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+Project Gutenberg's The Coming of the Law, by Charles Alden Seltzer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Coming of the Law
+
+Author: Charles Alden Seltzer
+
+Illustrator: R. W. Amick
+
+Release Date: March 5, 2010 [EBook #31512]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMING OF THE LAW ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "What have you done with Hollis?" demanded Norton,
+thrusting his big six-shooter against Ten Spot's stomach. _Page 165_
+_The Coming of the Law_]
+
+
+
+
+THE COMING OF THE LAW
+
+BY CHARLES ALDEN SELTZER
+
+Author of "The Range Riders," "The Two-Gun Man,"
+"The Triangle Cupid," etc.
+
+With Frontispiece in Colors by R. W. AMICK
+
+A. L. BURT COMPANY
+
+Publishers--New York
+
+
+
+
+Copyright 1912, By
+
+OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+All Rights Reserved
+
+First Printing, August, 1912
+
+Second Printing, September, 1912
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. The Arrival of the Man 9
+ II. The Rule of Cattle 25
+ III. Norton Makes a Discovery 42
+ IV. At the Circle Bar 53
+ V. The Girl of Dry Bottom 73
+ VI. Hollis Renews an Acquaintance 87
+ VII. The "Kicker" Becomes an Institution 107
+ VIII. Concerning the "Six O'Clock" 119
+ IX. How a Bad Man Left the "Kicker" Office 127
+ X. The Lost Trail 151
+ XI. Picking Up the Trail 161
+ XII. After the Storm 169
+ XIII. "Woman--She Don't Need No Tooter" 177
+ XIV. The Coalition 187
+ XV. To Support the Law 198
+ XVI. The Bearer of Good News 209
+ XVII. The Rustler 224
+ XVIII. The Tenth Day 238
+ XIX. How a Rustler Escaped 246
+ XX. The "Kicker's" Candidate 257
+ XXI. Dunlavey Plays a Card 267
+ XXII. Proof of Gratitude 280
+ XXIII. Ten Spot Uses His Eyes 289
+ XXIV. Campaign Guns 294
+ XXV. Handling the Law 314
+ XXVI. Autumn and the Gods 327
+ XXVII. The Sear and Yellow Days 336
+ XXVIII. In Defiance of the Law 342
+ XXIX. The Arm of the Law 354
+ XXX. Forming a Friendship 364
+ XXXI. Afterward 375
+
+
+
+
+THE COMING OF THE LAW
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE ARRIVAL OF THE MAN
+
+
+If the passengers on the west-bound train that pulled up at the little
+red wooden station at Dry Bottom at the close of a June day in 18--,
+were interested in the young man bearing the two suit cases, they gave
+no evidence of it. True, they noted his departure; with casual glances
+they watched him as he stepped down upon the platform; but immediately
+they forgot his athletic figure and his regular featured, serious face
+as their thoughts returned to the heat, the dust, and the monotony of
+travel.
+
+There was the usual bustle and activity which always follows the arrival
+of a train. A mail bag was dumped out of the mail car, another thrown
+in; some express packages were unceremoniously deposited near the door
+of the station by the agent; the conductor ran to the telegrapher's
+window to receive an order; ran back, signaling as he ran; the engine
+bell clanged, the drivers clanked, the wheels ground, the passengers
+sighed, and the train departed on its way.
+
+The young man who had alighted stood motionless for a moment, listening
+to the clatter of the wheels over the rail-joints, watching the smoke
+from the engine-stack befoul the clear blue of the sky. Then he smiled
+grimly, threw a rapid glance toward a group of loungers standing at a
+corner of the station, and walked over to where the station agent stood
+examining some newly arrived packages.
+
+"Do you mind directing me to the courthouse?" said the young man.
+
+The agent looked up, turned, and ran a measuring, speculative eye over
+the new arrival. He noted the Eastern cut of the young man's clothing
+and beneath the dust of travel the clear, healthy white skin of his
+face. "Stranger here?" observed the agent, with a slight, humorous
+narrowing of the eyes.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"No, I don't mind," resumed the agent, answering the young man's
+question. "You won't have any trouble findin' the courthouse. There's
+only one street in this town an' the courthouse is down to the other end
+of it--you couldn't miss it if you tried." He grinned with some
+amusement at the young man's back as the latter with a cordial "thank
+you," returned to his suit cases, gripped them firmly by the handles,
+and strode down the wooden platform toward the street, ignoring the
+group of loungers at the corner of the station.
+
+"'Nother tenderfoot," remarked one of the loungers as the young man
+passed out of hearing; "they're runnin' this country plum to hell!"
+
+The young man strode slowly down the board sidewalk that paralleled the
+buildings on one side of the street, mentally taking in the dimensions
+of the town. It was not an inviting picture. Many buildings of various
+descriptions snuggled the wide, vacant space which the station agent had
+termed a "street." Most of the buildings were unpainted and crude,
+composed of rough boards running perpendicularly, with narrow battens
+over the joints. There were several brick buildings two stories in
+height, bearing the appearance of having been recently erected, and
+these towered over the squat, one-story frames in seeming contemptuous
+dignity. There were many private dwellings, some stores, but the young
+man's first impression was that there was an enormous number of saloons.
+
+He saw few people; those who came within range of vision were apparently
+cowboys, for they were rigged in the picturesque garb that he had
+studied many times in the illustrations of Eastern magazines. He had
+admired them afar, for there was something about them, something in the
+free, wild life they led, that appealed to him; something that struck at
+the primitive in his heart. He had heard tales of them; travelers
+returning from these regions had related sundry stories of these wild
+men of the plains; stories of their hardihood, of their recklessness, of
+their absolute fearlessness--clothing them with a glamor and romance
+that had deeply impressed the young man. His own life had been rather
+prosaic.
+
+He saw some cowponies hitched to rails in front of several of the
+saloons; in front of a store he observed a canvas-covered wagon which he
+recognized (from sketches he had seen) as a "prairie schooner"; in front
+of another store he saw a spring wagon of the "buckboard" variety. That
+was all. The aroma of sage-brush filled his nostrils; the fine,
+flint-like, powdered alkali dust lay thick everywhere. It was
+unattractive and dismal.
+
+The town, as it lay before him, began in desolation and ended in
+desolation. Except that it was a trifle larger it differed in no
+important particular from many others that littered the face of the
+world through which he had passed during the last twenty-four hours. It
+was a mere dot in the center of a flat grass country covering a vast
+area. It sat, serene in its isolation, as far from civilization as
+Genesis from Revelation. In the stifling heat of the lazy June afternoon
+it drowsed, seemingly deserted except for the ponies and the two wagons,
+and the few incurious cowboys who had rewarded the young man with their
+glances. Apparently whatever citizens were here were busy in the
+saloons. As this thought flashed upon the young man his lips
+straightened grimly. But he continued slowly on his way, giving much
+attention to objects that came within his range of vision. The more he
+saw of the town, the less pleased he was with it.
+
+The suit cases were heavy; he paused in front of a building and set them
+down, while with his handkerchief he mopped the dust and perspiration
+from his forehead. He saw a flaring sign on the roof of the building in
+front of which he had stopped and he read the legend with a smile of
+derision: "The Fashion Saloon." Several ponies were hitched to the rail
+in front of the building; the bridle of one was gaily decorated with a
+bow of ribbon. Only a woman would have decorated a pony thus, the young
+man decided with a smile. Yet what sort of woman would hitch her pony in
+front of a saloon? He looked about him for some explanation and saw a
+vacant space beside him and beside the vacant space a store. There was
+no hitching rail in front of the store, therefore here was the
+explanation. He heard a sound behind him and turning he beheld the
+figures of a man and a woman in the vacant space between the two
+buildings.
+
+The woman seemed to be little more than a girl, for as the young man
+watched she turned slightly toward him--though not seeing him--and he
+saw youth pictured on her face, and innocence, though withal she gave
+the young man an impression of sturdy self-reliance that awakened
+instant admiration for her in his mind.
+
+She was attired in picturesque costume, consisting of short riding
+skirt, boots, felt hat, woolen blouse with a flowing tie at the throat,
+gloves, and spurs. It was not the sort of thing to which the young man
+was accustomed, but she made an attractive picture and he took in every
+detail of her appearance with eager eyes.
+
+It was some time before he noticed the man. The latter stood facing the
+girl and he could not get a view of his face. He had a gigantic frame,
+with huge shoulders that loomed above the girl, dwarfing her. The young
+man remained motionless, watching the two, for there was something in
+the big man's attitude that held him. The man turned presently and the
+young man had a glimpse of his face. It was heavy featured, coarse, and
+an unmistakable brutality was betrayed in it. The young man's lips
+curled. He did not like the type, and it was the girl's face that held
+him now that he had seen the man's.
+
+He leaned easily against the front of the building, not over fifteen
+feet distant from the two, trying to appear uninterested, but not
+concealing his interest. He believed the girl had not seen him, for
+though she had looked in his direction he was sure that her glance had
+passed him to rest on the pony at the hitching rail. Swift as the glance
+had been the young man had seen in her face an expression that caused
+him to decide to remain where he was until the girl mounted her pony, no
+matter how long that time might be. So he relaxed, leaning against the
+building--attentive, listening, though apparently entirely unconcerned
+over their conversation.
+
+The girl seemed moved with some deep emotion over something the big man
+had said, for her slight figure had stiffened and she stood looking at
+him with an angry, intense gaze. The big man had been taunting her, for
+his teeth showed in a mocking grin as he hovered near her, apparently
+sure of her. It was like a lion playing with a mouse. Then the young man
+heard the big man's voice:
+
+"So you don't take kindly to my courting? Don't want anything to do with
+me at all?" His forced laugh had a harshness in it that caused the young
+man's muscles to stiffen. He took a sly glance at the girl and saw her
+chin uplift with disdain.
+
+"Do you think it necessary for me to tell you that--again?" she said.
+
+A strange satisfaction thrilled the young man; sympathy for her drew his
+mouth into a peculiarly grim smile. But he had no time to enjoy his
+satisfaction for the big man spoke and this time he did not laugh.
+
+"Well," he said shortly, "you're going to have something to do with me.
+You're going to hook up with me or I'm putting that crazy brother of
+yours out of business!"
+
+The girl was suddenly rigid and a deep red as suddenly suffused her
+cheeks. The young man's face paled at the threat, his teeth came
+together with a snap, and he leaned forward, wishing to hear some more
+of this extraordinary conversation. More of it came quickly. The girl
+spoke, her voice even and well controlled, though burdened with a biting
+sarcasm:
+
+"What a terrible man you are, to be sure, to threaten to make war upon a
+defenseless girl and her afflicted brother. But I'm not afraid of you!"
+
+She took a step toward him, standing very close to him and looking
+straight into his eyes. She was fighting bravely for her composure, but
+the young man had seen that her lips had quivered pitifully during her
+brief speech. He stiffened with sympathy. He could not, of course,
+understand this strange conversation, but he could discern its drift,
+and the suggestive underplay in the big man's words. But plainly he had
+not been mistaken in his estimate of the young woman--she seemed
+entirely able to take care of herself.
+
+He crowded a little closer, though he knew that this conversation was
+none of his affair further than that he was interested--as any man would
+be interested--in seeing that the young woman received decent treatment.
+Certainly so far she had not received that, yet neither had the big man
+said anything to warrant interference by a stranger. Stealing another
+glance, the young man saw a heavy revolver at the man's hip, and he did
+not doubt, from what he had thus far seen of him, that he would use the
+weapon should he turn and discover that there was a listener to his
+conversation. Such an action would accord perfectly with tales that the
+young man had heard of this section of the country. But he edged closer.
+
+The big man's face had become poisonously bloated. The girl's defiance
+seemed to have enraged him.
+
+"Hell!" he said venomously. "You're talking damn brave!" He leaned
+closer to her. "And you think you'd be disgraced if folks knowed you was
+a friend of mine?" He laughed harshly. "Most folks are tickled to be
+known as my friend. But I'm telling you this: If I ain't a friend I'm an
+enemy, and you're doing as I say or I'm making things mighty unpleasant
+for you and your poor, 'afflicted' brother!"
+
+The young man saw the girl's hands clench, saw her face grow slowly
+pale. Twice now had the big man taunted her about her brother, and
+plainly his words had hurt her. Words trembled on her lips but refused
+to come. But for an instant she forced her eyes to meet those of the man
+and then they suddenly filled with tears. She took a backward step, her
+shoulders drooping. The big man followed her, gloating over her. Again
+the young man's thoughts went to the lion and the mouse.
+
+"Hurts, does it?" said the big man, brutally. "Well, you've brought it
+on yourself, being such a damn prude!"
+
+He reached out and grasped her by the shoulder. She shrank back,
+struggling with him, trying to grasp the butt of an ivory-handled
+revolver that swung at her right hip. The big man pinned her arms and
+the effort was futile.
+
+And then retribution--like an avalanche--struck the big man. He heard
+the movement, sensed the danger, and flung his right hand toward his
+pistol butt. There was a silent struggle; a shot, one of the young man's
+arms swung out--flail like--the clenched hand landing with a crash. The
+big man went down like a falling tree--prone to the ground, his revolver
+flying ten feet distant, a little blue-white smoke curling lazily upward
+out of its muzzle. The big man was raised again--bodily--and hurled down
+again. He lay face upward in the white sunlight--a mass of bruised and
+bleeding flesh.
+
+The young man's anger had come and gone. He stood over the big man,
+looking down at him, his white teeth gleaming through his slightly
+parted lips.
+
+"I think that will do for you," he said in an even, passionless voice.
+
+For an instant there was a tense silence. The young man turned and
+looked at the girl, who was regarding him with surprised and bewildered
+eyes.
+
+The young man smiled mirthlessly. "I think I waited rather too long. But
+he won't bother you again--at least for a few minutes."
+
+He saw the girl's gaze directed to a point somewhere behind him and he
+turned to see that a door in the side of the Fashion Saloon was vomiting
+men. They came rushing out, filling the space between the two
+buildings--cowboys mostly, with a sprinkling of other men whose
+appearance and attire proclaimed them citizens. The young man stood
+silent while the newcomers ranged themselves about him, others giving
+their attention to the big man who still lay on the ground. The girl had
+not moved; she was standing near the young man, her face pale, her
+slight figure rigid, her eyes wide and flashing. The young man looked
+from her to the men who had crowded about him and he became aware that
+one of the men--a slender, olive-skinned cowboy--evidently a
+half-breed--was speaking to him. He stood looking at the man, saw menace
+in his eyes, heard his voice, writhing in profane accusation:
+
+"So you've shot Beeg Beel, you tenderfoot----!" said the man. His right
+hand was hooked in his cartridge belt, near the butt of his six-shooter.
+
+The young man had been coldly scrutinizing the face of the half-breed;
+he had seen a sneering insolence on the thin, snarling lips, and he knew
+instantly that this man was a friend of his fallen adversary. He had
+smiled grimly when the man had begun speaking, being willing to argue
+the justice of his action in striking the big man, but at the man's vile
+insult his white teeth gleamed again and his right arm flew out--like a
+flail--the fist crashing against the half-breed's jaw. Like the big man
+the half-breed collapsed in a heap on the ground. There was a sudden
+movement in the crowd, and pistols flashed in the sunlight. The young
+man took a backward step, halted, drew himself up and faced them, his
+lips curling.
+
+"Of course you'll shoot now," he said bitterly.
+
+He heard a rustle beside him, and turned to see the girl standing within
+a foot of him, the ivory-handled pistol in hand, her eyes flashing
+coldly.
+
+"I don't think that any of them are going to shoot," she declared
+evenly, her voice resounding in the sudden silence that had fallen; "Big
+Bill got just what he deserved, and this gentleman will not be molested.
+He isn't armed," she said, with a dry laugh; "shooting him would be
+murder, and if he is shot I promise to avenge him immediately." She
+turned slightly, speaking to the young man while keeping her eyes on the
+men around her. During the pause that followed her words several of the
+men stealthily sheathed their weapons and stepped back.
+
+"I think Big Bill is able to fight his own battles," continued the girl,
+taking advantage of the evident reluctance of the men to force trouble.
+
+Her face became slightly paler as she saw the big man sit up and stare
+about him. He got to his feet and stood, swaying dizzily for an instant,
+and then his gaze sought out the young man and was fixed on him with
+foreboding malignance. His right hand fell to his holster, and finding
+no weapon there he turned and sought it, finding it, and returning to a
+point near the young man, the weapon in hand. As he halted there was
+another movement and the half-breed was on his feet and dragging at his
+revolver. The young man crouched, prepared to spring, and the big man
+spoke sharply to the half-breed.
+
+"Quit it!" he said, snarling. "Mind your own business!" Then he seemed
+to realize that the half-breed had been worsted also, for he looked at
+the latter, saw the dust on his clothing and grinned expressively.
+
+"So he got you too, did he, Yuma?" His heavy features wreathed into a
+mocking sneer as he faced the young man.
+
+"Knocked me down!" he said in a silky, even voice. "Knocked me cold with
+a punch. Knocked Yuma Ed down too!" He took another step toward the
+young man and surveyed him critically, his eyes glinting with something
+very near amusement. Then he stepped back, laughing shortly.
+
+"I ain't shooting you," he said. "I've got an idea that you and me will
+meet again." There was an ominous threat in his voice as he continued:
+"Shooting you wouldn't half pay you back. Mark that, young man--shooting
+you wouldn't half pay you back."
+
+He stepped away from the young man, motioning the other men into the
+door through which they had emerged to come to his assistance, and they
+filed slowly in without protest. The big man paused long enough to look
+again at the young man.
+
+"Knocked me down!" he said as though scarcely able to realize the truth;
+"knocked me cold with a punch!" He laughed, his coarse features twisting
+into an odd expression. "Well, I'll be damned!" He turned abruptly and
+disappeared through the door through which the other men had gone.
+
+For an instant the young man stood, looking after him. Then he turned
+and saw the young woman, standing near her pony, regarding him with
+grave eyes.
+
+"Thank you," she said. He caught a flashing smile and then she was in
+the saddle, loping her pony down the street toward the station. For a
+moment the young man looked after her and then with a smile he returned
+to his suit cases and was off down the street toward the courthouse,
+which he saw in the distance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE RULE OF CATTLE
+
+
+The courthouse was a low, one-story redbrick building, sitting well back
+from the street. It was evidently newly built, for an accumulation of
+débris, left by the workmen, still littered the ground in the vicinity.
+A board walk led from the street to the wide, arched entrance. From the
+steps one could look down the street at the station and the other
+buildings squatting in the sunlight, dingy with the dust of many dry
+days. Except for the cowponies and the buckboard and the prairie
+schooner there was a total absence of life or movement, offering a
+striking contrast to the bustling cities to which the young man had been
+accustomed.
+
+He walked rapidly down the board walk, entered the courthouse, and
+paused before a door upon which appeared the legend: "United States
+District Court. J. Blackstone Graney." The young man set his suit cases
+down, mopped his forehead with his handkerchief, making a wry face at
+the dust that appeared on the linen after his use of it, and then
+knocked lightly, but firmly, on the door. A voice inside immediately
+admonished him to "come in." The young man smiled with satisfaction,
+turned the knob and opened the door, standing on the threshold. A man
+seated at one of the windows of the room was gazing steadily out at the
+vast, dry, sun-scorched country. He turned at the young man's entrance
+and got slowly to his feet, apparently waiting for the visitor to speak.
+He was a short man, not heavily, but stockily built, giving a clear
+impression of stolidity. Yet there was a certain gleam in his eyes that
+gave the lie to this impression, a gleam that warned of an active,
+analytical mind. Judicial dignity lurked all over him.
+
+The young man bowed respectfully. "Are you Judge Graney?" he questioned.
+
+The judge nodded and the young man smiled slightly. "I am Kent Hollis,"
+he said.
+
+The judge had been approaching a big table that stood in the center of
+the room and at the young man's words he took a second glance at him,
+but did not hesitate in his walk toward the table. However, he smiled
+when he reached it, sinking into a chair and motioning the young man to
+another.
+
+"I have been expecting you," he said after he had become seated. "Take a
+chair." He waited until the young man had drawn a chair opposite him and
+then he leaned over the table and stretched out his hand in greeting.
+"I'm glad to see you," he continued cordially. He held the young man's
+hand for an instant, peering steadily into the latter's unwavering eyes,
+apparently making a mental estimate of him. Then he dropped the hand and
+sat back, a half smile on his face. "You look like your father," he
+said.
+
+The young man's face clouded. "Poor dad," he said slowly.
+
+For a moment there was a silence; the judge studied the young man's
+face. Something that he saw in it must have pleased him, for he smiled,
+becoming serious instantly.
+
+"I am sorry you could not get here in time," he said. "We buried your
+father yesterday."
+
+"I couldn't make it," returned the young man regretfully. "I should have
+liked to see him before he died. Where did you bury him?"
+
+"We took him out to his ranch--the Circle Bar," returned the judge,
+"where he said he wanted to be buried when he died. You'll find that the
+Circle Bar boys have done their best for him--which was little enough.
+Poor fellow, he deserved something better." He looked keenly at the
+young man.
+
+Lines of pain came into the latter's face; he bowed his head, nodding at
+the Judge's words.
+
+"I have always thought that it was his own fault," he said gently. "It
+might have been different." He looked slowly up at the judge, his face
+reddening with embarrassment. "Of course you know something of his
+life," he said. "You were his friend--he wrote me a while back, telling
+me that. I don't pretend to know what came between him and mother," he
+continued; "mother would never tell and father never mentioned it in his
+letters. I have thought it was drink," he added, watching the judge's
+face closely. He caught the latter's slight nod and his lips
+straightened. "Yes, it must have been drink," he continued; "I have
+inferred that from what mother has hinted now and then. But----" and a
+wistful gleam came into his eyes--"I have hoped that it would not be
+drink that would cause his----"
+
+He caught the judge's slow, grave nod and he broke off abruptly, his
+eyes filling with an expression of resignation. "Well," he said, "it is
+ended, no matter what did it." He shoved back his chair. "I thank you
+for what you did for him," he added, rising; "I assure you that if it is
+possible for me to repay----"
+
+"Sit down," said the judge, waving a hand to the young man's chair. "No
+thanks are due me. I did only what any friend would do for another. I
+have arranged for you to go out to the Circle Bar," he informed Hollis
+as the latter hesitated over resuming his chair. "Neil Norton, your
+range boss, is to be here at six o'clock with the buckboard." He
+consulted his watch. "He ought to be here in half an hour--if he is on
+time. Meantime there are some things I would like to say to you."
+
+Hollis smiled. "Fire away," he directed.
+
+The judge leaned his elbows on the table and narrowed his eyes at
+Hollis. "Don't think my questions impertinent," he said gravely, "for I
+assure you that nothing is further from my mind than a desire to pry
+into your affairs. But I take it you will need some advice--which, of
+course, you may disregard if you wish. I suppose you don't make a secret
+of your age?"
+
+"No," was the instant reply, given with a grin, "I am twenty-six."
+
+The judge smiled dryly. "We have great ambitions at twenty-six," he
+said. "I remember that at twenty-six I was rather determined on making
+the Supreme bench. You can see for yourself how far I missed it. I do
+not say that we never realize our ambitions," he added quickly as he saw
+a flash light up the young man's eyes; "I merely wish to show that in my
+case they were rather extravagant." He grimaced, continuing with a
+smile: "You are a college man, of course--I can see that."
+
+Hollis nodded. The judge continued, with an admiring glance at the young
+man's muscular frame and broad shoulders.
+
+"Went in for athletics--football, and such?" he said. "Well," he added,
+catching the young man's nod, "it didn't hurt you a particle--it doesn't
+hurt anybody. Rather prepares a man for hard knocks--which he is sure to
+get sooner or later. If you have decided to live in this country you
+must expect hard knocks. And I presume you are going to live here?"
+
+"That depends." returned Hollis. "If father has left his affairs in such
+shape that it is necessary for me to stay here and straighten them out,
+why of course I shall stay. Otherwise----" He hesitated and laughed
+quietly, continuing: "Well, I also have an ambition, and if I am
+compelled to remain here it will have to be sacrificed. It is a rather
+humble ambition compared to yours," he laughed. "It is journalism," he
+continued, suddenly serious; "I want to own a newspaper. I am city
+editor now and in a few years----" He laughed. "I am not going to
+prophesy, but I have been working hard."
+
+The judge's eyelashes flickered, but his face remained grave. "I am
+afraid that you will have to remain here. That is"--he added dryly--"if
+you expect to realize anything from the property."
+
+"I expect there can't be much property," observed Hollis.
+
+The judge smiled. "A thousand acres of good grass land, some buildings,
+and"--here the judge's eyes gleamed and he drawled his words--"a
+newspaper."
+
+Hollis sat erect. "A newspaper!" he gasped. "A newspaper in this
+country? Why, man, a newspaper----"
+
+The judge laughed. "So you will not have to go back East in order to be
+able to realize your ambition--you can own a newspaper here--your
+father's newspaper--the Dry Bottom _Kicker_. It was quite a recent
+venture; I believe it appeared about a dozen times--intermittently.
+Ostensibly it was a weekly, but in reality it was printed at those times
+when your father's affliction sat least heavily upon him. He used to
+hire a compositor from Las Vegas to set the type,--a man named Potter--a
+worthless sort of fellow, but a genius in his way--when sober. I suspect
+that much of the matter that went into the _Kicker_ emanated from
+the brain of Dave Potter."
+
+Hollis's smile revealed just a trace of derision. "You don't happen to
+know how father happened to think that a newspaper would pay--in this
+place?" he asked.
+
+The judge looked at him meditatively, a gleam of quiet amusement in his
+eyes. "I don't remember to have said that the paper made any money for
+your father," he returned slowly; "nor do I remember hearing your father
+say that he expected it to make any money. As I understand the
+situation, your father founded the paper on principle. He expected to
+use it as a weapon."
+
+"Please go on," urged Hollis. "That strikes me as a rather Quixotic
+proceeding."
+
+"It was, rather," admitted the judge; "that is, it would seem Quixotic
+as viewed by an Eastern newspaper man. But out here people are apt to
+ignore money and methods in considering results. After you have been
+here a while you will be able to see the force and truth of that
+statement. Your father was after results and he seized upon the idea of
+founding a newspaper as a means by which to obtain them. And I feel
+certain that had he lived he would have succeeded."
+
+"I plead ignorance," said Hollis, watching the judge closely. "What
+particular result did my father desire?"
+
+Judge Graney's eyes gleamed with earnestness. He leaned forward,
+speaking slowly and distinctly.
+
+"I am going to illustrate my point by giving you a brief history of your
+father's experiences out here--as I had it from him. He came out here
+about fifteen years ago and took up a quarter-section of land over on
+Rabbit-Ear Creek, the present site of the Circle Bar ranch. For quite a
+few years he was a nester--as the small owner is called in this country,
+but he was unmolested for the reason that there were few large owners in
+the vicinity and each man was willing that his neighbor should succeed.
+Your father prospered and after a few years began to buy land. He
+finally acquired a thousand acres; he told me that at one time he had
+about five thousand head of cattle. Of course, these cattle could not
+live on your father's thousand acres, but the ranges are free and the
+thousand acres answered very well as a headquarters.
+
+"Eight years ago some men in Santa Fe organized what is known as the
+Union County Cattlemen's Association. This company secured a section of
+land adjoining your father's property, on the other side of Rabbit-Ear
+Creek. The company called its ranch the Circle Cross. Perhaps it strikes
+you as peculiar that the Association should have chosen a brand so
+closely resembling your father's. I will digress long enough to explain
+the action."
+
+The judge drew out a pencil and picked up a piece of paper that lay near
+him on the desk, making some crude hieroglyphics and poising his pencil
+above them.
+
+"Here," he explained, indicating a sketch which he had drawn, "is the
+Circle Bar brand--a bar within a circle. And this--" indicating another
+sketch, "--is the Circle Cross--a cross within a circle. It is of course,
+perfectly obvious that all the Circle Cross company had to do when it
+desired to appropriate one of the Circle Bar cattle was to add a
+vertical bar to the Circle Bar brand and the brand became the Circle
+Cross. From a mechanical standpoint it was a very trifling operation,
+the manipulator of the brands having merely to apply the hot iron
+through a piece of wet blanket--that gives a new brand the appearance of
+age.
+
+"To get back to the main subject. The new company called its ranch the
+Circle Cross and it erected new buildings within a few miles of the
+Circle Bar buildings. Not long after the advent of the new company it
+tried to buy the Circle Bar, but your father refused to sell. Bill
+Dunlavey, the Circle Cross manager, attempted to negotiate the purchase
+of the Circle Bar and when he was met with refusal hard words passed
+between him and your father. Not long after that your father began to
+miss cattle--rustlers began a systematic attack upon his herds. Your
+father recognized this thievery as the work of the Cattlemen's
+Association and he fought back.
+
+"A number of times he changed his brands but each time the company
+checkmated him. To illustrate: Your father changed his brand to appear
+thus:" The judge drew again on the paper. "That is the 'Wine-Glass'
+brand. You can see that it resembles a wine glass when held up
+vertically, though of course as it appeared on the Circle Bar cattle it
+lay on its side. But this move was futile, for among the Circle Cross
+cattle now appeared many branded with the sign of the 'Hour-Glass,'
+thus:" The judge drew again. "This was achieved by merely adding a
+semi-circle to the wine-glass, closing over the bowl."
+
+"As I have said your father altered his brand a good many times. But the
+Circle Bar cattle continued to disappear. Years of warfare followed. The
+Cattlemen's Association lost no opportunity to harass your father or,
+for that matter, all the other small owners in the vicinity. Desperate,
+dissolute men were imported from Texas and Arizona, men who took delight
+in the shedding of human blood. These men roamed the ranges, stealing
+the Circle Bar cattle and killing Circle Bar cowboys. Your father had
+trouble in keeping men; in order to surround himself with enough men to
+protect his cattle and resist the aggressions of Dunlavey's hired
+assassins he was forced to pay ruinous wages.
+
+"Even then he could not prevent rustling. Dunlavey bribed his men; his
+herds dwindled; he saw that he was facing ruin if he did not devise some
+means to successfully cope with his enemies. He went over to Santa Fe to
+see the governor--a piffling carpet-bagger. He was told that the
+government was powerless; that the same condition existed all over the
+country, and that the government was unable to combat it. The Law had
+not come.
+
+"Your father returned home, discouraged but not beaten. He approached
+the several other small owners in the vicinity, asking for co-operation
+and assistance. Fearful of Dunlavey's wrath, the small owners refused to
+organize. But your father decided to carry on the fight alone. He
+recognized the fact that nothing but the Law could defeat the
+association's aims, and he determined to force the Law into the
+Territory. With this end in view he established his newspaper. He
+succeeded in arousing public interest with the result that a court was
+established here."
+
+The judge smiled dryly, continuing: "Yes, the Law is here. Or what is
+more to the point, a representative of the Law is here. 'I am the Law,'"
+he quoted, ironically. "But my hands are tied; this court is a mere
+travesty upon justice. The government at Washington has seen fit to send
+me here--alone. I can't go out and get evidence; I couldn't secure a
+conviction if I did. The people here who are not Dunlavey's friends were
+afraid of him. I can't get a jury. Dunlavey elects the sheriff--controls
+the election machinery. I am powerless--a mere figurehead. This is the
+situation in a nutshell. I could go into detail, but I imagine it is
+plain enough as it is."
+
+Hollis's face had become gravely serious; his lips were straightened
+with an expression that hinted at the conflict that was going on in his
+mind.
+
+"Isn't there an army post near?" he questioned.
+
+"Over at Fort Union--a hundred miles or so southwest. I have pleaded for
+a detail, but have been informed that it can't be had; that the soldiers
+are needed to keep the Indians in order. Independent cattlemen are
+supposed to fight it out alone. At least that is the inference, if we
+are to consider the attitude of the government."
+
+Hollis was gravely silent. The judge leaned back in his chair, watching
+him with a queer expression. He realized that he had said enough to
+discourage the average young man from remaining in the country a moment
+longer than was absolutely necessary. He would not have been surprised
+had Hollis told him that he did not intend to remain. But from what he
+had seen of the young man he felt sure that his decision, when it did
+come, would be final. More than once since Hollis had been in the office
+had the judge observed the serene, steady gleam in his eyes, and he had
+catalogued him with the rare class of men whose mental balance is so
+perfect that nothing disturbs it. The judge had met a few such men in
+the West and he knew the type. As he sat looking at the young man he
+decided that Providence had made a mistake in allowing him to waste his
+time in the East. The West teemed with opportunities for men of his
+kind.
+
+He was not surprised at Hollis's next question; it showed that he was
+considering the situation from many angles before committing himself.
+
+"What is the condition of Circle Bar ranch at present?" he asked.
+
+"The title to the land is intact and cannot be assailed. But Norton
+informs me that there are not above two hundred head of cattle on the
+range, and that the buildings are run down. Not a very cheerful
+prospect?"
+
+He had told the truth about the land and the cattle, but he had
+purposely exaggerated concerning the condition of the buildings, being
+grimly determined to place the situation in its most unfavorable light
+that he might be the better able to test the young man's mettle. He
+smiled as Hollis thoughtfully stroked his chin.
+
+"Well, now," admitted the latter, flashing a queer smile at the judge,
+"I quite agree with you that the prospect isn't cheering. But so long as
+the condition is such as it is there is no need to grumble. I didn't
+come out here expecting to fall into a bed of roses."
+
+"Then you won't be disappointed," returned the judge dryly. He filled
+and lighted a pipe, smoking meditatively, his eyes on the younger man
+with a curious expression. He had determined to push the test a little
+farther.
+
+"You could probably sell the Circle Bar," he said finally. "Your father
+told me before he died that he had been offered ten dollars an acre for
+his land. That would total to a tidy sum."
+
+Hollis looked quickly at the judge, his eyes flashing with grim
+amusement. "Would you advise me to sell?" he questioned.
+
+The judge laughed quietly. "That is an unfair question," he equivocated,
+narrowing his eyes whimsically. "If I were heir to the property and felt
+that I did not care to assume the danger of managing it I should sell,
+without doubt. If, on the other hand, I had decided to continue my
+father's fight against an unscrupulous company, I would stay no matter
+what the consequences. But"--He puffed slowly at his pipe, his voice
+filling with unmistakable sarcasm--"it would be so much easier to sell
+and return at once to a more peaceful atmosphere. With ten thousand
+dollars you could go back East and go on with your newspaper work, well
+equipped, with a chance of realizing your ambition--and not be troubled
+with continuing a fight in which, no doubt, there would be many blows to
+be taken."
+
+"Thank you," returned Hollis quietly. He looked steadily into the
+judge's eyes, his own glinting with a grim humor. "You have succeeded in
+making it very plain," he continued slowly. "But I am not going to
+run--I have decided on that. Of course I feel properly resentful over
+the way my father has been treated by this man Dunlavey and his
+association." His eyes flashed with a peculiar hardness. "And I would
+stay here and fight Dunlavey and his parcel of ruffians if for no other
+reason than to secure revenge on personal grounds.
+
+"But there is one other reason. There is a principle at stake. I don't
+care very much about the personal side of the question; little as I knew
+my father, I believe he would have ignored personalities were he
+confronted with the condition that confronts me. It is my belief that as
+an American citizen he chafed under conditions that prevented him from
+enjoying that freedom to which we are all entitled under the
+Constitution. Judging from your conversation you are in entire sympathy
+with that sentiment." He smiled at the judge. "Of course I am not
+mistaken?" he added.
+
+The tobacco in the bowl of the judge's pipe spluttered; he brought his
+right fist heavily down upon the table, rattling the pens and ink
+bottles that littered its top. "No, young man; you are not mistaken--you
+have hit the nail squarely on the head. If you are going to stay here
+and fight Dunlavey and his crew, Blackstone Graney is with you
+until----"
+
+"Until the Law comes," suggested Hollis.
+
+"Yes, by thunder!" declared the judge. "You can go further than that and
+say: 'until the Law rules!'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+NORTON MAKES A DISCOVERY
+
+
+Judge Graney rose and leaned over the table, taking the young man's hand
+and holding it tightly. Then he sat down again and resumed smoking.
+Neither man said a word during the hand-clasp and yet both knew that
+their hearts and minds were united in a common cause. Words would have
+been unnecessary and futile.
+
+Hollis's path of duty lay straight and open before him. There was no
+by-way that would lead him around the dangers that were sure to beset
+him. Nor had he thought to search for any. Long before the judge had
+concluded his recital of conditions in the county Hollis had decided to
+meet the issue squarely. He had been able to see beyond the petty,
+personal side of the question; had even ignored it to get at the big,
+pithy principle of equal rights. The Law must come. If he could assist
+in bringing it he would be accomplishing something real and tangible and
+he would be satisfied. He did not believe that Destiny had anything to
+do with his appearance upon the scene at this particular time; rather he
+felt that his coming was merely a result of a combination of
+circumstances such as might have occurred to any man. And like any man
+with courage and deeply settled convictions he was prepared to move
+forward to the issue, trusting himself. He had no thought of appearing
+heroic.
+
+Yet to the judge he appeared so. The latter had been prepared to hear
+excuses from him; had been prepared to resist a natural inclination to
+berate the young man soundly for lack of parental loyalty, though
+conscious that he could advance no valid reason for the young man
+sacrificing himself upon the altars of an old feud. It was against human
+nature for any man to so sacrifice himself, he had assured himself when
+trying to build up a defense for the young man.
+
+And now that Hollis had shown that he needed no defender; that he was
+willing to take up the cudgels in behalf of his father, the judge was
+scarcely able to restrain himself. To state calmly that he intended to
+fight the Cattlemen's Association when there was a life of comparative
+safety awaiting him in another section of the country was an heroic
+decision. Many another man would have cringed--would have surrendered
+without striking a blow.
+
+Judge Graney had long known that the action of his government in sending
+him to Union County was an ironical surrender on the part of the
+government to the forces in the West which had been long demanding the
+Law. He had been sent here, presumably to enforce the law, but in
+reality to silence the government's critics. He was not expected to
+convict anyone. Theoretically he was supposed to uphold the majesty of
+the law in Union County, but in reality he merely remained and drew his
+salary. There was no law to enforce.
+
+In the fight that had been waged between the elder Hollis and the
+Cattlemen's Association his sympathies had been with Hollis, though he
+had never been able to assist him in a legal way. But the judge knew
+that eventually the Law must come, and so he encouraged Hollis, assuring
+him that victory would be his in the end.
+
+And then Hollis had died--suddenly. The Las Vegas doctor who had
+attended him had shaken his head sagely when the judge had questioned
+him regarding his patient and had pointed significantly to one of Dry
+Bottom's saloons. The doctor had told the judge there was no hope, and
+the latter had telegraphed East. The appearance of young Hollis had been
+the result. The judge's heart had warmed toward the young man.
+
+"What are your intentions regarding the newspaper--the _Kicker_?"
+he questioned.
+
+Hollis looked up quickly, his face grave. "Perhaps if there had been no
+_Kicker_ here my decision might have been different," he said. "But
+so long as it is here it is in business to stay!"
+
+"I expect that decision won't please Dunlavey a whole lot," the judge
+returned.
+
+"Perhaps not," drawled Hollis; "still, we can't aim to please everybody.
+I expect I might be able to get hold of that printer--Potter I believe
+you called him?"
+
+"Potter won't be hard to find," assured the judge; "a search of the
+saloons would uncover him, I imagine." He smiled. "When you get ready to
+get the _Kicker_ out just let me know; I promise to have Potter on
+hand."
+
+To the ears of the two men came a rattle of wheels and a voice. The
+judge leaned back in his chair and looked out through the window. His
+face wreathed into a broad smile as he resumed his former position and
+looked at Hollis. "Your range boss is here," he said.
+
+They heard a step on the board walk, and a man stood in the doorway
+looking at them.
+
+The newcomer gave an instant impression of capability. He stood on the
+threshold, entirely composed, saturnine, serene eyed, absolutely sure of
+himself. He was arrayed in high heeled boots, minus spurs; the bottoms
+of a pair of dust-covered overalls were tucked into the boot legs; a
+woolen shirt, open at the throat, covered a pair of admirable shoulders;
+a scarlet handkerchief was knotted around his neck; and a wide brimmed
+hat, carelessly dented in the crown, was shoved rakishly back from his
+forehead. Sagging from his slim waist was a well filled cartridge belt
+and at the right hip a heavy revolver.
+
+"Howdy, judge!" he said with a smile, in response to Judge Graney's
+cordial greeting.
+
+"Just come in?" questioned the judge.
+
+"Been in town an hour," returned Norton.
+
+He flashed a searching glance at Hollis, which that young man met
+steadily. The thought crossed Hollis's mind that the buckboard that he
+had seen in front of a store soon after leaving the station must have
+been Norton's. But now Norton was speaking again and Hollis listened.
+
+"Dropped into the Fashion to see my friend Red Eggers," resumed Norton,
+smiling broadly. "Same old crowd--Dunlavey, Yuma Ed, Ten Spot,
+Greasy--most of the bunch which has been makin' things interestin' for
+us hereabouts."
+
+At the mention of "Yuma Ed" Hollis looked up. That was the name of the
+second man he had struck in the affair near the Fashion Saloon. He
+wondered if Norton knew. He did not remember to have seen the latter
+among the men who had surrounded him in the space between the two
+buildings. But the judge was now introducing him to Norton and he stood
+up, holding the latter's hand and meeting his inspecting gaze fairly. He
+found that the range boss was fully as tall as he; indeed, Hollis
+discovered that he was compelled to look up slightly in order to meet
+the latter's level gaze. Norton smiled peculiarly; there was a friendly
+expression in his eyes, but mingled with it was a reserved, appraising,
+speculative gleam, which drew a smile to Hollis's lips.
+
+"So you're Jim Hollis's boy?" said Norton. "My new boss?" He grinned,
+evidently willing to go more than half way in forming a friendship with
+his "new boss". "I don't reckon that you're much stuck on this here
+country--much as you've seen of it?"
+
+"I've been used to keeping busy," laughed Hollis, "and my impression is
+that it seems rather dull out here."
+
+Norton's eyelashes flickered. He deliberately closed one eye at the
+judge, carefully averting his face so that Hollis could not see.
+
+"So you're lookin' for action?" he said to Hollis in a grave voice.
+"Mebbe it ain't none of my business," he added, his eyes gleaming, "but
+I'm askin' you if you're thinkin' to stay in this country--keepin' your
+dad's ranch an' his newspaper?"
+
+Hollis nodded. Norton's eyes gleamed with a savage delight. "Bully!" he
+declared. "If you stay here you'll get plenty of action. I was afraid
+you wouldn't stay." He turned to Judge Graney, a grin of satisfaction on
+his face. "I'm tellin' you somethin' that will tickle you a heap," he
+said. "I told you that I had stopped in Red Egger's saloon. I did.
+Dunlavey's bunch was feelin' mighty sore over somethin'. I stayed there
+a while, tryin' to find out what it was all about, but there wasn't none
+of them sayin' anything to me. But pretty soon I got Red over into a
+corner an' he told me. Accordin' to him Dunlavey had corraled that
+Hazelton girl outside an' was tellin' her somethin' pretty strong when a
+tenderfoot, which hadn't any regard for Dunlavey's delicate feelin's, up
+an' lambasted him in the jaw!"
+
+"Struck him?" queried the judge, grinning delightedly.
+
+"Knocked him cold," affirmed Norton, his eyes dancing. "Pasted him so
+hard that he thought it was night an' went to sleep. Then Yuma busted in
+an' thought to work his guns. He got his'n, too. That there tenderfoot
+didn't have no respect for guns. Red says he never thought any man could
+hit so hard. It must have been sumptuous!" He laughed delightedly. "I'd
+like to shake hands with that tenderfoot--he's my friend!"
+
+Hollis pulled out a cigar case, selected a cigar, lighted it, and smoked
+in silence.
+
+So her name was Hazelton. Admiration over the manner in which she had
+held the men at bay before Dunlavey got to his feet still lingered; she
+had impressed him deeply. But a deeper satisfaction overshadowed his
+thoughts of the girl, for he had slugged Dunlavey, his father's enemy.
+His satisfaction grew to amusement. Did Dunlavey know who had slugged
+him? He must have suspected, for Hollis recalled the man's significant
+expression when, after he had risen from the ground he said: "I've got
+an idea that you an' me will meet again."
+
+Hollis's thoughts flitted rapidly from Dunlavey to the girl. Now that he
+had decided to stay he had determined to search her out. He remembered
+that Dunlavey had spoken slightingly of her brother and he assured
+himself that he would not be entirely satisfied until he had uncovered
+the mystery. He might have questioned Norton or the judge, for both men
+evidently knew the girl, but he was reluctant to betray his interest in
+her to either man.
+
+He heard Norton make an exclamation of surprise, and looking up he saw
+him holding his right hand out, the palm upward, examining it. There was
+a splotch of blood on the palm and another on the under side of the
+thumb.
+
+"Shucks!" Norton was saying. "Now where in thunder did I get that?" He
+looked again at the hand and then suddenly dove forward to Hollis's
+side, seized his right hand, peered at the knuckles and held the hand
+triumphantly aloft.
+
+"I reckon this is where I got it!" he grinned.
+
+Hollis looked ruefully down at his knuckles. The skin was
+gashed--evidently where it had come in contact with a bone in either
+Dunlavey's or Yuma's jaw. He had intended to keep the story of adventure
+to himself. But he saw that Norton had stepped back and was gazing
+soberly at the suitcases, which Hollis had deposited near the door.
+Norton suddenly let out a chirp of delight.
+
+"Two of them!" he said, suppressing his excitement; "Two grips! Red
+Eggers said there was two an' that the tenderfoot had come down toward
+the court house!" He walked to Hollis and halted in front of him,
+looking at him with admiration and satisfaction.
+
+"Own up now!" he said. "You ain't tellin' us that it wasn't you, durn
+you! Oh, say!" He uttered a whoop that must have startled the horses in
+front of the building. Then he sobered down, speaking in a low,
+regretful voice: "You durn tenderfoot! Here I've been waitin' for years
+to get a crack at that big four-flusher, an' here you come, a-fannin'
+along from your little old East an' get ahead of me!" He stifled a
+cackle of mirth. "An' so you're lookin' for action? Lordy! If you don't
+call what you done to Dunlavey an' Yuma action this country's goin' to
+set up an' take notice when you get to goin' in earnest!"
+
+Judge Graney loomed somberly over the table. "I suppose it must have
+been you?" he said gravely.
+
+Hollis nodded. "I may as well confess," he said. "I saw a man giving a
+young lady a mighty bad moment and I slugged him. Another man called me
+a vile name and I slugged him, too. That was all."
+
+The judge sat down again, his face slightly pale. A significant glance
+passed between him and Norton, but the latter laughed grimly.
+
+"I reckon he's opened the ball, right off the reel," he suggested.
+
+Judge Graney drew a deep breath. "Yes," he returned. "I suppose that way
+is as good as any other. It was bound to come anyway. It will be war to
+the finish now!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+AT THE CIRCLE BAR
+
+
+In the two weeks that followed his arrival at Dry Bottom, Hollis had
+much time to meditate upon the great change that had come into his life.
+His conclusion that there was nothing in common between cattle raising
+and journalism was not a result of an involved process of reasoning, and
+had he not been endowed with a sense of humor he might have become
+embittered. Though a sacrifice be made cheerfully, there lingers always
+its ghost to draw mental pictures of "what might have been." Hollis
+would have been more than human had he not felt some little regret over
+his sacrifice.
+
+It had seemed to him, as two weeks before he had ridden away from the
+court house--sitting on the seat of the buckboard beside Neil Norton,
+his suitcases tucked snugly away underneath--that he was once and for
+all severing his connection with the big, bustling world in which he had
+moved; in whose busy scenes he had been so vitally interested. His had
+been a big work; seated at his desk in the "city" room of his newspaper
+he had many times likened himself unto an argus-eyed recording angel
+whose business it was to keep in view each of the many atoms of a busy
+multitude and to accord to them that amount of space that their
+importance seemed to demand. He had loved his work; it had broadened
+him, had provided him with exactly the proportion of mental exercise
+needed to keep him on edge and in a position to enjoy life. He had lived
+in the East--really lived. Out here he would merely exist, though, he
+assured himself grimly, his enemies would have to pay dearly for his
+sacrifice.
+
+The picture of his journey to the Circle Bar ranch was still fresh in
+his mind as he rode slowly away from Neil Norton, whom he had left
+sitting in his saddle on a ridge, watching him. The long twilight had
+brought its lengthening shadows that night before Norton had struck the
+Circle Bar trail, and before they had traveled a mile of the ten that
+lay before them night had come. Hollis had been little inclined to talk
+and Norton did not disturb him, but gave his attention to the horses.
+There had been no moon and few stars, and darkness, as under a blanket,
+had settled over them before they were many miles from Dry Bottom.
+
+The country seemed nothing more than a vast plain, broken here and there
+by ridges and depressions. Occasionally a low hill loomed out of the
+darkness, the shadows deepening around it; now and then the buckboard
+passed through a draw, the wheels sinking hub-deep in the loose sand.
+Several dry arroyos crossed the trail, but with a knowledge that seemed
+almost marvelous Norton cleverly avoided these pitfalls. Hollis could
+not see a foot ahead, but the location of the trail seemed to be no
+mystery to the range boss, for he drove the horses steadily on,
+hesitating for nothing.
+
+Once during the ride Norton broke the silence with a subdued cackle of
+mirth, and at another time he laughed aloud.
+
+"I'd liked to have seen Big Bill when you hit him!" he observed, regret
+in his voice. "I reckon he might have been just a little surprised!"
+
+To which Hollis made no reply. At another time Norton broke the silence
+long enough to inquire:
+
+"I reckon mebbe you wouldn't have hit him so hard if you'd knowed who he
+was?"
+
+"I think I should have hit a little harder," returned Hollis quietly.
+
+"Why, hell!" declared Norton with a laugh; "I reckon you would have done
+just that!"
+
+About ten o'clock they came in sight of some straggling posts, and
+Norton assured Hollis that the posts were strung with wire, forming a
+fence which skirted one side of the Circle Bar pasture. A few minutes
+later a dog barked and at Norton's call came bounding up to the
+buckboard, yipping joyously. Hollis could make out his shape as he
+cavorted about.
+
+"My dog," offered the range boss. "Half wolf, the other half just dog."
+He chuckled over his joke. "Best dog you ever see," he boasted; "money
+couldn't buy him. Like dogs?"
+
+Hollis nodded and then realizing that Norton could not see him in the
+darkness, voiced a quick "yes".
+
+In the distance Hollis saw a sudden square of light illuminate the wall
+of darkness into which they had been driving; a door had been opened.
+Evidently the dog's barking had aroused the inmates of the building, for
+as the buckboard drew nearer Hollis saw several figures flit out of the
+door-way. Norton drove the horses close to the building and brought them
+to a halt with a sonorous "whoa"! Then he turned to Hollis and spoke
+with a drawl: "This here building is the Circle Bar bunkhouse; them's
+some of your men."
+
+Hollis remarked the size of the building and Norton laughed grimly.
+"There was a time when it wasn't any too big," he said. "Five years ago
+your dad had twenty-seven men on the pay-roll. If Dunlavey an' his damn
+association hadn't showed up he'd have had them yet." He turned toward
+three men who were lounging in the doorway. "Hey, you guys!" he yelled;
+"this here's your new boss. If you-all ain't glued there you might grab
+his grips an' tote them up to the ranchhouse. Tell the missus that I'll
+be along directly with the boss."
+
+Amusement over the Southern twang that marked Norton's speech filled
+Hollis. He had noticed it before and it had made plain to him the reason
+of Norton's unhurried movements, his slow humor, his habit of quiet
+scrutiny.
+
+But he had little time for reflection. At Norton's words two men sprang
+forward to the buckboard and he saw his suitcases disappear into the
+darkness in the direction of a light that he now saw flickering from
+some little distance. He jumped out of the buckboard and saw another man
+spring to the horses' heads and lead them away into the darkness. Then
+he followed Norton into the light from the open doorway. Presently he
+was shaking hands with a man who stood there, whose chief articles of
+raiment were overalls, boots, and a woolen shirt. Almost instantly, it
+seemed, two of the others had returned and Norton was introducing them
+as "Ace," "Lanky," and "Weary." These pseudonyms were picturesque and
+descriptive, though at the time Hollis was in a state of pained
+incomprehension concerning them. Later he was informed that Ace had been
+so named on account of having once been caught slipping a playing card
+of that character into his bootleg during a game of poker.
+Incidentally--Hollis was told--gun-play had resulted. That Ace was still
+active proved that the other man might have profited by keeping his
+knowledge to himself. Obviously, Lanky deserved his appellation--he was
+a trifle over six feet tall and proportioned like a young sapling. Weary
+had been born tired--so Hollis was told by the latter's defamers;
+defamers, for later Hollis discovered that no man in the outfit could
+show more surprising agility on occasion than this same Weary.
+
+Hollis found himself inside the bunkhouse, where he was critically
+inspected by the three men--and before he left, by the fourth, who
+answered to the name of "Bud." Norton told him that these four comprised
+his outfit--Bud acting as blacksmith. Hollis remained with the men only
+long enough to announce that there would be no change; that he intended
+to hang on and fight for his rights. When Norton told them that Hollis
+had already begun the fight by slugging Dunlavey and Yuma Ed, the
+enthusiasm of the four men was unbounded. They assured him profanely
+that they were with him to the "finish"--whatever it might be. After
+which Hollis departed to the ranchhouse.
+
+He found Mrs. Norton to be a pleasant faced woman of twenty-seven or
+eight, who had--according to Norton--"bossed him for seven years."
+Norton grinned hugely over his wife's embarrassed protest.
+
+"I haven't 'bossed' him," she told Hollis, while Norton looked on with
+amusement, "though there have been times when he richly deserved it."
+There was a spirited flash in the lady's eyes as she looked at her lord.
+
+"I don't wish to take sides in any marital controversy," Hollis told
+them. "I don't care to parade my ignorance. However," he smiled, with a
+wink at Norton, "most men need a boss, if for no other reason than to
+teach them the value of discipline."
+
+"There!" said Mrs. Norton with a triumphant laugh, and immediately left
+the two men and went into the kitchen.
+
+After partaking of a hearty meal Hollis and Norton went out on the porch
+for a smoke and a talk, and it was near midnight when Hollis tumbled
+into bed, distinctly pleased with the range boss and his admirable wife.
+He was asleep within five minutes.
+
+The sun was streaming into his window when he hopped out of bed the next
+morning, refreshed and eager to make a trip of inspection over his
+property. He came down stairs lightly, in the hope of being able to slip
+outside without disturbing anybody, but upon opening the stair door he
+was surprised to find the cloth on the table in the dining room already
+spread and hot food steaming upon it. Mrs. Norton was bustling about
+from the kitchen to the dining room. Evidently the Nortons had been
+astir for hours.
+
+Mrs. Norton smilingly directed him to a wash basin on a bench just
+outside the door and stood in the opening a moment, watching him as he
+drenched his face with the cold water. There was in her manner only the
+solicitous concern of the hostess whose desire is to place a guest at
+ease. Hollis decided that Norton had been most fortunate in his choice
+of a "boss."
+
+"Neil has gone down into the big basin to look after the men," she told
+him from the doorway. "I don't expect him to return for some little
+time. Come in to breakfast when you are ready."
+
+To his protest that he would wait until Norton's return before
+breakfasting she replied with a smile that her husband had already
+breakfasted, telling him also that in this part of the country everyone
+rose with the sun.
+
+He stood on the edge of the porch for a moment after washing, drinking
+in the air that came to him from the plains--a breeze laden with the
+clear aroma of the sage-brush moist with the dew of the night. When he
+entered the house Mrs. Norton was nowhere to be seen and he drew up a
+chair and breakfasted alone.
+
+A little later he embarked upon a tour of inspection. All of the
+buildings, with the exception of the ranchhouse, which was constructed
+of logs, with a gable roof and plastered interstices--were built of
+adobe, low, squat structures with flat roofs. There were six of
+them--the bunkhouse, mess house, blacksmith shop, the range boss's
+private shack (from which Norton and his wife had removed after the
+death of the elder Hollis), the stable, and one other building for the
+storing of miscellaneous articles. Hollis inspected them all and was not
+quite convinced that they had reached the stage of dilapidation
+suggested by Judge Graney.
+
+During his inspection Hollis had seen a patch of garden, some chickens,
+and down in a small pasture some cows that he supposed were kept for
+milking. He was leaning on the top rail of the corral fence after he had
+concluded his trip of inspection when he heard a clatter of hoofs behind
+him and turned to observe Norton, just riding up to the corral gate. The
+range boss wore a grin of pleasure.
+
+"How you findin' things?" he questioned.
+
+"In better shape than I expected--after listening to Judge Graney,"
+smiled Hollis.
+
+Norton looked critically at him. "Then you ain't changed your mind about
+stayin' here?" he inquired.
+
+"No," returned Hollis; "I believe I shall get used to it in time."
+
+Norton dismounted, his eyes alight with satisfaction. "That's the
+stuff!" he declared. He threw the reins over his pony's head and seized
+Hollis by an arm. "Come along with me--down to my shack," he said; "I've
+got somethin' to show you."
+
+Without further words he led Hollis toward a building--the one he had
+occupied previous to the death of the elder Hollis. There were three
+rooms in the building and in the front one were several articles of
+furniture and some boxes. One of these boxes Norton opened, taking
+therefrom several articles of wearing apparel, consisting of a pair of
+corduroy trousers, a pair of leathern chaps, boots, spurs, two woolen
+shirts, a blue neckerchief, a broad felt hat, and last, with a grin of
+amusement over Hollis's astonished expression, a cartridge belt to which
+was attached a holster containing a Colt .45.
+
+"I bought this outfit over at Santa Fé two months ago," he informed
+Hollis, who was gravely contemplating the lay-out, "expectin' to wear
+them myself some day. But when I got home I found they didn't quite
+fit." He surveyed Hollis with a critical eye. "I've been thinkin' ever
+since you come that you'd fit pretty snug in them." He raised a
+protesting hand as Hollis was about to speak. "I ain't givin' them to
+you," he grinned. "But you can't wear no tenderfoot clothes out here.
+Some day when we're together an' we've got time you can blow me to
+another outfit; I won't hesitate about takin' it." He leaned over and
+tapped the butt of the Colt. "You ever handle one of them?" he
+questioned.
+
+Hollis nodded. Once during a shooting tournament he had done good work
+with a pistol. But Norton laughed at his nod.
+
+"Mebbe we do it a little different out here," he smiled. "You hop into
+them duds an' we'll go out into the cottonwood yonder an' try out your
+gun." He pointed through the door to a small clump of cottonwoods beyond
+the bunkhouse.
+
+He went out and fifteen minutes later Hollis joined him, looking
+thoroughly at home in his picturesque rigging. An hour later they
+returned to the corral fence, where Norton caught up his pony and
+another, saddling the latter for Hollis. He commented briefly upon the
+new owner's ability with the six-shooter.
+
+"You use your fists a little better than you use a gun," he remarked
+with his peculiar drawl, "but I reckon that on the whole you'll be able
+to take care of yourself--after you've had a little practise gettin'
+your gun out." He laughed with a grim humor. "More men have been killed
+in this country on account of bein' slow on the draw than for any other
+reason. Don't never monkey with it unless you intend to use it, an' then
+see that you get it out middlin' rapid. That's the recipe," he advised.
+
+The pony that he had selected for Hollis was a slant-eyed beast, larger
+than the average, with rangy limbs, black in color with a white muzzle
+and fetlocks. Hollis voted him a "beaut" after he had ridden him a mile
+or two and found that he had an easy, steady stride.
+
+Together they made a round of the basin, returning to the ranchhouse for
+dinner. Hollis was saddle weary and when Norton proposed another trip
+during the afternoon he was met with the response that the new owner
+purposed enjoying the cool of the ranchhouse porch for the remainder of
+the day.
+
+The next morning Hollis was up with the dawn and out on the porch
+splashing water over his face from the wash basin that stood outside the
+door. For a long time after washing he stood on the porch, looking out
+over the big basin at this new and strange world. Endless it seemed,
+lying before him in its solemn silence; a world of peace, of eternal
+sunlight, smiling skies, and infinite distance. It seemed unreal to him.
+Did this same planet hold the busy cities to which he had been
+accustomed? The stuffy room, with its smell of damp ink, its litter of
+papers--his room in the newspaper offices, filled with desks and the
+clatter of typewriters? Through whose windows came the incessant clamor
+that welled up from the streets below? He laughed at the thought and
+turned to see Norton standing in the doorway looking at him with a
+smile.
+
+"Comparin' her with your little old East?" inquired the latter.
+
+Hollis confessed that he had been doing something of that sort.
+
+"Well," returned Norton, "there ain't any way to compare this country
+with anything else. Seems as though when the world was made the Lord had
+a few million miles left which he didn't know what to do with an' so he
+just dumped it down out here. An' then, havin' business somewhere else
+about that time he forgot about it an' left it to get along as best it
+could--which wasn't none too rapid."
+
+This conversation had taken place just twelve days ago, yet Norton's
+words still remained fresh in Hollis's mind. Yet he did not altogether
+agree with Norton. The West had impressed him far more than he cared to
+admit.
+
+This morning, directly after breakfast Hollis and Norton had saddled
+their horses and ridden out of the basin toward the river, into a
+section of the country that Hollis had not yet explored. Emerging from
+the basin, they came to a long, high ridge. On its crest Norton halted.
+Hollis likewise drew in his pony. From here they could see a great
+stretch of country, sweeping away into the basin beneath it, toward a
+mountain range whose peaks rose barren and smooth in the white sunlight.
+
+"This here's 'Razor-Back' ridge," explained Norton as the ponies halted;
+"called that on account of bein' so unusually narrow on the top." He
+pointed to some buildings which Hollis had seen but to which he had
+given very little attention, thinking they were those of the Circle Bar.
+"Them's the Circle Cross buildings," resumed Norton. "They're about
+three miles from the Circle Bar ranchhouse, directly north through that
+cottonwood back of the bunkhouse where you tried your gun the day after
+you come out here. Down below there--where you see them two big
+cottonwood trees--is 'Big Elk' crossin'. There's another somethin' like
+it back up the crick a ways, on the other side of the ranchhouse, called
+the 'Narrows.'" He laughed grimly. "But we don't use them crossins'
+much--they're dead lines; generally you'll find there's a Circle Cross
+man or so hangin' around them--with a rifle. So it don't pay to go
+monkeyin' around there unless you've got pressin' business."
+
+He made a grimace. "It's my opinion that a good many Circle Bar cattle
+have crossed the crick in them two places--never to come back." He swept
+a hand up the river, indicating the sentinel like buttes that frowned
+above the bed of the stream. "The crick is pretty shallow," he
+continued, "but Big Elk an' the Narrows are the only two places where a
+man can cross in safety--if we consider that there wouldn't be any
+Circle Cross man hangin' around them two places. But there ain't no
+other place to cross an' so we don't go on the other side much."
+
+He turned to Hollis, looking at him with a quaint smile. "From here you
+can see everything that amounts to anything in this section--which ain't
+a heap. Of course over there are some mountains--where we was a few days
+ago lookin' up the boys"--he pointed to some serrated peaks that rose
+somberly in the southwestern distance--"but as you saw there ain't much
+to them except rocks an' lava beds. There's some hills there"--pointing
+to the south--"but there ain't nothin' to see in them. They look a heap
+better from here than they do when you get close to them. That's the way
+with lots of things, ain't it?"
+
+Hollis smiled. "I like it," he said quietly, "much better than I did
+when I came." He turned to Norton with a whimsical smile. "I suppose it
+will strike you as peculiar, but I've got a notion that I would like to
+ride around a while alone. I don't mean that I don't like your company,
+for I do. But the notion has just struck me."
+
+Norton laughed indulgently. "I reckon I won't consider that you're
+trying to slight me," he returned. "I know exactly how you feel; that
+sort of thing comes over everybody who comes to this country--sooner or
+later. Generally it's later, when a man has got used to the silence an'
+the bigness an' so on. But in your case it's sooner. You'll have to have
+it out with yourself."
+
+His voice grew serious. "But don't go ridin' too far. An' keep away from
+the river trail."
+
+In spite of his ready acquiescence he sat for some time on his pony,
+watching Hollis as the latter urged his pony along the ridge. Just
+before Hollis disappeared down the slope of the ridge he turned and
+waved a hand to Norton, and the latter, with a grim, admiring smile,
+wheeled his pony and loped it over the back trail.
+
+Once down the slope of the ridge Hollis urged his pony out into the
+level of the basin, through some deep saccatone grass, keeping well away
+from the river trail as advised by the range boss.
+
+In spite of his serious thoughts Hollis had not been dismayed over the
+prospect of remaining at the Circle Bar to fight Dunlavey and his crew.
+He rather loved a fight; the thought of clashing with an opposing force
+had always filled him with a sensation of indefinable exultation. He
+reveled in the primitive passions. He had been endowed by nature with
+those mental and physical qualities that combine to produce the perfect
+fighter. He was six feet of brawn and muscle; not an ounce of
+superfluous flesh encumbered him--he had been hammered and hardened into
+a state of physical perfection by several years of athletic training,
+sensible living, and good, hard, healthy labor. Circumstances had not
+permitted him to live a life of ease. The trouble between his
+parents--which had always been much of a mystery to him--had forced him
+at a tender age to go out into the world and fight for existence. It had
+toughened him; it had trained his mind through experience; it had given
+him poise, persistence, tenacity--those rare mental qualities without
+which man seldom rises above mediocrity.
+
+Before leaving Dry Bottom to come to the Circle Bar he had telegraphed
+his mother that he would be forced to remain indefinitely in the West,
+and the sending of this telegram had committed him irrevocably to his
+sacrifice. He knew that when his mother received a letter from him
+explaining the nature of the work that required his presence in Dry
+Bottom she would approve his course. At least he was certain that she
+would not advise surrendering.
+
+After riding for more than an hour he came to a shallow draw and urged
+his pony through the deep sand of its center. On the other side of the
+draw the country became suddenly rocky; great boulders were strewn
+indiscriminately about, as though some giant hand had distributed them
+carelessly, without regard to their final resting place. A lava bed,
+looming gray and dead under a barren rock hill, caught his attention,
+and he drew his pony to a halt and sat quietly in the saddle examining
+it. From the lava bed his gaze went to a weird mineral shape that rose
+in the distance--an inverted cone that seemed perfectly balanced on its
+narrowest point. He studied this long without moving, struck with the
+miraculous stability of the thing; it seemed that a slight touch would
+send it tumbling down.
+
+He realized that he had stumbled upon a spot that would have provided
+pleasure to a geological student. To him it was merely a source of
+wonder and awe. Some mighty upheaval of nature had created this, and he
+continued to gaze at it, his mind full of conjecture.
+
+To his right rose a precipitous rock wall surmounted by a fringe of
+thick shrubbery. On the left was another wall, perpendicular, flat on
+its top and stretching away into the distance, forming a grass plateau.
+Directly in front of him was a narrow canyon through which he could see
+a plain that stretched away into the unknown distance.
+
+It was a magnificent country; he did not now regret his decision to
+remain here. He pulled out his watch, noting that its hands pointed to
+ten, and realized that he must be off if he expected to reach the Circle
+Bar by noon.
+
+He sat erect in the saddle, about to wheel his pony toward the draw
+through which he had entered, when he heard a sharp sound. Startled, he
+glanced swiftly to his right, searching the immediate vicinity for the
+agency which had created sound in this vast silence. He stiffened slowly
+in the saddle, his face gradually paling. Not over a hundred feet from
+him, partly concealed by a big boulder, stood a man with a rifle, the
+muzzle of the weapon trained fairly on him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE GIRL OF DRY BOTTOM
+
+
+Hollis was not frightened, though he was in a position that might have
+aroused fear or apprehension in any man's mind. He was alone, the man
+had him covered with the rifle, and assuredly this was one of Dunlavey's
+hirelings.
+
+Hollis glanced swiftly around. Certain signs--some shrubbery that he saw
+through the canyon, a bald butte or two rising in the distance--told him
+that he was near the river. And Norton had told him to keep away from
+the river trail. In his eagerness to explore the country he had
+forgotten all about Norton's warning.
+
+The prospect was not a hopeful one, yet Hollis could not have admitted
+to feeling any alarm. He realized that had the man intended any
+immediate harm he would have shot him down long before this--while he
+had sat motionless in the saddle inspecting the place. Concerning the
+man's intentions he could only speculate, but assuredly they were not
+peaceful.
+
+For a little time the man remained motionless and Hollis sat quiet,
+looking at him. The weapon had not moved; its muzzle still menaced him
+and he watched it closely, wondering whether the man would give him any
+warning when about to pull the trigger.
+
+Many minutes dragged and the man did not move. A slow anger began to
+steal over Hollis; the man's inaction grated on his nerves.
+
+"Well!" he challenged sharply. "What do you want?"
+
+There was no answer. Hollis could see only the man's head and shoulders
+projecting above the boulder, and the rifle--steady and level--menacing
+him. With an exclamation of rage and disdain he seized the bridle rein
+and pulled sharply on it, swinging the pony's head around. The rifle
+crashed venomously; Hollis felt the right sleeve of his shirt flutter,
+and he pulled the pony abruptly up.
+
+"Just to show you!" came the man's voice, mockingly. "If you move again
+until I give the word you won't know where you've been hit!"
+
+Hollis was satisfied--the man undoubtedly meant business. He settled
+back into the saddle and looked down at his shirt sleeve. The bullet had
+passed very close to the arm. If the man had meant the bullet for that
+particular spot he was a deadly marksman. In the face of such marvelous
+shooting Hollis did not care to experiment further. But his anger had
+not yet abated.
+
+"No doubt you are enjoying yourself!" he said with bitter sarcasm. "But
+the pleasure is all yours. I am not enjoying myself a bit, I assure you.
+And I don't like the idea of being a target for you to shoot at!"
+
+A laugh came back to Hollis--a strange, unnatural, sardonic cackle that,
+in spite of his self-control, caused his flesh to creep. And then the
+man's voice:
+
+"No, you don't like it. I knew that all along. But you're going to stay
+here for seven weeks while I shoot holes in you!" He laughed again, his
+voice high and shrill, its cackling cadences filling the place.
+
+"Seven weeks in Devil's Hollow!" came the voice again. "Seven weeks!
+Seven weeks!"
+
+Hollis felt his heart thumping heavily against his ribs, while a sinking
+sensation in the pit of his stomach told him that his courage was
+touched. He realized now why the man had not shot him down immediately.
+He was a maniac!
+
+For a few terrible seconds Hollis sat in the saddle while the world
+reeled around him; while the rocks and cliffs danced fantastically.
+Courage he had to be sure; he had already become resigned to death
+before the man's rifle, but he had imagined the man to be in full
+possession of his senses; imagined his death to have been planned out of
+the deliberate coolness of reason. Such a death would have been bad
+enough, but to meet death at the hands of a man mentally unbalanced!
+Somehow it seemed different, seemed horribly unreal--like a terrible
+nightmare.
+
+It was some seconds before he regained control of himself, and then he
+steadied himself in the saddle, assuring himself in a burst of bitter,
+ironic humor that death at the hands of a crazy man could be no worse
+than death at the hands of a rational one.
+
+He looked up again, a defiant smile on his lips, to see that both man
+and rifle had disappeared. In a flash he saw his chance and took
+advantage of it. In an instant he was off his pony; in another he was
+behind a convenient rock, breathing easier, his senses alert. For some
+little time he remained in the shelter of the rock, awaiting the other
+man's movements. He did not doubt that acting upon some freakish
+impulse, the man had left his boulder and was even now stalking him from
+some other direction. He peered carefully about him. He had no thought
+of shooting the man--that would be murder, for the man was not mentally
+responsible for his actions. His efforts must be centered solely upon
+some plan for saving his own life.
+
+To do this he realized that he must be careful. In view of the man's
+unerring marksmanship it would be certain death for him to expose
+himself for an instant. But he must take some chances. Convinced of this
+he peered around the edge of his rock, taking a flashing glance around
+him. The man was nowhere to be seen. Hollis waited some little time and
+then taking another glance and not seeing the man, rose slowly to his
+feet and crouched. Then, filled with a sudden, reckless impulse, he
+sprang for another rock a dozen feet distant, expecting each instant to
+hear the crash of the man's rifle. But he succeeded in gaining the
+shelter of the other rock intact. Evidently the man was looking for him
+in some other direction.
+
+Emboldened with his success he grimly determined on advancing to another
+rock some twenty or thirty feet farther on. As in the first instance he
+succeeded in gaining it in safety. His maneuvering had been circuitous,
+bringing him into a position from which he could see partly behind the
+rock where the man had been concealed.
+
+And now, having gained the second rock in safety, Hollis decided to take
+no more chances. Sooner or later, he was convinced, the man was sure to
+see him as he jumped. He did not like the picture that his imagination
+conjured up. Therefore his actions were now marked with more caution. It
+took him a long time to gain a position where he could peer over the
+upper edge of the rock behind which he was concealed. But he gained it
+finally and then dropped back with an exclamation of surprise. He had
+caught a glimpse of the man. He was lying face upward behind the
+boulder, his arms outstretched, his rifle lying in the dust near him.
+
+Hollis was tempted to make a run for his pony, mount, and race out of
+the hollow. But a second thought restrained him. He had considered the
+man's action merely a ruse, but why should he attempt it after he had
+once had an opportunity to make use of his rifle? Still for an instant
+Hollis hesitated, for he knew there was no rule by which a maniac's
+actions might be judged. Then with a grim laugh he sprang over the few
+feet that separated him from the man, approaching him carefully, still
+slightly doubtful.
+
+But the man was not shamming; Hollis could see that when he had
+approached close enough to see his face. It bore a curious pallor, his
+eyes were wide open and staring, and some foam flecked his lips.
+Evidently he had been overcome by a paroxysm of his malady at about the
+moment Hollis had discovered it.
+
+Hollis stepped back and heaved a sigh of relief. Then he stepped over to
+where the man's rifle lay, taking it up and removing the cartridges.
+Returning to the man he removed the cartridges from his belt and drew
+his six-shooter from its holster, determined that when the man recovered
+from his stupor there would be no danger of a recurrence of the previous
+incident. Then he leaned against the boulder to await the man's
+recovery.
+
+Ten minutes later, while he still watched the man, he heard a clatter of
+hoofs. Determined not to be taken by surprise again he drew his own
+six-shooter and peered cautiously around the edge of the boulder. What
+he saw caused him to jam the weapon back into its holster very
+hurriedly. Then he stepped out of his concealment with a red,
+embarrassed face to greet a young woman whose expression of doubt and
+fear was instantly replaced by one of pleasure and recognition as she
+caught sight of him. It was the girl of Dry Bottom.
+
+"Oh!" she said. "Is it you? I was afraid----" And then she saw the man
+and was off her pony in a flash and at his head, supporting it and
+pouring something down his throat from a bottle.
+
+She rose presently, embarrassment crimsoning her face. Hollis saw her
+lips quiver when she turned and spoke to him.
+
+"He will be all right--now," she said, facing Hollis, her eyes drooping
+as though ashamed to meet his. "He has had another attack of his--his
+trouble." She looked suddenly up at Hollis, bravely trying to repress
+her emotion--but with little success.
+
+"You heard what he--Big Bill Dunlavey--said about my brother?" she
+questioned, her eyes full and moist. Hollis nodded and she continued
+rapidly, her voice quavering: "Well, he told the truth." Her voice
+trailed away into a pitiful wail, and she stepped over and leaned
+against the boulder, sobbing quietly into her hands. "That's why it
+hurts so," she added.
+
+Hollis yielded to a sudden wave of sympathy. He stood close to her,
+aware of his inability to cope with this strange situation. She looked
+so small, so out of place, he felt that whatever he did or said would
+not help matters. What he did say, however, assisted in restoring her
+composure.
+
+"I am glad I slugged him!" he said heatedly.
+
+She turned suddenly to him, her eyes flashing spiritedly through the
+moisture in them.
+
+"Oh, it was great!" she declared, her hands clenching at the
+recollection. "I could have shaken hands with you--with the hand that
+struck him!"
+
+Hollis smiled whimsically. "I've still got the hand," he said
+significantly, extending it toward her--"if you have not reconsidered."
+He laughed as she took it and pressed it firmly. "I rather think that
+we've both got a shake coming on that," he added. "I didn't understand
+then about your brother or I would have added a few extra pounds to that
+punch."
+
+Her face clouded as he mentioned her brother. "Poor Ed," she said in a
+low voice. She went over to the man, leaning over him and smoothing back
+the hair from his forehead, Hollis looking glumly on, clenching his
+teeth in impotent sympathy.
+
+"These attacks do not come often," she volunteered as she again
+approached Hollis. "But they do come," she added, her voice catching.
+Hollis did not reply, feeling that he had no right to be inquisitive.
+But she continued, slightly more at ease and plainly pleased to have
+some one in whom she might confide.
