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The Young Engineers in Arizona

Page 13

by Hancock, H Irving


  In the background the halted crowd watched in suspense as George Ashby galloped over the treacherous sand.

  Several times the pony's hoofs were seen to sink, yet each time the animal seemed able to draw his feet out of the sand and go on again.

  "It's a crazy man's luck," cried an Arizona man thickly. "Of course, here and there on the Man-killer there are safe, sound spots, and Ashby is having the luck of his life in hitting all the sound spots in getting across. But I wouldn't follow him for a thousand dollars a minute!"

  The mad hotel man was soon lost to view on the other side of one of the little hills of sand.

  There would have been little sense in trying to follow him or to head him off, even by more roundabout courses. Ashby was now far enough away to elude any pursuit that might start.

  "I wonder if Reade has any idea of what he's up against now?" murmured the mayor of Paloma. "That crazy man is loose, and sooner or later he'll be heard from again."

  CHAPTER XX. DUFF PROMISES THE "SQUARE DEAL"

  Altogether the day had been a hugely satisfactory one to the young chief engineer.

  The first test had been made, and, all had passed off well, for, in Tom Reade's easy-going, fearless mind the peculiar doings of George Ashby did not figure at all as a part of the day's work.

  "Harry, we've every reason to feel proud of ourselves" mused Tom aloud, as he undressed in the shack that night.

  "You feel pretty certain that we've conquered the Man-killer, do you?" Hazelton asked, as he laid down the book he had been reading.

  Of late, since the burning of the Cactus House, the chums had slept in the shack, though still getting many of their meals in town.

  "Oh, of course you know that we haven't won, the whole fight yet," Reade went on. "We've plenty of work to do here still before we pronounce the job finished. But to-day's shows that our plan for filling in this particular, kind of quicksand was a sound one. You know the president of the road said that words failed to express his complete approbation of our work."

  "We certainly have been remarkably fortunate—so far," Harry admitted. "Yet I must confess, Tom, that I'm still nervous."

  "Then it must be over Ashby," Tom laughed.

  "Ashby be hanged!" Hazelton retorted. "I haven't given him a thought this evening. No, I'm still nervous about our job here. The first test was all right—that is, it was all right to-day. But these quicksands are treacherous. Our roadbed may be all right for a fortnight, and may seem as safe as we could wish it to be. Then, all of a sudden, within sixty seconds, it may sink before our very eyes. Suppose it were to sink while a trainload of human beings was passing over it!"

  "You might as well dismiss all such thoughts," Reade counseled. "I tell you, Harry, we've proved that our principle is sound. Now, we will go ahead and finish the job. When we go away from here I, for one, shall feel certain that the Man-killer must behave for all time to come. Harry, there's a limit to the shifting tendency of a quicksand, and to-day's test proves to me that we've found it. We've won. I wish I were as sure of a dozen other things as I am that we've won out here to-day."

  "All right, then," smiled Hazelton. "You're a smarter engineer than I am, Tom, old fellow. If you're satisfied, then I'm bound to be, for I'll back your judgment in engineering against my own."

  "That's rather more praise, Harry, than I expect or wish," Reade rejoined soberly. "But I don't see how the Man-killer can ever again assert himself against the A. G. & N. M.'s roadbed."

  "Oh, I'm only an old croaker, I know," Harry confessed. "I've got a blue streak on to-night. Or else it's a fit of apprehension about something or other. I feel as if—"

  Crack! crack!

  Outside two shots rang suddenly out, to be followed by a dozen swift, scattering reports.

  "Mr. Reade! They—" began a voice outside, then stopped abruptly.

  Tom hustled on his clothing again with a speed that seemed to partake of magic. Then, with Harry close upon his heels, he rushed to the door, jerking it open.

  "Just the pair we want!" snarled a voice that proceeded from behind a mask.

  A dozen masked men pressed into the room. Tom and Harry put their fists into instant action, but it availed them nothing.

  In a twinkling they were borne to the floor. At lightning speed both were rolled over and bound.

  From the tents of the laborers, beyond hoarse voices sounded as the men were awakened by the shots.

  "Get back there, you idiots!" commanded a voice outside. "If you don't, you'll think that a Gatling gun factory has blown up about your ears."

