The Charles Alden Seltzer Megapack

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by Charles Alden Seltzer


  Warden did not move a muscle. He tried to look steadily into Lawler’s eyes, found that he could not endure the terrible intensity of them—and drooped his own, cursing himself for the surrender.

  He heard Lawler laugh again, a sound that sent a cold shiver over him; and then he saw Lawler standing beside the desk at which Jordan sat.

  “Jordan,” said Lawler, shortly; “I want you to vent my cattle. There’s eight thousand head, approximately. They’re being held just out of town—about a mile. I’d like to have you give me a certificate of ownership tonight, so we can start to drive before daylight.”

  Jordan’s face whitened, and then grew crimson. He essayed to look up, to meet Lawler’s eyes, raising his head and then lowering it again without achieving his desire. He cleared his throat, shifted his body and scuffed his feet on the floor. At last, after clearing his throat again, he spoke, huskily:

  “We ain’t ventin’ any trail herds this fall, Lawler.”

  Lawler stiffened, looked from Jordan to Warden, and then back again at Jordan, who had taken up the pencil again and was nervously tapping with it upon the desk top.

  “Not venting trail herds, eh?” said Lawler. “Whose orders?”

  “The state inspector—headquarters,” replied Jordan, hesitatingly.

  “Would you mind letting me see the order, Jordan?” asked Lawler, calmly.

  Jordan succeeded in looking up at Lawler now, and there was rage in his eyes—rage and offended dignity.

  Both were artificial—Lawler knew it. And his smile as he looked into Jordan’s eyes told the other of the knowledge.

  Jordan got up, stung by the mockery in Lawler’s eyes.

  “Hell’s fire, Lawler!” cursed Jordan; “can’t you take a man’s word?” He stepped back, viciously pulled open a drawer in the desk, drew out a paper—a yellow telegraph form, and slapped it venomously down on the desk in front of Lawler.

  “It’s ag’in’ orders, but I’m lettin’ you see it. Mebbe you’ll take a man’s word after this!” he sneered.

  Lawler read the order. Then he calmly placed it on the desk. He looked at Jordan, whose gaze fell from his; he turned to Warden, who smiled jeeringly.

  “There is nothing like thoroughness, whenever you do anything on a big scale, Warden,” he said. “This order forces cattle owners in this section to drive cattle over a trail without proof of ownership. We fought for that vent law for a good many years, as a weapon against rustlers. This order leaves a cattle owner without protection against the horde of rustlers who infest the state. And the order is dated yesterday. This thing begins to look interesting.”

  He turned and walked out, not glancing back at the two men inside, who stood for a long time looking at each other, smiling.

  CHAPTER XI

  THE LONG TRAIL

  After leaving Jordan and Warden, Lawler walked across the railroad tracks and entered the station, where he sent a telegram to Keppler, the buyer at Red Rock. Then he drew a chair over near the door and sat down to await an answer. At the end of an hour the agent walked over to Lawler and gave him the reply. It was from Keppler, saying that he would be glad to buy all of the Circle L cattle at thirty dollars a head.

  Lawler stuck the telegram in a pocket and went out, mounting Red King and riding through Willets. Darkness had come, and there were few persons on the street, and Lawler did not stop. A little later he was talking with Blackburn at the camp fire, his voice low and earnest.

  Blackburn’s face was seamed with wrath over the news Lawler had communicated.

  “So that’s the polecat scheme they’re runnin’!” he said, hoarsely. “I reckon they know that between here an’ Red Rock there’s a dozen big gangs of buzzards which make a business of grabbin’ cattle from every herd that hits the Tom Long trail!”

  “Blackburn,” said Lawler gravely; “do you know of any other trail?”

  “No; nor you don’t neither!” declared the range boss. “What you meanin’?” he added, peering intently at Lawler.

  “It’s mighty plain,” said Lawler; “if we travel at all, we’ll have to take the Tom Long trail. It’s been used before, Blackburn, by all the cattle owners in the section—before the railroad came. It hasn’t been used much lately, though, and so I reckon it isn’t worn out.”

