Riding slowly Rathburn kept well in toward the range and proceeded cautiously. This wasn’t alone a safety measure, for he wished to favor his horse. The dun had been hard ridden in the spurt to gain the mountains ahead of the posse. He had been rested at Price’s cabin, to be sure, and also at the Mallory ranch; but now Rathburn had a ride of fifteen miles to the town of Hope, and he did not know how much riding he might have to do next day. When a scant three miles from Hope, he halted, loosened the saddle cinch, and rested his horse, while he himself reclined on the ground and smoked innumerable cigarettes. He was in a thoughtful mood, serious and somewhat puzzled. The recollection of Eagen’s proposition caused him to frown frequently. Then a wistful light would glow in his eyes, and he thought of Laura Mallory. This would be succeeded by another frown, and then his eyes would narrow, and the smile that men had come to fear would tremble on his lips. He was again in the saddle with the first faint glimmer of the approaching dawn. He covered the distance into Hope at a swinging lope and rode in behind a row of neat, yellow-brick buildings which formed the east side of one block on the short main street. Securing his horse behind a building midway of the rear of the block, he entered one of the buildings through a back door. It proved to be a “Kind of early, ain’t you, boss?” grinned the porter. “Maybe you’re lookin’ for something to start the day with.” He winked broadly. Rathburn nodded and walked over to the bar. “Just get in?” asked the porter, as he put out a bottle of white liquor and glanced at the dust on Rathburn’s clothes. “Just in,” replied Rathburn, pouring and tossing off one drink. “Where’s everybody? Too early for ’em?” “Well, it’s about an hour too early on the average, unless there’s been an all-night game,” replied the porter, putting the bottle away, as his customer declined a second drink. “But then there ain’t very many in town right now. Everybody’s out after the reward money.” Rathburn lifted his brows. “Say,” exclaimed the porter eagerly, “you didn’t see any men ridin’ looselike, when you was coming in, did you?” Rathburn shook his head. “What’s all this you’re tryin’ to chirp into my ear?” he asked. “Well, Bob Long, the sheriff, has got all his deputies out except just the jailer––there ain’t anybody much in jail now, anyway––an’ all the other men he could pin a star on, lookin’ for a gang that held up the stage from Sunshine yesterday mornin’, shot the stage driver dead, an’ made off with an express package full of money. There’s a big reward out for the man that’s leadin’ the gang. He’s called The Coyote. Used to live here. He’s a bad one.” “Sheriff out, too?” Rathburn asked, showing great interest. “Sure. Come back in early last night an’ got more men. They’re tryin’ to surround Imagination Range, I guess. That’s where this Coyote an’ his gang are supposed to be hanging out. The sheriff don’t care so much for the fellers that’s with him, I guess, but he sure does want this Coyote person. He told everybody to let the gang go if they had to, but to get the leader.” Rathburn looked through the front windows with a quizzical smile on his lips. The sun was shining in the deserted street. “How many men has the sheriff got?” he inquired casually. “Most two hundred, I guess. They’re scattered all over the range, an’ a lot of ’em has hit over on the other side. They think The Coyote crossed the range an’ is makin’ east.” “Well, maybe he has, an’ maybe he hasn’t,” Rathburn observed. “The best place to hide from a posse is in the middle of it.” The porter looked at him, then burst into a loud laugh. “I guess you said something that time, pardner. In the middle of it, eh?” He went about his work, chuckling, while Rathburn walked to a front window and stood looking out. A few minutes later he stepped quickly back into a corner, as a small automobile raced up the street. He sauntered to the rear door, passed out with a pleasant word to the porter, and when he gained the open, hurried up behind the buildings the length of the block. There he turned to the left and walked rapidly to a large stone building. He went around on the east side and entered a door on the ground floor. He found himself in a hallway, and on his left was a door, on the glazed glass of the After a moment’s hesitation he opened the door quickly and went in. A man standing before an open roll-top desk turned and regarded the early-morning visitor. He was a small man, but of wiry build. His eyes were gray, and he wore a small, brown mustache. He had a firm chin, and his face was well tanned. He was holding a paper in his hands, and the paper remained as steady as a rock in his grasp. His eyes bored straight and unflinchingly into Rathburn’s. He showed no surprise, no concern. He made no move toward the pair of guns in the holsters of the belt which reposed on top of his desk. He spoke first. “Have you come to give yourself up, Rathburn?” “Hardly that, sheriff,” replied Rathburn cheerfully. “I arrived in town this morning after most of the population had moved to the desert and the country aroun’ Imagination. I didn’t think I was goin’ to be lucky enough to catch you in till I saw you arrive in that flivver. Are you back for more recruits?” The sheriff continued to hold the paper without moving. “When you first started to talk, Rathburn, I thought maybe bravado had brought you here to make a grand-stand play,” he said coolly. “But I see you’re not as foolhardy as some might think. I always gave you credit for being clever.” “Thanks, Sheriff Long,” said Rathburn dryly. “There’s a few preliminaries we’ve got to get over, so–––” His gun leaped into his hand and instantly covered the official. He stepped to the end of the desk, reached over and appropriated the belt with “Now, sheriff, I didn’t come lookin’ for a cell like you hinted; I drifted in for a bit of