+
+"Ed was injured a year ago through a fall," she informed Hollis. "He was
+breaking a wild horse and a saddle girth broke and he fell, striking on
+his head. The wound healed, but he has never been the same. At intervals
+these attacks come on and then he is irresponsible--and dangerous." She
+shuddered. "You were watching him," she added, looking suddenly at him;
+"did you find him as he is or did he attack you? Frequently when he has
+these attacks he comes here to Devil's Hollow, explaining that he
+expects to find some of Dunlavey's men. He doesn't like Dunlavey," she
+added with a flush, "since Dunlavey----" She hesitated and then went on
+determinedly--"well, since Dunlavey told him that he wanted to marry me.
+But Ed says that Dunlavey has a wife in Tucson and--well, I wouldn't
+have married him anyway--the brute!"
+
+"Exactly," agreed Hollis gravely, trying to repress a thrill of
+satisfaction; "of course you couldn't marry him." He understood now the
+meaning of Dunlavey's words to her in Dry Bottom. "If you wasn't such a
+damn prude," he had said. He looked at the girl with a sudden, grim
+smile. "He said something about running you and your brother out of the
+country," he said; "of course you won't allow him to do that?"
+
+The girl's slight figure stiffened. "I would like to see him try it!"
+she declared defiantly.
+
+Hollis grinned. "That's the stuff!" he sympathized. "I rather think that
+Dunlavey is something of a bluffer--that folks in this country have
+allowed him to have his own way too much."
+
+She shook her head doubtfully. "I don't know about that," she returned.
+Then she smiled. "You are the new owner of the Circle Bar, aren't you?"
+
+Hollis startled, looking at her with a surprised smile. "Yes," he
+returned, "I am the new owner. But how did you know it? I haven't told
+anyone here except Neil Norton and Judge Graney. Have Norton and the
+Judge been talking?"
+
+"They haven't talked to me," she assured him with a demure smile. "You
+see," she added, "you were a stranger in Dry Bottom, and after you left
+the Fashion you went right down to the court house. I knew Judge Graney
+had been your father's friend. And then I saw Neil Norton coming into
+town with the buckboard." She laughed. "You see, it wasn't very hard to
+add two and two."
+
+"Why, no," Hollis agreed, "it wasn't. But how did you happen to see me
+go down to the court house?"
+
+"Why, I watched you!" she returned. And then suddenly aware of her
+mistake in admitting that she had felt an interest in him at their first
+meeting, she lowered her gaze in confusion and stood, kicking with her
+booted toe into a hummock, her face suddenly very red.
+
+The situation might have been embarrassing for her had not her brother
+created a diversion by suddenly sighing and struggling to sit up. The
+girl was at his side in an instant, assisting him. The young man's
+bewilderment was pitiful. He sat silent for a full minute, gazing first
+at his sister and then at Hollis, and finally at his surroundings. Then,
+when a rational gleam had come into his eyes he bowed his head, a blush
+of shame sweeping over his face and neck.
+
+"I expect I've been at it again," he muttered, without looking up.
+
+The girl leaned over him, reassuring him, patting his face lovingly,
+letting him know by all a woman's arts of the sympathy and love she bore
+for him. Hollis watched her with a grim, satisfied smile. If he had had
+a sister he would have hoped that she would be like her. He stepped
+forward and seized the young man by the arm, helping him to his feet.
+
+"You are right now," he assured him; "there has been no harm done."
+
+Standing, the young man favored Hollis with a careful inspection. He
+flushed again. "You're the man that rode through the draw," he said. "I
+saw you and thought you were one of Dunlavey's men. I shot at you once,
+and was going to shoot again, but something cracked in my head. I hope I
+didn't hit you." Embarrassment again seized him; his eyes drooped. "Of
+course you are not one of Dunlavey's men," he added, "or you wouldn't be
+here, talking to sis. No friend of Dunlavey's could do that." He looked
+at the girl with a tender smile. "I don't know what I'd do if it wasn't
+for her," he added, speaking to Hollis. "But I expect it's a good thing
+that I'm not crazy all the time." He looked searchingly at Hollis. "I've
+never seen you before," he said. "Who are you?"
+
+"I am Kent Hollis."
+
+The young man's eyes lighted. "Not Jim Hollis's son?" he asked.
+
+Hollis nodded. The young man's face revealed genuine pleasure. "You
+going to stay in this here country?" he asked.
+
+"I am going to run the Circle Bar," returned Hollis slowly.
+
+"Bully!" declared the young man. "There's some folks around here said
+you wouldn't have nerve enough to stay." He made a wry face. "But I
+reckon you've got nerve or you'd have hit the breeze when I started to
+stampede." He suddenly held out a hand. "I like you," he said
+impulsively. "You and me are going to be friends. Shake!"
+
+Hollis saw a smile of pleasure light up the girl's face, which she tried
+to conceal by brushing the young man's clothing with a gloved hand,
+meanwhile keeping him between her and Hollis.
+
+Hollis stood near the boulder, watching them as they prepared to depart,
+the girl telling her brother that he would find his pony on the plains
+beyond the canyon.
+
+"I am glad I didn't hit you," the young man told Hollis as he started
+away with the girl. "If you are not scared off you might take a run down
+to the shack some time--it's just down the creek a ways."
+
+Hollis hesitated and then, catching the girl's glance, he smiled.
+
+"I can't promise when," he said, looking at the girl, "but you may be
+sure that I will look you up the first chance I get."
+
+He stood beside the boulder until he saw them disappear around the wall
+of the canyon. Then with a satisfied grin he walked to his pony,
+mounted, and was off through the draw toward the Circle Bar ranchhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HOLLIS RENEWS AN ACQUAINTANCE
+
+
+Rumor, that mysterious disseminator of news whose tongues are legion,
+whispered that the Dry Bottom _Kicker_ was to come to life.
+Wherefore curiosity led many of Dry Bottom's citizens past the door of
+the _Kicker_ office to steal covert glances at the young man whose
+figure was bent over the desk inside. Many passed in silence after
+looking at the young man--he did not see them. Others commented gravely
+or humorously according to their whim--the young man did not hear them.
+Seated at the desk he gave his attention to the tasks before him--he was
+not concerned with rumor; the curiosity of Dry Bottom's citizens did not
+affect him. Seriously, methodically, steadily, he worked at his desk,
+while rumor wagged her tongues and curiosity lounged past the window.
+
+It was Hollis's first visit to the _Kicker_ office; he had come to
+work and there was much that he could do. He had found the _Kicker_
+installed in a one story frame building, verging upon dilapidation,
+unpainted, dingy. The appearance of its exterior had given Hollis a
+queer sensation in the pit of the stomach. He was cheered a little by
+the businesslike appearance of the interior. It was not what he had been
+used to, but he felt that it would answer very well in this locality,
+and--well, he planned to make improvements.
+
+About twenty by forty, he estimated the size of the interior. Originally
+there had been only one room. This had been divided into three sections
+by partitions. An old, flat-topped desk sat near the front window, a
+swivel chair before it. Along the wall above the desk were several rows
+of shelving with paste-board boxes and paper piled neatly up. Calendars,
+posters, and other specimens of the printer's art covered the walls. In
+the next room was another desk. Piles of advertising electrotypes, empty
+forms, and papers filled the corners. The composing room was in the
+rear. Everything was in order here; type cases, stands, forms. There
+were a proof press, some galley racks, a printing press, with a
+forlorn-looking gasolene engine near it. A small cast-iron stove stood
+in a corner with its door yawning open, its front bespattered with
+tobacco juice. A dilapidated imposing stone ranged along the rear wall
+near a door that opened into the sunlight. A man stood before one of the
+type cases distributing type. He did not look up at Hollis's entrance.
+
+"Hello!" greeted Hollis.
+
+The man hesitated in his work and looked up. "Hello," he returned,
+perfunctorily.
+
+"I suppose your name is Potter?" Hollis inquired cordially. Judge Graney
+had told him that if he succeeded in finding the compositor he would
+have him at the _Kicker_ office this morning. Potter had gone to
+work without further orders.
+
+"Yes," said the man. He came forward.
+
+"I am the new owner of the _Kicker_," Hollis informed him with a
+smile.
+
+"Jim Hollis's boy?" inquired Potter, straightening. At Hollis's nod he
+stepped quickly forward and grasped the hand the latter offered him,
+squeezing it tightly. "Of course you are Jim Hollis's boy!" he said,
+finishing his inspection. "You are the living image of him!" He swept
+his hand around toward the type case. "I am working, you see. Judge
+Graney wrote me last week that you wanted me and I came as soon as I
+could. Is it true that the _Kicker_ is going to be a permanent
+institution?"
+
+"The _Kicker_ is here to stay!" Hollis informed him.
+
+Potter's face lighted with pleasure. "That's bully!" he said. "That's
+bully!"
+
+He was of medium height, slender, lean faced, with a magnificent head,
+and a wealth of brown hair thickly streaked with silver. His thin lips
+were strong; his chin, though a trifle weak, was well formed; his eyes
+slightly bleared, but revealing, in spite of this defect, unmistakable
+intelligence. In the first flashing glance which Hollis had taken at him
+he had been aware that here was a person of more than ordinary mental
+ability and refinement. It was with a pang of pity that he remembered
+Judge Graney's words to the effect that he was a good workman--"when
+sober." Hollis felt genuinely sorry for him.
+
+"I have had a talk with Judge Graney," volunteered Potter. "He tells me
+that you are a newspaper man. Between us we ought to be able to get out
+a very respectable paper."
+
+"We will," calmly announced Hollis; "and we'll get the first issue out
+Saturday. Come in here and we'll talk about it."
+
+He led the way to the front room and seated himself at the desk,
+motioning Potter to another chair. Within the next hour he knew all
+about the _Kicker_. It was a six-column sheet of four pages. The
+first page was devoted to local news. The second carried some local
+advertisements, exchange clippings, and two or three columns of
+syndicate plate matter. On the third page two columns were devoted to
+editorials, one to advertisements, and three to local news in large
+type. The fourth, and last page was filled with more plate matter and a
+litter of "foreign" advertising--patent-medicines, soaps, hair-dye.
+
+At the first glance it appeared that the paper must be a paying
+proposition, for there were a goodly proportion of advertisements. Yet
+Hollis had his suspicions about the advertisements. When he had spoken
+to Potter about them he discovered that quite a number of them were what
+is known to the craft as "dead ads"--which meant advertisements upon
+which payment had ceased and which were carried either for the purpose
+of filling up the paper or because it was found cheaper to run them than
+to set type for the space which would be left by their absence.
+
+"We won't carry any dead ads!" announced Hollis.
+
+"Several of these are big merchants," said Potter, pointing them out
+with inky forefinger; "though the contracts have run out the appearance
+of their ads lends the _Kicker_ a certain moral support--the little
+fellows don't know that they are not paid for and it draws their
+business."
+
+"We don't care for that kind of business," smiled Hollis; "we're going
+to run a real newspaper. We're going to get paid ads!"
+
+"I hope so," hesitatingly replied Potter.
+
+"Of course you do," laughed Hollis; "but whether we get paid ads or not
+this newspaper is coming out regularly and on time. Furthermore, we're
+going to cut down on this plate stuff; we don't want a paper filled with
+stale articles on snakes, antedated ocean disasters, Egyptian monoliths,
+and the latest style in opera hats. We'll fill the paper with local
+news--we'll ginger things up a little. You are pretty well acquainted
+here--I'll leave the local items to you. What town near here compares
+with Dry Bottom in size?"
+
+"There's Lazette," returned Potter; "over in Colfax County."
+
+"How far from here?"
+
+"Eighty miles."
+
+"Got a newspaper?"
+
+"Yes; the _Eagle_."
+
+"Bully! Step on the _Eagle's_ toes. Make the _Eagle_ scream.
+Get into an argument with it about something--anything. Tell Lazette
+that as a town it's forty miles behind Dry Bottom. That will stir up
+public spirit and boom our subscription list. You see, Potter, civic
+pride is a big asset to a newspaper. We'll start a row right off the
+reel. Furthermore, we're going to have some telegraph news. I'll make
+arrangements for that to-day."
+
+Hollis's enthusiasm was infectious; a flash of spirit lighted up
+Potter's eyes as he rose from his chair. "I'm going to set up the head
+for the first page," he said. "Probably you'll want a slogan; that sort
+of thing is the style out here."
+
+"We'll have one," returned Hollis briskly. "Set this in triple leads:
+_'We Herald the Coming of the Law! The Kicker is Here to Stay!'_"
+
+"Good!" declared Potter. He went into the composing room and Hollis saw
+his fine old head bent over a type case. Hollis turned to his desk.
+
+He sat there long, his tall, lithe body slack, grim, serious lines in
+his lean face. He had thought of his conversation with Judge Graney
+concerning ambition--his ambition, the picture upon which his mind had
+dwelt many times. A little frame printing office in the West was not one
+of its features. He sighed with resignation and began methodically to
+look over the papers in the desk, finding many things to interest him.
+He discovered that in spite of his father's one great fault he had been
+a methodical man. He smiled regretfully, wishing that he might have been
+able to have seen more of him. Among the papers he hoped to find a
+personal note--a word--from his father. He found nothing of that
+character.
+
+After a time he took up a pen and began to write. Long ago he had
+decided that in the first issue of the paper he would attack the
+Cattlemen's Association. Judge Graney had ridden out to the Circle Bar
+on the previous Saturday afternoon, remaining over Sunday, and
+accompanying Hollis on the return trip Monday morning.
+
+While at the ranch the Judge had spent much of his time in communicating
+to Hollis his views of the situation in Union County and in acquainting
+him with the elder Hollis's intentions regarding the newspaper. Hollis
+had made some inquiries on his own account, with the result that when he
+reached the _Kicker_ office this morning he felt that he had
+acquired a good and sufficient knowledge of the situation.
+
+Looking over the old copy of the _Kicker_ he studied some of the
+advertisements. Evidently some Dry Bottom merchants had been brave
+enough to antagonize Dunlavey by advertising in the _Kicker_. With
+this copy of the _Kicker_ in hand Hollis rose from his desk, told
+Potter he was going out, and proceeded to visit some of the merchants
+whose advertisements appeared in the paper, hoping that their bravery
+still abided with them. He made a good solicitor. Some of the merchants
+flatly refused, saying they did not care to risk Dunlavey's anger.
+Others demurred, confidentially announcing that they had never
+considered the paper seriously and that there was really no good in
+advertising in Dry Bottom anyway--the town wasn't big enough. Half a
+dozen listened quietly while he told them that the _Kicker_ was in
+Dry Bottom to stay and then smiled and told him to run their
+advertisements. They rather admired his "nerve" and were not afraid of
+Dunlavey.
+
+At noon Hollis stepped into a restaurant called the Alhambra. While he
+ate he was critically inspected; the Alhambra swarmed with customers,
+and the proprietor quietly informed him that he was a "drawin' card" and
+hoped he'd "grub" there regularly. In return for his promise to do so
+Hollis secured his advertisement.
+
+Leaving the Alhambra he returned to the _Kicker_ office, seating
+himself again at his desk. The sun came slantwise through the window
+full upon him; the heat was oppressive; the flint-like alkali dust
+sifted through the crevices in the building and settled over everything
+in the room; myriad flies droned in the white sunlight before the open
+door. He heard nothing, felt nothing, saw nothing--for his thoughts were
+miles away, in an upper story of a big office building in the East from
+whose windows he even now looked down upon a bustling city.
+
+Life would be so different here. He heard a sound behind him and turned.
+Dunlavey was standing just inside the door, his great arms folded over
+his chest. He had been watching Hollis, his eyes narrowed with a
+cynically humorous expression.
+
+Hollis knew that by this time Dunlavey must have discovered his
+identity. He swung slowly around in his chair, his face wearing an
+expression of whimsical amusement as he greeted his victim of a few days
+previous.
+
+"Welcome to the _Kicker_ office," he said quietly.
+
+Dunlavey did not move. Evidently he had expected another sort of
+greeting and was slightly puzzled over Hollis's manner. He remained
+motionless and Hollis had an opportunity to study him carefully and
+thoroughly. His conclusions were brief and comprehensive. They were
+expressed tersely to himself as he waited for Dunlavey to speak: "A
+trickster and a cheat--dangerous."
+
+Dunlavey's eyes flashed metallically for an instant, but immediately the
+humorous cynicism came into them again. "I don't think you mean all of
+that," he said evenly.
+
+Hollis laughed. "I am not in the habit of saying things that I do not
+mean," he said quietly. "I am here to do business and I am ready to talk
+to anybody who wants to do business with me."
+
+Dunlavey's hands fell to his sides and were shoved into his capacious
+trousers' pockets. "Right," he said tersely: "that's what I'm here
+for--to talk business."
+
+He pulled a chair over close to Hollis and seated himself in it, moving
+deliberately, a certain grim reserve in his manner. Hollis watched him,
+marveling at his self-control. He reflected that it required will power
+of a rare sort to repress or conceal the rage which he surely must feel
+over his humiliation of two weeks before. That Dunlavey was able to so
+mask his feelings convinced Hollis that he had to deal with a man of
+extraordinary character.
+
+"I recollect meeting you the other day," said Dunlavey after he had
+become seated. He smiled with his lips, his eyes glittering again. "I'll
+say that we got acquainted then. There ain't no need for us to shake
+hands now." He showed his teeth in a mirthless grin. "I didn't know you
+then, but I know you now. You're Jim Hollis's boy."
+
+Hollis nodded. Dunlavey continued evenly: "Your father and me wasn't
+what you might call bosom friends. I reckon Judge Graney has told you
+that--if he ain't you've heard it from some one else. It don't make any
+difference. So there won't be any misunderstanding I'll tell you that I
+ain't figgering on you and me hitching up to the mutual friendship wagon
+either. I might say that we wasn't introduced right." He grinned evilly.
+"But I ain't letting what happened interfere with the business that's
+brought me here to-day. I've heard that you're intending to start the
+_Kicker_ again; that you're figgering on staying here and running
+the Circle Bar. What I'm here for is to buy you out. I'm offering you
+fifteen thousand dollars for the Circle Bar and this damn newspaper."
+
+Dunlavey had lost a little of the composure which had characterized his
+actions since entering the office and the last words of his speech had
+writhed venomously through his lips.
+
+Hollis's face betrayed absolutely no emotion. Though Dunlavey's visit to
+the _Kicker_ office had surprised him he was not surprised at his
+offer for the ranch and the newspaper, for according to Judge Graney he
+had made some such offer to the elder Hollis. Coming now, with an
+addition of five thousand dollars, Dunlavey's offer seemed to advertise
+his reluctance to continue the war that he had waged. Hollis appreciated
+the situation. If Dunlavey were to buy him off now there would come an
+end to the warfare that had already been an expensive one for the
+interests represented by Dunlavey. Likewise, the acceptance of the offer
+would give Hollis an opportunity to withdraw gracefully. Dunlavey had
+placed the issue squarely before him. The young man held his future in
+his hands and he did not reply at once.
+
+He sat silent for a few moments, studying the coarse, brutal face of the
+man seated before him, noting that his under jaw had come forward
+slightly, and that the cold, hard glitter had come again in his eyes.
+However, Hollis's silence meant nothing beyond the fact that he was
+going slowly over the history of the fight between his father and the
+man who sat there representing the interests which had begun the war. He
+had no thought of surrendering--that would be dishonorable. He was
+merely revolving the situation in his mind, considering how best to word
+his refusal. He did not want to appear belligerent; he did not want to
+precipitate war. But he did want Dunlavey to know that he purposed to
+have his rights; he wanted Dunlavey to know that he could not be
+frightened into surrendering them. He clasped one hand over his knee and
+leaned back in his chair, his gaze meeting Dunlavey's steadily.
+
+"Dunlavey," he said quietly, "what is the actual value of the Circle Bar
+ranch?"
+
+Dunlavey smiled blandly. "You couldn't find any man around these parts
+to take it at any price," he returned.
+
+"Why?" questioned Hollis.
+
+Dunlavey grinned mysteriously. "I reckon you know why," he returned;
+"you're pretty much of a tenderfoot, but I reckon Judge Graney has put
+you wise to the situation. There ain't nobody wants to buy the Circle
+Bar except me."
+
+"Why?" persisted Hollis.
+
+"I reckon you know that too," laughed Dunlavey. "It ain't no secret. The
+Cattlemen's Association is running things in this here county and it
+ain't wanting anyone to buy the Circle Bar except me. And nobody is fool
+enough to antagonize the Association. That's the why, if you want to
+know real bad."
+
+"You are frank about it at any rate," conceded Hollis smiling slightly.
+"But that doesn't get us anywhere. What I am trying to get at is this:
+what would the Circle Bar bring in cash if the Cattlemen's Association
+ceased to be a factor in the county?" Dunlavey grinned broadly. "For a
+tenderfoot you're real amusing," he derided. "There ain't nobody out
+here crazy enough to think that the Cattlemen's Association will ever be
+put out of business!"
+
+Hollis's lips curled a little, but his gaze was still steady.
+
+"That's evasion, Dunlavey," he said quietly. "You will remember that I
+asked you what the Circle Bar would bring 'if' the Association ceased to
+be a factor."
+
+Dunlavey favored Hollis with a perplexed grin. "I don't know what
+difference that makes," he returned. "We're dealing with what's before
+us now--we ain't considering what might be. But if you want to know my
+personal opinion it's that the Circle Bar might bring thirty thousand."
+
+"Thanks," said Hollis dryly; "that's getting somewhere. And now we'll be
+able to talk business. We've got thirty thousand to start with. I am
+told that when the Association began its war against my father he was
+rather prosperous. Usually he rounded up about two thousand head of
+cattle. But we'll call it a thousand. We'll say that they brought about
+thirty dollars a head, which would make an income of thirty thousand
+dollars a year, gross. We'll deduct fifty per cent for operating
+expenses, losses, and so on. That would leave about fifteen thousand.
+You've been fighting the Circle Bar for several years. We'll call it
+five. Five times fifteen thousand is seventy-five thousand. That
+represents the sum which my father would have made from the Circle Bar
+if you had not fought him. Add to that the thirty thousand which you
+admit would be a fair figure for the ranch if the Association were
+eliminated as a factor, and we have a total of one hundred and five
+thousand dollars." He smiled and leaned a little farther back in his
+chair, narrowing his eyes at Dunlavey. "Now we have reached a point
+where we can get somewhere. I'll take one hundred thousand dollars for
+the Circle Bar."
+
+The calm announcement had no effect upon Dunlavey except to cause him to
+grin derisively.
+
+"For a tenderfoot you're pretty slick," he allowed, his teeth showing.
+"You've figgered it out so that it sounds right reasonable. But you've
+forgot one thing. The Cattlemen's Association ain't eliminated. It says
+that the Circle Bar is worth fifteen thousand. You'll take that or----"
+He smiled grimly, holding back the threat.
+
+"I think I know what you mean," said Hollis quietly, without changing
+color. "You mean that the Cattlemen's Association will continue its
+fight and eventually ruin the Circle Bar. Perhaps it will--no man can
+tell what lies in the future. But I can tell you this: you can't retard
+progress."
+
+"No?" said Dunlavey with an irritating drawl.
+
+Hollis smiled composedly. He spoke without bitterness. "Dunlavey," he
+said, "I'm going to tell you something which you perhaps know but will
+not admit. Your Association has been successful in pulling the strings
+which make the politicians at Washington jump to do your bidding. I
+don't accuse you of buying them, but in any event they have greased the
+ways over which your Association has slipped to power. And now you think
+that the impetus you have gained will carry you along indefinitely. It
+won't. Everything in this world runs its natural course and when it does
+there comes an end.
+
+"If you were endowed with the average foresight you would be able to see
+that things cannot always go on the way they have. The law must come. It
+is inevitable. Its coming will be facilitated by such organizations as
+the Cattlemen's Association and by such men as you. Back in the East the
+forces of Good and Bad are battling. The forces of Good will be
+victorious. The government at Washington is familiar with the conditions
+that exist here and sooner or later will be compelled to act. When it
+does the small cattle owner will receive protection."
+
+"We're holding tight till the law comes," sneered Dunlavey; "which won't
+be soon."
+
+"Perhaps not," admitted Hollis dryly; "good things come slowly.
+Meanwhile, if you don't care to accept my figure for the Circle Bar I
+shall follow your example and hold tight until the law comes."
+
+"Meaning that you won't sell, I suppose?" sneered Dunlavey.
+
+"Meaning just that," returned Hollis quietly. "I am going to fight you.
+I have offered the Circle Bar at a fair figure and you have responded
+with threats. I wouldn't sell to you now if you offered one hundred and
+fifty thousand. The Circle Bar is not for sale!"
+
+Dunlavey had not moved. He sat quiet, leaning a little forward, his
+hands resting on his knees, his eyes narrowed to glittering pin-points
+as he watched Hollis. When the latter had concluded he leaned back,
+laughing hoarsely.
+
+"What are you going to do with this damn newspaper?" he demanded.
+
+"The newspaper will be used as a weapon against you," returned Hollis.
+"It will kick loud and long against such organizations as the
+Cattlemen's Association--against such men as you. Ostensibly the
+_Kicker_ will be a Dry Bottom newspaper, but it will appear in
+every city in the East; the matter that appears in it will be reprinted
+in Chicago, in Washington, in New York--in fact in every city in which I
+have a friend engaged in the newspaper business--and I have a number. I
+am going to stir up sentiment against you. I am going to be the Law's
+advance agent!"
+
+Dunlavey rose, his lips curling with contempt. "You make me sick!" he
+sneered. He turned his back and walked to the door, returning and
+standing in front of Hollis, ominously cool and deliberate. "So that's
+the how of it?" he said evenly. "You've come out here looking for fight.
+Well, you'll get it--plenty of it. I owe you something----"
+
+"Wait, Dunlavey," Hollis interrupted, without excitement; "I want you to
+understand that there isn't anything personal in this. I am going to
+fight you because you are a member of the Cattlemen's Association and
+not because you were my father's enemy. I am not afraid of you. I
+suspect that you will try to make things decidedly interesting for me
+from now on and I suppose I ought to be properly troubled. But I am not.
+I shall not be surprised at anything you do. I think that is all. Please
+close the door when you go out."
+
+He turned to the desk, ignoring Dunlavey. Sitting there, his senses
+alert, he heard the door slam. From beyond it came a curse. Silence
+again reigned in the office; Hollis was alone with the dust and the
+heat--and some very original thoughts.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE "KICKER" BECOMES AN INSTITUTION
+
+
+It was mid-July--and hot. The sun shone continually; the nights were
+uncomfortable, stifling. The dust was everywhere and grew deeper and
+lighter as the days passed. Water grew scarce; cattle suffered, lowing
+throughout the night, during the day searching the bogs and water holes
+for drops of moisture. Men looked up at the clear, cloudless sky and
+prayed--and cursed--for rain. The rain did not come. It was one long,
+continuous nightmare of heat.
+
+The _Kicker_ had appeared four times--on Saturdays--on time.
+Telegraphic communication with the outside world had been established.
+Potter had taken up his residence at the Circle Bar. War had been
+declared between the _Kicker_ and the Lazette _Eagle_. Hollis
+had written an argumentative essay on the virtues of Dry Bottom as a
+town, dwelling upon its superiority over Lazette. The editor of the
+_Eagle_ had replied with some bitterness, setting forth in detail
+why Dry Bottom did _not_ compare with Lazette. As the editor of the
+_Eagle_ mentioned population and civic spirit in his bill of
+particulars the war promised to be of long duration--questions of
+superiority between spirited persons are never settled. And Hollis had
+succeeded in arousing the spirit of Dry Bottom's citizens. They began to
+take some interest in the _Kicker_. Many subscribed; all read it.
+
+From the "local" columns of the paper one might have discovered that
+many public and private improvements were contemplated. Among these the
+following items were of the greatest interest:
+
+ Steps are being taken by the government toward the erection of a
+ fence around the court house grounds. Judge Graney is
+ contemplating a lawn and flowers. When these improvements are
+ completed there will be no comparison between our court house and
+ the dilapidated hovel which disgraces the county seat of Colfax.
+ The Lazette _Eagle_ please notice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ William Dunn, the proprietor of the Alhambra eating house,
+ announces that in the near future he will erect a new sign.
+ Thereafter the Alhambra will be known as the Alhambra
+ Restaurant. This is a step forward. We have been informed that
+ there is no restaurant in Lazette. Good boy, Dunn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Chet Miller's general merchandise store is to be repainted
+ throughout. Chet is public spirited.
+
+Everybody of any importance in Dry Bottom received weekly mention of
+some sort in the _Kicker_. Chet Miller was heard to say that the
+_Kicker_ was a "hummer," and no one ascribed his praise of the
+paper to thanks for the appearance of his name therein, for all who
+would have criticized were silenced by the appearance of their own
+names.
+
+In the fourth issue of the paper appeared several new advertisements.
+Judicious personal mention and lively news locals had aroused public
+spirit to a point where it ignored thoughts of Dunlavey's displeasure.
+
+Upon the Saturday which had marked the first issue of the _Kicker_
+under Hollis's ownership he had employed a circulation manager. That
+afternoon on the street near the _Kicker_ office he had almost
+collided with a red haired youth of uncertain age who had bounded out
+through the door of a private dwelling. In order to keep from knocking
+the youth over Hollis was forced to seize him by the arms and literally
+lift him off his feet. While in the air the youth's face was close to
+Hollis's and both grinned over the occurrence. When Hollis set the youth
+down he stood for an instant, looking up into Hollis's face and a grin
+of amusement overspread his own.
+
+"Shucks!" he said slowly. "If it ain't the tenderfoot editor!"
+
+"That's just who it is," returned Hollis with a smile.
+
+The youth grinned as he looked critically at Hollis. "You gittin' out
+that there paper to-day, mister?" he questioned.
+
+"Right now," returned Hollis.
+
+"Bully!" exclaimed the youth. He surveyed Hollis with a frank
+admiration. "They said you wouldn't have the nerve to do it," he said;
+"but, say! I reckon they ain't got you sized up right!"
+
+Hollis smiled, remembering that though the paper had been printed it was
+not yet distributed. He placed a hand on the youth's shoulder.
+
+"Have you got nerve enough to pass the _Kicker_ around to the
+people of this town?" he questioned.
+
+"I reckon," grinned the youth. "I was comin' down to ast you for the job
+when you bumped into me. I used to peddle them for your dad. My name's
+Jiggs Lenehan--mebbe you've heard of me?"
+
+Hollis smiled. "The question of delivering the _Kicker_ was one of
+the details that I overlooked," he said. "But fortunately it is arranged
+now. Henceforth, Jiggs, you are the _Kicker's_ official circulation
+manager. Likewise, if you care to add to your income, you can help
+Potter around the office."
+
+So it had been arranged, and Jiggs entered upon his duties with an
+energy that left little doubt in his employer's mind that he would prove
+a valuable addition to the force.
+
+In Hollis's "Salutatory" to the people of Dry Bottom he had announced in
+a quiet, unostentatious paragraph that while he had not come to Dry
+Bottom for a free fight, he would permit no one to tread on his toes.
+His readers' comprehension of the metaphor was complete--as was
+evidenced by the warm hand-clasps which he received from citizens who
+were not in sympathy with the Dunlavey regime. It surprised him to find
+how many such there were in town. He was convinced that all this element
+needed was a leader and he grimly determined to step quietly into that
+position himself.
+
+The second issue of the _Kicker_ was marked by a more aggressive
+spirit--a spirit engendered by the sympathetic reception of the first
+issue. In it he stated concisely his views of the situation in Union
+County, telling his readers that the best interests of the community
+demanded that Dunlavey's evil influence be wiped out. This article was
+headed: "Dry Bottom's Future," and won him many friends.
+
+The third issue contained stronger language, and the fourth was
+energetically aggressive. As he had decided before the first appearance
+of the paper, he took a certain number of copies of each issue, folded
+them neatly, stamped and addressed them, and mailed them to a number of
+newspapers throughout the country whose editors he knew. He also
+directed copies to a number of his friends in the East--to the president
+of his college, and last, to the Secretary of the Interior at
+Washington, who had formerly resided near him in Boston, and with whom
+he had a long acquaintance. There had been a change of administration
+the fall previous and he was certain that the new administration would
+not ignore the situation. To the Secretary, and also to a number of his
+friends, he wrote personal letters, explaining in detail the exact
+condition of affairs in Union County.
+
+He had not seen Dunlavey since the day the latter had come to the
+_Kicker_ office to negotiate for the purchase of the paper. On
+several of his rides to and from the Circle Bar ranch he had seen signs
+of life at the Circle Cross; once or twice he thought he saw someone
+watching him from a hill on the Circle Cross side of the Rabbit-Ear, but
+of this he was not quite certain, for the hill-top was thickly wooded
+and the distance great.
+
+He had been warned by Norton not to ride too often over the same trail
+lest Dunlavey send someone to ambush him.
+
+Hollis had laughed at the warning, though thanking Norton for it. He
+told his range boss that he did not anticipate any immediate trouble
+with Dunlavey.
+
+"It all depends on how Big Bill feels," returned Norton with a grim
+smile. "If you've got him mad there's no telling. And there are plenty
+of places between here and Dry Bottom where a man might be shot from
+ambush. And nobody'd ever know who done it. I wouldn't ride the Dry
+Bottom trail every day. There's the old Coyote trail, that takes you
+past the Razor-Back and through Devil's Hollow to Little Canyon an'
+along the hills to the other side."
+
+He laughed. "There's only one thing you need to be afraid of if you take
+the Coyote trail, an' that's Ed Hazelton. Ed gets spells when he's plum
+crazy. He's Nellie Hazelton's brother--her that Dunlavey was pesterin'
+when you slammed him." He laughed again, significantly. "Though if Ed
+knowed you was the man who took his sister's part you wouldn't need to
+be much scared of him--I've heard that he's got a pretty good memory for
+his friends--even when he's off."
+
+Hollis had not told Norton of his experience in Devil's Hollow, nor did
+he tell him now. But he followed his advice about taking the Coyote
+trail, and the following day when he made the trip to Dry Bottom he
+returned that way. About half way between Dry Bottom and the Circle Bar
+he came upon a little adobe cabin snuggling an arroyo through which
+trickled a small stream of water.
+
+It was an ideal location for a small rancher, and Hollis observed that
+the buildings were in order--evidently Nellie Hazelton and her brother
+were provident. He saw some cattle grazing on the edge of a small grass
+plateau which began at the slope of the arroyo through which the stream
+of water ran. A shout reached his ears as he sat motionless in the
+saddle looking about him, and he saw Ed Hazelton on the plateau among
+the cattle, waving a hand to him. The young man began to descend the
+side of the plateau, but before he had fairly started Nellie Hazelton
+had come out of the front door of the cabin and stood on the edge of the
+small porch, smiling at him.
+
+"So you did come, after all?" was her greeting.
+
+Hollis spurred his pony closer and sat smiling down at her. "I don't
+think anything could have stopped me after your invitation," he returned
+quickly.
+
+"Oh!" she said. The sudden color that came into her face told of her
+confusion. It betrayed the fact that she knew he had come because of
+her. Her brother's invitation in Devil's Hollow had been merely formal;
+there had been another sort of invitation in her eyes as she and her
+brother had left him that day.
+
+"Won't you get off your horse?" she said while he still sat motionless.
+"It's quite a while before sundown and you have plenty of time to reach
+the Circle Bar before dark."
+
+He had determined to discover something of the mystery that surrounded
+her and her brother, and so he was off his pony quickly and seating
+himself in a chair that she drew out of the cabin for him. By the time
+her brother had reached the porch Hollis was stretched comfortably out
+in the chair and was answering several timid questions concerning his
+opinion of the country and his new responsibilities.
+
+She was glad he liked the country, she said. It was wonderful. In the
+five years they had been here they had enjoyed it thoroughly--that was,
+of course, barring the trouble they had had with Dunlavey.
+
+Of their trouble with Dunlavey Hollis would hear much later, he told
+himself. At present he was more interested in discovering something
+about her and her brother, though he did not wish to appear inquisitive.
+Therefore his voice was politely casual.
+
+"Then you are not a Westerner?" he said.
+
+She smiled mournfully. "No," she returned; "we--Ed and I--were raised in
+Illinois, near Springfield. We came out here five years ago after--after
+mother died." Her voice caught. "Sometimes it seems terribly lonesome
+out here," she added; "when I get to thinking of--of our other home.
+But"--she smiled bravely through the sudden moisture that had come into
+her eyes--"since Ed got hurt I don't have much time to think of myself.
+Poor fellow."
+
+Hollis was silent. He had never had a sister but he could imagine how
+she must feel over the misfortune that had come to her brother. It must
+be a sacrifice for her to remain in this country, to care for a brother
+who must be a great burden to her at times, to fight the solitude, the
+hardships, to bear with patience the many inconveniences which are
+inevitable in a new, unsettled country. He felt a new admiration for her
+and a profound sympathy.
+
+"I think that you must be a very brave young woman," he said earnestly.
+
+"Oh!" she returned with a sudden, illuminating smile. "It isn't hard to
+be brave. But at times I find it hard to be patient."
+
+"Patience is one of the cardinal virtues," declared Hollis, "but it
+takes bravery of a rare sort to remain in this country, surrounded with
+the care----"
+
+Her fingers were suddenly over her lips warningly, and he saw Ed
+Hazelton nearing the porch.
+
+"I wouldn't have him know for the world," she said rapidly. "It isn't a
+care to look after someone you love."
+
+Hollis smiled grimly at the reproach in her voice and rose to greet her
+brother.
+
+The latter seemed to be quite recovered from the attack he had suffered
+in Devil's Hollow and talked freely and intelligently of affairs in the
+country. Hollis found that on the whole he was a well informed young
+man--quiet, modest, and apparently well able to give a good account of
+himself in spite of his affliction. He was bitter against Dunlavey and
+thanked Hollis warmly for his defense of his sister.
+
+At sundown Hollis departed, telling the Hazeltons that since he was
+their neighbor he would not neglect to see them occasionally. As he rode
+away into the dusk Nellie Hazelton stood on the porch smilingly waving
+her hand at him. As he threaded his way through the rapidly growing
+darkness he felt an unaccountable satisfaction over the fact that he had
+elected to remain in Union County; that henceforth his fortunes were to
+be linked with those of a brave young woman who had also accepted the
+robes of sacrifice and who was committed to war against their common
+enemy--Dunlavey. Curiously, during the past few days he had felt a
+decided change in his attitude toward life. His old ambition was no
+longer uppermost in his mind--it had been crowded out of his existence.
+In its place had been erected a new pinnacle of promise. A seat among
+the mighty was a worthy goal. Yet the lowly bench of sacrifice was not
+without its compensations.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+CONCERNING THE "SIX-O'CLOCK"
+
+
+On Friday evening previous to the Saturday on which the _Kicker_
+was to be issued for the fifth consecutive time by Hollis, Potter did
+not ride out to the Circle Bar. There still remained some type to be set
+and Potter had declared his intention of completing the work and staying
+overnight in town. Hollis had acquiesced and had departed for the Circle
+Bar alone.
+
+When he reached Dry Bottom the following morning he found a small crowd
+of people in front of the _Kicker_ office. During the night someone
+had posted a written notice on the front door, and when Hollis
+dismounted from his pony there were perhaps a dozen interested citizens
+grouped about the door, reading the notice. There were several of the
+town's merchants and a number of cowboys--new arrivals and those who had
+remained overnight to gamble and participate in the festivities that
+were all-night features of the dives. There were also the usual loafers,
+who constitute an element never absent in any group of idlers in any
+street. All, however, gave way before Hollis and allowed him to reach
+the door without molestation, though in passing he observed significant
+grins on several faces.
+
+The notice was written in a bold, legible hand.
+
+"Mr. Hollis:"--it read, the prefix under-scored--"The express leaves
+town this afternoon at six o'clock--goin' east. Better be on it."
+
+ Signed--"Y. Z."
+
+Hollis read the notice and then turned and quietly surveyed his
+watchful, interested audience. He smiled grimly, seeing several faces
+which, though plainly expressing amusement, seemed quietly sympathetic.
+He felt that these were wishing him success, though doubting his ability
+to cope with his enemies. Other faces were plainly antagonistic in
+expression. He looked at both for an instant and then turned again to
+the notice and producing a pencil printed boldly on its face the slogan
+he had devised:
+
+_"We Herald the Coming of the Law! The Kicker is Here to Stay!"_
+
+And below he indulged in this sarcasm: _"Don't hold the express on my
+account!"_
+
+ Signed--"KENT HOLLIS"
+
+Leaving his audience to stare after him Hollis pushed open the door of
+the office and entered.
+
+He found Potter bending over the imposing table, hard at work on one of
+the forms. Three other forms, locked and ready for the press, stood in a
+corner. Potter looked up and smiled as his chief entered.
+
+"See the notice on the door?" he inquired.
+
+"Some of Dunlavey's work, I suppose," returned Hollis.
+
+"Well, yes. I suppose Dunlavey is back of it. But Yuma tacked the sign
+up." He smiled soberly as Hollis flashed a grin at him. "They tried hard
+last night to get me to drink. Of course their purpose was to get me
+drunk so that I wouldn't be able to get the paper out today. I am not
+going to tell you how hard I had to fight myself to resist the
+temptation to drink. But you can see for yourself that I succeeded. The
+_Kicker_ will be ready to go to press in an hour."
+
+He felt Hollis's hand patting his shoulder approvingly and he continued,
+a little hoarsely. "I took one drink at the Fashion last night after I
+got through here. Then I came back and went to sleep. I am a light
+sleeper and when some time after midnight I heard a sound at the door I
+got up and peered out of the window. I saw Yuma tacking up the notice. I
+suppose Dunlavey wrote it." He looked at Hollis with a whimsical
+expression. "I suppose you are going to take the express?" he inquired.
+
+"Tried to get you drunk, did they?" shaking his head negatively to
+Potter's question, a smile on his face. "I can't understand that game,"
+he continued, soberly. "Of course getting you drunk would have prevented
+the appearance of the paper on scheduled time. But if they wanted to do
+serious damage--of course I mean to the paper," he apologized with a
+grim smile, "why didn't they come down here--some of them--during your
+absence, and smash things up? That would have made the thing sure for
+them."
+
+Potter laughed mirthlessly. "Of course they could have done that," he
+said; "it would have been easy--will be easy any time. But it wouldn't
+be artistic, would be coarse in fact. Dunlavey doesn't do things that
+way. If they smash your stuff, destroy your plant here, ruin your type
+and press, and so forth, they invite sympathy in your behalf. But if
+they prevent the appearance of your paper without having done any damage
+to your plant they accomplish something--they expose you to ridicule.
+And in this country ridicule is a potent weapon--even if it involves
+nothing more serious than a drunken printer."
+
+Hollis shook Potter's hand in silence. He had expected violence from
+Dunlavey; long before this he had expected him to show his hand, to
+attempt some covert and damaging action. And he had been prepared to
+fight to get the _Kicker_ out. He had not expected subtlety from
+Dunlavey.
+
+He went to his desk and sat in the chair, looking out through the window
+at the crowd that still lingered in front of the office. Most of the
+faces wore grins. Plainly they were amused, but Hollis saw that the
+amusement was of a grim sort. They appreciated the situation and enjoyed
+its humor but felt the tragedy behind it. Probably most of them were
+acquainted with Dunlavey's methods; some of them probably knew of the
+attempt that had been made to incapacitate Potter. Certainly those of
+them that did know had seen the failure of the attempt and were now
+speculating upon Dunlavey's next move. Looking out of the window Hollis
+felt that some of his audience must be wondering whether the editor of
+the _Kicker_ would pay any attention to the notice on the door.
+Would he scare?
+
+Hollis had already decided that he would not "scare." He grinned at
+several of the men who watched him and then turned and instructed Potter
+to take down a column of type on the first page of the paper to make
+room for an article that he intended to write. Then he seized a pen and
+wrote a red hot defiance directed at the authors of the notice, which
+Potter set up under the heading:
+
+"Why the Editor of the _Kicker_ Won't Take the Express."
+
+In clear, terse language he told his audience his reasons. This was
+America; he was an American, and he didn't purpose to allow the
+Cattlemen's Association--or any other association, gang, or
+individual--to dictate the policy of his paper or influence his private
+actions. Least of all did he purpose to allow anyone to "run him out of
+town." He printed the notice entire, adding his answer, assuring readers
+that he was sending copies of the _Kicker_ to every newspaper in
+the East and that notices such as had been affixed to his door would
+react against the authors. He ended with the prophecy that the law would
+come into Union County and that meanwhile the _Kicker_ purposed to
+fight.
+
+At noon Hollis took the usual number of copies to the station and mailed
+them. Walking down the street on his return from the station he
+attracted much attention. Men stood in the open doorways of saloons
+watching him, a number openly jeered; others sent subtle jibes after
+him. Still others were silent, their faces expressing amusement.
+
+But he looked at none of them. He swung along the board walk, his face a
+little pale, his lips tightly closed, determined to pay no attention to
+the jeers that reached his ears.
+
+When he passed the Fashion there were a number of men draped along its
+front; and he was conscious of many grins. Passing the men he heard low
+laughter and profane reference which caused his cheeks to redden. But he
+walked steadily on. Near the _Kicker_ office he met Jiggs Lenehan.
+Followed by the youth he reached the office to find that Potter had
+completed the press work and that several hundred copies of the paper,
+the ink still moist on its pages, were stacked in orderly array on the
+imposing stone. In a very brief time Jiggs burst out of the office door,
+a bundle of papers under his arm, and began the work of distribution.
+Standing back from the window with Potter, Hollis watched Jiggs until
+the latter reached the crowd in front of the Fashion saloon. Then all
+that Hollis could see of him was his red head. But that trade was brisk
+was proved by the press around Jiggs--the youth was passing out papers
+at a rapid rate and soon nearly every man in the crowd about the Fashion
+was engaged in reading, or,--if this important feature of his education
+had been neglected--in questioning his neighbor concerning the things
+that appeared in the paper.
+
+Presently Jigg's customers in front of the Fashion were all supplied.
+Then other purchasers appeared. Soon the _Kicker_ was being read
+by--it seemed--nearly every grown person in Dry Bottom. Business was
+suspended. Down the street men were congregated about the doors of many
+of the stores; others were sitting in doorways, still others leaned
+against buildings; some, not taking time to search for support, read
+while walking, or stood motionless on the board sidewalks, satisfying
+their curiosity.
+
+Hollis watched through the window until he began to be certain that
+every person in town was supplied with a paper. Then with a grim smile
+he left the window and sought his chair beside the desk. He was
+satisfied. Dunlavey had made the first aggressive movement and the fight
+was on.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HOW A BAD MAN LEFT THE "KICKER" OFFICE
+
+
+It was about one o'clock in the afternoon when the _Kicker_
+appeared on Dry Bottom's street. At about five minutes after one, Potter
+left the front of the office and walked to the rear room where he halted
+at the imposing stone. There he proceeded to "take down" the four forms.
+This done he calmly began distributing type.
+
+While Potter worked Hollis sat very quietly at his desk in the front
+office, his arms folded, one hand supporting his chin, his lips forming
+straight lines, his eyes narrowed with a meditative expression.
+Occasionally Potter glanced furtively at him, his eyes filled with
+mingled expressions of sympathy, admiration, and concern.
+
+Potter appreciated his chief's position. It meant something for a man of
+Hollis's years and training to bury himself in this desolate sink-hole
+of iniquity; to elect to carry on an unequal war with interests that
+controlled the law machinery of the county and Territory--whose power
+extended to Washington. No doubt the young man was even now brooding
+over the future, planning his fight, pessimistically considering his
+chances of success. Potter's sympathy grew. He thought of approaching
+his chief with a word of encouragement. But while he hesitated, mentally
+debating the propriety of such an action, Hollis turned quickly and
+looked fairly at him, his forehead perplexed.
+
+"Potter," he remarked, "I suppose there isn't a good brain specialist in
+this section of the country?"
+
+"Why--why----" began Potter. Then he stopped and looked at his chief in
+wordless astonishment. His sympathy had been wasted.
+
+"No," laughed Hollis, divining the cause of the compositor's
+astonishment, "personally I have no use for a brain specialist. I was
+thinking of some other person."
+
+"Not me?" grinned Potter from behind his type case. He flushed a little
+at the thought of how near he had come to offering encouragement to a
+man who had not been in need of it, who, evidently, had not been
+thinking of the big fight at all. "Perhaps I need one," he added, eyeing
+Hollis whimsically; "a moment ago I thought you were in the dumps on
+account of the situation here--you seemed rather disturbed. It surprised
+me considerably to find that you had not been thinking of Dunlavey at
+all."
+
+"No," admitted Hollis gravely, "I was not thinking of Dunlavey. I was
+wondering if something couldn't be done for Ed Hazelton."
+
+"Something ought to be done for him," declared Potter earnestly. "I have
+watched that young man closely and I am convinced that with proper care
+and treatment he would recover fully. But I never heard of a specialist
+in this section--none, in fact, nearer than Chicago. And I've forgotten
+his name."
+
+"It is Hammond," supplied Hollis. "I've been thinking of him. I knew his
+son in college. I am going to write to him."
+
+He turned to his desk and took up a pen, while Potter resumed his work
+of distributing type.
+
+About half an hour later Jiggs Lenehan strolled into the office wearing
+a huge grin on his face. "'Pears like everybody in town wants to read
+the _Kicker_ to-day," he said with a joyous cackle. "Never had so
+much fun sellin' them. Gimme some more," he added breathlessly; "they's
+a gang down to the station howlin' for them. Say," he yelled at Hollis
+as he went out of the door with a big bundle of _Kickers_ under his
+arm, "you're cert'nly some editor man!" He grinned admiringly and widely
+as he disappeared.
+
+Hollis finished his letter to Hammond and then leaned back in his chair.
+For half an hour he sat there, looking gravely out into the street and
+then, answering a sudden impulse, he rose and strode to the door.
+
+"Going down to the court house," he informed Potter.
+
+He found Judge Graney in his room, seated at the big table, a copy of
+the _Kicker_ spread out in front of him. At his appearance the
+Judge pushed back his chair and regarded him with an approving smile.
+
+"Well, Hollis," he said, "I see Dunlavey has played the first card."
+
+"He hasn't taken the first trick," was the young man's quick reply.
+
+"Fortunately not," laughed the judge. He placed a finger on a column in
+the _Kicker_. "This article about the Cattlemen's Association is a
+hummer--if I may be allowed the phrase. A straight, manly citation of
+the facts. It ought to win friends for you."
+
+"I've merely stated the truth," returned Hollis, "and if the article
+seems good it is merely because it defends a principle whose virtue is
+perfectly obvious."
+
+"But only a man who felt strongly could have written it," suggested the
+Judge.
+
+"Perhaps. I admit feeling a deep interest in the question of cattle."
+
+"Your ambition?" slyly insinuated the Judge.
+
+"Is temporarily in abeyance--perhaps permanently."
+
+"Then your original decision about remaining here has been--well,
+strengthened?"
+
+Hollis nodded. The Judge grinned mysteriously. "There is an article on
+the first page of the _Kicker_ which interested me greatly," he
+said. "It concerns the six o'clock train--going east. Do you happen to
+know whether the editor of the _Kicker_ is going to use the
+express?"
+
+Hollis smiled appreciatively. "The editor of the _Kicker_ is going
+to use the express," he admitted, "though not in the manner some people
+are wishing. The usual number of copies of the _Kicker_ are going
+to ride on the express, as are also some very forceful letters to the
+President of the United States and the Secretary of the Interior."
+
+"Good!" said the Judge. He looked critically at Hollis. "I know that you
+are going to remain in Dry Bottom," he said slowly; "I have never
+doubted your courage. But I want to warn you to be careful. Don't make
+the mistake of thinking that the notice which you found on the door of
+the _Kicker_ office this morning is a joke. They don't joke like
+that out here. Of course I know that you are not afraid and that you
+won't run. But be careful--there are men out here who would snuff out a
+human life as quickly as they would the flame of a candle, and with as
+little fear of the consequences. I shouldn't like to hear of you using
+your revolver, but if you do have occasion to use it, use it fast and
+make a good job of it."
+
+"I don't like to use a gun," returned Hollis gravely, "but all the same
+I shall bear your advice in mind." An expression of slight disgust swept
+over his face. "I don't see why men out here don't exhibit a little more
+courage," he said. "They all 'pack' a gun, as Norton says, and all are
+apparently yearning to use one. I don't see what satisfaction there
+could be in shooting a man with whom you have had trouble; it strikes me
+as being a trifle cowardly." He laughed grimly. "For my part," he added,
+"I can get more satisfaction out of slugging a man. Perhaps it isn't so
+artistic as shooting, but you have the satisfaction of knowing that your
+antagonist realizes and appreciates his punishment."
+
+Judge Graney's gaze rested on the muscular frame of the young man. "I
+suppose if all men were built like you there would be less shooting
+done. But unfortunately nature has seen fit to use different molds in
+making her men. Not every man has the strength or science to use his
+fists, nor the courage. But there is one thing that you will do well to
+remember. When you slug a man who carries a gun you only beat him
+temporarily; usually he will wait his chance and use his gun when you
+least expect him."
+
+"I suppose you refer to Yuma Ed and Dunlavey?" suggested Hollis.
+
+"Well, no, not Dunlavey. I have never heard of Dunlavey shooting
+anybody; he plays a finer game. But Yuma Ed, Greasy, Ten Spot, and some
+more who belong to the Dunlavey crowd are professional gun-men and do
+not hesitate to shoot. The chances are that Dunlavey will try to square
+accounts with you in some other manner, but I would be careful of
+Yuma--a blow in the face never sets well on a man of that character."
+
+An hour later, when Hollis sat at his desk in the _Kicker_ office,
+Judge Graney's words were recalled to him. He was thinking of his
+conversation with the Judge when Jiggs Lenehan burst into the office,
+breathless, his face pale and his eyes swimming with news. He was
+trembling With excitement.
+
+"Ten Spot is comin' down here to put you out of business!" he blurted
+out when he could get his breath. "I was in the Fashion an' I heard him
+an' Yuma talkin' about you. Ten Spot is comin' here at six o'clock!"
+
+Hollis turned slowly in his chair and faced the boy. His cheeks whitened
+a little. Judge Graney had been right. Hollis had rather expected at
+some time or other he would have to have it out with Yuma, but he had
+expected he would have to deal with Yuma himself. He smiled a little
+grimly. It made very little difference whether he fought Yuma or some
+other man; when he had elected to remain in Dry Bottom he had realized
+that he must fight somebody--everybody in the Dunlavey crew. He looked
+at his watch and saw that the hands pointed to four. Therefore he had
+two hours to prepare for Ten Spot's coming. He smiled at the boy, looked
+back into the composing room and saw that Potter had ceased his labors
+and was leaning on a type case, watching him soberly. He grinned broadly
+at Potter and turned to Jiggs.
+
+"How many _Kickers_ did you sell?"
+
+"Two hundred an' ten," returned the latter; "everybody bought them." He
+took a step forward; his hands clenching with the excitement that still
+possessed him. "I told you Ten Spot was comin' down here to kill you!"
+he said hoarsely and insistently. "Didn't you hear me?"
+
+"I heard you," smiled Hollis, "and I understand perfectly. But I don't
+think we need to get excited over it. Just how much money did you
+receive for the two hundred and ten papers?"
+
+"Six dollars an' two bits," responded the boy, regarding Hollis
+wonderingly.
+
+"It is yours," Hollis informed him; "there was to be no charge for the
+_Kicker_ to-day."
+
+The boy grinned with pleasure. "Don't you want none of it?" he inquired.
+
+"It is yours," repeated Hollis. He reached out and grasped the boy by
+the arm, drawing him close. "Now tell me what you heard at the Fashion,"
+he said.
+
+Rapidly, but with rather less excitement in his manner than he had
+exhibited on his entrance, the boy related in detail the conversation he
+had overheard at the Fashion. When he had finished Hollis patted him
+approvingly on the back.
+
+"The official circulation manager of the _Kicker_ has made good,"
+he said with a smile. "Now go home and take a good rest and be ready to
+deliver the _Kicker_ next Saturday."
+
+The boy backed away and stood looking at Hollis in surprise. "Why!" he
+said in an awed voice, "you ain't none scared a-tall!"
+
+"I certainly am scared," laughed Hollis; "scared that Ten Spot will
+change his mind before six o'clock. Do you think he will?"
+
+"No!" emphatically declared the boy. "I don't reckon that Ten Spot will
+change his mind a-tall. He'll sure come down here to shoot you!"
+
+"That relieves me," returned Hollis dryly. "Now you go home. But," he
+warned, "don't tell anyone that I am scared."
+
+For an instant the boy looked at Hollis critically, searching his face
+with all a boy's unerring judgment for signs which would tell of
+insincerity. Seeing none, he deliberately stretched a hand out to
+Hollis, his lips wreathing into an approving grin.
+
+"Durned if you ain't the stuff!" he declared. "I'm just bettin' that Ten
+Spot ain't scarin' you none!" Then he backed out of the door and still
+grinning, disappeared.
+
+After Jiggs had gone Hollis turned and smiled at Potter. "I suppose you
+know this man Ten Spot," he said. "Will he come?"
+
+"He will come," returned Potter. His face was pale and his lips quivered
+a little as he continued: "Ten Spot is the worst of Dunlavey's set," he
+said; "a dangerous, reckless taker of human life. He is quick on the
+trigger and a dead shot. He is called Ten Spot because of the fact that
+once, with a gun in each hand, he shot all the spots from a ten of
+hearts at ten paces."
+
+Hollis sat silent, thoughtfully stroking his chin. Potter smiled
+admiringly.
+
+"I know that you don't like to run," he said; "you aren't that kind. But
+you haven't a chance with Ten Spot--unfortunately you haven't had much
+experience with a six-shooter." Potter's hands shook as he tried to
+resume work at the type case. "I didn't think they would have nerve
+enough for that game," he added, advancing again toward Hollis. "I
+rather thought they would try some other plan--something not quite so
+raw. But it seems they have nerve enough for anything. Hollis" he
+concluded dejectedly, "you've got to get out of town before six o'clock
+or Ten Spot will kill you!
+
+"You've got plenty of time," he resumed as Hollis kept silent; "it's
+only a little after four. You can get on your horse and be almost at the
+Circle Bar at six. No one can blame you for not staying--everybody knows
+that you can't handle a gun fast enough to match Ten Spot. Maybe if you
+do light out and don't show up in town for a week or so this thing will
+blow over."
+
+"Thank you very much for that advice, Potter," said Hollis slowly. "I
+appreciate the fact that you are thinking of my safety. But of course
+there is another side to the situation. You of course realize that if I
+run now I am through here--no one would ever take me seriously after it
+had been discovered that I had been run out of town by Ten Spot."
+
+"That's a fact," admitted Potter. "But of course----"
+
+"I think that is settled," interrupted Hollis. "You can't change the
+situation by argument. I've got to face it and face it alone. I've got
+to stay here until Ten Spot comes. If I can't beat him at his game he
+wins and you can telegraph East to my people." He rose and walked to the
+window, his back to the printer.
+
+"You can knock off for to-day, Potter. Jump right on your pony and get
+out to Circle Bar. I wouldn't say anything to Norton or anyone until
+after nine to-night and then if I don't show up at the ranch you will
+know that Ten Spot has got me."
+
+He stood at the window while Potter slowly drew off his apron, carefully
+folded it and tucked it into a corner. He moved very deliberately, as
+though reluctant to leave his chief. Had Hollis shown the slightest sign
+of weakening Potter would have stayed. But watching closely he saw no
+sign of weakness in the impassive face of his chief, and so, after he
+had made his preparations for departure, he drew a deep breath of
+resignation and walked slowly to the back door, where his pony was
+hitched. He halted at the threshold, looking back at his chief.
+
+"Well, good-bye then," he said.
+
+Hollis did not turn. "Good-bye," he answered.
+
+Potter took one step outward, hesitated, and then again faced the front
+of the office.
+
+"Damn it, Hollis," he said hoarsely, "don't wait for Ten Spot to start
+anything; when you see him coming in the door bore him. You've got a
+right to; that's the law in this country. When a man gives you notice to
+leave town you've got a right to shoot him on sight!"
+
+For a moment he stood, awaiting an answer. None came. Potter sighed and
+stepped out through the door, leaving his chief alone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At one minute to six Hollis pulled out his watch. He sighed, replaced
+the time-piece, and leaned back in his chair. A glance out through the
+window showed him that the street was deserted except for here and there
+a cow pony drooping over one of the hitching rails and a wagon or two
+standing in front of a store. The sun was coming slantwise over the
+roofs; Hollis saw that the strip of shade in front of the _Kicker_
+building had grown to wide proportions. He looked at his watch again. It
+was one minute after six--and still there were no signs of Ten Spot.
+
+A derisive grin appeared on Hollis's face. Perhaps Ten Spot had
+reconsidered. He decided that he would wait until ten minutes after six;
+that would give Ten Spot a decent margin of time for delay.
+
+And then there was a sudden movement and a man stood just inside the
+office door, a heavy revolver in his right hand, its muzzle menacing
+Hollis. The man was tall and angular, apparently about thirty years old,
+with thin, cruel lips and insolent, shifty eyes.
+
+"'Nds up!" he said sharply, swinging the revolver to a threatening
+poise. "It's six o'clock, you tenderfoot ---- ---- ---- ----!"
+
+This was the vile epithet that had been applied to Hollis by Yuma Ed,
+which had been the direct cause of Yuma's downfall the day of Hollis's
+arrival in Dry Bottom. Hollis's eyes flashed, but the man was several
+feet from him and out of reach of his fists. Had Hollis been standing he
+would have had no chance to reach the man before the latter could have
+made use of his weapon. Therefore Hollis remained motionless in his
+chair, catching the man's gaze and holding it steadily with unwavering,
+narrowed eyes.
+
+Though he had waited for the coming of Ten Spot, he had formulated no
+plan of action; he had felt that somehow he would come out of the clash
+with him without injury. He still thought so. In spite of his danger he
+felt that some chance of escape would be offered him. Grimly confident
+of this he smiled at the man, though still holding his gaze, determined,
+if he saw the faintest flicker of decision in his eyes, to duck and
+tackle him regardless of consequences.
+
+"I suppose you are Ten Spot?" he said slowly. He was surprised at the
+steadiness of his voice.
+
+The man grinned, his eyes alert, shifty, filled with a chilling menace.
+"You've got her right, tenderfoot," he said; "'Ten Spot's' m' handle,
+an' if you're a-feelin' like criticizin' of her do her some rapid before
+I starts dealin' out the lead which is in my pritty."
+
+Just how one man could be so entirely remorseless as to shoot another
+when that other man was looking straight into his eyes Hollis could not
+understand. He could readily realize how a man could kill when provoked
+to anger, or when brooding over an injury. But he had done nothing to
+Ten Spot--did not even know him--had never seen him before, and how Ten
+Spot could deliberately shoot him--without provocation--was
+incomprehensible. He was convinced that in order to shoot, Ten Spot must
+work himself into an artificial rage, and he believed that the vile
+epithet which Ten Spot had applied to him immediately upon his entrance
+must be part of his scheme. He was convinced that had he shown the
+slightest resentment over the application of the epithet Ten Spot would
+have shot him down at once. Therefore he resolved to give the man no
+opportunity to work himself into a rage. He smiled again as Ten Spot
+concluded and carelessly twisted himself about in his chair until he was
+in a position to make a quick spring.
+
+"'Ten Spot' is a picturesque name," he remarked quietly, not removing
+his gaze from Ten Spot's eyes for the slightest fraction of a second; "I
+have no criticism to make. I have always made it a point to refrain from
+criticizing my visitors. At least I do not recollect ever having
+criticized a visitor who carried a gun," he concluded with a smile.
+
+Ten Spot's lips curled sarcastically. Apparently he would not swerve in
+his determination to provoke trouble.
+
+"Hell," he said truculently, "that there palaver makes me sick. I reckon
+you're too damn white livered to criticize a man that's lookin' at you.
+There ain't no tenderfoot (here he applied the unprintable epithet
+again) got nerve enough to criticize nothin'!"
+
+Hollis slowly raised his hands and placed them on the arms of his chair,
+apparently to steady himself, but in reality to be ready to project
+himself out of the chair in case he could discern any indication of
+action on Ten Spot's part.
+
+"Ten Spot," he said in a low, even, well controlled voice, conciliatory,
+but filled with a manliness which no man could mistake, "at four o'clock
+this afternoon I heard that you and Yuma Ed were framing up your present
+visit. I am not telling who gave me the information," he added as he saw
+Ten Spot's eyes brighten, "but that is what happened. So you see I know
+what you have come for. You have come to kill me. Is that correct?"
+
+Ten Spot's eyes narrowed--into them had come an appraising, speculative
+glint. He nodded. "You've got her right," he admitted gruffly. "But if
+you knowed why didn't you slope?" He looked at Hollis with a half sneer,
+as though unable to decide whether Hollis was a brave man or merely a
+fool.
+
+Hollis saw the indecision in Ten Spot's eyes and his own brightened. At
+last he had planned a form of action and he cooly estimated the distance
+between himself and Ten Spot. While Hollis had been speaking Ten Spot
+had taken a step forward and he was now not over four or five feet
+distant. Into Ten Spot's eyes had come an amused, disdainful gleam;
+Hollis's quiet, argumentative attitude had disarmed him. This was
+exactly what Hollis had been waiting for.
+
+Ten Spot seemed almost to have forgotten his weapon; it had sagged, the
+muzzle pointing downward--the man's mind had become temporarily diverted
+from his purpose. When he saw Hollis move suddenly forward he remembered
+his gun and tried to swing its muzzle upward, but it was too late.
+Hollis had lunged forward, his left hand closing on Ten Spot's right
+wrist, his right fist reaching Ten Spot's jaw in a full, sweeping,
+crashing uppercut.
+
+The would-be killer did not have even time enough to pull the trigger of
+his six-shooter. It fell from his hand and thudded dully to the floor as
+his knees doubled under him and he collapsed in an inert, motionless
+heap near the door.
+
+With a grim smile on his face Hollis picked up Ten Spot's weapon and
+placed it on the desk. For an instant he stood at the window, looking
+out into the street. Down near the Fashion he saw some men--Yuma Ed
+among them. No doubt they were waiting the sound of the pistol shot
+which would tell them that Ten Spot had disposed of Hollis. Hollis
+grinned widely--Yuma and his gang were due for a surprise. For perhaps a
+minute Hollis stood beside the desk, watching Ten Spot. Then when the
+latter's hands began to twitch and a trace of color appeared in his
+face, Hollis pulled out his own revolver and approached him, standing
+within a few feet of him and looking down at him.
+
+There was no mark on Ten Spot's jaw to show where Hollis's blow had
+landed, for his fist had struck flush on the point, its force directed
+upward. Ten Spot's mouth had been open at the instant and the snapping
+of his teeth from the impact of the blow no doubt had much to do with
+his long period of unconsciousness.
+
+He stirred presently and then with an effort sat up and looked at his
+conqueror with a glance of puzzled wonderment. Seeing Hollis's weapon
+and his own on the desk, the light of past events seemed to filter into
+his bewildered brain. He grinned owlishly, felt of his jaw and then
+bowed his head, a flush of shame overspreading his face.
+
+"Herd-rode!" he said dismally. "Herd-rode, an' by a tenderfoot! Oh,
+Lordy!" He suddenly looked up at Hollis, his eyes flashing with rage and
+defiance.
+
+"Damn your hide, why don't you shoot?" he demanded. He placed his hands,
+palm down, on the floor, preparatory to rising, but ceased his efforts
+when he heard Hollis's voice, coldly humorous:
+
+"I shall shoot you just the instant you get to your feet. I rather think
+that I am running things here now."
+
+Ten Spot sagged back and looked up at him. "Why I reckon you are," he
+said. No method of action having suggested itself to him, he continued
+to sit, watching Hollis narrowly.
+
+The latter retreated to his chair and dropped into it, moving
+deliberately. When he spoke his voice was cold and metallic.
+
+"When you first came into the office," he said, "you applied a vile
+epithet to me. Once after that you did it again. You have asked me why I
+don't shoot you. If you really want me to shoot you you can keep your
+mouth closed for just one minute. If you want to continue to live you
+can tell me that you didn't mean a word of what you said on those two
+occasions. It's up to you." He sat silent, looking steadily at Ten Spot.
+
+The latter fidgeted, shame again reddening his cheeks. "Why," he said
+finally, "I reckon she don't go, tenderfoot. You see, she's only a noma
+de ploom which we uses when we wants to rile somebody. I cert'nly didn't
+mean nothin' by it."
+
+"Thanks," drawled Hollis dryly; "I'll call that sufficient. But you
+certainly did 'rile' me some."
+
+"I reckon I must have done just that," grinned Ten Spot ruefully.
+"You're shorely some she-wolf with them there claws of your'n. An' I
+done laffed at Dunlavey an' Yuma after you'd clawed them." His face
+sobered, his eyes suddenly filling with an expression of defiant
+resignation.
+
+"I reckon when you're done triflin' with me you c'n start to pumpin'
+your lead," he said. "There ain't no use of prolongin' the agony." He
+looked steadily at Hollis, his eyes filling with decision as he again
+placed his hands beside him on the floor to rise.
+
+"You c'n open the ball when you get damn good an' ready," he sneered,
+"but I'm gettin' up right now. I ain't goin' to die off my pins like a
+damn coyote!"
+
+He rose quickly, plainly expecting to be shot down the moment he reached
+his feet. When he discovered that Hollis evidently intended to delay the
+fatal moment he stiffened, his lips twitching queerly.
+
+"Ten Spot," said Hollis quietly, "by apologizing for what you said when
+you came in you have shown that there is a great deal of the man left in
+you despite your bad habits and associations. I am going to show you
+that I think there is enough of the man left in you to trust you with
+your gun."
+
+He turned abruptly to the desk and took up Ten Spot's weapon, holding it
+by the muzzle and presenting it to the latter. Ten Spot looked from the
+weapon to Hollis and back again to the weapon, blank amazement pictured
+on his face. Then he reached out mechanically, taking the weapon and
+holding it in his hands, turning it over and over as though half
+inclined to believe that it was not a revolver at all.
+
+"Chuck full of cattridges, too!" he exclaimed in amazement, as he
+examined the chambers.
+
+"Why, hell----" He crouched and deftly swung the six-shooter around, the
+butt in his hand, his finger resting on the trigger. In this position he
+looked at Hollis.
+
+The latter had not moved, but his own weapon was in his right hand, its
+muzzle covering Ten Spot, and when the latter swung his weapon up Hollis
+smiled grimly at him.
+
+"Using it?" he questioned.
+
+For an instant it seemed that Ten Spot would. An exultant, designing
+expression came into his eyes, he grinned, his teeth showing tigerishly.
+Then suddenly he snapped himself erect and with a single, dexterous
+movement holstered the weapon. Then his right hand came suddenly out
+toward Hollis.
+
+"Shake!" he said. "By ----, you're white!"
+
+Hollis smiled as he returned the hearty handclasp.
+
+"You're cert'nly plum grit," assured Ten Spot as he released Hollis's
+hand and stepped back the better to look at the latter. "But I reckon
+you're some damn fool too. How did you know that I wouldn't turn you
+into a colander when you give me back my gun?"
+
+"I didn't know," smiled Hollis. "I just took a chance. You see," he
+added, "it was this way. I never intended to shoot you. That sort of
+thing isn't in my line and I don't intend to shoot anyone if there is
+any way out of it. But I certainly wasn't going to allow you to shoot
+me." He smiled oddly. "So I watched my chance and slugged you. Then when
+I was certain that you weren't dangerous any more I had to face another
+problem. If I had turned you loose after taking your gun what would you
+have done?"
+
+"I'd have gone out an' rustled another gun an' come back here an'
+salivated you."
+
+"That's just what you would have done," smiled Hollis. "I intend to stay
+in this country, Ten Spot, and if I had turned you loose without an
+understanding you would have shot me at the first opportunity. As it
+stands now you owe me-----"
+
+"As it stands now," interrupted Ten Spot, a queer expression on his
+face, "I'm done shootin' as far as you're concerned." He walked to the
+door, hesitated on the threshold and looked back. "Mister man," he said
+slowly, "mebbe you won't lick Big Bill in this here little mix-up, but
+I'm telling you that you're goin' to give him a damn good run for his
+money! So-long."
+
+He stepped down and disappeared. For a moment Hollis looked after him,
+and then he sat down at the desk, his face softening into a satisfied
+smile. It was something to receive a tribute from a man like Ten Spot.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE LOST TRAIL
+
+
+It was after seven o'clock when Hollis mounted his pony in the rear of
+the _Kicker_ office and rode out over the plains toward the Circle
+Bar. He was properly elated by the outcome of his affair with Ten Spot.
+The latter had come to the _Kicker_ office as an enemy looking for
+an opportunity to kill. He had left the office, perhaps not a friend,
+but at least a neutral, sympathetic onlooker, for according to Hollis's
+interpretation of his words at parting he would take no further part in
+Dunlavey's campaign--at least he would do no more shooting.
+
+Hollis was compelled to make a long detour in order to strike the Circle
+Bar trail, and when at seven-thirty o'clock he rode down through a dry
+arroyo toward a little basin which he must cross to reach a ridge that
+had been his landmark during all his trips back and forth from Dry
+Bottom to the Circle Bar, dusk had fallen and the shadows of the
+oncoming night were settling somberly down over the plains.
+
+He rode slowly forward; there was no reason for haste, for he had told
+Potter to say nothing about the reason of his delay in leaving Dry
+Bottom, and Potter would not expect him before nine o'clock. Hollis had
+warmed toward Potter this day; there had been in the old printer's
+manner that afternoon a certain solicitous concern and sympathy that had
+struck a responsive chord in his heart. He was not a sentimentalist, but
+many times during his acquaintance with Potter he had felt a genuine
+pity for the man. It had been this sentiment which had moved him to ask
+Potter to remove temporarily to the Circle Bar, though one consideration
+had been the fact at the Circle Bar he would most of the time be beyond
+the evil influence of Dry Bottom's saloons. That Potter appreciated this
+had been shown by his successful fight against temptation the night
+before, when postponement of the publication of the _Kicker_ would
+have been fraught with serious consequences.
+
+Riding down through the little basin at the end of the arroyo Hollis
+yielded to a deep, stirring satisfaction over the excellent beginning he
+had made in his fight against Dunlavey and the interests behind him.
+Many times he smiled, thinking of the surprise his old friends in the
+East must have felt over the perusal of their copies of the
+_Kicker_; over the information that he--who had been something of a
+figure in Eastern newspaperdom--had become the owner and editor of a
+newspaper in a God-forsaken town in New Mexico, and that at the outset
+he was waging war against interests that ridiculed a judge of the United
+States Court. He smiled grimly. They might be surprised, but they must
+feel, all who knew him, that he would stay and fight until victory
+rewarded him or until black, bitter defeat became his portion. There
+could be no compromise.
+
+When he reached the ridge toward which he had been riding for the
+greater part of an hour night had come. The day had been hot, but there
+had been a slight breeze, and in the _Kicker_ office, with the
+front and rear doors open, he had not noticed the heat very much. But
+just as he reached the ridge he became aware that the breeze had died
+down; that waves of hot, sultry air were rising from the sun-baked
+earth. Usually at this time of the night there were countless stars, and
+now as he looked up into the great, vast arc of sky he saw no stars at
+all except away down in the west in a big rift between some mountains.
+He pulled up his pony and sat motionless in the saddle, watching the
+sky. A sudden awe for the grandeur of the scene filled him. He
+remembered to have seen nothing quite like it in the East.
+
+Back toward Dry Bottom, and on the north and south, rose great, black
+thunderheads with white crests, seeming like mountains with snowcapped
+peaks. Between the thunder-heads were other clouds, of grayish-white,
+fleecy, wind-whipped, weird shapes, riding on the wings of the
+Storm-Kings. Other clouds flanked these, moving slowly and
+majestically--like great ships on the sea--in striking contrast to the
+fleecy, unstable shapes between the thunderheads, which, though rushing
+always onward, were riven and broken by the irresistible force behind
+them. To Hollis it seemed there were two mighty opposing forces at work
+in the sky, marshalling, maneuvering, preparing for conflict. While he
+sat motionless in the saddle watching, a sudden gust of cold wind
+swirled up around him, dashed some fine, flint-like sand against his
+face and into his eyes, and then swept onward. He was blinded for an
+instant, and allowed the reins to drop on his pony's neck while he
+rubbed his eyes with his fingers. He sat thus through an ominous hush
+and then to his ears came a low, distant rumble.
+
+He touched his pony lightly on the flanks with his spurs and headed it
+along the ridge, convinced that a storm was coming and suddenly
+realizing that he was many miles from shelter.
+
+He had traveled only a little distance when clouds of sand and dust,
+wind-driven, enveloped him, blinding him again, stinging his face and
+hands and blotting out the landmarks upon which he depended to guide him
+to the Circle Bar. The sky had grown blacker; even the patch of blue
+that he had seen in the rift between the distant mountains was now gone.
+There was nothing above him--it seemed--except inky black clouds,
+nothing below but chaos and wind. He could not see a foot of the trail
+and so he gave the pony the rein, trusting to its instinct.
+
+When Norton had provided him with an outfit the inevitable tarpaulin had
+not been neglected. Hollis remembered that this was attached to the
+cantle of the saddle, and so, after he had proceeded a little way along
+the crest of the ridge, he halted the pony, dismounted, unstrapped the
+tarpaulin, and folded it about him. Then he remounted and continued on
+his way, mentally thanking Norton for his foresight.