  “You’re startin’ at daybreak, I reckon?”

  “Yes.” Lawler looked straight at the range boss. “Some of the boys who are with us don’t know the Tom Long trail, Blackburn. You’d better tell them there are prospects for trouble. No man goes on that trail with my cattle under regular working orders. It’s volunteer work. But you might mention to them that if we get through the difference between what Warden offered me and what I get from Keppler, will be divided among the men of the outfit. That will be in addition to regular trail herd wages.”

  “That’s mighty white of you, Boss. But I reckon there’d be no back-slidin’. The boys ain’t admirin’ the deal you’re gettin’. I’m tellin’ them.”

  He took a step away from Lawler, and then halted, uncertainly.

  “Lawler,” he said; “you’ve been over the Tom Long trail—you know what it is. There’s places where we’ll find eight thousand head to be a mighty big herd. A herd that big will be powerful hard to handle in some of them long passes. An’ if they’d get in some of that timber we’d never get them out. We’ve got twenty-eight men. If we’d have an open winter we’d likely be able to take care of about three thousand head by watchin’ them close. Now, if we’d leave about three thousand head at the Circle L—with four or five of the boys to keep an eye on them, that would leave us about twenty-three or twenty-four men for trail herd work. That won’t be any too many for five thousand head of cattle on the Tom Long trail. Unless you’re figgerin’ to hire some hands from another outfit?”

  “We’re asking no favors,” said Lawler. “We’re driving five thousand, as you suggest. I’m leaving the selecting of the trail crew to you—you know your men.”

  At dawn the following morning the big herd was divided into about the proportions suggested by Blackburn. The smaller section, escorted by five disgruntled Circle L cowboys, moved slowly southward, while the main herd headed eastward, flanked at the sides by grim-faced Circle L riders; at the rear by a number of others and by Lawler, Blackburn; the “chuck-wagon” driven by the cook—a portly, solemn-visaged man of forty with a thin, complaining voice; the “hoodlum” wagon, equipped with bedding and a meager stock of medicines and supplies for emergencies—driven by a slender, fiercely mustached man jocosely referred to as “Doc;” and a dozen horses of the remuda, in charge of the horse-wrangler and an assistant.

  It was the first trail herd that had been started eastward since the coming of the railroad. To some of the Circle L men it was a novel experience—for they had begun range work since the railroad had appeared. There were several others, rugged, hardy range riders of the days when the driving of a trail herd was an annual experience, it was a harking back to the elemental and the crude, with the attendant hardships and ceaseless, trying work. The younger men were exultant, betraying their exuberance in various ways—shouting, laughing, singing, gayly bantering one another as they capered beside the cattle; but the older men rode grimly on, grinning tolerantly, knowing that the time would come when the faces of the younger men would grow stern and set from the ceaseless activity, the long night watches, the deadly monotony and the thousand inconveniences of the long drive.

  Many of Willets’ men were watching the departure of the herd. They stood on the street, in doorways; and in some windows were women. For rumor had been whispering during the past few days, and it was known that Kane Lawler had defied the powerful forces which were attempting to control the mediums of trade in the section; and there were many of the watchers who sent silent applause after the departing herd. They were aware of the hazards that confronted Lawler and his men—hazards enough without the additional menace of the invisible power, of which most of the inhabitants of Willets knew n
othing.

  However, Caldwell knew. He was standing in the doorway of the Willets Hotel; and his face was drawn and seamed with gravity as he watched.

  Gary Warden knew. For he stood in the street in front of the Wolf, watching, his eyes glowing with malice.

  Singleton knew. He was standing near Warden, in the grip of a malign anticipation. His lips were bestially pouted.

  “Showed yellow at the last minute,” he whispered to Warden; “only drivin’ about half of them. Well, we’ll take care of them he’s leavin’ before the winter’s over.”

  CHAPTER XII

  THE NIGHT WIND’S MYSTERY

  After the departure of Lawler on the night of Gary Warden’s visit to the Hamlin cabin, silence, vast and deep reigned inside. The last golden shadows from the sinking sun were turning somber shades of twilight as Ruth came to the door and peered outward, to see Lawler riding away.

