Max Brand

The Max Brand Megapack


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      The others obeyed without question, and the leader turned back to his lieutenant. For a moment longer they remained staring at each other. Then Silent moved slowly forward with outstretched hand.

      “Lee,” he said quietly, “I’m owin’ you an apology an’ I’m man enough to make it.”

      “I can’t take your hand, Jim.”

      Silent hesitated.

      “I guess you got cause to be mad, Lee,” he said. “Maybe I played too quick a hand. I didn’t think about double crossin’ you. I only seen a way to get Whistlin’ Dan out of our path, an’ I took it without rememberin’ that you was the safeguard to the girl.”

      Haines eyed his chief narrowly.

      “I wish to God I could read your mind,” he said at last, “but I’ll take your word that you did it without thinking.”

      His hand slowly met Silent’s.

      “An’ what about the girl now, Lee?”

      “I’ll send her back to her father’s ranch. It will be easy to put her on the right way.”

      “Don’t you see no reason why you can’t do that?”

      “Are you playing with me?”

      “I’m talkin’ to you as I’d talk to myself. If she’s loose she’ll describe us all an’ set the whole range on our trail.”

      Haines stared.

      Silent went on: “If we can’t turn her loose, they’s only one thing left—an’ that’s to take her with us wherever we go.”

      “On your honour, do you see no other way out?”

      “Do you?”

      “She may promise not to speak of it.”

      “There ain’t no way of changin’ the spots of a leopard, Lee, an’ there ain’t no way of keepin’ a woman’s tongue still.”

      “How can we take a girl with us.”

      “It ain’t goin’ to be for long. After we pull the job that comes on the eighteenth, we’ll blow farther south an’ then we’ll let her go.”

      “And no harm will come to her while she’s with us?”

      “Here’s my hand on it, Lee.”

      “How can she ride with us?”

      “She won’t go as a woman. I’ve thought of that. I brought out a new outfit for Purvis from Elkhead—trousers, chaps, shirts, an’ all. He’s small. They’ll near fit the girl.”

      “There isn’t any other way, Jim?”

      “I leave it to you. God knows I don’t want to drag any damn calico aroun’ with us.”

      As they went back towards their clearing they arranged the details. Silent would take the men aside and explain his purpose to them. Haines could inform the girl of what she must do. Just before they reached the camp Silent stopped short and took Haines by the shoulder.

      “They’s one thing I can’t make out, Lee, an’ that’s how Whistlin’ Dan made his getaway. I’d of bet a thousand bones that he would be dropped before he could touch his shootin’ irons. An’ then what happened? Hal Purvis jest flashed a gun—and that feller shot it out’n his hand. I never seen a draw like that. His hand jest seemed to twitch—I couldn’t follow the move he made—an’ the next second his gun went off.”

      He stared at Lee with a sort of fascinated horror.

      “Silent,” said Haines, “can you explain how the lightning comes down out of the sky?”

      “Of course not.”

      “Then don’t ask me to explain how Whistling Dan made his getaway. One minute I heard him talkin’ with the girl. The next second there was two shots and when I whirled he was gone. But he’ll come back, Jim. We’re not through with him. He slipped away from you and your men like water out of a sieve, but we won’t slip away from him the same way.”

      Silent stared on again with bowed head.

      “He liked the girl, Lee?”

      “Any one could see that.”

      “Then while she’s with us he’ll go pretty slow. Lee, that’s another reason why she’s got to stay with us. My frien’, it’s time we was moving out from the willows. The next time he comes up with us he won’t be numb in the head. He’ll be thinkin’ fast an’ he’ll be shootin’ a damn sight faster. We got two jobs ahead of us—first to get that Wells Fargo shipment, and then to get Whistling Dan. There ain’t room enough in the whole world for him and me.”

      CHAPTER XVI

      THE THREE OF US

      In the clearing of Whistling Dan and Tex Calder the marshal had turned into his blankets once more. There was no thought of sleep in Dan’s mind. When the heavy breathing of the sleeper began he rose and commenced to pace up and down on the farther side of the open space. Two pairs of glowing eyes followed him in every move. Black Bart, who trailed him up and down during the first few turns he made, now sat down and watched his master with a wistful gaze. The black stallion, who lay more like a dog than a horse on the ground, kept his ears pricked forwards, as if expecting some order. Once or twice he whinnied very softly, and finally Dan sat down beside Satan, his shoulders leaned against the satiny side and his arms flung out along the stallion’s back. Several times he felt hot breath against his cheek as the horse turned a curious head towards him, but he paid no attention, even when the stallion whinnied a question in his ear. In his heart was a numb, strange feeling which made him weak. He was even blind to the fact that Black Bart at last slipped into the shadows of the willows.

      Presently something cold touched his chin. He found himself staring into the yellow-green eyes of Black Bart, who panted from his run, and now dropped from his mouth something which fell into Dan’s lap. It was the glove of Kate Cumberland. In the grasp of his long nervous fingers, how small it was!; and yet the hand which had wrinkled the leather was strong enough to hold the heart of a man. He slipped and caught the shaggy black head of Bart between his hands. The wolf knew—in some mysterious way he knew!

      The touch of sympathy unnerved him. All his sorrow and his weakness burst on his soul in a single wave. A big tear struck the shining nose of the wolf.

      “Bart!” he whispered. “Did you figger on plumb bustin’ my heart, pal?”

      To avoid those large melancholy eyes, Bart pressed his head inside of his master’s arms.

      “Delilah!” whispered Dan.

      After that not a sound came from the three, the horse, the dog, or the man. Black Bart curled up at the feet of his master and seemed to sleep, but every now and then an ear raised or an eye twitched open. He was on guard against a danger which he did not understand. The horse, also, with a high head scanned the circling willows, alert; but the man for whom the stallion and the wolf watched gave no heed to either. There was a vacant and dreamy expression in his eye as if he was searching his own inner heart and found there the greatest enemy of all. All night they sat in this manner, silent, moveless; the animals watching against the world, the man watching against himself. Before dawn he roused himself suddenly, crossed to the sleeping marshal, and touched him on the arm.

      “It’s time we hit the trail,” he said, as Calder sat up in the blanket.

      “What’s happened? Isn’t it our job to comb the willows?”

      “Silent ain’t in the willows.”

      Calder started to his feet.

      “How do you know?”

      “They ain’t close to us, that’s all I know.”

      Tex smiled incredulously.

      “I