+
+The pony had negotiated the ridge; had slowly loped down its slope to a
+comparatively low and level stretch of country, and was traveling
+steadily forward, when Hollis noticed a change in the atmosphere. It had
+grown hot again--sultry; the heat seemed to cling to him. An ominous
+calm had succeeded the aerial disturbance. From a great distance came a
+slight sound--a gentle sighing--gradually diminishing until it died away
+entirely. Then again came the ominous, premonitory silence--an absolute
+absence of life and movement. Hollis urged the pony forward, hoping the
+calm would last until he had covered a goodly part of the distance to
+the Circle Bar. For a quarter of an hour he went on at a good pace. But
+he had scarcely reached the edge of a stretch of broken country--which
+he dreaded even in the daylight--when the storm was upon him.
+
+It did not come unheralded. A blinding flash of lightning illuminated
+miles of the surrounding country, showing Hollis the naked peaks of
+ridges and hills around him; gullies, draws, barrancas, the levels, lava
+beds, fantastic rock shapes--mocking his ignorance of the country. He
+saw them all for an instant and then they were gone and
+darkness--blacker than before--succeeded. It was as though a huge map
+had suddenly been thrust before his eyes by some giant hand, an intense
+light thrown upon it, and the light suddenly turned off. Immediately
+there came a heavy crash as though the Storm-Kings, having marshalled
+their forces, had thrown them together in one, great, clashing onrush.
+And then, straight down, roaring and shrieking, came the deluge.
+
+The wise little plains-pony halted, standing with drooping head,
+awaiting the end of the first fierce onslaught. It lasted long and when
+it had gone another silence, as ominous as the preceding one, followed.
+The rain ceased entirely and the pony again stepped forward, making his
+way slowly, for the trail was now slippery and hazardous. The baked
+earth had become a slimy, sticky clay which clung tenaciously to the
+pony's hoofs.
+
+For another quarter of an hour the pony floundered through the mud,
+around gigantic boulders, over slippery hummocks, across little gullies,
+upon ridges and small hills and down into comparatively level stretches
+of country. Hollis was beginning to think that he might escape a bad
+wetting after all when the rain came again.
+
+This time it seemed the Storm-Kings were in earnest. The rain came down
+in torrents; Hollis could feel it striking against his tarpaulin in
+long, stinging, vicious slants, and the lightning played and danced
+along the ridges and into the gullies with continuing energy, the
+thunder following, crashing in terrific volleys. It was uncomfortable,
+to say the least, and the only consoling thought was that the deluge
+would prove a God-send to the land and the cattle. Hollis began to wish
+that he had remained in Dry Bottom for the night, but of course Dry
+Bottom was not to be thought of now; he must devote all his energy to
+reaching the ranch.
+
+It was slow work for the pony. After riding for another quarter of an
+hour Hollis saw, during another lightning flash, another of his
+landmarks, and realized that in the last quarter of an hour he had
+traveled a very short distance. The continuing flashes of lightning had
+helped the pony forward, but presently the lightning ceased and a dense
+blackness succeeded. The pony went forward at an uncertain pace; several
+times it halted and faced about, apparently undecided about the trail.
+After another half hour's travel and coming to a stretch of level
+country, the pony halted again, refusing to respond to Hollis's repeated
+urging to go forward without guidance. For a long time Hollis continued
+to urge the animal--he cajoled, threatened--but the pony would not
+budge. Hollis was forced to the uncomfortable realization that it had
+lost the trail.
+
+For a long time he sat quietly in the saddle, trying in the dense
+darkness to determine upon direction, but he finally gave it up and with
+a sudden impulse took up the reins and pulled the pony to the left,
+determined to keep to the flat country as long as possible.
+
+He traveled for what seemed several miles, the pony gingerly feeling its
+way, when suddenly it halted and refused to advance. Something was
+wrong. Hollis leaned forward, attempting to peer through the darkness
+ahead, but not succeeding. And now, as though having accomplished its
+design by causing Hollis to lose the trail, the lightning flashed again,
+illuminating the surrounding country for several miles.
+
+Hollis had been peering ahead when the flash came and he drew a deep
+breath of horror and surprise. The pony had halted within a foot of the
+edge of a high cliff whose side dropped away sheer, as though cut with a
+knife. Down below, perhaps a hundred feet, was an immense basin, through
+which flowed a stream of water. To Hollis's right, parallel with the
+stream, the cliff sloped suddenly down, reaching the water's edge at a
+distance of two or three hundred feet. Beyond that was a stretch of
+sloping country many miles in area, and, also on his right, was a long,
+high, narrow ridge. He recognized the ridge as the one on which he and
+Norton had ridden some six weeks before--on the day he had had the
+adventure with Ed Hazelton. Another flash of lightning showed him two
+cotton-wood trees--the ones pointed out to him by Norton as marking Big
+Elk crossing--the dead line set by Dunlavey and his men.
+
+Hollis knew his direction now and he pulled the pony around and headed
+it away from the edge of the cliff and toward the flat country which he
+knew led down through the canyon to Devil's Hollow, where he had taken
+leave of Ed and Nellie Hazelton. He was congratulating himself upon his
+narrow escape when a flash of lightning again illuminated the country
+and he saw, not over a hundred feet distant, sitting motionless on their
+ponies, a half dozen cowboys. Also on his pony, slightly in advance of
+the others, a grin of derision on his face, was Dunlavey.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+PICKING UP THE TRAIL
+
+
+At about the time that the storm had overtaken Hollis, Potter was
+unsaddling his pony at the Circle Bar corral gate. A little later he was
+on the wide lower gallery of the ranchhouse washing the stains of travel
+from his face and hands. At supper he was taciturn, his face deeply
+thoughtful. Had Ten Spot come? What had been the outcome of the meeting?
+These questions preyed on his mind and brought furrows into his face.
+
+At supper he caught Norton watching him furtively and he flushed
+guiltily, for he felt that in spite of Hollis's order to say nothing to
+Norton he should have told. He had already informed Norton that Hollis
+intended remaining in Dry Bottom until a later hour than usual, but he
+had said nothing about the intended visit of Ten Spot to the
+_Kicker_ office. Loyalty to Hollis kept him from communicating to
+Norton his fears for Hollis's safety. It was now too late to do anything
+if he did tell Norton; whatever had been done had been done already and
+there was nothing for him to do but to wait until nine o'clock.
+
+After he finished his meal he drew a chair out upon the gallery and
+placing it in a corner from where he could see the Dry Bottom trail he
+seated himself in it and tried to combat the disquieting fears that
+oppressed him. When Norton came out and took a chair near him he tried
+to talk to the range boss upon those small subjects with which we fill
+our leisure, but he could not hold his thoughts to these trivialities.
+He fell into long silences; his thoughts kept going back to Dry Bottom.
+
+When the rain came he felt a little easier, for he had a hope that
+Hollis might have noticed the approach of the storm and decided to
+remain in town until it had passed. But after the rain had ceased his
+fears again returned. He looked many times at his watch and when Mrs.
+Norton came to the door and announced her intention of retiring he
+scarcely noticed her. Norton had repeatedly referred to Hollis's
+absence, and each time Potter had assured him that Hollis would come
+soon. Shortly before nine o'clock, when the clouds lifted and the stars
+began to appear, Potter rose and paced the gallery floor. At nine, when
+it had become light enough to see quite a little distance down the Dry
+Bottom trail and there were still no signs of Hollis, he blurted out the
+story of the day's occurrences.
+
+The information acted upon Norton like an electric shock. He was on his
+feet before Potter had finished speaking, grasping him by the shoulders
+and shaking him roughly.
+
+"Why didn't you say something before?" he demanded. "Why did you leave
+him? Wasn't there somebody in Dry Bottom that you could have sent out
+here to tell me?" He cursed harshly. "Ten Spot's got him!" he declared
+sharply, his eyes glittering savagely. "He'd have been here by this
+time!" He was taking a hitch in his cartridge belt while talking, and
+before concluding he was down off the gallery floor and striding toward
+the corral.
+
+"Tell my wife that I've gone to Dry Bottom," he called back to Potter.
+"Important business! I'll be back shortly after midnight!"
+
+Leaving Potter on the porch staring after him he ran to the corral,
+roped his pony, threw on a saddle and bridle and mounted with the animal
+on a run.
+
+The stars were shining brilliantly now and from the porch Potter could
+see Norton racing down the Dry Bottom trail with his pony in a furious
+gallop. For a time Potter watched him, then he disappeared and Potter
+went into the house to communicate his message to his wife.
+
+The rain had been heavy while it lasted, but by the time Norton had
+begun his race to Dry Bottom very little evidence of it remained and the
+pony's flying hoofs found the sand of the trail almost as dry and hard
+as before the storm. Indeed, there was now little evidence that there
+had been a storm at all.
+
+Norton spared the pony only on the rises and in something over an hour
+after the time he had left the Circle Bar he drew up in front of the
+_Kicker_ office in Dry Bottom, dismounted, and bounded to the door.
+It was locked. He placed a shoulder against it and crashed it in,
+springing inside and lighting a match. He smiled grimly when he saw no
+signs of Hollis; when he saw that the interior was in an orderly
+condition and that there were no signs of a conflict. If Ten Spot had
+killed Hollis he had done the deed outside the _Kicker_ office.
+
+Norton came out again, pulling the wreck of the door after him and
+closing it as well as he could. Then, leaving his pony, he strode toward
+the Fashion saloon. As he came near he heard sounds of revelry issuing
+from the open door and he smiled coldly. A flashing glance through the
+window showed him that Ten Spot was there, standing at the bar. In the
+next instant Norton was inside, confronting Ten Spot, his big
+six-shooter out and shoved viciously against Ten Spot's stomach.
+
+"What have you done with Hollis, you mangy son-of-a-gun?" he demanded.
+
+Several men who had been standing at the bar talking and laughing fell
+silent and looked at the two men, the barkeeper sidled closer, crouching
+warily, for he knew Norton.
+
+Ten Spot had spread his arms out on the bar and was leaning against it,
+looking at Norton in unfeigned bewilderment. He did not speak at once.
+Then suddenly aware of the foreboding, savage gleam in Norton's eyes, a
+glint of grim humor came into his own and his lips opened a little,
+curling sarcastically.
+
+"Why," he said, looking at Norton, "I don't reckon to be anyone's
+keeper." He smiled widely, with a suddenly ludicrous expression. "If
+you're talkin' about that tenderfoot noospaper guy, he don't need no
+keeper. What have I done to him?" he repeated, his smile growing. "Why,
+I reckon I didn't do a heap; I went down to call on him. He was right
+sociable. I was goin' to be mean to him, but I just couldn't. When he
+left he was sayin' that he'd be right glad to see me again--he'd been
+right playful durin' my talk with him. I reckon by now he's over at the
+Circle Bar laffin' hisself to sleep over the mean way I treated him. You
+just ast him when you see him."
+
+A flicker of doubt came into Norton's eyes--Ten Spot's words had the
+ring of truth.
+
+"You went down there to shoot him!" he said coldly, still unconvinced.
+
+"Mebbe I did," returned Ten Spot. "Howsomever, I didn't. I ain't tellin'
+how I come to change my mind--that's my business, an' you can't shoot it
+out of me. But I'm tellin' you this: me an' that guy has agreed to call
+it quits, an' if I hear any man talkin' extravagant about him, me an'
+that man's goin' to have a run in mighty sudden!" He laughed. "Someone's
+been funnin' you," he said. "When he handed me back my gun after
+sluggin'----"
+
+But he was now talking to Norton's back, for the range boss was at the
+door, striding rapidly toward his pony. He mounted again and rode out on
+the trail, proceeding slowly, convinced that something had happened to
+Hollis after he had left Dry Bottom. It was more than likely that he had
+lost his way in the storm, and in that case he would probably arrive at
+the Circle Bar over some round-about trail. He was now certain that he
+had not been molested in town; if he had been some of the men in the
+Fashion would have told him about it. Hollis would probably be at the
+ranch by the time he arrived, to laugh at his fears. Nevertheless he
+rode slowly, watching the trail carefully, searching the little gullies
+and peering into every shadow for fear that Hollis had been injured in
+some accident and might be lying near unable to make his presence known.
+
+The dawn was just showing above the horizon when he rode up to the
+ranchhouse to find Potter standing on the porch--apparently not having
+left there during his absence. Beside Potter stood Ed Hazelton, and near
+the latter a drooping pony, showing signs of hard riding.
+
+Norton passed the corral gate and rode up to the two men. A glance at
+their faces told him that something had gone wrong. But before he could
+speak the question that had formed on his lips Hazelton spoke.
+
+"They got him, Norton," he said slowly.
+
+"Dead?" queried Norton sharply, his lips straightening.
+
+"No," returned Hazelton gloomily; "he ain't dead. But when I found him
+he wasn't far from it. Herd-rode him, the damned sneaks! Beat him up
+so's his own mother wouldn't know him!"
+
+"Wait!" commanded Norton. "I'm going with you. I suppose you've got him
+over to your shack?" He caught Hazelton's nod and issued an order to
+Potter. "Go down to the bunkhouse and get Weary out. Tell him to hit the
+breeze to Cimarron for the doctor. If the doc' don't want to come drag
+him by the ears!"
+
+He spurred his pony furiously to the corral gate and in a short time had
+saddled another horse and was back where Hazelton was awaiting him.
+Without speaking a word to each other the two men rode rapidly down the
+Coyote trail, while Potter, following directions, his face haggard and
+drawn from loss of sleep and worry, hurried to the bunkhouse to arouse
+Weary and send him on his long journey to Cimarron.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+AFTER THE STORM
+
+
+Hollis's tall figure lay pitifully slack on a bed in the Hazelton cabin.
+Nellie Hazelton had given him what care she could out of her limited
+knowledge and now nothing more could be done until the arrival of the
+Cimarron doctor. Swathed in bandages, his clothing torn and soiled--as
+though after beating him his assailants had dragged him through the
+mud--one hand queerly twisted, his face swollen, his whole great body
+looking as though it had received the maximum of injury, Hollis moved
+restlessly on the bed, his head rolling oddly from side to side,
+incoherent words issuing from between his bruised and swollen lips.
+
+Norton stood beside the bed, looking down at the injured man with a
+grim, savage pity.
+
+"The damned cowards!" he said, his voice quivering. "There must have
+been a dozen of them--to do him up like that!"
+
+"Seven," returned Ed Hazelton grimly. "They left their trail there; I
+counted the hoof prints, an' they led down the slope toward Big Elk
+crossin'." He looked at Norton with a frown. "We can't do anything
+here," he said shortly, "until the doctor comes. I'll take you down
+where I found him."
+
+They went out and mounted their ponies. Down the trail a mile or so they
+came to a level that led away toward Rabbit-Ear Creek. From the level
+they could see the Circle Cross buildings, scattered over a small
+stretch of plain on the opposite side of the river. There was no life
+around them, no movement. Norton grimaced toward them.
+
+Hazelton halted his pony in some tall grass near a bare, sandy spot on
+the plains. The grass here grew only in patches and Norton could plainly
+see a number of hoof prints in the sand. One single set led away across
+the plains toward the Dry Bottom trail. Seeing the knowing expression in
+Norton's eyes, Hazelton spoke quietly.
+
+"That's Hollis's trail. He must have took the Dry Bottom trail an' lost
+it in the storm. Potter says he would probably take it because it's
+shorter. Anyways, it's his trail; I followed it back into the hills
+until I was sure. I saw that he had been comin' from Dry Bottom. He lost
+his way an' rode over here. I remember there was an awful darkness, for
+I was out scoutin' around to see if my stock was all right. Well, he got
+this far--rode right up to the edge of the butte over there an' then
+come back this way. Then he met--well, the men that did it."
+
+"They all stood there for a little while; you can see where their horses
+pawed. Then mebbe they started somethin', for you can see where Hollis's
+pony throwed up a lot of sand, tryin' to break out. The others were in a
+circle--you can see that. I've figured it out that Hollis saw there
+wasn't any chance for him against so many an' he tried to hit the breeze
+away from here. I'll show you."
+
+They followed the hoof prints down the slope and saw that all the riders
+must have been traveling fast at this point, for the earth was cut and
+the hoof prints bunched fore and aft. They ran only a little way,
+however. About a hundred yards down the slope, in a stretch of bare,
+sandy soil, the horses had evidently come to a halt again, for they were
+bunched well together and there were many of them, showing that there
+had been some movement after the halt.
+
+Norton dismounted and examined the surrounding soil.
+
+"They all got off here," he said shortly, after the examination;
+"there's the prints of their boots. They caught him here and handed it
+to him."
+
+Hazelton silently pointed to a queer track in the sand--a shallow groove
+running about fifty feet, looking as though some heavy object had been
+drawn over it. Norton's face whitened.
+
+"Drug him!" he said grimly, his lips in two straight lines. "It's likely
+they roped him!" He remounted his pony and sat in the saddle, watching
+Hazelton as the latter continued his examination. "They're a fine, nervy
+bunch!" he sneered as Hazelton also climbed into his saddle. "They must
+have piled onto him like a pack of wolves. If they'd have come one at a
+time he'd have cleaned them up proper!"
+
+They rode away down the trail toward the cabin. Norton went in and
+looked again at Hollis, and then, telling Hazelton that he would return
+in the afternoon, he departed for the Circle Bar. He stopped at the
+ranchhouse and communicated the news to his wife and Potter and then
+rode on up the river to a point about ten miles from the
+ranchhouse--where the outfit was working.
+
+The men received his news with expressions of rage and vengeance. They
+had come to admire Hollis for his courage in electing to continue the
+fight against Dunlavey; they had seen that in spite of his ignorance of
+the customs of their world he possessed a goodly store of common sense
+and an indomitable spirit. Yet none of them expressed sympathy, though
+their faces showed that they felt it. Expressions of sympathy in a case
+such as this would have been unnecessary and futile. But their
+expressions of rage showed how the news had affected them. Though they
+knew that Dunlavey's forces outnumbered their own they were for striking
+back immediately. But Norton discouraged this.
+
+"We're layin' low for a while," he said. "Mebbe the boss will get well.
+If he does he'll make things mighty interestin' for Dunlavey--likely
+he'll remember who was in the crowd which beat him up. If he dies----"
+His eyes flashed savagely. "Well, if he dies you boys can go as far as
+you like an' I'll go with you without doin' any kickin'."
+
+"What's goin' to be done with that noospaper of his'n?" inquired Ace.
+"You reckon she'll miss fire till he's well again?"
+
+Norton's brows wrinkled; he had not thought of the newspaper. But he
+realized now that if the paper failed to appear on scheduled time the
+people in Union County would think that Hollis had surrendered; they
+would refuse to believe that he had been so badly injured that he could
+not issue the paper, and Dunlavey would be careful to circulate some
+sort of a story to encourage this view. Now that Ace had brought the
+matter to his attention he began to suspect that this had been the
+reason of the attack on Hollis. That they had not killed him when they
+had the opportunity, showed that they must have had some purpose other
+than that of merely desiring to get him out of the way. That they had
+merely beaten him showed that their wish was only to incapacitate him
+temporarily. Norton's eyes flashed with a sudden determination.
+
+"I don't reckon that the _Kicker_ will miss fire," he declared;
+"not if I have to go to Dry Bottom an' get her out myself!"
+
+Ace eyed him furtively and now spoke with an embarrassed
+self-consciousness.
+
+"I've been considerin' this here situation ever since you told us about
+the boss," he said diffidently, "an' if you're goin' to get that paper
+out, a little poem or two might help out considerable."
+
+"Meanin'?" interrogated Norton, his eyelashes flickering.
+
+Ace's face reddened painfully. "Meanin' that I've got several little
+pieces which I've wrote when I didn't have anything else to do an' that
+I'd be right willin' to have them put into the _Kicker_ to help
+fill her up. Some of the boys think they're right classy."
+
+Norton looked around at the other men for confirmation of the truth of
+this modest statement. He caught Lanky's glance.
+
+"I reckon that's about right," said that sober-faced puncher; "Ace is
+the pote lariat of this here outfit, an' he sure has got a lot of right
+clever lines in his pomes. I've read them which wasn't one-two-three
+with his'n."
+
+Norton smiled, a little cynically. He wasn't quite sure about it, he
+said, but if Ace could write poetry he hadn't any doubt that during the
+next few weeks there would be plenty of opportunity to print some of it
+in the Kicker. He smiled when he saw Ace's face brighten. But he told
+him he would have to see Hollis--if the latter got well enough to endure
+an interview. If the boss recovered enough to be able to look at Ace's
+poetry before it was printed, why of course it would have to be shown
+him. He didn't want anything to go into the _Kicker_ which the boss
+wouldn't like. But if he wasn't able to look at it, why he would leave
+the decision to Potter, and if it suited the latter he would be
+satisfied. He would keep the boys posted on the boss's condition. Then
+he rode away toward the ranchhouse.
+
+Late in the afternoon he again visited the Hazelton cabin. He found the
+Cimarron doctor already there. Hollis was still unconscious, though
+resting easier. The doctor declared that he would remain with him
+throughout the night. He followed Norton out on to the porch and told
+him that at present he could not tell just how serious Hollis's injuries
+were. There was a great wound in his head which he feared might turn out
+seriously, but if not, Hollis would recover quickly and be as good as
+ever within a few weeks--except for his left wrist--which was broken. He
+praised Nellie Hazelton for the care she was giving the injured man.
+Convinced that there was nothing more to be done, Norton returned to the
+Circle Bar to give his attention to his work.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+"WOMAN--SHE DON'T NEED NO TOOTER"
+
+
+The Cimarron doctor's fears for the wound on Hollis's head had proved
+unfounded and on the tenth day after his experience on the night of the
+storm, Hollis was sitting on the Hazelton porch, his head still swathed
+in bandages, his left wrist in a splint, but his spirit still untouched.
+The marks on his face had all disappeared, except an ugly gash under his
+right eye--which still showed a slight discoloration--and a smaller cut
+on the chin. The Cimarron doctor had told him that the wound under his
+eye would leave a permanent scar--the wound had been deep and in spite
+of the doctor's care, had drawn together queerly, affecting the eye
+itself and giving it an odd expression. Many times since becoming able
+to move about had Hollis looked at his face in his mirror, and each time
+there had come into his eyes an expression that boded ill for the men
+who had been concerned in the attack on him.
+
+It was mid-afternoon and the sun was coming slant-wise over the roof of
+the cabin, creating a welcome shade on the porch. Ed Hazelton had been
+gone since morning, looking after his cattle, and Nellie was in the
+house, busily at work in the kitchen--Hollis could hear her as she
+stepped about the room.
+
+Norton had left the cabin an hour before and a little later Potter had
+stopped in on his way over to Dry Bottom to set up an article that he
+had written at Hollis's dictation. Hollis had told Norton of his
+experiences on the night of the storm.
+
+After the flash of lightning had revealed Dunlavey and his men, Hollis
+had attempted to escape, knowing that Dunlavey's intentions could not be
+peaceable, and that he would have no chance in a fight with several men.
+He had urged his pony toward the two buttes that he had seen during the
+lightning flash, making a circuit in order to evade his enemies. He
+might have succeeded, but unfortunately the darkness had lifted and they
+had been able to intercept him. He could give no clear account of what
+had happened after they had surrounded him. There had been no words
+spoken. He had tried to break out of the circle; had almost succeeded
+when a loop settled over his shoulders and he was dragged from his
+pony--dragged quite a distance.
+
+The fall had hurt him, but when the rope had slackened he had regained
+his feet--to see that all the men had surrounded him. One man struck at
+him and he had immediately struck back, knocking the man down. After
+that the blows came thick and fast. He hit several more faces that were
+close to him and at one time was certain he had put three of his
+assailants out of the fight. But the others had crowded him close. He
+fought them as well as he could with the great odds against him, and
+once was inspired with a hope that he might escape. Then had come a
+heavy blow on the head--he thought that one of the men had used the butt
+of a revolver. He could dimly remember receiving a number of other blows
+and then he knew nothing more until he had awakened in the Hazelton
+cabin.
+
+Hollis's opinion of Dunlavey's motive in thus attacking him coincided
+with Norton's. They might easily have killed him. That they did not
+showed that they must have some peculiar motive. Aside from a perfectly
+natural desire on Dunlavey's part to deal to Hollis the same sort of
+punishment that Hollis had inflicted on Dunlavey on the occasion of
+their first meeting, the latter could have no motive other than that of
+preventing the appearance of the _Kicker_ on its regular
+publication day.
+
+Hollis was convinced that Dunlavey had been inspired by both motives.
+But though Dunlavey had secured his revenge for the blow that Hollis had
+struck him in Dry Bottom, Hollis did not purpose to allow him to prevent
+the appearance of the _Kicker_. It had been impossible for him to
+make the trip to Dry Bottom, but he had summoned Potter and had dictated
+considerable copy, Potter had written some, and in this manner they had
+managed to get the _Kicker_ out twice.
+
+Ace had not been able to get any of his poems into the _Kicker_. He
+had submitted some of them to Potter, but the printer had assured him
+that he did not care to assume the responsibility of publishing them.
+Thereupon Ace had importuned Norton to intercede with Hollis on his
+behalf. On his visit this morning Norton had brought the matter to
+Hollis's attention. The latter had assured the range boss that he
+appreciated the puncher's interest and would be glad to go over some of
+his poems. Therefore Hollis was not surprised when in the afternoon he
+saw Ace loping his pony down the Coyote trail toward the Hazelton cabin.
+
+Ace's approach was diffident, though ambition urged him on. He rode up
+to the edge of the porch, dismounted, and greeted his boss with an
+earnestness that contrasted oddly with his embarrassment. He took the
+chair that Hollis motioned him to, sitting on the edge of it and
+shifting nervously under Hollis's direct gaze.
+
+"I reckon Norton told you about my poems," he began. He caught Hollis's
+nod and continued: "Well, I got a bunch of 'em here which I brung over
+to show you. Folks back home used to say that I was a genyus. But I
+reckon mebbe they was hittin' her up a little bit strong," he admitted,
+modestly; "folks is that way--they like to spread it on a bit. But"--and
+the eyes of the genius flashed proudly--"I reckon I've got a little
+talyunt, the evidence of which is right here!" With rather more
+composure than had marked his approach he now drew out a prodigious
+number of sheets of paper, which he proceeded to spread out on his knee,
+smoothing them lovingly.
+
+"Mebbe I ain't much on spellin' an' grammar an' all that sort of thing,"
+he offered, "but there's a heap of sense to be got out of the stuff I've
+wrote. Take this one, for instance. She's a little oday to 'Night,'
+which I composed while the boys was poundin' their ears one night--not
+bein' affected in their feelin's like I was. If you ain't got no
+objections I'll read her." And then, not waiting to hear any objections,
+he began:
+
+ The stars are bright to-night;
+ They surely are a sight,
+ Sendin' their flickerin' light
+ From an awful, unknown height.
+
+ Why do they shine so bright?
+ I'm most o'ercome with fright----
+
+"Of course I reely wasn't scared," he offered with a deprecatory smile,
+"but there wasn't any other word that I could think of just then an' so
+I shoved her in. It rhymes anyhow an' just about says what I wanted."
+
+He resumed:
+
+ When I look up into the night,
+ An' see their flickerin' light.
+
+He ceased and looked at Hollis with an abashed smile. "It don't seem to
+sound so good when I'm readin' her out loud," he apologized. "An' I've
+thought that mebbe I've worked that 'night' an' 'light' rhyme over-time.
+But of course I've got 'fright' an' 'sight' an' 'height' in there to
+kind of off-set that." He squirmed in his chair. "You take her an' read
+her." He passed the papers over to Hollis and rose from his chair. "I'll
+be goin' back to the outfit; Norton was sayin' that he wanted me to look
+up some strays an' I don't want him to be waitin' for me. But I'd like
+to have one of them pomes printed in the _Kicker_--just to show the
+folks in this here country that there's a real pote in their midst."
+
+"Why----" began Hollis, about to express his surprise over his guest's
+sudden determination to depart. But he saw Nellie Hazelton standing just
+outside the door, and the cause of Ace's projected departure was no
+longer a mystery. He had gone before Hollis could have finished his
+remonstrance, and was fast disappearing in a cloud of dust down the
+trail when Hollis turned slowly to see Nellie Hazelton smiling broadly.
+
+"I just couldn't resist coming out," she said. "It rather startled me to
+discover that there was a real poet in the country."
+
+"There seems to be no doubt of it," returned Hollis with a smile. But he
+immediately became serious. "Ace means well," he added. "I imagine that
+it wasn't entirely an ambition to rush into print that moved him to
+submit his poems; he wants to help fill up the paper."
+
+Miss Hazelton laughed. "I really think," she said, looking after the
+departing poet, "that he might have been fibbing a little when he said
+that the 'night' had not 'scared' him. He ran from me," she added,
+amusement shining in her eyes, "and I should not like to think that any
+woman could appear so forbidding and mysterious as the darkness."
+
+Hollis had been scanning one of the poems in his hand. He smiled
+whimsically at Miss Hazelton as she concluded.
+
+"Here is Ace's opinion on that subject," he said. "Since you have
+doubted him I think it only fair that you should give him a hearing.
+Won't you read it?"
+
+She came forward and seated herself in the chair that the poet had
+vacated, taking the mass of paper that Hollis passed over to her.
+
+"Shall I read it aloud?" she asked with a smile at him.
+
+"I think you had better not," he returned; "it might prove
+embarrassing."
+
+She blushed and gave her attention to the poem. It was entitled:
+"Woman," and ran;
+
+ "Woman she dont need no tooter,
+ be she skule mam or biscut shooter.
+ she has most curyus ways about her,
+ which leads a man to kinda dout her.
+
+ Though lookin at her is shure a pleasur
+ there aint no way to get her measure
+ i reckon she had man on the run
+ a long while before the world begun.
+
+ I met a biscut shooter in the chance saloon
+ when i was blowin my coin in ratoon
+ while the coin lasted i owned her an the town
+ but when it was gone she throwed me down.
+
+ An so i say she dont need no tooter
+ be she skule mam or biscut shooter
+ she fooled me an my hart she stole
+ which has opened my eyes an hurt my sole."
+
+Miss Hazelton laid the manuscript in her lap and laughed heartily.
+
+"What a harrowing experience!" she declared. Hollis was grinning at her.
+
+"That was a bad thing to have happen to a man," he observed; "I suppose
+it rather shattered Ace's faith in woman. At least you could observe by
+his actions just a moment ago that he isn't taking any more chances."
+
+She fixed him with a defiant eye. "But he still admits that he takes
+pleasure in looking at a woman!" she told him triumphantly.
+
+"So he does. Still, that isn't remarkable. You see, a man couldn't help
+that--no matter how badly he had been treated."
+
+She had no reply to make to this, though she gave him a look that he
+could not mistake. But he laughed. "I think Ace's effort ought to go
+into the _Kicker_" he said. "I have no doubt that many who read the
+poem will find in it a great deal of truth--perhaps a reflection of
+their own personal experiences."
+
+Her face clouded and she regarded him a little soberly. "Of your own,
+perhaps?" she suggested.
+
+"Not guilty," he returned laughing. "You see, I have never had any time
+to devote to the study of women, let alone time to allow them to fool
+me. Perhaps when I do have time to study them I may find some truth in
+Ace's effort."
+
+"Then women do not interest you?" She was looking down the Coyote trail.
+
+"Well, no," he said, thinking of the busy days of his past, and not
+being aware of the furtive, significant glance she threw toward him.
+"You see, there have always been so many important things to engage my
+attention."
+
+"How fortunate!" she said mockingly, after a pause during which he had
+time to realize that he had been very ungracious. He saw Ace's
+manuscript flutter toward him, saw her rise and heard the screen door
+slam after her. During the remainder of the afternoon he was left alone
+on the porch to meditate upon the evils that arise from thoughtless
+speech.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE COALITION
+
+
+Perhaps there were some persons in Union County who, acquainted with the
+details of the attack on Hollis, expected to read an account of it in
+the _Kicker_. If there were any such they were disappointed. There
+was nothing about the attack printed in the _Kicker_--nor did
+Hollis talk to any stranger concerning it.
+
+Ace's poem entitled "Woman" had gone into the paper, causing the
+poet--for many days following the appearance of his composition--to look
+upon his fellow punchers with a sort of condescending pity. On the
+second day after his discussion with Miss Hazelton over Ace's poem
+Hollis returned to the Circle Bar. He had succeeded in convincing Nellie
+that he had answered thoughtlessly when he had informed her that he took
+no interest in women, and though she had defiantly assured him that she
+had not taken offense, there had been a light in her eyes upon his
+departure which revealed gratification over his repentance. She stood
+long on the porch after he had taken leave of her, watching him as he
+rode slowly down the trail and disappeared around a turn. Then she
+smiled regretfully, sighed, and went into the house.
+
+Hollis's return to the Circle Bar was unostentatious and quite in
+keeping with his method of doing things. Within the next few days he met
+several of the Circle Bar men and there were mutterings against
+Dunlavey, but Hollis discouraged action, assuring the mutterers that his
+differences with Dunlavey were entirely personal and that he intended
+carrying on the fight alone.
+
+His wounds mended rapidly, and within two weeks--except for the broken
+wrist--he was well as ever. Meanwhile Potter had succeeded in getting
+the _Kicker_ out on time, though there had been a noticeable lack
+of aggressiveness in the articles. Especially was this true of the
+articles bearing upon the situation in Union County. Hollis had dictated
+some of these, but even those which he had dictated had seemed to lack
+something.
+
+Nothing had been heard of Dunlavey--it seemed that after the attack upon
+Hollis he had withdrawn from the scene to await the latter's next move.
+
+But Hollis was in no hurry; he had lost some of the enthusiasm that had
+marked his attitude in the beginning, but this enthusiasm had been
+replaced by determination. He was beginning to realize that in Dunlavey
+he had met a foe worthy of his most serious efforts. He had determined
+that there would be no repetition of the attack upon him, and therefore
+during his convalescence he had sent to Las Vegas for a repeating rifle,
+and this he carried with him on his trips to and from Dry Bottom.
+
+Meanwhile the drought continued. The sky was cloudless, the desultory
+breezes that swept the plains blighted growing things, raising little
+whirlwinds of fine, flinty alkali dust and spreading it over the face of
+the world. The storm that had caught Hollis on the Dry Bottom trail had
+covered only a comparatively small area; it had lasted only a brief time
+and after its passage the country was dry as before.
+
+Rabbit-Ear Creek of all the streams in the vicinity of Dry Bottom held
+water. From all points of the compass cattle drifted to the Rabbit-Ear,
+slaking their thirst and refusing to leave. Bronzed riders on drooping
+ponies trailed them, cutting them out, trying to keep their herds
+intact, but not succeeding. Confusion reigned. For miles in both
+directions Rabbit-Ear Creek became one huge, long watering trough.
+Temporary camps were made; chuck wagons rattled up to them, loaded with
+supplies for the cowboys, and rattled back to distant ranches for more.
+There had been other droughts, but this one was
+unexpected--unprecedented. There had always been a little water
+everywhere. Now Rabbit-Ear Creek held all there was.
+
+Only the small cattle owners suffered because of the drought. Riders
+told of the presence of plenty of water in the Canadian, the Cimarron,
+and the Ute. Carrizo held some. In fact, nearly all the streams held by
+the large ranchers seemed to contain plenty. The smaller owners, whose
+herds were smaller and whose complement of punchers was necessarily
+limited, had apparently been selected by Providence for ruin.
+
+There were mutterings against the large owners, against Providence.
+Particularly were there mutterings against Dunlavey when word came to
+the owners of the herds that if the drought was not broken within the
+next ten days the Circle Cross manager would drive all foreign cattle
+from the Rabbit-Ear. He would not allow his own herds to suffer to save
+theirs, he said.
+
+On the night following the day upon which the small owners had received
+this word from Dunlavey a number of the former waited upon Hollis. They
+found him seated on the lower gallery of the ranchhouse talking to
+Norton and Potter. Lemuel Train, of the Pig-pen outfit, had been
+selected as their spokesman. He stood before Hollis, a big man,
+diffident in manner and rough in appearance, surrounded by his fellow
+ranchers, bronzed, bearded, serious of face. Though the sun had been
+down three hours the heat was frightful and the visitors shuffled their
+feet and uncomfortably wiped the perspiration from their brows.
+
+"Sit down," invited Hollis. He rose and stood while the men draped
+themselves on the edge of the gallery floor--all except the spokesman,
+Lemuel Train. The latter faced Hollis. His face was grim in the dusk.
+
+"We've come to see what you've got to say about water," he said.
+
+Days before Norton had told Hollis that these men who were now herding
+at the Rabbit-Ear were the small ranchers who had refused to aid the
+elder Hollis in his fight against Dunlavey some years before. Therefore
+Hollis did not answer at once. When he did his voice was dry and cold.
+He too had heard of Dunlavey's ultimatum concerning the water.
+
+"Before I say anything on that subject I should like to know to whom I
+am talking," he said.
+
+Train swept a ponderous hand toward his fellow visitors, pointing them
+out in turn. "There's Truxton, of the Diamond Dot; Holcomb, of the Star;
+Henningson, of the Three Bar; Yeager, of the Three Diamond; an' Clark,
+of the Circle Y."
+
+"Correct," affirmed Norton, behind Hollis.
+
+Hollis smiled grimly; he had caught a belligerent note in Norton's
+voice. Plainly, if the range boss were allowed a voice in the matter,
+these visitors would have now received as little encouragement as they
+had received from Dunlavey. But Hollis's smile showed that he held
+different views.
+
+"I am Kent Hollis," he said to the men; "I suppose you know that."
+
+"I reckon we know you," said Train; "you're Jim Hollis's boy."
+
+"Then you know that Dunlavey and my father were not exactly bosom
+friends," returned Hollis.
+
+Several heads bobbed affirmatively; others sat grimly silent. Hollis
+smiled.
+
+"How many of you offered to help my father when he came to you asking
+for assistance in his fight against Dunlavey?"
+
+Train fidgeted. "I reckon they wasn't much chance----" he began, and
+then hesitated, looking around at his fellows.
+
+"Of course," returned Hollis quietly, after an embarrassed pause, "there
+wasn't much chance for you to win then. And you had to take a big risk
+to help my father. But he had to take a bigger risk to fight alone.
+Still he fought. And he fought alone. He was almost ruined. And now you
+men are facing ruin. And you have come to Jim Hollis's son to help you.
+Do you think he ought?"
+
+The men sat silent; the spokesman was without words.
+
+"How many men can the six of you muster--in case Dunlavey should try to
+carry out his decision to drive your cattle from the Rabbit-Ear--or
+shoot them?"
+
+"Eighteen, I reckon," returned Train, looking at the others, who nodded
+affirmatively to his question.
+
+Hollis turned to Norton. "How many men does Dunlavey employ?" he
+questioned.
+
+"Thirty," snapped Norton. "But in case he needed them he c'n get a
+hundred."
+
+"Big odds," smiled Hollis. "Why should I volunteer to help you fight
+Dunlavey? My cattle are certain of getting enough water. Why should I
+not be selfish, as you men were when my father went to you for
+assistance?"
+
+There was no answer. The faces that surrounded Hollis in the
+semi-darkness showed plainly that their owners had given up thoughts of
+assistance. Grim, hard lines came into them; two or three sneered. Of
+course they would fight Dunlavey; there was no alternative, for they
+could not stand idly by and see their cattle slain--Dunlavey could not
+drive them from water, they would have to be shot. They had reckoned on
+securing help from Hollis; he held one side of the Rabbit-Ear and with
+his support they were in a position to make things very unpleasant for
+any of Dunlavey's men who might, from the opposite side of the river,
+attempt to shoot their cattle. But with Hollis against them they would
+be powerless; with Hollis against them Dunlavey's men could swarm both
+sides of the river and the destruction of their cattle would be certain.
+
+All of the men knew this. Yet they did not answer Hollis's question.
+They had not come to plead with him; they knew that the situation had
+narrowed down to a point where they could depend only on their own
+resources. They would not plead, yet as they silently started to file
+off the gallery there were bitter smiles on several of their faces.
+There were no threats; perhaps Hollis had succeeded in showing them the
+similarity between his conduct and their own in the long ago, when his
+father had gone to them for assistance. At least this was what he had
+tried to show them.
+
+Lemuel Train was the last man down the gallery. He turned as he reached
+the ground and looked back over his shoulder at Hollis.
+
+"So-long," he said shortly. "I reckon you're even now."
+
+Hollis had not moved. "Wait, Train!" he said. The visitors halted and
+faced him.
+
+"Men," he said quietly, "you have not answered my question. I am going
+to repeat it: Why should I not be selfish, as you men were when my
+father went to you for assistance?"
+
+Lemuel Train smiled ironically. "Why, I reckon it's your trick, mister
+man," he said; "you've got all the cards."
+
+"Come back here, men," said Hollis. "Since none of you care to answer my
+question I will answer it myself." He stood silent while the men filed
+back and resumed seats on the gallery edge. Darkness had come on while
+he had been talking to the men and inside the ranchhouse Mrs. Norton had
+lighted the kerosene lamp and its weak, flickering rays straggled out
+into the darkness and upon Hollis's face and the faces of several of the
+men who sat on the edge of the gallery.
+
+Hollis knew that he might readily become melodramatic in the few words
+that he purposed to say to the men, and so when he began talking he
+adopted a low, even tone, confidential, serious. He told them that the
+things he had written in his salutatory in the _Kicker_, months
+before, had been an honest declaration of the principles in which he
+believed. This was America, he repeated; they were all Americans; they
+were all entitled to that freedom of thought, speech, and movement for
+which their forefathers had fought. For one, he purposed to fight, if
+necessary, to retain his rights.
+
+He told them that he held no ill-feeling against them on account of
+their refusal to assist his father. That was past history. But now they
+were to look into the future; they were all facing ruin if they did not
+combine in a common cause. So far as he was concerned their cattle might
+remain at the Rabbit-Ear until the drought ended, or until the stream
+went dry. And if Dunlavey fought them--well, he would be with them to
+the finish.
+
+When he had concluded Lemuel Train stepped forward and shook his hand.
+The others followed. There was no word spoken. The men filed down from
+the gallery, sought their horses, mounted, and rode slowly away into the
+darkness. When they had gone Hollis turned to resume his chair, but
+found Norton standing near him, looking at him with a curious smile.
+
+"Shake!" said the latter. "I knowed you'd do it that way!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+TO SUPPORT THE LAW
+
+
+Hollis alone, of all the men whose cattle grazed on the Circle Bar side
+of the Rabbit-Ear, really doubted that Dunlavey would have the courage
+to inaugurate a war against the small owners. Lemuel Train was
+particularly strong in his belief that Dunlavey would not hesitate to
+shoot whatever cattle infringed on what he considered were his rights.
+"I know the skunk!" he declared heatedly to Hollis a day or two after
+the conversation on the porch at the Circle Bar. "He'll do it. I'm only
+scared that he won't wait till the tenth day before beginnin'. Why in
+hell don't it rain?"
+
+This remained the great, universal interrogation. But at the end of a
+week it was unanswered. The sun swam in its endless circles, a great
+ball of molten silver at which no man could look with the naked eye,
+traveling its slow way through a blurred, white sky, sinking to the
+horizon in the evening and leaving a scorched, blasted, gasping country
+behind. The nights brought no relief. Clark, of the Circle Y,
+sarcastically declared it to be his belief that some meddler in things
+firmamental was paying the owner of the sun to work it overtime.
+
+Hollis's daily twenty mile ride from the Circle Bar to Dry Bottom and
+return became a trial to him. At night, when he returned from the trip,
+hot, dry, dusty, he would draw a chair out on the gallery floor and scan
+the sky for signs of rain. To his recollection since his adventure on
+the night of the storm there had not been a cloud in the sky. On the
+trails the dust was inches deep and light as a feather. It rose in
+stifling whirlwinds, filling the nostrils and the lungs, parching the
+tongues of man and beast and accentuating the suffering caused by lack
+of water.
+
+All the pleasure had been drawn from Hollis's rides because of the
+dryness and heat. On a morning a week following the day upon which
+Dunlavey had issued his warning to the cattle owners, Hollis made his
+usual trip to Dry Bottom. Norton accompanied him, intending to make some
+purchases in town. They rode the ten miles without incident and Hollis
+left Norton at the door of the _Kicker_ office, after telling the
+range boss to come back to the office when he had made his purchases as
+he intended returning to the Circle Bar before noon. Hollis found Potter
+inside. The latter had remained in Dry Bottom over night and was busy at
+a type case when his chief entered. Hollis did not remain long in the
+office. He looked over some letters that Potter had placed on his desk,
+placed one in a pocket and rose, telling Potter that he would be back
+and instructing him to tell Norton to await his coming should the latter
+return before him. Then he went down to the court house.
+
+He found the door of Judge Graney's court room slightly ajar and without
+knocking he pushed it open and entered. On the threshold he halted and
+drew a deep breath. Judge Graney was seated at the big table, and
+directly opposite him, leaning heavily on his elbows, his face inflamed
+with anger, sat Dunlavey. Near a window at the side of the room stood a
+grave faced man of medium height, slender and muscular, who was watching
+the Judge and Dunlavey soberly.
+
+At Hollis's sudden appearance the Judge looked up and smiled, while
+Dunlavey faced around, a derisive, mocking grin on his face. Hollis bore
+no marks of the recent attack beyond the left wrist, still in splints.
+
+"Come in," invited Judge Graney, his smile growing, his eyes glinting
+oddly. "I think, since you are responsible for the startling innovation
+which we have been discussing, that you are entitled to a word."
+
+He gravely waved Hollis to a chair and stood silent while the latter
+sank into it. Then he smiled, glancing furtively at Dunlavey and
+addressing Hollis.
+
+"Perhaps you will remember that some time ago you printed an article in
+the _Kicker_ urging upon the Government the necessity of bringing
+the law into Union County?"
+
+Hollis nodded. "Yes," he said quietly; "I remember."
+
+"Well," resumed the Judge, "the article has borne fruit. But perhaps not
+in the manner you expected." He laughed around at the three,
+deliberately closing an eye at Hollis. "You know," he resumed,
+addressing them all, his eyes twinkling as his gaze met Dunlavey's,
+"that the law is an expensive institution. It is a fundamental
+principle--at least of some governments," he smiled--"that a community
+that desires the law must pay, and pay dearly--for it. In short, if it
+wants the law it must pay taxes. I do not say that that is a principle
+which our government is applying, but I do say that it is an eminently
+fair proposition.
+
+"At all events I have received word from the Interior Department that if
+we want the law to come out here we must pay for it. That is not said in
+so many words, but that is the inference, if we are to consider the
+instructions of the Secretary of the Interior--which are: 'I am informed
+that several large ranch owners in Union County are inclined to evade
+taxation. Especially is this true--I am told--of a man named Dunlavey,
+who, if the report is correct, paid, during the last half year, taxes on
+five hundred head of cattle, whereas it is claimed that his holdings
+will amount to about five thousand, yearly average. In view of this
+ridiculously low return it seems incumbent upon me to appoint an
+inquisitor, whose duty----"
+
+Dunlavey laughed harshly, interrupting the Judge. Then he turned
+suddenly to Hollis, his face inflamed with passion.
+
+"I reckon this is some of your work?" he snarled.
+
+Hollis met his gaze steadily. "I imagine it is," he said quietly. He
+could not keep a flash of triumph from his eyes. "Nothing could please
+me better than to discover that I had a hand in bringing the law to this
+country. It needs plenty of law."
+
+Judge Graney cleared his throat. "This does not apply to you alone,
+Dunlavey," he said, facing the latter. "Letters have been sent to every
+cattleman in Union County, demanding their appearance before me. The
+government is determined to re-adjust conditions out here--to enforce
+this new law to the letter. Beginning on the first of next
+month,--September--which will be the day after to-morrow, every cattle
+owner in the county will be required to register his brand and return a
+list of his cattle, for taxation. Any owner refusing to make a fair
+return on his stock will make a grave mistake. Upon his failure to make
+such return the government will seize his stock and dispose of it to the
+highest bidder, deducting such an amount as will cover taxes, court
+costs, and fines, and returning the remainder, if any, to the owner."
+Judge Graney faced Hollis. "I suppose you have received your
+notification to that effect?" he inquired.
+
+"I haven't paid much attention to my mail since--since I met Mr.
+Dunlavey and several of his friends one night--some weeks ago." He
+smiled grimly at Dunlavey, who met his gaze with a derisive grin. "I
+haven't been very much interested in anything except getting well,"
+continued Hollis. "But whether I have been notified or not I shall take
+pleasure in complying with the law. I shall have my list ready on
+time--likewise I shall register my brand."
+
+Dunlavey sneered. "That won't be such an almighty big job--counting your
+steers," he said.
+
+Hollis laughed shortly. "Perhaps not as big a job as it would have been
+had conditions been different," he observed dryly.
+
+"Meaning?" snapped Dunlavey, stiffening in his chair.
+
+"You may draw your own inference," drawled Hollis.
+
+For an instant it seemed that Dunlavey contemplated attacking Hollis; he
+placed both hands on the table before him, preparatory to rising,
+evidently thought better of the idea and sank into the chair again, his
+eyes flashing venomously as they met Hollis's.
+
+"This country's going plum to hell!" he sneered; "when tenderfeet and
+half-baked lawyers get to running things it will be time for the
+cattlemen to pull up stakes and hit the breeze! But I'm telling you one
+thing!" He banged his fist heavily down upon the table in front of him
+and scowled at the Judge, his voice vibrating with passion: "You let
+your damned tenderfoot owners bring in their lists. Mebbe they don't
+know any better. But I ain't bringin' in no list. It's one thing to pass
+a law and another thing to enforce it!" He sat silent for an instant,
+glaring at the Judge, who smiled quietly at him, then he turned to
+Hollis.
+
+"You've been carrying on like you was intending to own this here country
+some day," he sneered; "with your damned newspaper and your lawyer
+friend here. What we handed you the other night was just a sample of
+what you'll get if you don't hit the breeze out of this country!" He got
+to his feet and stood beside the table, glaring around at the three men.
+
+For a moment neither of the three spoke. There was a saturnine, almost
+mocking, smile on the face of the man who stood at the window. In his
+expression one could discover much appreciation of the character of the
+man at whom he was looking--it revealed the fact that he had met such
+men before--and admired them little. There was no fear in the
+expression, yet had one of the other men taken the trouble to look at
+him they would have seen that his right hand was now lingering very
+close to the butt of the revolver at his hip.
+
+Judge Graney cleared his throat. The smile was still on his face, but a
+sudden brightness of the eyes and a flush in each cheek showed that
+Dunlavey's defiance had affected him. Both he and the man at the window
+watched closely as Hollis got to his feet and approached Dunlavey.
+
+Hollis's face was slightly pale, but there was a steady, unwavering
+gleam in his eyes as he walked to within five feet of Dunlavey and stood
+quietly beside the table looking at him.
+
+"Dunlavey," he began slowly, in a soft, even voice, in which there was
+not a hint of excitement, "I haven't anything to do with enforcing the
+law that seems to have come to Union County. You can defy the law if you
+please. But I have something to say in reply to what you have said to
+me. It is this: I haven't any ambition to own the entire country--such
+talk from a grown man is childish. But I do intend to own the little
+I've got in spite of you or anyone else. I am not in the least afraid of
+you. I owe you something on account of the other night and some day I am
+going to thrash you within an inch of your life!"
+
+Dunlavey's hand fell suggestively to his side. "There's no time like the
+present," he sneered.
+
+"Of course I know that you carry a gun," said Hollis still evenly,
+without excitement; "most of you folks out here don't seem to be able to
+get along without one--it seems to be the fashion. Also, I might add,
+every man that carries one seems to yearn to use it. But it has always
+seemed to me that a man who will use a gun without great provocation is
+a coward!" He smiled grimly into Dunlavey's face.
+
+For an instant Dunlavey did not move. His eyes glittered malevolently as
+they bored into Hollis's. Then his expression changed until it was a
+mingling of contempt, incredulity, and mockery.
+
+"So you're thinking of thrashing me?" he sniffed, backing away a little
+and eyeing Hollis critically. "You slugged me once and you're thinking
+to do it again. And you think that any man who uses a gun on another is
+a coward?" He laughed sardonically. "Well, all I've got to say to you is
+that you ain't got your eye-teeth cut yet." He deliberately turned his
+back on Hollis and the others and walked to the door. On the threshold
+he halted, looking back at them all with a sneering smile.
+
+"You know where I live," he said to Judge Graney. "I ain't bringing in
+no list nor I ain't registering my brand. I don't allow no man to come
+monkeying around on my range and if you come out there, thinking to run
+off any of my stock, you're doing it at your own risk!" His gaze went
+from the Judge to Hollis and his smile grew malignant.
+
+"I'm saying this to you," he said, "no man ain't ever thrashed Bill
+Dunlavey yet and I ain't allowing that any man is ever going to. Put
+that in your pipe and smoke it!"
+
+He slammed the door and was gone. Hollis turned from the door to see a
+dry smile on the face of the man at the window.
+
+"Fire eater, ain't he?" observed the latter, as he caught Hollis's
+glance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE BEARER OF GOOD NEWS
+
+
+Hollis smiled. The Judge got to his feet and approached the two men.
+
+"Hollis," he said, "shake hands with Mr. Allen, of Lazette."
+
+Allen's hand came out quickly and was grasped by Hollis's, both grips
+being hearty and warm.
+
+"My name's Ben Allen," explained the stranger with a smile. "Tacking on
+a handle like 'Mister' would sure make me feel like a stranger to
+myself."
+
+"We'll not quarrel about that," remarked the Judge with a smile; "we'll
+call you Ben." He looked soberly at Hollis, continuing:
+
+"Allen has been sent over here from Lazette to assist us in establishing
+the law. He was formerly sheriff of Colfax County, having been defeated
+by the Cattlemen's Association because he refused to become a party to
+its schemes. On several occasions since severing his official connection
+with Colfax County he has acted in a special capacity for the
+government. He is an old acquaintance of the new Secretary of the
+Interior and much trusted by him. He is to be the inquisitor mentioned
+in the letter which I read in the presence of Dunlavey."
+
+Hollis looked at Allen with a new interest. After noting again the
+steady, serene eyes, narrowed always with a slight squint; the firm
+straight lips, the well set jaws, Hollis mentally decided that the
+Secretary of the Interior could not have made a better choice.
+Certainly, if he had served as sheriff of Colfax County, he had had some
+excellent experiences, for from reading the _Lazette Eagle_, Hollis had
+acquired considerable knowledge of the character of the inhabitants of
+Colfax. The editor of the _Eagle_ had many times felicitated himself upon
+the fact that his town (Lazette) had not been built ten miles farther
+east--in which case he would have been a resident of Union--and ashamed
+of it.
+
+"I think we need you," said Hollis simply. "But I imagine you will have
+to concentrate your efforts upon one ranch only--the Circle Cross. If
+you make Dunlavey bow to the law you may consider your work finished."
+
+"I think Dunlavey will change his views of things shortly," remarked
+Allen, quietly, but significantly. He smiled at Hollis. "I have read
+your paper regularly," he said. "You've got the editor of our paper
+hopping mad--with your claims about Dry Bottom being superior to
+Lazette. Also, you've stirred up the Secretary of the Interior some. I
+was called to Washington three weeks ago and invited to tell what I knew
+of conditions out here. I didn't exaggerate when I told the Secretary
+that hell was a more peaceful place for a law loving man to live in.
+Though," he added with a smile, "I wasn't ever in hell and couldn't be
+positive. I was just accepting what I've heard preachers say about it.
+The Secretary asked me if I knowed you and I told him that though I
+didn't I would be right glad to if you was doing anything in my line. He
+laughed and said he'd miss his guess if you wasn't making things
+interesting. Told me to get you to one side and tell you to go to it."
+He smiled dryly. "According to what I've read in the _Kicker_ you don't
+need to be told that and so I'm keeping my mouth shut."
+
+He dropped his humor and spoke seriously, questioning Hollis about the
+location of his ranch, listening quietly and attentively to the latter's
+answers. Half an hour later after having arranged with Judge Graney for
+the registering of his brand and the listing of his cattle, Hollis left
+the court house and went to his office. In running through his mail he
+came upon Judge Graney's notification and also another letter,
+postmarked "Chicago," which drew a pleased smile to his face. A few
+minutes later Norton came in, and though Hollis had done very little on
+the paper he rose and smilingly announced his intention of returning to
+the Circle Bar.
+
+"We'll take the Coyote trail," he informed Norton, after they had
+mounted and were riding away from the _Kicker_ office; "I'm stopping for a
+moment at the Hazelton cabin. Of course," he added, seeing a knowing
+grin on Norton's face, "I expected you would be suspicious--married
+folks have a habit of adopting a supercilious and all-wise attitude
+toward those of us who have been unfortunate enough to remain in a state
+of single blessedness."
+
+"Meanin' that you're some sore because you ain't got hooked up yet?"
+grinned Norton.
+
+"Perhaps," laughed Hollis. "But I have been thinking seriously of trying
+to reach your altitude."
+
+"Girl willin'?" queried Norton, as they rode down through a little
+gully, then up to a stretch of plain that brought them to the Coyote
+trail.
+
+"That's where I am all at sea," returned Hollis. He laughed. "I suppose
+you've read Ace's poem in the Kicker?" He caught Norton's nod and
+continued. "Well, Ace succeeded in crowding a whole lot of truth into
+that effort. Of course you remember the first couplet:
+
+ "'Woman--she don't need no tooter,
+ Be she skule ma'am or biscut shooter."'
+
+he quoted.
+
+"A woman seems to have an intuitive knowledge of man's mental processes.
+At least she gauges him pretty well without letting him into the mystery
+of how she does it. A man can never tell where he will land." Ace came
+very near striking the nail on the head when he wrote in the second
+couplet that:
+
+ 'She has most curyus ways about her,
+ Which leads a man to kinda dout her.'
+
+"And then, knowing man so well, she absolutely refuses to let him know
+anything of her thoughts. Which again, Ace has noted in this manner:
+
+ 'Though lookin' at her is sure a pleasure;
+ There ain't no way to get her measure.
+ I reckon she had man on the run
+ A long while before the world begun.'
+
+"That seems to be the exact truth," he laughed.
+
+Norton grinned at him. "You single guys have certa'nly got a whole lot
+to learn," he said, "for a fact. Of course if she's any kind of a woman
+at all she's got him runnin'. But which way?"
+
+"Why, toward her, of course!" laughed Hollis.
+
+Norton's smile widened. "You've tumbled to that, then," he observed
+dryly. "Then you're ready for the next lesson."
+
+"And that?" questioned Hollis.
+
+Norton smiled with ineffable pity. "Lordy!" he laughed; "you single guys
+don't know a thing not a durned thing!"
+
+After that they rode on in silence. When they came in sight of the
+Hazelton cabin Norton reined in his pony and sat motionless in the
+saddle, grinning at Hollis.
+
+"You run along now," he advised. "I'll be hittin' her off toward the Dry
+Bottom trail for the rest of the way--I sorta like that trail better
+anyway."
+
+He urged his pony off at a tangent and Hollis continued on his way. He
+found Nellie alone, her brother having gone out on the range. She came
+out on the porch, hearing his pony's hoofs on the hard sand and rocks of
+the trail, and there was a sincere welcome in her eyes. It was the first
+time that he had visited the cabin since he had returned to the Circle
+Bar.
+
+"Oh!" she said delightedly. And then, aware of the sudden light that had
+come into Hollis's eyes at this evidence of interest, she blushed and
+looked down at the hem of her skirt, nervously pushing it out with the
+toe of her shoe.
+
+During the days of Hollis's convalescence at the Hazelton cabin he had
+seen the young woman in many moods. In none of them, however, had she
+seemed so attractive as now. Confusion became her, he decided, and he
+regarded her with a new interest as he sat on his pony, awaiting her
+invitation to dismount. It came presently.
+
+"It is frightfully hot," she said, moving over to where stood two
+chairs--one in which he had passed many hours during the days of his
+convalescence, the other in which she had sat quite often--near him. Not
+until now did he realize how full and satisfying those days had been. As
+he dismounted and tied his pony to one of the slender porch columns he
+smiled--thinking of Norton's question during their discussion of Ace's
+poem. "Of course"--the range boss had said--"if she's any kind of a
+woman at all she's got him runnin'. But which way?" Of
+course--literally--she did not have him running, but he knew that some
+uncommon passion had gripped him and that he was unaccountably pleased.
+
+His smile grew when he remembered her sudden indignation over his
+thoughtless statement that women had never interested him. Of course he
+would not tell her that he felt a serious interest in _one_ woman.
+When he dropped into his favorite chair, removing his hat and mopping
+the perspiration from his forehead with his handkerchief, he caught her
+looking swiftly at the scar under his right eye--which would always be a
+reminder of his experience on the night of the storm. She saw his brows
+contract in a frown.
+
+"You have quite recovered," she said; "except for that slight scar under
+the eye you are the same as before the meeting with Dunlavey's men."
+
+He looked beyond her at the tawny mountains that rose in the
+distance,--miles on the other side of the big basin--swimming in the
+shimmering blur of white sky--somber guardians of a mysterious world.
+What secret did they guard? What did they know of this world of eternal
+sunlight, of infinite distance? Did they know as much of the world upon
+which they frowned as he knew of the heart of the slender, motherly girl
+whose eyes betrayed her each time he looked into them?
+
+A smile that lurked deep within him did not show in his face--it was
+unborn and it gripped him strangely, creating a sensation in his breast
+that he could not analyze, but which pleaded to be expressed. He could
+not express it--now. He feared to trust himself and so he fought it
+down, assuring himself that it was not yet time. But he knew that he was
+not the same as before his experience with Dunlavey on the night of the
+storm. Something had stolen into his heart and was enthroned there;
+something deeper than a mere scar--a girl who had mothered him in his
+extremity; who had hovered over him, attending to his bruises, binding
+his wounds, tenderly smoothing his brow during the days and nights of
+the fever; attending his wants during convalescence; erecting a citadel
+in his heart which would stand as a monument to his gratitude. No, not
+gratitude merely. The smile was born. He turned and looked at her,
+meeting her eyes fairly, and hers dropped in confusion.
+
+"Do you think that I am the same as before?" he asked suddenly.
+
+She stood up, radiant, pointing a finger toward the Coyote trail. "Ed is
+coming!" she declared.
+
+Before he could say another word she was down off the porch and running
+toward her brother, holding his horse while he dismounted, kissing him,
+patting him lovingly as they came toward the porch.
+
+The latter greeted Hollis warmly. "A fellow couldn't help but feel good
+with a sister like that--now could he?" he inquired as he came upon the
+porch and took the chair which Nellie had vacated. She had disappeared
+into the cabin, not even looking at Hollis, but she could not have heard
+Hollis's reply had she remained. For it was wordless. There are times
+when men understand perfectly without speech.
+
+Hollis stayed for dinner. Nellie was radiantly silent during the meal,
+attending to the wants of the two men, listening while they discussed
+recent happenings in the county. Ed was much pleased to hear of the
+coming of Ben Allen.
+
+"That guy is business--through and through," he assured Hollis. "He was
+the best sheriff Colfax County ever had--and it's had some good ones.
+Allen's quiet, but there ain't anyone going to herdride him. Some have
+tried it, but they found it didn't pay and so they don't try it any
+more."
+
+After dinner they went out on the porch for a smoke, leaving Nellie
+inside. They could hear her singing as she washed the dishes. Hazelton
+smiled as a particularly happy note reached his ears. "I don't know
+what's got into Sis," he said, flashing a swift glance at Hollis. "I
+don't know as I ever heard her sing that well before."
+
+Hollis made no reply and the conversation turned to the drought--as all
+conversations did during that period. Word had come to Hazelton of
+Dunlavey's warning to the cattle owners. He had heard also of Hollis's
+announced intention of taking sides with the small owners.
+
+"Dunlavey's ten days is up the day after tomorrow," said Hazelton. "If
+Dunlavey starts anything what are you going to do?"
+
+"That will depend on what Dunlavey starts," smiled Hollis.
+
+"H'm!" inexpressively grunted Hazelton. He flashed a glance at the face
+of the young man beside him, noting the firm mouth, the steady eyes, and
+the faint, grim smile. "H'm!" he said again. "I suppose you know who
+you're going to give your water to?" he questioned.
+
+Hollis nodded. "To men who refused to help my father when he needed
+help," he returned.
+
+Hazelton smiled oddly. "I've heard about that," he said. He laughed. "It
+strikes me that I wouldn't give such men any water," he added.
+
+Hollis turned and looked at him, meeting his gaze fairly, and holding
+it.
+
+"Yes, you would, Hazelton," he said, a broad smile on his face.
+
+"How do you know that?" queried the latter, slightly defiant.
+
+Hollis motioned toward the kitchen door. "I know," he said; "you're her
+brother."
+
+"Well," began Hazelton hesitatingly,--"I----"
+
+The screen door opened--slammed, and Nellie Hazelton came out upon the
+porch. She had found time to change her morning dress for a soft, fluffy
+creation of some sort, and she stood before them, flushing slightly as
+both looked at her, a picture that smote Hollis's heart with a sudden
+longing. Only one glance did she give him and then she was over near
+Ed's chair, leaning over him, stroking his hair.
+
+For a long time Hollis sat, watching them with sympathetic, appreciative
+eyes. Then he thought of the letter in his pocket, the one postmarked
+"Chicago," which he had discovered at the _Kicker_ office on
+returning from the court house. He drew it from his pocket and read the
+legend in the upper left hand corner:
+
+"Dr. J. J. Hammond, ---- Hospital, Chicago, Ill."
+
+He studied the legend for some little time, his thoughts busy with the
+contents of the envelope. Fortunately, his letter to the great physician
+had fallen into the hands of the son, Tom Hammond, and the latter, not
+forgetting his old schoolmate, had appealed to his father. This was what
+the surgeon had written in the letter--he would not have agreed to
+accept the case had it not been for the fact that Hollis had been, and
+was Tom's friend. He would be pleased if the patient would make the
+journey to Chicago within a month, that he might be able to take up his
+case before entering upon some scientific investigations which had been
+deferred a long time, etc.
+
+Hollis had been reading the letter again. He finished it and looked up,
+to see Ed and Nellie watching him. He flushed and smiled, holding out
+the letter to Nellie.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said. "I found this interesting. Perhaps you
+will also find it so."
+
+He leaned back with a smile and watched them. But he did not, watch
+long. He saw Nellie start, saw the color slowly recede from her face,
+saw her hands clench tightly--as she began to read the letter. He turned
+away, not caring to watch them during that sacred moment in which they
+would read the line of hope that the great surgeon had written. He
+looked--it seemed--for a long time down the Coyote trail, and when he
+finally turned his head toward them he saw Ed Hazelton sitting erect in
+his chair, apparently stunned by the news. But before him, close to him,
+so close that he felt her breath in his face--her eyes wide with
+delight, thankfulness--and perhaps something more--Nellie was kneeling.
+
+"Oh, thank you, Mr. Hollis!" she said earnestly, her lips all a-quiver;
+"Thank you, and God bless you!"
+
+He tried to sit erect; tried to open his lips to tell her that he had
+done only what any man would have done under the circumstances. But he
+moved not, nor did he speak, for her arms had gone around his shoulders,
+and her lips were suddenly pressed firmly and quickly to his. Then he
+was released and she turned, crying:
+
+"Come and thank him, Ed!"
+
+But Ed had taken himself off--perhaps he did not care to allow anyone to
+witness his joy.
+
+Some time during the evening Hollis took his departure from the Hazelton
+cabin. Ed had come back, silently taking Hollis's hand and gripping it
+earnestly. And before Hollis had departed Ed had taken himself into the
+house. Perhaps he divined that there were other's joys beside his.
+
+That night before retiring Nellie stole softly into her brother's room
+and kissed him lightly on the forehead. That same night also Hollis rode
+up to the Circle Bar corral gate--singing. Norton and Potter were
+sitting on the gallery, waiting for him. While Hollis was removing the
+saddle from his pony Norton rose from his chair and smiled at Potter.
+
+"Well," he said to the latter, "I'm goin' to bed." He moved a few steps
+toward the door and then turned and looked back at Potter, who had also
+risen. He laughed.
+
+"Listen, Potter," he said. Then he quoted:
+
+ "Woman--she don't need no tooter
+ Be she skule ma'am or biscuit shooter."
+
+He hesitated and looked again at Potter. "Why," said the latter,
+puzzled, "that's from Ace's poem!"
+
+"Sure," laughed Norton; "that's just what it is!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE RUSTLER
+
+
+The following day Hollis rode to town over the Dry Bottom trail. Had he
+followed a perfectly natural inclination he would have taken the Coyote,
+for it would have brought him to the Hazelton cabin. But he succeeded in
+forcing himself to go the other way, arguing that Nellie and her brother
+might wish to be alone to consider the great good fortune that had come
+upon them.
+
+And so they did, though had Hollis appeared to them this morning as they
+sat upon the porch he would have been assured of a royal welcome.
+Indeed, during the early morning hours Nellie had cast many furtive,
+expectant glances down the Coyote trail. When eight o'clock came and
+Hollis did not appear she gave him up.
+
+The dawn found her kneeling beside her brother's bed.
+
+"Ed!" she said, leaning over him, waking him, her eyes alight with joy;
+"Ed, he says you can be cured!"
+
+He struggled and sat up, rubbing his eyes.
+
+"Gosh, sis!" he said in an awed voice. "Then it's true! I was afraid I'd
+been dreaming!"
+
+"It is no dream," she returned ecstatically; "it is reality--beautiful
+reality! Wasn't it simply _great_ of him to take such an interest
+in us?"
+
+"Us?" grinned Ed, noting her crimson, happy face. "Well, mebbe he did it
+for _us_," he added subtly, "but I take it I've got a right to have
+another opinion on that."
+
+She fled from him without answering and a little later he heard her
+singing as she prepared breakfast. After the meal Ed made a short trip
+out into the basin to look after his cattle and then returned to the
+cabin. Sitting on the porch he and Nellie devoted several hours to a
+grave discussion of the situation. They discovered that it had a serious
+side.
+
+In the first place there was the dangerous nature of the operation. Here
+Ed laughed away his sister's fears by assuring her that he had an
+excellent constitution and that since the fall from the pony had not
+killed him he was in no danger from the knife. If Nellie entertained any
+doubt of this she wisely remained silent, though Ed could see that she
+was not entirely reassured. He swept away her last objection to this
+forbidding feature when he told her that he preferred taking the risk to
+living in constant dread of a recurrence of an acute attack of his
+malady--such as he had experienced when he had attacked Hollis in
+Devil's Hollow.
+
+There were many other things to be discussed--chiefly the care of the
+cattle and the cabin during his absence in Chicago. He would not listen
+to her suggestion to accompany him--he would prefer to have her remain
+at the cabin. Or he would try to arrange with Hollis for her to stay at
+the Circle Bar. There she would have Mrs. Norton for a companion, and
+she might ride each day to the cabin. He was certain that Hollis would
+arrange to have his men care for the cattle. He assured her that he
+would settle that question with Hollis when the latter passed the cabin
+that night on his return to the Circle Bar. Of course Hollis would take
+the Coyote trail to-night, he insinuated, grinning hugely at the blushes
+that reached her face.
+
+But Hollis did not pass the cabin that night. He had taken the Dry
+Bottom trail on his return to the Circle Bar.
+
+He had accomplished very little that day on account of the heat--and a
+certain vision that had troubled him--taking his mind off his work and
+projecting it to a little cabin in a small basin, to a porch where sat a
+girl--the girl of his vision. She had voluntarily kissed him. Had it
+been all on account of gratitude? Of course--though--Well, memory of the
+kiss still lingered and he was willing to forgive her the slight lapse
+of modesty because he had been the recipient.
+
+There had been one interesting development in Dry Bottom during the day.
+All day the town had swarmed with ranch owners who had come in to the
+court house to list their cattle for taxation and register their brands.
+Shortly after noon Ben Allen had dropped into the _Kicker_ office
+with the news that every owner in the county with the exception of
+Dunlavey had responded to the law's demands.
+
+To Hollis's inquiry regarding the course he would pursue in forcing
+Dunlavey to comply with the law, Allen remarked with a smile that there
+was "plenty of time." He had had much experience with men of the
+Dunlavey type.
+
+Potter and Hollis exchanged few words during the ride to the Circle Bar.
+The heat--the eternal, scorching, blighting heat--still continued; the
+dust had become an almost unbearable irritation. During the trip to the
+ranch the two men came upon an arroyo over which Hollis had passed many
+times. At a water hole where he had often watered his horse they came
+upon several dead steers stretched prone in the green slime. The water
+had disappeared; the spring that had provided it had dried and there was
+nothing to tell of it except a small stretch of damp earth, baking in
+the sun. The steers were gaunt, lanky creatures, their hides stretched
+tight as drum-heads over their ribs, their tongues lolling out, black
+and swollen, telling mutely of their long search for water and their
+suffering. Coyotes had been at work on them; here lay a heap of bare
+bones; there a skull glistened in the white sunlight.
+
+A few miles farther on they came upon one of the punchers from the
+Circle Y with a calf thrown over the saddle in front of him. He was
+driving several gaunt, drooping cattle toward the Rabbit-Ear. The calf
+bellowed piteously at sight of Hollis and Potter. The puncher hailed
+them.
+
+"You're Hollis, of the Circle Bar, ain't you?" he said when the latter
+had spurred his pony close to him. At Hollis's nod he grinned
+ironically. "Hot!" he said, coming quickly to the universal topic of
+conversation; "I reckon this wouldn't be called hot in some places--in
+hell, for instance. Say," he said as he saw Hollis's lips straighten,
+"to-morrow the ten days is up. Mebbe it'll be hotter then. The damned
+skunk!"
+
+Of course he referred to Dunlavey--the latter's threat to drive all
+foreign cattle from the Rabbit-Ear had been carried far and wide by
+riders--the whole country knew of it. There had been much condemnation
+and some speculation, but there was nothing to be done until after the
+tenth day. Even then much depended upon Hollis's attitude. Would he make
+war upon Dunlavey in defense of the men who had refused aid to his
+father in time of need?
+
+Hollis was still of the opinion that Dunlavey would not attempt to carry
+out his threat. He smiled at the malevolent expression in the puncher's
+eyes.
+
+"Somehow," he said quietly, "I have always been able to distinguish
+between empty boast and determination. Dunlavey has done some foolish
+things, no doubt, and is doing a foolish thing in defying the law, but I
+don't anticipate that he will do anything quite so rash as to further
+antagonize the small owners."
+
+The puncher sat erect and laughed harshly. "You don't?" he inquired in
+an over-gentle, polite voice. "Mister Hollis," he added, as the latter
+looked quickly at him, "you ain't heard nothin' from the Circle Bar
+to-day, I reckon?"
+
+Hollis's answer was negative. The Circle Y man's face grew suddenly
+serious. "You ain't! Well, then, that's the reason you're talkin' so.
+The last I heard from the Circle Bar was that Norton an' some of your
+men had captured one of Dunlavey's men--Greasy--rebrandin' some Circle
+Bar steers an' was gettin' ready to string him up. I reckon mebbe you'd
+call that doin' somethin'!"
+
+Hollis straightened. He had suddenly forgotten the heat, the dust, and
+the problem of water.
+
+"How long ago did you hear this?" he demanded sharply.
+
+"'Bout an hour ago," returned the Circle Y man. "I was rustlin' up these
+strays down in the basin an' headin' them toward the crick when I runs
+plum into a man from the Three Bar outfit. He was plum excited over it.
+Said they'd ketched Greasy down by the Narrows sometime after noon
+an'----"
+
+But the Circle Y man finished to the empty air for Hollis's pony had
+leaped forward into a cloud of dust, running desperately.
+
+The Circle Y man sat erect, startled. "Well, I'll be----" he began,
+speaking to Potter. But the printer was following his chief and was
+already out of hearing. "Now what do you suppose----" again began the
+Circle Y man, and then fell silent, suddenly smitten with the
+uselessness of speech. He yelled at his gaunt steers and shifted the
+calf in front of him to a more comfortable position. Then he proceeded
+on his way. But as he rode his lips curled, his eyes narrowed, and
+speech again returned to him. "Now why in hell would a man get so damned
+excited over hearin' that someone was goin' to string up a measly
+rustler?"
+
+The interrogation remained unanswered. The Circle Y man continued on his
+way, watching the fast disappearing dust clouds on the Circle Bar trail.
+
+When Hollis reached the Circle Bar ranchhouse there was no one about. He
+rode up to the front gallery and dismounted, thinking that perhaps
+Norton would be in the house. But before he had crossed the gallery Mrs.
+Norton came to the door. She was pale and laboring under great
+excitement, but instantly divined Hollis's errand.
+
+"They've taken him down to the cottonwood" she told Hollis, pointing
+toward the grove in which Hollis had tried the six-shooter that Norton
+had given him the first day after his arrival at the ranch. "They are
+going to hang him! Hurry!"
+
+Hollis was back in the saddle in an instant and racing his pony down
+past the bunk house at break-neck speed. He urged the little animal
+across an intervening stretch of plain, up a slight rise, down into a
+shallow valley, and into the cottonwood, riding recklessly through the
+trees and urging the pony at a headlong pace through the
+underbrush--crashing it down, scaring the rattlers from their
+concealment, and startling the birds from their lofty retreats.