  For a long time the girl watched Lawler, her face burning with shame over what had happened, her senses revolting from the realization of the things Lawler knew concerning her father. Then she seated herself on the threshold of the doorway, watching the long shadows steal over the plains.

  She loved Lawler; she never had attempted to deny it, not even to herself. And she had found it hard to restrain herself when he had stood outside the door of her room gravely pleading with her. Only pride had kept her from yielding—the humiliating conviction that she was not good enough for him—or rather that her father’s crimes had made it impossible for her to accept him upon a basis of equality.

  She felt that Lawler would take her upon any terms—indeed, his manner while in the cabin shortly before convinced her of that; but she did not want to go to him under those conditions. She would have felt, always, as though pity for her had influenced him. She felt that she would always be searching his eyes, looking for signs which would indicate that he was thinking of her father. And he was certain to think of him—those thoughts would come in spite of his efforts to forget; they would be back of every glance he threw at her; they would be lurking always near, to humiliate her. The conviction sent a shudder over her.

  The girl’s mental processes were not involved; they went directly, unwaveringly, to the truth—the truth as her heart revealed it, as she knew it must be. If there was any subconscious emotion in her heart or mind from which might spring chaotic impulses that would cloud her mental vision, she was not aware of it. Her thoughts ran straight and true to the one outstanding, vivid, and overwhelming fact that she could not marry Kane Lawler because to marry him would mean added humiliation.

  Greatness, Ruth knew, was hedged about by simplicity. Lawler was as direct in his attitude toward life—and to herself—as she. There was about him no wavering, no indecision, no mulling over in his mind the tangled threads of thought that would bring confusion. The steel fiber of his being was unelastic. He met the big questions of life with an eagerness to solve them instantly.

  He wanted her—she knew. But she assured herself that she could not bring upon him the shame and ignominy of a relationship with a cattle thief, no matter how intensely he wanted her. That would be doing him an injustice, and she would never agree to it.

  But it hurt, this knowledge that she could not marry Lawler; that she must put away from her the happiness that might be hers for the taking; that she must crush the eager impulses that surged through her; that she must repulse the one man who could make her heart beat faster; the man for whom she longed with an intensity that sometimes appalled her.

  She got up after a while and lighted an oil-lamp, placing it upon the table in the big room. She closed the door and then dropped listlessly into a chair beside the table, her eyes glistening, her lips quivering.

  The future was somber in aspect, almost hopeless, it seemed. And yet into her mind as she sat there crept a determination—a resolution to tell her father what she knew; to tell him that she could no longer endure the disgrace of his crimes.

  That meant of course that she would have to leave him, for she knew he was weak, and that he had been drawn into crime and had not the moral strength to redeem himself.

  When about midnight she heard the beating of hoofs near the cabin she sat very quiet, rigid, still determined, her eyes flashing with resolution.

  She was standing near the door of her room when her father entered, and as he stood for an instant blinking at the light, trying to accustom his eyes to it after riding for some time through the darkness; she watched him, noting—as she had noted many times before—the weakness of his mouth and the furtive gleam of his eyes.

  He had not always been like that. Before the death of her mother she had always admired him, aware of the sturdiness of his character, of his rugged manliness, and of his devotion to her mother.

  Adversity had changed him, had weakened him. And now, watching him, noting the glow in his eyes when he saw her—the pathetic worship in them—her heart protested the decision that her cold judgment had made, and she ran to him with a little, quavering, pitying cry and buried her face on his shoulder, shuddering, murmuring sobbingly:

  “O Daddy; O Daddy, what have you done!”

  He stood rigid, his eyes wide with astonishment, looking down at her as she clung to him as though wondering over a sudden miracle. For he knew she was not an emotional girl, and this evidence of emotion almost stunned him.

  “Why, Honey!” He patted her hair and her cheeks and hugged her tightly to him. And presently he gently disengaged himself and held her at arm’s length, peering into her face.

  And then, when her clear eyes met his—her gaze direct and searching even though her cheeks had paled, his eyes drooped, and his arms fell to his sides.

