The Max Brand Megapack (136 page)

Read The Max Brand Megapack Online

Authors: Max Brand,Frederick Faust

Tags: #old west, #outlaw, #gunslinger, #Western, #cowboy

“Get on!” cried Barry.

There was a lift of the head, a quivering of the tensed nostrils, but that was all. He seemed to be dying on his feet, when the master whistled. The sound cut through the rushing of the Asper as a ray of light probes a dark room, shrill, harsh, like the hissing of some incredible snake, and Satan went an uncertain step forward, reeled, almost fell; but the shoulder of the master was at his side lifting up, and the arm of the master was under his chest, raising. He tried another step; he went on among the trees with his forelegs sprawling and his head drooped as though he were trying to crop grass. Black Bart did his part to recall that flagging spirit. Sometimes it was his snarl that startled the black; sometimes he leaped, and his teeth clashed a hair’s breadth from Satan’s nose.

By degrees the congealing blood flowed freely again through Satan’s body; he no longer staggered; and now he lifted a forepaw and struck vaguely at Bart as the wolf-dog leaped. Barry stepped away.

“Bart!” he called, and the shouting of the Asper was now so far away that he could be heard. “Come round here, old boy, and stop botherin’ him. He’s goin’ to pull through.”

He leaned against a willow, his face suddenly old and white with something more than exhaustion, and laughed in such an oddly pitched, cracked tone that the wolf-dog slunk to him on his belly and licked the dangling hand. He caught the scarred head of Bart and looked steadily down into the eyes of the wolf.

“It was a close call, Bart. There wasn’t more than half an inch between Satan and—”

The black turned his head and whinnied feebly.

“Listen to him callin’ for help like a new-foaled colt,” said the master, and went to Satan.

The head of the stallion rested on his shoulder as they went slowly on.

“Tonight,” said the master, “you get two pieces of pone without askin’.” The cold nose of the jealous wolf-dog thrust against his left hind. “You too, Bart. You showed us the way.”

The rattle had left the breathing of Satan, the stagger was gone from his walk; with each instant he grew perceptibly larger as they approached the border of the wood. It fell off to a scattering thicket with the Grizzly Peaks stepping swiftly up to the sky. This was their magic instant in all the day, when the sun, grown low in the west, with bulging sides, gave the mountains a yellow light. They swelled up larger with warm tints of gold rolling off into the blue of the canyons; at the foot of the nearest slope a thicket of quaking aspens was struck by a breeze and flashed all silver. Not many moments more, and all the peaks would be falling back into the evening.

It seemed that Satan saw this, for he raised his head from the shoulder of the master and stopped to look.

“Step on,” commanded Barry.

The stallion shook himself violently as a dog that knocks the water from his pelt, but he took no pace forward.

“Satan!”

The order made him sway forward, but he checked the movement.

“I ask you man to man, Bart,” said the master in sudden anger, “was there ever a worse fool hoss than him? He won’t budge till I get on his back.”

The wolf-dog shoved his nose again into Barry’s hand and growled. He seemed quite willing to go on alone with the master and leave Satan forgotten.

“All right,” said Barry. “Satan, are you comin’?”

The horse whinnied, but would not move.

“Then stay here.”

He turned his back and walked resolutely across the meadow, but slowly, and more slowly, until a ringing neigh made him stop and turn. Satan had not stirred from his first halting place, but now his head was high and his cars pricked anxiously. He pawed the ground in his impatience.

“Look there, Bart,” observed the master gloomily. “There’s pride for you. He won’t let on that he’s too weak to carry me. Now I’d ought to let him stay there till he drops.”

He whistled suddenly, the call sliding up, breaking, and rising again with a sharp appeal. Satan neighed again as it died away.

“If that won’t bring him, nothin’ will. Back we got to go. Bart, you jest take this to heart: It ain’t any use tryin’ to bring them to reason that ain’t got any sense.”

He went back and sprang lightly to the back of the horse and Satan staggered a little under the weight but once, as if to prove that his strength was more than equal to the task, he broke into a trot. A harsh order called him back to a walk, and so they started up into the Grizzly Peaks.

By dark, however, a few halts, a chance to crop grass for a moment here and there, a roll by the next creek and a short draught of water, restored a great part of the black’s strength, and before the night was an hour old he was heading up through the hills at a long, swift trot.