  Reports rang out sharply as a dozen revolver shots were fired into the air.

  Now, dazed with the suddenness of the attack, Reade and Hazelton were dragged into the open.

  Their two night watchmen, who had gone down bravely, now lay wounded on the ground, their weapons snatched from them.

  "Hoist 'em along, boys," ordered a gruff voice.

  Tom and Harry were carried on the shoulders of men, and moved along at a swift pace. Only half a dozen of the raiders needed to remain somewhat in the rear, firing an occasional shot to prevent the unarmed laborers from swarming to the attack.

  "Hoist 'em up! Tie 'em on! Get under way quick! There'll be a big noise raised after us soon," declared the same directing voice.

  Tom and Harry were fairly thrown upon the backs of horses, and there lashed fast.

  "Mount and get away," ordered the commander of this strangest of night raids.

  Two men, each leading a pony to which a captive was lashed, rode off in one direction. Groups of two or three rode away in other directions, the blackness of the night swallowing them up.

  It was going to be a difficult task for pursuers to know which direction to take in order to come up with Reade and Hazelton in time to save them from the fate that lay just ahead of them!

  For audacity and dash the raid could not have been better planned.

  From camp not a shot was fired, for the watchmen had had the only weapons and these had been seized by the invaders.

  "Our foremen might telegraph to camp," thought Tom swiftly, as he felt himself being carried away. "But I'll wager that these smart scoundrels didn't forget to cut the wire before springing the raid."

  For the first two or three minutes Harry's, slower moving mind hardly grasped more than the fact that their enemies appeared to have won a complete triumph.

  "There isn't much doubt as to what they'll do with us," thought Hazelton, with a slight shudder. "These rascals will move too fast for pursuit to overtake them early. What they in intend to do with us can be done in a very few minutes."

  Neither young engineer really expected to live to see daylight. From the first, after having incurred the anger of a certain lawless element in Paloma, the young engineers had understood fully that threats of lynching them had not been idly made.

  "There'll be a stir, though," Tom Reade muttered to himself. "The A. G. & N. M. officials won't let this crime go by without a determined effort to bring the offenders to justice. Detectives will search this community in squads, and everyone of these masked gentlemen is likely to get his deserts."

  Within the next half hour the galloping horses had covered fully five miles. Now the leader of the crowd led the way down into a deep gully in the sand.

  "Hold up, men," ordered the leader, and the cavalcade came to a stop, horses panting.

  "Tumble the cattle off into the dirt," was the next order, and it was obeyed, Tom and Harry rolling in the bitter alkali dust.

  "Now, gentlemen, I believe I will take command," spoke one of the party of horsemen, in his most suave voice, as he removed his mask. The speaker, as Reade knew at once, was Jim Duff, the gambler.

  "That's all right, Jim," nodded the former leader.

  "Jake, ride back a few hundred yards and keep a sharp lookout," suggested Duff blandly. "The pursuers may come in automobiles. We'll cut the ceremonies here short and leave nothing but lifeless bodies for the rescue parties to find."<
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  Stakes were driven and the horses picketed.

  "Bring along our guests," suggested Jim Duff, with a touch of humor that the occasion rendered grisly.

  Thereupon Tom and Harry were once more jerked to their feet.

  "Ye can walk, I reckon, and don't have be toted," observed one of the scoundrels.

  "We're wholly at your service, sir," rejoined Tom mockingly.

  "And equally at your pleasure," Harry suggested dryly.

  Two hundred yards further on the halted close to a pair of stunted trees of about the same size.

  "Gentlemen, you may as well remove your masks on this hot evening," suggested Jim Duff. The face coverings came off. Reade and Hazelton surveyed their captors as the chance offered, being careful not to betray too great curiosity.

  "I see one gentleman here whom I had expected to find," remarked Tom quietly.

  "Me?" hinted Duff.

  "Well, yes; you, for one, but I refer to that excellent host, Mr. Ashby, of the Mansion House."

  With a start George Ashby turned on Reade, coming closer and grinning ferociously into the face of the young chief engineer. Tom, however, managed to muster a smile as he went on:

  "How do you do, Mr. Ashby? Your performance of this afternoon mystified me a good deal. I had never expected to find myself on a shooting acquaintance with you."