+
+For ten minutes he rode as he had never ridden before. And then he came
+upon them. They stood at the base of a fir-balsam, whose gnarled limbs
+spread flatly outward--three Circle Bar men, a half dozen from the
+various outfits whose herds grazed his range, and the rustler--Greasy--a
+rope knotted about his neck, standing directly under one of the
+out-spreading limbs of the tree, his head bowed, but his face wearing a
+mocking, defiant grin. The rope had been thrown over the limb and
+several men were holding it, preparatory to drawing it taut. Norton was
+standing near, his face pale, his lips straight and grim with
+determination. Apparently Hollis had arrived just in time.
+
+None of the men moved from their places when Hollis dismounted, but all
+looked at him as though expecting him to express approval of what they
+were about to do. Several lowered their gaze with embarrassment when
+they saw that he did not approve.
+
+"What is all this about, Norton?" he asked, speaking to the latter, who
+had stepped forward and now stood beside Greasy. Whatever excitement had
+resulted from the sudden discovery that his men had captured a rustler
+and were about to hang him, together with the strain of his hard ride to
+the cottonwood, had disappeared, and Hollis's voice was quiet as he
+addressed his range boss.
+
+Norton smiled grimly. "We were roundin' up a few strays just the other
+side of the Narrows this morning, and Ace and Weary were workin' down
+the river. In that little stretch of gully just the other side of the
+Narrows they came upon this sneak brandin' two of our beeves through a
+piece of wet blanket. He'd already done it an' so we ketched him with
+the goods. It's the first time we've ever been able to lay a hand on one
+of Dunlavey's pluguglies, an' we was figgerin' on makin' an example of
+him."
+
+Hollis met Norton's grim gaze and smiled. "I want to thank you--all of
+you, for guarding my interests so zealously," he said. "There is no
+doubt that this man richly deserves hanging--that is, of course,
+according to your code of ethics. I understand that is the way things
+have been done heretofore. But I take it none of you want to make me
+appear ridiculous?"
+
+"Sure not," came several voices in chorus.
+
+Hollis laughed. "But you took the surest way of making me appear so," he
+returned.
+
+He saw Norton's face flush and he knew that the latter had already
+grasped the significance of his words. But the others, simpler of mind,
+reasoning by no involved process, looked at him, plainly puzzled. He
+would have to explain more fully to them. He did so. When he had shown
+them that in hanging the rustler he would be violating the principle
+that he had elected to defend, they stood before him abashed, thoroughly
+disarmed. All except Ace. The poet's mind was still active.
+
+"I reckon you might say you didn't know nothin' about us hangin' him?"
+he suggested.
+
+"So I might," returned Hollis. "But people would not think so. And there
+is my conscience. It wouldn't be such a weight upon it--the hanging of
+this man; I believe I would enjoy standing here and watching him stretch
+your rope. But I would not be able to reconcile the action with the
+principle for which I am fighting. I believe none of you men would trust
+me very much if I advocated the law one day and broke it the next. The
+application of this principle would be much the same as if I stole a
+horse to-day and to-morrow had you arrested for stealing one."
+
+"That's so," they chorused, and fell silent, regarding him with a new
+interest.
+
+"But what are you goin' to do with the cuss?" queried one man.
+
+"We have a sheriff in Dry Bottom, I expect?" questioned Hollis.
+
+Grins appeared on the faces of several of the men; the prisoner's face
+lighted.
+
+"Oh, yes," said one; "I reckon Bill Watkins is the sheriff all right."
+
+"Then we'll take him to Bill Watkins," decided Hollis.
+
+The grins on the faces of several of the men grew. Norton laughed.
+
+"I reckon you ain't got acquainted with Bill yet, Hollis," he said.
+"Bill owes his place to Dunlavey. There has never been a rustler
+convicted by Watkins yet. I reckon there won't ever be any
+convicted--unless he's been caught stealin' Dunlavey's cattle. Bill's
+justice is a joke."
+
+Hollis smiled grimly. He had learned that much from Judge Graney. He did
+not expect to secure justice, but he wished to have something tangible
+upon which to work to force the law into the country. His duty in the
+matter consisted only in delivering the prisoner into the custody of the
+authorities, which in this case was the sheriff. The sheriff would be
+held responsible for him. He said this much to the men. There was no
+other lawful way.
+
+He was not surprised that they agreed with him. They had had much
+experience in dealing with Dunlavey; they had never been successful with
+the old methods of warfare and they were quite willing to trust to
+Hollis's judgment.
+
+"I reckon you're just about right," said one who had spoken before.
+"Stringin' this guy up would finish him all right. But that wouldn't
+settle the thing. What's needed is to get it fixed up for good an' all."
+
+"Correct!" agreed Hollis; "you've got it exactly. We might hang a dozen
+men for stealing cattle and we could go on hanging them. We've got no
+right to hang anyone--we've got a law for that purpose. Then let us make
+the law act!"
+
+The prisoner had stood in his place, watching the men around him, his
+face betraying varying emotions. When it had been finally agreed to take
+him to Dry Bottom and deliver him over to the sheriff he grinned
+broadly. But he said nothing as they took the rope from around his neck,
+forced him to mount a horse and surrounding him, rode out of the
+cottonwood toward the Circle Bar ranchhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE TENTH DAY
+
+
+Dusk had fallen by the time Greasy had been brought to the bunkhouse,
+and Mrs. Norton had lighted the kerosene lamps when Norton and Hollis,
+assured of the safety of the prisoner, left the bunkhouse and went into
+the house for supper. Potter had washed the dust of travel from him and
+when Norton and Hollis arrived he was seated on the porch, awaiting
+them. Mrs. Norton greeted them with a smile. Her eyes expressed
+gratitude as they met Hollis's.
+
+"I am so glad you were in time," she said. "I told Neil not to do it,
+but he was determined and wouldn't listen to me."
+
+"You might have tried 'bossing' him," suggested Hollis, remembering his
+range boss's words on the occasion of his first meeting with Norton's
+wife. He looked straight at Norton, his eyes narrowing quizzically. "You
+know you told me once that----"
+
+"Mebbe I was stretchin' things a little when I told you that,"
+interrupted Norton, grinning shamelessly. "If a man told the truth all
+the time he'd have a hard time keepin' ahead of a woman."
+
+"'Woman--she don't need no tooter,'" quoted Hollis. "It has taken you a
+long time to discover what Ace has apparently known for years. And Ace
+is only a bachelor."
+
+Norton's eyes lighted. "You're gettin' back at me for what I said to you
+the day before yesterday--when you stopped off at Hazelton's," he
+declared. "All the same you'll know more about women when you've had
+more experience with them. When I told you that I'd been 'bossed,' I
+didn't mean that I'd been bossed regular. No woman that knows just how
+much she can run a man ever lets him know that she's bossin' him. Mebbe
+she'll act like she's lettin' him have his own way. But she's bossin'
+him just the same. He sort of likes it, I reckon. At least it's only
+when a man gets real mad that he does a little bossin' on his own
+account. And then, like as not, he'll find that he's made a big mistake.
+Like I did to-day about hangin' Greasy, for instance."
+
+Hollis bowed gravely to Mrs. Norton. "I think he ought to be forgiven,
+Mrs. Norton," he said. "Day before yesterday he presumed to lecture me
+on the superiority of the married male over the unmarried one. And now
+he humbly admits to being bossed. What then becomes of his much talked
+of superiority? Shall I--free and unbossed--admit inferiority?"
+
+Mrs. Norton smiled wisely as she moved around the table, arranging the
+dishes. "I couldn't decide that," she said, "until it is explained to me
+why so many men are apparently so eager to engage a boss."
+
+"I reckon that settles that argument!" gloated Norton.
+
+Had this conversation taken place two months before Hollis might have
+answered, Why, indeed, were men so eager to engage a boss? Two months
+before he might have answered cynically, remembering the unhappiness of
+his parents. That he did not answer now showed that he was no longer
+cynical; that he had experienced a change of heart.
+
+Of course Mrs. Norton knew this--Norton must have told her. He could
+appreciate the subtle mockery that had suggested the question, but he
+did not purpose to allow Norton to sit there and enjoy the confusion
+that was sure to overtake him did he attempt to continue the argument
+with Mrs. Norton. He was quite certain that Norton anticipated such an
+outcome.
+
+"Perhaps Norton can answer that?" he suggested mildly.
+
+"I ain't no good at guessin' riddles," jeered Norton. "But I reckon you
+know--if you wanted to tell."
+
+But Hollis did not tell, and the conversation shifted to other subjects.
+After supper they went out upon the porch. A slight breeze had sprung up
+with the dusk, though the sky was still cloudless. At ten o'clock, when
+they retired, the breeze had increased in velocity, sighing mournfully
+through the trees in the vicinity of the ranchhouse, though there was no
+perceptible change in the atmosphere--it seemed that the wind was merely
+shifting the heat waves from one point to another.
+
+"A good, decent rain would save lots of trouble to-morrow," said Norton
+as he and Hollis stood on the porch, taking a last look at the sky
+before going to bed.
+
+"Do you really think Dunlavey will carry out his threat?" questioned
+Hollis. "Somehow I can't help but think that he was bluffing when he
+said it."
+
+"He don't do much bluffin'," declared Norton. "At least he ain't done
+much up to now."
+
+"But there is plenty of water in the Rabbit-Ear," returned Hollis;
+"plenty for all the cattle that are here now."
+
+Norton flashed a swift glance at him. "That's because you don't know
+this country," he said. "Four years ago we had a dry spell. Not so bad
+as this, but bad enough. The Rabbit-Ear held up good enough for two
+months. Then she went dry sudden. There wasn't water enough in her to
+fill a thimble. I reckon you ain't been watchin' her for the last day or
+so?"
+
+Hollis admitted that he had not seen the river within that time. Norton
+laughed shortly.
+
+"She's dry in spots now," he informed Hollis. "There ain't any water at
+all in the shallows. It's tricklin' through in some places, but mostly
+there's nothin' but water holes an' dried, baked mud. In two days more,
+if it don't rain, there won't be water enough for our own stock. Then
+what?"
+
+"There will be water for every steer on the range as long as it lasts,"
+declared Hollis grimly. "After that we'll all take our medicine
+together."
+
+"Good!" declared Norton. "That's what I expected of you. But I don't
+think it's goin' to work out that way. Weary was ridin' the Razor Back
+this mornin' and he says he saw Dunlavey an' Yuma and some more Circle
+Cross guys nosin' around behind some brush on the other side of the
+creek. They all had rifles."
+
+Hollis's face paled slightly. "Where are the other men--Train and the
+rest?" he inquired.
+
+"Down on Razor Back," Norton informed him; "they sneaked down there
+after Weary told me about seein' Dunlavey on the other side. Likely
+they're scattered by now--keepin' an eye out for trouble."
+
+"Well," decided Hollis, "there isn't any use of looking for it. It finds
+all of us soon enough. To-morrow is the tenth day and I am sure that if
+Dunlavey carries out his threat he won't start anything until to-morrow.
+Therefore I am going to bed." He laughed. "Call me if you hear any
+shooting. I may want to take a hand in it."
+
+They parted--Hollis going to his room and Norton stepping down off the
+porch to take a turn down around the pasture to look after the horses.
+
+Hollis was tired after his experiences of the day and soon dropped off
+to sleep. It seemed that he had been asleep only a few minutes, however,
+when he felt a hand shaking him, and a voice--Norton's voice.
+
+"Hollis!" said the range boss. "Hollis! Wake up!"
+
+Hollis sat erect, startled into perfect wakefulness. He could not see
+Norton's face in the dark, but he swung around and sat on the edge of
+the bed.
+
+"What's up?" he demanded. "Have they started?"
+
+He heard Norton laugh, and there was satisfaction in the laugh.
+"Started?" he repeated. "Well, I reckon something's started. Listen!"
+
+Hollis listened. A soft patter on the roof, a gentle sighing of the
+wind, and a distant, low rumble reached his ears. He started up. "Why,
+it's raining!" he said.
+
+Norton chuckled. "Rainin'!" he chirped joyously. "Well, I reckon it
+might be called that by someone who didn't know what rain is. But I'm
+tellin' you that it ain't rainin'--it's pourin'! It's a cloud-burst,
+that's what it is!"
+
+Hollis did not answer. He ran to the window and stuck his head out. The
+rain came against his head and shoulders in stinging, vicious slants.
+There was little lightning, and what there was seemed distant, as though
+the storm covered a vast area. He could dimly see the pasture--the
+horses huddled in a corner under the shelter that had been erected for
+them; he could see the tops of the trees in the cottonwood
+grove--bending, twisting, leaning from the wind; the bunkhouse door was
+open, a stream of light illuminating a space in which stood several of
+the cowboys. Some were attired as usual, others but scantily, but all
+were outside in the rain, singing, shouting, and pounding one another in
+an excess of joy. For half an hour Hollis stood at the window, watching
+them, looking out at the storm. There was no break anywhere in the sky
+from horizon to horizon. Plainly there was to be plenty of rain.
+Convinced of this he drew a deep breath of satisfaction, humor moving
+him.
+
+"I do hope Dunlavey and his men don't get wet." he said. He went to his
+trousers and drew forth his watch. He could not see the face of it and
+so he carried it to the window. The hands pointed to fifteen minutes
+after one. "It's the tenth day," he smiled. "Dunlavey might have saved
+himself considerable trouble in the future if he had placed a little
+trust in Providence--and not antagonized the small owners. I don't think
+Providence has been looking out for my interests, but I wonder who will
+stand the better in the estimation of the people of this
+county--Dunlavey or me?"
+
+He smiled again, sighed with satisfaction, and rolled into bed. For a
+long time he lay, listening to the patter of the rain on the roof, and
+then dropped off to sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+HOW A RUSTLER ESCAPED
+
+
+When Hollis got out of bed at six o'clock that same morning he heard
+surprising sounds outside. Slipping on his clothes he went to the window
+and looked out. Men were yelling at one another, screeching delightful
+oaths, capering about hatless, coatless, in the rain that still came
+steadily down. The corral yard was a mire of sticky mud in which the
+horses reared and plunged in evident appreciation of the welcome change
+from dry heat to lifegiving moisture. Riderless horses stood about, no
+one caring about the saddles, several calves capered awkwardly in the
+pasture. Norton's dog--about which he had joked to Hollis during the
+latter's first ride to the Circle Bar--was yelping joyously and running
+madly from one man to another.
+
+Norton himself stood down by the door of the bunkhouse, grinning with
+delight. Near him stood Lemuel Train, and several of the other small
+ranchers whose stock had grazed for more than two weeks on the Circle
+Bar range without objection from Hollis. They saw him and motioned for
+him to come down, directing original oaths at him for sleeping so late
+on so "fine a morning."
+
+He dressed hastily and went down. They all ate breakfast in the mess
+house, the cook being adjured to "spread it on for all he was
+worth"--which he did. Certainly no one left the mess house hungry.
+During the meal Lemuel Train made a speech on behalf of himself and the
+other owners who had enjoyed Hollis's hospitality, assuring him that
+they were "with him" from now on. Then they departed, each going his
+separate way to round up his cattle and drive them back to the home
+ranch.
+
+The rain continued throughout the day and far into the night. The dried,
+gasping country absorbed water until it was sated and then began to shed
+it off into the arroyos, the gullies, the depressions, and the river
+beds. Every hollow overflowed with it; it seemed there could never be
+another drought.
+
+Before dawn on the following day all the small ranchers had departed.
+Several of them, on their way to their home ranches, stopped off at the
+Circle Bar to shake hands with Hollis and assure him of their
+appreciation. Lemuel Train did not forget to curse Dunlavey.
+
+"We ain't likely to forget how he stood on the water proposition," he
+said.
+
+After Train had departed Norton stood looking after him. Then he turned
+and looked at Hollis, his eyes narrowing quizzically. "You've got in
+right with that crowd," he said. "Durned if I don't believe you knowed
+all the time that it was goin' to rain before Dunlavey's tenth day was
+over!"
+
+Hollis smiled oddly. "Perhaps," he returned; "there is no law, moral or
+otherwise, to prevent a man from looking a little ahead."
+
+After breakfast Hollis gave orders to have Greasy prepared for travel,
+and an hour later he and the range boss, both armed with rifles, rode
+out of the corral yard with Greasy riding between them and took the Dry
+Bottom trail.
+
+The earth had already dried; the trail was hard, level, and dustless,
+and traveling was a pleasure. But neither of the three spoke a word to
+one another during the entire trip to Dry Bottom. Greasy bestrode his
+horse loosely, carelessly defiant; Norton kept a watchful eye on him,
+and Hollis rode steadily, his gaze fixed thoughtfully on the trail.
+
+At ten o'clock they rode into Dry Bottom. There were not many persons
+about, but those who were gave instant evidence of interest in the three
+by watching them closely as they rode down the street to the sheriff's
+office, dismounted, and disappeared inside.
+
+The sheriff's office was in a little frame shanty not over sixteen feet
+square, crude and unfinished. There were a front and back door, two
+windows--one in the side facing the court house, the other in the front.
+For furniture there were a bench, two chairs, some shelves, a cast iron
+stove, a wooden box partly filled with saw-dust which was used as a
+cuspidor, and a rough wooden table which served as a desk. In a chair
+beside the desk sat a tall, lean-faced man, with a nose that suggested
+an eagle's beak, with its high, thin, arched bridge, little, narrowed,
+shifting eyes, and a hard mouth whose lips were partly concealed under a
+drooping, tobacco-stained mustache. He turned as the three men entered,
+leaning back in his chair, his legs a-sprawl, motioning them to the
+chairs and the bench. They filed in silently. Greasy dropped carelessly
+into one of the chairs, Norton took another near him, but Hollis
+remained standing.
+
+"You are the sheriff, I suppose?" inquired the latter.
+
+The official spat copiously into the wooden box without removing his
+gaze from the three visitors.
+
+"Yep," he returned shortly, his voice coming with a truculent snap. "You
+wantin' the sheriff?"
+
+Hollis saw a swift, significant glance pass between him and Greasy and
+he smiled slightly.
+
+"Yes," he returned quietly; "we want you. We are delivering this man
+into your custody."
+
+"What's he done?" demanded the sheriff.
+
+"I charge him with stealing two of my steers," returned Hollis. "Several
+of my men discovered him at work the day before yesterday and----"
+
+"Hold on a minute now!" interrupted the sheriff. "Let's git this thing
+goin' accordin' to the law." He spat again into the wooden box, cocked
+his head sideways and surveyed Hollis with a glance in which there was
+much insolence and contempt. "Who might you be?" he questioned.
+
+"My name is Hollis," returned the latter quietly, his eyes meeting the
+other's steadily. "I own the Circle Bar."
+
+"H'm!" The sheriff crossed his legs and stuck his thumbs into the
+arm-holes of his vest, revealing a nickle-plated star on the lapel of
+the latter. "H'm. Your name's Hollis, an' you own the Circle Bar. Seems
+I've heard of you." He squinted his eyes at Hollis. "You're Jim Hollis's
+boy, ain't you?" His eyes flashed with a sudden, contemptuous light.
+"Tenderfoot, ain't you? Come out here to try an' show folks how to run
+things?"
+
+Hollis's face slowly paled. He saw Greasy grinning. "I suppose it makes
+little difference to you what I am or what I came out here for," he said
+quietly; "though, if I were to be required to give an opinion I should
+say that there is room for improvement in this county in the matter of
+applying its laws."
+
+The sheriff laughed harshly. "You'll know more about this country after
+you've been here a while," he sneered.
+
+"Mebbe he'll know more about how to run a law shebang, too," dryly
+observed Norton, "after he's watched Bill Watkins run her a little."
+
+"I don't reckon anyone ast you to stick your gab in this here affair?"
+demanded the sheriff of Norton.
+
+"No," returned Norton, drawling, "no one asked me. But while we're
+handin' out compliments we might as well all have a hand in it. It
+strikes me that when a man's runnin' a law shop he ought to run her."
+
+"I reckon I'll run her without any help from you, Norton!" snapped the
+sheriff.
+
+"Why, sure!" agreed the latter, his gaze level as his eyes met the
+sheriff's, his voice even and sarcastic. "But I'm tellin' you that this
+man's my friend an' if there's any more of them compliments goin' to be
+handed around I'm warnin' you that you want to hand them out soft an'
+gentle like. That's all. I reckon we c'n now proceed."
+
+The sheriff's face bloated poisonously. He flashed a malignant glance at
+Hollis. "Well," he snapped, "what's the charge?"
+
+"I have already told you," returned Hollis. "It is stealing cattle."
+
+"How stealin' them?" demanded the Sheriff truculenty.
+
+"Changing the brand," Hollis informed him. He related how Ace and Weary
+had come upon the prisoner while the latter was engaged in changing his
+brand to the Circle Cross.
+
+"They see him brandin'?" questioned the sheriff when Hollis had
+concluded.
+
+Hollis told him that the two men had come upon Greasy after the brand
+had been applied, but that the cattle bore the Circle Bar ear-mark, and
+that Greasy had built a fire and that branding irons had been found in
+his possession--which which he had tried to hide when discovered by the
+Circle Bar men.
+
+"Then your men didn't really see him doin' the brandin'?" questioned
+Watkins.
+
+Hollis was forced to admit that they had not. Watkins smiled
+sarcastically.
+
+"I reckon you're runnin' a little bit wild," he remarked. "Some of your
+stock has been rebranded an' you're chargin' a certain man with doin'
+it--only you didn't see him doin' it." He turned to Greasy. "What you
+got to say about this, Greasy?" he demanded.
+
+Greasy grinned blandly at Hollis. "This guy's talkin' through his hat,"
+he sneered. "I ain't allowin' that I branded any of his cattle."
+
+Watkins smiled. "There don't seem to be nothin' to this case a-tall--not
+a-tall. There ain't nobody goin' to be took into custody by me for
+stealin' cattle unless they're ketched with the goods--an' that ain't
+been proved so far." He turned to Hollis. "You got anything more to say
+about it?" he demanded.
+
+"Only this," returned Hollis slowly and evenly, "I have brought this man
+here. I charge him with stealing my cattle. To use your term--he was
+caught 'with the goods.' He is guilty. If you take him into custody and
+bring him to trial I shall have two witnesses there to prove what I have
+already told you. If you do not take him into custody, it is perfectly
+plain that you are deliberately shielding him--that you are making a
+joke of the law."
+
+Watkins's face reddened angrily. "Mebbe I'm makin' a joke of it----" he
+began.
+
+"Of course we can't force you to arrest this man," resumed Hollis,
+interrupting Watkins. "Unfortunately the government has not yet awakened
+to the fact that such men as you are a public menace and danger. I did
+not expect you to arrest him--I tell you that frankly. I merely brought
+him here to see whether it were true that you were leagued with Dunlavey
+against the other ranchers in the country. You are, of course.
+Therefore, as we cannot secure justice by appealing to you we will be
+forced to adopt other means."
+
+The sheriff's right hand dropped to his gun-holster. He sneered, his
+lips writhing. "Mebbe you mean----" he began.
+
+"I ain't lettin' this here situation get beyond my control," came
+Norton's voice, cold and even, as his six-shooter came out and was
+shoved menacingly forward. "Whatever he means, Watkins, he's my friend
+an' you ain't runnin' in no cold lead proposition on him." He smiled
+mirthlessly.
+
+Watkins's face paled; his right hand fell away from the pistol holster.
+There was a sound at the door; it swung suddenly open and Dunlavey's
+gigantic frame loomed massively in the opening.
+
+"I'm looking for Greasy!" he announced in a soft, silky voice, looking
+around at the four men with a comprehending, appreciative smile. "I was
+expecting to find him here," he added as his gaze sought out the
+prisoner, "after I heard that he'd been nabbed by the Circle Bar men."
+
+Norton smiled coldly. "He's here, Bill," he said evenly. "He's stayin'
+here till Mr. Hollis says it's time for him to go."
+
+He did not move the weapon in his hand, but a certain glint in his eyes
+told Dunlavey that the pistol was not in his hand for mere show. The
+latter smiled knowingly.
+
+"I'm not interfering with the law," he said mockingly. "And I certainly
+ain't bucking your game, Norton." He turned to Watkins, speaking with
+broad insinuation: "Of course you are putting a charge against Greasy,
+Watkins?" he said.
+
+They all caught the sheriff's flush; all saw the guilty embarrassment in
+his eyes as he answered that he had not. Dunlavey turned to Hollis with
+a bland smile.
+
+"Have you any objection to allowing Greasy to go now, Mr. Hollis?"
+
+Hollis's smile was no less bland as his gaze met Dunlavey's. "Not the
+slightest objection, Mr. Dunlavey," he returned. "I congratulate you
+upon the manner in which you have trained your servants!" He ignored
+Dunlavey and smiled at Norton. "Mr. Norton," he said with polite
+mockery, "I feel certain that you agree with me that we have no wish to
+contaminate this temple of justice with our presence."
+
+He bowed with mock politeness as he strode to the door and stepped down
+into the street. Norton followed him, grinning, though he did not sheath
+his weapon until he also was in the street.
+
+As they strode away from the door they turned to see Dunlavey looking
+out after them, his face wreathed in a broad smile.
+
+"There is plenty of law in Union County, Mr. Hollis," he said, "if you
+know how to handle it!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE "KICKER'S" CANDIDATE
+
+
+The next issue of the _Kicker_ contained many things of interest to
+its readers. Now that the drought had been broken, Union County could
+proceed with its business of raising cattle without fear of any future
+lack of water, with plenty of grass, and no losses except those from the
+usual causes. Dry Bottom merchants--depending upon the cattlemen for
+their trade--breathed easier and predicted a good year in spite of the
+drought. Their worries over, they had plenty of time--and
+inclination--to discuss the _Kicker_.
+
+More advertisements were appearing in the paper. Dry Bottom merchants
+were beginning to realize that it deserved their support, and with few
+exceptions they openly began to voice their opinions that the editor
+would "make good."' The advertisements began to take on a livelier tone
+and the Lazette _Eagle_ grew more sarcastic.
+
+When the _Kicker_ appeared following the incident in the sheriff's
+office, there was a detailed account of Dunlavey's now famous "ten day
+edict," together with some uncomplimentary comments upon the latter's
+action. This was signed by Hollis. He called attention to Dunlavey's
+selfishness, to the preparations that had been made by him to shoot down
+all the foreign cattle on the Rabbit-Ear. He made no reference to his
+part in the affair--to his decision to allow the small ranchers to water
+their cattle in the river at the imminent risk of losing his own. But
+though he did not mention this, the small owners and his friends took
+care that the matter received full publicity, with the result that
+Hollis was kept busy assuring his admirers that the incident had been
+much magnified--especially his part of it. Then his friends applauded
+his modesty.
+
+In the same issue of the paper was also related the story of Greasy's
+capture by the Circle Bar men. But in telling this story Hollis was not
+so modest, for he spoke frankly of his part in it--how he had refused to
+allow his men to hang the thief, telling his readers that though Greasy
+deserved hanging, he did not purpose to violate the law while advocating
+it. Following the story of the capture was a detailed report of the
+incident in the sheriff's office and a scathing commentary upon the
+subservience of the latter official to Dunlavey's will. The article was
+entitled: "Handling the Law," and Dunlavey's exact words when he stood
+in the door of the sheriff's office as Hollis and Norton departed were
+repeated.
+
+Below this, under the rubric, "Union County Needs a New Sheriff,"
+appeared an article that created a sensation. This dwelt upon the
+necessity of the county having a sheriff who would not permit his office
+to be prostituted by any man or influence. The _Kicker_ named a man
+who would not be bribed or cowed and declared that his name would appear
+on the ballot at the next election--to be held on the first Monday in
+November. At the end of the article he printed the man's name--Ben
+Allen!
+
+He had made this announcement without authority, and therefore he was
+not surprised, soon after the appearance of the issue containing the
+article, to see Allen's tall figure darken the door of the _Kicker_
+office while he sat at his desk.
+
+"Durn your hide!" cried the latter as he stood in the doorway; "you're
+the biggest disturber in seven states!"
+
+"Perhaps," smiled Hollis, motioning Allen to a chair. "Still, you don't
+need to thank me. You see, I have decided to clean up this county and I
+need some help. I supposed you were interested. Of course you may refuse
+if you like."
+
+"Refuse!" Allen's eyes flashed as he took Hollis's hand and wrung it
+heartily. "My boy," he declared earnestly, "you couldn't have done
+anything to suit me better. I'm just yearning to take a big hand in this
+game!"
+
+"Interesting, isn't it?" smiled Hollis.
+
+"Some," returned Allen. He grasped Hollis's hand and wrung it heartily.
+"You're a winner and I'm mighty glad to be able to work with you." He
+spoke seriously. "Do you think there's a chance for us to beat
+Dunlavey?"
+
+Hollis laughed. "I flatter myself that a certain editor in this town
+stands rather well with the people of this county since a certain thing
+happened."
+
+"You sure do!" grinned Allen. "Lordy! how this county has needed a man
+like you!"
+
+Hollis smiled. "Then you won't object to being the _Kicker's_
+candidate?" he inquired.
+
+"Object!" returned Allen with mock seriousness. "Say, young man, if you
+don't keep my name at the head of your editorial column from now till
+the first Monday in November I'll come down here and manhandle you!"
+
+And so it was arranged. Dry Bottom gasped in public but rejoiced in
+secret. Many of the town's merchants personally congratulated Hollis.
+
+But for two days following the appearance of the issue of the
+_Kicker_ containing these sensations, Hollis stayed away from Dry
+Bottom. Now that he had launched Allen's campaign and placed the other
+matters before his readers, he began to devote some attention to the
+problem of arranging for Ed Hazelton's visit to the great Chicago
+surgeon. Both Nellie and Ed had been disappointed because of his
+continued absence, and when, on an afternoon a few days after his
+activity in Dry Bottom, he rode up to the Hazelton cabin his welcome was
+a cordial one.
+
+"It seems like a year since I've seen you!" declared Hazelton as he came
+down from the porch to lead Hollis's pony into the shade at the rear of
+the cabin.
+
+While he was gone with the pony Hollis stood looking up at Nellie, who
+had remained seated in her chair on the porch and who was now regarding
+him with eyes in which shone unconcealed pleasure.
+
+"It hasn't really been so long, you know," said Hollis, smiling at her.
+"But then, I have been so busy that I may not have noticed it."
+
+Of course she could not tell him how many times she had sat on the porch
+during Ed's absences watching the Coyote trail. But she blushed and made
+room for him on the porch. Ed appeared presently and joined them there.
+The young man was not able to conceal his joy over the prospect of his
+ultimate recovery from the peculiar malady that afflicted him, and
+gratitude mingled with it as he looked at his benefactor. He had not
+recovered from an attack the day before.
+
+"We've got it all arranged," he told Hollis with a wan smile. "I'm going
+to Chicago just as soon as I can get things fixed." He reddened with
+embarrassment as he continued: "There's some things that I'd like to
+talk to you about before I make up my mind when to start," he said;
+"I've been worrying about what to do with my stock while I'm gone. I
+wouldn't want it to stray or be run off by Dunlavey's gang." The appeal
+in his eyes did not escape Hollis's keen observation.
+
+"I have thought of that too," smiled the latter. "In fact, I have talked
+it over with Norton. He tells me that he won't have any trouble in
+caring for your stock while you are away."
+
+"Thanks." Hazelton did not trust himself to say more at that moment. He
+knew how great would be the task of caring for his stock during his
+absence, and had not Hollis come to his aid with this offer he would
+have had to give up the proposed trip. He sat silent until his composure
+returned, and then he looked up at Hollis gratefully.
+
+"That will make things much easier for Nellie," he said. And then,
+remembering that Hollis knew nothing of his intention to ask him for
+permission to allow Nellie to remain at the Circle Bar during his
+absence, he fell silent again.
+
+"Easier?" inquired Hollis, puzzled. He had supposed that Nellie would
+accompany her brother to Chicago. He did not look at either of the two
+for a time. He had been anticipating a period of lonesomeness and this
+unexpected news came like a bright shaft of light into the darkness.
+
+"But you can't allow her to stay at the cabin alone!" he said when Ed
+did not answer. And then the thought struck him that this peculiar
+silence on Ed's part could mean only one thing--that he and Nellie had
+decided that she was not to accompany him, and that the problem that was
+now confronting them--since he had told them that his men would care for
+the cattle--was the girl's welfare. He appreciated the situation and
+smiled wisely into the yawning distance. But a deep sympathy made the
+smile grim.
+
+"I have sometimes wondered how it were possible for a woman to live in
+this country without having close at hand one of her sex with whom to
+gossip," he remarked, looking at Ed and deliberately closing an eye at
+him. "It doesn't bother a man so much--this being alone. If he is a
+drinking man there are the saloons; if a poet he may write wise saws
+concerning the inconstancy of women; he may punch cows, another man's
+head--or run a newspaper. In any case his mind is occupied.
+
+"But a woman! Of course it is different with a woman. A woman must
+talk--she simply can't help it. There's Mrs. Norton. Only this morning I
+chanced to hear her remark to her lord and master that if he did not
+soon provide her with a companion with whom she might discuss the things
+which are dear to the feminine heart, he might as well make up his mind
+to requisition the mourners. All of which suggests the thought that
+perhaps it would not be a bad idea for Miss Hazelton to bundle up her
+things and advance on the Circle Bar. Thus two ends will be served--Mrs.
+Norton will secure her companion and Norton will find peace." He turned
+to Nellie. "Of course if you are afraid that the cabin will stray during
+your absence I could manage to ride the Coyote trail each morning and
+evening--or you could ride over yourself occasionally."
+
+He could tell by the light in her eyes that she was pleased over the
+suggestion. He was sure of it when she smiled at him.
+
+"If you really think that Mrs. Norton would like some one to talk
+to----" she began, and then hesitated, her eyes suddenly widening as she
+saw an odd light in his. "Oh!" she said, "it isn't true about Mrs.
+Norton wanting to talk. You have guessed that I--that Ed--wanted me to
+go----" But confusion descended upon her and she flushed crimson with
+embarrassment.
+
+"If you think it isn't true, why don't you ride over to the Circle Bar
+and inquire?" he smiled.
+
+"Perhaps I may," she replied, looking at him in mock defiance.
+
+As a precaution against the carrying out of this threat, Hollis that
+night acquainted Mrs. Norton with the facts in the case, even going so
+far as to inform the lady brazenly that he had deliberately lied about
+her. But when she had been fully informed, she told Hollis that she did
+not blame him very much, and that should Nellie carry out her threat to
+come to her upon an errand having as its object a question of his
+veracity, she would assure the young lady that he had spoken the plain
+truth. Would that be sufficient?
+
+Hollis told her that it would, and the following morning on his way to
+Dry Bottom, he took the Coyote trail and stopped off at the Hazelton
+cabin, where he informed Ed that he had decided to send Weary with him
+on his trip to Chicago.
+
+Nellie spoke a few words to him while he lingered beside the porch, but
+her threat of the night before was not repeated and Hollis rightly
+guessed that it would never be carried out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+DUNLAVEY PLAYS A CARD
+
+
+During the week following Ed Hazelton's departure for Chicago Hollis did
+not see much of Nellie. In the few days preceding his departure she had
+not allowed her brother to see how his refusal to allow her to accompany
+him had hurt her, but once he had boarded the east-bound express at Dry
+Bottom, she had yielded to the emotions that she had so far succeeded in
+concealing. Hollis had ridden in to town with them, and not until Nellie
+and he had seen Ed and Weary safely on the train--indeed, not until the
+train was well under way and the two figures on the back platform could
+no longer be discerned--did Nellie break down. Then Hollis turned to her
+with a smile to see the sudden tears well up into her eyes. He had not
+attempted to console her, feeling the awkwardness of the situation.
+
+He was much relieved when she refused his offer to make the return trip
+with her, for he was certain that a few hours alone in which to meditate
+over her loss would enable her to regain her composure. But before
+leaving her he secured her promise not to stop at the cabin, but to go
+on to the Circle Bar. On her arrival at the ranch she was to tell Norton
+to send one of the men to the cabin after the few personal effects that
+she had decided to transfer. But once out of Hollis's sight Nellie
+forgot her promise through fear over the safety of her things. She took
+the Coyote trail, riding slowly through the clear sunshine of the
+morning.
+
+After taking leave of Nellie Hollis rode slowly down the street to the
+_Kicker_ office. He looked in through the window and seeing that
+Potter had not yet arrived, continued down to the court house. He talked
+for a few minutes with Judge Graney. Nothing new had developed. Ben
+Allen had gone to visit several small ranchers the day before and had
+not returned.
+
+Hollis returned to the _Kicker_ office. At noon Potter had arrived,
+bearing the news that he had seen Nellie Hazelton on the Coyote trail,
+within a few miles of the Circle Bar. She had stopped at her cabin and
+there were several bundles strapped to the cantle of her saddle.
+
+That night Hollis did not see her at all. He did not inquire for her,
+but surmised that she was in her room. The next morning soon after he
+had awakened and while he still debated the question of arising, he
+heard her singing in the kitchen. He smiled, thinking how quickly she
+had adapted herself to her new surroundings.
+
+At breakfast he looked closely at her several times, searching for
+evidence of her grief of yesterday. There was none. Therefore he was not
+surprised when, after breakfast, she told him that she intended riding
+with him as far as the cabin for the purpose of bringing the remainder
+of her effects. He gravely reminded her that she had broken her promise
+of yesterday, and that as a punishment he contemplated refusing her
+request. But when, an hour later, he urged his pony down the river trail
+she was riding beside him.
+
+But she did not ride again that week. She did not tell Hollis the
+reason; that returning that evening she had reached the Razor-Back and
+was riding along its crest when she happened to glance across the
+Rabbit-Ear toward the Circle Cross. On the opposite side of the river
+she had seen two men, sitting quietly in their saddles, watching her.
+They were Dunlavey and Yuma. She did not know what their presence there
+meant, but the sight was disquieting and she feared to return to the
+cabin for the few things that were still here.
+
+But as the days went her fears were dispersed. Time and the lure of her
+old home had revived her courage, and on a day about a week following
+her previous trip, she herself saddled and bridled her pony and set out
+over the Coyote trail toward her cabin.
+
+She had not told Hollis of her intention to ride there, fearing that the
+knowledge of what she had seen on the day of the other ride would be
+revealed in her eyes. It was a good hour after noon when she stole out
+of the house to her pony, mounted, and rode away toward the river.
+
+For many days she had been wondering at Dunlavey's continued inaction.
+He had been known as an energetic enemy, and though at their last
+meeting in Dry Bottom he had threatened her and her brother, he had so
+far made no hostile move. Uusually he would go a considerable distance
+out of his way to speak to her. Perhaps, she thought, at their last
+meeting she had shown him that he was wasting his time. Yet she could
+not forget that day when she had seen Yuma and Dunlavey on the Circle
+Cross side of the Rabbit-Ear. The sight somehow had been significant and
+forbidding.
+
+But when she reached her cabin she had forgotten Dunlavey and Yuma; her
+thoughts dwelt upon more pleasant people. Had she done right in allowing
+Hollis to see that she was interested in him? Would he think less of her
+for revealing this interest? She could not answer these questions, but
+she could answer another--one that brought the blushes to her cheeks.
+Why had Hollis shown an interest in her? She had known this answer for a
+long time--when she had read Ace's poem to him while sitting on the
+porch beside him, to be perfectly accurate. She had pretended then to
+take offense when he had assured her that Ace had succeeded in getting
+much truth into his lines, especially into the first couplet, which ran:
+
+ "Woman--she don't need no tutor,
+ Be she school ma'am or biscuit shooter."
+
+The language had not been graceful, nor the diction, yet she knew that
+Ace had struck the mark fairly, for woman indeed needed no tutor to
+teach her to understand man--woman had always understood him.
+
+She dismounted from her pony at the edge of the porch, hitching the
+animal to one of the slender porch columns. Then she went into the house
+to gather up the few things that still remained there.
+
+But for a long time after entering the cabin she sat on a chair in the
+kitchen, sobbing softly, for now that Ed had gone she felt the
+desolation of the country more than ever. Presently she rose and with a
+start looked out of the door. The dusk had fallen; darkness was stealing
+into the valley around the cabin!
+
+Flitting here and there, she hurriedly began packing things which she
+took from shelves and racks. It was an engrossing task and she was much
+interested in it, so much so that she did not hear a slight sound at the
+door that led out to the front porch. But when she saw a shadow darken
+the doorway of the room in which she was working she stood suddenly
+erect and with rapidly beating heart stole softly forward and peered
+around the door-jamb. Of course it could be no one but Hollis. He had
+taken the Coyote trail to-night. He would be surprised to see her.
+
+But it was she who was surprised. Yuma stood near the table in the
+center of the kitchen, looking straight at her, his insolent, evil face
+drawn into a foreboding smile.
+
+After the first gasp of horror and surprise a righteous anger stiffened
+her.
+
+"What are you doing here?" she demanded.
+
+Yuma's evil smile grew. She had seen him often, usually at a distance,
+for she had abhorred him, with his olive skin, his thin, cruel lips and
+small glittering eyes. He had always seemed like an animal to her,
+though she could not have told why. She thought it must be something in
+his attitude, in the stoop which was almost a crouch, in the stealthy,
+cat-like manner in which he walked. She had spoken to Ed about him more
+than once, conveying to him her abhorrence of the man, and he had told
+her that he felt the same about him. She shuddered now, thinking of what
+her brother had told her of the man's cruelty. Dunlavey had often
+boasted that Yuma was the most venomous and bloodthirsty of his crew of
+cut-throats.
+
+"What are you doing here?" she repeated, her anger growing.
+
+Yuma laughed softly. "I saw you ridin' the Razor Back the other day," he
+said, showing his teeth as the words came--even, smooth, burdened with a
+subtle mockery. "I saw you again thees afternoon--but you not see me
+like the other day--I watch you thees long." He held up three fingers to
+denote that he had watched her three hours. She shuddered, suddenly
+realizing the significance of his attitude that day she had seen him
+from the Razor Back.
+
+"Ed gone," he continued, watching her narrowly; "nobody here; I come. I
+like you--much." He grinned, his eyes brightening. "I reckon you
+know--you girl that understan'?"
+
+She drew a slow deep breath. Curiously enough, next to the horror and
+doubt that she felt over Yuma's presence at the cabin was a wonder for
+the idioms of cowboy speech that were interjected with his own. He had
+caught them from association, she supposed. She made a pretense of
+boldness, though she felt more like screaming.
+
+"Leave this cabin!" she commanded sharply.
+
+Yuma did not change his position. "Leave heem?" he laughed. "I theenk
+not. Dunlavey says me come here--make um love me--same as tenderfoot
+noospaper man!" He laughed again, exultantly. "Dunlavey say you spark
+tenderfoot--you spark me!"
+
+She trembled, realizing that a crisis was at hand and that she must meet
+it boldly. She thought of the ivory-handled weapon in the holster at her
+hip and involuntarily her right hand dropped to its butt. She had
+learned to shoot, but she had never yet shot at a man and she drew her
+hand away from the butt of the weapon with a shudder. Yuma had been
+watching her closely, his evil little eyes glittering, and when he saw
+her hand drop away he laughed derisively.
+
+"You no shoot heem!" he said. "You 'fraid. Dunlavey say he reckon you no
+shoot--say you make love to um right away!"
+
+He smiled significantly and took a step toward her. She made an
+involuntary step backward and her right hand again sought the butt of
+the revolver, the left closing on the edge of the door that opened into
+her room. Terror had given her courage and as Yuma continued to advance
+with a soft, cautious, cat-like sliding movement, she drew the revolver
+and presented it, though her hand wavered a little.
+
+"If you take another step toward me, Yuma, I will kill you!" she
+declared.
+
+She saw his little eyes glitter with decision, saw him measure the
+distance between them, saw him crouch for a spring.
+
+She fired, aiming at the lower edge of the scarf that sagged at his
+throat. The smoke from the pistol blinded her; she heard his laugh,
+heard the rush of his feet as he hurled himself forward. Terror stricken
+over her failure to hit him, she dropped the pistol and whirled,
+grasping the edge of the door and slamming it shut in his face. She felt
+his weight against it, but he had been taken by surprise by the
+movement; there was the strength of desperation in her body and she held
+the door closed against him while she shoved the fastenings into place.
+
+Then, suddenly overcome, she leaned weakly against the jamb, her heart
+thumping hard, her nerves tingling.
+
+For a long time she did not move, and there came no sound from the other
+side of the door to tell her of Yuma's movements. There was a wild hope
+in her heart that he had gone, but presently, becoming a little calmer,
+she pressed her ear against the door. There was no doubt of Yuma's
+presence; she could hear him stepping softly about the room. Had there
+been a window in the room in which she had imprisoned herself she might
+have escaped, but unfortunately there was not.
+
+She fell to thinking of the revolver she had dropped when Yuma had
+sprung upon her. It must have dropped very close to the door. Had Yuma
+picked it up? There was a chance that he had not. If the weapon were
+still there and she could open the door and secure it and close the door
+again, she would be in a position to defend herself. She could not
+defend herself without it. If Yuma should burst the door open she would
+be at his mercy. She must get the revolver.
+
+Convinced of this she stood for some little time at the door, her ear
+pressed against it, listening for any sound that might tell her of the
+whereabouts of Yuma in the cabin. She heard nothing. Perhaps he had
+gone? But she listened a while longer, determined to be certain before
+loosening the fastenings of the door. Silence--a premonitory
+silence--filled the room beyond the door. She could hear nothing except
+her own rapid breathing. Presently she heard a horse whinny. Was Yuma at
+the horses? It seemed incredible that any man should visit the cabin
+purposely to attack her. Perhaps Yuma had only intended to frighten her;
+he had said that Dunlavey had told him to follow her, but she believed
+that Dunlavey, in spite of his reputation for lawlessness and trickery,
+was not so unmanly as to incite the half-breed to attack her. He may
+have told him to steal the horses--she could believe that of him!
+
+But for a long time, in spite of the quieting influence of these
+thoughts, she kept her ear pressed against the door. Then, moved by a
+sudden impulse--an accession of courage inspired by the continued
+silence--she cautiously loosened the fastenings and swung the door
+slowly open.
+
+Her revolver lay close and with a swift movement she reached for it. As
+her fingers grasped its butt she heard a slight sound and Yuma was upon
+her from behind, pinning her arms to her sides. She felt his breath on
+her neck, heard his laugh, exultant and derisive, mocking her. His right
+hand, gripping hers tightly, was slipping slowly down toward the hand
+that held the revolver. She struggled desperately, squirming and
+twisting in his grasp, silently matching her strength against his.
+Finding this hopeless and feeling his hand gradually slipping toward the
+revolver, she suddenly raised her hand toward her face, bringing Yuma's
+hand, still on her arm, with it. Then she dropped her head to his arm
+near the wrist, and sank her teeth savagely into the flesh.
+
+Yuma howled in anguish, loosening his hold momentarily. In an instant
+she had wrenched herself free and had bounded to the center of the room,
+placing the kitchen table between herself and her assailant.
+
+But he was after her with a bound, his little eyes gleaming with a
+venomous expression, his face contorted with passion. She raised the
+revolver and fired. For a breathless instant she thought that she had
+hit him, for he sank almost to the floor. But she saw that it was only a
+trick for he was up again on the instant, a mocking smile on his face
+and closer than ever. She fired again, and when she saw him sink to the
+floor she pulled the trigger a second time. He had been very close to
+the table when she fired the last time and before she could press the
+trigger again he had lurched forward under it, raising it on his
+shoulders and sending it crashing down behind him as he confronted her,
+his evil face close to hers, his hands again gripping her arms.
+
+She fought him silently, and together they reeled around the cabin. She
+bit him again, and then in an outburst of savage fury he brutally
+twisted the arm in which she still held the revolver, sending the weapon
+crashing to the floor. While twisting her arm he had been compelled to
+loosen his grasp of the other slightly, and she again wrenched herself
+free and darted toward the door leading to the porch. But he bounded
+forward, intercepting her, and with a last, despairing effort she raised
+both hands to his face and clawed furiously at his eyes.
+
+She heard a savage curse from him, saw the lust of murder in his little,
+glittering eyes, felt his sinewy fingers at her throat. Then objects
+within the cabin swam in a dizzy, blurring circle before her. She heard
+a crash--seeming to come from a great distance; heard Yuma curse again.
+And then, borne resistlessly forward by the weight of his body, she
+tumbled to the floor in an inert heap.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+PROOF OF GRATITUDE
+
+
+Shortly after noon on the same day Hollis, finding work irksome, closed
+his desk with a bang, told Potter that he was going home, mounted his
+pony, and loped the animal out the Dry Bottom trail. He remembered
+hearing Norton tell one of the men that morning that he suspected that
+several of Ed Hazelton's cattle were still in the vicinity of the basin
+near the Hazelton cabin, and he determined to ride around that way and
+try to turn them back toward the Circle Bar. It would be recreation for
+him after a hot morning in the office.
+
+He also remembered another thing that had occurred that morning at the
+ranch house. Mrs. Norton had assured him--with a sly, eloquent glance at
+him--that he might do worse than to make arrangements to keep Nellie
+Hazelton at the Circle Bar indefinitely. At the risk of being considered
+obtuse Hollis had ignored the hint, broad though it had been. But Mrs.
+Norton's words had shown him that Nellie stood high in her estimation
+and he felt a queer, unaccountable elation.
+
+After striking the Dry Bottom trail he took a circuitous route and some
+time later came out upon a high ridge overlooking a basin. There were
+some cattle down there and he made a mental note of the locality so that
+he would be able to tell Norton where to have the men look for the
+cattle. Then he rode along the ridge until he could no longer see the
+basin. He spent most of the afternoon exploring the surrounding country,
+and then when the dusk began to fall he retraced his steps to the ridge
+upon which he had ridden earlier in the afternoon. Something familiar in
+the shape of the hills near him struck him and he halted his pony and
+smiled. These were the hills that he had seen many times from the
+Hazelton porch. He faced around, certain that if the hills could be seen
+from the porch he would be able to discern the porch from some point on
+the ridge, for he was satisfied that he must be nearly in line with it.
+He rode back and forth a few moments, and then, coming out on a bald
+spot on the ridge, he saw the cabin.
+
+It was about a mile away, snuggled comfortably down in a little basin,
+with some trees and shrubbery flanking it on both sides. He smiled as he
+looked at it, and then suddenly his face clouded, for he saw two ponies
+hitched to the porch. His forehead wrinkled perplexedly over this. He
+was certain that Nellie rode the same animal each time, because she
+would not trust any of the others that were now with the remuda. One of
+the horses belonged to her of course, for he could see the gay ribbon
+with which she was accustomed to decorate her animal's bridle. But to
+whom did the other horse belong? He gazed steadily toward the cabin,
+searching for signs of life on the porch. But though he could see
+clearly--even into the shadows from a rambling rose bush that clung to
+the eaves of the roof--no human figure appeared on the porch.
+
+Certainly Nellie must have a visitor. But who? He was not aware that the
+Hazeltons had made friends with anyone in the neighborhood besides
+himself and the Nortons. He smiled. Probably some cowboy from the Circle
+Bar had been in the vicinity looking for Hazelton's cattle, had met
+Nellie, and had stopped at the cabin. He remembered to have heard Norton
+say that he was sending a man in that direction some time that day.
+
+That must be the explanation. But while he sat, debating the propriety
+of riding down to the cabin to satisfy his curiosity, the sound of a
+pistol shot floated to his ears on the slight breeze that was blowing
+toward him.
+
+He sat erect, his face paling. Then he smiled again. He had been in the
+West long enough to become acquainted with the cowboy nature and he
+surmised that Nellie's visitor was very likely exhibiting his skill with
+the revolver. But he turned his pony and urged it down the sloping side
+of the ridge, riding slowly in the direction of the cabin.
+
+After striking the bottom of the slope he rode cut upon a broad level
+that stretched away for half a mile. He made better time here and had
+almost covered half the width of the plain when two more reports reached
+his ears. He was close enough now to hear them distinctly and it seemed
+to him that they sounded muffled. He halted the pony and sat stiffly in
+the saddle, his gaze on the cabin. Then he saw a thin stream of
+blue-white smoke issue from the doorway and curl lazily upward.
+
+A grave doubt assailed him. No cowboy would be likely to exhibit his
+skill with a weapon in the cabin! Nellie's visitor must be an unwelcome
+one!
+
+The pony felt the sudden spurs and raced like a whirlwind over the
+remaining stretch of plain. Hollis had become suddenly imbued with a
+suspicion that brought an ashen pallor to his face and an awful rage
+into his heart. He slid his pony down one side of a steep arroyo, sent
+it scrambling up the other side, jumped it over some rocks that littered
+the rise, spurred savagely through a little basin, and reaching the edge
+of the porch, dismounted and bounded to the door.
+
+He saw two figures--Nellie Hazelton and a man. He saw the man's fingers
+gripping the girl's throat and the lust of murder surged over and
+blinded him. In the dusk that had fallen he could only dimly see the
+man's head and he swung his right fist at it, putting every ounce of his
+strength into the blow. He felt the fist strike, realized that it had
+glanced, and tried to recover for a second blow.
+
+But the terrific swing had carried him off his balance. He whirled clear
+around, slipped, and came down to the floor flat on his face. He was up
+in an instant, however, his brain afire with rage, his muscles tingling
+with eagerness. He did not think of the gun at his hip, for the lust of
+murder was in his soul and he wanted only to hit the man--to seize him
+and tear him apart--to crush and smash the vile hands that he had seen
+at the girl's throat.
+
+Five feet from him, facing him, on his hands and knees and scrambling to
+rise, was the man. He recognized Yuma, and even as he bounded forward
+the latter gained his feet and tugged at his gun-holster. The weapon had
+not yet cleared the holster when Hollis was upon him. He struck again
+with his right fist and missed, crashing against Yuma in his eagerness
+and carrying him down to the floor with a force that shook the cabin. As
+they fell Hollis felt a sharp, agonizing pain in his left wrist, from
+which the splints had been only recently removed, and the hand hung limp
+at his side, entirely useless.
+
+For an instant after the fall Yuma lay still, breathing heavily. Then he
+made a sudden movement with his right arm and Hollis caught a glint of
+metal. He threw himself at the arm, catching it with his right hand just
+above the wrist and jamming it tight to the floor. Yuma tried to squirm
+free, failed, and with a curse drove his left fist into the side of
+Hollis's face. Again he tried to squirm free and during the struggle
+that followed the hand holding the pistol was raised from the floor.
+Hollis saw it and wrenched desperately at the arm, twisting it and
+dragging it furiously downward to the floor. Yuma shrieked with rage and
+pain as the force of the impact cracked his knuckles and sent the weapon
+clattering ten feet away.
+
+For an instant both men lay silent, panting from their exertions. Then
+Yuma succeeded in getting one leg over Hollis's body and one arm around
+his neck. With a quick motion--successful because of Hollis's injured
+wrist--he turned the latter over on his back. His eyes alight with an
+exultant, malevolent fire, he gripped Hollis's throat with one hand and
+drove at his face with the other. A quick movement of the head served to
+defeat Yuma's aim and his fist thumped heavily against the floor,
+bringing a grimace of pain to his face. Disregarding his injured wrist,
+Hollis wrenched savagely and succeeded in rolling free of Yuma and
+reaching his feet. He had moved quickly, but the lithe, cat-like
+half-breed was before him, bounding toward the pistol on the floor. He
+was bending over it, his fingers gripping its butt, when Hollis,
+throwing himself forward bodily, crashed into him and hurled him heavily
+to the floor.
+
+This time Yuma lay face downward, his arms outstretched, and Hollis lay
+sprawled out on top of him. But Yuma had succeeded in holding to the
+pistol; it was grasped in his outstretched right hand, just out of
+Hollis's reach.
+
+For an instant again both men lay silent, breathing rapidly. Then,
+yielding to the rage that still possessed him, Hollis bounded to his
+feet, striking Yuma a crashing blow in the face as he did so. While Yuma
+reeled he brought his booted foot down on the hand holding the pistol,
+grinding it under his heel.
+
+Yuma screamed with pain and rage and got to his feet, holding his
+injured hand with the other. The pistol lay on the floor where Yuma had
+dropped it when Hollis's boot had come in contact with his hand. For an
+instant Yuma stood gripping his hand, his face hideous with passion.
+Then with a snarl of rage and hate he drew a knife from the folds of his
+shirt and sprang toward Hollis.
+
+Hollis tensed himself for the clash, rapidly measuring the distance, and
+when Yuma came close enough caught him squarely on the side of the jaw
+with a vicious right swing. But in some manner when Hollis stepped aside
+to avoid Yuma's knife, his feet had become entangled with the legs of
+the table that Yuma had previously overturned. As he struck he slipped,
+the blow at Yuma's jaw not having the force he intended it to have. He
+caught himself, slipped again and went down, turning completely over the
+table top and falling face downward to the floor. He saw Yuma throw
+himself forward and he tried to wriggle out of danger, but he failed. He
+felt the half-breed's weight on his body, saw the knife flash in the
+dull light. He tried to roll over and grasp the knife in its descent,
+but could not, his left arm, now useless, being pinned to the floor by
+Yuma's knee.
+
+A revolver roared spitefully--once--twice. Yuma's knife hissed past
+Hollis's ear and struck the floor, its point sunk deep, its handle
+swaying idly back and forth. Yuma himself--inert, limp, rolled from
+Hollis's back and lay flat on his own, his eyes wide open and staring,
+two huge bullet holes in his forehead. And in the open doorway of the
+cabin stood Ten Spot.
+
+For an instant Hollis could not realize his escape. He looked at Yuma
+and then again at Ten Spot. Slowly and painfully he got to his feet,
+looking around at the wreck of the room. Staggering a little, he walked
+to where Ten Spot stood, gripping the latter's hand silently, at a loss
+for words with which to thank him.
+
+But apparently Ten Spot did not notice the omission, for he grinned
+broadly.
+
+"I reckon there's folks which would call that a right clever bit of
+shootin'," he said, "seem' a? there wasn't time to pull off no fancy
+stuff!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+TEN SPOT USES HIS EYES
+
+
+The crash of Ten Spot's pistols aroused Nellie Hazelton, and she sat up
+and stared stupidly about--at Hollis, who was just rising from the
+floor; at Ten Spot, who still stood in the doorway; and then at Yuma's
+body, stretched out on the floor beside the overturned table. She
+shuddered and covered her face with her hands. The next instant Hollis
+was bending over her, helping her to her feet, leading her to the door
+and assuring her in a low, earnest voice that everything was all right,
+and that Yuma would never trouble her again, and that he wanted her to
+get on her pony and go to the Circle Bar. She allowed herself to be led
+out on the porch, but once there she looked at him with renewed spirit.
+
+"It was you who came first," she said; "I didn't see you, but I heard
+Yuma curse, felt something strike him, and then--I must have fainted.
+You see, I felt it must be you--I had been expecting you."
+
+As she spoke she seized his hands and pressed them tightly, her eyes
+eloquent with thankfulness. "Oh, I am so glad!" she whispered. Then she
+saw Ten Spot standing in the doorway and she ran over and seized his
+hands also, shaking them hysterically. And Ten Spot stood, red of face,
+grinning bashfully at her--like a big, awkward, embarrassed schoolboy.
+
+"That's the first time I've ever been thanked for shootin' anybody!" he
+confided to Hollis, later. "An' it cert'nly did feel some strange!"
+
+In spite of Hollis's remonstrances the girl insisted on returning to the
+interior of the cabin, to "bundle up her things." Feeling the futility
+of further objection, Hollis finally allowed her to enter. But while she
+was busy in one of the rooms he and Ten Spot carried Yuma's body
+outside, around to the rear of the cabin.
+
+Then, when the girl had finally secured her "things" and they had been
+securely tied to her pony, and she had started down the trail toward the
+Circle Bar ranch, Hollis and Ten Spot returned to the rear of the cabin,
+took up Yuma's body, carried it to a secluded spot at some little
+distance from the cabin and there buried it deep and quickly.
+
+"I want to thank you again," said Hollis as he and Ten Spot stood on the
+porch when Hollis was ready to depart; "it was a great stroke of luck
+that brought you here just when you were needed."
+
+Ten Spot grinned. "I don't think it was just luck that brought me," he
+said; "though mebbe it was luck that took me into the Fashion this
+morning. Whatever it was, I was in there, an' I heard Dunlavey an' Yuma
+cookin' this here deal. I wasn't feelin' entirely ongrateful for the way
+you'd treated me after you'd got my gun that day in the _Kicker_
+office an' I wasn't intendin' to let happen what Dunlavey wanted to
+happen. So I got out of the Fashion as soon as I could an' trailed Yuma.
+I've been after him all day, but somehow or other I lost him an' didn't
+find out where he'd gone till a little while ago--when I heard a gun go
+off. Then I hit the breeze here--after Yuma. That's all. That's how I
+come to get here so lucky." He stuck out a hand to Hollis. "Well,
+so-long," he said; "I'm hittin' the breeze out of the country." He
+stepped forward to his pony, but hesitated when he heard Hollis speak.
+
+"Then you're not going back to the Circle Cross--to work for Dunlavey?"
+questioned the latter.
+
+"Well, no," grinned Ten Spot. "You see, it might not be so pleasant now
+as it's been. I reckon when Dunlavey hears this he won't be exactly
+tickled."
+
+Hollis contemplated him gravely. "So you're going to leave the country?"
+he said slowly, his eyes twinkling. "I take it you are not afraid----"
+
+"Don't!" said Ten Spot coldly and sharply. Then he grinned with feline
+cordiality. "I reckon I ain't scared of anyone," he said, "but I ain't
+likin' to go back to the Circle Cross after puttin' Yuma out of
+business. I've done some mean things in my time, but I ain't dealin'
+double with no man, an' I couldn't go back to the Circle Cross an' work
+for Dunlavey when I ain't sympathizin' with him none."
+
+"I'm shy of good cowhands," offered Hollis quietly. "If forty a month
+would be----"
+
+Ten Spot's right hand was suddenly gripping Hollis's. "You've hired a
+man, boss!" he said, his eyes alight with pleasure. "Ever since you
+clawed me that day in the _Kicker_ office I've had a hankerin' to
+work for you. I was wonder in' if you'd ast me. There ain't no damn----"
+
+"Then it's a bargain," laughed Hollis, interrupting. "You can start
+right now." He pointed to the ridge upon which he had been riding when
+he heard the shot that had brought him to the cabin. "Some of Ed
+Hazelton's cattle are in the basin on the other side of that ridge," he
+said. "You go over there and keep an eye on them until I can get a
+chance to send some one here to help you drive them back up the river
+toward the Circle Bar." As he came to the edge of the porch to mount his
+pony his gaze fell on Yuma's horse, still hitched to one of the columns.
+"What are we going to do with Yuma's horse?" he questioned.
+
+Ten Spot grinned. He walked over to the pony, unhitched it, and with a
+vicious slap on the flank sent it loping down the trail toward the
+river.
+
+"That'll be my message to Dunlavey that Yuma ain't here any more," he
+said grimly.
+
+Hollis mounted and rode a short distance, but halted and turned in the
+saddle when he heard Ten Spot call to him.
+
+"Boss," he said with a grin, "I ain't exactly blind, an' mebbe you've
+got your eyes with you, too. But I saw that there Hazelton girl lookin'
+at you sorta----"
+
+He saw a smile on Hollis's face, but the rest of his speech was drowned
+in a clatter of hoofs as the "boss's" pony tore down the Coyote trail.
+Then Ten Spot smiled, mounted his pony, and rode away toward the ridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+CAMPAIGN GUNS
+
+
+Of course Yuma had been amply punished for his part in the attack on
+Nellie Hazelton, but there still remained Dunlavey--who had instigated
+it. Hollis was aware of the uselessness of bringing a charge against
+Dunlavey--he had not forgotten his experience with Bill Watkins when he
+had attempted to have Greasy brought to justice. He believed that he
+would not have brought such a charge had there been any probability of
+the sheriff taking action. He felt that in inciting Yuma to attack
+Nellie, Dunlavey had also contemplated a blow at him. The man's devilish
+ingenuity appalled him, but it also aroused a fierce anger in his heart
+that, in the absence of a powerful will, would have moved him to
+immediate vengeance.
+
+But he contemplated no immediate action. Besides the attack on Nellie
+Hazelton there was another score to settle with Dunlavey, and when the
+time came for a final accounting he told himself that he would settle
+both. He knew there would come such a time. From the beginning he had
+felt that he and the Circle Cross manager were marked by fate for a
+clash. He was eager for it, but content to wait until the appointed
+time. And he knew that the time was not far distant.
+
+Therefore he remained silent regarding the incident, and except to
+Norton and his wife, Nellie Hazelton, Ten Spot, and himself, the
+disappearance of Yuma remained a mystery.
+
+Dunlavey, perhaps, might have had his suspicions, but if so he
+communicated them to no one, and so as the days passed the mystery
+ceased to be discussed and Yuma was forgotten.
+
+Hollis received a letter from Weary, dated "Chicago," announcing the
+safe arrival of himself and Ed Hazelton. "Town" suited him to a "T," he
+wrote. But Doctor Hammond would not operate at once--he wanted time to
+study the symptoms of Ed's malady. That was all. Hollis turned this
+letter over to Nellie, with another from Ed, addressed to her--whose
+contents remained a mystery to him.
+
+Ben Allen had returned from his visit to the small ranchers in the
+vicinity, had confided to Hollis that he had "mixed a little politics
+with business," and then, after receiving a telegram from the Secretary
+of the Interior, had taken himself off to Santa Fe to confer with the
+governor.
+
+After several days he returned. He entered the _Kicker_ office to
+greet Hollis, his face wreathed in smiles.
+
+"You've got 'em all stirred up, my boy!" he declared, placing his hand
+on Hollis's shoulder with a resounding "smack"; "they're goin' to
+enforce the little law we've got and they've passed some new ones.
+Here's a few! First and foremost, cattle stealing is to be considered
+felony! Penalty, from one to twenty years! Next--free water! Being as
+the rivers in this Territory ain't never been sold with what land the
+government sharks has disposed of, any cattleman's got the right to
+water wherever he wants to. The governor told me that if it's necessary
+he'll send Uncle Sam's blue coats anywhere in the Territory to enforce
+that! Third: after a man's registered his brand he can't change it
+unless he applies to the district judge. Them that ain't registered
+their brand ain't entitled to no protection. I reckon there's trouble
+ahead for any man which monkeys with another man's brand!
+
+"Say!" Allen eyed Hollis whimsically; "that new governor's all het up
+over you! Had a copy of the _Kicker_ in front of him on his desk
+when he was talkin' to me. Says you're a scrapper from the word go, an'
+that he'd back you up long as there was a blue coat anywhere in the
+Territory!"
+
+Allen's speech was ungrammatical, but its message was one of good cheer
+and Hollis's eyes brightened. The Law was coming at last! He could not
+help but wonder what Dunlavey's feelings would be when he heard of it.
+For himself, he felt as any man must feel who, laboring at a seemingly
+impossible task, endless and thankless, sees in the distance the
+possible, the end, and the plaudits of his friends.
+
+Yes, he could see the end, but the end was not yet. He looked gravely at
+Allen.
+
+"Did you happen to hear when these laws become effective?" he inquired.
+
+"On the first day of October!" returned Allen, triumphantly.
+
+Hollis smiled. "And election day is the third of November," he said.
+"That gives Dunlavey, Watkins and Company a month's grace--in case you
+are elected sheriff."
+
+Allen grinned. "They can't do a heap in a month," he said.
+
+"No," returned Hollis, "but in most elections that have come under my
+observation, I have noticed that the winning candidate does not assume
+office for a considerable time after the election. What is the custom
+out here?"
+
+Allen grinned grimly. "Usually it's two weeks," he said, "but if I'm
+elected it will be the next day--if I have to go down to the sheriff's
+office and drag Bill Watkins out by the hair!"
+
+"That belligerent spirit does you credit," dryly observed Hollis. "It
+will afford me great pleasure to participate in the festivities. But
+there is another matter to be thought of--which we seem to have
+overlooked. Usually before an election there is a primary, or a
+convention, is there not?"
+
+"There is," grinned Allen. "It's to-night, and I'm ready for it!" His
+grin expanded to a wide, whimsical smile. "I told you that I'd been
+mixing a little politics with business," he said. "Well, I've done so."
+He got up and approached the front window of the office, sweeping a hand
+toward the street. "If you'll just get up and look out here," he said,
+"you'll see that I ain't lying. There's some good in being an
+ex-office-holder--you get experience enough to tell you how to run a
+campaign." He bowed to Hollis. "Now, if you'll look close at that gang
+which is mixing palaver in front of the Silver Dollar you'll mebbe
+notice that Lemuel Train is in it, an' Truxton, of the Diamond Dot,
+Holcomb, of the Star, Yeager, of the Three Diamond, Clark, of the Circle
+Y, Henningson, of the Three Bar, Toban, of the T Down, an' some more
+which has come in for the racket tonight. Countin' 'em all--the punchers
+which have come in with the fellows I have named--there'll be about
+seventy-five.
+
+"An', say!" he added, suddenly confronting Hollis and grasping him by
+the shoulder and shaking him playfully and admiringly, "there wouldn't a
+durn one of them have come over here on my account. They up an' told me
+so when I asked them. Said they'd nothin' ag'in me, but they wasn't
+considerin' votin' at all. But since Hollis wanted me--well, they'd come
+over just to show you that they appreciated what you'd done for them!"
+
+Hollis smiled. He did not tell Allen that since the appearance of the
+_Kicker_ containing the announcement that he was to be its
+candidate he had written every small rancher in the vicinity, requesting
+as a personal favor that they appear in Dry Bottom on the day of the
+primary; that these letters had been delivered by Ace, and that when the
+poet returned he had presented Hollis with a list containing the name of
+every rancher who had promised to come, and that several days before
+Hollis had known approximately how many votes Allen would receive at the
+primary. He did not intend that Allen should know this--or that he had
+been going quietly from one Dry Bottom merchant to another, appealing to
+them for their support. And the earnestness with which many of them had
+promised had convinced him that the primary was to be the beginning of
+the end for Bill Watkins and Dunlavey.
+
+When he had first come to Dry Bottom it had been universally conceded by
+the town's citizens that his differences with Dunlavey and the
+Cattlemen's Association were purely personal, and there had been a
+disposition on the part of the citizens to let them fight it out between
+themselves. But of late there had come a change in that sentiment. The
+change had been gradual, beginning with the day when he had told the
+author of the notice that had appeared on the door of the _Kicker_
+office not to hold the express on his account. But the change had come
+and it was evident that it was to be permanent. It had only been
+necessary to arouse the government to the situation in order to secure
+intervention. He had hoped to secure this intervention without being
+forced to a hostile clash with the opposition, but his first meeting
+with Dunlavey had spoiled that. Subsequent events had widened the
+breach.
+
+He was satisfied. Let Bill Watkins be defeated for sheriff and Dunlavey
+was beaten. But there was much to be done before that desirable end
+could be achieved.
+
+Following the custom the primary was to be held in the sheriff's office.
+Watkins had issued a proclamation some weeks before; it had appeared on
+the door of the sheriff's office--a written notice, tacked to the
+door--but it had been removed the same day. Obviously, it was the
+sheriff's intention to conduct the primary as quietly as possible,
+hoping no doubt to disarm whatever opposition might develop. But Hollis
+had been apprised of the appearance of the proclamation and had quietly
+proceeded to plant the seed of opposition to Watkins in the minds of his
+friends.
+
+He had been warned by Judge Graney that Watkins would try to "pack" the
+sheriff's office with his friends on the night of the primary. This had
+been the usual method employed by Dunlavey when opposition to Watkins
+developed. Drunken, dissolute, dangerous men were usually on hand to
+overawe the opposition; the Judge told of instances in which gunplay had
+developed. But Hollis had determined that Watkins must be beaten.
+
+Allen did not stay long in the _Kicker_ office. Nor, for that
+matter, did Hollis. Once, during the morning, he went down to the court
+house to talk with Judge Graney. Then he returned to the _Kicker_
+office and worked until noon.
+
+During the morning there had been a surprising influx of visitors.
+Bronzed punchers on dusty, drooping ponies rode down the town's one
+street, dropped from their saddles, and sought the saloons. Groups of
+them swarmed the streets and the stores. As Hollis walked down to his
+office after leaving the court house, he was kept busy nodding to
+friends--many of whom had become such during the later days of the
+drought. Merchants grinned at him from their doorways; Dunlavey's
+friends sneered as he passed or sent ribald jokes after him.
+
+At noon he went to the Alhambra for lunch. Almost the first person he
+saw there was Dunlavey. The latter grinned at him mockingly.
+
+"Friends of yours in town to-day," he said with a sneer. "Well, you'll
+need them!"
+
+His voice had been loud enough for all in the restaurant to hear. Hollis
+did not answer, though he appreciated the significance of Dunlavey's
+words; they told him that the Circle Cross manager was aware of the
+contemplated contest and was ready for it.
+
+During the afternoon Dry Bottom presented a decidedly different
+appearance from the day when Hollis had first viewed it. Animation had
+succeeded desolation. Perhaps a hundred cowponies were hitched to the
+rails that paralleled the fronts of the saloons, the stores, and many of
+the private dwellings. It was apparent that many of the visitors had
+made the trip to town for the double purpose of voting and securing
+supplies, for mixed with the ponies were numerous wagons of various
+varieties, their owners loading them with boxes and crates. Men swarmed
+the sidewalks; the saloons buzzed.
+
+Toward dusk the volume of noise in the saloons drowned all sound
+outside. Having made their purchases the ranchers who had driven in for
+supplies and had loaded their wagons preparatory to departure found time
+to join their friends and acquaintances over a convivial glass. By the
+time the kerosene lamps were lighted in the saloons revelry reigned.
+From one saloon issued the shrieking, discordant notes of a violin,
+accompanied by the scuffling of feet; from another came laughter and the
+clinking of glasses; from still another came harsh oaths and obscene
+shouts. In the latter place rose the laughter of women.
+
+Seated at his desk near the front window of the _Kicker_ office
+Hollis gravely watched the scene--listened to the sounds. In another
+chair sat Potter. There was no light in the office; neither man had
+thought of a light. As the revelry in the saloons increased the printer
+glanced furtively at his chief.
+
+"There'll be hell to-night!" he said.
+
+"I expect there will be trouble," agreed Hollis.
+
+Potter shifted uneasily in his chair, eyeing his employer with a worried
+expression. He was silent for a moment. Then he cleared his throat
+nervously.
+
+"Do you intend to go there--to the sheriff's office--to-night?" he
+questioned.
+
+Hollis looked quickly at him. "Of course!" he said with emphasis. "Why?"
+he interrogated.
+
+"Nothing," returned Potter; "only----" he hesitated and then blurted
+out: "I wouldn't go if I were you. They've been saying that if you do
+there'll be trouble. You know what that means."
+
+"Who has been saying that?" inquired Hollis.
+
+"I heard it at noon--in the Silver Dollar. Some of Dunlavey's men sat
+near me and I heard them saying that Watkins was to win if they had to
+put two or three of his chief opponents out of business."
+
+"I have been expecting that," returned Hollis. He said nothing more and
+Potter, having done his duty, felt that he had no business to interfere
+further.
+
+Shortly after dark there was a clatter of hoofs outside the
+_Kicker_ office and four men dismounted from their ponies and
+strode to the office door. They were Norton, Ace, Lanky, and Bud.
+Evidently Hollis had been awaiting their coming, for he met them at the
+door, greeting them with the words: "We'll be going at once; it's about
+time."
+
+Followed by Potter the five strode rapidly down the street. When they
+arrived at the sheriff's office there were a number of men congregated
+about the door. Inside a kerosene lamp flickered on a table that sat in
+the center of the room. Another lamp stood on Watkins's desk, and beside
+the desk sat Watkins himself.
+
+Conversation died away as Hollis and his men approached the door and
+stood in the stream of light from the interior. A man stepped out of the
+shadow of the building and approached Hollis, drawing him and Norton
+aside. It was Allen. The latter had lost some of the sprightliness that
+had marked his manner during his conversation with Hollis in the
+_Kicker_ office that morning--he was again the cool, deliberate,
+steady-eyed man he had been that day in Judge Graney's office when
+Hollis had met him the first time.
+
+"I've been waitin' for you," he said; "we're goin' to have a scrumptuous
+time. Dunlavey's planning to pack her." He swept a hand toward the
+interior of the office. "But each candidate is to be allowed two
+witnesses. I've selected you two. Dunlavey and Greasy are doing the
+honors for Watkins. We might just as well go inside; we can't do
+anything out here. There won't be anything done by any of this gang
+until Dunlavey says the word."
+
+He turned and stepped into the sheriff's office, Hollis and Norton
+following.
+
+Watkins looked up and surveyed them with a bland smile as they entered
+and dropped quietly into the several chairs that had been provided.
+
+"I reckon she's goin' to be some hot tonight?" significantly remarked
+Watkins, addressing himself to Allen.
+
+"Maybe," grinned Allen.
+
+"We're goin' to take a hand in handlin' the Law," significantly remarked
+Norton.
+
+Watkins's face reddened. He stared offensively at Hollis.