Even then it was that dark, cold time just before dawn when they wound up the difficult pass toward the cave. The moon had gone down; a thin, high mist painted out the stars; and there were only varying degrees of blackness to show them the way, with peaks and ridges starting here and there out of the night, very suddenly. It was so dark, indeed, that sometimes Dan could not see where Bart skulked a little ahead, weaving among the boulders and picking the easiest way. But all three of them knew the course by instinct, and when they came to a more or less commanding rise of ground in the valley Dan checked the stallion and whistled.

Then he sat canting his head to one side to listen more intently. A rising wind brought about him something like an echo of the sound, but otherwise there was no answer.

“She ain’t heard,” muttered Dan to Bart, who came running back at the call, so familiar to him and to the horse. He whistled again, prolonging the call until it soared and trembled down the gulch, and this time when he stopped he sat for a long moment, waiting, until Black Bart whined at his side.

“She ain’t learned to sleep light, yet,” muttered Barry. “An’ I s’pose she’s plumb tired out waitin’ for me. But if something’s happened—Satan!”

That word sent the stallion leaping ahead at a racing gait, swerving among rocks which he could not see.

“They’s nothin’ wrong with her,” whispered Barry to himself. “They can’t be nothin’ happened to her!”

He was in the cave, a moment later, standing in the center of the place with the torch high above his head; it flared and glimmered in the great eyes of Satan and the narrow eyes of Bart. At length he slipped down to a rock beside him while the torch, fallen from his hand, sputtered and whispered where it lay on the gravel.

“She’s gone,” he said to emptiness. “She’s lef’ me—” Black Bart licked his limp hand but dared not even whine.

CHAPTER XXXVII

Ben Swann

Since
the night when old Joe Cumberland died and Kate Cumberland rode off after her wild man, Ben Swann, the foreman of the Cumberland ranch, had lived in the big house. He would have been vastly more comfortable in the bunkhouse playing cards with the other hands, but Ben Swann felt vaguely that it was a shame for so much space in the ranch house to go to waste, and besides, Ben’s natural dignity was at home in the place even if his mind grew lonely. It was Ben Swann, therefore, who ran down and flung open the door, on which a heavy hand was beating. Outside stood two men, very tall, taller than himself, and one of them a giant. They had about them a strong scent of horses.

“Get a light,” said one of these. “Run for it. Get a light. Start a fire, and be damned quick about it!”

“And who the hell might you gents be?” queried Ben Swann, leaning against the side of the doorway to dicker.

“Throw that fool on his head,” said one of the strangers, “and go on in, Lee!”

“Stand aside,” said the other, and swept the doorknob out of Ben’s grip, flattening Ben himself against the wall. While he struggled there, gasping, a man and a woman slipped past him.

“Tell him who we are,” said the woman’s voice. “We’ll go to the living-room, Buck, and start a fire.”

The strangers apparently knew their way even in the dark, for presently he heard the scraping of wood on the hearth in the living-room. It bewildered Ben Swann. It was dream-like, this sudden invasion.

“Now, who the devil are you?”

A match was scratched and held under his very nose, until Ben shrank back for fear that his splendid mustaches might ignite. He found himself confronted by one of the largest men he had ever seen, a leonine face, vaguely familiar.

“You Lee Haines!” he gasped. “What are you doin’ here?”

“You’re Swann, the foreman, aren’t you?” said Haines. “Well, come out of your dream, man. The owner of the ranch is in the living-room.”

“Joe Cumberland’s dead,” stammered Ben Swann.

“Kate Cumberland.”

“Her! And—Barry—the Killing at Alder—”

“Shut up!” ordered Haines, and his face grew ugly. “Don’t let that chatter get to Kate’s ears. Barry ain’t with her. Only his kid. Now stir about.”

After the first surprise was over, Ben Swann did very well. He found the fire already started in the living-room and on the rug before the hearth a yellow-haired little girl wrapped in a tawny hide. She was sound asleep, worn out by the long ride, and she seemed to Ben Swann a very pretty picture. Surely there could be in her little of the father of whom he had heard so much—of whom that story of the Killing at Alder was lately told. He took in that picture at a glance and then went to rustle food; afterward he went down to sleep in the bunkhouse and at breakfast he recounted the events of the night with a relish. Not one of the men had been more than three years on the place, and therefore their minds were clean slates on which Swann could write his own impressions.