information.” “This is headquarters for that article, especially if it’s about yourself,” said Long, dropping the paper on his desk and sitting down in the chair before it. “What all have you got against me?” frowned Rathburn. “Nothing much,” said the sheriff with biting sarcasm; “just a few killings, highway robbery, a bank stick-up, two or three gaming houses looted, and a stage holdup. Enough to keep you in the Big House for ninety-nine years and then hang you.” Rathburn nodded. “You’re sure an ambitious man, sheriff. The killings now––there was White and Moran, that you know about, an’ a skunk over in California named Carlisle, that you don’t know about, I guess. I couldn’t get away from those shootings, sheriff.” “How about Simpson and Manley?” countered the official scornfully. “Not on my list,” said Rathburn quickly. “I heard I was given credit for those affairs, but I wasn’t a member of the party where they were snuffed out.” “If you can make a jury believe that, you’re in the clear,” said Long. “But how about that stage driver yesterday morning?” Rathburn’s face darkened. “I got in from the west just in time to stumble on that gang of rats,” he flared. “That’s how your men came to see me. The chase happened to come in my direction, that’s all.” “If you can prove that, you’re all right again,” “An’ I probably wouldn’t be able to prove it,” said Rathburn bitterly. “Those other things––the bank job an’ the gamblin’ stick-ups––I was younger then, sheriff, an’ no one can say that that bank sharp didn’t do me dirt.” “If you can show a good, reasonable doubt in those other cases, Rathburn, I know the court would show leniency if the jury found you guilty on the counts you just mentioned,” said the sheriff earnestly. “I’m minded to believe you, so far as yesterday’s work was concerned. I have an idea or two myself, but I haven’t been able to get a good line on my man. He’s too tricky. Of course I’m not going to urge you to do anything against your will. I appreciate your position. You’re a fugitive, but you have your liberty. Perhaps you can get away clean, though I doubt it. But there’s that chance, and you’ve naturally got to take it into consideration. And you’re not sure of anything if you go to trial on the charges there are against you. But it would count like sixty in your favor, Rathburn, if you’d give yourself up.” Rathburn stared at the official speculatively. His thoughts flashed back along the years to the time when he and Laura Mallory had played together as children. He thought of what she had said the night before about the compass. He shifted uneasily on his feet. “Funny thing, sheriff, but I had some such fool notion,” he confessed. “It takes nerve, Rathburn, for a man who is wanted to walk in and give up his gun,” said the sheriff quietly. “I was thinking of something else,” said Rathburn. “How much time do you want, Rathburn?” asked Long. Rathburn scowled. “Our positions haven’t changed,” he said curtly. “I’m still the man you’re lookin’ for. I’ll have to do my thinkin’ on my own hook, I reckon.” “Just as you say,” Long said gravely. “Go over what I’ve told you carefully and don’t make any more false moves while you’re making up your mind. You wounded one of my men yesterday.” “I shot high on purpose,” Rathburn pointed out. “I didn’t aim to be corralled just then.” “I know you did,” was the sheriff’s rejoinder. “I know you could have killed him. I gave you credit for it.” “You give me credit for quite a few things, sheriff,” said Rathburn whimsically. “An’ now you’ll have to give me credit for bein’ plumb cautious. It ain’t my intention to have my thinking spell disturbed.” His gun flashed in his hand. “I’ll have to ask you to go inside an’ occupy one of your own cells, sheriff, while I’m wanderin’ around an’ debatin’ the subject.” “I know you too well, Rathburn,” said the sheriff with a grim smile. “I’m not armed, and I don’t intend to obey you. If you intend to shoot you might just as well start!” Rathburn gazed at him coolly for a moment; then he shoved his gun in its holster and leaped. Quick as he was, Long was quicker. The sheriff was out of his chair in a twinkling, and he made a flying tackle, grasping Rathburn about the legs. The two fell to the floor and rolled over and over in their struggles. Although Rathburn was the larger man, the sheriff seemed made of steel wire. He twisted out of Rathburn’s holds, one after another. In one great effort he freed himself and leaped to his feet. Rathburn was up instantly. Long drove a straight right that grazed Rathburn’s jaw and staggered him, but Rathburn blocked the next blow and succeeded in upper-cutting his left to the sheriff’s chin. They went into another clinch, and the sheriff got the better of the close fighting. Rathburn’s face was bleeding, where it had been cut on a leg of the chair, when they were struggling on the floor. The feel of trickling crimson drove him mad. He threw Long off in an amazing burst of strength and then sent his right to the sheriff’s jaw with all the force he could put into it. Long dropped to the floor, and Rathburn raised him and carried him to a door leading into the jail proper. As he drew open the door, he drew his gun and threw it down on the astonished jailer who was dozing in the little office outside the bars. “Open up!” Rathburn commanded. The jailer hastened to obey, as he saw the appearance of Rathburn’s face and the dangerous look in his eyes. Rathburn compelled him at the point of his gun to lead the way to a cell in the rear, unlock it, and go inside. Rathburn pushed Long, who was regaining his senses, in after him and took the jailer’s keys. “Tell Long I’m thinkin’ over what he told me,” he said to the jailer, as he locked them in. Then he hurried back to the entrance, locked it, and tossed the keys in through the bars. He wet his handkerchief with ice water from a tank in Long’s office, wiped his face clean, and left the building. |