+
+"I reckon you're a witness, too," he said, sneering. "Well," he went on
+as Hollis gravely nodded, "the law says that a witness to the count must
+be a resident of the county. An' I reckon you ain't. You ain't been----"
+
+"He stays," interrupted Allen, shortly. "That's settled."
+
+Watkins's face bloated with a sudden anger, but he wheeled without
+replying and gave his attention to some papers lying on the desk in
+front of him.
+
+For a long time the four sat in silence. Outside arose voices of
+men--growing in volume. There was a jam around the door; looking out
+Hollis could see the bronzed, grim faces of the punchers as they crowded
+close, moved by a spirit of curiosity. Hollis could hear exclamations of
+impatience, though the majority of the men outside stood in silence,
+waiting.
+
+Plainly, nothing was to be done until the arrival of Dunlavey. And
+presently he came.
+
+He had not been drinking; he was undeniably sober and self-possessed. As
+he entered the door of the office there was a sudden surge on the part
+of the crowd--several of the men tried to force their way in behind
+Dunlavey. But he halted on the threshold, scowling back at them and
+uttering the one word: "Wait!" The crowd fell back at the command and
+watched.
+
+Dunlavey stepped across the room, standing beside Watkins, his rapid
+glance noting the presence of the three members of the opposition. He
+ignored Hollis and Norton, speaking to Allen.
+
+"So you're sure enough going to run?" he said.
+
+"Sure," returned Allen. He rose slowly, stepped deliberately across the
+room, closed the door, and stood with his back to it.
+
+"We're all here now," he said quietly, "and I want to talk a little.
+There ain't no one going to hear what I've got to say but them I'm going
+to say it to. I reckon that goes?" He turned to Dunlavey.
+
+Dunlavey had shown some evidence of surprise over Allen's action in
+closing the door, but this immediately gave way to a sneer of mockery.
+"I reckon you've forgot Greasy," he said.
+
+"Why, I sure have!" returned Allen evenly. He opened the door a trifle
+and called: "Greasy!"
+
+Evidently Greasy had been waiting at the door, for he immediately came
+in, slouching across the floor and standing beside Watkins and Dunlavey.
+Allen closed the door and adjusted the fastenings carefully. Then he
+turned again to Dunlavey.
+
+"Now we'll proceed to do the talking," he said. He walked over to the
+chair that he had previously vacated, dropping carelessly into it and
+leaning comfortably back. His movements had been those of a man
+unquestionably sure of peace. The expression of his eyes, the tones of
+his voice, his deliberation hinted at a desire for a peaceful
+compromise.
+
+But once seated in his chair a startling change came over him. There was
+a rapid movement at his sides, a mere flash of light, and two heavy
+six-shooters appeared suddenly in his hands and lay there, unaimed, but
+forbiddingly ready. He sat erect, his eyes chilled and glittering,
+alert, filled with menace.
+
+"Now," he said sharply, "the first man who peeps above a whisper gets
+his so plenty that he won't care a damn who's nominated for sheriff!" He
+spoke to Norton and Hollis without turning his head. "You two get
+whatever guns them gentlemen happen to have on them, standing to one
+side so's I can see to perforate anyone who ain't agreeable to handing
+them over."
+
+Norton rose and approached Dunlavey, while Hollis stepped forward to the
+sheriff and secured the weapon that reposed in a holster at his right
+hip. He did likewise with Greasy. While Norton was relieving Dunlavey of
+his weapon the sheriff opened his lips to speak, his gaze fixed
+doubtfully on one of Allen's sixes.
+
+"The law----" he began. But Allen interrupted with a grin.
+
+"Sure," he said, "the law didn't figure on this. But I reckon you heard
+Big Bill say once that the law could be handled. I'm handling it now.
+But I reckon that lets you out--you ain't in on this and the mourners'll
+be after you to-morrow if you open your trap again!"
+
+The sheriff swelled with rage, but he closed his lips tightly. When
+Hollis and Norton had completed their search for weapons and had laid
+the result of their search on the table near Allen they sought their
+chairs.
+
+Dunlavey had said nothing. He stood beside Watkins's desk, still
+self-possessed, the mocking smile still on his face, though into his
+eyes had come a doubting, worried expression. Plainly he had not
+anticipated such drastic action from Allen.
+
+The latter laughed grimly, quietly. "Sort of unexpected, wasn't it,
+Bill?" he said, addressing Dunlavey. "It ain't just the sort of politics
+that you've been used to. But I'm kind of used to it myself. Had to pull
+the same game off over in Colfax County when I was runnin' for sheriff
+the first time. It worked, too, because the folks that was mixed up in
+it knowed I wasn't ringing in any bluff." He looked at Dunlavey with a
+level, steady gaze, his eyes gleaming coldly. "If you think I'm bluffing
+now, chirp for some one of your pluguglies to bust into this game. I'd
+sort of like to let off my campaign guns into your dirty gizzard!"
+
+Hollis had been watching Dunlavey closely. There was no fear in the
+man's eyes; even the doubt and worry that had been there had disappeared
+and his expression was now mildly ironical, contrasting oddly with the
+demeanor of Watkins--who was plainly frightened--and that of Greasy--who
+smirked and showed his teeth like some beast at bay and in fear of
+death. It was evident that Dunlavey possessed the spirit of the fighter,
+that indomitable courage which enables a man to face any situation and
+still retain his presence of mind, which permits him to face death
+unafraid and unyielding. In spite of the enmity that had existed between
+them from the beginning, Hollis had always respected Dunlavey for these
+very qualities, and within the last few minutes that respect had grown.
+
+Dunlavey's eyes gleamed as he looked at Allen. "I don't think you would
+try to work any bluff on me, Allen," he said quietly. "You've took me by
+surprise, that's a fact. But let's get down to business. What's your
+game?"
+
+"I reckon that's a sensible way to look at it," returned Allen evenly.
+"That's the way I expected you'd look at it when you begun to realize
+that I was holding some pretty good cards. There ain't nothing personal
+in this; I'm out for a square deal and I'm going to get it. I want you
+to understand that I'm running this game to-night and I'm running it
+square. If I get enough votes I'm going to be the next sheriff. If I
+don't get enough votes Bill Watkins'll be it. But the votes are going to
+be real votes. I ain't figuring on letting your gang pack in here and
+keep my friends from voting.
+
+"I'm going to put your hat on this table. Then Norton will open the door
+and let one man come in. That man will vote--for whoever he pleases.
+Then Mr. Hollis will let him out the back door and Norton will let
+another man in the front. There won't be any row. I'm telling you that
+you and Bill Watkins and Greasy are going to set here and watch the
+voting. I'm going to stand behind you with one of my guns tucked under
+your fifth rib. If you, or Watkins, or Greasy let out a yawp that can be
+construed as a signal for anyone to bust into the game, or if there's
+anything started by your friends which ain't your doing, I'm going to
+pump six chunks of lead into you so fast that they'll be playing tag
+with one another going through. I reckon you get me. That ends the
+palaver."
+
+He arose, snatched Dunlavey's hat from his head, placed it on the table,
+and walked behind Dunlavey, standing against the wall.
+
+"Open the door!" he directed, looking at Norton.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+HANDLING THE LAW
+
+
+Norton opened the door a trifle and called "One man at a time!" There
+were some hoarse shouts from without--presumably from Dunlavey's
+friends; a chorus of derisive laughter from Allen's. Then the first man
+entered.
+
+It was Ace. The poet stood for an instant, blinking at the light, then
+he grinned as his gaze rested on the occupants of the room. He was
+directed how to cast his ballot. He took the piece of paper that was
+given him by Norton, scrawled "Allen" across it with a pencil that
+Norton had previously placed on the table, and dropped the paper into
+Dunlavey's hat. Hollis opened the rear door for him, but he halted on
+the threshold, looking back into the room with a broad grin.
+
+"Gawd A'mighty!" he said in an awed tone; "there must have been a wad of
+money blowed in in this here town to-day! Drunks! Man alive there ain't
+nothin' but drunks; the town's reelin' with 'em! They're layin' in the
+street; there's a dozen in the Silver Dollar an' that many more in the
+Fashion--an' Gawd knows how many more in the other saloons. Their heads
+is under the tables; they're hangin' on the walls an' clawin' around in
+spittoons--gle-or-i-ously, be-ut-i-fully paralyzed!"
+
+He was suddenly outside, pushed through the door by Hollis, and the door
+closed after him. Hollis glanced furtively at Dunlavey to see that
+gentleman scowl. He thought he saw a questioning glint in Allen's eyes
+as the latter looked suddenly at him, but he merely smiled and gave his
+attention to the next man, who was now entering.
+
+The latter proved to be Lemuel Train. He did his voting quietly and
+grimly. But as he went out through the door that Hollis opened for him
+he growled: "Lordy, what a drunken bunch!" He looked at Hollis. "One of
+your men, too," he said, grinning slightly. "I thought you taught them
+better!"
+
+Hollis frowned. He knew that Allen would need all his friends; none of
+them could be spared in this crisis. He smiled incredulously. It had
+been only a short time before that his men had accompanied him to the
+door of the sheriff's office. At that time they were perfectly sober. It
+would have been impossible for any of them--
+
+"An' Ten Spot's a hummer when he gits started," Train was saying. "I've
+seen him before when he cut loose an' he sure is a holy terror!"
+
+Then with a word of parting Train was gone, saying that he had done all
+the "damage" he could and that he purposed "hitting" the trail back to
+his ranch.
+
+He had certainly done some damage to Hollis. The latter's mind now
+rioted with all sorts of conjecture and he mechanically did his work of
+letting man after man out through the rear door, scarcely seeing them.
+
+He was aware of an odd expression that had come into Dunlavey's eyes at
+the mention of Ten Spot. Had Dunlavey succeeded in bribing Ten Spot to
+desert him? He had left Ten Spot at the Circle Bar, not inviting him to
+Dry Bottom because he felt that the latter would rather not come since
+he had deserted Dunlavey. And Ten Spot had come to town anyway. What did
+it mean? Did it mean that Ten Spot had come to assist Dunlavey in
+nominating Watkins and defeating his new employer?
+
+He frowned again, and for the next few minutes gravely studied
+Dunlavey's face. He was sure that the latter's manner had changed. The
+mocking smile which had been on his face since his arrival at the
+sheriff's office had been superseded by a huge grin--plainly of
+anticipation. Ten Spot--dangerous, reckless, drunk, at the head of a
+number of dissolute men, had it in his power to make things decidedly
+interesting should he advance on the sheriff's office with the intention
+of assisting Dunlavey.
+
+Several times since hiring Ten Spot Hollis had doubted him. The
+suspicion had assailed him that perhaps the appearance of Ten Spot at
+the Hazelton cabin so opportunely had been a part of a plot by Dunlavey
+to place a spy in his employ. They might have purposely sacrificed Yuma.
+
+During the next quarter of an hour he gave more attention to Dunlavey
+than to the steady stream of men that passed through the room, though he
+recognized a goodly number as friends he had made during the latter days
+of the drought.
+
+Allen's spirits had risen during the last quarter of an hour. His
+maneuver had dissipated Dunlavey's strength and it was plain to be seen
+that a majority of the votes cast were for him. If nothing unusual or
+unexpected happened within the next hour, or until nine o'clock, the
+hour named in Watkins's proclamation for the closing of the polls, he
+was assured of victory.
+
+Thoughts of the same character were passing through Hollis's mind. There
+was silence in the office. A man was voting at the table--writing his
+favorite's name on a piece of paper. Hollis consulted his watch. It
+lacked over an hour of the time for closing. The man at the table
+finished writing and tossed the paper into the hat. Hollis opened the
+rear door to allow him to go out. While the door remained open a sound
+floated in, which they all heard--an ear-splitting screech, followed
+instantly by a chorus of yells, a pistol report, more yells, and then a
+number of reports.
+
+Norton did not open the door. He exchanged glances with Hollis and
+Allen. Dunlavey grinned widely.
+
+"Something's coming," remarked Allen grimly.
+
+Dunlavey's grin grew derisive. "It would sure be too bad if my friends
+should bust up this peace meeting," he sneered.
+
+"There won't be nothin' spoiled," grimly assured Allen. But he drew his
+other six-shooter.
+
+The sounds outside grew in volume as they swept toward the sheriff's
+office. They broke presently at the door and an ominous silence
+succeeded. Then a voice reached the interior--harsh authoritative--Ten
+Spot's voice.
+
+"Open up, you damned shorthorns!" it said.
+
+Norton looked at Allen. The latter's face was pale. "They come in," he
+directed, "like the others--one at a time."
+
+Norton carefully withdrew the bar with which the door was fastened,
+swinging it open slightly. As he did so there was a sudden rush of
+bodies; Norton tried to jam the door shut, failed, and was flung back
+several steps by the surging, yelling crowd that piled tumultuously into
+the room.
+
+There were perhaps twenty of them and as they surged into the room,
+shouting and cursing and laughing Hollis recognized among them many men
+that he had come to know by sight. They were of the reckless, lawless
+element upon which Dunlavey had relied for his support--men of Ten
+Spot's character. They had been drinking, but in spite of their laughter
+and loud talking it was plain to be seen that they had determined not to
+be balked in the purpose which had brought them into the office.
+
+There was now no need to guard the door; the damage had been wrought,
+and Norton backed away, leaving the door ajar, pale, grim eyed, alert,
+ready to take an active part in the trouble which he felt certain was
+sure to develop. Something in the faces of the men who had come in with
+Ten Spot proclaimed trouble.
+
+Allen had not moved. He still stood behind Dunlavey, but his weapons no
+longer menaced the Circle Cross manager; their muzzles, level and
+forbidding, were covering the other men.
+
+Standing quietly beside the rear door, his face pale, his eyes bright,
+his lips in straight lines, Hollis watched closely as the visitors,
+having gained entrance, gathered together in the center of the room.
+They were not awed by Allen's weapons; they grinned hugely at him. One
+man, a young man of about Hollis's age, bronzed, lean, reckless of eye,
+and unmistakably under the influence of liquor, lunged forward to Allen
+and stood within arm's length of him, grinning at him.
+
+"Two guns!" he said with a laugh. "Why, I reckon you'd make a hell of a
+sheriff!"
+
+A chorus of laughter greeted the young cowboy's words. Dunlavey grinned
+widely. "You boys are just in time," he said.
+
+There was another roar of laughter. Many of the men seemed only now to
+have become aware of Dunlavey's presence and they surged forward around
+him, disregarding Allen's guns. The latter seemed to realize that the
+situation had passed beyond his control, for catching Hollis's eye he
+smiled grimly and sheathed his weapons, seeking Hollis's side.
+
+"It's no use," he said shortly to Hollis as he came near; "they'll run
+things to suit themselves now. I wasn't expectin' Ten Spot to butt into
+the game."
+
+"I reckon they've got us." Norton had also sought Hollis's side and the
+three stood near the rear door, watching the crowd around Dunlavey.
+Hollis tried to catch Ten Spot's gaze but failed--the latter seemed
+studiously to avoid him.
+
+A wave of dull anger surged through Hollis's veins. Until now the
+contest had been conducted fairly; they had given Dunlavey and Watkins
+an honest election, even though they had found it necessary to eliminate
+them as active participants. From now on he was assured the contest
+would be a joke--though a grim one. He had depended upon Allen's
+success--it meant much to him. The thought of failure just when victory
+was within his grasp aroused him and in spite of Norton's low word of
+caution he stepped forward and stood beside the table on which reposed
+the hat into which the ballots had been placed by the men who had
+previously voted. He intended to take personal charge of the hat,
+determined upon securing a fair deal in spite of the great odds.
+
+As he stepped forward he saw Greasy grin maliciously and try to snatch a
+gun from the holster of a cowboy who stood near him. This attempt was
+frustrated by the puncher, who suddenly dropped his hand to his holster,
+where it closed upon Greasy's. The puncher snarled, muttered profanely,
+and struck furiously at Greasy, knocking him down in a corner.
+
+Other men moved. There were curses; the flashing of metal as guns came
+out. Hollis felt rather than saw Norton and Allen advance toward the
+table and stand beside him. A grim smile wreathed his face over the
+knowledge that in the crowd there were at least two men upon whom he
+might depend to the end--whatever the end might be.
+
+He heard Dunlavey snarl an oath, saw his big form loom out of the crowd,
+saw one of his gigantic hands reach for the hat on the table.
+
+"I reckon I'll take charge of this now!" he sneered, his brutal face
+close to Hollis's.
+
+Hollis would have struck the face that was so close to his, but at the
+instant he saw Dunlavey's hand reach out for the hat he saw another hand
+dart out from the other side of the table, seize the hat, and draw it
+out of Dunlavey's reach.
+
+"I don't reckon that you'll take charge of her!" said a voice.
+
+Hollis turned quickly. Over the table leaned Ten Spot, the captured hat
+in his hand, a big forty-five in the other, a cold, evil glitter in his
+eyes as he looked up at Dunlavey.
+
+"I don't reckon that you're goin' to have a hand in runnin' this show
+a-tall, Bill," he sneered. "Me an' my friends come down here special to
+tend to that." He grinned the shallow, hard grin that marks the passing
+of a friendship and the dawn of a bitter hatred. "You see, Bill, me an'
+my friends has got sorta tired of the way you've been runnin' things an'
+we're shufflin' the cards for a new deal. This here tenderfoot which
+you've been a-slanderin' shameful is man's size an' we're seein' that he
+gits a fair shake in this here. I reckon you git me?"
+
+Hollis felt Norton poking him in the ribs, but he did not turn; he was
+too intent upon watching the two principal actors in the scene. Tragedy
+had been imminent; comedy was slowly gaining the ascendency. For at the
+expression that had come over Dunlavey's face several of the men were
+grinning broadly. Were the stakes not so great Hollis would have felt
+like smiling himself. Dunlavey seemed stunned. He stood erect, passing
+his hand over his forehead as though half convinced that the scene were
+an illusion and that the movement of the hand would dispel it. Several
+times his lips moved, but no words came and he turned, looking about at
+the men who were gathered around him, scanning their faces for signs
+that would tell him that they were not in sympathy with Ten Spot. But
+the faces that he looked upon wore mocking grins and sneers.
+
+"An' I've been tellin' the boys how you set Yuma on Nellie Hazelton, an'
+they've come to the conclusion that a guy which will play a low down
+mean game like that on a woman ain't no fit guy to have no hand in any
+law makin'."
+
+Ten Spot's voice fell coldly and metallically in the silence of the
+room. Slowly recovering from the shock Dunlavey attempted a sneer, which
+gradually faded into a mirthless smile as Ten Spot continued:
+
+"An' you ain't goin' to have a hand in any more law-makin' in this man's
+town. Me an' my friends is goin' to see to that, an' my boss, Mr.
+Hollis. I reckon that'll be about all. You don't need to hang around
+here while we do the rest of the votin'. Watkins an' Greasy c'n stay to
+see that everything goes on regular." He grinned wickedly as Dunlavey
+stiffened. "I reckon you know me, Bill. I ain't palaverin' none. You an'
+Ten Spot is quits!"
+
+He stepped back a little, away from the table, his teeth showing in a
+mocking grin. Then he looked down at the hat which he still held in his
+hand--Dunlavey's hat. He laughed. "Why, I'm cert'nly impolite!" he said
+insinuatingly. "Here you've been wantin' to go an' I've been keepin'
+your hat!" He dumped the ballots upon the table and passed the hat to
+Dunlavey. Without a word Dunlavey took it, jerking it savagely, placed
+it on his head, and strode to the door, stepping down into the street.
+
+There was a short silence. Then Ten Spot turned and looked at Hollis,
+his face wreathed in a broad grin.
+
+"I reckon you-all think you know somethin' about handlin' the law," he
+said, "but your little Ten Spot ain't exactly the measliest card in the
+deck! We'll do our votin' now."
+
+A quarter of an hour later, after Ten Spot and his friends had cast
+their ballots and Watkins had been forced to make out a certificate of
+nomination,--which reposed safely in Ben Allen's inside pocket--the
+kerosene lights were extinguished and the men filed out. Hollis and Ten
+Spot were the last to leave. As they stood for a moment on the threshold
+of the doorway Hollis seized Ten Spot's hand and gripped it heartily.
+
+"I want to thank you, my friend," he said earnestly.
+
+Ten Spot jerked his hand away. "Aw, hell!" he said as they sought the
+darkness of the street, "I ain't mushin' none. But," he added, as a
+concession to his feelings, "I reckon to know a white man when I see
+one!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+AUTUMN AND THE GODS
+
+
+It was Sunday afternoon and a hazy, golden, late September sun was
+swimming lazily in the blue arc of sky, flooding the lower gallery of
+the Circle Bar ranchhouse, but not reaching a secluded nook in which sat
+Hollis and Nellie Hazelton. Mrs. Norton was somewhere in the house and
+Norton had gone down to the bunkhouse for a talk with the men--Hollis
+and Nellie could see him, sitting on a bench in the shade of the eaves,
+the other men gathered about him.
+
+Below the broad level that stretched away from the ranchhouse sank the
+big basin, sweeping away to the mountains. Miles into the distance the
+Circle Bar cattle could be seen--moving dots in the center of a great,
+green bowl. To the right Razor-Back ridge loomed its bald crest upward
+with no verdure saving the fringe of shrubbery at its base; to the left
+stretched a vast plain that met the distant horizon that stretched an
+interminable distance behind the cottonwood. Except for the moving dots
+there was a total absence of life and movement in the big basin. It
+spread in its wide, gradual, downward slope, bathed in the yellow
+sunshine of the new, mellow season, peacefully slumberous, infinitely
+beautiful.
+
+Many times had Hollis sat in the gallery watching it, his eyes
+glistening, his soul stirred to awe. Long since had he ceased regretting
+the glittering tinsel of the cities of his recollection; they seemed
+artificial, unreal. When he had first gazed out over the basin he had
+been oppressed with a sensation of uneasiness. Its vastness had appalled
+him, its silence had aroused in him that vague disquiet which is akin to
+fear. But these emotions had passed. He still felt awed--he would always
+feel it, for it seemed that here he was looking upon a section of the
+world in its primitive state; that in forming this world the creator had
+been in his noblest mood--so far did the lofty mountains, the wide,
+sweeping valleys, the towering buttes, and the mighty canyons dwarf the
+flat hills and the puny shallows of the land he had known. But he was no
+longer appalled; disquietude had been superseded by love.
+
+It all seemed to hold some mystery for him--an alluring, soul-stirring
+mystery. The tawny mountains, immutable guardians of the basin, whose
+peaks rose somberly in the twilight glow--did they hold it? Or was it
+hidden in the basin, in the great, green sweep that basked in the
+eternal sunlight?
+
+Perhaps there was no mystery. Perhaps he felt merely the romance that
+would inevitably come to one who deeply appreciated the beauty of a land
+into which he had come so unwillingly? For romance was here.
+
+He turned his head slightly and looked at the girl who sat beside him.
+She also was looking out over the basin, her eyes filled with a light
+that thrilled him. He studied her face long, noting the regular
+features, the slight tan, through which shone the dusky bloom of perfect
+health; the golden brown hair, with the wind-blown wisps straggling over
+her temples; he felt the unaccountable, indefinable something that told
+him of her inborn innocence and purity--qualities that he had worshiped
+ever since he had been old enough to know the difference between right
+and wrong.
+
+A deep respect moved him, a reverent smile wreathed his lips. Motherly?
+Yes, that world-thrilling word aptly described her. And as he continued
+to look at her he realized that this world held no mystery for him
+beyond that which was enthroned in the heart of the girl who sat beside
+him, unconscious of his thoughts.
+
+He turned again toward the basin. He did not want to uncover the
+mystery--yet. There were still several things to be done before he would
+feel free to speak the words that he had meditated upon for some weeks.
+Meanwhile--if the gods were with him--the solving of the mystery would
+be the more enjoyable.
+
+Two weeks of inaction had followed the primary incident. Several of Ten
+Spot's friends were now in his employ; in spite of the drought the
+Circle Bar had so far experienced a very prosperous season, and, though
+the addition of the men represented quite an item of expense, he felt
+that it was much better to employ them than to allow them to be
+re-engaged by Dunlavey.
+
+He had been able to save considerable money. This he had transferred to
+a bank in Santa Fe, for he had determined to stay in the West. He had
+told his mother of this decision and had asked her to come, but she had
+written that she preferred to remain East for a time--at least until the
+following spring.
+
+Hollis was satisfied. Affairs were progressing beyond his anticipations.
+Dunlavey's influence in the county had received a mighty blow in the
+defeat of Watkins at the primary; he had received notice of the
+enactment of several new laws that would appreciably assist him in his
+fight; he had succeeded in winning many friends because of his attitude
+on the water question; the increased number of advertisements appearing
+in the _Kicker_ would soon necessitate the addition of an extra
+sheet. It all presaged prosperity. Yes, he was satisfied. And yet--
+
+He turned again and looked at the girl. This time he caught her watching
+him. Evidently she had been watching him for a long time for her gaze
+was fixed and meditative, as though she had been studying him. She
+started and blushed when he turned and caught her, looking down in
+sudden and complete confusion. But she looked up again instantly,
+meeting his gaze steadily, her lips in a frank smile.
+
+"You have been thinking of this country," she said.
+
+"You have guessed it," he returned gravely and gently; "I have been
+thinking of this country--and its people." He smiled at her, his eyes
+shining with a light that caused hers to waver and droop. "But how did
+you discover that?" he questioned. "I was not aware that I had been
+speaking my thoughts."
+
+"Do you think it is always necessary to speak?" she answered, looking at
+him with a quiet smile. "Don't you think there are times when one's
+thoughts find expression in one's eyes? When we can not conceal them--no
+matter how hard we try? I know that you were thinking of the country,"
+she went on earnestly, "because a few moments ago I had been thinking of
+it too and I know that my emotions were exactly the same as those
+expressed in your eyes. It is magnificent, isn't it?" she said in an
+awed, eager voice. "It is so big, so mighty, so soul-stirring. It
+allures with its vastness, it dazzles with its beauty; it makes one feel
+closer to the Creator, even while pressing home a disquieting sense of
+one's own insignificance.
+
+"For instance," she went on, her eyes large and luminous, a new, quiet
+color coming into her face "there are times when our tasks seem
+stupendous, when we are filled with an overpowering consciousness of the
+importance of them; when we feel that we are carrying such a burden that
+the addition of another would make the load too heavy. Then we look upon
+God's work and immediately a still, small voice within us cries: 'What
+have ye done in comparison to this?' And what have we done?" she
+suddenly demanded.
+
+"Nothing," he returned gravely, awed by this fleeting illuminating
+glimpse into her soul.
+
+She leaned back into her chair with a smile. "Those were the things I
+was thinking about. And you, too, were thinking of them," she added.
+"Now, don't deny it!" she warned, "for I saw it in your eyes!"
+
+"No!" he said with a quick smile; "I don't deny it. But I was thinking
+of the people also."
+
+"Oh, the people!" she said with a frown.
+
+"Perhaps I should have said 'person,'" he modified with a quick glance
+at her, under which her eyes drooped in swift confusion--as they had
+drooped on another occasion which he remembered.
+
+"Oh!" she said merely.
+
+"I have been comparing this person to God's other works," he said, a
+light in his eyes which told that the former decision to postpone an
+attempt to uncover the mystery had been ruthlessly put aside, "and I
+have come to the conclusion that in spite of the infinite care he took
+in forming the beautiful world out yonder he did not neglect this person
+to whom I refer."
+
+Her eyes met his in a glance of swift comprehension. She drew a slow,
+deep breath and averted her face, which was now crimson.
+
+"As you have been able to illustrate man's insignificance in comparison
+to God's mighty creations, so has my own inferiority been forced upon me
+by my attempting to compare myself to the sweet character of the person
+of whom I speak," said Hollis, his voice low and earnest. "It has been a
+question whether--when I speak to her of a thing which has been on my
+mind for many days--she could not with justice paraphrase the question
+asked by the still, small voice and say: What have you done to deserve
+this? And I should have to reply--nothing." He had moved closer to her,
+leaning forward to look into her eyes.
+
+She sat very still, her gaze on the basin. "Perhaps this very estimable
+person holds other views?" she returned, with a flash of mischief in her
+eyes. She turned suddenly and looked straight at him, meeting his gaze
+unwaveringly, a demure smile on her face. "I told you that sometimes a
+person's thoughts were expressed in their eyes," she said--and now her
+lashes flickered--"perhaps you can tell what my thoughts are?"
+
+It was a challenge, a defiance, and an unconditional surrender. Like a
+flash one of Hollis's arms went out--she was drawn, vainly protesting,
+toward him.
+
+"You haven't answered," she laughed, in a smothered voice; "you are not
+certain----"
+
+She did not finish the sentence. Mrs. Norton, coming to the door for a
+breath of fresh air, halted on the threshold, looked, smiled, and then
+quietly--very quietly--slipped back into the house.
+
+Away out over the basin a Mexican eagle circled, winging his slow way
+through the golden sunshine of the afternoon. Miles away the mountain
+peaks rose somberly, a mysterious, golden halo rising slowly above them.
+Perhaps there would always be mystery in the mountains, but a certain
+mystery that had troubled Hollis mightily had been successfully solved.
+The gods had favored him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE SEAR AND YELLOW DAYS
+
+
+"This here town,"--read a letter that Hollis received from Weary late in
+September--"aint fit for no man to live in which thinks anythink of
+hisself, in the first place theres two many folks here which dont seem
+to know what to do with themselves they just keep millin around an actin
+like they was ready to stampead any time. In the 2nd place im runnin shy
+of dust an id admire for to receave about a months pay which i wont
+charge two you bein as ive already spent more then i ought two its a
+good thing i got a return ticket or id be in a hell of a fix when i got
+ready to come back last nite the doctor at the hospittle said hed
+operate on ed today which hes already done this mornin an eds restin
+easy though the doc dont know whether hes goin to git well or not but
+hes hopin an ile let you know by telegraph if he gits any worse which is
+all for this time.
+
+P. S. say boss dont forgit to hustel that coin ile shure make it right
+with you i forgot to tell you that i got cleaned out by a card sharper
+here i would have tore him apart but about a million sheriffs piled onto
+me an i dident have no chancst what in hell does any town need with so
+many sheriffs.
+ "Weary.
+
+"P. S. id like to be home for the round-up but reckon i wont make it.
+
+ "Weary."
+
+Nellie Hazelton did not see this letter, though Hollis told her that Ed
+had been operated on and that he was doing as well as could be expected.
+And the telegraph that night flashed Weary's "coin" to him.
+
+The days passed all too quickly now, for the time for the fall round-up
+was at hand and Hollis realized with regret that his daily rides--with
+Nellie Hazelton as a companion--must soon be discontinued.
+
+The nights had already grown cool; snow had appeared on the mountain
+peaks; the basin was no longer a great green bowl, but resembled a
+mammoth, concave palette upon which nature had mixed her colors--yellow
+and gold and brown, with here and there a blotch of red and purple, a
+dash of green,--lingering over the season--and great, wide stretches of
+gray. The barren spots seemed to grow more barren--mocked by the scarlet
+blossoms of the cactus that seemed to be everlasting, and the fringing,
+yellow soap weed, hardy, defying the advancing winter. Razor-Back ridge
+was a desolate place. Never attractive, it reared aloft barren and
+somber, frowning down upon its fringe of shrubbery the latter stripped
+of its leaves, its scant beauty gone and bending its bare branches
+stubbornly to the early winds.
+
+With the last day of the month came a rain--a cold, bitter, driving
+storm that raged for three days and started a drift that the cattlemen
+could not stop. Arrayed in tarpaulins the cowboys went forth, suffering,
+cursing, laboring heroically to stem the tide. The cattle retreated
+steadily before the storm--no human agency could halt them. On the
+second day Norton came into the Circle Bar ranchhouse, wet, disgusted,
+but fighting mad.
+
+"If this damn rain don't stop pretty soon," he told Hollis as he dried
+himself before the open fireplace, "we'll have cattle down here from
+over the Colorado line. An' then there'll be hell to pay!"
+
+But on the third day the rain ceased and the sun came out. The country
+lay smiling in the sunshine, mellow, glistening, inviting. But the
+damage had been wrought. From Lemuel Train of the Pig Pen outfit, came
+word that fifty per cent of his cattle were missing. Truxton of the
+Diamond Dot, Henningson of the Three Bar, and nearly all of the other
+small owners, reported losses. Of course the cattle would be recovered
+during the fall round up, but they were now scattered and fair prey for
+cattle thieves, and with the round up still two weeks away it seemed
+that many must be stolen.
+
+Yet there was nothing that could be done; it is folly to attempt to "cut
+out" cattle on the open range.
+
+From the editorial columns of the _Kicker_ might be gleaned the
+fact that the Law had come into Union County. Many men of Dry Bottom
+entered the _Kicker_ office to thank Hollis; others boldly draped
+their houses with flags and bunting.
+
+Dunlavey had visited Dry Bottom twice since the incident of the primary.
+He had said nothing concerning the incident to anyone save possibly his
+intimates, but from the sneer that appeared on his face when approached
+by those whom he considered friendly to Hollis it was plain that he
+intended continuing the fight.
+
+Hollis had been compelled to record in the _Kicker_ the unpleasant
+news that Dunlavey had refused to comply with the new law regulating
+brands and the submitting of lists for taxation, and also that he had
+threatened to shoot the first officer trespassed on his land. Dunlavey
+had not complied with the law, but he had failed to carry out his threat
+to "shoot the first officer that trespassed on his land," for Allen had
+trespassed several times, openly and boldly. Moreover, Dunlavey had seen
+him, had even spoken to him, but had offered no violence.
+
+Perhaps in a calmer mood Dunlavey had decided not to use his weapon;
+perhaps there was something about the quiet, cool, and deliberate Allen
+which convinced Dunlavey that the former might be able to give a good
+account of himself in the event of trouble. At any rate several times
+Allen had ridden the Circle Cross range unmolested by either Dunlavey or
+his men. He explored the farthest limits of the Circle Cross property,
+tallying the cattle, nosing around the corrals, examining brands, and
+doing sundry other things not calculated to allay Dunlavey's anger over
+this new and odd condition of affairs.
+
+Then one day he failed to visit the Circle Cross. Instead, he appeared
+to Potter in the office of the _Kicker_ with copy for a poster
+announcing the sale by auction of a thousand of Dunlavey's best cattle.
+He ordered Potter to print it so that he might post copies throughout
+the county within a week. The night following the issue of the
+_Kicker_ containing the announcement concerning the coming of the
+law Potter had informed Hollis that he had that day delivered the
+notices to Allen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN DEFIANCE OF THE LAW
+
+
+Hollis had demonstrated the fact that a majority of Dry Bottom's
+citizens welcomed the law. Dry Bottom had had a law, to be sure--the law
+of the six-shooter, with the cleverest man "on the trigger" as its chief
+advocate. Few men cared to appear before such a court with an argument
+against its jurisdiction. The law, as the citizens of Dry Bottom had
+seen it, was an institution which frowned upon such argument. Few men
+cared to risk an adverse decision of the established court to advocate
+laws which would come from civilized authority; they had remained silent
+against the day when it would come in spite of the element that had
+scoffed at it. And now that day had arrived. The Law had come.
+
+Even the evil element knew it. The atmosphere was vibrant with
+suppressed excitement; in the stores men and women were congregated; in
+the saloons rose a buzz of continuous conversation. On the street men
+greeted one another with subdued voices, or halted one another to
+discuss the phenomenon. In a dozen conspicuous places were posted
+flaring, printed notices, informing the reader that a thousand of the
+Circle Cross cattle--a description of which followed--were, on the
+following day, to be sold to the highest bidder. Below this
+announcement, in small, neat print, was quoted the Law.
+
+Dry Bottom gasped. The saloons swarmed. In the Fashion two bartenders
+and the proprietor labored heroically to supply their customers with the
+liquid stimulant which would nerve them to look upon Ben Allen's posters
+with a certain degree of equanimity. The reckless element--the gun-men
+who in a former day were wont to swagger forth with reckless disregard
+for the polite conventions--skulked in the background, sneering at this
+thing which had come to rob them of their power and which, they felt,
+presaged their ultimate downfall.
+
+But Dry Bottom ignored the gun-men, or smiled blandly at them, giving
+its attention to Ben Allen's posters and discussing a rumor which had
+gained rapid credence, to the effect that the new governor had
+telegraphed Allen that he would hold a detail of United States soldiers
+in readiness for any contingency.
+
+The good citizens smiled. And throughout the day many of them passed and
+repassed the _Kicker_ office, anxious to get a glimpse of the man
+who had been instrumental in bringing about this innovation.
+
+Shortly after noon on the same day Dunlavey rode into Dry Bottom,
+dismounted, hitched his pony to the rail in front of the Fashion, and
+entered.
+
+In former days Dunlavey's appearance within the doors of the Fashion was
+the signal for boisterous greetings. For here might always be found the
+law's chief advocates. To-day, however, there were no greetings. Minds
+were filled with vague and picturesque conjecture concerning Dunlavey's
+probable actions and the outcome of this strange affair. Thus upon
+Dunlavey's entrance a silence--strange and awkward--fell in the
+bar-room. There were short nods and men fell away from Dunlavey as he
+crossed the room and came to a halt before one of Ben Allen's posters.
+He read every line of it--every word. No man interrupted him. Then,
+finishing his reading, he turned and faced the crowd, his face white
+with wrath, his lips snarling.
+
+"Why in hell didn't some of you damned fools tear this down?" he
+demanded.
+
+No man felt it incumbent upon him to reply to this and Dunlavey watched
+them for an instant, sneering, his eyes glittering menacingly. Then he
+suddenly turned, seized the poster, savagely tore it into pieces, hurled
+the pieces to the floor, and stamped upon them. Then he turned again to
+the silent crowd, his face inflamed, his voice snapping with a bitter,
+venomous sarcasm.
+
+"Scared!" he said. "Scared out clean--like a bunch of coyotes runnin'
+from the daylight!" He made a strange sound with his lips, expressing
+his unutterable contempt for men so weakly constituted.
+
+"Quit!" he grated. "Quit clean because a tenderfoot comes out here and
+tries to run things! So long as things come your way you're willing to
+stick it out, but when things go the other way--Ugh!"
+
+He turned abruptly, strode out through the door, mounted his pony, and
+rode rapidly down the street. Several of the men, who went to the door
+after his departure, saw him riding furiously toward the Circle Cross.
+
+Then one of his former friends laughed harshly--sarcastically. "I reckon
+that there tenderfoot is botherin' Big Bill a whole lot," he said as he
+turned to the bar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It had been a busy day for Hollis. His hand had been shaken so much that
+it pained him. The day had been a rather warm one for the season and so
+when late in the afternoon Norton rode into town, "To see the
+excitement," he told Hollis, the latter determined to make the return
+trip to the Circle Bar in the evening. Therefore, after a short
+conference with Judge Graney and Allen--and a frugal, though wholesome
+supper in the Judge's rooms back of the court house--which Allen
+cooked--he and Norton rode out upon the Coyote trail and jogged quietly
+toward the Circle Bar.
+
+There was a good moon; the air was invigorating, though slightly chill,
+and the trail lay clear and distinct before them, hard after the rain,
+ideal for riding.
+
+Many times during the first half hour of the ride Norton looked
+furtively at his chief. Certain things that Mrs. Norton had told him
+held a prominent place in his thoughts, and mingling with these thoughts
+was the recollection of a conversation that he had held with Hollis one
+day when both of them had been riding this same trail and Hollis had
+stopped off at the Hazelton cabin. Many times Norton smiled. He would
+have liked to refer to that conversation, but hesitated for fear of
+seeming to meddle with that which did not concern him. He remembered the
+days of his own courtship--how jealously he had guarded his secret.
+
+But the longer his thoughts dwelt upon the incident that had been
+related to him by Mrs. Norton the harder it became to keep silent. But
+he managed to repress his feelings for the first half hour and then,
+moved by an internal mirth that simply would not be held in check
+longer, he cackled aloud.
+
+He saw Hollis shoot a quick glance at him. He cackled again, his mirth
+swelling as he caught the surprised and puzzled expression of Hollis's
+face.
+
+"I have a very original opinion of people who laugh without any visible
+cause," remarked the latter, grinning reluctantly in the semi-darkness.
+
+Norton's reply was another cackle. They rode in silence for a long time.
+
+Then Norton spoke. "This is a great country," he said.
+
+Silence from Hollis, though taking a quick glance at him Norton again
+observed the puzzled grin on his face.
+
+"And original," he remarked, placing upon the latter word the same
+peculiar emphasis that Hollis had given it a moment before.
+
+Hollis grinned widely; he began to detect a subtle meaning in the range
+boss's speech and actions. But he did not answer; it would not strain
+his patience to await until such a time as Norton made his meaning
+clear.
+
+"But there's some things that ain't original," continued Norton in the
+same tone, after another short silence.
+
+This remark clearly required comment. Hollis grinned mildly. "Meaning
+what?" he questioned.
+
+Norton met his gaze gravely. "Meanin' that the ways of makin' love are
+pretty much the same in every country." He laughed. "I know there's
+different ways of makin' it--in books," he continued; "the folks which
+write books make their men an' women go at it all kinds of ways. But did
+you ever know anyone in real life to make love to a girl any different
+than anyone else?"
+
+"I have had no experience in love making," returned Hollis, puzzled
+again.
+
+Norton cackled. "No," he said, "an' that's the peculiar part of it.
+Mostly no one has ever had any experience when they start to makin' love
+the first time. But they all make it the same way. That's why it ain't
+original. You take a man which has got in love with a girl--any man. He
+don't want anyone to know that he's in love with her--he feels sorta
+sheepish about it. Goes around hangin' his head an' blushin', an' mostly
+not sayin' anything about it. Once he gets it into his system he ain't
+the same man any more. Takes to actin' reserved like an' gentle. But
+them that's had experience can see the symptoms. There ain't no way to
+hide it."
+
+Had Norton looked at Hollis now he might have observed a touch of red in
+the young man's face. But he did not look; he was watching the trail
+ahead, smiling broadly.
+
+They had been riding through a deep depression, going toward a ridge
+whose crest was fringed with dense, tangled shrubbery. Hollis was about
+to reply to Norton's remark when he saw the latter's lips suddenly
+straighten; saw his body stiffen as he drew himself erect in the saddle
+and pulled his pony abruptly up. Surprised, Hollis also reined in and
+sat silent, looking at Norton.
+
+The latter's hand went to one of his ears, the fingers spreading out,
+fan like. "Listen!" he warned sharply.
+
+Hollis had been listening. A low rumble greeted his ears. He looked
+suddenly upward at the sky, fearful that another storm, such as he had
+encountered months before, might be forming. But the sky was cloudless.
+He looked again at Norton. The latter's eyes shone brightly in the
+moonlight as he leaned toward Hollis. The rumbling had grown more
+distinct.
+
+"It ain't a stampede," said Norton rapidly; "there wouldn't be anything
+to stampede cattle on a night like this. An' them's cattle!"
+
+It was about a hundred yards to the ridge toward which they had been
+riding and Hollis saw Norton suddenly plunge the spurs into his pony's
+flanks; saw the animal rush forward. He gave his own animal the spurs
+and in an instant was at Norton's side, racing toward the ridge. The
+range boss dismounted at the bottom, swiftly threw the reins over his
+pony's head, and running stealthily toward the crest. Hollis followed
+him. When he reached Norton's side the latter was flat on a rim rock at
+the edge of a little cliff, behind some gnarled brush. Below them the
+country stretched away for miles, level, unbroken, basking in the
+moonlight. Hollis recognized the section as that through which he had
+traveled on the night he had been overtaken by the storm--the big level
+that led to Big Elk crossing, where he had met Dunlavey and his men that
+night.
+
+Looking out upon the plain he held his breath in amazement. During the
+time he had been at the Circle Bar he had seen cattle running, but never
+had he seen them run like this. About a quarter of a mile from the ridge
+on which he and Norton stood rose a dust cloud--moving swiftly. But
+ahead of the cloud, heads down, their horns tossing were a number of
+cattle, perhaps fifty, racing furiously. They were running parallel with
+the ridge and would probably pass it. Behind and flanking them raced
+several cowboys, silent, driving with their quirts.
+
+"Rustlers!" came Norton's voice from beside him. "They're headin' for
+Big Elk!"
+
+Hollis had brought his rifle, which he had carried since the attack on
+the night of the storm. At Norton's word he raised it. But Norton's hand
+touched his and his voice came again, sharply, commandingly.
+
+"Don't shoot!" he said. "It wouldn't do any good; some of them would get
+away. Mebbe they'll come close enough so's we can see who they are!"
+
+Hollis waited breathlessly. It seemed that but an instant had passed
+from the time he had caught a first glimpse of them until they were
+thundering by the ridge and he and Norton were blinded by the dust. They
+had gone before the dust settled, but through it as they passed, Hollis
+had caught sight of a familiar figure. Before the thunder of hoofs had
+died away Hollis felt Norton's hand on his arm and his voice in his ear.
+
+"Dunlavey!"
+
+There could be no doubt of that, for Hollis had recognized him also. He
+turned, to hear Norton's dry voice in his ear.
+
+"The new law don't seem to be botherin' Dunlavey a heap," he said.
+
+Hollis stepped boldly out on the ridge, his face grim and pale. But he
+was pulled back by Norton. "I take it you don't want to let them see
+you," he said. "When a thing like that comes off there's always somebody
+sure to be lookin' back." He was pulling at Hollis's arm, directing his
+steps down the slope toward where they had left the horses. "You an' me
+ain't enough," he was saying to Hollis; "we'll hit the breeze to the
+Circle Bar, get some of the boys, an' hustle back here an' take them
+cattle!"
+
+Hollis accompanied him willingly as far as the horses. Then he halted,
+his eyes flashing brightly. "We won't go to the Circle Bar," he said.
+"We won't fight them like that. There is a law in this country now and I
+am going to see that the law acts!" He seized Norton's arm in a firm
+commanding grip. "You follow them," he directed. "From the edge of the
+butte where they caught me on the night of the storm you can see the
+country for miles. Don't cross the river," he warned. "Stay there beside
+the butte until I come back--I won't be long. Watch where they take the
+cattle!"
+
+Before Norton could offer a word of objection he was on his pony and
+racing over the back trail at terrific speed. For a moment Norton
+watched him. Then he disappeared and Norton grimly mounted his pony and
+rode down to the level following the trail taken by the thieves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+THE ARM OF THE LAW
+
+
+The lights in Dry Bottom's saloons were flickering brightly when Hollis
+rode down the street and dismounted from his drooping pony in front of
+the court house. He ran stiffly around the side of the building and
+knocked loudly on a door. There was a short silence and then a movement
+inside and Ben Allen stuck his head out of a window. He saw at a glance
+the upward turned face of the nocturnal visitor and called shortly:
+"Wait! I'll be down!"
+
+There was a short wait, during which Hollis impatiently paced back and
+forth and then Allen appeared in the door, fully dressed. Judge Graney,
+in a night shirt, stood behind him.
+
+"Something's up, of course," drawled Allen as he stepped down from the
+door, "or you wouldn't come around disturbing folks this way. What is
+it?"
+
+Hollis briefly related the events of the night, concluding with the
+statement that he was determined to force the law to act.
+
+"Correct!" laughed Allen. "She's got to act now." He caught Hollis's arm
+and turned him toward a small cottonwood grove about half a mile
+distant. A dozen white objects dotting the grove caught Hollis's gaze.
+He started.
+
+"Soldiers!" he exclaimed.
+
+"I might say that was a good guess," drawled Allen. "I sent for them
+because I thought I might need them if our friend Dunlavey got to
+cuttin' up any. It's been my experience that a detail of Uncle Sam's
+boys is about as good a thing to have around in case of trouble as any
+man could want."
+
+"But you can't use them in this case," remarked Judge Graney, who had
+stepped down beside the two men. "The governor's instructions were that
+they should be used merely as an instrument in enforcing the court's
+order regarding the sale of Dunlavey's cattle. The theft of the Circle
+Bar cattle is a matter which comes directly under the jurisdiction of
+the sheriff. If he refuses to act----"
+
+"Hell!" broke in Allen. "We know he won't do anything!"
+
+The Judge smiled slightly. "I suspect he won't," he said dryly. He
+winked at Hollis.
+
+"Being a judge in this district I am, of course, averse to advising any
+infractions of the law. But if I were not a judge I would suggest that
+two strong, energetic men--such as you appear to be----" He leaned
+forward and whispered in Allen's ear, whereat that gentleman let out a
+joyous whoop and almost dragged Hollis around the corner of the building
+toward the street, leaving the Judge standing in the doorway.
+
+Once on the street Allen set a pace that brought the two to the door of
+the sheriff's office quickly. A light shone through the window and when
+Allen opened the door Watkins was sitting beside his desk, gravely
+fumbling a deck of cards. He dropped them when he saw his visitors and
+made a quick movement with his right hand toward his revolver. But
+Allen's weapon was already out.
+
+"Bill," he said in a soft, even voice, "we're wantin' a warrant for the
+arrest of Bill Dunlavey. The charge is stealin' cattle. Of course you'll
+issue it," he added insinuatingly.
+
+Watkins's face slowly paled. "Why----" he began.
+
+"Of course I knowed you wouldn't do it when I asked you," said Allen
+with a dangerously soft smile. "That's why I come down here. This town's
+got a sheriff an' it ain't. I wouldn't care a damn if it didn't have
+you. There's lots of folks wouldn't care either. So that if you're one
+of them which does care you're settin' right still an' not sayin'
+anything which can be construed as talk till my friend here goes down to
+the station." He whispered to Hollis. "Be middlin' rapid," he said aloud
+afterward, "an' use my name." He turned to Watkins with a smile. "While
+we're waitin' I'll do some talkin'," he said. "But if you let out one
+little wee chirp them folks which don't care about you bein' sheriff of
+this man's town will sure have a heap of cause to rejoice."
+
+Hollis was already far down the street toward the station. When he got
+there the station was dark--evidently the agent had gone to bed. Hollis
+pounded heavily on the door and presently the agent opened it, appearing
+in his night shirt, a heavy six-shooter in hand, his eyes blinking.
+
+"My name is Hollis," said the latter from the darkness; "I want you to
+telegraph the governor."
+
+"Come in." The agent disappeared within, Hollis following. "This way,"
+he directed, as he disappeared through another door leading into the
+station, his night shirt flapping about his lean legs. "What you wantin'
+to telegraph?" he questioned, as he seated himself before the instrument
+and looked up at Hollis. And then, before the latter could answer he
+continued: "You're the durndest man to stir up a muss I ever, seen in my
+life!"
+
+Hollis smiled grimly as he seized a blank and wrote his message to the
+governor:
+
+ "Cattle thieves caught red-handed. Sheriff refuses to act.
+ Crisis. Suggest you appoint me temporarily.
+
+ BEN ALLEN"
+
+The agent took the message, read it, and then monotonously began to drum
+on the keys of his instrument.
+
+Hollis found it impossible to sit still and so he nervously paced up and
+down the room during the sending of the message. The agent finished and,
+leaned his head sleepily on the table.
+
+"Ought to answer in half an hour--if he's home," he informed Hollis.
+Upon which Hollis slipped out of the door and returned down the street
+to the sheriff's office, peering within Watkins still sat at the table
+and in a chair near him lounged Allen, talking volubly. Hollis watched
+for a time and then returned to the station to find the agent asleep
+beside his instrument. Hollis had scarcely awakened him when the sounder
+began its monotonous ticking. He leaned over the agent's shoulder and
+read the governor's answer as the agent sleepily wrote it down.
+
+ "Ben Allen: You are hereby appointed sheriff of Union County in
+ place of W. Watkins, dismissed. Have Judge certify,"
+
+"I reckon there must be somethin' goin' on," remarked the agent. "What's
+the matter with Bill----"
+
+But Hollis had snatched the message from his hand and was out into the
+street in an instant and running down toward the sheriff's office. When
+he arrived there Allen was still talking. He passed the telegram to him
+and the latter rose to his feet and smiled at Watkins, shoving the
+message under his nose.
+
+"You can read her," he said. "Then you can go home an' quit
+sheriffin'--after I've got through with you. You've been called down to
+the court house. I'm takin' you, chargin' you with bein' an accessory
+before the fact, or somethin' like that. It don't make no difference
+what it is, you're goin' with me." His voice came sharp and chill:
+"Jump!"
+
+Judge Graney had dressed himself by the time the three arrived at the
+court house and Watkins was roughly tumbled into the room which had been
+set aside as the jail. Then the judge led Hollis and Allen into the
+court room where he issued Allen's certificate of appointment.
+
+"Now, I reckon we won't have no trouble in gettin' the soldiers," he
+grinned. "This sheriff is goin' to act!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+FORMING A FRIENDSHIP
+
+
+At three o'clock in the afternoon Hollis closed his desk and announced
+to Potter that he was going to the Circle Bar. Potter watched him with a
+fond smile as he went out the door and placed the saddle on his pony,
+mounted and rode into the sunshine of the afternoon. The presence of the
+troopers in town had created a sensation and most of the town's citizens
+were gathered about the court house, curiously watching Dunlavey and
+several of his men who had been taken into custody during the early
+hours of the morning. Neither Hollis or Norton had been allowed to
+participate in the final scene, the little captain informing them curtly
+that the presence of civilians at what promised to be a free-for-all
+fight was strictly forbidden. And so Norton had returned to the Circle
+Bar, while Hollis had gone to Dry Bottom to finish an article for the
+next issue of the _Kicker_.
+
+It had been in that bald, gray time between darkness and dawn when Ben
+Allen and Hollis, riding at the head of the detail of troopers beside
+the dapper little captain, had arrived at the edge of the butte where
+Hollis had directed Norton to await his coming.
+
+Norton's only comment upon seeing the troopers had been: "Where in hell
+did them come from?"
+
+He told Allen that he had watched where Dunlavey and his men had driven
+the cattle, and that he would find them concealed in a narrow defile
+between two hills about a mile on the other side of the Rabbit-Ear. He
+and Hollis had announced their intention to accompany the troop to the
+scene, but had been refused permission by the captain.
+
+The capture of the thieves had been quite a simple matter. In single
+file the troopers had descended the slope of the river, crossed a
+shallow, and clattered up the other side. A mile dash at a gallop had
+brought them to one end of the defile mentioned by Norton, and in a
+grove of fir-balsam the captain had deployed his troopers and swooped
+suddenly down into the defile, surprising several men, who with
+Dunlavey, were busily at work altering the brands on the cattle they had
+stolen. There was a fire near the center of the defile, with branding
+irons scattered about it.
+
+The stolen cattle bore various brands. There were perhaps a dozen
+belonging to the Circle Bar, several from the Pig Pen; others bore the
+brands of the Three Bar and the Diamond Dot.
+
+Proof of Dunlavey's guilt had been absolute. He had made some
+resistance, but had been quickly overpowered by Allen and the troopers.
+Then with their prisoners the troops had returned to Dry Bottom.
+
+Hollis rode slowly toward the Circle Bar. He was tired--dead tired. When
+he arrived at the Hazelton cabin the shade on the porch looked so
+inviting that he dismounted, tied his pony to one of the slender porch
+columns, and seated himself, leaning wearily against the column to which
+he had tied his pony.
+
+He sat there long, staring at a clump of nondescript weed that fringed
+the edge of the arroyo near the cabin, his thoughts filled with pictures
+of incidents that had occurred to him during his stay in the West.
+Nellie Hazelton appeared in every one of these pictures and therefore he
+smiled often.
+
+He had not liked the country when he had first come here; it had seemed
+to offer him no field for the pursuit of his ambition. Certainly the
+raising of cattle had never entered into his scheme of things. Yet he
+now realized that there was plenty of room in this country for success
+in this particular industry; all a man had to do was to keep up his end
+until the law came. And now the law had come and he had been partly
+responsible for its coming. The realization of this moved his lips into
+a grim smile.
+
+He filled and lighted his pipe, smoking placidly as he leaned against
+the slender column, his gaze shifting to a clump of dense shrubbery that
+skirted the trail within twenty feet of the cabin. He sat quiet, his
+long legs stretched out to enjoy the warmth of the sun that struck a
+corner of the porch floor. His pipe spluttered in depletion and he
+raised himself and looked around for his pony, observing that the animal
+was contentedly browsing the tops of some weeds at the edge of the
+porch. Then, resigning himself to the sensation of languor that
+oppressed him, he knocked the ash from the pipe, filled it again,
+lighted it, and resumed his former reclining position.
+
+During the past few days he had given much thought to Dunlavey. He was
+thinking of the man now, as his gaze went again to the clump of
+shrubbery that skirted the trail.
+
+Some men's mental processes were incomprehensible. Dunlavey was one of
+these men. What did the man hope to gain by defying the law? Would there
+not be profit enough in the cattle business when conducted honestly?
+
+He felt a certain contempt for the man, but mingled with it was a sort
+of grim pity. No doubt Dunlavey felt justified in his actions, for he
+had lived here a good many years, no doubt suffering the privations
+encountered by all pioneers; living a hard life, dealing heavy blows to
+his enemies, and receiving some himself. No doubt his philosophy of life
+had been of the peculiar sort practiced by the feudal barons of the Old
+World, before civilization had come, carrying its banner of justice,
+which, summed up epigrammatically, though ironically, had been "Might is
+Right." But might could never be right in this country. Dunlavey must
+learn this lesson; he could not hope to--!
+
+Hollis sat suddenly erect, putting aside his pipe and his ruminations at
+the same instant, the languor gone from him, his eyes narrowing coldly.
+
+For suddenly, from behind the shrubbery that skirted the edge of the
+trail, had appeared the man about whom he had been thinking! It was
+evident that he had not come upon Hollis unexpectedly. He reined in his
+pony and sat motionless in the saddle, his face white, his eyes alight
+with passion.
+
+For an instant neither man spoke. Hollis realized that the great moment
+for which he had waited many days had arrived. And it had arrived
+unexpectedly. It had arrived to find him tired after his activities of
+the night and in no condition for a fight. He drew a deep breath and got
+to his feet, a grim smile on his face. He stepped off the porch and
+stood by one of the columns, watching Dunlavey closely. As he watched
+the grim smile on his face slowly faded, his lips curled bitterly, his
+eyes chilled.
+
+"I suppose you've come to collect that thrashing?" he said.
+
+Dunlavey dismounted quickly, his right hand flew to his holster, drawing
+his revolver. He came toward Hollis crouching, a cold, merciless glitter
+in his eyes.
+
+"Yes, you tenderfoot ---- ----." he snarled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the moment of Hollis's arrival at the court house the night before
+Ben Allen had been constantly in action. It was late in the morning when
+he had returned to the court house with his prisoners. The men who had
+been captured with Dunlavey were still with the troopers, there not
+being sufficient room at the court house for them. Watkins had been
+released and Dunlavey had taken his place in the little room that
+answered for a jail. Shortly before noon Allen proceeded to the station,
+where he telegraphed to the governor the story of the capture. He had
+then deputized a dozen punchers and sent them to the Circle Cross to
+round up a thousand of Dunlavey's cattle and hold them until the late
+afternoon when, according to Allen's published program, they were to be
+sold to the highest bidder. Then, tired and hungry, Allen sought the
+Alhambra and ate a hearty meal.
+
+Dry Bottom was swarming with visitors that had come in for the sale. But
+by the time Allen had finished eating the exodus had begun. The trail
+leading to the Circle Cross ranch was dotted with probable bidders,
+curiosity seekers, idlers, and mere residents of the town. Now that the
+law had come there were many who discovered that their sympathies had
+always been with the men who had championed it. Allen found his way to
+the court house strewn with men who halted him to express their good
+will. Many people gathered in front of the _Kicker_ office, eager
+for a glimpse of Hollis. Those who gathered there before twelve-thirty
+saw him seated at his desk, tall, angular, serious of face, absolutely
+unaffected by this thing which had caused a sensation. Passing the
+_Kicker_ office on his way to the court house, Allen had paused to
+look within and shout a greeting to him. Then he had continued on his
+way.
+
+Arriving at the court house Allen looked in at Dunlavey to find him
+lying on the floor, apparently asleep. Allen did not disturb him. He
+went out, threw the saddle on his pony, and rode over to the grove where
+the soldiers were quartered, talking long with the captain. At two
+o'clock he returned to the court house to be greeted with the news that
+Dunlavey had escaped. Allen did not stop to inquire how the escape had
+been accomplished. He remounted his pony and raced down to the
+_Kicker_ office, fearing that Dunlavey had gone there. Potter
+informed him that his chief had departed for the Circle Bar fully an
+hour and a half before. He had taken the Coyote trail--Potter had
+watched him.
+
+Allen wheeled his pony and returned to the court house. He was met at
+the door by Judge Graney. The latter's face was white and drawn with
+fear.
+
+"He's gone to kill Hollis!" the judge told him through white, set lips.
+"I heard him threaten Hollis this morning and a moment ago a man told me
+that he had seen Dunlavey, not over half an hour ago, riding out the
+Coyote trail at a dead run!"
+
+Allen's own face whitened. He did not stop to answer but drove the spurs
+deep into his pony's flanks and rode furiously down the street toward a
+point near the _Kicker_ office where he struck the trail.
+
+The distance to the Circle Bar ranch was ten miles and Dunlavey had a
+good half hour's start! He fairly lifted his pony over the first mile,
+though realizing that he could not hope to arrive at the Circle Bar in
+time to prevent Dunlavey from carrying out his design to kill Hollis.
+No, he told himself as he rode, he could not prevent him from killing
+Hollis, should he catch the latter unprepared, but he promised himself
+that Dunlavey should not escape punishment for the deed.
+
+He had had some hope that Dunlavey would accept his defeat
+philosophically. The latter was not the only man he had seen who had
+been defeated by the law. Over in Colfax County and up in Wyoming he had
+dealt with many such men, and usually, after they had seen that the law
+was inevitable, they had resigned themselves to the new condition and
+had become pretty fair citizens. He had imagined that Dunlavey would
+prove to be no exception, that after the first sting of defeat had been
+removed he would meet his adversaries half way in an effort to patch up
+their differences. The danger was in the time immediately following the
+realization of defeat. A man of the Dunlavey type was then usually
+desperate.
+
+So Allen communed with himself as he rode at a head-long pace down the
+Coyote trail, risking his neck a dozen times. Not once since he had left
+Dry Bottom had he considered his own danger.
+
+He had been riding more than half an hour, and was coming up out of a
+little gully when he came upon a riderless pony, and close by it,
+browsing near a clump of shrubbery, another. He recognized one of them
+instantly as Dunlavey's, and his teeth came together with a snap. He
+rode closer to the other pony, examining it. On one of its hips was a
+brand--the Circle Bar. Allen's face whitened again. He had arrived too
+late. But he would not be too late to wreak vengeance upon Dunlavey.
+
+He dismounted and cautiously approached the brush at the side of the
+trail. Parting it, he saw the roof of a cabin. He recognized it; he had
+passed it a number of times during his exploration of the country. He
+drew back and crept crept farther along in the brush, certain that he
+would presently see Dunlavey. But he had not gone very far when he heard
+voices and he cautiously parted the brush again and peered through.
+
+He started back in surprise, an incredulous grin slowly appearing on his
+face. The incredulity changed to amusement a moment later--when he heard
+Hollis's voice!
+
+The young man was seated on the edge of the porch--smoking a pipe! Near
+him, seated on a flat rock, his face horribly puffed out, with several
+ugly gashes disfiguring it, his eyes blackened, his clothing in tatters,
+one hand hanging limply by his side, the fingers crushed and bleeding,
+was Dunlavey! Near him, almost buried in the sand, was a revolver.
+Allen's smile broadened when he saw Dunlavey's empty holster. Evidently
+he had met with a surprise!
+
+While taking in these details Allen had not forgotten to listen to
+Hollis as the latter talked to Dunlavey. Apparently Hollis had about
+finished his talk, for his voice was singularly soft and even, and
+Dunlavey's almost comical air of dejection could not have settled over
+him in an instant.
+
+"... and so of course I had to thrash you--you had it coming to you. You
+haven't been a man--you've acted like a sneak and a cur all through this
+business. You made a thrashing inevitable when you set Yuma on Nellie
+Hazelton. You'll have plenty of marks to remind you of the one you gave
+me that night." He pointed to his cheek. "I've got even for that. But I
+think I wouldn't have trimmed you quite so bad if you hadn't tried to
+shoot me a few minutes ago."
+
+He puffed silently at his pipe for a short time, during which Dunlavey
+sat on the rock and squinted pathetically at him. Then he resumed:
+
+"I've heard people talk of damned fools, but never, until I met you,
+have I been unfortunate enough to come into personal contact with one. I
+should think that when you saw the soldiers had come you would have
+surrendered decently. Perhaps you know by now that you can't fight the
+United States Army--and that you can't whip me. If you've got any sense
+left at all you'll quit fighting now and try your best to be a good
+citizen."
+
+He smiled grimly as he rose from the porch and walked to where Dunlavey
+sat, standing over him and looking down at him.
+
+"Dunlavey," he said, extending his right hand to the beaten man, "let's
+call it quits. You've been terribly worked up, but you ought to be over
+it now. You ought to be able to see that it doesn't go. I've thrashed
+you pretty badly, but you and your men used me up pretty well that night
+and so it's an even thing. Let's shake and be friends. If you show signs
+of wanting to be a man again I'll withdraw the charge of cattle
+stealing which I have placed against you, and I imagine I won't have any
+trouble in inducing Allen to call off that auction sale and accept
+settlement of the claim against you."
+
+Until now Dunlavey had avoided looking at the outstretched hand. But now
+he looked at it, took it and held it for an instant, his bruised and
+swollen face taking on an expression of lugubrious self-pity.
+
+"I reckon I've got it in the neck all around," he said finally. "But I
+ain't no squealer and I've got----" His gaze met Hollis's and his eyes
+gleamed with a reluctant admiration. "By God, you're white! I reckon you
+could have tore the rest of me apart like you did my hand." He held up
+the injured member for inspection.
+
+Allen's grin could grow no broader, and now he showed his increased
+satisfaction with a subdued cackle. He backed stealthily out of the
+shrubbery, taking a final glance at the two men. He saw Hollis leading
+Dunlavey toward a small water hole at the rear of the cabin; saw him
+bathing Dunlavey's injured hand and binding it with his handkerchief.
+
+Then Allen proceeded to his pony, mounted, and departed for the court
+house to tell Judge Graney the news that kept his own face continually
+in a smile.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+AFTERWARD
+
+
+From Razor-Back ridge the big basin spread away to the Blue Peak
+mountains. On the opposite side of the ridge began the big plain on
+which, snuggled behind some cottonwood trees, were the Circle Cross
+buildings. From where Hollis and Nellie Hazelton sat on the ridge they
+could look miles down the Coyote trail, into Devil's Hollow; could see
+the two big cottonwood trees that stood beside Big Elk crossing, above
+which, on the night of the storm, Hollis had been attacked by Dunlavey's
+men. Back on the stretch of plain above the basin they could make out
+the Circle Bar buildings, lying close to the banks of the river.
+
+It was in the late afternoon and the sun had gone down behind the Blue
+Peaks, though its last rays were just touching the crest of the ridge
+near Hollis and Nellie. He had called her attention to the sinking sun,
+telling her that it was time they started for the Circle Bar.
+
+"Wait," she said; "someone is coming up the Coyote trail. I have been
+watching him for ten minutes."
+
+Hollis faced the trail and watched also. In a quarter of an hour the
+horseman came out of Devil's Hollow. Hollis and Nellie could see him
+plainly as he guided his pony around the huge boulders that filled the
+place. Hollis smiled whimsically.
+
+"It's the poet," he told Nellie, catching her gaze and grinning widely
+at her. "I sent him to Dry Bottom this noon for the mail--Potter is
+going to stay in town over night."
+
+For an instant it seemed that Ace would not see them, and Hollis rose
+from the rock on which he had been sitting and halloed to him. He
+responded with a shout and urged his pony up the steep side of the slope
+and then along the crest until he came within a few feet of where they
+sat. He dismounted and came forward, grinning broadly.
+
+"Takin' the view?" he questioned. His eyes twinkled. "Sometimes there's
+a heap of poetry could be got out of this county. But--" and his
+eyelashes flickered slightly--"a fellow's got to be in the right frame
+of mind to get it out. I reckon you two----"
+
+"I suppose you got the mail?" interrupted Hollis, grimacing at him.
+
+"I sure did," returned the poet, "one letter. I reckon the blacksmith'll
+be kickin' because I've been galivantin' around the country for one
+letter. Here it is." He passed an envelope to Hollis, and the latter,
+with a quick glance at the legend in the upper left hand corner, tore it
+open and read. It was from Weary.
+
+ Dear boss i got cleaned out agin what did you send me a hundred
+ dollars for you might have knowed that id make a gol darned fool
+ of myself with so much coin i never could keep no coin no how
+ but its all right anyway cause me an eds comin home tomorrow eds
+ all right except bein a littel week which the doc says he git
+ over in a littel while.
+
+ ta ta.
+ WEARY
+
+ P.S. i might have telegraphed but ed says it dont make no
+ difference cause the letter will git there quick enough any way
+ an hes afraid a telegram will scare some one. im dam glad i got
+ a return ticket.
+
+ WEARY
+
+After reading the letter Hollis passed it over to Nellie, watching her,
+his eyes alight with satisfaction.
+
+"Oh!" she said. "Oh!" The letter dropped from her hand, was caught by
+the breezes and swirled several feet distant. Ace sprang to recover it.
+When he turned, the letter in hand, he saw something that brought a huge
+grin of sympathy to his face. But mingled with the sympathy was another
+emotion.
+
+"Boss," he said, as Hollis, disengaging himself, turned and faced him,
+"I've writ quite a nice little thing on 'Love.' Mebbe you'd like to----"
+
+He caught Hollis's frown and immediately retreated to his pony, his grin
+broadening as he went. He cackled with mirth as Hollis's voice reached
+him.
+
+"Ace," he said gravely, "don't attempt to write a poem on 'Love' until
+you've had some experience."
+
+"You havin' yours now?" insinuated Ace, as he mounted his pony.
+
+He alone caught Hollis's reply. It was an expressive wink.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Coming of the Law, by Charles Alden Seltzer
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+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Coming of the Law, by Charles Alden Seltzer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Coming of the Law
+
+Author: Charles Alden Seltzer
+
+Illustrator: R. W. Amick
+
+Release Date: March 5, 2010 [EBook #31512]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMING OF THE LAW ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i1'></a><img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+&#8220;What have you done with Hollis?&#8221; demanded Norton,<br />thrusting his big six-shooter against Ten Spot&#8217;s stomach.<br /><i>Page 165</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>The Coming of the Law</i>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+<p class='fs20 mb20'>THE COMING<br />OF THE LAW</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 mb20'>BY CHARLES ALDEN SELTZER</p>
+
+<p class='fs08'>Author of &#8220;The Range Riders,&#8221; &#8220;The Two-Gun
+Man,&#8221;<br />&#8220;The Triangle Cupid,&#8221; etc.</p>
+
+<div class='tpi'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-emb.jpg' />
+</div>
+
+<p class='sc mb20'>With Frontispiece in Colors<br /> by R. W. AMICK</p>
+
+<p class='fs12'>A. L. BURT COMPANY</p>
+
+<p class='fs11'>Publishers&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;New
+York</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+<p class='fs08 sc'>Copyright 1912, By</p>
+<p>OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY</p>
+<hr class='hr10' />
+<p class='fs08 mb40'>All Rights Reserved</p>
+<p class='fs08'>First Printing, August, 1912<br />
+Second Printing, September, 1912</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<table summary='TOC'>
+<tr><td colspan='3' class='center fs12'>CONTENTS</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='3' class='center fs12'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='fs08'>CHAPTER</td><td colspan='2' class='tar fs08'>PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>I.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Arrival of the Man</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_1'>9</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>II.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Rule of Cattle</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_2'>25</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>III.</td><td class='tcol2'>Norton Makes a Discovery</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_3'>42</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>IV.</td><td class='tcol2'>At the Circle Bar</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_4'>53</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>V.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Girl of Dry Bottom</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_5'>73</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>VI.</td><td class='tcol2'>Hollis Renews an Acquaintance</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_6'>87</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>VII.</td><td class='tcol2'>The &#8220;Kicker&#8221; Becomes an Institution</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_7'>107</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>VIII.</td><td class='tcol2'>Concerning the &#8220;Six O&#8217;Clock&#8221;</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_8'>119</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>IX.</td><td class='tcol2'>How a Bad Man Left the &#8220;Kicker&#8221; Office</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_9'>127</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>X.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Lost Trail</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_10'>151</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XI.</td><td class='tcol2'>Picking Up the Trail</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_11'>161</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XII.</td><td class='tcol2'>After the Storm</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_12'>169</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XIII.</td><td class='tcol2'>&#8220;Woman&#8211;She Don&#8217;t Need No Tooter&#8221;</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_13'>177</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XIV.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Coalition</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_14'>187</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XV.</td><td class='tcol2'>To Support the Law</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_15'>198</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XVI.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Bearer of Good News</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_16'>209</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XVII.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Rustler</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_17'>224</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XVIII.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Tenth Day</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_18'>238</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XIX.</td><td class='tcol2'>How a Rustler Escaped</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_19'>246</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XX.</td><td class='tcol2'>The &#8220;Kicker&#8217;s&#8221; Candidate</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_20'>257</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXI.</td><td class='tcol2'>Dunlavey Plays a Card</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_21'>267</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXII.</td><td class='tcol2'>Proof of Gratitude</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_22'>280</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXIII.</td><td class='tcol2'>Ten Spot Uses His Eyes</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_23'>289</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXIV.</td><td class='tcol2'>Campaign Guns</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_24'>294</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXV.</td><td class='tcol2'>Handling the Law</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_25'>314</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXVI.</td><td class='tcol2'>Autumn and the Gods</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_26'>327</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXVII.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Sear and Yellow Days</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_27'>336</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXVIII.</td><td class='tcol2'>In Defiance of the Law</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_28'>342</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXIX.</td><td class='tcol2'>The Arm of the Law</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_29'>354</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXX.</td><td class='tcol2'>Forming a Friendship</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_30'>364</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1'>XXXI.</td><td class='tcol2'>Afterward</td><td class='tcol3'><a href='#link_31'>375</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<h1>THE COMING OF THE LAW</h1>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<p class='c fs14'>THE COMING OF THE LAW</p>
+
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9'></a>9</span><a id='link_1'></a>CHAPTER I<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE ARRIVAL OF THE MAN</span></h2>
+
+<p>If the passengers on the west-bound train that pulled up at the little red
+wooden station at Dry Bottom at the close of a June day in 18&#8211;, were
+interested in the young man bearing the two suit cases, they gave no evidence of
+it. True, they noted his departure; with casual glances they watched him as he
+stepped down upon the platform; but immediately they forgot his athletic figure
+and his regular featured, serious face as their thoughts returned to the heat,
+the dust, and the monotony of travel.</p>
+
+<p>There was the usual bustle and activity which always follows the arrival of a
+train. A mail bag was dumped out of the mail car, another thrown in; some
+express packages were unceremoniously deposited near the door of the station by
+the agent; the conductor ran to the telegrapher&#8217;s <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_10'></a>10</span> window to receive an order; ran back,
+signaling as he ran; the engine bell clanged, the drivers clanked, the wheels
+ground, the passengers sighed, and the train departed on its way.</p>
+
+<p>The young man who had alighted stood motionless for a moment, listening to
+the clatter of the wheels over the rail-joints, watching the smoke from the
+engine-stack befoul the clear blue of the sky. Then he smiled grimly, threw a
+rapid glance toward a group of loungers standing at a corner of the station, and
+walked over to where the station agent stood examining some newly arrived
+packages.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you mind directing me to the courthouse?&#8221; said the young
+man.</p>
+
+<p>The agent looked up, turned, and ran a measuring, speculative eye over the
+new arrival. He noted the Eastern cut of the young man&#8217;s clothing and
+beneath the dust of travel the clear, healthy white skin of his face.
+&#8220;Stranger here?&#8221; observed the agent, with a slight, humorous
+narrowing of the eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I don&#8217;t mind,&#8221; resumed the agent, answering the young
+man&#8217;s question. &#8220;You won&#8217;t have any trouble findin&#8217; the
+courthouse. There&#8217;s only one street in this town an&#8217; the courthouse
+is down to the other end of it&#8211;you couldn&#8217;t miss <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11'></a>11</span> it if you tried.&#8221; He
+grinned with some amusement at the young man&#8217;s back as the latter with a
+cordial &#8220;thank you,&#8221; returned to his suit cases, gripped them firmly
+by the handles, and strode down the wooden platform toward the street, ignoring
+the group of loungers at the corner of the station.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Nother tenderfoot,&#8221; remarked one of the loungers as the young
+man passed out of hearing; &#8220;they&#8217;re runnin&#8217; this country plum
+to hell!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The young man strode slowly down the board sidewalk that paralleled the
+buildings on one side of the street, mentally taking in the dimensions of the
+town. It was not an inviting picture. Many buildings of various descriptions
+snuggled the wide, vacant space which the station agent had termed a
+&#8220;street.&#8221; Most of the buildings were unpainted and crude, composed
+of rough boards running perpendicularly, with narrow battens over the joints.