“Appearances is deceivin’” concluded the foreman. “Look at Mrs. Dan Barry. They tell you around these parts that she’s pretty, but they don’t tell you how damned fine lookin’ she is. She’s got a soft look and you’d never pick her for the sort that would run clean off with a gent like Barry. Barry himself wasn’t so bad for looks, but they’ll tell you in Elkhead how bad he is in action, and maybe they’s some widders in Alder that could put in a word. Take even the kid. She looks no more’n a baby, but what d’you know is inside of her?

“Speakin’ personal, gents, I don’t put no kind of trust in that houseful yonder. Here they come in the middle of the night like there was a posse after ’em. They climb that house and sit down and eat like they’d ridden all day. Maybe they had. Even while they was eatin’ they didn’t seem none too happy.

“That loose shutter upstairs come around in the wind with a bang and Buck Daniels comes out of his chair as fast as powder could blow him. He didn’t say nothin’. Just sat down lookin’ kind of sick, and the other two was the same way. When they talked, they’d bust off in the middle of a word and let their eyes go trailin’ into some corner of the room that was plumb full of shadow. Then Lee Haines gets up and walks up and down.

“‘Swann,’ says he, ‘how many good men have you got on the place?’

“‘Why,’ says I, ‘they’re all good!’

“‘Huh,’ says Haines, and he puts a hand on my shoulder, ‘Just how good are they, Swann?’”

“I seen what he wanted. He wanted to know how many scrappy gents was punchin’ cows here; maybe them three up there figures that they might need help. From what? What was they runnin’ away from?”

“Hey!” broke in one of the cowpunchers, pointing with a dramatic fork through the window.

It was a bright spot of gold that disappeared over the top of the nearest hill; then it came into view again, the whole body of a yellow-haired child, clothed in a wisp of white, and running steadily toward the north.

“The kid!” gasped the foreman. “Boys, grab her. No, you’d bust her; I know how to handle her!”

He was gone through the door with gigantic leaps and shot over the crest of the low hill. Then those in the cookhouse heard a small, tingling scream; after it, came silence, and the tall foreman striding across the hill with the child high in his arms. He came panting through the door and stood her up on the end of the table, a small and fearless creature. She wore on her feet the little moccasins which Dan himself had fashioned for her, but the tawny hide was not on her—perhaps her mother had thrown the garment away. The moccasins and the white nightgown were the sum and substance of her apparel, and the cowpunchers stood up around the table to admire her spunk.

“Damed near spat pizen,” observed Ben Swann, “when I hung into her—tried to bite me, but the minute I got her in my hands she quit strugglin’, as reasonable as a grown-up, by God!”

“Shut up, Ben. Don’t you know no better’n to cuss in front of a kid?”

The great, dark eyes of Joan went somberly from face to face. If she was afraid, she disguised it well, but now and then, like a wild thing which sees that escape is impossible, she looked through the window and out over the open country beyond.

“Where was you headed for, honey?” queried Ben Swann.

The child considered him bravely for a time before she replied.

“Over there.”

“Over there? Now what might she mean by that? Headed for Elkhead—in a nightgown? Any place I could take you, kid?”

If she did not altogether trust Ben Swann, at least she preferred him to the other unshaven, work-thinned faces which leered at her around the table.

“Daddy Dan,” she said softly. “Joan wants to go to Daddy Dan.”

“Daddy Dan—Dan Barry,” translated Ben Swann, and he drew a bit away from her. “Boys, that mankillin’ devil must be around here; and that’s what them up to the house was runnin’ from—Barry!”

It scattered the others to the windows, to the door.

“What d’you see?”

“Nothin’.”

“Swann, if Barry is comin’ to these parts, I’m goin’ to pack my war-bag.”

“Me too, Ben. Them that get ten thousand’ll earn it. I heard about the Killin’ at Alder.”

“Listen to me, gents,” observed Ben Swann. “If Barry is comin’ here we ain’t none of us goin’ to stay; but don’t start jumpin’ out from under till I get the straight of it. I’m goin’ to take the kid up to the house right now and find out.”

So he wrapped up Joan in an old blanket, for she was shivering in the cold of the early morning, and carried her up to the ranchhouse. The alarm had already been given. He saw Buck Daniels gallop toward the front of the place leading two saddled horses; he saw Haines and Kate run down the steps to meet them, and then they caught sight of the foreman coming with Joan on his shoulder.

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