knows. God! I'm shaking like a leaf."

  "Bah! She's feel purty bad! Sh
e's go out by herse'f. Dat's all right."

  "I tell you something has happened to her; there's hell to pay. I found her clothes at the house torn to ribbons and all muddy and wet."

  Poleon cried out at this.

  "We've got to find her and Gale, and we haven't a minute to lose. I'm afraid we're too late as it is. I wish it was daylight. Damn the darkness, anyhow! It makes it ten times harder."

  His incoherence alarmed his listener more than his words.

  "Were have you look?"

  "I've been to the house, but Alluna is crazy, and says Gale has gone to kill Stark, as near as I can make out. Both of them were at my quarters to-night, and I'm afraid the squaw is right."

  "But w'ere is Necia?"

  "We don't know; maybe Stark has got her."

  The Frenchman cursed horribly. "Have you try hees cabane?"

  "No."

  Without answer the Frenchman darted away, and the Lieutenant sped after him through the deserted rows of log-houses.

  "Ha! Dere's light," snarled Doret, over his shoulder, as they neared their goal.

  "Be careful," panted Burrell. "Wait! Don't knock." He forced Poleon to pause. "Let's find out who's inside. Remember, we're working blind."

  He gripped his companion's arm with fingers of steel, and together they crept up to the door, but even before they had gained it they heard a voice within. It was Stark's. The walls of the house were of moss-chinked logs that deadened every sound, but the door itself was of thin, whip-sawed pine boards with ample cracks at top and bottom, and, the room being of small dimensions, they heard plainly. The Lieutenant leaned forward, then with difficulty smothered an exclamation, for he heard another voice now—the voice of John Gale. The words came to him muffled but distinct, and he raised his hand to knock, when, suddenly arrested, he seized Poleon and forced him to his knees, hissing into his ear:

  "Listen! Listen! For God's sake, listen!"

  For the first time in his tempestuous life Ben Stark lost the iron composure that had made his name a by-word in the West, and at sight of his bitterest enemy seated in the dark of his own house waiting for him he became an ordinary, nervous, frightened man faced by a great peril. It was the utter unexpectedness of the thing that shook him, and before he could regain his balance Gale spoke:

  "I've come to settle, Bennett."

  "What are you doing here?" the gambler stammered.

  "I was up at the soldier's place just now and heard you. I didn't want any interruptions, so I came here where we can be alone." He paused, and, when Stark made no answer, continued, "Well, let's get at it." But still the other made no move. "You've had all the best of it for twenty years," Gale went on, in his level voice, "but to-night I get even. By God! I've lived for this."

  "That shot in Lee's cabin?" recalled Stark, with the light of a new understanding. "You knew me then?"

  "Yes."

  Stark took a deep breath. "What a damned fool I've been!"

  "Your devil's magic saved you that time, but it won't stop this." The trader rose slowly with the knife in his hand.

  "You'll hang for this!" said the gambler, unsteadily, at which Gale's face blazed.

  "Ha!" exclaimed the trader, exultingly; "you can feel it in your guts already, eh?"

  With an effort Stark began to assemble his wits as the trader continued:

  "You saddled your dirty work on me, Ben Stark, and I've carried it for fifteen years; but to-night I put you out the way you put her out. An eye for an eye!"

  "I didn't kill her," said the man.

  "Don't lie. This isn't a grand jury. We're all alone."

  "I didn't kill her."

  "So? The yellow is showing up at last. I knew you were a coward, but I didn't think you'd be afraid to own it to yourself. That thing must have lived with you."

  "Look here," said Stark, curiously, "do you really think I killed Merridy?"

  "I know it. A man who would strike a woman would kill her—if he had the nerve."

  Stark had now mastered himself, and smiled.

  "My hate worked better than I thought. Well, well, that made it hard for you, didn't it?" he chuckled. "I supposed, of course, you knew—"

  "Knew?" Gale's face showed emotion for the first time. "Knew what—?" His hands were quivering slightly.

  "She killed herself."

  "So help you God?"

  "So help me God!"

  There was a long pause.

  "Why?"

  "Say, it's kind of funny our standing here talking about that thing, isn't it? Well, if you want to know, I came home early that night—I guess you hadn't been gone two hours—and the surprise did it, more than anything else, I suppose—she hadn't prepared a story. I got suspicious, named you at random, and hit the nail on the head. She broke down, thought I knew more than I did, and—and then there was hell to pay."

  "Go on."

  "I suppose I talked bad and made threats—I was crazy over you—till she must have thought I meant to kill her, but I didn't. No. I never was quite that bad. Anyhow, she did it herself."