+There were several brick buildings two stories in height, bearing the appearance
+of having been recently erected, and these towered over the squat, one-story
+frames in seeming contemptuous dignity. There were many private dwellings, some
+stores, but the young man&#8217;s first impression was that there was an
+enormous number of saloons.</p>
+
+<p>He saw few people; those who came within <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_12'></a>12</span> range of vision were apparently cowboys, for they
+were rigged in the picturesque garb that he had studied many times in the
+illustrations of Eastern magazines. He had admired them afar, for there was
+something about them, something in the free, wild life they led, that appealed
+to him; something that struck at the primitive in his heart. He had heard tales
+of them; travelers returning from these regions had related sundry stories of
+these wild men of the plains; stories of their hardihood, of their recklessness,
+of their absolute fearlessness&#8211;clothing them with a glamor and romance
+that had deeply impressed the young man. His own life had been rather
+prosaic.</p>
+
+<p>He saw some cowponies hitched to rails in front of several of the saloons; in
+front of a store he observed a canvas-covered wagon which he recognized (from
+sketches he had seen) as a &#8220;prairie schooner&#8221;; in front of another
+store he saw a spring wagon of the &#8220;buckboard&#8221; variety. That was
+all. The aroma of sage-brush filled his nostrils; the fine, flint-like, powdered
+alkali dust lay thick everywhere. It was unattractive and dismal.</p>
+
+<p>The town, as it lay before him, began in desolation and ended in desolation.
+Except that it was a trifle larger it differed in no important particular from
+many others that littered the face <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_13'></a>13</span> of the world through which he had passed during the
+last twenty-four hours. It was a mere dot in the center of a flat grass country
+covering a vast area. It sat, serene in its isolation, as far from civilization
+as Genesis from Revelation. In the stifling heat of the lazy June afternoon it
+drowsed, seemingly deserted except for the ponies and the two wagons, and the
+few incurious cowboys who had rewarded the young man with their glances.
+Apparently whatever citizens were here were busy in the saloons. As this thought
+flashed upon the young man his lips straightened grimly. But he continued slowly
+on his way, giving much attention to objects that came within his range of
+vision. The more he saw of the town, the less pleased he was with it.</p>
+
+<p>The suit cases were heavy; he paused in front of a building and set them
+down, while with his handkerchief he mopped the dust and perspiration from his
+forehead. He saw a flaring sign on the roof of the building in front of which he
+had stopped and he read the legend with a smile of derision: &#8220;The Fashion
+Saloon.&#8221; Several ponies were hitched to the rail in front of the building;
+the bridle of one was gaily decorated with a bow of ribbon. Only a woman would
+have decorated a pony thus, the young man decided with a smile. Yet what sort of
+woman <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14'></a>14</span> would hitch
+her pony in front of a saloon? He looked about him for some explanation and saw
+a vacant space beside him and beside the vacant space a store. There was no
+hitching rail in front of the store, therefore here was the explanation. He
+heard a sound behind him and turning he beheld the figures of a man and a woman
+in the vacant space between the two buildings.</p>
+
+<p>The woman seemed to be little more than a girl, for as the young man watched
+she turned slightly toward him&#8211;though not seeing him&#8211;and he saw
+youth pictured on her face, and innocence, though withal she gave the young man
+an impression of sturdy self-reliance that awakened instant admiration for her
+in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>She was attired in picturesque costume, consisting of short riding skirt,
+boots, felt hat, woolen blouse with a flowing tie at the throat, gloves, and
+spurs. It was not the sort of thing to which the young man was accustomed, but
+she made an attractive picture and he took in every detail of her appearance
+with eager eyes.</p>
+
+<p>It was some time before he noticed the man. The latter stood facing the girl
+and he could not get a view of his face. He had a gigantic frame, with huge
+shoulders that loomed above the girl, dwarfing her. The young man remained
+motionless, watching the two, for there was something <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_15'></a>15</span> in the big man&#8217;s attitude that held
+him. The man turned presently and the young man had a glimpse of his face. It
+was heavy featured, coarse, and an unmistakable brutality was betrayed in it.
+The young man&#8217;s lips curled. He did not like the type, and it was the
+girl&#8217;s face that held him now that he had seen the man&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>He leaned easily against the front of the building, not over fifteen feet
+distant from the two, trying to appear uninterested, but not concealing his
+interest. He believed the girl had not seen him, for though she had looked in
+his direction he was sure that her glance had passed him to rest on the pony at
+the hitching rail. Swift as the glance had been the young man had seen in her
+face an expression that caused him to decide to remain where he was until the
+girl mounted her pony, no matter how long that time might be. So he relaxed,
+leaning against the building&#8211;attentive, listening, though apparently
+entirely unconcerned over their conversation.</p>
+
+<p>The girl seemed moved with some deep emotion over something the big man had
+said, for her slight figure had stiffened and she stood looking at him with an
+angry, intense gaze. The big man had been taunting her, for his teeth showed in
+a mocking grin as he hovered near her, apparently sure of her. It was like a
+lion playing with <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16'></a>16</span> a
+mouse. Then the young man heard the big man&#8217;s voice:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So you don&#8217;t take kindly to my courting? Don&#8217;t want
+anything to do with me at all?&#8221; His forced laugh had a harshness in it
+that caused the young man&#8217;s muscles to stiffen. He took a sly glance at
+the girl and saw her chin uplift with disdain.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you think it necessary for me to tell you that&#8211;again?&#8221;
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>A strange satisfaction thrilled the young man; sympathy for her drew his
+mouth into a peculiarly grim smile. But he had no time to enjoy his satisfaction
+for the big man spoke and this time he did not laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said shortly, &#8220;you&#8217;re going to have
+something to do with me. You&#8217;re going to hook up with me or I&#8217;m
+putting that crazy brother of yours out of business!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl was suddenly rigid and a deep red as suddenly suffused her cheeks.
+The young man&#8217;s face paled at the threat, his teeth came together with a
+snap, and he leaned forward, wishing to hear some more of this extraordinary
+conversation. More of it came quickly. The girl spoke, her voice even and well
+controlled, though burdened with a biting sarcasm:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What a terrible man you are, to be sure, to <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_17'></a>17</span> threaten to make war upon a defenseless
+girl and her afflicted brother. But I&#8217;m not afraid of you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She took a step toward him, standing very close to him and looking straight
+into his eyes. She was fighting bravely for her composure, but the young man had
+seen that her lips had quivered pitifully during her brief speech. He stiffened
+with sympathy. He could not, of course, understand this strange conversation,
+but he could discern its drift, and the suggestive underplay in the big
+man&#8217;s words. But plainly he had not been mistaken in his estimate of the
+young woman&#8211;she seemed entirely able to take care of herself.</p>
+
+<p>He crowded a little closer, though he knew that this conversation was none of
+his affair further than that he was interested&#8211;as any man would be
+interested&#8211;in seeing that the young woman received decent treatment.
+Certainly so far she had not received that, yet neither had the big man said
+anything to warrant interference by a stranger. Stealing another glance, the
+young man saw a heavy revolver at the man&#8217;s hip, and he did not doubt,
+from what he had thus far seen of him, that he would use the weapon should he
+turn and discover that there was a listener to his conversation. Such an action
+would accord <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18'></a>18</span>
+perfectly with tales that the young man had heard of this section of the
+country. But he edged closer.</p>
+
+<p>The big man&#8217;s face had become poisonously bloated. The girl&#8217;s
+defiance seemed to have enraged him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hell!&#8221; he said venomously. &#8220;You&#8217;re talking damn
+brave!&#8221; He leaned closer to her. &#8220;And you think you&#8217;d be
+disgraced if folks knowed you was a friend of mine?&#8221; He laughed harshly.
+&#8220;Most folks are tickled to be known as my friend. But I&#8217;m telling
+you this: If I ain&#8217;t a friend I&#8217;m an enemy, and you&#8217;re doing
+as I say or I&#8217;m making things mighty unpleasant for you and your poor,
+&#8216;afflicted&#8217; brother!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The young man saw the girl&#8217;s hands clench, saw her face grow slowly
+pale. Twice now had the big man taunted her about her brother, and plainly his
+words had hurt her. Words trembled on her lips but refused to come. But for an
+instant she forced her eyes to meet those of the man and then they suddenly
+filled with tears. She took a backward step, her shoulders drooping. The big man
+followed her, gloating over her. Again the young man&#8217;s thoughts went to
+the lion and the mouse.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hurts, does it?&#8221; said the big man, brutally. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19'></a>19</span> &#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve
+brought it on yourself, being such a damn prude!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He reached out and grasped her by the shoulder. She shrank back, struggling
+with him, trying to grasp the butt of an ivory-handled revolver that swung at
+her right hip. The big man pinned her arms and the effort was futile.</p>
+
+<p>And then retribution&#8211;like an avalanche&#8211;struck the big man. He
+heard the movement, sensed the danger, and flung his right hand toward his
+pistol butt. There was a silent struggle; a shot, one of the young man&#8217;s
+arms swung out&#8211;flail like&#8211;the clenched hand landing with a crash.
+The big man went down like a falling tree&#8211;prone to the ground, his
+revolver flying ten feet distant, a little blue-white smoke curling lazily
+upward out of its muzzle. The big man was raised again&#8211;bodily&#8211;and
+hurled down again. He lay face upward in the white sunlight&#8211;a mass of
+bruised and bleeding flesh.</p>
+
+<p>The young man&#8217;s anger had come and gone. He stood over the big man,
+looking down at him, his white teeth gleaming through his slightly parted
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think that will do for you,&#8221; he said in an even, passionless
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant there was a tense silence. The <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_20'></a>20</span> young man turned and looked at the girl,
+who was regarding him with surprised and bewildered eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The young man smiled mirthlessly. &#8220;I think I waited rather too long.
+But he won&#8217;t bother you again&#8211;at least for a few minutes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He saw the girl&#8217;s gaze directed to a point somewhere behind him and he
+turned to see that a door in the side of the Fashion Saloon was vomiting men.
+They came rushing out, filling the space between the two buildings&#8211;cowboys
+mostly, with a sprinkling of other men whose appearance and attire proclaimed
+them citizens. The young man stood silent while the newcomers ranged themselves
+about him, others giving their attention to the big man who still lay on the
+ground. The girl had not moved; she was standing near the young man, her face
+pale, her slight figure rigid, her eyes wide and flashing. The young man looked
+from her to the men who had crowded about him and he became aware that one of
+the men&#8211;a slender, olive-skinned cowboy&#8211;evidently a
+half-breed&#8211;was speaking to him. He stood looking at the man, saw menace in
+his eyes, heard his voice, writhing in profane accusation:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So you&#8217;ve shot Beeg Beel, you tenderfoot&#8213;!&#8221; said the
+man. His right hand <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21'></a>21</span>
+was hooked in his cartridge belt, near the butt of his six-shooter.</p>
+
+<p>The young man had been coldly scrutinizing the face of the half-breed; he had
+seen a sneering insolence on the thin, snarling lips, and he knew instantly that
+this man was a friend of his fallen adversary. He had smiled grimly when the man
+had begun speaking, being willing to argue the justice of his action in striking
+the big man, but at the man&#8217;s vile insult his white teeth gleamed again
+and his right arm flew out&#8211;like a flail&#8211;the fist crashing against
+the half-breed&#8217;s jaw. Like the big man the half-breed collapsed in a heap
+on the ground. There was a sudden movement in the crowd, and pistols flashed in
+the sunlight. The young man took a backward step, halted, drew himself up and
+faced them, his lips curling.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course you&#8217;ll shoot now,&#8221; he said bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>He heard a rustle beside him, and turned to see the girl standing within a
+foot of him, the ivory-handled pistol in hand, her eyes flashing coldly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think that any of them are going to shoot,&#8221; she
+declared evenly, her voice resounding in the sudden silence that had fallen;
+&#8220;Big Bill got just what he deserved, and this gentleman <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22'></a>22</span> will not be molested. He
+isn&#8217;t armed,&#8221; she said, with a dry laugh; &#8220;shooting him would
+be murder, and if he is shot I promise to avenge him immediately.&#8221; She
+turned slightly, speaking to the young man while keeping her eyes on the men
+around her. During the pause that followed her words several of the men
+stealthily sheathed their weapons and stepped back.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think Big Bill is able to fight his own battles,&#8221; continued
+the girl, taking advantage of the evident reluctance of the men to force
+trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Her face became slightly paler as she saw the big man sit up and stare about
+him. He got to his feet and stood, swaying dizzily for an instant, and then his
+gaze sought out the young man and was fixed on him with foreboding malignance.
+His right hand fell to his holster, and finding no weapon there he turned and
+sought it, finding it, and returning to a point near the young man, the weapon
+in hand. As he halted there was another movement and the half-breed was on his
+feet and dragging at his revolver. The young man crouched, prepared to spring,
+and the big man spoke sharply to the half-breed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Quit it!&#8221; he said, snarling. &#8220;Mind your own
+business!&#8221; Then he seemed to realize that the half-breed had been worsted
+also, for he <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23'></a>23</span> looked
+at the latter, saw the dust on his clothing and grinned expressively.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So he got you too, did he, Yuma?&#8221; His heavy features wreathed
+into a mocking sneer as he faced the young man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Knocked me down!&#8221; he said in a silky, even voice. &#8220;Knocked
+me cold with a punch. Knocked Yuma Ed down too!&#8221; He took another step
+toward the young man and surveyed him critically, his eyes glinting with
+something very near amusement. Then he stepped back, laughing shortly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t shooting you,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I&#8217;ve got an
+idea that you and me will meet again.&#8221; There was an ominous threat in his
+voice as he continued: &#8220;Shooting you wouldn&#8217;t half pay you back.
+Mark that, young man&#8211;shooting you wouldn&#8217;t half pay you
+back.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stepped away from the young man, motioning the other men into the door
+through which they had emerged to come to his assistance, and they filed slowly
+in without protest. The big man paused long enough to look again at the young
+man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Knocked me down!&#8221; he said as though scarcely able to realize the
+truth; &#8220;knocked me cold with a punch!&#8221; He laughed, his coarse
+features twisting into an odd expression. &#8220;Well, <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_24'></a>24</span> I&#8217;ll be damned!&#8221; He turned
+abruptly and disappeared through the door through which the other men had
+gone.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant the young man stood, looking after him. Then he turned and saw
+the young woman, standing near her pony, regarding him with grave eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; she said. He caught a flashing smile and then she
+was in the saddle, loping her pony down the street toward the station. For a
+moment the young man looked after her and then with a smile he returned to his
+suit cases and was off down the street toward the courthouse, which he saw in
+the distance.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25'></a>25</span><a id='link_2'></a>CHAPTER II<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE RULE OF CATTLE</span></h2>
+
+<p>The courthouse was a low, one-story redbrick building, sitting well back from
+the street. It was evidently newly built, for an accumulation of débris, left by
+the workmen, still littered the ground in the vicinity. A board walk led from
+the street to the wide, arched entrance. From the steps one could look down the
+street at the station and the other buildings squatting in the sunlight, dingy
+with the dust of many dry days. Except for the cowponies and the buckboard and
+the prairie schooner there was a total absence of life or movement, offering a
+striking contrast to the bustling cities to which the young man had been
+accustomed.</p>
+
+<p>He walked rapidly down the board walk, entered the courthouse, and paused
+before a door upon which appeared the legend: &#8220;United States District
+Court. J. Blackstone Graney.&#8221; The young man set his suit cases down,
+mopped his forehead with his handkerchief, making a wry face at the dust that
+appeared on the linen after his use of it, and then knocked lightly, but <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26'></a>26</span> firmly, on the door. A
+voice inside immediately admonished him to &#8220;come in.&#8221; The young man
+smiled with satisfaction, turned the knob and opened the door, standing on the
+threshold. A man seated at one of the windows of the room was gazing steadily
+out at the vast, dry, sun-scorched country. He turned at the young man&#8217;s
+entrance and got slowly to his feet, apparently waiting for the visitor to
+speak. He was a short man, not heavily, but stockily built, giving a clear
+impression of stolidity. Yet there was a certain gleam in his eyes that gave the
+lie to this impression, a gleam that warned of an active, analytical mind.
+Judicial dignity lurked all over him.</p>
+
+<p>The young man bowed respectfully. &#8220;Are you Judge Graney?&#8221; he
+questioned.</p>
+
+<p>The judge nodded and the young man smiled slightly. &#8220;I am Kent
+Hollis,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>The judge had been approaching a big table that stood in the center of the
+room and at the young man&#8217;s words he took a second glance at him, but did
+not hesitate in his walk toward the table. However, he smiled when he reached
+it, sinking into a chair and motioning the young man to another.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have been expecting you,&#8221; he said after he had become seated.
+&#8220;Take a chair.&#8221; He <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_27'></a>27</span> waited until the young man had drawn a chair opposite
+him and then he leaned over the table and stretched out his hand in greeting.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m glad to see you,&#8221; he continued cordially. He held the
+young man&#8217;s hand for an instant, peering steadily into the latter&#8217;s
+unwavering eyes, apparently making a mental estimate of him. Then he dropped the
+hand and sat back, a half smile on his face. &#8220;You look like your
+father,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>The young man&#8217;s face clouded. &#8220;Poor dad,&#8221; he said
+slowly.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment there was a silence; the judge studied the young man&#8217;s
+face. Something that he saw in it must have pleased him, for he smiled, becoming
+serious instantly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am sorry you could not get here in time,&#8221; he said. &#8220;We
+buried your father yesterday.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t make it,&#8221; returned the young man regretfully.
+&#8220;I should have liked to see him before he died. Where did you bury
+him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We took him out to his ranch&#8211;the Circle Bar,&#8221; returned the
+judge, &#8220;where he said he wanted to be buried when he died. You&#8217;ll
+find that the Circle Bar boys have done their best for him&#8211;which was
+little enough. Poor fellow, he deserved something better.&#8221; He looked
+keenly at the young man.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28'></a>28</span>Lines of pain came
+into the latter&#8217;s face; he bowed his head, nodding at the Judge&#8217;s
+words.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have always thought that it was his own fault,&#8221; he said
+gently. &#8220;It might have been different.&#8221; He looked slowly up at the
+judge, his face reddening with embarrassment. &#8220;Of course you know
+something of his life,&#8221; he said. &#8220;You were his friend&#8211;he wrote
+me a while back, telling me that. I don&#8217;t pretend to know what came
+between him and mother,&#8221; he continued; &#8220;mother would never tell and
+father never mentioned it in his letters. I have thought it was drink,&#8221; he
+added, watching the judge&#8217;s face closely. He caught the latter&#8217;s
+slight nod and his lips straightened. &#8220;Yes, it must have been
+drink,&#8221; he continued; &#8220;I have inferred that from what mother has
+hinted now and then. But&#8213;&#8221; and a wistful gleam came into his
+eyes&#8211;&#8220;I have hoped that it would not be drink that would cause
+his&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He caught the judge&#8217;s slow, grave nod and he broke off abruptly, his
+eyes filling with an expression of resignation. &#8220;Well,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;it is ended, no matter what did it.&#8221; He shoved back his chair.
+&#8220;I thank you for what you did for him,&#8221; he added, rising; &#8220;I
+assure you that if it is possible for me to repay&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29'></a>29</span>&#8220;Sit
+down,&#8221; said the judge, waving a hand to the young man&#8217;s chair.
+&#8220;No thanks are due me. I did only what any friend would do for another. I
+have arranged for you to go out to the Circle Bar,&#8221; he informed Hollis as
+the latter hesitated over resuming his chair. &#8220;Neil Norton, your range
+boss, is to be here at six o&#8217;clock with the buckboard.&#8221; He consulted
+his watch. &#8220;He ought to be here in half an hour&#8211;if he is on time.
+Meantime there are some things I would like to say to you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled. &#8220;Fire away,&#8221; he directed.</p>
+
+<p>The judge leaned his elbows on the table and narrowed his eyes at Hollis.
+&#8220;Don&#8217;t think my questions impertinent,&#8221; he said gravely,
+&#8220;for I assure you that nothing is further from my mind than a desire to
+pry into your affairs. But I take it you will need some advice&#8211;which, of
+course, you may disregard if you wish. I suppose you don&#8217;t make a secret
+of your age?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; was the instant reply, given with a grin, &#8220;I am
+twenty-six.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The judge smiled dryly. &#8220;We have great ambitions at twenty-six,&#8221;
+he said. &#8220;I remember that at twenty-six I was rather determined on making
+the Supreme bench. You can see for yourself how far I missed it. I do not say
+that we never realize our ambitions,&#8221; he added <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_30'></a>30</span> quickly as he saw a flash light up the
+young man&#8217;s eyes; &#8220;I merely wish to show that in my case they were
+rather extravagant.&#8221; He grimaced, continuing with a smile: &#8220;You are
+a college man, of course&#8211;I can see that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded. The judge continued, with an admiring glance at the young
+man&#8217;s muscular frame and broad shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Went in for athletics&#8211;football, and such?&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;Well,&#8221; he added, catching the young man&#8217;s nod, &#8220;it
+didn&#8217;t hurt you a particle&#8211;it doesn&#8217;t hurt anybody. Rather
+prepares a man for hard knocks&#8211;which he is sure to get sooner or later. If
+you have decided to live in this country you must expect hard knocks. And I
+presume you are going to live here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That depends.&#8221; returned Hollis. &#8220;If father has left his
+affairs in such shape that it is necessary for me to stay here and straighten
+them out, why of course I shall stay. Otherwise&#8213;&#8221; He hesitated and
+laughed quietly, continuing: &#8220;Well, I also have an ambition, and if I am
+compelled to remain here it will have to be sacrificed. It is a rather humble
+ambition compared to yours,&#8221; he laughed. &#8220;It is journalism,&#8221;
+he continued, suddenly serious; &#8220;I want to own a newspaper. I am city
+editor now and in a few years&#8213;&#8221; He laughed. &#8220;I am not <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31'></a>31</span> going to prophesy, but I
+have been working hard.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The judge&#8217;s eyelashes flickered, but his face remained grave. &#8220;I
+am afraid that you will have to remain here. That is&#8221;&#8211;he added
+dryly&#8211;&#8220;if you expect to realize anything from the
+property.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I expect there can&#8217;t be much property,&#8221; observed
+Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>The judge smiled. &#8220;A thousand acres of good grass land, some buildings,
+and&#8221;&#8211;here the judge&#8217;s eyes gleamed and he drawled his
+words&#8211;&#8220;a newspaper.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis sat erect. &#8220;A newspaper!&#8221; he gasped. &#8220;A newspaper in
+this country? Why, man, a newspaper&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The judge laughed. &#8220;So you will not have to go back East in order to be
+able to realize your ambition&#8211;you can own a newspaper here&#8211;your
+father&#8217;s newspaper&#8211;the Dry Bottom <i>Kicker</i>. It was quite a
+recent venture; I believe it appeared about a dozen times&#8211;intermittently.
+Ostensibly it was a weekly, but in reality it was printed at those times when
+your father&#8217;s affliction sat least heavily upon him. He used to hire a
+compositor from Las Vegas to set the type,&#8211;a man named Potter&#8211;a
+worthless sort of fellow, but a genius in his way&#8211;when sober. I <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32'></a>32</span> suspect that much of the
+matter that went into the <i>Kicker</i> emanated from the brain of Dave
+Potter.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s smile revealed just a trace of derision. &#8220;You
+don&#8217;t happen to know how father happened to think that a newspaper would
+pay&#8211;in this place?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>The judge looked at him meditatively, a gleam of quiet amusement in his eyes.
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t remember to have said that the paper made any money for
+your father,&#8221; he returned slowly; &#8220;nor do I remember hearing your
+father say that he expected it to make any money. As I understand the situation,
+your father founded the paper on principle. He expected to use it as a
+weapon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Please go on,&#8221; urged Hollis. &#8220;That strikes me as a rather
+Quixotic proceeding.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was, rather,&#8221; admitted the judge; &#8220;that is, it would
+seem Quixotic as viewed by an Eastern newspaper man. But out here people are apt
+to ignore money and methods in considering results. After you have been here a
+while you will be able to see the force and truth of that statement. Your father
+was after results and he seized upon the idea of founding a newspaper as a means
+by which to obtain them. And I feel certain that had he lived he would have
+succeeded.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33'></a>33</span>&#8220;I plead
+ignorance,&#8221; said Hollis, watching the judge closely. &#8220;What
+particular result did my father desire?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Judge Graney&#8217;s eyes gleamed with earnestness. He leaned forward,
+speaking slowly and distinctly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am going to illustrate my point by giving you a brief history of
+your father&#8217;s experiences out here&#8211;as I had it from him. He came out
+here about fifteen years ago and took up a quarter-section of land over on
+Rabbit-Ear Creek, the present site of the Circle Bar ranch. For quite a few
+years he was a nester&#8211;as the small owner is called in this country, but he
+was unmolested for the reason that there were few large owners in the vicinity
+and each man was willing that his neighbor should succeed. Your father prospered
+and after a few years began to buy land. He finally acquired a thousand acres;
+he told me that at one time he had about five thousand head of cattle. Of
+course, these cattle could not live on your father&#8217;s thousand acres, but
+the ranges are free and the thousand acres answered very well as a
+headquarters.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Eight years ago some men in Santa Fe organized what is known as the
+Union County Cattlemen&#8217;s Association. This company secured a section of
+land adjoining your father&#8217;s property, on the other side of Rabbit-Ear
+Creek. The <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34'></a>34</span> company
+called its ranch the Circle Cross. Perhaps it strikes you as peculiar that the
+Association should have chosen a brand so closely resembling your
+father&#8217;s. I will digress long enough to explain the action.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The judge drew out a pencil and picked up a piece of paper that lay near him
+on the desk, making some crude hieroglyphics and poising his pencil above
+them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Here,&#8221; he explained, indicating a sketch which he had drawn, &#8220;is
+the Circle Bar brand&#8211;a bar within a circle. And this&#8211;&#8221; indicating
+another sketch, &#8220;&#8211;is the Circle Cross&#8211;a cross within a circle. It is
+of course, perfectly obvious that all the Circle Cross company had to do when it
+desired to appropriate one of the Circle Bar cattle was to add a vertical bar to
+the Circle Bar brand and the brand became the Circle Cross. From a mechanical
+standpoint it was a very trifling operation, the manipulator of the brands
+having merely to apply the hot iron through a piece of wet blanket&#8211;that
+gives a new brand the appearance of age.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;To get back to the main subject. The new company called its ranch the
+Circle Cross and it erected new buildings within a few miles of the Circle Bar
+buildings. Not long after the advent of the new company it tried to buy the
+Circle <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35'></a>35</span> Bar, but your
+father refused to sell. Bill Dunlavey, the Circle Cross manager, attempted to
+negotiate the purchase of the Circle Bar and when he was met with refusal hard
+words passed between him and your father. Not long after that your father began
+to miss cattle&#8211;rustlers began a systematic attack upon his herds. Your
+father recognized this thievery as the work of the Cattlemen&#8217;s Association
+and he fought back.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A number of times he changed his brands but each time the company
+checkmated him. To illustrate: Your father changed his brand to appear
+thus:&#8221; The judge drew again on the paper. &#8220;That is the
+&#8216;Wine-Glass&#8217; brand. You can see that it resembles a wine glass when held
+up vertically, though of course as it appeared on the Circle Bar cattle it lay
+on its side. But this move was futile, for among the Circle Cross cattle now
+appeared many branded with the sign of the &#8216;Hour-Glass,&#8217; thus:&#8221; The
+judge drew again. &#8220;This was achieved by merely adding a semi-circle to the
+wine-glass, closing over the bowl.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;As I have said your father altered his brand a good many times. But
+the Circle Bar cattle continued to disappear. Years of warfare followed. The
+Cattlemen&#8217;s Association lost no opportunity to harass your father or, for
+that matter, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36'></a>36</span> all the
+other small owners in the vicinity. Desperate, dissolute men were imported from
+Texas and Arizona, men who took delight in the shedding of human blood. These
+men roamed the ranges, stealing the Circle Bar cattle and killing Circle Bar
+cowboys. Your father had trouble in keeping men; in order to surround himself
+with enough men to protect his cattle and resist the aggressions of
+Dunlavey&#8217;s hired assassins he was forced to pay ruinous wages.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Even then he could not prevent rustling. Dunlavey bribed his men; his
+herds dwindled; he saw that he was facing ruin if he did not devise some means
+to successfully cope with his enemies. He went over to Santa Fe to see the
+governor&#8211;a piffling carpet-bagger. He was told that the government was
+powerless; that the same condition existed all over the country, and that the
+government was unable to combat it. The Law had not come.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Your father returned home, discouraged but not beaten. He approached
+the several other small owners in the vicinity, asking for co-operation and
+assistance. Fearful of Dunlavey&#8217;s wrath, the small owners refused to
+organize. But your father decided to carry on the fight alone. He recognized the
+fact that nothing but the Law could defeat the association&#8217;s aims, and he
+determined <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37'></a>37</span> to force
+the Law into the Territory. With this end in view he established his newspaper.
+He succeeded in arousing public interest with the result that a court was
+established here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The judge smiled dryly, continuing: &#8220;Yes, the Law is here. Or what is
+more to the point, a representative of the Law is here. &#8216;I am the
+Law,&#8217;&#8221; he quoted, ironically. &#8220;But my hands are tied; this
+court is a mere travesty upon justice. The government at Washington has seen fit
+to send me here&#8211;alone. I can&#8217;t go out and get evidence; I
+couldn&#8217;t secure a conviction if I did. The people here who are not
+Dunlavey&#8217;s friends were afraid of him. I can&#8217;t get a jury. Dunlavey
+elects the sheriff&#8211;controls the election machinery. I am powerless&#8211;a
+mere figurehead. This is the situation in a nutshell. I could go into detail,
+but I imagine it is plain enough as it is.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s face had become gravely serious; his lips were straightened
+with an expression that hinted at the conflict that was going on in his
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t there an army post near?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Over at Fort Union&#8211;a hundred miles or so southwest. I have
+pleaded for a detail, but have been informed that it can&#8217;t be had; that
+the <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38'></a>38</span> soldiers are
+needed to keep the Indians in order. Independent cattlemen are supposed to fight
+it out alone. At least that is the inference, if we are to consider the attitude
+of the government.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was gravely silent. The judge leaned back in his chair, watching him
+with a queer expression. He realized that he had said enough to discourage the
+average young man from remaining in the country a moment longer than was
+absolutely necessary. He would not have been surprised had Hollis told him that
+he did not intend to remain. But from what he had seen of the young man he felt
+sure that his decision, when it did come, would be final. More than once since
+Hollis had been in the office had the judge observed the serene, steady gleam in
+his eyes, and he had catalogued him with the rare class of men whose mental
+balance is so perfect that nothing disturbs it. The judge had met a few such men
+in the West and he knew the type. As he sat looking at the young man he decided
+that Providence had made a mistake in allowing him to waste his time in the
+East. The West teemed with opportunities for men of his kind.</p>
+
+<p>He was not surprised at Hollis&#8217;s next question; it showed that he was
+considering the situation from many angles before committing himself.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39'></a>39</span>&#8220;What is the
+condition of Circle Bar ranch at present?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The title to the land is intact and cannot be assailed. But Norton
+informs me that there are not above two hundred head of cattle on the range, and
+that the buildings are run down. Not a very cheerful prospect?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He had told the truth about the land and the cattle, but he had purposely
+exaggerated concerning the condition of the buildings, being grimly determined
+to place the situation in its most unfavorable light that he might be the better
+able to test the young man&#8217;s mettle. He smiled as Hollis thoughtfully
+stroked his chin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, now,&#8221; admitted the latter, flashing a queer smile at the
+judge, &#8220;I quite agree with you that the prospect isn&#8217;t cheering. But
+so long as the condition is such as it is there is no need to grumble. I
+didn&#8217;t come out here expecting to fall into a bed of roses.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then you won&#8217;t be disappointed,&#8221; returned the judge dryly.
+He filled and lighted a pipe, smoking meditatively, his eyes on the younger man
+with a curious expression. He had determined to push the test a little
+farther.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You could probably sell the Circle Bar,&#8221; he said finally.
+&#8220;Your father told me before he died that he had been offered ten dollars
+an acre <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40'></a>40</span> for his
+land. That would total to a tidy sum.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis looked quickly at the judge, his eyes flashing with grim amusement.
+&#8220;Would you advise me to sell?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>The judge laughed quietly. &#8220;That is an unfair question,&#8221; he
+equivocated, narrowing his eyes whimsically. &#8220;If I were heir to the
+property and felt that I did not care to assume the danger of managing it I
+should sell, without doubt. If, on the other hand, I had decided to continue my
+father&#8217;s fight against an unscrupulous company, I would stay no matter
+what the consequences. But&#8221;&#8211;He puffed slowly at his pipe, his voice
+filling with unmistakable sarcasm&#8211;&#8220;it would be so much easier to
+sell and return at once to a more peaceful atmosphere. With ten thousand dollars
+you could go back East and go on with your newspaper work, well equipped, with a
+chance of realizing your ambition&#8211;and not be troubled with continuing a
+fight in which, no doubt, there would be many blows to be taken.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; returned Hollis quietly. He looked steadily into the
+judge&#8217;s eyes, his own glinting with a grim humor. &#8220;You have
+succeeded in making it very plain,&#8221; he continued slowly. &#8220;But I am
+not going to run&#8211;I have decided on that. Of course I feel properly
+resentful over the way my father has been treated by this man Dunlavey and his
+association.&#8221; His <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_41'></a>41</span> eyes flashed with a peculiar hardness. &#8220;And I
+would stay here and fight Dunlavey and his parcel of ruffians if for no other
+reason than to secure revenge on personal grounds.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But there is one other reason. There is a principle at stake. I
+don&#8217;t care very much about the personal side of the question; little as I
+knew my father, I believe he would have ignored personalities were he confronted
+with the condition that confronts me. It is my belief that as an American
+citizen he chafed under conditions that prevented him from enjoying that freedom
+to which we are all entitled under the Constitution. Judging from your
+conversation you are in entire sympathy with that sentiment.&#8221; He smiled at
+the judge. &#8220;Of course I am not mistaken?&#8221; he added.</p>
+
+<p>The tobacco in the bowl of the judge&#8217;s pipe spluttered; he brought his
+right fist heavily down upon the table, rattling the pens and ink bottles that
+littered its top. &#8220;No, young man; you are not mistaken&#8211;you have hit
+the nail squarely on the head. If you are going to stay here and fight Dunlavey
+and his crew, Blackstone Graney is with you until&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Until the Law comes,&#8221; suggested Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, by thunder!&#8221; declared the judge. &#8220;You can go further
+than that and say: &#8216;until the Law rules!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42'></a>42</span><a id='link_3'></a>CHAPTER III<br /><span class='h2fs'>NORTON MAKES A DISCOVERY</span></h2>
+
+<p>Judge Graney rose and leaned over the table, taking the young man&#8217;s
+hand and holding it tightly. Then he sat down again and resumed smoking. Neither
+man said a word during the hand-clasp and yet both knew that their hearts and
+minds were united in a common cause. Words would have been unnecessary and
+futile.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s path of duty lay straight and open before him. There was no
+by-way that would lead him around the dangers that were sure to beset him. Nor
+had he thought to search for any. Long before the judge had concluded his
+recital of conditions in the county Hollis had decided to meet the issue
+squarely. He had been able to see beyond the petty, personal side of the
+question; had even ignored it to get at the big, pithy principle of equal
+rights. The Law must come. If he could assist in bringing it he would be
+accomplishing something real and tangible <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_43'></a>43</span> and he would be satisfied. He did not believe that
+Destiny had anything to do with his appearance upon the scene at this particular
+time; rather he felt that his coming was merely a result of a combination of
+circumstances such as might have occurred to any man. And like any man with
+courage and deeply settled convictions he was prepared to move forward to the
+issue, trusting himself. He had no thought of appearing heroic.</p>
+
+<p>Yet to the judge he appeared so. The latter had been prepared to hear excuses
+from him; had been prepared to resist a natural inclination to berate the young
+man soundly for lack of parental loyalty, though conscious that he could advance
+no valid reason for the young man sacrificing himself upon the altars of an old
+feud. It was against human nature for any man to so sacrifice himself, he had
+assured himself when trying to build up a defense for the young man.</p>
+
+<p>And now that Hollis had shown that he needed no defender; that he was willing
+to take up the cudgels in behalf of his father, the judge was scarcely able to
+restrain himself. To state calmly that he intended to fight the
+Cattlemen&#8217;s Association when there was a life of comparative safety
+awaiting him in another section of the country was an heroic decision. Many
+another <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44'></a>44</span> man would
+have cringed&#8211;would have surrendered without striking a blow.</p>
+
+<p>Judge Graney had long known that the action of his government in sending him
+to Union County was an ironical surrender on the part of the government to the
+forces in the West which had been long demanding the Law. He had been sent here,
+presumably to enforce the law, but in reality to silence the government&#8217;s
+critics. He was not expected to convict anyone. Theoretically he was supposed to
+uphold the majesty of the law in Union County, but in reality he merely remained
+and drew his salary. There was no law to enforce.</p>
+
+<p>In the fight that had been waged between the elder Hollis and the
+Cattlemen&#8217;s Association his sympathies had been with Hollis, though he had
+never been able to assist him in a legal way. But the judge knew that eventually
+the Law must come, and so he encouraged Hollis, assuring him that victory would
+be his in the end.</p>
+
+<p>And then Hollis had died&#8211;suddenly. The Las Vegas doctor who had
+attended him had shaken his head sagely when the judge had questioned him
+regarding his patient and had pointed significantly to one of Dry Bottom&#8217;s
+saloons. The doctor had told the judge there was no hope, and the latter had
+telegraphed East. The appearance of young Hollis had been the result. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45'></a>45</span> The judge&#8217;s heart
+had warmed toward the young man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What are your intentions regarding the newspaper&#8211;the
+<i>Kicker</i>?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis looked up quickly, his face grave. &#8220;Perhaps if there had been no
+<i>Kicker</i> here my decision might have been different,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;But so long as it is here it is in business to stay!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I expect that decision won&#8217;t please Dunlavey a whole lot,&#8221;
+the judge returned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps not,&#8221; drawled Hollis; &#8220;still, we can&#8217;t aim
+to please everybody. I expect I might be able to get hold of that
+printer&#8211;Potter I believe you called him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Potter won&#8217;t be hard to find,&#8221; assured the judge; &#8220;a
+search of the saloons would uncover him, I imagine.&#8221; He smiled.
+&#8220;When you get ready to get the <i>Kicker</i> out just let me know; I
+promise to have Potter on hand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>To the ears of the two men came a rattle of wheels and a voice. The judge
+leaned back in his chair and looked out through the window. His face wreathed
+into a broad smile as he resumed his former position and looked at Hollis.
+&#8220;Your range boss is here,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>They heard a step on the board walk, and a man stood in the doorway looking
+at them.</p>
+
+<p>The newcomer gave an instant impression of <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_46'></a>46</span> capability. He stood on the threshold, entirely
+composed, saturnine, serene eyed, absolutely sure of himself. He was arrayed in
+high heeled boots, minus spurs; the bottoms of a pair of dust-covered overalls
+were tucked into the boot legs; a woolen shirt, open at the throat, covered a
+pair of admirable shoulders; a scarlet handkerchief was knotted around his neck;
+and a wide brimmed hat, carelessly dented in the crown, was shoved rakishly back
+from his forehead. Sagging from his slim waist was a well filled cartridge belt
+and at the right hip a heavy revolver.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Howdy, judge!&#8221; he said with a smile, in response to Judge
+Graney&#8217;s cordial greeting.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Just come in?&#8221; questioned the judge.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Been in town an hour,&#8221; returned Norton.</p>
+
+<p>He flashed a searching glance at Hollis, which that young man met steadily.
+The thought crossed Hollis&#8217;s mind that the buckboard that he had seen in
+front of a store soon after leaving the station must have been Norton&#8217;s.
+But now Norton was speaking again and Hollis listened.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dropped into the Fashion to see my friend Red Eggers,&#8221; resumed
+Norton, smiling broadly. &#8220;Same old crowd&#8211;Dunlavey, Yuma Ed, Ten
+Spot, Greasy&#8211;most of the bunch which has been makin&#8217; things
+interestin&#8217; for us hereabouts.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At the mention of &#8220;Yuma Ed&#8221; Hollis looked <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_47'></a>47</span> up. That was the name of the second man
+he had struck in the affair near the Fashion Saloon. He wondered if Norton knew.
+He did not remember to have seen the latter among the men who had surrounded him
+in the space between the two buildings. But the judge was now introducing him to
+Norton and he stood up, holding the latter&#8217;s hand and meeting his
+inspecting gaze fairly. He found that the range boss was fully as tall as he;
+indeed, Hollis discovered that he was compelled to look up slightly in order to
+meet the latter&#8217;s level gaze. Norton smiled peculiarly; there was a
+friendly expression in his eyes, but mingled with it was a reserved, appraising,
+speculative gleam, which drew a smile to Hollis&#8217;s lips.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So you&#8217;re Jim Hollis&#8217;s boy?&#8221; said Norton. &#8220;My
+new boss?&#8221; He grinned, evidently willing to go more than half way in
+forming a friendship with his &#8220;new boss&#8221;. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+reckon that you&#8217;re much stuck on this here country&#8211;much as
+you&#8217;ve seen of it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been used to keeping busy,&#8221; laughed Hollis,
+&#8220;and my impression is that it seems rather dull out here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton&#8217;s eyelashes flickered. He deliberately closed one eye at the
+judge, carefully averting his face so that Hollis could not see.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48'></a>48</span>&#8220;So
+you&#8217;re lookin&#8217; for action?&#8221; he said to Hollis in a grave
+voice. &#8220;Mebbe it ain&#8217;t none of my business,&#8221; he added, his
+eyes gleaming, &#8220;but I&#8217;m askin&#8217; you if you&#8217;re
+thinkin&#8217; to stay in this country&#8211;keepin&#8217; your dad&#8217;s
+ranch an&#8217; his newspaper?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded. Norton&#8217;s eyes gleamed with a savage delight.
+&#8220;Bully!&#8221; he declared. &#8220;If you stay here you&#8217;ll get
+plenty of action. I was afraid you wouldn&#8217;t stay.&#8221; He turned to
+Judge Graney, a grin of satisfaction on his face. &#8220;I&#8217;m tellin&#8217;
+you somethin&#8217; that will tickle you a heap,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I told
+you that I had stopped in Red Egger&#8217;s saloon. I did. Dunlavey&#8217;s
+bunch was feelin&#8217; mighty sore over somethin&#8217;. I stayed there a
+while, tryin&#8217; to find out what it was all about, but there wasn&#8217;t
+none of them sayin&#8217; anything to me. But pretty soon I got Red over into a
+corner an&#8217; he told me. Accordin&#8217; to him Dunlavey had corraled that
+Hazelton girl outside an&#8217; was tellin&#8217; her somethin&#8217; pretty
+strong when a tenderfoot, which hadn&#8217;t any regard for Dunlavey&#8217;s
+delicate feelin&#8217;s, up an&#8217; lambasted him in the jaw!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Struck him?&#8221; queried the judge, grinning delightedly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Knocked him cold,&#8221; affirmed Norton, his eyes dancing.
+&#8220;Pasted him so hard that he thought it was night an&#8217; went to sleep.
+Then Yuma <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49'></a>49</span> busted in
+an&#8217; thought to work his guns. He got his&#8217;n, too. That there
+tenderfoot didn&#8217;t have no respect for guns. Red says he never thought any
+man could hit so hard. It must have been sumptuous!&#8221; He laughed
+delightedly. &#8220;I&#8217;d like to shake hands with that
+tenderfoot&#8211;he&#8217;s my friend!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis pulled out a cigar case, selected a cigar, lighted it, and smoked in
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>So her name was Hazelton. Admiration over the manner in which she had held
+the men at bay before Dunlavey got to his feet still lingered; she had impressed
+him deeply. But a deeper satisfaction overshadowed his thoughts of the girl, for
+he had slugged Dunlavey, his father&#8217;s enemy. His satisfaction grew to
+amusement. Did Dunlavey know who had slugged him? He must have suspected, for
+Hollis recalled the man&#8217;s significant expression when, after he had risen
+from the ground he said: &#8220;I&#8217;ve got an idea that you an&#8217; me
+will meet again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s thoughts flitted rapidly from Dunlavey to the girl. Now that
+he had decided to stay he had determined to search her out. He remembered that
+Dunlavey had spoken slightingly of her brother and he assured himself that he
+would not be entirely satisfied until he had uncovered the mystery. He might
+have questioned <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50'></a>50</span>
+Norton or the judge, for both men evidently knew the girl, but he was reluctant
+to betray his interest in her to either man.</p>
+
+<p>He heard Norton make an exclamation of surprise, and looking up he saw him
+holding his right hand out, the palm upward, examining it. There was a splotch
+of blood on the palm and another on the under side of the thumb.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Shucks!&#8221; Norton was saying. &#8220;Now where in thunder did I
+get that?&#8221; He looked again at the hand and then suddenly dove forward to
+Hollis&#8217;s side, seized his right hand, peered at the knuckles and held the
+hand triumphantly aloft.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon this is where I got it!&#8221; he grinned.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis looked ruefully down at his knuckles. The skin was
+gashed&#8211;evidently where it had come in contact with a bone in either
+Dunlavey&#8217;s or Yuma&#8217;s jaw. He had intended to keep the story of
+adventure to himself. But he saw that Norton had stepped back and was gazing
+soberly at the suitcases, which Hollis had deposited near the door. Norton
+suddenly let out a chirp of delight.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Two of them!&#8221; he said, suppressing his excitement; &#8220;Two
+grips! Red Eggers said there was two an&#8217; that the tenderfoot had come down
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51'></a>51</span> toward the court
+house!&#8221; He walked to Hollis and halted in front of him, looking at him
+with admiration and satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Own up now!&#8221; he said. &#8220;You ain&#8217;t tellin&#8217; us
+that it wasn&#8217;t you, durn you! Oh, say!&#8221; He uttered a whoop that must
+have startled the horses in front of the building. Then he sobered down,
+speaking in a low, regretful voice: &#8220;You durn tenderfoot! Here I&#8217;ve
+been waitin&#8217; for years to get a crack at that big four-flusher, an&#8217;
+here you come, a-fannin&#8217; along from your little old East an&#8217; get
+ahead of me!&#8221; He stifled a cackle of mirth. &#8220;An&#8217; so
+you&#8217;re lookin&#8217; for action? Lordy! If you don&#8217;t call what you
+done to Dunlavey an&#8217; Yuma action this country&#8217;s goin&#8217; to set
+up an&#8217; take notice when you get to goin&#8217; in earnest!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Judge Graney loomed somberly over the table. &#8220;I suppose it must have
+been you?&#8221; he said gravely.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded. &#8220;I may as well confess,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I saw a
+man giving a young lady a mighty bad moment and I slugged him. Another man
+called me a vile name and I slugged him, too. That was all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The judge sat down again, his face slightly pale. A significant glance passed
+between him and Norton, but the latter laughed grimly.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52'></a>52</span>&#8220;I reckon
+he&#8217;s opened the ball, right off the reel,&#8221; he suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Judge Graney drew a deep breath. &#8220;Yes,&#8221; he returned. &#8220;I
+suppose that way is as good as any other. It was bound to come anyway. It will
+be war to the finish now!&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53'></a>53</span><a id='link_4'></a>CHAPTER IV<br /><span class='h2fs'>AT THE CIRCLE BAR</span></h2>
+
+<p>In the two weeks that followed his arrival at Dry Bottom, Hollis had much
+time to meditate upon the great change that had come into his life. His
+conclusion that there was nothing in common between cattle raising and
+journalism was not a result of an involved process of reasoning, and had he not
+been endowed with a sense of humor he might have become embittered. Though a
+sacrifice be made cheerfully, there lingers always its ghost to draw mental
+pictures of &#8220;what might have been.&#8221; Hollis would have been more than
+human had he not felt some little regret over his sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>It had seemed to him, as two weeks before he had ridden away from the court
+house&#8211;sitting on the seat of the buckboard beside Neil Norton, his
+suitcases tucked snugly away underneath&#8211;that he was once and for all
+severing his connection with the big, bustling world in which he had moved; in
+whose busy scenes he had been so vitally interested. His had been a big work;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54'></a>54</span> seated at his desk
+in the &#8220;city&#8221; room of his newspaper he had many times likened
+himself unto an argus-eyed recording angel whose business it was to keep in view
+each of the many atoms of a busy multitude and to accord to them that amount of
+space that their importance seemed to demand. He had loved his work; it had
+broadened him, had provided him with exactly the proportion of mental exercise
+needed to keep him on edge and in a position to enjoy life. He had lived in the
+East&#8211;really lived. Out here he would merely exist, though, he assured
+himself grimly, his enemies would have to pay dearly for his sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>The picture of his journey to the Circle Bar ranch was still fresh in his
+mind as he rode slowly away from Neil Norton, whom he had left sitting in his
+saddle on a ridge, watching him. The long twilight had brought its lengthening
+shadows that night before Norton had struck the Circle Bar trail, and before
+they had traveled a mile of the ten that lay before them night had come. Hollis
+had been little inclined to talk and Norton did not disturb him, but gave his
+attention to the horses. There had been no moon and few stars, and darkness, as
+under a blanket, had settled over them before they were many miles from Dry
+Bottom.</p>
+
+<p>The country seemed nothing more than a vast <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_55'></a>55</span> plain, broken here and there by ridges and
+depressions. Occasionally a low hill loomed out of the darkness, the shadows
+deepening around it; now and then the buckboard passed through a draw, the
+wheels sinking hub-deep in the loose sand. Several dry arroyos crossed the
+trail, but with a knowledge that seemed almost marvelous Norton cleverly avoided
+these pitfalls. Hollis could not see a foot ahead, but the location of the trail
+seemed to be no mystery to the range boss, for he drove the horses steadily on,
+hesitating for nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Once during the ride Norton broke the silence with a subdued cackle of mirth,
+and at another time he laughed aloud.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d liked to have seen Big Bill when you hit him!&#8221; he
+observed, regret in his voice. &#8220;I reckon he might have been just a little
+surprised!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>To which Hollis made no reply. At another time Norton broke the silence long
+enough to inquire:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon mebbe you wouldn&#8217;t have hit him so hard if you&#8217;d
+knowed who he was?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think I should have hit a little harder,&#8221; returned Hollis
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, hell!&#8221; declared Norton with a laugh; &#8220;I reckon you
+would have done just that!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56'></a>56</span>About ten
+o&#8217;clock they came in sight of some straggling posts, and Norton assured
+Hollis that the posts were strung with wire, forming a fence which skirted one
+side of the Circle Bar pasture. A few minutes later a dog barked and at
+Norton&#8217;s call came bounding up to the buckboard, yipping joyously. Hollis
+could make out his shape as he cavorted about.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My dog,&#8221; offered the range boss. &#8220;Half wolf, the other
+half just dog.&#8221; He chuckled over his joke. &#8220;Best dog you ever
+see,&#8221; he boasted; &#8220;money couldn&#8217;t buy him. Like
+dogs?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded and then realizing that Norton could not see him in the
+darkness, voiced a quick &#8220;yes&#8221;.</p>
+
+<p>In the distance Hollis saw a sudden square of light illuminate the wall of
+darkness into which they had been driving; a door had been opened. Evidently the
+dog&#8217;s barking had aroused the inmates of the building, for as the
+buckboard drew nearer Hollis saw several figures flit out of the door-way.
+Norton drove the horses close to the building and brought them to a halt with a
+sonorous &#8220;whoa&#8221;! Then he turned to Hollis and spoke with a drawl:
+&#8220;This here building is the Circle Bar bunkhouse; them&#8217;s some of your
+men.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis remarked the size of the building and Norton laughed grimly.
+&#8220;There was a time <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_57'></a>57</span> when it wasn&#8217;t any too big,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;Five years ago your dad had twenty-seven men on the pay-roll. If Dunlavey
+an&#8217; his damn association hadn&#8217;t showed up he&#8217;d have had them
+yet.&#8221; He turned toward three men who were lounging in the doorway.
+&#8220;Hey, you guys!&#8221; he yelled; &#8220;this here&#8217;s your new boss.
+If you-all ain&#8217;t glued there you might grab his grips an&#8217; tote them
+up to the ranchhouse. Tell the missus that I&#8217;ll be along directly with the
+boss.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Amusement over the Southern twang that marked Norton&#8217;s speech filled
+Hollis. He had noticed it before and it had made plain to him the reason of
+Norton&#8217;s unhurried movements, his slow humor, his habit of quiet
+scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p>But he had little time for reflection. At Norton&#8217;s words two men sprang
+forward to the buckboard and he saw his suitcases disappear into the darkness in
+the direction of a light that he now saw flickering from some little distance.
+He jumped out of the buckboard and saw another man spring to the horses&#8217;
+heads and lead them away into the darkness. Then he followed Norton into the
+light from the open doorway. Presently he was shaking hands with a man who stood
+there, whose chief articles of raiment were overalls, boots, and a woolen shirt.
+Almost instantly, it seemed, two of the others had returned <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_58'></a>58</span> and Norton was introducing them as
+&#8220;Ace,&#8221; &#8220;Lanky,&#8221; and &#8220;Weary.&#8221; These
+pseudonyms were picturesque and descriptive, though at the time Hollis was in a
+state of pained incomprehension concerning them. Later he was informed that Ace
+had been so named on account of having once been caught slipping a playing card
+of that character into his bootleg during a game of poker.
+Incidentally&#8211;Hollis was told&#8211;gun-play had resulted. That Ace was
+still active proved that the other man might have profited by keeping his
+knowledge to himself. Obviously, Lanky deserved his appellation&#8211;he was a
+trifle over six feet tall and proportioned like a young sapling. Weary had been
+born tired&#8211;so Hollis was told by the latter&#8217;s defamers; defamers,
+for later Hollis discovered that no man in the outfit could show more surprising
+agility on occasion than this same Weary.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis found himself inside the bunkhouse, where he was critically inspected
+by the three men&#8211;and before he left, by the fourth, who answered to the
+name of &#8220;Bud.&#8221; Norton told him that these four comprised his
+outfit&#8211;Bud acting as blacksmith. Hollis remained with the men only long
+enough to announce that there would be no change; that he intended to hang on
+and fight for his rights. When Norton told them <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_59'></a>59</span> that Hollis had already begun the fight by slugging
+Dunlavey and Yuma Ed, the enthusiasm of the four men was unbounded. They assured
+him profanely that they were with him to the &#8220;finish&#8221;&#8211;whatever
+it might be. After which Hollis departed to the ranchhouse.</p>
+
+<p>He found Mrs. Norton to be a pleasant faced woman of twenty-seven or eight,
+who had&#8211;according to Norton&#8211;&#8220;bossed him for seven
+years.&#8221; Norton grinned hugely over his wife&#8217;s embarrassed
+protest.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t &#8216;bossed&#8217; him,&#8221; she told Hollis, while
+Norton looked on with amusement, &#8220;though there have been times when he
+richly deserved it.&#8221; There was a spirited flash in the lady&#8217;s eyes
+as she looked at her lord.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t wish to take sides in any marital controversy,&#8221;
+Hollis told them. &#8220;I don&#8217;t care to parade my ignorance.
+However,&#8221; he smiled, with a wink at Norton, &#8220;most men need a boss,
+if for no other reason than to teach them the value of discipline.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There!&#8221; said Mrs. Norton with a triumphant laugh, and
+immediately left the two men and went into the kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>After partaking of a hearty meal Hollis and Norton went out on the porch for
+a smoke and a talk, and it was near midnight when Hollis <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_60'></a>60</span> tumbled into bed, distinctly pleased with
+the range boss and his admirable wife. He was asleep within five minutes.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was streaming into his window when he hopped out of bed the next
+morning, refreshed and eager to make a trip of inspection over his property. He
+came down stairs lightly, in the hope of being able to slip outside without
+disturbing anybody, but upon opening the stair door he was surprised to find the
+cloth on the table in the dining room already spread and hot food steaming upon
+it. Mrs. Norton was bustling about from the kitchen to the dining room.
+Evidently the Nortons had been astir for hours.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Norton smilingly directed him to a wash basin on a bench just outside
+the door and stood in the opening a moment, watching him as he drenched his face
+with the cold water. There was in her manner only the solicitous concern of the
+hostess whose desire is to place a guest at ease. Hollis decided that Norton had
+been most fortunate in his choice of a &#8220;boss.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Neil has gone down into the big basin to look after the men,&#8221;
+she told him from the doorway. &#8220;I don&#8217;t expect him to return for
+some little time. Come in to breakfast when you are ready.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>To his protest that he would wait until Norton&#8217;s <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_61'></a>61</span> return before breakfasting she replied
+with a smile that her husband had already breakfasted, telling him also that in
+this part of the country everyone rose with the sun.</p>
+
+<p>He stood on the edge of the porch for a moment after washing, drinking in the
+air that came to him from the plains&#8211;a breeze laden with the clear aroma
+of the sage-brush moist with the dew of the night. When he entered the house
+Mrs. Norton was nowhere to be seen and he drew up a chair and breakfasted
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>A little later he embarked upon a tour of inspection. All of the buildings,
+with the exception of the ranchhouse, which was constructed of logs, with a
+gable roof and plastered interstices&#8211;were built of adobe, low, squat
+structures with flat roofs. There were six of them&#8211;the bunkhouse, mess
+house, blacksmith shop, the range boss&#8217;s private shack (from which Norton
+and his wife had removed after the death of the elder Hollis), the stable, and
+one other building for the storing of miscellaneous articles. Hollis inspected
+them all and was not quite convinced that they had reached the stage of
+dilapidation suggested by Judge Graney.</p>
+
+<p>During his inspection Hollis had seen a patch of garden, some chickens, and
+down in a small pasture some cows that he supposed were kept <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62'></a>62</span> for milking. He was
+leaning on the top rail of the corral fence after he had concluded his trip of
+inspection when he heard a clatter of hoofs behind him and turned to observe
+Norton, just riding up to the corral gate. The range boss wore a grin of
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How you findin&#8217; things?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In better shape than I expected&#8211;after listening to Judge
+Graney,&#8221; smiled Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Norton looked critically at him. &#8220;Then you ain&#8217;t changed your
+mind about stayin&#8217; here?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; returned Hollis; &#8220;I believe I shall get used to it in
+time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton dismounted, his eyes alight with satisfaction. &#8220;That&#8217;s the
+stuff!&#8221; he declared. He threw the reins over his pony&#8217;s head and
+seized Hollis by an arm. &#8220;Come along with me&#8211;down to my
+shack,&#8221; he said; &#8220;I&#8217;ve got somethin&#8217; to show
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Without further words he led Hollis toward a building&#8211;the one he had
+occupied previous to the death of the elder Hollis. There were three rooms in
+the building and in the front one were several articles of furniture and some
+boxes. One of these boxes Norton opened, taking therefrom several articles of
+wearing apparel, consisting of a pair of corduroy trousers, a pair of <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63'></a>63</span> leathern chaps, boots,
+spurs, two woolen shirts, a blue neckerchief, a broad felt hat, and last, with a
+grin of amusement over Hollis&#8217;s astonished expression, a cartridge belt to
+which was attached a holster containing a Colt .45.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I bought this outfit over at Santa Fé two months ago,&#8221; he
+informed Hollis, who was gravely contemplating the lay-out,
+&#8220;expectin&#8217; to wear them myself some day. But when I got home I found
+they didn&#8217;t quite fit.&#8221; He surveyed Hollis with a critical eye.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve been thinkin&#8217; ever since you come that you&#8217;d fit
+pretty snug in them.&#8221; He raised a protesting hand as Hollis was about to
+speak. &#8220;I ain&#8217;t givin&#8217; them to you,&#8221; he grinned.
+&#8220;But you can&#8217;t wear no tenderfoot clothes out here. Some day when
+we&#8217;re together an&#8217; we&#8217;ve got time you can blow me to another
+outfit; I won&#8217;t hesitate about takin&#8217; it.&#8221; He leaned over and
+tapped the butt of the Colt. &#8220;You ever handle one of them?&#8221; he
+questioned.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded. Once during a shooting tournament he had done good work with a
+pistol. But Norton laughed at his nod.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mebbe we do it a little different out here,&#8221; he smiled.
+&#8220;You hop into them duds an&#8217; we&#8217;ll go out into the cottonwood
+yonder an&#8217; try out your gun.&#8221; He pointed through the door to a <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64'></a>64</span> small clump of cottonwoods
+beyond the bunkhouse.</p>
+
+<p>He went out and fifteen minutes later Hollis joined him, looking thoroughly
+at home in his picturesque rigging. An hour later they returned to the corral
+fence, where Norton caught up his pony and another, saddling the latter for
+Hollis. He commented briefly upon the new owner&#8217;s ability with the
+six-shooter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You use your fists a little better than you use a gun,&#8221; he
+remarked with his peculiar drawl, &#8220;but I reckon that on the whole
+you&#8217;ll be able to take care of yourself&#8211;after you&#8217;ve had a
+little practise gettin&#8217; your gun out.&#8221; He laughed with a grim humor.
+&#8220;More men have been killed in this country on account of bein&#8217; slow
+on the draw than for any other reason. Don&#8217;t never monkey with it unless
+you intend to use it, an&#8217; then see that you get it out middlin&#8217;
+rapid. That&#8217;s the recipe,&#8221; he advised.</p>
+
+<p>The pony that he had selected for Hollis was a slant-eyed beast, larger than
+the average, with rangy limbs, black in color with a white muzzle and fetlocks.
+Hollis voted him a &#8220;beaut&#8221; after he had ridden him a mile or two and
+found that he had an easy, steady stride.</p>
+
+<p>Together they made a round of the basin, returning to the ranchhouse for
+dinner. Hollis <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65'></a>65</span> was
+saddle weary and when Norton proposed another trip during the afternoon he was
+met with the response that the new owner purposed enjoying the cool of the
+ranchhouse porch for the remainder of the day.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Hollis was up with the dawn and out on the porch splashing
+water over his face from the wash basin that stood outside the door. For a long
+time after washing he stood on the porch, looking out over the big basin at this
+new and strange world. Endless it seemed, lying before him in its solemn
+silence; a world of peace, of eternal sunlight, smiling skies, and infinite
+distance. It seemed unreal to him. Did this same planet hold the busy cities to
+which he had been accustomed? The stuffy room, with its smell of damp ink, its
+litter of papers&#8211;his room in the newspaper offices, filled with desks and
+the clatter of typewriters? Through whose windows came the incessant clamor that
+welled up from the streets below? He laughed at the thought and turned to see
+Norton standing in the doorway looking at him with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Comparin&#8217; her with your little old East?&#8221; inquired the
+latter.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis confessed that he had been doing something of that sort.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; returned Norton, &#8220;there ain&#8217;t any <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66'></a>66</span> way to compare this
+country with anything else. Seems as though when the world was made the Lord had
+a few million miles left which he didn&#8217;t know what to do with an&#8217; so
+he just dumped it down out here. An&#8217; then, havin&#8217; business somewhere
+else about that time he forgot about it an&#8217; left it to get along as best
+it could&#8211;which wasn&#8217;t none too rapid.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This conversation had taken place just twelve days ago, yet Norton&#8217;s
+words still remained fresh in Hollis&#8217;s mind. Yet he did not altogether
+agree with Norton. The West had impressed him far more than he cared to
+admit.</p>
+
+<p>This morning, directly after breakfast Hollis and Norton had saddled their
+horses and ridden out of the basin toward the river, into a section of the
+country that Hollis had not yet explored. Emerging from the basin, they came to
+a long, high ridge. On its crest Norton halted. Hollis likewise drew in his
+pony. From here they could see a great stretch of country, sweeping away into
+the basin beneath it, toward a mountain range whose peaks rose barren and smooth
+in the white sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This here&#8217;s &#8216;Razor-Back&#8217; ridge,&#8221; explained Norton as
+the ponies halted; &#8220;called that on account of bein&#8217; so unusually
+narrow on the top.&#8221; He pointed to some buildings which Hollis had seen but
+to which he had given very little attention, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_67'></a>67</span> thinking they were those of the Circle Bar.
+&#8220;Them&#8217;s the Circle Cross buildings,&#8221; resumed Norton.
+&#8220;They&#8217;re about three miles from the Circle Bar ranchhouse, directly
+north through that cottonwood back of the bunkhouse where you tried your gun the
+day after you come out here. Down below there&#8211;where you see them two big
+cottonwood trees&#8211;is &#8216;Big Elk&#8217; crossin&#8217;. There&#8217;s another
+somethin&#8217; like it back up the crick a ways, on the other side of the
+ranchhouse, called the &#8216;Narrows.&#8217;&#8221; He laughed grimly. &#8220;But we
+don&#8217;t use them crossins&#8217; much&#8211;they&#8217;re dead lines;
+generally you&#8217;ll find there&#8217;s a Circle Cross man or so hangin&#8217;
+around them&#8211;with a rifle. So it don&#8217;t pay to go monkeyin&#8217;
+around there unless you&#8217;ve got pressin&#8217; business.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He made a grimace. &#8220;It&#8217;s my opinion that a good many Circle Bar
+cattle have crossed the crick in them two places&#8211;never to come
+back.&#8221; He swept a hand up the river, indicating the sentinel like buttes
+that frowned above the bed of the stream. &#8220;The crick is pretty
+shallow,&#8221; he continued, &#8220;but Big Elk an&#8217; the Narrows are the
+only two places where a man can cross in safety&#8211;if we consider that there
+wouldn&#8217;t be any Circle Cross man hangin&#8217; around them two places. But
+there ain&#8217;t no other place to cross an&#8217; so we don&#8217;t go on the
+other side much.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He turned to Hollis, looking at him with a <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_68'></a>68</span> quaint smile. &#8220;From here you can see everything
+that amounts to anything in this section&#8211;which ain&#8217;t a heap. Of
+course over there are some mountains&#8211;where we was a few days ago
+lookin&#8217; up the boys&#8221;&#8211;he pointed to some serrated peaks that
+rose somberly in the southwestern distance&#8211;&#8220;but as you saw there
+ain&#8217;t much to them except rocks an&#8217; lava beds. There&#8217;s some
+hills there&#8221;&#8211;pointing to the south&#8211;&#8220;but there
+ain&#8217;t nothin&#8217; to see in them. They look a heap better from here than
+they do when you get close to them. That&#8217;s the way with lots of things,
+ain&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled. &#8220;I like it,&#8221; he said quietly, &#8220;much better
+than I did when I came.&#8221; He turned to Norton with a whimsical smile.
+&#8220;I suppose it will strike you as peculiar, but I&#8217;ve got a notion
+that I would like to ride around a while alone. I don&#8217;t mean that I
+don&#8217;t like your company, for I do. But the notion has just struck
+me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton laughed indulgently. &#8220;I reckon I won&#8217;t consider that
+you&#8217;re trying to slight me,&#8221; he returned. &#8220;I know exactly how
+you feel; that sort of thing comes over everybody who comes to this
+country&#8211;sooner or later. Generally it&#8217;s later, when a man has got
+used to the silence an&#8217; the bigness an&#8217; so on. But in your <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69'></a>69</span> case it&#8217;s sooner.
+You&#8217;ll have to have it out with yourself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His voice grew serious. &#8220;But don&#8217;t go ridin&#8217; too far.
+An&#8217; keep away from the river trail.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his ready acquiescence he sat for some time on his pony, watching
+Hollis as the latter urged his pony along the ridge. Just before Hollis
+disappeared down the slope of the ridge he turned and waved a hand to Norton,
+and the latter, with a grim, admiring smile, wheeled his pony and loped it over
+the back trail.</p>
+
+<p>Once down the slope of the ridge Hollis urged his pony out into the level of
+the basin, through some deep saccatone grass, keeping well away from the river
+trail as advised by the range boss.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his serious thoughts Hollis had not been dismayed over the
+prospect of remaining at the Circle Bar to fight Dunlavey and his crew. He
+rather loved a fight; the thought of clashing with an opposing force had always
+filled him with a sensation of indefinable exultation. He reveled in the
+primitive passions. He had been endowed by nature with those mental and physical
+qualities that combine to produce the perfect fighter. He was six feet of brawn
+and muscle; not an ounce of superfluous flesh encumbered him&#8211;he had been
+hammered and hardened into a state of physical perfection by several years of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70'></a>70</span> athletic training,
+sensible living, and good, hard, healthy labor. Circumstances had not permitted
+him to live a life of ease. The trouble between his parents&#8211;which had
+always been much of a mystery to him&#8211;had forced him at a tender age to go
+out into the world and fight for existence. It had toughened him; it had trained
+his mind through experience; it had given him poise, persistence,
+tenacity&#8211;those rare mental qualities without which man seldom rises above
+mediocrity.</p>
+
+<p>Before leaving Dry Bottom to come to the Circle Bar he had telegraphed his
+mother that he would be forced to remain indefinitely in the West, and the
+sending of this telegram had committed him irrevocably to his sacrifice. He knew
+that when his mother received a letter from him explaining the nature of the
+work that required his presence in Dry Bottom she would approve his course. At
+least he was certain that she would not advise surrendering.</p>
+
+<p>After riding for more than an hour he came to a shallow draw and urged his
+pony through the deep sand of its center. On the other side of the draw the
+country became suddenly rocky; great boulders were strewn indiscriminately
+about, as though some giant hand had distributed them carelessly, without regard
+to their final resting place. A lava bed, looming gray and dead under <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71'></a>71</span> a barren rock hill, caught
+his attention, and he drew his pony to a halt and sat quietly in the saddle
+examining it. From the lava bed his gaze went to a weird mineral shape that rose
+in the distance&#8211;an inverted cone that seemed perfectly balanced on its
+narrowest point. He studied this long without moving, struck with the miraculous
+stability of the thing; it seemed that a slight touch would send it tumbling
+down.</p>
+
+<p>He realized that he had stumbled upon a spot that would have provided
+pleasure to a geological student. To him it was merely a source of wonder and
+awe. Some mighty upheaval of nature had created this, and he continued to gaze
+at it, his mind full of conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>To his right rose a precipitous rock wall surmounted by a fringe of thick
+shrubbery. On the left was another wall, perpendicular, flat on its top and
+stretching away into the distance, forming a grass plateau. Directly in front of
+him was a narrow canyon through which he could see a plain that stretched away
+into the unknown distance.</p>
+
+<p>It was a magnificent country; he did not now regret his decision to remain
+here. He pulled out his watch, noting that its hands pointed to ten, and
+realized that he must be off if he expected to reach the Circle Bar by noon.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72'></a>72</span>He sat erect in
+the saddle, about to wheel his pony toward the draw through which he had
+entered, when he heard a sharp sound. Startled, he glanced swiftly to his right,
+searching the immediate vicinity for the agency which had created sound in this
+vast silence. He stiffened slowly in the saddle, his face gradually paling. Not
+over a hundred feet from him, partly concealed by a big boulder, stood a man
+with a rifle, the muzzle of the weapon trained fairly on him.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73'></a>73</span><a id='link_5'></a>CHAPTER V<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE GIRL OF DRY BOTTOM</span></h2>
+
+<p>Hollis was not frightened, though he was in a position that might have
+aroused fear or apprehension in any man&#8217;s mind. He was alone, the man had
+him covered with the rifle, and assuredly this was one of Dunlavey&#8217;s
+hirelings.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis glanced swiftly around. Certain signs&#8211;some shrubbery that he saw
+through the canyon, a bald butte or two rising in the distance&#8211;told him
+that he was near the river. And Norton had told him to keep away from the river
+trail. In his eagerness to explore the country he had forgotten all about
+Norton&#8217;s warning.</p>
+
+<p>The prospect was not a hopeful one, yet Hollis could not have admitted to
+feeling any alarm. He realized that had the man intended any immediate harm he
+would have shot him down long before this&#8211;while he had sat motionless in
+the saddle inspecting the place. Concerning the man&#8217;s intentions he could
+only speculate, but assuredly they were not peaceful.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74'></a>74</span>For a little time
+the man remained motionless and Hollis sat quiet, looking at him. The weapon had
+not moved; its muzzle still menaced him and he watched it closely, wondering
+whether the man would give him any warning when about to pull the trigger.</p>
+
+<p>Many minutes dragged and the man did not move. A slow anger began to steal
+over Hollis; the man&#8217;s inaction grated on his nerves.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221; he challenged sharply. &#8220;What do you
+want?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. Hollis could see only the man&#8217;s head and shoulders
+projecting above the boulder, and the rifle&#8211;steady and
+level&#8211;menacing him. With an exclamation of rage and disdain he seized the
+bridle rein and pulled sharply on it, swinging the pony&#8217;s head around. The
+rifle crashed venomously; Hollis felt the right sleeve of his shirt flutter, and
+he pulled the pony abruptly up.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Just to show you!&#8221; came the man&#8217;s voice, mockingly.
+&#8220;If you move again until I give the word you won&#8217;t know where
+you&#8217;ve been hit!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was satisfied&#8211;the man undoubtedly meant business. He settled
+back into the saddle and looked down at his shirt sleeve. The bullet had passed
+very close to the arm. If the man <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_75'></a>75</span> had meant the bullet for that particular spot he was
+a deadly marksman. In the face of such marvelous shooting Hollis did not care to
+experiment further. But his anger had not yet abated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No doubt you are enjoying yourself!&#8221; he said with bitter
+sarcasm. &#8220;But the pleasure is all yours. I am not enjoying myself a bit, I
+assure you. And I don&#8217;t like the idea of being a target for you to shoot
+at!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A laugh came back to Hollis&#8211;a strange, unnatural, sardonic cackle that,
+in spite of his self-control, caused his flesh to creep. And then the
+man&#8217;s voice:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you don&#8217;t like it. I knew that all along. But you&#8217;re
+going to stay here for seven weeks while I shoot holes in you!&#8221; He laughed
+again, his voice high and shrill, its cackling cadences filling the place.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Seven weeks in Devil&#8217;s Hollow!&#8221; came the voice again.
+&#8220;Seven weeks! Seven weeks!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis felt his heart thumping heavily against his ribs, while a sinking
+sensation in the pit of his stomach told him that his courage was touched. He
+realized now why the man had not shot him down immediately. He was a maniac!</p>
+
+<p>For a few terrible seconds Hollis sat in the saddle while the world reeled
+around him; while the rocks and cliffs danced fantastically. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76'></a>76</span> Courage he had to be sure;
+he had already become resigned to death before the man&#8217;s rifle, but he had
+imagined the man to be in full possession of his senses; imagined his death to
+have been planned out of the deliberate coolness of reason. Such a death would
+have been bad enough, but to meet death at the hands of a man mentally
+unbalanced! Somehow it seemed different, seemed horribly unreal&#8211;like a
+terrible nightmare.</p>
+
+<p>It was some seconds before he regained control of himself, and then he
+steadied himself in the saddle, assuring himself in a burst of bitter, ironic
+humor that death at the hands of a crazy man could be no worse than death at the
+hands of a rational one.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up again, a defiant smile on his lips, to see that both man and
+rifle had disappeared. In a flash he saw his chance and took advantage of it. In
+an instant he was off his pony; in another he was behind a convenient rock,
+breathing easier, his senses alert. For some little time he remained in the
+shelter of the rock, awaiting the other man&#8217;s movements. He did not doubt
+that acting upon some freakish impulse, the man had left his boulder and was
+even now stalking him from some other direction. He peered carefully about him.
+He had no thought of shooting the man&#8211;that would be murder, for the man
+was not <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77'></a>77</span> mentally
+responsible for his actions. His efforts must be centered solely upon some plan
+for saving his own life.</p>
+
+<p>To do this he realized that he must be careful. In view of the man&#8217;s
+unerring marksmanship it would be certain death for him to expose himself for an
+instant. But he must take some chances. Convinced of this he peered around the
+edge of his rock, taking a flashing glance around him. The man was nowhere to be
+seen. Hollis waited some little time and then taking another glance and not
+seeing the man, rose slowly to his feet and crouched. Then, filled with a
+sudden, reckless impulse, he sprang for another rock a dozen feet distant,
+expecting each instant to hear the crash of the man&#8217;s rifle. But he
+succeeded in gaining the shelter of the other rock intact. Evidently the man was
+looking for him in some other direction.</p>
+
+<p>Emboldened with his success he grimly determined on advancing to another rock
+some twenty or thirty feet farther on. As in the first instance he succeeded in
+gaining it in safety. His maneuvering had been circuitous, bringing him into a
+position from which he could see partly behind the rock where the man had been
+concealed.</p>
+
+<p>And now, having gained the second rock in <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_78'></a>78</span> safety, Hollis decided to take no more chances.
+Sooner or later, he was convinced, the man was sure to see him as he jumped. He
+did not like the picture that his imagination conjured up. Therefore his actions
+were now marked with more caution. It took him a long time to gain a position
+where he could peer over the upper edge of the rock behind which he was
+concealed. But he gained it finally and then dropped back with an exclamation of
+surprise. He had caught a glimpse of the man. He was lying face upward behind
+the boulder, his arms outstretched, his rifle lying in the dust near him.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was tempted to make a run for his pony, mount, and race out of the
+hollow. But a second thought restrained him. He had considered the man&#8217;s
+action merely a ruse, but why should he attempt it after he had once had an
+opportunity to make use of his rifle? Still for an instant Hollis hesitated, for
+he knew there was no rule by which a maniac&#8217;s actions might be judged.