  “I’ve done enough, Ruth,” he said, soberly.

  “Why, Daddy—why did you do it? Oh, you have made it so hard for me!”

  “There, there, Honey,” he consoled, reaching out and patting her shoulders again. “I’ve been a heap ornery, but it ain’t goin’ to happen again.” His eyes shone through a mist that had come into them.

  “I’ve been talkin’ with Kane Lawler, an’ he opened my eyes. I’ve been blind, Ruth—blind to what it all meant to you. An’ from now on I’m goin’ straight—straight as a die!”

  “Ruth,” he went on, when he saw incredulity in her gaze; “I wasn’t to tell you. I reckon Lawler would half kill me if he know’d I was tellin’ you. But there ain’t no use, I’ve got—”

  “Did you give your word to Lawler, Daddy?”

  “I sure did. But I’ve got to tell you, Ruth. Mebbe you knowin’ will sort of help me to go through with it.

  “Kane Lawler was here this mornin’—he come here to see me about a Circle L cow that I was runnin’ my brand on the night before. He talked mighty plain to me—an’ earnest. He offered me a job over to the Circle L, an’ I took it. I rode over there this afternoon an’ Lawler’s straw boss put me to work. Then tonight Lawler rode in an’ took me out by the corral. He gave it to me straight there. He’s goin’ to restock my place an’ give me a chance to get on my feet. He’s goin’ to put his shoulder behind me, he says, an’ make me run a straight trail—takin’ a mortgage on the place to secure him. He give me a letter to his mother, sayin’ I was to have what stock I wanted. An’ I’m to repay him when I get around to it. Honey, I’ve got a chance, an’ I’m never goin’ to slip again!”

  Ruth walked to the door and threw it open, standing on the threshold and gazing out into the dull moonlight, across the vast sweep of plain from which came the low moaning of the night wind, laden with mystery.

  For a long time, as she stood there, pride fought a savage battle with duty. Her face was pallid, her lips tight-clenched, and shame unutterable gripped her. To be sure, Lawler had enjoined her father to silence, and it was evident that she was not to know. Still, she did know; and Lawler had added an obligation, a debt, to the already high barrier that was between them. Yet she dared not evade the obligation, for that would be robbing her father of a chance over wh
ich he seemed to exult, a chance which promised the reformation, for which she had prayed.

  Her heart was like lead within her—a dull weight that threatened to drag her down. And yet she felt a pulse of thankfulness. For if her father really meant to try—if he should succeed in redeeming himself in Lawler’s eyes and in her own, she might one day be able to go to Lawler with no shame in her eyes, with the comforting assurance that her father had earned the right to hold his head up among men. To be sure, there always would be the shadow of the past mistake lurking behind; but it would be the shadow of a mistake corrected, of a black gulf bridged.

  Her father was waiting when she finally turned to him—waiting, his chin on his chest, his face crimson with shame.

  “Ruth, girl—you ain’t goin’ to judge me too harsh, are you?” he begged. Once more she yielded to the pathetic appeal in his eyes. She ran to him again, holding him tightly to her. A cool gust swept in through the open doorway—the night wind, laden with mystery. But the girl laughed and snuggled closer to the man; and the man laughed hoarsely, vibrantly, in a voice that threatened to break.

  CHAPTER XIII

  THE INVISIBLE MENACE

  At the close of the second day the big trail herd halted at the edge of the vast level over which it had come. The herd had been driven forty miles. Cattle, men, and horses had passed through a country which was familiar to them; a country featured by long grama grass, greasewood, and cactus plants.

  There was no timber on the plains. The gray of the grama grass and the bare stretches of alkali shone white in the glare of a sun that swam in a cloudless sky of deepest azure. Except for the men, the cattle, the horses, and the two slow-moving, awkward-looking canvas-covered wagons, there had been no evidence of life on the great plain. In a silence unbroken save by the clashing of horns, the bleating and bawling of the cattle, the ceaseless creaking of the wagons, and the low voices of the men, the cavalcade moved eastward.

 

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