  Three or four of the rascals chuckled at this way of putting it, but Proprietor Ashby snarled like a wild animal.

  "As for you, Mr. Duff," Reade resumed, "I confess that I have never been able to understand you."

  "You will to-night," smiled Duff, with bland ferocity. "I can promise you, as a gambler, that I am going to give you a square deal."

  "Fine!" glowed Tom. "I am delighted to hear that you have reformed, then."

  This' time there was a general laugh. Jim Duff flushed angrily.

  "Reade, what you never understood about me is that I belong to the ranks of the square gamblers."

  "I didn't believe there were any such gamblers," Tom replied in a voice of surprise. "It is still hard for me to believe. How can any man be square and honorable when he won't work, but fattens on the earnings of others? Has that idea any connection with honor?"

  "Stop that line of talk, you young hound!" ordered Duff, striding up to this bold young enemy. All the slight veneer of polish that Duff usually affected had vanished now. His eyes blazed with rage as he doubled his fist and struck Reade full in the face, knocking him down. One of the bystanders jerked Tom to his feet.

  "Speaking of the square deal," Tom observed, "I now insist upon it. Duff, you knocked me down when my hands were tied. If you're not a coward I request that you order my hands freed—and then repeat your blow if you dare."

  "You'll stay tied," retorted Duff grimly.

  "I knew it," sighed Reade. "What's the use of talking about honor and square dealing where a gambler is concerned? Loaded dice, marked cards or tying a man before you dare to hit him—it's all the same to your kind."

  "Shut up that talk, you hound, or I'll pound you stiff before we go on with what's been arranged for you!" raged the gambler, shaking his clenched fist in the face of the young engineer.

  "Go slowly, Jim," advised one of the men present. "Of course we know what we're to do to this young pup, and we all know what he thinks of you. But some of the rest of us have different ideas as to how a helpless enemy ought to be treated."

  "You, Rafe Bodson!" snarled Duff, turning on the last speaker. "Are you one of us? Do you belong to our side, or are you a spy for the other crowd?"

  "Got your gun with you, Duff?" inquired Bodson calmly.

  "Yes," snapped the gambler.

  "Get it out in your hand, then, before, you talk to me any more in that fashion."

  "He won't," mocked Tom. "He doesn't dare, Bodson. Your hands are not tied."

  "Cut it out, Rafe! Quit it!" ordered one of the other men in the crowd. "We won't let this tenderfoot split our ranks. You're one of us, and you'll stand by us."

  "Not if there's going to be any more hitting of tied men," retorted Bodson sulkily. "There's a limit to what a man can stand."

  "Thank you, my friend," broke in Tom Reade mildly. "But don't go to any trouble on our account. There are few if any others in this crowd who can understand the meaning of fair play—the gambler least of all."

  "I'll take that out of you, Reade!" blazed Jim Duff. "I'll—"

  "You'll do nothing while the kid's hands are tied," objected Bodson, stepping between the pair. "Act fair and square, Jim, as a man should act."

  "That's the argument, Rafe," remarked another man, also stepping forward.

  "Bully for you, Jeff Moore," replied Rafe. "Now, remember, friends, we're not calling for anything except that Jim Duff live up to the program he just published for himself—the square deal."

  Several murmurs of protest came from the other raiders.

  "I reckon, Rafe, you and Jeff had better step back and let the rest of us handle this thing," advised one of the party. "The pair of you are too chicken-livered for us."

  "It's a lie, as anyone in Paloma knows," Rafe retorted coolly. "No—put up your shooters," as the hands of five or six men slid to their belts. "There's no need of bad blood between us. All I ask is for Jim Duff to step back out of this."

  "Am I the leader here or am I not?" demanded Duff boldly. "Wasn't it my interests that were first assailed by these fresh tenderfeet! Didn't you gentlemen come out to-night, to help me attend to my affair? Didn't you turn also to avenge the blow that has been dealt these cubs to poor George Ashby's prosperity?"

  At hearing himself so sympathetically referred to, Ashby threw himself forward, a short, double-barreled shotgun in his hands.