+Then with a grim laugh he sprang over the few feet that separated him from the
+man, approaching him carefully, still slightly doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>But the man was not shamming; Hollis could see that when he had approached
+close enough to see his face. It bore a curious pallor, his eyes were wide open
+and staring, and some foam <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_79'></a>79</span> flecked his lips. Evidently he had been overcome by a
+paroxysm of his malady at about the moment Hollis had discovered it.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis stepped back and heaved a sigh of relief. Then he stepped over to
+where the man&#8217;s rifle lay, taking it up and removing the cartridges.
+Returning to the man he removed the cartridges from his belt and drew his
+six-shooter from its holster, determined that when the man recovered from his
+stupor there would be no danger of a recurrence of the previous incident. Then
+he leaned against the boulder to await the man&#8217;s recovery.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, while he still watched the man, he heard a clatter of
+hoofs. Determined not to be taken by surprise again he drew his own six-shooter
+and peered cautiously around the edge of the boulder. What he saw caused him to
+jam the weapon back into its holster very hurriedly. Then he stepped out of his
+concealment with a red, embarrassed face to greet a young woman whose expression
+of doubt and fear was instantly replaced by one of pleasure and recognition as
+she caught sight of him. It was the girl of Dry Bottom.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; she said. &#8220;Is it you? I was afraid&#8213;&#8221; And
+then she saw the man and was off her pony in a flash and at his head, supporting
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80'></a>80</span> it and pouring
+something down his throat from a bottle.</p>
+
+<p>She rose presently, embarrassment crimsoning her face. Hollis saw her lips
+quiver when she turned and spoke to him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He will be all right&#8211;now,&#8221; she said, facing Hollis, her
+eyes drooping as though ashamed to meet his. &#8220;He has had another attack of
+his&#8211;his trouble.&#8221; She looked suddenly up at Hollis, bravely trying
+to repress her emotion&#8211;but with little success.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You heard what he&#8211;Big Bill Dunlavey&#8211;said about my
+brother?&#8221; she questioned, her eyes full and moist. Hollis nodded and she
+continued rapidly, her voice quavering: &#8220;Well, he told the truth.&#8221;
+Her voice trailed away into a pitiful wail, and she stepped over and leaned
+against the boulder, sobbing quietly into her hands. &#8220;That&#8217;s why it
+hurts so,&#8221; she added.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis yielded to a sudden wave of sympathy. He stood close to her, aware of
+his inability to cope with this strange situation. She looked so small, so out
+of place, he felt that whatever he did or said would not help matters. What he
+did say, however, assisted in restoring her composure.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am glad I slugged him!&#8221; he said heatedly.</p>
+
+<p>She turned suddenly to him, her eyes flashing spiritedly through the moisture
+in them.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81'></a>81</span>&#8220;Oh, it was
+great!&#8221; she declared, her hands clenching at the recollection. &#8220;I
+could have shaken hands with you&#8211;with the hand that struck him!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled whimsically. &#8220;I&#8217;ve still got the hand,&#8221; he
+said significantly, extending it toward her&#8211;&#8220;if you have not
+reconsidered.&#8221; He laughed as she took it and pressed it firmly. &#8220;I
+rather think that we&#8217;ve both got a shake coming on that,&#8221; he added.
+&#8220;I didn&#8217;t understand then about your brother or I would have added a
+few extra pounds to that punch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her face clouded as he mentioned her brother. &#8220;Poor Ed,&#8221; she said
+in a low voice. She went over to the man, leaning over him and smoothing back
+the hair from his forehead, Hollis looking glumly on, clenching his teeth in
+impotent sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;These attacks do not come often,&#8221; she volunteered as she again
+approached Hollis. &#8220;But they do come,&#8221; she added, her voice
+catching. Hollis did not reply, feeling that he had no right to be inquisitive.
+But she continued, slightly more at ease and plainly pleased to have some one in
+whom she might confide.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ed was injured a year ago through a fall,&#8221; she informed Hollis.
+&#8220;He was breaking a wild horse and a saddle girth broke and he fell,
+striking on his head. The wound healed, but he has <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_82'></a>82</span> never been the same. At intervals these
+attacks come on and then he is irresponsible&#8211;and dangerous.&#8221; She
+shuddered. &#8220;You were watching him,&#8221; she added, looking suddenly at
+him; &#8220;did you find him as he is or did he attack you? Frequently when he
+has these attacks he comes here to Devil&#8217;s Hollow, explaining that he
+expects to find some of Dunlavey&#8217;s men. He doesn&#8217;t like
+Dunlavey,&#8221; she added with a flush, &#8220;since Dunlavey&#8213;&#8221; She
+hesitated and then went on determinedly&#8211;&#8220;well, since Dunlavey told
+him that he wanted to marry me. But Ed says that Dunlavey has a wife in Tucson
+and&#8211;well, I wouldn&#8217;t have married him anyway&#8211;the
+brute!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Exactly,&#8221; agreed Hollis gravely, trying to repress a thrill of
+satisfaction; &#8220;of course you couldn&#8217;t marry him.&#8221; He
+understood now the meaning of Dunlavey&#8217;s words to her in Dry Bottom.
+&#8220;If you wasn&#8217;t such a damn prude,&#8221; he had said. He looked at
+the girl with a sudden, grim smile. &#8220;He said something about running you
+and your brother out of the country,&#8221; he said; &#8220;of course you
+won&#8217;t allow him to do that?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl&#8217;s slight figure stiffened. &#8220;I would like to see him try
+it!&#8221; she declared defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis grinned. &#8220;That&#8217;s the stuff!&#8221; he <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_83'></a>83</span> sympathized. &#8220;I rather think that
+Dunlavey is something of a bluffer&#8211;that folks in this country have allowed
+him to have his own way too much.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head doubtfully. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know about that,&#8221;
+she returned. Then she smiled. &#8220;You are the new owner of the Circle Bar,
+aren&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis startled, looking at her with a surprised smile. &#8220;Yes,&#8221; he
+returned, &#8220;I am the new owner. But how did you know it? I haven&#8217;t
+told anyone here except Neil Norton and Judge Graney. Have Norton and the Judge
+been talking?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They haven&#8217;t talked to me,&#8221; she assured him with a demure
+smile. &#8220;You see,&#8221; she added, &#8220;you were a stranger in Dry
+Bottom, and after you left the Fashion you went right down to the court house. I
+knew Judge Graney had been your father&#8217;s friend. And then I saw Neil
+Norton coming into town with the buckboard.&#8221; She laughed. &#8220;You see,
+it wasn&#8217;t very hard to add two and two.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, no,&#8221; Hollis agreed, &#8220;it wasn&#8217;t. But how did you
+happen to see me go down to the court house?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, I watched you!&#8221; she returned. And then suddenly aware of
+her mistake in admitting <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_84'></a>84</span> that she had felt an interest in him at their first
+meeting, she lowered her gaze in confusion and stood, kicking with her booted
+toe into a hummock, her face suddenly very red.</p>
+
+<p>The situation might have been embarrassing for her had not her brother
+created a diversion by suddenly sighing and struggling to sit up. The girl was
+at his side in an instant, assisting him. The young man&#8217;s bewilderment was
+pitiful. He sat silent for a full minute, gazing first at his sister and then at
+Hollis, and finally at his surroundings. Then, when a rational gleam had come
+into his eyes he bowed his head, a blush of shame sweeping over his face and
+neck.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I expect I&#8217;ve been at it again,&#8221; he muttered, without
+looking up.</p>
+
+<p>The girl leaned over him, reassuring him, patting his face lovingly, letting
+him know by all a woman&#8217;s arts of the sympathy and love she bore for him.
+Hollis watched her with a grim, satisfied smile. If he had had a sister he would
+have hoped that she would be like her. He stepped forward and seized the young
+man by the arm, helping him to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You are right now,&#8221; he assured him; &#8220;there has been no
+harm done.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Standing, the young man favored Hollis with a careful inspection. He flushed
+again. &#8220;You&#8217;re <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_85'></a>85</span> the man that rode through the draw,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;I saw you and thought you were one of Dunlavey&#8217;s men. I shot at you
+once, and was going to shoot again, but something cracked in my head. I hope I
+didn&#8217;t hit you.&#8221; Embarrassment again seized him; his eyes drooped.
+&#8220;Of course you are not one of Dunlavey&#8217;s men,&#8221; he added,
+&#8220;or you wouldn&#8217;t be here, talking to sis. No friend of
+Dunlavey&#8217;s could do that.&#8221; He looked at the girl with a tender
+smile. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know what I&#8217;d do if it wasn&#8217;t for
+her,&#8221; he added, speaking to Hollis. &#8220;But I expect it&#8217;s a good
+thing that I&#8217;m not crazy all the time.&#8221; He looked searchingly at
+Hollis. &#8220;I&#8217;ve never seen you before,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Who are
+you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am Kent Hollis.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The young man&#8217;s eyes lighted. &#8220;Not Jim Hollis&#8217;s son?&#8221;
+he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded. The young man&#8217;s face revealed genuine pleasure.
+&#8220;You going to stay in this here country?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am going to run the Circle Bar,&#8221; returned Hollis slowly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bully!&#8221; declared the young man. &#8220;There&#8217;s some folks
+around here said you wouldn&#8217;t have nerve enough to stay.&#8221; He made a
+wry face. &#8220;But I reckon you&#8217;ve got nerve or you&#8217;d have hit the
+breeze when I started to stampede.&#8221; He <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_86'></a>86</span> suddenly held out a hand. &#8220;I like you,&#8221;
+he said impulsively. &#8220;You and me are going to be friends.
+Shake!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis saw a smile of pleasure light up the girl&#8217;s face, which she
+tried to conceal by brushing the young man&#8217;s clothing with a gloved hand,
+meanwhile keeping him between her and Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis stood near the boulder, watching them as they prepared to depart, the
+girl telling her brother that he would find his pony on the plains beyond the
+canyon.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am glad I didn&#8217;t hit you,&#8221; the young man told Hollis as
+he started away with the girl. &#8220;If you are not scared off you might take a
+run down to the shack some time&#8211;it&#8217;s just down the creek a
+ways.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis hesitated and then, catching the girl&#8217;s glance, he smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t promise when,&#8221; he said, looking at the girl,
+&#8220;but you may be sure that I will look you up the first chance I
+get.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stood beside the boulder until he saw them disappear around the wall of
+the canyon. Then with a satisfied grin he walked to his pony, mounted, and was
+off through the draw toward the Circle Bar ranchhouse.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87'></a>87</span><a id='link_6'></a>CHAPTER VI<br /><span class='h2fs'>HOLLIS RENEWS AN ACQUAINTANCE</span></h2>
+
+<p>Rumor, that mysterious disseminator of news whose tongues are legion,
+whispered that the Dry Bottom <i>Kicker</i> was to come to life. Wherefore
+curiosity led many of Dry Bottom&#8217;s citizens past the door of the
+<i>Kicker</i> office to steal covert glances at the young man whose figure was
+bent over the desk inside. Many passed in silence after looking at the young
+man&#8211;he did not see them. Others commented gravely or humorously according
+to their whim&#8211;the young man did not hear them. Seated at the desk he gave
+his attention to the tasks before him&#8211;he was not concerned with rumor; the
+curiosity of Dry Bottom&#8217;s citizens did not affect him. Seriously,
+methodically, steadily, he worked at his desk, while rumor wagged her tongues
+and curiosity lounged past the window.</p>
+
+<p>It was Hollis&#8217;s first visit to the <i>Kicker</i> office; he had come to
+work and there was much that he could do. He had found the <i>Kicker</i>
+installed in a one story frame building, verging upon dilapidation, <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88'></a>88</span> unpainted, dingy. The
+appearance of its exterior had given Hollis a queer sensation in the pit of the
+stomach. He was cheered a little by the businesslike appearance of the interior.
+It was not what he had been used to, but he felt that it would answer very well
+in this locality, and&#8211;well, he planned to make improvements.</p>
+
+<p>About twenty by forty, he estimated the size of the interior. Originally
+there had been only one room. This had been divided into three sections by
+partitions. An old, flat-topped desk sat near the front window, a swivel chair
+before it. Along the wall above the desk were several rows of shelving with
+paste-board boxes and paper piled neatly up. Calendars, posters, and other
+specimens of the printer&#8217;s art covered the walls. In the next room was
+another desk. Piles of advertising electrotypes, empty forms, and papers filled
+the corners. The composing room was in the rear. Everything was in order here;
+type cases, stands, forms. There were a proof press, some galley racks, a
+printing press, with a forlorn-looking gasolene engine near it. A small
+cast-iron stove stood in a corner with its door yawning open, its front
+bespattered with tobacco juice. A dilapidated imposing stone ranged along the
+rear wall near a door that <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_89'></a>89</span> opened into the sunlight. A man stood before one of
+the type cases distributing type. He did not look up at Hollis&#8217;s
+entrance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hello!&#8221; greeted Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>The man hesitated in his work and looked up. &#8220;Hello,&#8221; he
+returned, perfunctorily.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose your name is Potter?&#8221; Hollis inquired cordially. Judge
+Graney had told him that if he succeeded in finding the compositor he would have
+him at the <i>Kicker</i> office this morning. Potter had gone to work without
+further orders.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the man. He came forward.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am the new owner of the <i>Kicker</i>,&#8221; Hollis informed him
+with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Jim Hollis&#8217;s boy?&#8221; inquired Potter, straightening. At
+Hollis&#8217;s nod he stepped quickly forward and grasped the hand the latter
+offered him, squeezing it tightly. &#8220;Of course you are Jim Hollis&#8217;s
+boy!&#8221; he said, finishing his inspection. &#8220;You are the living image
+of him!&#8221; He swept his hand around toward the type case. &#8220;I am
+working, you see. Judge Graney wrote me last week that you wanted me and I came
+as soon as I could. Is it true that the <i>Kicker</i> is going to be a permanent
+institution?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The <i>Kicker</i> is here to stay!&#8221; Hollis informed him.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90'></a>90</span>Potter&#8217;s
+face lighted with pleasure. &#8220;That&#8217;s bully!&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;That&#8217;s bully!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was of medium height, slender, lean faced, with a magnificent head, and a
+wealth of brown hair thickly streaked with silver. His thin lips were strong;
+his chin, though a trifle weak, was well formed; his eyes slightly bleared, but
+revealing, in spite of this defect, unmistakable intelligence. In the first
+flashing glance which Hollis had taken at him he had been aware that here was a
+person of more than ordinary mental ability and refinement. It was with a pang
+of pity that he remembered Judge Graney&#8217;s words to the effect that he was
+a good workman&#8211;&#8220;when sober.&#8221; Hollis felt genuinely sorry for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have had a talk with Judge Graney,&#8221; volunteered Potter.
+&#8220;He tells me that you are a newspaper man. Between us we ought to be able
+to get out a very respectable paper.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We will,&#8221; calmly announced Hollis; &#8220;and we&#8217;ll get
+the first issue out Saturday. Come in here and we&#8217;ll talk about
+it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He led the way to the front room and seated himself at the desk, motioning
+Potter to another chair. Within the next hour he knew all about the
+<i>Kicker</i>. It was a six-column sheet of four pages. The first page was
+devoted to local news. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_91'></a>91</span> The second carried some local advertisements,
+exchange clippings, and two or three columns of syndicate plate matter. On the
+third page two columns were devoted to editorials, one to advertisements, and
+three to local news in large type. The fourth, and last page was filled with
+more plate matter and a litter of &#8220;foreign&#8221;
+advertising&#8211;patent-medicines, soaps, hair-dye.</p>
+
+<p>At the first glance it appeared that the paper must be a paying proposition,
+for there were a goodly proportion of advertisements. Yet Hollis had his
+suspicions about the advertisements. When he had spoken to Potter about them he
+discovered that quite a number of them were what is known to the craft as
+&#8220;dead ads&#8221;&#8211;which meant advertisements upon which payment had
+ceased and which were carried either for the purpose of filling up the paper or
+because it was found cheaper to run them than to set type for the space which
+would be left by their absence.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We won&#8217;t carry any dead ads!&#8221; announced Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Several of these are big merchants,&#8221; said Potter, pointing them
+out with inky forefinger; &#8220;though the contracts have run out the
+appearance of their ads lends the <i>Kicker</i> a certain moral
+support&#8211;the little fellows don&#8217;t know that they are not paid for and
+it draws their business.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92'></a>92</span>&#8220;We
+don&#8217;t care for that kind of business,&#8221; smiled Hollis;
+&#8220;we&#8217;re going to run a real newspaper. We&#8217;re going to get paid
+ads!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope so,&#8221; hesitatingly replied Potter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course you do,&#8221; laughed Hollis; &#8220;but whether we get
+paid ads or not this newspaper is coming out regularly and on time. Furthermore,
+we&#8217;re going to cut down on this plate stuff; we don&#8217;t want a paper
+filled with stale articles on snakes, antedated ocean disasters, Egyptian
+monoliths, and the latest style in opera hats. We&#8217;ll fill the paper with
+local news&#8211;we&#8217;ll ginger things up a little. You are pretty well
+acquainted here&#8211;I&#8217;ll leave the local items to you. What town near
+here compares with Dry Bottom in size?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s Lazette,&#8221; returned Potter; &#8220;over in Colfax
+County.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How far from here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Eighty miles.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Got a newspaper?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes; the <i>Eagle</i>.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bully! Step on the <i>Eagle&#8217;s</i> toes. Make the <i>Eagle</i>
+scream. Get into an argument with it about something&#8211;anything. Tell
+Lazette that as a town it&#8217;s forty miles behind Dry Bottom. That will stir
+up public spirit and boom our subscription list. You see, Potter, civic pride is
+a <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93'></a>93</span> big asset to a
+newspaper. We&#8217;ll start a row right off the reel. Furthermore, we&#8217;re
+going to have some telegraph news. I&#8217;ll make arrangements for that
+to-day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s enthusiasm was infectious; a flash of spirit lighted up
+Potter&#8217;s eyes as he rose from his chair. &#8220;I&#8217;m going to set up
+the head for the first page,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Probably you&#8217;ll want a
+slogan; that sort of thing is the style out here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have one,&#8221; returned Hollis briskly. &#8220;Set this
+in triple leads: <i>&#8216;We Herald the Coming of the Law! The Kicker is Here to
+Stay!&#8217;</i>&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; declared Potter. He went into the composing room and
+Hollis saw his fine old head bent over a type case. Hollis turned to his
+desk.</p>
+
+<p>He sat there long, his tall, lithe body slack, grim, serious lines in his
+lean face. He had thought of his conversation with Judge Graney concerning
+ambition&#8211;his ambition, the picture upon which his mind had dwelt many
+times. A little frame printing office in the West was not one of its features.
+He sighed with resignation and began methodically to look over the papers in the
+desk, finding many things to interest him. He discovered that in spite of his
+father&#8217;s one great fault he had been a methodical man. He smiled
+regretfully, wishing that he might have been able to have seen more of him.
+Among the <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94'></a>94</span> papers he
+hoped to find a personal note&#8211;a word&#8211;from his father. He found
+nothing of that character.</p>
+
+<p>After a time he took up a pen and began to write. Long ago he had decided
+that in the first issue of the paper he would attack the Cattlemen&#8217;s
+Association. Judge Graney had ridden out to the Circle Bar on the previous
+Saturday afternoon, remaining over Sunday, and accompanying Hollis on the return
+trip Monday morning.</p>
+
+<p>While at the ranch the Judge had spent much of his time in communicating to
+Hollis his views of the situation in Union County and in acquainting him with
+the elder Hollis&#8217;s intentions regarding the newspaper. Hollis had made
+some inquiries on his own account, with the result that when he reached the
+<i>Kicker</i> office this morning he felt that he had acquired a good and
+sufficient knowledge of the situation.</p>
+
+<p>Looking over the old copy of the <i>Kicker</i> he studied some of the
+advertisements. Evidently some Dry Bottom merchants had been brave enough to
+antagonize Dunlavey by advertising in the <i>Kicker</i>. With this copy of the
+<i>Kicker</i> in hand Hollis rose from his desk, told Potter he was going out,
+and proceeded to visit some of the merchants whose advertisements appeared in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95'></a>95</span> the paper, hoping
+that their bravery still abided with them. He made a good solicitor. Some of the
+merchants flatly refused, saying they did not care to risk Dunlavey&#8217;s
+anger. Others demurred, confidentially announcing that they had never considered
+the paper seriously and that there was really no good in advertising in Dry
+Bottom anyway&#8211;the town wasn&#8217;t big enough. Half a dozen listened
+quietly while he told them that the <i>Kicker</i> was in Dry Bottom to stay and
+then smiled and told him to run their advertisements. They rather admired his
+&#8220;nerve&#8221; and were not afraid of Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>At noon Hollis stepped into a restaurant called the Alhambra. While he ate he
+was critically inspected; the Alhambra swarmed with customers, and the
+proprietor quietly informed him that he was a &#8220;drawin&#8217; card&#8221;
+and hoped he&#8217;d &#8220;grub&#8221; there regularly. In return for his
+promise to do so Hollis secured his advertisement.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving the Alhambra he returned to the <i>Kicker</i> office, seating himself
+again at his desk. The sun came slantwise through the window full upon him; the
+heat was oppressive; the flint-like alkali dust sifted through the crevices in
+the building and settled over everything in the room; myriad flies droned in the
+white sunlight before the open door. He heard nothing, felt nothing, <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96'></a>96</span> saw nothing&#8211;for his
+thoughts were miles away, in an upper story of a big office building in the East
+from whose windows he even now looked down upon a bustling city.</p>
+
+<p>Life would be so different here. He heard a sound behind him and turned.
+Dunlavey was standing just inside the door, his great arms folded over his
+chest. He had been watching Hollis, his eyes narrowed with a cynically humorous
+expression.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis knew that by this time Dunlavey must have discovered his identity. He
+swung slowly around in his chair, his face wearing an expression of whimsical
+amusement as he greeted his victim of a few days previous.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Welcome to the <i>Kicker</i> office,&#8221; he said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey did not move. Evidently he had expected another sort of greeting and
+was slightly puzzled over Hollis&#8217;s manner. He remained motionless and
+Hollis had an opportunity to study him carefully and thoroughly. His conclusions
+were brief and comprehensive. They were expressed tersely to himself as he
+waited for Dunlavey to speak: &#8220;A trickster and a
+cheat&#8211;dangerous.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey&#8217;s eyes flashed metallically for an instant, but immediately
+the humorous cynicism came into them again. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_97'></a>97</span> &#8220;I don&#8217;t think you mean all of
+that,&#8221; he said evenly.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis laughed. &#8220;I am not in the habit of saying things that I do not
+mean,&#8221; he said quietly. &#8220;I am here to do business and I am ready to
+talk to anybody who wants to do business with me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey&#8217;s hands fell to his sides and were shoved into his capacious
+trousers&#8217; pockets. &#8220;Right,&#8221; he said tersely:
+&#8220;that&#8217;s what I&#8217;m here for&#8211;to talk business.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He pulled a chair over close to Hollis and seated himself in it, moving
+deliberately, a certain grim reserve in his manner. Hollis watched him,
+marveling at his self-control. He reflected that it required will power of a
+rare sort to repress or conceal the rage which he surely must feel over his
+humiliation of two weeks before. That Dunlavey was able to so mask his feelings
+convinced Hollis that he had to deal with a man of extraordinary character.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I recollect meeting you the other day,&#8221; said Dunlavey after he
+had become seated. He smiled with his lips, his eyes glittering again.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll say that we got acquainted then. There ain&#8217;t no need for
+us to shake hands now.&#8221; He showed his teeth in a mirthless grin. &#8220;I
+didn&#8217;t know you then, but I know you now. You&#8217;re Jim Hollis&#8217;s
+boy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98'></a>98</span>Hollis nodded.
+Dunlavey continued evenly: &#8220;Your father and me wasn&#8217;t what you might
+call bosom friends. I reckon Judge Graney has told you that&#8211;if he
+ain&#8217;t you&#8217;ve heard it from some one else. It don&#8217;t make any
+difference. So there won&#8217;t be any misunderstanding I&#8217;ll tell you
+that I ain&#8217;t figgering on you and me hitching up to the mutual friendship
+wagon either. I might say that we wasn&#8217;t introduced right.&#8221; He
+grinned evilly. &#8220;But I ain&#8217;t letting what happened interfere with
+the business that&#8217;s brought me here to-day. I&#8217;ve heard that
+you&#8217;re intending to start the <i>Kicker</i> again; that you&#8217;re
+figgering on staying here and running the Circle Bar. What I&#8217;m here for is
+to buy you out. I&#8217;m offering you fifteen thousand dollars for the Circle
+Bar and this damn newspaper.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey had lost a little of the composure which had characterized his
+actions since entering the office and the last words of his speech had writhed
+venomously through his lips.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s face betrayed absolutely no emotion. Though Dunlavey&#8217;s
+visit to the <i>Kicker</i> office had surprised him he was not surprised at his
+offer for the ranch and the newspaper, for according to Judge Graney he had made
+some such offer to the elder Hollis. Coming now, with an addition of five
+thousand dollars, Dunlavey&#8217;s offer <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_99'></a>99</span> seemed to advertise his reluctance to continue the
+war that he had waged. Hollis appreciated the situation. If Dunlavey were to buy
+him off now there would come an end to the warfare that had already been an
+expensive one for the interests represented by Dunlavey. Likewise, the
+acceptance of the offer would give Hollis an opportunity to withdraw gracefully.
+Dunlavey had placed the issue squarely before him. The young man held his future
+in his hands and he did not reply at once.</p>
+
+<p>He sat silent for a few moments, studying the coarse, brutal face of the man
+seated before him, noting that his under jaw had come forward slightly, and that
+the cold, hard glitter had come again in his eyes. However, Hollis&#8217;s
+silence meant nothing beyond the fact that he was going slowly over the history
+of the fight between his father and the man who sat there representing the
+interests which had begun the war. He had no thought of surrendering&#8211;that
+would be dishonorable. He was merely revolving the situation in his mind,
+considering how best to word his refusal. He did not want to appear belligerent;
+he did not want to precipitate war. But he did want Dunlavey to know that he
+purposed to have his rights; he wanted Dunlavey to know that he could not be
+frightened into surrendering them. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_100'></a>100</span> He clasped one hand over his knee and leaned back
+in his chair, his gaze meeting Dunlavey&#8217;s steadily.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dunlavey,&#8221; he said quietly, &#8220;what is the actual value of
+the Circle Bar ranch?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey smiled blandly. &#8220;You couldn&#8217;t find any man around these
+parts to take it at any price,&#8221; he returned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; questioned Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey grinned mysteriously. &#8220;I reckon you know why,&#8221; he
+returned; &#8220;you&#8217;re pretty much of a tenderfoot, but I reckon Judge
+Graney has put you wise to the situation. There ain&#8217;t nobody wants to buy
+the Circle Bar except me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; persisted Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon you know that too,&#8221; laughed Dunlavey. &#8220;It
+ain&#8217;t no secret. The Cattlemen&#8217;s Association is running things in
+this here county and it ain&#8217;t wanting anyone to buy the Circle Bar except
+me. And nobody is fool enough to antagonize the Association. That&#8217;s the
+why, if you want to know real bad.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You are frank about it at any rate,&#8221; conceded Hollis smiling
+slightly. &#8220;But that doesn&#8217;t get us anywhere. What I am trying to get
+at is this: what would the Circle Bar bring in cash if the Cattlemen&#8217;s
+Association ceased to be a factor in the county?&#8221; <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_101'></a>101</span> Dunlavey grinned broadly. &#8220;For a
+tenderfoot you&#8217;re real amusing,&#8221; he derided. &#8220;There
+ain&#8217;t nobody out here crazy enough to think that the Cattlemen&#8217;s
+Association will ever be put out of business!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s lips curled a little, but his gaze was still steady.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s evasion, Dunlavey,&#8221; he said quietly. &#8220;You
+will remember that I asked you what the Circle Bar would bring &#8216;if&#8217; the
+Association ceased to be a factor.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey favored Hollis with a perplexed grin. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know what
+difference that makes,&#8221; he returned. &#8220;We&#8217;re dealing with
+what&#8217;s before us now&#8211;we ain&#8217;t considering what might be. But
+if you want to know my personal opinion it&#8217;s that the Circle Bar might
+bring thirty thousand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thanks,&#8221; said Hollis dryly; &#8220;that&#8217;s getting
+somewhere. And now we&#8217;ll be able to talk business. We&#8217;ve got thirty
+thousand to start with. I am told that when the Association began its war
+against my father he was rather prosperous. Usually he rounded up about two
+thousand head of cattle. But we&#8217;ll call it a thousand. We&#8217;ll say
+that they brought about thirty dollars a head, which would make an income of
+thirty thousand dollars a year, gross. We&#8217;ll deduct fifty per cent <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102'></a>102</span> for operating expenses,
+losses, and so on. That would leave about fifteen thousand. You&#8217;ve been
+fighting the Circle Bar for several years. We&#8217;ll call it five. Five times
+fifteen thousand is seventy-five thousand. That represents the sum which my
+father would have made from the Circle Bar if you had not fought him. Add to
+that the thirty thousand which you admit would be a fair figure for the ranch if
+the Association were eliminated as a factor, and we have a total of one hundred
+and five thousand dollars.&#8221; He smiled and leaned a little farther back in
+his chair, narrowing his eyes at Dunlavey. &#8220;Now we have reached a point
+where we can get somewhere. I&#8217;ll take one hundred thousand dollars for the
+Circle Bar.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The calm announcement had no effect upon Dunlavey except to cause him to grin
+derisively.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;For a tenderfoot you&#8217;re pretty slick,&#8221; he allowed, his
+teeth showing. &#8220;You&#8217;ve figgered it out so that it sounds right
+reasonable. But you&#8217;ve forgot one thing. The Cattlemen&#8217;s Association
+ain&#8217;t eliminated. It says that the Circle Bar is worth fifteen thousand.
+You&#8217;ll take that or&#8213;&#8221; He smiled grimly, holding back the
+threat.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think I know what you mean,&#8221; said Hollis quietly, without
+changing color. &#8220;You mean <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_103'></a>103</span> that the Cattlemen&#8217;s Association will
+continue its fight and eventually ruin the Circle Bar. Perhaps it will&#8211;no
+man can tell what lies in the future. But I can tell you this: you can&#8217;t
+retard progress.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No?&#8221; said Dunlavey with an irritating drawl.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled composedly. He spoke without bitterness.
+&#8220;Dunlavey,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;m going to tell you something
+which you perhaps know but will not admit. Your Association has been successful
+in pulling the strings which make the politicians at Washington jump to do your
+bidding. I don&#8217;t accuse you of buying them, but in any event they have
+greased the ways over which your Association has slipped to power. And now you
+think that the impetus you have gained will carry you along indefinitely. It
+won&#8217;t. Everything in this world runs its natural course and when it does
+there comes an end.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you were endowed with the average foresight you would be able to
+see that things cannot always go on the way they have. The law must come. It is
+inevitable. Its coming will be facilitated by such organizations as the
+Cattlemen&#8217;s Association and by such men as you. Back in the East the
+forces of Good and Bad are battling. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_104'></a>104</span> The forces of Good will be victorious. The
+government at Washington is familiar with the conditions that exist here and
+sooner or later will be compelled to act. When it does the small cattle owner
+will receive protection.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re holding tight till the law comes,&#8221; sneered Dunlavey;
+&#8220;which won&#8217;t be soon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps not,&#8221; admitted Hollis dryly; &#8220;good things come
+slowly. Meanwhile, if you don&#8217;t care to accept my figure for the Circle
+Bar I shall follow your example and hold tight until the law comes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Meaning that you won&#8217;t sell, I suppose?&#8221; sneered
+Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Meaning just that,&#8221; returned Hollis quietly. &#8220;I am going
+to fight you. I have offered the Circle Bar at a fair figure and you have
+responded with threats. I wouldn&#8217;t sell to you now if you offered one
+hundred and fifty thousand. The Circle Bar is not for sale!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey had not moved. He sat quiet, leaning a little forward, his hands
+resting on his knees, his eyes narrowed to glittering pin-points as he watched
+Hollis. When the latter had concluded he leaned back, laughing hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What are you going to do with this damn newspaper?&#8221; he
+demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The newspaper will be used as a weapon <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_105'></a>105</span> against you,&#8221; returned Hollis.
+&#8220;It will kick loud and long against such organizations as the
+Cattlemen&#8217;s Association&#8211;against such men as you. Ostensibly the
+<i>Kicker</i> will be a Dry Bottom newspaper, but it will appear in every city
+in the East; the matter that appears in it will be reprinted in Chicago, in
+Washington, in New York&#8211;in fact in every city in which I have a friend
+engaged in the newspaper business&#8211;and I have a number. I am going to stir
+up sentiment against you. I am going to be the Law&#8217;s advance
+agent!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey rose, his lips curling with contempt. &#8220;You make me
+sick!&#8221; he sneered. He turned his back and walked to the door, returning
+and standing in front of Hollis, ominously cool and deliberate. &#8220;So
+that&#8217;s the how of it?&#8221; he said evenly. &#8220;You&#8217;ve come out
+here looking for fight. Well, you&#8217;ll get it&#8211;plenty of it. I owe you
+something&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wait, Dunlavey,&#8221; Hollis interrupted, without excitement;
+&#8220;I want you to understand that there isn&#8217;t anything personal in
+this. I am going to fight you because you are a member of the Cattlemen&#8217;s
+Association and not because you were my father&#8217;s enemy. I am not afraid of
+you. I suspect that you will try to make things decidedly interesting for me
+from now on and I <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106'></a>106</span>
+suppose I ought to be properly troubled. But I am not. I shall not be surprised
+at anything you do. I think that is all. Please close the door when you go
+out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He turned to the desk, ignoring Dunlavey. Sitting there, his senses alert, he
+heard the door slam. From beyond it came a curse. Silence again reigned in the
+office; Hollis was alone with the dust and the heat&#8211;and some very original
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107'></a>107</span><a id='link_7'></a>CHAPTER VII<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE &#8220;KICKER&#8221; BECOMES AN INSTITUTION</span></h2>
+
+<p>It was mid-July&#8211;and hot. The sun shone continually; the nights were
+uncomfortable, stifling. The dust was everywhere and grew deeper and lighter as
+the days passed. Water grew scarce; cattle suffered, lowing throughout the
+night, during the day searching the bogs and water holes for drops of moisture.
+Men looked up at the clear, cloudless sky and prayed&#8211;and cursed&#8211;for
+rain. The rain did not come. It was one long, continuous nightmare of heat.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Kicker</i> had appeared four times&#8211;on Saturdays&#8211;on time.
+Telegraphic communication with the outside world had been established. Potter
+had taken up his residence at the Circle Bar. War had been declared between the
+<i>Kicker</i> and the Lazette <i>Eagle</i>. Hollis had written an argumentative
+essay on the virtues of Dry Bottom as a town, dwelling upon its superiority over
+Lazette. The editor of the <i>Eagle</i> had replied with some bitterness,
+setting forth in detail why Dry Bottom did <i>not</i> compare with Lazette. As
+the <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108'></a>108</span> editor of the
+<i>Eagle</i> mentioned population and civic spirit in his bill of particulars
+the war promised to be of long duration&#8211;questions of superiority between
+spirited persons are never settled. And Hollis had succeeded in arousing the
+spirit of Dry Bottom&#8217;s citizens. They began to take some interest in the
+<i>Kicker</i>. Many subscribed; all read it.</p>
+
+<p>From the &#8220;local&#8221; columns of the paper one might have discovered
+that many public and private improvements were contemplated. Among these the
+following items were of the greatest interest:</p>
+
+<div class='bquote'>
+<p>Steps are being taken by the government toward the erection of a fence around
+the court house grounds. Judge Graney is contemplating a lawn and flowers. When
+these improvements are completed there will be no comparison between our court
+house and the dilapidated hovel which disgraces the county seat of Colfax. The
+Lazette <i>Eagle</i> please notice.</p>
+
+<hr class='tb' />
+
+<p>William Dunn, the proprietor of the Alhambra eating house, announces that in
+the near future he will erect a new sign. Thereafter the Alhambra will be known
+as the Alhambra Restaurant. This is a step forward. We have been informed that
+there is no restaurant in Lazette. Good boy, Dunn.</p>
+
+<hr class='tb' />
+
+<p>Chet Miller&#8217;s general merchandise store is to be repainted throughout.
+Chet is public spirited.</p> </div><!-- block quote -->
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109'></a>109</span>Everybody of any
+importance in Dry Bottom received weekly mention of some sort in the
+<i>Kicker</i>. Chet Miller was heard to say that the <i>Kicker</i> was a
+&#8220;hummer,&#8221; and no one ascribed his praise of the paper to thanks for
+the appearance of his name therein, for all who would have criticized were
+silenced by the appearance of their own names.</p>
+
+<p>In the fourth issue of the paper appeared several new advertisements.
+Judicious personal mention and lively news locals had aroused public spirit to a
+point where it ignored thoughts of Dunlavey&#8217;s displeasure.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the Saturday which had marked the first issue of the <i>Kicker</i> under
+Hollis&#8217;s ownership he had employed a circulation manager. That afternoon
+on the street near the <i>Kicker</i> office he had almost collided with a red
+haired youth of uncertain age who had bounded out through the door of a private
+dwelling. In order to keep from knocking the youth over Hollis was forced to
+seize him by the arms and literally lift him off his feet. While in the air the
+youth&#8217;s face was close to Hollis&#8217;s and both grinned over the
+occurrence. When Hollis set the youth down he stood for an instant, looking up
+into Hollis&#8217;s face and a grin of amusement overspread his own.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_110'></a>110</span>&#8220;Shucks!&#8221; he said slowly. &#8220;If it
+ain&#8217;t the tenderfoot editor!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s just who it is,&#8221; returned Hollis with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>The youth grinned as he looked critically at Hollis. &#8220;You gittin&#8217;
+out that there paper to-day, mister?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Right now,&#8221; returned Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bully!&#8221; exclaimed the youth. He surveyed Hollis with a frank
+admiration. &#8220;They said you wouldn&#8217;t have the nerve to do it,&#8221;
+he said; &#8220;but, say! I reckon they ain&#8217;t got you sized up
+right!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled, remembering that though the paper had been printed it was not
+yet distributed. He placed a hand on the youth&#8217;s shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Have you got nerve enough to pass the <i>Kicker</i> around to the
+people of this town?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon,&#8221; grinned the youth. &#8220;I was comin&#8217; down to
+ast you for the job when you bumped into me. I used to peddle them for your dad.
+My name&#8217;s Jiggs Lenehan&#8211;mebbe you&#8217;ve heard of me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled. &#8220;The question of delivering the <i>Kicker</i> was one of
+the details that I overlooked,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But fortunately it is
+arranged now. Henceforth, Jiggs, you are the <i>Kicker&#8217;s</i> official
+circulation manager. Likewise, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_111'></a>111</span> if you care to add to your income, you can help
+Potter around the office.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So it had been arranged, and Jiggs entered upon his duties with an energy
+that left little doubt in his employer&#8217;s mind that he would prove a
+valuable addition to the force.</p>
+
+<p>In Hollis&#8217;s &#8220;Salutatory&#8221; to the people of Dry Bottom he had
+announced in a quiet, unostentatious paragraph that while he had not come to Dry
+Bottom for a free fight, he would permit no one to tread on his toes. His
+readers&#8217; comprehension of the metaphor was complete&#8211;as was evidenced
+by the warm hand-clasps which he received from citizens who were not in sympathy
+with the Dunlavey regime. It surprised him to find how many such there were in
+town. He was convinced that all this element needed was a leader and he grimly
+determined to step quietly into that position himself.</p>
+
+<p>The second issue of the <i>Kicker</i> was marked by a more aggressive
+spirit&#8211;a spirit engendered by the sympathetic reception of the first
+issue. In it he stated concisely his views of the situation in Union County,
+telling his readers that the best interests of the community demanded that
+Dunlavey&#8217;s evil influence be wiped out. This article was headed:
+&#8220;Dry Bottom&#8217;s Future,&#8221; and won him many friends.</p>
+
+<p>The third issue contained stronger language, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_112'></a>112</span> and the fourth was energetically aggressive. As he
+had decided before the first appearance of the paper, he took a certain number
+of copies of each issue, folded them neatly, stamped and addressed them, and
+mailed them to a number of newspapers throughout the country whose editors he
+knew. He also directed copies to a number of his friends in the East&#8211;to
+the president of his college, and last, to the Secretary of the Interior at
+Washington, who had formerly resided near him in Boston, and with whom he had a
+long acquaintance. There had been a change of administration the fall previous
+and he was certain that the new administration would not ignore the situation.
+To the Secretary, and also to a number of his friends, he wrote personal
+letters, explaining in detail the exact condition of affairs in Union
+County.</p>
+
+<p>He had not seen Dunlavey since the day the latter had come to the
+<i>Kicker</i> office to negotiate for the purchase of the paper. On several of
+his rides to and from the Circle Bar ranch he had seen signs of life at the
+Circle Cross; once or twice he thought he saw someone watching him from a hill
+on the Circle Cross side of the Rabbit-Ear, but of this he was not quite
+certain, for the hill-top was thickly wooded and the distance great.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113'></a>113</span>He had been
+warned by Norton not to ride too often over the same trail lest Dunlavey send
+someone to ambush him.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had laughed at the warning, though thanking Norton for it. He told his
+range boss that he did not anticipate any immediate trouble with Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It all depends on how Big Bill feels,&#8221; returned Norton with a
+grim smile. &#8220;If you&#8217;ve got him mad there&#8217;s no telling. And
+there are plenty of places between here and Dry Bottom where a man might be shot
+from ambush. And nobody&#8217;d ever know who done it. I wouldn&#8217;t ride the
+Dry Bottom trail every day. There&#8217;s the old Coyote trail, that takes you
+past the Razor-Back and through Devil&#8217;s Hollow to Little Canyon an&#8217;
+along the hills to the other side.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. &#8220;There&#8217;s only one thing you need to be afraid of if
+you take the Coyote trail, an&#8217; that&#8217;s Ed Hazelton. Ed gets spells
+when he&#8217;s plum crazy. He&#8217;s Nellie Hazelton&#8217;s brother&#8211;her
+that Dunlavey was pesterin&#8217; when you slammed him.&#8221; He laughed again,
+significantly. &#8220;Though if Ed knowed you was the man who took his
+sister&#8217;s part you wouldn&#8217;t need to be much scared of
+him&#8211;I&#8217;ve heard that he&#8217;s got a pretty good memory for his
+friends&#8211;even when he&#8217;s off.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114'></a>114</span>Hollis had not
+told Norton of his experience in Devil&#8217;s Hollow, nor did he tell him now.
+But he followed his advice about taking the Coyote trail, and the following day
+when he made the trip to Dry Bottom he returned that way. About half way between
+Dry Bottom and the Circle Bar he came upon a little adobe cabin snuggling an
+arroyo through which trickled a small stream of water.</p>
+
+<p>It was an ideal location for a small rancher, and Hollis observed that the
+buildings were in order&#8211;evidently Nellie Hazelton and her brother were
+provident. He saw some cattle grazing on the edge of a small grass plateau which
+began at the slope of the arroyo through which the stream of water ran. A shout
+reached his ears as he sat motionless in the saddle looking about him, and he
+saw Ed Hazelton on the plateau among the cattle, waving a hand to him. The young
+man began to descend the side of the plateau, but before he had fairly started
+Nellie Hazelton had come out of the front door of the cabin and stood on the
+edge of the small porch, smiling at him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So you did come, after all?&#8221; was her greeting.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis spurred his pony closer and sat smiling down at her. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t think anything could <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_115'></a>115</span> have stopped me after your invitation,&#8221; he
+returned quickly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; she said. The sudden color that came into her face told of
+her confusion. It betrayed the fact that she knew he had come because of her.
+Her brother&#8217;s invitation in Devil&#8217;s Hollow had been merely formal;
+there had been another sort of invitation in her eyes as she and her brother had
+left him that day.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you get off your horse?&#8221; she said while he still sat
+motionless. &#8220;It&#8217;s quite a while before sundown and you have plenty
+of time to reach the Circle Bar before dark.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He had determined to discover something of the mystery that surrounded her
+and her brother, and so he was off his pony quickly and seating himself in a
+chair that she drew out of the cabin for him. By the time her brother had
+reached the porch Hollis was stretched comfortably out in the chair and was
+answering several timid questions concerning his opinion of the country and his
+new responsibilities.</p>
+
+<p>She was glad he liked the country, she said. It was wonderful. In the five
+years they had been here they had enjoyed it thoroughly&#8211;that was, of
+course, barring the trouble they had had with Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>Of their trouble with Dunlavey Hollis would <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_116'></a>116</span> hear much later, he told himself. At present he was
+more interested in discovering something about her and her brother, though he
+did not wish to appear inquisitive. Therefore his voice was politely casual.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then you are not a Westerner?&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled mournfully. &#8220;No,&#8221; she returned; &#8220;we&#8211;Ed and
+I&#8211;were raised in Illinois, near Springfield. We came out here five years
+ago after&#8211;after mother died.&#8221; Her voice caught. &#8220;Sometimes it
+seems terribly lonesome out here,&#8221; she added; &#8220;when I get to
+thinking of&#8211;of our other home. But&#8221;&#8211;she smiled bravely through
+the sudden moisture that had come into her eyes&#8211;&#8220;since Ed got hurt I
+don&#8217;t have much time to think of myself. Poor fellow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was silent. He had never had a sister but he could imagine how she
+must feel over the misfortune that had come to her brother. It must be a
+sacrifice for her to remain in this country, to care for a brother who must be a
+great burden to her at times, to fight the solitude, the hardships, to bear with
+patience the many inconveniences which are inevitable in a new, unsettled
+country. He felt a new admiration for her and a profound sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think that you must be a very brave young woman,&#8221; he said
+earnestly.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_117'></a>117</span>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; she returned with a sudden,
+illuminating smile. &#8220;It isn&#8217;t hard to be brave. But at times I find
+it hard to be patient.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Patience is one of the cardinal virtues,&#8221; declared Hollis,
+&#8220;but it takes bravery of a rare sort to remain in this country, surrounded
+with the care&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her fingers were suddenly over her lips warningly, and he saw Ed Hazelton
+nearing the porch.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t have him know for the world,&#8221; she said rapidly.
+&#8220;It isn&#8217;t a care to look after someone you love.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled grimly at the reproach in her voice and rose to greet her
+brother.</p>
+
+<p>The latter seemed to be quite recovered from the attack he had suffered in
+Devil&#8217;s Hollow and talked freely and intelligently of affairs in the
+country. Hollis found that on the whole he was a well informed young
+man&#8211;quiet, modest, and apparently well able to give a good account of
+himself in spite of his affliction. He was bitter against Dunlavey and thanked
+Hollis warmly for his defense of his sister.</p>
+
+<p>At sundown Hollis departed, telling the Hazeltons that since he was their
+neighbor he would not neglect to see them occasionally. As he rode away into the
+dusk Nellie Hazelton stood on the porch smilingly waving her hand at him. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118'></a>118</span> As he threaded his way
+through the rapidly growing darkness he felt an unaccountable satisfaction over
+the fact that he had elected to remain in Union County; that henceforth his
+fortunes were to be linked with those of a brave young woman who had also
+accepted the robes of sacrifice and who was committed to war against their
+common enemy&#8211;Dunlavey. Curiously, during the past few days he had felt a
+decided change in his attitude toward life. His old ambition was no longer
+uppermost in his mind&#8211;it had been crowded out of his existence. In its
+place had been erected a new pinnacle of promise. A seat among the mighty was a
+worthy goal. Yet the lowly bench of sacrifice was not without its
+compensations.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119'></a>119</span><a id='link_8'></a>CHAPTER VIII<br /><span class='h2fs'>CONCERNING THE &#8220;SIX-O&#8217;CLOCK&#8221;</span></h2>
+
+<p>On Friday evening previous to the Saturday on which the <i>Kicker</i> was to
+be issued for the fifth consecutive time by Hollis, Potter did not ride out to
+the Circle Bar. There still remained some type to be set and Potter had declared
+his intention of completing the work and staying overnight in town. Hollis had
+acquiesced and had departed for the Circle Bar alone.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached Dry Bottom the following morning he found a small crowd of
+people in front of the <i>Kicker</i> office. During the night someone had posted
+a written notice on the front door, and when Hollis dismounted from his pony
+there were perhaps a dozen interested citizens grouped about the door, reading
+the notice. There were several of the town&#8217;s merchants and a number of
+cowboys&#8211;new arrivals and those who had remained overnight to gamble and
+participate in the festivities that were all-night features of the dives. There
+were also the usual loafers, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_120'></a>120</span> who constitute an element never absent in any group
+of idlers in any street. All, however, gave way before Hollis and allowed him to
+reach the door without molestation, though in passing he observed significant
+grins on several faces.</p>
+
+<p>The notice was written in a bold, legible hand.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Hollis:&#8221;&#8211;it read, the prefix
+under-scored&#8211;&#8220;The express leaves town this afternoon at six
+o&#8217;clock&#8211;goin' east. Better be on it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p class='tar'>Signed&#8211;&#8220;Y. Z.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis read the notice and then turned and quietly surveyed his watchful,
+interested audience. He smiled grimly, seeing several faces which, though
+plainly expressing amusement, seemed quietly sympathetic. He felt that these
+were wishing him success, though doubting his ability to cope with his enemies.
+Other faces were plainly antagonistic in expression. He looked at both for an
+instant and then turned again to the notice and producing a pencil printed
+boldly on its face the slogan he had devised:</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121'></a>121</span><i>&#8220;We
+Herald the Coming of the Law! The Kicker is Here to Stay!&#8221;</i></p>
+
+<p>And below he indulged in this sarcasm: <i>&#8220;Don&#8217;t hold the express
+on my account!&#8221;</i></p>
+
+<p class='tar'>Signed&#8211;&#8220;KENT HOLLIS&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Leaving his audience to stare after him Hollis pushed open the door of the
+office and entered.</p>
+
+<p>He found Potter bending over the imposing table, hard at work on one of the
+forms. Three other forms, locked and ready for the press, stood in a corner.
+Potter looked up and smiled as his chief entered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;See the notice on the door?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Some of Dunlavey&#8217;s work, I suppose,&#8221; returned Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, yes. I suppose Dunlavey is back of it. But Yuma tacked the sign
+up.&#8221; He smiled soberly as Hollis flashed a grin at him. &#8220;They tried
+hard last night to get me to drink. Of course their purpose was to get me drunk
+so that I wouldn&#8217;t be able to get the paper out today. I am not going to
+tell you how hard I had to fight myself to resist the temptation to drink. But
+you can see for yourself that I succeeded. The <i>Kicker</i> will be ready to go
+to press in an hour.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He felt Hollis&#8217;s hand patting his shoulder <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_122'></a>122</span> approvingly and he continued, a little
+hoarsely. &#8220;I took one drink at the Fashion last night after I got through
+here. Then I came back and went to sleep. I am a light sleeper and when some
+time after midnight I heard a sound at the door I got up and peered out of the
+window. I saw Yuma tacking up the notice. I suppose Dunlavey wrote it.&#8221; He
+looked at Hollis with a whimsical expression. &#8220;I suppose you are going to
+take the express?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tried to get you drunk, did they?&#8221; shaking his head negatively
+to Potter&#8217;s question, a smile on his face. &#8220;I can&#8217;t understand
+that game,&#8221; he continued, soberly. &#8220;Of course getting you drunk
+would have prevented the appearance of the paper on scheduled time. But if they
+wanted to do serious damage&#8211;of course I mean to the paper,&#8221; he
+apologized with a grim smile, &#8220;why didn&#8217;t they come down
+here&#8211;some of them&#8211;during your absence, and smash things up? That
+would have made the thing sure for them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Potter laughed mirthlessly. &#8220;Of course they could have done
+that,&#8221; he said; &#8220;it would have been easy&#8211;will be easy any
+time. But it wouldn&#8217;t be artistic, would be coarse in fact. Dunlavey
+doesn&#8217;t do things that way. If they smash your stuff, destroy your plant
+here, ruin <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123'></a>123</span> your
+type and press, and so forth, they invite sympathy in your behalf. But if they
+prevent the appearance of your paper without having done any damage to your
+plant they accomplish something&#8211;they expose you to ridicule. And in this
+country ridicule is a potent weapon&#8211;even if it involves nothing more
+serious than a drunken printer.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis shook Potter&#8217;s hand in silence. He had expected violence from
+Dunlavey; long before this he had expected him to show his hand, to attempt some
+covert and damaging action. And he had been prepared to fight to get the
+<i>Kicker</i> out. He had not expected subtlety from Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>He went to his desk and sat in the chair, looking out through the window at
+the crowd that still lingered in front of the office. Most of the faces wore
+grins. Plainly they were amused, but Hollis saw that the amusement was of a grim
+sort. They appreciated the situation and enjoyed its humor but felt the tragedy
+behind it. Probably most of them were acquainted with Dunlavey&#8217;s methods;
+some of them probably knew of the attempt that had been made to incapacitate
+Potter. Certainly those of them that did know had seen the failure of the
+attempt and were now speculating upon Dunlavey&#8217;s next <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_124'></a>124</span> move. Looking out of the window Hollis
+felt that some of his audience must be wondering whether the editor of the
+<i>Kicker</i> would pay any attention to the notice on the door. Would he
+scare?</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had already decided that he would not &#8220;scare.&#8221; He grinned
+at several of the men who watched him and then turned and instructed Potter to
+take down a column of type on the first page of the paper to make room for an
+article that he intended to write. Then he seized a pen and wrote a red hot
+defiance directed at the authors of the notice, which Potter set up under the
+heading:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why the Editor of the <i>Kicker</i> Won&#8217;t Take the
+Express.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In clear, terse language he told his audience his reasons. This was America;
+he was an American, and he didn&#8217;t purpose to allow the Cattlemen&#8217;s
+Association&#8211;or any other association, gang, or individual&#8211;to dictate
+the policy of his paper or influence his private actions. Least of all did he
+purpose to allow anyone to &#8220;run him out of town.&#8221; He printed the
+notice entire, adding his answer, assuring readers that he was sending copies of
+the <i>Kicker</i> to every newspaper in the East and that notices such as had
+been affixed to his door would react against the authors. He ended with the
+prophecy that <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125'></a>125</span> the
+law would come into Union County and that meanwhile the <i>Kicker</i> purposed
+to fight.</p>
+
+<p>At noon Hollis took the usual number of copies to the station and mailed
+them. Walking down the street on his return from the station he attracted much
+attention. Men stood in the open doorways of saloons watching him, a number
+openly jeered; others sent subtle jibes after him. Still others were silent,
+their faces expressing amusement.</p>
+
+<p>But he looked at none of them. He swung along the board walk, his face a
+little pale, his lips tightly closed, determined to pay no attention to the
+jeers that reached his ears.</p>
+
+<p>When he passed the Fashion there were a number of men draped along its front;
+and he was conscious of many grins. Passing the men he heard low laughter and
+profane reference which caused his cheeks to redden. But he walked steadily on.
+Near the <i>Kicker</i> office he met Jiggs Lenehan. Followed by the youth he
+reached the office to find that Potter had completed the press work and that
+several hundred copies of the paper, the ink still moist on its pages, were
+stacked in orderly array on the imposing stone. In a very brief time Jiggs burst
+out of the office door, a bundle of papers under his arm, and began the work of
+distribution. Standing back from the window with Potter, Hollis watched <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126'></a>126</span> Jiggs until the latter
+reached the crowd in front of the Fashion saloon. Then all that Hollis could see
+of him was his red head. But that trade was brisk was proved by the press around
+Jiggs&#8211;the youth was passing out papers at a rapid rate and soon nearly
+every man in the crowd about the Fashion was engaged in reading, or,&#8211;if
+this important feature of his education had been neglected&#8211;in questioning
+his neighbor concerning the things that appeared in the paper.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Jigg&#8217;s customers in front of the Fashion were all supplied.
+Then other purchasers appeared. Soon the <i>Kicker</i> was being read
+by&#8211;it seemed&#8211;nearly every grown person in Dry Bottom. Business was
+suspended. Down the street men were congregated about the doors of many of the
+stores; others were sitting in doorways, still others leaned against buildings;
+some, not taking time to search for support, read while walking, or stood
+motionless on the board sidewalks, satisfying their curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis watched through the window until he began to be certain that every
+person in town was supplied with a paper. Then with a grim smile he left the
+window and sought his chair beside the desk. He was satisfied. Dunlavey had made
+the first aggressive movement and the fight was on.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127'></a>127</span><a id='link_9'></a>CHAPTER IX<br /><span class='h2fs'>HOW A BAD MAN LEFT THE &#8220;KICKER&#8221; OFFICE</span></h2>
+
+<p>It was about one o&#8217;clock in the afternoon when the <i>Kicker</i>
+appeared on Dry Bottom&#8217;s street. At about five minutes after one, Potter
+left the front of the office and walked to the rear room where he halted at the
+imposing stone. There he proceeded to &#8220;take down&#8221; the four forms.
+This done he calmly began distributing type.</p>
+
+<p>While Potter worked Hollis sat very quietly at his desk in the front office,
+his arms folded, one hand supporting his chin, his lips forming straight lines,
+his eyes narrowed with a meditative expression. Occasionally Potter glanced
+furtively at him, his eyes filled with mingled expressions of sympathy,
+admiration, and concern.</p>
+
+<p>Potter appreciated his chief&#8217;s position. It meant something for a man
+of Hollis&#8217;s years and training to bury himself in this desolate sink-hole
+of iniquity; to elect to carry on an unequal war with interests that controlled
+the law machinery of the county and Territory&#8211;whose power extended to
+Washington. No doubt the young <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_128'></a>128</span> man was even now brooding over the future, planning
+his fight, pessimistically considering his chances of success. Potter&#8217;s
+sympathy grew. He thought of approaching his chief with a word of encouragement.
+But while he hesitated, mentally debating the propriety of such an action,
+Hollis turned quickly and looked fairly at him, his forehead perplexed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Potter,&#8221; he remarked, &#8220;I suppose there isn&#8217;t a good
+brain specialist in this section of the country?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why&#8211;why&#8213;&#8221; began Potter. Then he stopped and looked
+at his chief in wordless astonishment. His sympathy had been wasted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; laughed Hollis, divining the cause of the
+compositor&#8217;s astonishment, &#8220;personally I have no use for a brain
+specialist. I was thinking of some other person.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not me?&#8221; grinned Potter from behind his type case. He flushed a
+little at the thought of how near he had come to offering encouragement to a man
+who had not been in need of it, who, evidently, had not been thinking of the big
+fight at all. &#8220;Perhaps I need one,&#8221; he added, eyeing Hollis
+whimsically; &#8220;a moment ago I thought you were in the dumps on account of
+the situation here&#8211;you seemed rather disturbed. It surprised me
+considerably to find that you had not been thinking of Dunlavey at
+all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_129'></a>129</span>&#8220;No,&#8221; admitted Hollis gravely, &#8220;I
+was not thinking of Dunlavey. I was wondering if something couldn&#8217;t be
+done for Ed Hazelton.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Something ought to be done for him,&#8221; declared Potter earnestly.
+&#8220;I have watched that young man closely and I am convinced that with proper
+care and treatment he would recover fully. But I never heard of a specialist in
+this section&#8211;none, in fact, nearer than Chicago. And I&#8217;ve forgotten
+his name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is Hammond,&#8221; supplied Hollis. &#8220;I&#8217;ve been thinking
+of him. I knew his son in college. I am going to write to him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He turned to his desk and took up a pen, while Potter resumed his work of
+distributing type.</p>
+
+<p>About half an hour later Jiggs Lenehan strolled into the office wearing a
+huge grin on his face. &#8220;&#8217;Pears like everybody in town wants to read the
+<i>Kicker</i> to-day,&#8221; he said with a joyous cackle. &#8220;Never had so
+much fun sellin&#8217; them. Gimme some more,&#8221; he added breathlessly;
+&#8220;they&#8217;s a gang down to the station howlin&#8217; for them.
+Say,&#8221; he yelled at Hollis as he went out of the door with a big bundle of
+<i>Kickers</i> under his arm, &#8220;you&#8217;re cert&#8217;nly some editor
+man!&#8221; He grinned admiringly and widely as he disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis finished his letter to Hammond and then leaned back in his chair. For
+half an hour <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130'></a>130</span> he
+sat there, looking gravely out into the street and then, answering a sudden
+impulse, he rose and strode to the door.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Going down to the court house,&#8221; he informed Potter.</p>
+
+<p>He found Judge Graney in his room, seated at the big table, a copy of the
+<i>Kicker</i> spread out in front of him. At his appearance the Judge pushed
+back his chair and regarded him with an approving smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, Hollis,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I see Dunlavey has played the
+first card.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He hasn&#8217;t taken the first trick,&#8221; was the young
+man&#8217;s quick reply.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fortunately not,&#8221; laughed the judge. He placed a finger on a
+column in the <i>Kicker</i>. &#8220;This article about the Cattlemen&#8217;s
+Association is a hummer&#8211;if I may be allowed the phrase. A straight, manly
+citation of the facts. It ought to win friends for you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve merely stated the truth,&#8221; returned Hollis, &#8220;and
+if the article seems good it is merely because it defends a principle whose
+virtue is perfectly obvious.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But only a man who felt strongly could have written it,&#8221;
+suggested the Judge.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps. I admit feeling a deep interest in the question of
+cattle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131'></a>131</span>&#8220;Your
+ambition?&#8221; slyly insinuated the Judge.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Is temporarily in abeyance&#8211;perhaps permanently.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then your original decision about remaining here has been&#8211;well,
+strengthened?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded. The Judge grinned mysteriously. &#8220;There is an article on
+the first page of the <i>Kicker</i> which interested me greatly,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;It concerns the six o&#8217;clock train&#8211;going east. Do you happen
+to know whether the editor of the <i>Kicker</i> is going to use the
+express?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled appreciatively. &#8220;The editor of the <i>Kicker</i> is going
+to use the express,&#8221; he admitted, &#8220;though not in the manner some
+people are wishing. The usual number of copies of the <i>Kicker</i> are going to
+ride on the express, as are also some very forceful letters to the President of
+the United States and the Secretary of the Interior.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; said the Judge. He looked critically at Hollis. &#8220;I
+know that you are going to remain in Dry Bottom,&#8221; he said slowly; &#8220;I
+have never doubted your courage. But I want to warn you to be careful.
+Don&#8217;t make the mistake of thinking that the notice which you found on the
+door of the <i>Kicker</i> office this morning is a joke. They don&#8217;t joke
+like that out here. Of course I know that you are not afraid and that <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132'></a>132</span> you won&#8217;t run. But
+be careful&#8211;there are men out here who would snuff out a human life as
+quickly as they would the flame of a candle, and with as little fear of the
+consequences. I shouldn&#8217;t like to hear of you using your revolver, but if
+you do have occasion to use it, use it fast and make a good job of
+it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like to use a gun,&#8221; returned Hollis gravely,
+&#8220;but all the same I shall bear your advice in mind.&#8221; An expression
+of slight disgust swept over his face. &#8220;I don&#8217;t see why men out here
+don&#8217;t exhibit a little more courage,&#8221; he said. &#8220;They all
+&#8216;pack&#8217; a gun, as Norton says, and all are apparently yearning to use one.
+I don&#8217;t see what satisfaction there could be in shooting a man with whom
+you have had trouble; it strikes me as being a trifle cowardly.&#8221; He
+laughed grimly. &#8220;For my part,&#8221; he added, &#8220;I can get more
+satisfaction out of slugging a man. Perhaps it isn&#8217;t so artistic as
+shooting, but you have the satisfaction of knowing that your antagonist realizes
+and appreciates his punishment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Judge Graney&#8217;s gaze rested on the muscular frame of the young man.
+&#8220;I suppose if all men were built like you there would be less shooting
+done. But unfortunately nature has seen fit to use different molds in making her
+men. Not every man has the strength or science to use his fists, nor the
+courage. But there is one thing <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_133'></a>133</span> that you will do well to remember. When you slug a
+man who carries a gun you only beat him temporarily; usually he will wait his
+chance and use his gun when you least expect him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you refer to Yuma Ed and Dunlavey?&#8221; suggested
+Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, no, not Dunlavey. I have never heard of Dunlavey shooting
+anybody; he plays a finer game. But Yuma Ed, Greasy, Ten Spot, and some more who
+belong to the Dunlavey crowd are professional gun-men and do not hesitate to
+shoot. The chances are that Dunlavey will try to square accounts with you in
+some other manner, but I would be careful of Yuma&#8211;a blow in the face never
+sets well on a man of that character.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>An hour later, when Hollis sat at his desk in the <i>Kicker</i> office, Judge
+Graney&#8217;s words were recalled to him. He was thinking of his conversation
+with the Judge when Jiggs Lenehan burst into the office, breathless, his face
+pale and his eyes swimming with news. He was trembling With excitement.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ten Spot is comin&#8217; down here to put you out of business!&#8221;
+he blurted out when he could get his breath. &#8220;I was in the Fashion
+an&#8217; I heard him an&#8217; Yuma talkin&#8217; about you. Ten Spot is
+comin&#8217; here at six o&#8217;clock!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis turned slowly in his chair and faced the <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_134'></a>134</span> boy. His cheeks whitened a little.
+Judge Graney had been right. Hollis had rather expected at some time or other he
+would have to have it out with Yuma, but he had expected he would have to deal
+with Yuma himself. He smiled a little grimly. It made very little difference
+whether he fought Yuma or some other man; when he had elected to remain in Dry
+Bottom he had realized that he must fight somebody&#8211;everybody in the
+Dunlavey crew. He looked at his watch and saw that the hands pointed to four.
+Therefore he had two hours to prepare for Ten Spot&#8217;s coming. He smiled at
+the boy, looked back into the composing room and saw that Potter had ceased his
+labors and was leaning on a type case, watching him soberly. He grinned broadly
+at Potter and turned to Jiggs.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How many <i>Kickers</i> did you sell?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Two hundred an&#8217; ten,&#8221; returned the latter;
+&#8220;everybody bought them.&#8221; He took a step forward; his hands clenching
+with the excitement that still possessed him. &#8220;I told you Ten Spot was
+comin&#8217; down here to kill you!&#8221; he said hoarsely and insistently.
+&#8220;Didn&#8217;t you hear me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I heard you,&#8221; smiled Hollis, &#8220;and I understand perfectly.
+But I don&#8217;t think we need to <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_135'></a>135</span> get excited over it. Just how much money did you
+receive for the two hundred and ten papers?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Six dollars an&#8217; two bits,&#8221; responded the boy, regarding
+Hollis wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is yours,&#8221; Hollis informed him; &#8220;there was to be no
+charge for the <i>Kicker</i> to-day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The boy grinned with pleasure. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you want none of it?&#8221;
+he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is yours,&#8221; repeated Hollis. He reached out and grasped the
+boy by the arm, drawing him close. &#8220;Now tell me what you heard at the
+Fashion,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Rapidly, but with rather less excitement in his manner than he had exhibited
+on his entrance, the boy related in detail the conversation he had overheard at
+the Fashion. When he had finished Hollis patted him approvingly on the back.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The official circulation manager of the <i>Kicker</i> has made
+good,&#8221; he said with a smile. &#8220;Now go home and take a good rest and
+be ready to deliver the <i>Kicker</i> next Saturday.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The boy backed away and stood looking at Hollis in surprise.
+&#8220;Why!&#8221; he said in an awed voice, &#8220;you ain&#8217;t none scared
+a-tall!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I certainly am scared,&#8221; laughed Hollis; &#8220;scared that Ten
+Spot will change his mind before six o&#8217;clock. Do you think he
+will?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_136'></a>136</span>&#8220;No!&#8221; emphatically declared the boy.
+&#8220;I don&#8217;t reckon that Ten Spot will change his mind a-tall.
+He&#8217;ll sure come down here to shoot you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That relieves me,&#8221; returned Hollis dryly. &#8220;Now you go
+home. But,&#8221; he warned, &#8220;don&#8217;t tell anyone that I am
+scared.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For an instant the boy looked at Hollis critically, searching his face with
+all a boy&#8217;s unerring judgment for signs which would tell of insincerity.
+Seeing none, he deliberately stretched a hand out to Hollis, his lips wreathing
+into an approving grin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Durned if you ain&#8217;t the stuff!&#8221; he declared.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m just bettin&#8217; that Ten Spot ain&#8217;t scarin&#8217; you
+none!&#8221; Then he backed out of the door and still grinning, disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>After Jiggs had gone Hollis turned and smiled at Potter. &#8220;I suppose you
+know this man Ten Spot,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Will he come?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He will come,&#8221; returned Potter. His face was pale and his lips
+quivered a little as he continued: &#8220;Ten Spot is the worst of
+Dunlavey&#8217;s set,&#8221; he said; &#8220;a dangerous, reckless taker of
+human life. He is quick on the trigger and a dead shot. He is called Ten Spot
+because of the fact that once, with a gun in each hand, he shot all the spots
+from a ten of hearts at ten paces.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137'></a>137</span>Hollis sat
+silent, thoughtfully stroking his chin. Potter smiled admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know that you don&#8217;t like to run,&#8221; he said; &#8220;you
+aren&#8217;t that kind. But you haven&#8217;t a chance with Ten
+Spot&#8211;unfortunately you haven&#8217;t had much experience with a
+six-shooter.&#8221; Potter&#8217;s hands shook as he tried to resume work at the
+type case. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t think they would have nerve enough for that
+game,&#8221; he added, advancing again toward Hollis. &#8220;I rather thought
+they would try some other plan&#8211;something not quite so raw. But it seems
+they have nerve enough for anything. Hollis&#8221; he concluded dejectedly,
+&#8220;you&#8217;ve got to get out of town before six o&#8217;clock or Ten Spot
+will kill you!</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve got plenty of time,&#8221; he resumed as Hollis kept
+silent; &#8220;it&#8217;s only a little after four. You can get on your horse
+and be almost at the Circle Bar at six. No one can blame you for not
+staying&#8211;everybody knows that you can&#8217;t handle a gun fast enough to
+match Ten Spot. Maybe if you do light out and don&#8217;t show up in town for a
+week or so this thing will blow over.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thank you very much for that advice, Potter,&#8221; said Hollis
+slowly. &#8220;I appreciate the fact that you are thinking of my safety. But of
+course there is another side to the situation. You <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_138'></a>138</span> of course realize that if I run now I
+am through here&#8211;no one would ever take me seriously after it had been
+discovered that I had been run out of town by Ten Spot.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a fact,&#8221; admitted Potter. &#8220;But of
+course&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think that is settled,&#8221; interrupted Hollis. &#8220;You
+can&#8217;t change the situation by argument. I&#8217;ve got to face it and face
+it alone. I&#8217;ve got to stay here until Ten Spot comes. If I can&#8217;t
+beat him at his game he wins and you can telegraph East to my people.&#8221; He
+rose and walked to the window, his back to the printer.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You can knock off for to-day, Potter. Jump right on your pony and get
+out to Circle Bar. I wouldn&#8217;t say anything to Norton or anyone until after
+nine to-night and then if I don&#8217;t show up at the ranch you will know that
+Ten Spot has got me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stood at the window while Potter slowly drew off his apron, carefully
+folded it and tucked it into a corner. He moved very deliberately, as though
+reluctant to leave his chief. Had Hollis shown the slightest sign of weakening
+Potter would have stayed. But watching closely he saw no sign of weakness in the
+impassive face of his chief, and so, after he had made his preparations for
+departure, he drew a deep breath <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_139'></a>139</span> of resignation and walked slowly to the back door,
+where his pony was hitched. He halted at the threshold, looking back at his
+chief.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, good-bye then,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis did not turn. &#8220;Good-bye,&#8221; he answered.</p>
+
+<p>Potter took one step outward, hesitated, and then again faced the front of
+the office.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Damn it, Hollis,&#8221; he said hoarsely, &#8220;don&#8217;t wait for
+Ten Spot to start anything; when you see him coming in the door bore him.
+You&#8217;ve got a right to; that&#8217;s the law in this country. When a man
+gives you notice to leave town you&#8217;ve got a right to shoot him on
+sight!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For a moment he stood, awaiting an answer. None came. Potter sighed and
+stepped out through the door, leaving his chief alone.</p>
+
+<hr class='tb' />
+
+<p>At one minute to six Hollis pulled out his watch. He sighed, replaced the
+time-piece, and leaned back in his chair. A glance out through the window showed
+him that the street was deserted except for here and there a cow pony drooping
+over one of the hitching rails and a wagon or two standing in front of a store.
+The sun was coming slantwise over the roofs; Hollis saw that the strip of shade
+in front of the <i>Kicker</i> building had grown to wide proportions. He <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140'></a>140</span> looked at his watch
+again. It was one minute after six&#8211;and still there were no signs of Ten
+Spot.</p>
+
+<p>A derisive grin appeared on Hollis&#8217;s face. Perhaps Ten Spot had
+reconsidered. He decided that he would wait until ten minutes after six; that
+would give Ten Spot a decent margin of time for delay.</p>
+
+<p>And then there was a sudden movement and a man stood just inside the office
+door, a heavy revolver in his right hand, its muzzle menacing Hollis. The man
+was tall and angular, apparently about thirty years old, with thin, cruel lips
+and insolent, shifty eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Nds up!&#8221; he said sharply, swinging the revolver to a
+threatening poise. &#8220;It&#8217;s six o&#8217;clock, you tenderfoot &#8213;
+&#8213; &#8213; &#8213;!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This was the vile epithet that had been applied to Hollis by Yuma Ed, which
+had been the direct cause of Yuma&#8217;s downfall the day of Hollis&#8217;s
+arrival in Dry Bottom. Hollis&#8217;s eyes flashed, but the man was several feet
+from him and out of reach of his fists. Had Hollis been standing he would have
+had no chance to reach the man before the latter could have made use of his
+weapon. Therefore Hollis remained motionless in his chair, catching the
+man&#8217;s gaze and holding it steadily with unwavering, narrowed eyes.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141'></a>141</span>Though he had
+waited for the coming of Ten Spot, he had formulated no plan of action; he had
+felt that somehow he would come out of the clash with him without injury. He
+still thought so. In spite of his danger he felt that some chance of escape
+would be offered him. Grimly confident of this he smiled at the man, though
+still holding his gaze, determined, if he saw the faintest flicker of decision
+in his eyes, to duck and tackle him regardless of consequences.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you are Ten Spot?&#8221; he said slowly. He was surprised at
+the steadiness of his voice.</p>
+
+<p>The man grinned, his eyes alert, shifty, filled with a chilling menace.
+&#8220;You&#8217;ve got her right, tenderfoot,&#8221; he said; &#8220;&#8216;Ten
+Spot&#8217;s&#8217; m&#8217; handle, an&#8217; if you&#8217;re a-feelin&#8217;
+like criticizin&#8217; of her do her some rapid before I starts dealin&#8217;
+out the lead which is in my pritty.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Just how one man could be so entirely remorseless as to shoot another when
+that other man was looking straight into his eyes Hollis could not understand.
+He could readily realize how a man could kill when provoked to anger, or when
+brooding over an injury. But he had done nothing to Ten Spot&#8211;did not even
+know him&#8211;had never seen him before, and how Ten Spot could deliberately
+shoot him&#8211;without provocation&#8211;was <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_142'></a>142</span> incomprehensible. He was convinced that in order to
+shoot, Ten Spot must work himself into an artificial rage, and he believed that
+the vile epithet which Ten Spot had applied to him immediately upon his entrance
+must be part of his scheme. He was convinced that had he shown the slightest
+resentment over the application of the epithet Ten Spot would have shot him down
+at once. Therefore he resolved to give the man no opportunity to work himself
+into a rage. He smiled again as Ten Spot concluded and carelessly twisted
+himself about in his chair until he was in a position to make a quick
+spring.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Ten Spot&#8217; is a picturesque name,&#8221; he remarked quietly,
+not removing his gaze from Ten Spot&#8217;s eyes for the slightest fraction of a
+second; &#8220;I have no criticism to make. I have always made it a point to
+refrain from criticizing my visitors. At least I do not recollect ever having
+criticized a visitor who carried a gun,&#8221; he concluded with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot&#8217;s lips curled sarcastically. Apparently he would not swerve in
+his determination to provoke trouble.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hell,&#8221; he said truculently, &#8220;that there palaver makes me
+sick. I reckon you&#8217;re too damn white livered to criticize a man
+that&#8217;s lookin&#8217; at <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_143'></a>143</span> you. There ain&#8217;t no tenderfoot (here he
+applied the unprintable epithet again) got nerve enough to criticize
+nothin&#8217;!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis slowly raised his hands and placed them on the arms of his chair,
+apparently to steady himself, but in reality to be ready to project himself out
+of the chair in case he could discern any indication of action on Ten
+Spot&#8217;s part.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ten Spot,&#8221; he said in a low, even, well controlled voice,
+conciliatory, but filled with a manliness which no man could mistake, &#8220;at
+four o&#8217;clock this afternoon I heard that you and Yuma Ed were framing up
+your present visit. I am not telling who gave me the information,&#8221; he
+added as he saw Ten Spot&#8217;s eyes brighten, &#8220;but that is what
+happened. So you see I know what you have come for. You have come to kill me. Is
+that correct?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot&#8217;s eyes narrowed&#8211;into them had come an appraising,
+speculative glint. He nodded. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got her right,&#8221; he
+admitted gruffly. &#8220;But if you knowed why didn&#8217;t you slope?&#8221; He
+looked at Hollis with a half sneer, as though unable to decide whether Hollis
+was a brave man or merely a fool.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis saw the indecision in Ten Spot&#8217;s eyes and his own brightened. At
+last he had planned a form of action and he cooly estimated the distance <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144'></a>144</span> between himself and Ten
+Spot. While Hollis had been speaking Ten Spot had taken a step forward and he
+was now not over four or five feet distant. Into Ten Spot&#8217;s eyes had come
+an amused, disdainful gleam; Hollis&#8217;s quiet, argumentative attitude had
+disarmed him. This was exactly what Hollis had been waiting for.</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot seemed almost to have forgotten his weapon; it had sagged, the
+muzzle pointing downward&#8211;the man&#8217;s mind had become temporarily
+diverted from his purpose. When he saw Hollis move suddenly forward he
+remembered his gun and tried to swing its muzzle upward, but it was too late.