  Gale's face was like chalk, and his voice sounded thin and dry as he said:

  "You beat her, that's why she did it."

  Stark made no answer.

  "The papers said the room showed a struggle."

  When the other still kept silent, Gale insisted:

  "Didn't you?"

  At this Stark flamed up defiantly.

  "Well, I guess I had cause enough. No woman except her was ever untrue to me—wife or sweetheart."

  "You didn't really think—?"

  "Think hell! I thought so then, and I think so now. She denied it, but—"

  "And you knew her so well, too. I guess you've had some bad nights yourself, Bennett, with that always on your mind—"

  "I swore I'd have you—"

  "—and so you put her blood on my head, and made me an outlaw." After an instant: "Why did you tell me this, anyhow?"

  "It's our last talk, and I wanted you to know how well my hate worked."

  "Well, I guess that's all," said Gale. So far they had watched each other with unwavering, unblinking eyes, straining at the leash and taut in every nerve. Now, however, the trader's fingers tightened on the knife-handle, and his knuckles whitened with the grip, at which Stark's right hand swept to his waist, and simultaneously Gale lunged across the table. His blade nickered in the light, and a gun spoke, once—twice—again and again. A cry arose outside the cabin, then some heavy thing crashed in through the door, bringing light with it, for with his first leap Gale had carried the lamp and the table with him, and the two had clenched in the dark.

  Burrell had waited an instant too long, for the men's voices had held so steady, their words had been so vital, that the finish found him unprepared, but, thrusting the lantern into Poleon's hand, he had backed off a pace and hurled himself at the door. He had learned the knack of bunching his weight in football days, and the barrier burst and splintered before him. He fell to his knees inside, and an instant later found himself wrestling for his life between two raging beasts. The Lieutenant knew Doret must have entered too, though he could not see him, for the lantern shed a sickly gloom over the chaos. He was locked desperately with John Gale, who flung him about and handled him like a child, fighting like an old gray wolf, hoary with years and terrible in his rage. Burrell had never been so battered and harried and torn; only for the lantern's light Gale would doubtless have sheathed his weapon in his new assailant, but the more fiercely the trader struggled, the more tenaciously the soldier clung. As it was, Gale carried the Lieutenant with him and struck over his head at Stark.

  Poleon had leaped into the room at Burrell's heels, to receive the impact of a heavy body hurled backward into his arms as if by some irresistible force. He seized it and tore it away from the thing that pressed after and bore down upon it with the ferocity of a wild beast. He saw Gale reach over the Lieutenant's head and swing his arm, saw the knife-blade bury itself in what he held, then saw it rip away,
and felt a hot stream spurt into his face. So closely was the Canadian entangled with Stark that he fancied for an instant the weapon had wounded both of them for the trader had aimed at his enemy's neck where it joined the shoulder, but, hampered by the soldier, his blow went astray about four inches. Doret glimpsed Burrell rising from his knees, his arms about the trader's waist, and the next instant the combatants were dragged apart.

  The Lieutenant wrenched the dripping blade from Gale's hand; it no longer gleamed, but was warm and slippery in his fingers. Poleon held Stark's gun, which was empty and smoking.

  The fight had not lasted a minute, and yet what terrible havoc had been wrought! The gambler was drenched with his own blood, which gushed from him, black in the yellow flicker, and so plentifully that the Frenchman was befouled with it, while Gale, too, was horribly stained, but whether from his own or his enemy's veins it was hard to tell. The trader paid no heed to himself nor to the intruders, allowing Burrell to push him back against the wall, the breath wheezing in and out of his lungs, his eyes fastened on Stark.

  "I got you, Bennett!" he cried, hoarsely. "Your magic is no good." His teeth showed through his grizzled muzzle like the fangs of some wild animal.

  Bennett, or Stark, as the others knew him, lunged about with his captor, trying to get at his enemy, and crying curses on them all, but he was like a child in Poleon's arms. Gradually he weakened, and suddenly resistance died out of him.

  "Come away from here," the Lieutenant ordered Gale.

  But the old man did not hear, and gathered himself as if to resume the battle with his bare hands, whereupon the soldier, finding himself shaking like a frightened child, and growing physically weak at what he saw, doubted his ability to prevent the encounter, and repeated his command.

  "Come away!" he shouted, but the words sounded foolishly flat and inane.

  Then Stark spoke intelligibly for the first time.

  "Arrest him! You've got to believe what I told you now, Burrell." He poured forth a stream of unspeakable profanity, smitten by the bitter knowledge of his first and only defeat. "You'll hang, Gaylord! I'll see your neck stretched, damn your heart!" To Poleon he panted, excitedly: "I followed him for fifteen years, Doret. He killed my wife."

 

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