  "Yes, you, get back, you white-livered cowards!" commanded Ashby hoarsely. "You let Duff and myself and the rest of us here handle these young hounds as they deserve to be treated. You, Rafe and Jeff, get out of this. You've no business here. You belong to the enemies of business interests in Paloma. The rest of us will settle with these business destroyers."

  Ashby's eyes glowed with the unbridled fury of the lunatic. Yet Rafe Bodson did not waver.

  "Gentlemen," he demanded coldly, "for what purpose did you bring these young fellows out here?"

  "To lynch 'em!" came the hoarse murmur.

  "Then go ahead and do it, like men," ordered Bodson. "There are the trees. You have your ropes, and your men are ready. Remember, no cowardly treatment of young fellows whose hands are tied. Go on with the lynching and get it over with!"

  CHAPTER XXI. A SPECIALIST IN "HONOR"

  "Sir! Stop it, I tell you," quivered Duff, again stepping to the front. "These young hounds shan't die until I've made them apologize for every insulting word they've said to me."

  "Fine!" glowed Tom with enthusiasm.

  "Great!"

  "What ails you now, Reade?" demanded Duff, his face again darkening.

  "You've just promised us that we shall live forever," returned Tom dryly.

  Then he added, with a sigh:

  "But I suppose that's only another lie—another specimen of a gambler's honor."

  "Stand aside, Bodson! Moore, you get out of the way!" snarled the gambler, his anger again depriving him of all reason. "I'll have my way with these young hounds before we string 'em up."

  "Let me at 'em!" implored Ashby, fingering his shotgun nervously. "Get out of my way. I don't want to pepper anyone else."

  But Bodson and Moore, bad as they were some respects, stood their ground.

  "Are you going to let us at them?" insisted Duff, his voice now broken and harsh from anger.

  "Not for the purpose of bullying them!" insisted Rafe, without moving. "Jeff, you're with me, aren't you?"

  "Right by your side, pardner."

  "Come on, then, boys!" called Duff, the note of rally in his tone. "Help me to drive this pair of traitors out of your company."

  Like a flash Bodson's revolver was in his band. The muzzle covered the gambler.<
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  "Jim Duff, down on your knees before I blow your bead off!"

  The gambler started back, his face paling.

  In the same instant Jeff Moore had also drawn his revolver, and held it ready for the first hostile sign from anyone in the group.

  "What's the matter with you, Rafe?" demanded the gambler, in a half-coaxing tone.

  "Nothing," Bodson assured him calmly, "except that I'm going to blow your head off if you aren't down on your knees before I've counted three! One—two—th—"

  Duff dropped to his knees, holding his hands high in air.

  "Now apologize for calling us traitors," admonished Rafe. "Do it handsomely, too, while you're about it."

  "Rafe," protested Jim Duff, "you, know that I said what I did only because I was angry. I know you're a gentleman, and you know that I know it. If I've hurt your feelings, I'm sorry, a thousand times over."

  "Jim, you're a good deal of a sneak, aren't you?" inquired Rafe, in a voice that sounded pleasant enough, but which carried a warning in its tone.

  "Yes," Duff admitted. "I guess I'm a good deal of a sneak."

  "Get up on your feet, then. We understand one another," said Bodson. "Go ahead, if you want to, and carry out your plans for a merry evening. But don't make the mistake of calling ugly names again, and don't forget all you've said about the square deal. Hang these tenderfeet, if that's what you want to do, but don't hit men without first giving them a chance to hit back."

  Duff, shaking partly from fear, though more from a sense of his humiliation, rose to his feet. For a moment he stood choking down his varied emotions. Then, with an attempt at his old-time, suave banter, he inquired:

  "Are you young gentlemen ready for the collar and neck-tie party that we've planned to give you?"

  "As ready as you are," observed Tom dryly.

  "And you?" asked Duff, turning to Hazelton. "Are you ready?"

  "I'm not particular about feeling a lariat around my neck," Harry answered, "but I'll follow my friend Reade anywhere—even where you propose to send us."

  "Ay, but that's courage of the kind you don't expect to find in a blamed tenderfoot!" remarked Jeff Moore, resting a hand first on Tom's shoulder and then on Harry's.

 

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