+Hollis had lunged forward, his left hand closing on Ten Spot&#8217;s right
+wrist, his right fist reaching Ten Spot&#8217;s jaw in a full, sweeping,
+crashing uppercut.</p>
+
+<p>The would-be killer did not have even time enough to pull the trigger of his
+six-shooter. It fell from his hand and thudded dully to the floor as his knees
+doubled under him and he collapsed in an inert, motionless heap near the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>With a grim smile on his face Hollis picked up Ten Spot&#8217;s weapon and
+placed it on the desk. For an instant he stood at the window, looking out into
+the street. Down near the Fashion he saw some men&#8211;Yuma Ed among them. No
+doubt they were waiting the sound of the pistol <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_145'></a>145</span> shot which would tell them that Ten Spot had
+disposed of Hollis. Hollis grinned widely&#8211;Yuma and his gang were due for a
+surprise. For perhaps a minute Hollis stood beside the desk, watching Ten Spot.
+Then when the latter&#8217;s hands began to twitch and a trace of color appeared
+in his face, Hollis pulled out his own revolver and approached him, standing
+within a few feet of him and looking down at him.</p>
+
+<p>There was no mark on Ten Spot&#8217;s jaw to show where Hollis&#8217;s blow
+had landed, for his fist had struck flush on the point, its force directed
+upward. Ten Spot&#8217;s mouth had been open at the instant and the snapping of
+his teeth from the impact of the blow no doubt had much to do with his long
+period of unconsciousness.</p>
+
+<p>He stirred presently and then with an effort sat up and looked at his
+conqueror with a glance of puzzled wonderment. Seeing Hollis&#8217;s weapon and
+his own on the desk, the light of past events seemed to filter into his
+bewildered brain. He grinned owlishly, felt of his jaw and then bowed his head,
+a flush of shame overspreading his face.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Herd-rode!&#8221; he said dismally. &#8220;Herd-rode, an&#8217; by a
+tenderfoot! Oh, Lordy!&#8221; He suddenly looked up at Hollis, his eyes flashing
+with rage and defiance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Damn your hide, why don&#8217;t you shoot?&#8221; he <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146'></a>146</span> demanded. He placed his
+hands, palm down, on the floor, preparatory to rising, but ceased his efforts
+when he heard Hollis&#8217;s voice, coldly humorous:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall shoot you just the instant you get to your feet. I rather
+think that I am running things here now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot sagged back and looked up at him. &#8220;Why I reckon you
+are,&#8221; he said. No method of action having suggested itself to him, he
+continued to sit, watching Hollis narrowly.</p>
+
+<p>The latter retreated to his chair and dropped into it, moving deliberately.
+When he spoke his voice was cold and metallic.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When you first came into the office,&#8221; he said, &#8220;you
+applied a vile epithet to me. Once after that you did it again. You have asked
+me why I don&#8217;t shoot you. If you really want me to shoot you you can keep
+your mouth closed for just one minute. If you want to continue to live you can
+tell me that you didn&#8217;t mean a word of what you said on those two
+occasions. It&#8217;s up to you.&#8221; He sat silent, looking steadily at Ten
+Spot.</p>
+
+<p>The latter fidgeted, shame again reddening his cheeks. &#8220;Why,&#8221; he
+said finally, &#8220;I reckon she don&#8217;t go, tenderfoot. You see,
+she&#8217;s only a noma de ploom which we uses when we wants to <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147'></a>147</span> rile somebody. I
+cert&#8217;nly didn&#8217;t mean nothin&#8217; by it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thanks,&#8221; drawled Hollis dryly; &#8220;I&#8217;ll call that
+sufficient. But you certainly did &#8216;rile&#8217; me some.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon I must have done just that,&#8221; grinned Ten Spot ruefully.
+&#8220;You&#8217;re shorely some she-wolf with them there claws of your&#8217;n.
+An&#8217; I done laffed at Dunlavey an&#8217; Yuma after you&#8217;d clawed
+them.&#8221; His face sobered, his eyes suddenly filling with an expression of
+defiant resignation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon when you&#8217;re done triflin&#8217; with me you c&#8217;n
+start to pumpin&#8217; your lead,&#8221; he said. &#8220;There ain&#8217;t no
+use of prolongin&#8217; the agony.&#8221; He looked steadily at Hollis, his eyes
+filling with decision as he again placed his hands beside him on the floor to
+rise.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You c&#8217;n open the ball when you get damn good an&#8217;
+ready,&#8221; he sneered, &#8220;but I&#8217;m gettin&#8217; up right now. I
+ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to die off my pins like a damn coyote!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He rose quickly, plainly expecting to be shot down the moment he reached his
+feet. When he discovered that Hollis evidently intended to delay the fatal
+moment he stiffened, his lips twitching queerly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ten Spot,&#8221; said Hollis quietly, &#8220;by apologizing <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148'></a>148</span> for what you said when
+you came in you have shown that there is a great deal of the man left in you
+despite your bad habits and associations. I am going to show you that I think
+there is enough of the man left in you to trust you with your gun.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He turned abruptly to the desk and took up Ten Spot&#8217;s weapon, holding
+it by the muzzle and presenting it to the latter. Ten Spot looked from the
+weapon to Hollis and back again to the weapon, blank amazement pictured on his
+face. Then he reached out mechanically, taking the weapon and holding it in his
+hands, turning it over and over as though half inclined to believe that it was
+not a revolver at all.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Chuck full of cattridges, too!&#8221; he exclaimed in amazement, as he
+examined the chambers.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, hell&#8213;&#8221; He crouched and deftly swung the six-shooter
+around, the butt in his hand, his finger resting on the trigger. In this
+position he looked at Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>The latter had not moved, but his own weapon was in his right hand, its
+muzzle covering Ten Spot, and when the latter swung his weapon up Hollis smiled
+grimly at him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Using it?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant it seemed that Ten Spot would. An exultant, designing
+expression came into his <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_149'></a>149</span> eyes, he grinned, his teeth showing tigerishly.
+Then suddenly he snapped himself erect and with a single, dexterous movement
+holstered the weapon. Then his right hand came suddenly out toward Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Shake!&#8221; he said. &#8220;By &#8213;, you&#8217;re
+white!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled as he returned the hearty handclasp.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re cert&#8217;nly plum grit,&#8221; assured Ten Spot as he
+released Hollis&#8217;s hand and stepped back the better to look at the latter.
+&#8220;But I reckon you&#8217;re some damn fool too. How did you know that I
+wouldn&#8217;t turn you into a colander when you give me back my gun?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know,&#8221; smiled Hollis. &#8220;I just took a
+chance. You see,&#8221; he added, &#8220;it was this way. I never intended to
+shoot you. That sort of thing isn&#8217;t in my line and I don&#8217;t intend to
+shoot anyone if there is any way out of it. But I certainly wasn&#8217;t going
+to allow you to shoot me.&#8221; He smiled oddly. &#8220;So I watched my chance
+and slugged you. Then when I was certain that you weren&#8217;t dangerous any
+more I had to face another problem. If I had turned you loose after taking your
+gun what would you have done?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d have gone out an&#8217; rustled another gun an&#8217; come
+back here an&#8217; salivated you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_150'></a>150</span>&#8220;That&#8217;s just what you would have
+done,&#8221; smiled Hollis. &#8220;I intend to stay in this country, Ten Spot,
+and if I had turned you loose without an understanding you would have shot me at
+the first opportunity. As it stands now you owe me&#8213;-&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;As it stands now,&#8221; interrupted Ten Spot, a queer expression on
+his face, &#8220;I&#8217;m done shootin&#8217; as far as you&#8217;re
+concerned.&#8221; He walked to the door, hesitated on the threshold and looked
+back. &#8220;Mister man,&#8221; he said slowly, &#8220;mebbe you won&#8217;t
+lick Big Bill in this here little mix-up, but I&#8217;m telling you that
+you&#8217;re goin&#8217; to give him a damn good run for his money!
+So-long.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stepped down and disappeared. For a moment Hollis looked after him, and
+then he sat down at the desk, his face softening into a satisfied smile. It was
+something to receive a tribute from a man like Ten Spot.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151'></a>151</span><a id='link_10'></a>CHAPTER X<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE LOST TRAIL</span></h2>
+
+<p>It was after seven o&#8217;clock when Hollis mounted his pony in the rear of
+the <i>Kicker</i> office and rode out over the plains toward the Circle Bar. He
+was properly elated by the outcome of his affair with Ten Spot. The latter had
+come to the <i>Kicker</i> office as an enemy looking for an opportunity to kill.
+He had left the office, perhaps not a friend, but at least a neutral,
+sympathetic onlooker, for according to Hollis&#8217;s interpretation of his
+words at parting he would take no further part in Dunlavey&#8217;s
+campaign&#8211;at least he would do no more shooting.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was compelled to make a long detour in order to strike the Circle Bar
+trail, and when at seven-thirty o&#8217;clock he rode down through a dry arroyo
+toward a little basin which he must cross to reach a ridge that had been his
+landmark during all his trips back and forth from Dry Bottom to the Circle Bar,
+dusk had fallen and the shadows of the oncoming night were settling somberly
+down over the plains.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152'></a>152</span>He rode slowly
+forward; there was no reason for haste, for he had told Potter to say nothing
+about the reason of his delay in leaving Dry Bottom, and Potter would not expect
+him before nine o&#8217;clock. Hollis had warmed toward Potter this day; there
+had been in the old printer&#8217;s manner that afternoon a certain solicitous
+concern and sympathy that had struck a responsive chord in his heart. He was not
+a sentimentalist, but many times during his acquaintance with Potter he had felt
+a genuine pity for the man. It had been this sentiment which had moved him to
+ask Potter to remove temporarily to the Circle Bar, though one consideration had
+been the fact at the Circle Bar he would most of the time be beyond the evil
+influence of Dry Bottom&#8217;s saloons. That Potter appreciated this had been
+shown by his successful fight against temptation the night before, when
+postponement of the publication of the <i>Kicker</i> would have been fraught
+with serious consequences.</p>
+
+<p>Riding down through the little basin at the end of the arroyo Hollis yielded
+to a deep, stirring satisfaction over the excellent beginning he had made in his
+fight against Dunlavey and the interests behind him. Many times he smiled,
+thinking of the surprise his old friends in the East must have felt over the
+perusal of their <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153'></a>153</span>
+copies of the <i>Kicker</i>; over the information that he&#8211;who had been
+something of a figure in Eastern newspaperdom&#8211;had become the owner and
+editor of a newspaper in a God-forsaken town in New Mexico, and that at the
+outset he was waging war against interests that ridiculed a judge of the United
+States Court. He smiled grimly. They might be surprised, but they must feel, all
+who knew him, that he would stay and fight until victory rewarded him or until
+black, bitter defeat became his portion. There could be no compromise.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached the ridge toward which he had been riding for the greater
+part of an hour night had come. The day had been hot, but there had been a
+slight breeze, and in the <i>Kicker</i> office, with the front and rear doors
+open, he had not noticed the heat very much. But just as he reached the ridge he
+became aware that the breeze had died down; that waves of hot, sultry air were
+rising from the sun-baked earth. Usually at this time of the night there were
+countless stars, and now as he looked up into the great, vast arc of sky he saw
+no stars at all except away down in the west in a big rift between some
+mountains. He pulled up his pony and sat motionless in the saddle, watching the
+sky. A sudden awe for the grandeur of the scene <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_154'></a>154</span> filled him. He remembered to have seen nothing
+quite like it in the East.</p>
+
+<p>Back toward Dry Bottom, and on the north and south, rose great, black
+thunderheads with white crests, seeming like mountains with snowcapped peaks.
+Between the thunder-heads were other clouds, of grayish-white, fleecy,
+wind-whipped, weird shapes, riding on the wings of the Storm-Kings. Other clouds
+flanked these, moving slowly and majestically&#8211;like great ships on the
+sea&#8211;in striking contrast to the fleecy, unstable shapes between the
+thunderheads, which, though rushing always onward, were riven and broken by the
+irresistible force behind them. To Hollis it seemed there were two mighty
+opposing forces at work in the sky, marshalling, maneuvering, preparing for
+conflict. While he sat motionless in the saddle watching, a sudden gust of cold
+wind swirled up around him, dashed some fine, flint-like sand against his face
+and into his eyes, and then swept onward. He was blinded for an instant, and
+allowed the reins to drop on his pony&#8217;s neck while he rubbed his eyes with
+his fingers. He sat thus through an ominous hush and then to his ears came a
+low, distant rumble.</p>
+
+<p>He touched his pony lightly on the flanks with his spurs and headed it along
+the ridge, convinced <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_155'></a>155</span> that a storm was coming and suddenly realizing that
+he was many miles from shelter.</p>
+
+<p>He had traveled only a little distance when clouds of sand and dust,
+wind-driven, enveloped him, blinding him again, stinging his face and hands and
+blotting out the landmarks upon which he depended to guide him to the Circle
+Bar. The sky had grown blacker; even the patch of blue that he had seen in the
+rift between the distant mountains was now gone. There was nothing above
+him&#8211;it seemed&#8211;except inky black clouds, nothing below but chaos and
+wind. He could not see a foot of the trail and so he gave the pony the rein,
+trusting to its instinct.</p>
+
+<p>When Norton had provided him with an outfit the inevitable tarpaulin had not
+been neglected. Hollis remembered that this was attached to the cantle of the
+saddle, and so, after he had proceeded a little way along the crest of the
+ridge, he halted the pony, dismounted, unstrapped the tarpaulin, and folded it
+about him. Then he remounted and continued on his way, mentally thanking Norton
+for his foresight.</p>
+
+<p>The pony had negotiated the ridge; had slowly loped down its slope to a
+comparatively low and level stretch of country, and was traveling steadily
+forward, when Hollis noticed a <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_156'></a>156</span> change in the atmosphere. It had grown hot
+again&#8211;sultry; the heat seemed to cling to him. An ominous calm had
+succeeded the aerial disturbance. From a great distance came a slight
+sound&#8211;a gentle sighing&#8211;gradually diminishing until it died away
+entirely. Then again came the ominous, premonitory silence&#8211;an absolute
+absence of life and movement. Hollis urged the pony forward, hoping the calm
+would last until he had covered a goodly part of the distance to the Circle Bar.
+For a quarter of an hour he went on at a good pace. But he had scarcely reached
+the edge of a stretch of broken country&#8211;which he dreaded even in the
+daylight&#8211;when the storm was upon him.</p>
+
+<p>It did not come unheralded. A blinding flash of lightning illuminated miles
+of the surrounding country, showing Hollis the naked peaks of ridges and hills
+around him; gullies, draws, barrancas, the levels, lava beds, fantastic rock
+shapes&#8211;mocking his ignorance of the country. He saw them all for an
+instant and then they were gone and darkness&#8211;blacker than
+before&#8211;succeeded. It was as though a huge map had suddenly been thrust
+before his eyes by some giant hand, an intense light thrown upon it, and the
+light suddenly turned off. Immediately there came a heavy crash as though the
+Storm-Kings, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157'></a>157</span>
+having marshalled their forces, had thrown them together in one, great, clashing
+onrush. And then, straight down, roaring and shrieking, came the deluge.</p>
+
+<p>The wise little plains-pony halted, standing with drooping head, awaiting the
+end of the first fierce onslaught. It lasted long and when it had gone another
+silence, as ominous as the preceding one, followed. The rain ceased entirely and
+the pony again stepped forward, making his way slowly, for the trail was now
+slippery and hazardous. The baked earth had become a slimy, sticky clay which
+clung tenaciously to the pony&#8217;s hoofs.</p>
+
+<p>For another quarter of an hour the pony floundered through the mud, around
+gigantic boulders, over slippery hummocks, across little gullies, upon ridges
+and small hills and down into comparatively level stretches of country. Hollis
+was beginning to think that he might escape a bad wetting after all when the
+rain came again.</p>
+
+<p>This time it seemed the Storm-Kings were in earnest. The rain came down in
+torrents; Hollis could feel it striking against his tarpaulin in long, stinging,
+vicious slants, and the lightning played and danced along the ridges and into
+the gullies with continuing energy, the thunder following, <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_158'></a>158</span> crashing in terrific volleys. It was
+uncomfortable, to say the least, and the only consoling thought was that the
+deluge would prove a God-send to the land and the cattle. Hollis began to wish
+that he had remained in Dry Bottom for the night, but of course Dry Bottom was
+not to be thought of now; he must devote all his energy to reaching the
+ranch.</p>
+
+<p>It was slow work for the pony. After riding for another quarter of an hour
+Hollis saw, during another lightning flash, another of his landmarks, and
+realized that in the last quarter of an hour he had traveled a very short
+distance. The continuing flashes of lightning had helped the pony forward, but
+presently the lightning ceased and a dense blackness succeeded. The pony went
+forward at an uncertain pace; several times it halted and faced about,
+apparently undecided about the trail. After another half hour&#8217;s travel and
+coming to a stretch of level country, the pony halted again, refusing to respond
+to Hollis&#8217;s repeated urging to go forward without guidance. For a long
+time Hollis continued to urge the animal&#8211;he cajoled, threatened&#8211;but
+the pony would not budge. Hollis was forced to the uncomfortable realization
+that it had lost the trail.</p>
+
+<p>For a long time he sat quietly in the saddle, <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_159'></a>159</span> trying in the dense darkness to
+determine upon direction, but he finally gave it up and with a sudden impulse
+took up the reins and pulled the pony to the left, determined to keep to the
+flat country as long as possible.</p>
+
+<p>He traveled for what seemed several miles, the pony gingerly feeling its way,
+when suddenly it halted and refused to advance. Something was wrong. Hollis
+leaned forward, attempting to peer through the darkness ahead, but not
+succeeding. And now, as though having accomplished its design by causing Hollis
+to lose the trail, the lightning flashed again, illuminating the surrounding
+country for several miles.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had been peering ahead when the flash came and he drew a deep breath
+of horror and surprise. The pony had halted within a foot of the edge of a high
+cliff whose side dropped away sheer, as though cut with a knife. Down below,
+perhaps a hundred feet, was an immense basin, through which flowed a stream of
+water. To Hollis&#8217;s right, parallel with the stream, the cliff sloped
+suddenly down, reaching the water&#8217;s edge at a distance of two or three
+hundred feet. Beyond that was a stretch of sloping country many miles in area,
+and, also on his right, was a long, high, narrow ridge. He recognized the ridge
+as the one on which he and Norton had ridden <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_160'></a>160</span> some six weeks before&#8211;on the day he had had
+the adventure with Ed Hazelton. Another flash of lightning showed him two
+cotton-wood trees&#8211;the ones pointed out to him by Norton as marking Big Elk
+crossing&#8211;the dead line set by Dunlavey and his men.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis knew his direction now and he pulled the pony around and headed it
+away from the edge of the cliff and toward the flat country which he knew led
+down through the canyon to Devil&#8217;s Hollow, where he had taken leave of Ed
+and Nellie Hazelton. He was congratulating himself upon his narrow escape when a
+flash of lightning again illuminated the country and he saw, not over a hundred
+feet distant, sitting motionless on their ponies, a half dozen cowboys. Also on
+his pony, slightly in advance of the others, a grin of derision on his face, was
+Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161'></a>161</span><a id='link_11'></a>CHAPTER XI<br /><span class='h2fs'>PICKING UP THE TRAIL</span></h2>
+
+<p>At about the time that the storm had overtaken Hollis, Potter was unsaddling
+his pony at the Circle Bar corral gate. A little later he was on the wide lower
+gallery of the ranchhouse washing the stains of travel from his face and hands.
+At supper he was taciturn, his face deeply thoughtful. Had Ten Spot come? What
+had been the outcome of the meeting? These questions preyed on his mind and
+brought furrows into his face.</p>
+
+<p>At supper he caught Norton watching him furtively and he flushed guiltily,
+for he felt that in spite of Hollis&#8217;s order to say nothing to Norton he
+should have told. He had already informed Norton that Hollis intended remaining
+in Dry Bottom until a later hour than usual, but he had said nothing about the
+intended visit of Ten Spot to the <i>Kicker</i> office. Loyalty to Hollis kept
+him from communicating to Norton his fears for Hollis&#8217;s safety. It was now
+too late to do anything if he did tell Norton; whatever had <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_162'></a>162</span> been done had been done already and
+there was nothing for him to do but to wait until nine o&#8217;clock.</p>
+
+<p>After he finished his meal he drew a chair out upon the gallery and placing
+it in a corner from where he could see the Dry Bottom trail he seated himself in
+it and tried to combat the disquieting fears that oppressed him. When Norton
+came out and took a chair near him he tried to talk to the range boss upon those
+small subjects with which we fill our leisure, but he could not hold his
+thoughts to these trivialities. He fell into long silences; his thoughts kept
+going back to Dry Bottom.</p>
+
+<p>When the rain came he felt a little easier, for he had a hope that Hollis
+might have noticed the approach of the storm and decided to remain in town until
+it had passed. But after the rain had ceased his fears again returned. He looked
+many times at his watch and when Mrs. Norton came to the door and announced her
+intention of retiring he scarcely noticed her. Norton had repeatedly referred to
+Hollis&#8217;s absence, and each time Potter had assured him that Hollis would
+come soon. Shortly before nine o&#8217;clock, when the clouds lifted and the
+stars began to appear, Potter rose and paced the gallery floor. At nine, when it
+had become light enough to see <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_163'></a>163</span> quite a little distance down the Dry Bottom trail
+and there were still no signs of Hollis, he blurted out the story of the
+day&#8217;s occurrences.</p>
+
+<p>The information acted upon Norton like an electric shock. He was on his feet
+before Potter had finished speaking, grasping him by the shoulders and shaking
+him roughly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t you say something before?&#8221; he demanded.
+&#8220;Why did you leave him? Wasn&#8217;t there somebody in Dry Bottom that you
+could have sent out here to tell me?&#8221; He cursed harshly. &#8220;Ten
+Spot&#8217;s got him!&#8221; he declared sharply, his eyes glittering savagely.
+&#8220;He&#8217;d have been here by this time!&#8221; He was taking a hitch in
+his cartridge belt while talking, and before concluding he was down off the
+gallery floor and striding toward the corral.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell my wife that I&#8217;ve gone to Dry Bottom,&#8221; he called back
+to Potter. &#8220;Important business! I&#8217;ll be back shortly after
+midnight!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Leaving Potter on the porch staring after him he ran to the corral, roped his
+pony, threw on a saddle and bridle and mounted with the animal on a run.</p>
+
+<p>The stars were shining brilliantly now and from the porch Potter could see
+Norton racing down the Dry Bottom trail with his pony in a furious gallop. For a
+time Potter watched him, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_164'></a>164</span> then he disappeared and Potter went into the house
+to communicate his message to his wife.</p>
+
+<p>The rain had been heavy while it lasted, but by the time Norton had begun his
+race to Dry Bottom very little evidence of it remained and the pony&#8217;s
+flying hoofs found the sand of the trail almost as dry and hard as before the
+storm. Indeed, there was now little evidence that there had been a storm at
+all.</p>
+
+<p>Norton spared the pony only on the rises and in something over an hour after
+the time he had left the Circle Bar he drew up in front of the <i>Kicker</i>
+office in Dry Bottom, dismounted, and bounded to the door. It was locked. He
+placed a shoulder against it and crashed it in, springing inside and lighting a
+match. He smiled grimly when he saw no signs of Hollis; when he saw that the
+interior was in an orderly condition and that there were no signs of a conflict.
+If Ten Spot had killed Hollis he had done the deed outside the <i>Kicker</i>
+office.</p>
+
+<p>Norton came out again, pulling the wreck of the door after him and closing it
+as well as he could. Then, leaving his pony, he strode toward the Fashion
+saloon. As he came near he heard sounds of revelry issuing from the open door
+and he smiled coldly. A flashing glance through the window showed him that Ten
+Spot <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165'></a>165</span> was there,
+standing at the bar. In the next instant Norton was inside, confronting Ten
+Spot, his big six-shooter out and shoved viciously against Ten Spot&#8217;s
+stomach.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What have you done with Hollis, you mangy son-of-a-gun?&#8221; he
+demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Several men who had been standing at the bar talking and laughing fell silent
+and looked at the two men, the barkeeper sidled closer, crouching warily, for he
+knew Norton.</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot had spread his arms out on the bar and was leaning against it,
+looking at Norton in unfeigned bewilderment. He did not speak at once. Then
+suddenly aware of the foreboding, savage gleam in Norton&#8217;s eyes, a glint
+of grim humor came into his own and his lips opened a little, curling
+sarcastically.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why,&#8221; he said, looking at Norton, &#8220;I don&#8217;t reckon to
+be anyone&#8217;s keeper.&#8221; He smiled widely, with a suddenly ludicrous
+expression. &#8220;If you&#8217;re talkin&#8217; about that tenderfoot noospaper
+guy, he don&#8217;t need no keeper. What have I done to him?&#8221; he repeated,
+his smile growing. &#8220;Why, I reckon I didn&#8217;t do a heap; I went down to
+call on him. He was right sociable. I was goin&#8217; to be mean to him, but I
+just couldn&#8217;t. When he left he was sayin&#8217; that he&#8217;d be right
+glad to see me again&#8211;he&#8217;d been right <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_166'></a>166</span> playful durin&#8217; my talk with him.
+I reckon by now he&#8217;s over at the Circle Bar laffin&#8217; hisself to sleep
+over the mean way I treated him. You just ast him when you see him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A flicker of doubt came into Norton&#8217;s eyes&#8211;Ten Spot&#8217;s words
+had the ring of truth.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You went down there to shoot him!&#8221; he said coldly, still
+unconvinced.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mebbe I did,&#8221; returned Ten Spot. &#8220;Howsomever, I
+didn&#8217;t. I ain&#8217;t tellin&#8217; how I come to change my
+mind&#8211;that&#8217;s my business, an&#8217; you can&#8217;t shoot it out of
+me. But I&#8217;m tellin&#8217; you this: me an&#8217; that guy has agreed to
+call it quits, an&#8217; if I hear any man talkin&#8217; extravagant about him,
+me an&#8217; that man&#8217;s goin&#8217; to have a run in mighty sudden!&#8221;
+He laughed. &#8220;Someone&#8217;s been funnin&#8217; you,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;When he handed me back my gun after sluggin&#8217;&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But he was now talking to Norton&#8217;s back, for the range boss was at the
+door, striding rapidly toward his pony. He mounted again and rode out on the
+trail, proceeding slowly, convinced that something had happened to Hollis after
+he had left Dry Bottom. It was more than likely that he had lost his way in the
+storm, and in that case he would probably arrive at the Circle Bar over some
+round-about trail. He was now certain that he had not been molested in town; if
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167'></a>167</span> he had been some
+of the men in the Fashion would have told him about it. Hollis would probably be
+at the ranch by the time he arrived, to laugh at his fears. Nevertheless he rode
+slowly, watching the trail carefully, searching the little gullies and peering
+into every shadow for fear that Hollis had been injured in some accident and
+might be lying near unable to make his presence known.</p>
+
+<p>The dawn was just showing above the horizon when he rode up to the ranchhouse
+to find Potter standing on the porch&#8211;apparently not having left there
+during his absence. Beside Potter stood Ed Hazelton, and near the latter a
+drooping pony, showing signs of hard riding.</p>
+
+<p>Norton passed the corral gate and rode up to the two men. A glance at their
+faces told him that something had gone wrong. But before he could speak the
+question that had formed on his lips Hazelton spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They got him, Norton,&#8221; he said slowly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dead?&#8221; queried Norton sharply, his lips straightening.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; returned Hazelton gloomily; &#8220;he ain&#8217;t dead. But
+when I found him he wasn&#8217;t far from it. Herd-rode him, the damned sneaks!
+Beat him up so&#8217;s his own mother wouldn&#8217;t know him!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_168'></a>168</span>&#8220;Wait!&#8221; commanded Norton.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m going with you. I suppose you&#8217;ve got him over to your
+shack?&#8221; He caught Hazelton&#8217;s nod and issued an order to Potter.
+&#8220;Go down to the bunkhouse and get Weary out. Tell him to hit the breeze to
+Cimarron for the doctor. If the doc&#8217; don&#8217;t want to come drag him by
+the ears!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He spurred his pony furiously to the corral gate and in a short time had
+saddled another horse and was back where Hazelton was awaiting him. Without
+speaking a word to each other the two men rode rapidly down the Coyote trail,
+while Potter, following directions, his face haggard and drawn from loss of
+sleep and worry, hurried to the bunkhouse to arouse Weary and send him on his
+long journey to Cimarron.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169'></a>169</span><a id='link_12'></a>CHAPTER XII<br /><span class='h2fs'>AFTER THE STORM</span></h2>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s tall figure lay pitifully slack on a bed in the Hazelton
+cabin. Nellie Hazelton had given him what care she could out of her limited
+knowledge and now nothing more could be done until the arrival of the Cimarron
+doctor. Swathed in bandages, his clothing torn and soiled&#8211;as though after
+beating him his assailants had dragged him through the mud&#8211;one hand
+queerly twisted, his face swollen, his whole great body looking as though it had
+received the maximum of injury, Hollis moved restlessly on the bed, his head
+rolling oddly from side to side, incoherent words issuing from between his
+bruised and swollen lips.</p>
+
+<p>Norton stood beside the bed, looking down at the injured man with a grim,
+savage pity.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The damned cowards!&#8221; he said, his voice quivering. &#8220;There
+must have been a dozen of them&#8211;to do him up like that!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Seven,&#8221; returned Ed Hazelton grimly. &#8220;They left their
+trail there; I counted the hoof <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_170'></a>170</span> prints, an&#8217; they led down the slope toward
+Big Elk crossin&#8217;.&#8221; He looked at Norton with a frown. &#8220;We
+can&#8217;t do anything here,&#8221; he said shortly, &#8220;until the doctor
+comes. I&#8217;ll take you down where I found him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They went out and mounted their ponies. Down the trail a mile or so they came
+to a level that led away toward Rabbit-Ear Creek. From the level they could see
+the Circle Cross buildings, scattered over a small stretch of plain on the
+opposite side of the river. There was no life around them, no movement. Norton
+grimaced toward them.</p>
+
+<p>Hazelton halted his pony in some tall grass near a bare, sandy spot on the
+plains. The grass here grew only in patches and Norton could plainly see a
+number of hoof prints in the sand. One single set led away across the plains
+toward the Dry Bottom trail. Seeing the knowing expression in Norton&#8217;s
+eyes, Hazelton spoke quietly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s Hollis&#8217;s trail. He must have took the Dry Bottom
+trail an&#8217; lost it in the storm. Potter says he would probably take it
+because it&#8217;s shorter. Anyways, it&#8217;s his trail; I followed it back
+into the hills until I was sure. I saw that he had been comin&#8217; from Dry
+Bottom. He lost his way an&#8217; rode over here. I remember <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171'></a>171</span> there was an awful
+darkness, for I was out scoutin&#8217; around to see if my stock was all right.
+Well, he got this far&#8211;rode right up to the edge of the butte over there
+an&#8217; then come back this way. Then he met&#8211;well, the men that did
+it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They all stood there for a little while; you can see where their
+horses pawed. Then mebbe they started somethin&#8217;, for you can see where
+Hollis&#8217;s pony throwed up a lot of sand, tryin&#8217; to break out. The
+others were in a circle&#8211;you can see that. I&#8217;ve figured it out that
+Hollis saw there wasn&#8217;t any chance for him against so many an&#8217; he
+tried to hit the breeze away from here. I&#8217;ll show you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They followed the hoof prints down the slope and saw that all the riders must
+have been traveling fast at this point, for the earth was cut and the hoof
+prints bunched fore and aft. They ran only a little way, however. About a
+hundred yards down the slope, in a stretch of bare, sandy soil, the horses had
+evidently come to a halt again, for they were bunched well together and there
+were many of them, showing that there had been some movement after the halt.</p>
+
+<p>Norton dismounted and examined the surrounding soil.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They all got off here,&#8221; he said shortly, after the examination;
+&#8220;there&#8217;s the prints of their <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_172'></a>172</span> boots. They caught him here and handed it to
+him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hazelton silently pointed to a queer track in the sand&#8211;a shallow groove
+running about fifty feet, looking as though some heavy object had been drawn
+over it. Norton&#8217;s face whitened.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Drug him!&#8221; he said grimly, his lips in two straight lines.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s likely they roped him!&#8221; He remounted his pony and sat in
+the saddle, watching Hazelton as the latter continued his examination.
+&#8220;They&#8217;re a fine, nervy bunch!&#8221; he sneered as Hazelton also
+climbed into his saddle. &#8220;They must have piled onto him like a pack of
+wolves. If they&#8217;d have come one at a time he&#8217;d have cleaned them up
+proper!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They rode away down the trail toward the cabin. Norton went in and looked
+again at Hollis, and then, telling Hazelton that he would return in the
+afternoon, he departed for the Circle Bar. He stopped at the ranchhouse and
+communicated the news to his wife and Potter and then rode on up the river to a
+point about ten miles from the ranchhouse&#8211;where the outfit was
+working.</p>
+
+<p>The men received his news with expressions of rage and vengeance. They had
+come to admire Hollis for his courage in electing to continue the fight against
+Dunlavey; they had seen that in <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_173'></a>173</span> spite of his ignorance of the customs of their
+world he possessed a goodly store of common sense and an indomitable spirit. Yet
+none of them expressed sympathy, though their faces showed that they felt it.
+Expressions of sympathy in a case such as this would have been unnecessary and
+futile. But their expressions of rage showed how the news had affected them.
+Though they knew that Dunlavey&#8217;s forces outnumbered their own they were
+for striking back immediately. But Norton discouraged this.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re layin&#8217; low for a while,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Mebbe
+the boss will get well. If he does he&#8217;ll make things mighty
+interestin&#8217; for Dunlavey&#8211;likely he&#8217;ll remember who was in the
+crowd which beat him up. If he dies&#8213;&#8221; His eyes flashed savagely.
+&#8220;Well, if he dies you boys can go as far as you like an&#8217; I&#8217;ll
+go with you without doin&#8217; any kickin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s goin&#8217; to be done with that noospaper of
+his&#8217;n?&#8221; inquired Ace. &#8220;You reckon she&#8217;ll miss fire till
+he&#8217;s well again?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton&#8217;s brows wrinkled; he had not thought of the newspaper. But he
+realized now that if the paper failed to appear on scheduled time the people in
+Union County would think that Hollis had surrendered; they would refuse to
+believe that he had been so badly injured that he <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_174'></a>174</span> could not issue the paper, and Dunlavey
+would be careful to circulate some sort of a story to encourage this view. Now
+that Ace had brought the matter to his attention he began to suspect that this
+had been the reason of the attack on Hollis. That they had not killed him when
+they had the opportunity, showed that they must have had some purpose other than
+that of merely desiring to get him out of the way. That they had merely beaten
+him showed that their wish was only to incapacitate him temporarily.
+Norton&#8217;s eyes flashed with a sudden determination.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t reckon that the <i>Kicker</i> will miss fire,&#8221; he
+declared; &#8220;not if I have to go to Dry Bottom an&#8217; get her out
+myself!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ace eyed him furtively and now spoke with an embarrassed
+self-consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been considerin&#8217; this here situation ever since you
+told us about the boss,&#8221; he said diffidently, &#8220;an&#8217; if
+you&#8217;re goin&#8217; to get that paper out, a little poem or two might help
+out considerable.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Meanin&#8217;?&#8221; interrogated Norton, his eyelashes
+flickering.</p>
+
+<p>Ace&#8217;s face reddened painfully. &#8220;Meanin&#8217; that I&#8217;ve got
+several little pieces which I&#8217;ve wrote when I didn&#8217;t have anything
+else to do an&#8217; that I&#8217;d be right willin&#8217; to have them put into
+the <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175'></a>175</span> <i>Kicker</i>
+to help fill her up. Some of the boys think they&#8217;re right
+classy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton looked around at the other men for confirmation of the truth of this
+modest statement. He caught Lanky&#8217;s glance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon that&#8217;s about right,&#8221; said that sober-faced
+puncher; &#8220;Ace is the pote lariat of this here outfit, an&#8217; he sure
+has got a lot of right clever lines in his pomes. I&#8217;ve read them which
+wasn&#8217;t one-two-three with his&#8217;n.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton smiled, a little cynically. He wasn&#8217;t quite sure about it, he
+said, but if Ace could write poetry he hadn&#8217;t any doubt that during the
+next few weeks there would be plenty of opportunity to print some of it in the
+<i>Kicker</i>. He smiled when he saw Ace&#8217;s face brighten. But he told him he
+would have to see Hollis&#8211;if the latter got well enough to endure an
+interview. If the boss recovered enough to be able to look at Ace&#8217;s poetry
+before it was printed, why of course it would have to be shown him. He
+didn&#8217;t want anything to go into the <i>Kicker</i> which the boss
+wouldn&#8217;t like. But if he wasn&#8217;t able to look at it, why he would
+leave the decision to Potter, and if it suited the latter he would be satisfied.
+He would keep the boys posted on the boss&#8217;s condition. Then he rode away
+toward the ranchhouse.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176'></a>176</span>Late in the
+afternoon he again visited the Hazelton cabin. He found the Cimarron doctor
+already there. Hollis was still unconscious, though resting easier. The doctor
+declared that he would remain with him throughout the night. He followed Norton
+out on to the porch and told him that at present he could not tell just how
+serious Hollis&#8217;s injuries were. There was a great wound in his head which
+he feared might turn out seriously, but if not, Hollis would recover quickly and
+be as good as ever within a few weeks&#8211;except for his left
+wrist&#8211;which was broken. He praised Nellie Hazelton for the care she was
+giving the injured man. Convinced that there was nothing more to be done, Norton
+returned to the Circle Bar to give his attention to his work.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177'></a>177</span><a id='link_13'></a>CHAPTER XIII<br /><span class='h2fs'>&#8220;WOMAN&#8211;SHE DON&#8217;T NEED NO TOOTER&#8221;</span></h2>
+
+<p>The Cimarron doctor&#8217;s fears for the wound on Hollis&#8217;s head had
+proved unfounded and on the tenth day after his experience on the night of the
+storm, Hollis was sitting on the Hazelton porch, his head still swathed in
+bandages, his left wrist in a splint, but his spirit still untouched. The marks
+on his face had all disappeared, except an ugly gash under his right
+eye&#8211;which still showed a slight discoloration&#8211;and a smaller cut on
+the chin. The Cimarron doctor had told him that the wound under his eye would
+leave a permanent scar&#8211;the wound had been deep and in spite of the
+doctor&#8217;s care, had drawn together queerly, affecting the eye itself and
+giving it an odd expression. Many times since becoming able to move about had
+Hollis looked at his face in his mirror, and each time there had come into his
+eyes an expression that boded ill for the men who had been concerned in the
+attack on him.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178'></a>178</span>It was
+mid-afternoon and the sun was coming slant-wise over the roof of the cabin,
+creating a welcome shade on the porch. Ed Hazelton had been gone since morning,
+looking after his cattle, and Nellie was in the house, busily at work in the
+kitchen&#8211;Hollis could hear her as she stepped about the room.</p>
+
+<p>Norton had left the cabin an hour before and a little later Potter had
+stopped in on his way over to Dry Bottom to set up an article that he had
+written at Hollis&#8217;s dictation. Hollis had told Norton of his experiences
+on the night of the storm.</p>
+
+<p>After the flash of lightning had revealed Dunlavey and his men, Hollis had
+attempted to escape, knowing that Dunlavey&#8217;s intentions could not be
+peaceable, and that he would have no chance in a fight with several men. He had
+urged his pony toward the two buttes that he had seen during the lightning
+flash, making a circuit in order to evade his enemies. He might have succeeded,
+but unfortunately the darkness had lifted and they had been able to intercept
+him. He could give no clear account of what had happened after they had
+surrounded him. There had been no words spoken. He had tried to break out of the
+circle; had almost succeeded when a loop settled over his shoulders and he <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179'></a>179</span> was dragged from his
+pony&#8211;dragged quite a distance.</p>
+
+<p>The fall had hurt him, but when the rope had slackened he had regained his
+feet&#8211;to see that all the men had surrounded him. One man struck at him and
+he had immediately struck back, knocking the man down. After that the blows came
+thick and fast. He hit several more faces that were close to him and at one time
+was certain he had put three of his assailants out of the fight. But the others
+had crowded him close. He fought them as well as he could with the great odds
+against him, and once was inspired with a hope that he might escape. Then had
+come a heavy blow on the head&#8211;he thought that one of the men had used the
+butt of a revolver. He could dimly remember receiving a number of other blows
+and then he knew nothing more until he had awakened in the Hazelton cabin.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s opinion of Dunlavey&#8217;s motive in thus attacking him
+coincided with Norton&#8217;s. They might easily have killed him. That they did
+not showed that they must have some peculiar motive. Aside from a perfectly
+natural desire on Dunlavey&#8217;s part to deal to Hollis the same sort of
+punishment that Hollis had inflicted on Dunlavey on the occasion of their first
+meeting, the <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180'></a>180</span>
+latter could have no motive other than that of preventing the appearance of the
+<i>Kicker</i> on its regular publication day.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was convinced that Dunlavey had been inspired by both motives. But
+though Dunlavey had secured his revenge for the blow that Hollis had struck him
+in Dry Bottom, Hollis did not purpose to allow him to prevent the appearance of
+the <i>Kicker</i>. It had been impossible for him to make the trip to Dry
+Bottom, but he had summoned Potter and had dictated considerable copy, Potter
+had written some, and in this manner they had managed to get the <i>Kicker</i>
+out twice.</p>
+
+<p>Ace had not been able to get any of his poems into the <i>Kicker</i>. He had
+submitted some of them to Potter, but the printer had assured him that he did
+not care to assume the responsibility of publishing them. Thereupon Ace had
+importuned Norton to intercede with Hollis on his behalf. On his visit this
+morning Norton had brought the matter to Hollis&#8217;s attention. The latter
+had assured the range boss that he appreciated the puncher&#8217;s interest and
+would be glad to go over some of his poems. Therefore Hollis was not surprised
+when in the afternoon he saw Ace loping his pony down the Coyote trail toward
+the Hazelton cabin.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181'></a>181</span>Ace&#8217;s
+approach was diffident, though ambition urged him on. He rode up to the edge of
+the porch, dismounted, and greeted his boss with an earnestness that contrasted
+oddly with his embarrassment. He took the chair that Hollis motioned him to,
+sitting on the edge of it and shifting nervously under Hollis&#8217;s direct
+gaze.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon Norton told you about my poems,&#8221; he began. He caught
+Hollis&#8217;s nod and continued: &#8220;Well, I got a bunch of &#8217;em here
+which I brung over to show you. Folks back home used to say that I was a genyus.
+But I reckon mebbe they was hittin&#8217; her up a little bit strong,&#8221; he
+admitted, modestly; &#8220;folks is that way&#8211;they like to spread it on a
+bit. But&#8221;&#8211;and the eyes of the genius flashed proudly&#8211;&#8220;I
+reckon I&#8217;ve got a little talyunt, the evidence of which is right
+here!&#8221; With rather more composure than had marked his approach he now drew
+out a prodigious number of sheets of paper, which he proceeded to spread out on
+his knee, smoothing them lovingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mebbe I ain&#8217;t much on spellin&#8217; an&#8217; grammar an&#8217;
+all that sort of thing,&#8221; he offered, &#8220;but there&#8217;s a heap of
+sense to be got out of the stuff I&#8217;ve wrote. Take this one, for instance.
+She&#8217;s a little oday to &#8216;Night,&#8217; which I composed while the boys was
+poundin&#8217; their ears one night&#8211;not <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_182'></a>182</span> bein&#8217; affected in their feelin&#8217;s like I
+was. If you ain&#8217;t got no objections I&#8217;ll read her.&#8221; And then,
+not waiting to hear any objections, he began:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>The stars are bright to-night;<br /> They surely are a sight,<br />
+Sendin&#8217; their flickerin&#8217; light<br /> From an awful, unknown
+height.<br /> &#160;<br /> Why do they shine so bright?<br /> I&#8217;m
+most o&#8217;ercome with fright&#8213;</p> </div><!-- poetry -->
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course I reely wasn&#8217;t scared,&#8221; he offered with a
+deprecatory smile, &#8220;but there wasn&#8217;t any other word that I could
+think of just then an&#8217; so I shoved her in. It rhymes anyhow an&#8217; just
+about says what I wanted.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He resumed:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>When I look up into the night,<br /> An&#8217; see their flickerin&#8217;
+light.</p> </div><!-- poetry -->
+
+<p>He ceased and looked at Hollis with an abashed smile. &#8220;It don&#8217;t
+seem to sound so good when I&#8217;m readin&#8217; her out loud,&#8221; he
+apologized. &#8220;An&#8217; I&#8217;ve thought that mebbe I&#8217;ve worked
+that &#8216;night&#8217; an&#8217; &#8216;light&#8217; rhyme over-time. But of course
+I&#8217;ve got &#8216;fright&#8217; an&#8217; &#8216;sight&#8217; an&#8217; &#8216;height&#8217;
+in there to kind of off-set that.&#8221; He squirmed <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_183'></a>183</span> in his chair. &#8220;You take her
+an&#8217; read her.&#8221; He passed the papers over to Hollis and rose from his
+chair. &#8220;I&#8217;ll be goin&#8217; back to the outfit; Norton was
+sayin&#8217; that he wanted me to look up some strays an&#8217; I don&#8217;t
+want him to be waitin&#8217; for me. But I&#8217;d like to have one of them
+pomes printed in the <i>Kicker</i>&#8211;just to show the folks in this here
+country that there&#8217;s a real pote in their midst.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why&#8213;&#8221; began Hollis, about to express his surprise over his
+guest&#8217;s sudden determination to depart. But he saw Nellie Hazelton
+standing just outside the door, and the cause of Ace&#8217;s projected departure
+was no longer a mystery. He had gone before Hollis could have finished his
+remonstrance, and was fast disappearing in a cloud of dust down the trail when
+Hollis turned slowly to see Nellie Hazelton smiling broadly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I just couldn&#8217;t resist coming out,&#8221; she said. &#8220;It
+rather startled me to discover that there was a real poet in the
+country.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There seems to be no doubt of it,&#8221; returned Hollis with a smile.
+But he immediately became serious. &#8220;Ace means well,&#8221; he added.
+&#8220;I imagine that it wasn&#8217;t entirely an ambition to rush into print
+that moved him to submit his poems; he wants to help fill up the
+paper.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184'></a>184</span>Miss Hazelton
+laughed. &#8220;I really think,&#8221; she said, looking after the departing
+poet, &#8220;that he might have been fibbing a little when he said that the
+&#8216;night&#8217; had not &#8216;scared&#8217; him. He ran from me,&#8221; she added,
+amusement shining in her eyes, &#8220;and I should not like to think that any
+woman could appear so forbidding and mysterious as the darkness.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had been scanning one of the poems in his hand. He smiled whimsically
+at Miss Hazelton as she concluded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Here is Ace&#8217;s opinion on that subject,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;Since you have doubted him I think it only fair that you should give him
+a hearing. Won&#8217;t you read it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She came forward and seated herself in the chair that the poet had vacated,
+taking the mass of paper that Hollis passed over to her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Shall I read it aloud?&#8221; she asked with a smile at him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think you had better not,&#8221; he returned; &#8220;it might prove
+embarrassing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She blushed and gave her attention to the poem. It was entitled:
+&#8220;Woman,&#8221; and ran;</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>&#8220;Woman she dont need no tooter,<br /> be she skule mam or biscut
+shooter.<br /> she has most curyus ways about her,<br /> which leads a man
+to kinda dout her.<br /> <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_185'></a>185</span>&#160;<br /> Though lookin at her is shure a
+pleasur<br /> there aint no way to get her measure<br /> i reckon she had
+man on the run<br /> a long while before the world begun.<br />
+&#160;<br /> I met a biscut shooter in the chance saloon<br /> when i was
+blowin my coin in ratoon<br /> while the coin lasted i owned her an the
+town<br /> but when it was gone she throwed me down.<br /> &#160;<br /> An
+so i say she dont need no tooter<br /> be she skule mam or biscut
+shooter<br /> she fooled me an my hart she stole<br /> which has opened my
+eyes an hurt my sole.&#8221;</p> </div><!-- poetry -->
+
+<p>Miss Hazelton laid the manuscript in her lap and laughed heartily.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What a harrowing experience!&#8221; she declared. Hollis was grinning
+at her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was a bad thing to have happen to a man,&#8221; he observed;
+&#8220;I suppose it rather shattered Ace&#8217;s faith in woman. At least you
+could observe by his actions just a moment ago that he isn&#8217;t taking any
+more chances.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She fixed him with a defiant eye. &#8220;But he still admits that he takes
+pleasure in looking at a woman!&#8221; she told him triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So he does. Still, that isn&#8217;t remarkable. You see, a man
+couldn&#8217;t help that&#8211;no matter how badly he had been
+treated.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She had no reply to make to this, though she <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_186'></a>186</span> gave him a look that he could not mistake. But he
+laughed. &#8220;I think Ace&#8217;s effort ought to go into the
+<i>Kicker</i>&#8221; he said. &#8220;I have no doubt that many who read the poem
+will find in it a great deal of truth&#8211;perhaps a reflection of their own
+personal experiences.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her face clouded and she regarded him a little soberly. &#8220;Of your own,
+perhaps?&#8221; she suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not guilty,&#8221; he returned laughing. &#8220;You see, I have never
+had any time to devote to the study of women, let alone time to allow
+them to fool me. Perhaps when I do have time to study them I may find some truth
+in Ace&#8217;s effort.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then women do not interest you?&#8221; She was looking down the Coyote
+trail.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, no,&#8221; he said, thinking of the busy days of his past, and
+not being aware of the furtive, significant glance she threw toward him.
+&#8220;You see, there have always been so many important things to engage my
+attention.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How fortunate!&#8221; she said mockingly, after a pause during which
+he had time to realize that he had been very ungracious. He saw Ace&#8217;s
+manuscript flutter toward him, saw her rise and heard the screen door slam after
+her. During the remainder of the afternoon he was left alone on the porch to
+meditate upon the evils that arise from thoughtless speech.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187'></a>187</span><a id='link_14'></a>CHAPTER XIV<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE COALITION</span></h2>
+
+<p>Perhaps there were some persons in Union County who, acquainted with the
+details of the attack on Hollis, expected to read an account of it in the
+<i>Kicker</i>. If there were any such they were disappointed. There was nothing
+about the attack printed in the <i>Kicker</i>&#8211;nor did Hollis talk to any
+stranger concerning it.</p>
+
+<p>Ace&#8217;s poem entitled &#8220;Woman&#8221; had gone into the paper,
+causing the poet&#8211;for many days following the appearance of his
+composition&#8211;to look upon his fellow punchers with a sort of condescending
+pity. On the second day after his discussion with Miss Hazelton over Ace&#8217;s
+poem Hollis returned to the Circle Bar. He had succeeded in convincing Nellie
+that he had answered thoughtlessly when he had informed her that he took no
+interest in women, and though she had defiantly assured him that she had not
+taken offense, there had been a light in her eyes upon his departure which
+revealed gratification over his <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_188'></a>188</span> repentance. She stood long on the porch after he
+had taken leave of her, watching him as he rode slowly down the trail and
+disappeared around a turn. Then she smiled regretfully, sighed, and went into
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s return to the Circle Bar was unostentatious and quite in
+keeping with his method of doing things. Within the next few days he met several
+of the Circle Bar men and there were mutterings against Dunlavey, but Hollis
+discouraged action, assuring the mutterers that his differences with Dunlavey
+were entirely personal and that he intended carrying on the fight alone.</p>
+
+<p>His wounds mended rapidly, and within two weeks&#8211;except for the broken
+wrist&#8211;he was well as ever. Meanwhile Potter had succeeded in getting the
+<i>Kicker</i> out on time, though there had been a noticeable lack of
+aggressiveness in the articles. Especially was this true of the articles bearing
+upon the situation in Union County. Hollis had dictated some of these, but even
+those which he had dictated had seemed to lack something.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing had been heard of Dunlavey&#8211;it seemed that after the attack upon
+Hollis he had withdrawn from the scene to await the latter&#8217;s next
+move.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189'></a>189</span>But Hollis was
+in no hurry; he had lost some of the enthusiasm that had marked his attitude in
+the beginning, but this enthusiasm had been replaced by determination. He was
+beginning to realize that in Dunlavey he had met a foe worthy of his most
+serious efforts. He had determined that there would be no repetition of the
+attack upon him, and therefore during his convalescence he had sent to Las Vegas
+for a repeating rifle, and this he carried with him on his trips to and from Dry
+Bottom.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the drought continued. The sky was cloudless, the desultory breezes
+that swept the plains blighted growing things, raising little whirlwinds of
+fine, flinty alkali dust and spreading it over the face of the world. The storm
+that had caught Hollis on the Dry Bottom trail had covered only a comparatively
+small area; it had lasted only a brief time and after its passage the country
+was dry as before.</p>
+
+<p>Rabbit-Ear Creek of all the streams in the vicinity of Dry Bottom held water.
+From all points of the compass cattle drifted to the Rabbit-Ear, slaking their
+thirst and refusing to leave. Bronzed riders on drooping ponies trailed them,
+cutting them out, trying to keep their herds intact, but not succeeding.
+Confusion reigned. For miles in both directions Rabbit-Ear <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_190'></a>190</span> Creek became one huge, long watering
+trough. Temporary camps were made; chuck wagons rattled up to them, loaded with
+supplies for the cowboys, and rattled back to distant ranches for more. There
+had been other droughts, but this one was unexpected&#8211;unprecedented. There
+had always been a little water everywhere. Now Rabbit-Ear Creek held all there
+was.</p>
+
+<p>Only the small cattle owners suffered because of the drought. Riders told of
+the presence of plenty of water in the Canadian, the Cimarron, and the Ute.
+Carrizo held some. In fact, nearly all the streams held by the large ranchers
+seemed to contain plenty. The smaller owners, whose herds were smaller and whose
+complement of punchers was necessarily limited, had apparently been selected by
+Providence for ruin.</p>
+
+<p>There were mutterings against the large owners, against Providence.
+Particularly were there mutterings against Dunlavey when word came to the owners
+of the herds that if the drought was not broken within the next ten days the
+Circle Cross manager would drive all foreign cattle from the Rabbit-Ear. He
+would not allow his own herds to suffer to save theirs, he said.</p>
+
+<p>On the night following the day upon which the small owners had received this
+word from <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191'></a>191</span> Dunlavey
+a number of the former waited upon Hollis. They found him seated on the lower
+gallery of the ranchhouse talking to Norton and Potter. Lemuel Train, of the
+Pig-pen outfit, had been selected as their spokesman. He stood before Hollis, a
+big man, diffident in manner and rough in appearance, surrounded by his fellow
+ranchers, bronzed, bearded, serious of face. Though the sun had been down three
+hours the heat was frightful and the visitors shuffled their feet and
+uncomfortably wiped the perspiration from their brows.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sit down,&#8221; invited Hollis. He rose and stood while the men
+draped themselves on the edge of the gallery floor&#8211;all except the
+spokesman, Lemuel Train. The latter faced Hollis. His face was grim in the
+dusk.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve come to see what you&#8217;ve got to say about
+water,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Days before Norton had told Hollis that these men who were now herding at the
+Rabbit-Ear were the small ranchers who had refused to aid the elder Hollis in
+his fight against Dunlavey some years before. Therefore Hollis did not answer at
+once. When he did his voice was dry and cold. He too had heard of
+Dunlavey&#8217;s ultimatum concerning the water.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Before I say anything on that subject I <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_192'></a>192</span> should like to know to whom I am
+talking,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Train swept a ponderous hand toward his fellow visitors, pointing them out in
+turn. &#8220;There&#8217;s Truxton, of the Diamond Dot; Holcomb, of the Star;
+Henningson, of the Three Bar; Yeager, of the Three Diamond; an&#8217; Clark, of
+the Circle Y.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Correct,&#8221; affirmed Norton, behind Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled grimly; he had caught a belligerent note in Norton&#8217;s
+voice. Plainly, if the range boss were allowed a voice in the matter, these
+visitors would have now received as little encouragement as they had received
+from Dunlavey. But Hollis&#8217;s smile showed that he held different views.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am Kent Hollis,&#8221; he said to the men; &#8220;I suppose you know
+that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon we know you,&#8221; said Train; &#8220;you&#8217;re Jim
+Hollis&#8217;s boy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then you know that Dunlavey and my father were not exactly bosom
+friends,&#8221; returned Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Several heads bobbed affirmatively; others sat grimly silent. Hollis
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How many of you offered to help my father when he came to you asking
+for assistance in his fight against Dunlavey?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193'></a>193</span>Train fidgeted.
+&#8220;I reckon they wasn&#8217;t much chance&#8213;&#8221; he began, and then
+hesitated, looking around at his fellows.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; returned Hollis quietly, after an embarrassed pause,
+&#8220;there wasn&#8217;t much chance for you to win then. And you had to take a
+big risk to help my father. But he had to take a bigger risk to fight alone.
+Still he fought. And he fought alone. He was almost ruined. And now you men are
+facing ruin. And you have come to Jim Hollis&#8217;s son to help you. Do you
+think he ought?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The men sat silent; the spokesman was without words.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How many men can the six of you muster&#8211;in case Dunlavey should
+try to carry out his decision to drive your cattle from the Rabbit-Ear&#8211;or
+shoot them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Eighteen, I reckon,&#8221; returned Train, looking at the others, who
+nodded affirmatively to his question.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis turned to Norton. &#8220;How many men does Dunlavey employ?&#8221; he
+questioned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thirty,&#8221; snapped Norton. &#8220;But in case he needed them he
+c&#8217;n get a hundred.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Big odds,&#8221; smiled Hollis. &#8220;Why should I volunteer to help
+you fight Dunlavey? My cattle are certain of getting enough water. Why <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194'></a>194</span> should I not be selfish,
+as you men were when my father went to you for assistance?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. The faces that surrounded Hollis in the semi-darkness
+showed plainly that their owners had given up thoughts of assistance. Grim, hard
+lines came into them; two or three sneered. Of course they would fight Dunlavey;
+there was no alternative, for they could not stand idly by and see their cattle
+slain&#8211;Dunlavey could not drive them from water, they would have to be
+shot. They had reckoned on securing help from Hollis; he held one side of the
+Rabbit-Ear and with his support they were in a position to make things very
+unpleasant for any of Dunlavey&#8217;s men who might, from the opposite side of
+the river, attempt to shoot their cattle. But with Hollis against them they
+would be powerless; with Hollis against them Dunlavey&#8217;s men could swarm
+both sides of the river and the destruction of their cattle would be
+certain.</p>
+
+<p>All of the men knew this. Yet they did not answer Hollis&#8217;s question.
+They had not come to plead with him; they knew that the situation had narrowed
+down to a point where they could depend only on their own resources. They would
+not plead, yet as they silently started to file off the gallery there were
+bitter smiles on <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195'></a>195</span>
+several of their faces. There were no threats; perhaps Hollis had succeeded in
+showing them the similarity between his conduct and their own in the long ago,
+when his father had gone to them for assistance. At least this was what he had
+tried to show them.</p>
+
+<p>Lemuel Train was the last man down the gallery. He turned as he reached the
+ground and looked back over his shoulder at Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So-long,&#8221; he said shortly. &#8220;I reckon you&#8217;re even
+now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had not moved. &#8220;Wait, Train!&#8221; he said. The visitors halted
+and faced him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Men,&#8221; he said quietly, &#8220;you have not answered my question.
+I am going to repeat it: Why should I not be selfish, as you men were when my
+father went to you for assistance?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Lemuel Train smiled ironically. &#8220;Why, I reckon it&#8217;s your trick,
+mister man,&#8221; he said; &#8220;you&#8217;ve got all the cards.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come back here, men,&#8221; said Hollis. &#8220;Since none of you care
+to answer my question I will answer it myself.&#8221; He stood silent while the
+men filed back and resumed seats on the gallery edge. Darkness had come on while
+he had been talking to the men and inside the ranchhouse Mrs. Norton had lighted
+the kerosene lamp and its weak, flickering rays straggled out into the <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196'></a>196</span> darkness and upon
+Hollis&#8217;s face and the faces of several of the men who sat on the edge of
+the gallery.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis knew that he might readily become melodramatic in the few words that
+he purposed to say to the men, and so when he began talking he adopted a low,
+even tone, confidential, serious. He told them that the things he had written in
+his salutatory in the <i>Kicker</i>, months before, had been an honest
+declaration of the principles in which he believed. This was America, he
+repeated; they were all Americans; they were all entitled to that freedom of
+thought, speech, and movement for which their forefathers had fought. For one,
+he purposed to fight, if necessary, to retain his rights.</p>
+
+<p>He told them that he held no ill-feeling against them on account of their
+refusal to assist his father. That was past history. But now they were to look
+into the future; they were all facing ruin if they did not combine in a common
+cause. So far as he was concerned their cattle might remain at the Rabbit-Ear
+until the drought ended, or until the stream went dry. And if Dunlavey fought
+them&#8211;well, he would be with them to the finish.</p>
+
+<p>When he had concluded Lemuel Train stepped forward and shook his hand. The
+others followed. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197'></a>197</span>
+There was no word spoken. The men filed down from the gallery, sought their
+horses, mounted, and rode slowly away into the darkness. When they had gone
+Hollis turned to resume his chair, but found Norton standing near him, looking
+at him with a curious smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Shake!&#8221; said the latter. &#8220;I knowed you&#8217;d do it that
+way!&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198'></a>198</span><a id='link_15'></a>CHAPTER XV<br /><span class='h2fs'>TO SUPPORT THE LAW</span></h2>
+
+<p>Hollis alone, of all the men whose cattle grazed on the Circle Bar side of
+the Rabbit-Ear, really doubted that Dunlavey would have the courage to
+inaugurate a war against the small owners. Lemuel Train was particularly strong
+in his belief that Dunlavey would not hesitate to shoot whatever cattle
+infringed on what he considered were his rights. &#8220;I know the skunk!&#8221;
+he declared heatedly to Hollis a day or two after the conversation on the porch
+at the Circle Bar. &#8220;He&#8217;ll do it. I&#8217;m only scared that he
+won&#8217;t wait till the tenth day before beginnin&#8217;. Why in hell
+don&#8217;t it rain?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This remained the great, universal interrogation. But at the end of a week it
+was unanswered. The sun swam in its endless circles, a great ball of molten
+silver at which no man could look with the naked eye, traveling its slow way
+through a blurred, white sky, sinking to the horizon in the evening and leaving
+a scorched, blasted, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_199'></a>199</span> gasping country behind. The nights brought no
+relief. Clark, of the Circle Y, sarcastically declared it to be his belief that
+some meddler in things firmamental was paying the owner of the sun to work it
+overtime.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s daily twenty mile ride from the Circle Bar to Dry Bottom and
+return became a trial to him. At night, when he returned from the trip, hot,
+dry, dusty, he would draw a chair out on the gallery floor and scan the sky for
+signs of rain. To his recollection since his adventure on the night of the storm
+there had not been a cloud in the sky. On the trails the dust was inches deep
+and light as a feather. It rose in stifling whirlwinds, filling the nostrils and
+the lungs, parching the tongues of man and beast and accentuating the suffering
+caused by lack of water.</p>
+
+<p>All the pleasure had been drawn from Hollis&#8217;s rides because of the
+dryness and heat. On a morning a week following the day upon which Dunlavey had
+issued his warning to the cattle owners, Hollis made his usual trip to Dry
+Bottom. Norton accompanied him, intending to make some purchases in town. They
+rode the ten miles without incident and Hollis left Norton at the door of the
+<i>Kicker</i> office, after telling the range boss to come back to the office
+when he had <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200'></a>200</span> made
+his purchases as he intended returning to the Circle Bar before noon. Hollis
+found Potter inside. The latter had remained in Dry Bottom over night and was
+busy at a type case when his chief entered. Hollis did not remain long in the
+office. He looked over some letters that Potter had placed on his desk, placed
+one in a pocket and rose, telling Potter that he would be back and instructing
+him to tell Norton to await his coming should the latter return before him. Then
+he went down to the court house.</p>
+
+<p>He found the door of Judge Graney&#8217;s court room slightly ajar and
+without knocking he pushed it open and entered. On the threshold he halted and
+drew a deep breath. Judge Graney was seated at the big table, and directly
+opposite him, leaning heavily on his elbows, his face inflamed with anger, sat
+Dunlavey. Near a window at the side of the room stood a grave faced man of
+medium height, slender and muscular, who was watching the Judge and Dunlavey
+soberly.</p>
+
+<p>At Hollis&#8217;s sudden appearance the Judge looked up and smiled, while
+Dunlavey faced around, a derisive, mocking grin on his face. Hollis bore no
+marks of the recent attack beyond the left wrist, still in splints.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come in,&#8221; invited Judge Graney, his smile <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_201'></a>201</span> growing, his eyes glinting oddly.
+&#8220;I think, since you are responsible for the startling innovation which we
+have been discussing, that you are entitled to a word.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He gravely waved Hollis to a chair and stood silent while the latter sank
+into it. Then he smiled, glancing furtively at Dunlavey and addressing
+Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps you will remember that some time ago you printed an article in
+the <i>Kicker</i> urging upon the Government the necessity of bringing the law
+into Union County?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded. &#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said quietly; &#8220;I
+remember.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; resumed the Judge, &#8220;the article has borne fruit.
+But perhaps not in the manner you expected.&#8221; He laughed around at the
+three, deliberately closing an eye at Hollis. &#8220;You know,&#8221; he
+resumed, addressing them all, his eyes twinkling as his gaze met
+Dunlavey&#8217;s, &#8220;that the law is an expensive institution. It is a
+fundamental principle&#8211;at least of some governments,&#8221; he
+smiled&#8211;&#8220;that a community that desires the law must pay, and pay
+dearly&#8211;for it. In short, if it wants the law it must pay taxes. I do not
+say that that is a principle which our government is applying, but I do say that
+it is an eminently fair proposition.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202'></a>202</span>&#8220;At all
+events I have received word from the Interior Department that if we want the law
+to come out here we must pay for it. That is not said in so many words, but that
+is the inference, if we are to consider the instructions of the Secretary of the
+Interior&#8211;which are: &#8216;I am informed that several large ranch owners in
+Union County are inclined to evade taxation. Especially is this true&#8211;I am
+told&#8211;of a man named Dunlavey, who, if the report is correct, paid, during
+the last half year, taxes on five hundred head of cattle, whereas it is claimed
+that his holdings will amount to about five thousand, yearly average. In view of
+this ridiculously low return it seems incumbent upon me to appoint an
+inquisitor, whose duty&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey laughed harshly, interrupting the Judge. Then he turned suddenly to
+Hollis, his face inflamed with passion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon this is some of your work?&#8221; he snarled.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis met his gaze steadily. &#8220;I imagine it is,&#8221; he said quietly.
+He could not keep a flash of triumph from his eyes. &#8220;Nothing could please
+me better than to discover that I had a hand in bringing the law to this
+country. It needs plenty of law.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Judge Graney cleared his throat. &#8220;This <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_203'></a>203</span> does not apply to you alone, Dunlavey,&#8221; he
+said, facing the latter. &#8220;Letters have been sent to every cattleman in
+Union County, demanding their appearance before me. The government is determined
+to re-adjust conditions out here&#8211;to enforce this new law to the letter.
+Beginning on the first of next month,&#8211;September&#8211;which will be the
+day after to-morrow, every cattle owner in the county will be required to
+register his brand and return a list of his cattle, for taxation. Any owner
+refusing to make a fair return on his stock will make a grave mistake. Upon his
+failure to make such return the government will seize his stock and dispose of
+it to the highest bidder, deducting such an amount as will cover taxes, court
+costs, and fines, and returning the remainder, if any, to the owner.&#8221;
+Judge Graney faced Hollis. &#8220;I suppose you have received your notification
+to that effect?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t paid much attention to my mail since&#8211;since I met
+Mr. Dunlavey and several of his friends one night&#8211;some weeks ago.&#8221;
+He smiled grimly at Dunlavey, who met his gaze with a derisive grin. &#8220;I
+haven&#8217;t been very much interested in anything except getting well,&#8221;
+continued Hollis. &#8220;But whether I have been notified or not I shall take
+pleasure in complying <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_204'></a>204</span> with the law. I shall have my list ready on
+time&#8211;likewise I shall register my brand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey sneered. &#8220;That won&#8217;t be such an almighty big
+job&#8211;counting your steers,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis laughed shortly. &#8220;Perhaps not as big a job as it would have been
+had conditions been different,&#8221; he observed dryly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Meaning?&#8221; snapped Dunlavey, stiffening in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You may draw your own inference,&#8221; drawled Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant it seemed that Dunlavey contemplated attacking Hollis; he
+placed both hands on the table before him, preparatory to rising, evidently
+thought better of the idea and sank into the chair again, his eyes flashing
+venomously as they met Hollis&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This country&#8217;s going plum to hell!&#8221; he sneered;
+&#8220;when tenderfeet and half-baked lawyers get to running things it will be
+time for the cattlemen to pull up stakes and hit the breeze! But I&#8217;m
+telling you one thing!&#8221; He banged his fist heavily down upon the table in
+front of him and scowled at the Judge, his voice vibrating with passion:
+&#8220;You let your damned tenderfoot owners bring in their lists. Mebbe they
+don&#8217;t know any better. But I ain&#8217;t bringin&#8217; in no list. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205'></a>205</span> It&#8217;s one thing to
+pass a law and another thing to enforce it!&#8221; He sat silent for an instant,
+glaring at the Judge, who smiled quietly at him, then he turned to Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve been carrying on like you was intending to own this here
+country some day,&#8221; he sneered; &#8220;with your damned newspaper and your
+lawyer friend here. What we handed you the other night was just a sample of what
+you&#8217;ll get if you don&#8217;t hit the breeze out of this country!&#8221;
+He got to his feet and stood beside the table, glaring around at the three
+men.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment neither of the three spoke. There was a saturnine, almost
+mocking, smile on the face of the man who stood at the window. In his expression
+one could discover much appreciation of the character of the man at whom he was
+looking&#8211;it revealed the fact that he had met such men before&#8211;and
+admired them little. There was no fear in the expression, yet had one of the
+other men taken the trouble to look at him they would have seen that his right
+hand was now lingering very close to the butt of the revolver at his hip.</p>
+
+<p>Judge Graney cleared his throat. The smile was still on his face, but a
+sudden brightness of the eyes and a flush in each cheek showed that
+Dunlavey&#8217;s defiance had affected him. Both he <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_206'></a>206</span> and the man at the window watched
+closely as Hollis got to his feet and approached Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s face was slightly pale, but there was a steady, unwavering
+gleam in his eyes as he walked to within five feet of Dunlavey and stood quietly
+beside the table looking at him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dunlavey,&#8221; he began slowly, in a soft, even voice, in which
+there was not a hint of excitement, &#8220;I haven&#8217;t anything to do with
+enforcing the law that seems to have come to Union County. You can defy the law
+if you please. But I have something to say in reply to what you have said to me.
+It is this: I haven&#8217;t any ambition to own the entire country&#8211;such
+talk from a grown man is childish. But I do intend to own the little I&#8217;ve
+got in spite of you or anyone else. I am not in the least afraid of you. I owe
+you something on account of the other night and some day I am going to thrash
+you within an inch of your life!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey&#8217;s hand fell suggestively to his side. &#8220;There&#8217;s no
+time like the present,&#8221; he sneered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course I know that you carry a gun,&#8221; said Hollis still
+evenly, without excitement; &#8220;most of you folks out here don&#8217;t seem
+to be able to get along without one&#8211;it seems to be the fashion. Also, I
+might add, every man that carries one seems to yearn to use it. But it has <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207'></a>207</span> always seemed to me that
+a man who will use a gun without great provocation is a coward!&#8221; He smiled
+grimly into Dunlavey&#8217;s face.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Dunlavey did not move. His eyes glittered malevolently as they
+bored into Hollis&#8217;s. Then his expression changed until it was a mingling
+of contempt, incredulity, and mockery.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So you&#8217;re thinking of thrashing me?&#8221; he sniffed, backing
+away a little and eyeing Hollis critically. &#8220;You slugged me once and
+you&#8217;re thinking to do it again. And you think that any man who uses a gun
+on another is a coward?&#8221; He laughed sardonically. &#8220;Well, all
+I&#8217;ve got to say to you is that you ain&#8217;t got your eye-teeth cut
+yet.&#8221; He deliberately turned his back on Hollis and the others and walked
+to the door. On the threshold he halted, looking back at them all with a
+sneering smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You know where I live,&#8221; he said to Judge Graney. &#8220;I
+ain&#8217;t bringing in no list nor I ain&#8217;t registering my brand. I
+don&#8217;t allow no man to come monkeying around on my range and if you come
+out there, thinking to run off any of my stock, you&#8217;re doing it at your
+own risk!&#8221; His gaze went from the Judge to Hollis and his smile grew
+malignant.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m saying this to you,&#8221; he said, &#8220;no man <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208'></a>208</span> ain&#8217;t ever
+thrashed Bill Dunlavey yet and I ain&#8217;t allowing that any man is ever going
+to. Put that in your pipe and smoke it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He slammed the door and was gone. Hollis turned from the door to see a dry
+smile on the face of the man at the window.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fire eater, ain&#8217;t he?&#8221; observed the latter, as he caught
+Hollis&#8217;s glance.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209'></a>209</span><a id='link_16'></a>CHAPTER XVI<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE BEARER OF GOOD NEWS</span></h2>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled. The Judge got to his feet and approached the two men.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hollis,&#8221; he said, &#8220;shake hands with Mr. Allen, of
+Lazette.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Allen&#8217;s hand came out quickly and was grasped by Hollis&#8217;s, both
+grips being hearty and warm.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My name&#8217;s Ben Allen,&#8221; explained the stranger with a smile.
+&#8220;Tacking on a handle like &#8216;Mister&#8217; would sure make me feel like a
+stranger to myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll not quarrel about that,&#8221; remarked the Judge with a
+smile; &#8220;we&#8217;ll call you Ben.&#8221; He looked soberly at Hollis,
+continuing:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Allen has been sent over here from Lazette to assist us in
+establishing the law. He was formerly sheriff of Colfax County, having been
+defeated by the Cattlemen&#8217;s Association because he refused to become a
+party to its schemes. On several occasions since severing his official
+connection with Colfax County he has acted in a <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_210'></a>210</span> special capacity for the government. He is an old
+acquaintance of the new Secretary of the Interior and much trusted by him. He is
+to be the inquisitor mentioned in the letter which I read in the presence of
+Dunlavey.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis looked at Allen with a new interest. After noting again the steady,
+serene eyes, narrowed always with a slight squint; the firm straight lips, the
+well set jaws, Hollis mentally decided that the Secretary of the Interior could
+not have made a better choice. Certainly, if he had served as sheriff of Colfax
+County, he had had some excellent experiences, for from reading the <i>Lazette
+Eagle</i>, Hollis had acquired considerable knowledge of the character of the
+inhabitants of Colfax. The editor of the <i>Eagle</i> had many times felicitated
+himself upon the fact that his town (Lazette) had not been built ten miles
+farther east&#8211;in which case he would have been a resident of
+Union&#8211;and ashamed of it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think we need you,&#8221; said Hollis simply. &#8220;But I imagine
+you will have to concentrate your efforts upon one ranch only&#8211;the Circle
+Cross. If you make Dunlavey bow to the law you may consider your work
+finished.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think Dunlavey will change his views of things shortly,&#8221;
+remarked Allen, quietly, but significantly. He smiled at Hollis. &#8220;I have
+read <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211'></a>211</span> your paper
+regularly,&#8221; he said. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got the editor of our paper
+hopping mad&#8211;with your claims about Dry Bottom being superior to Lazette.
+Also, you&#8217;ve stirred up the Secretary of the Interior some. I was called
+to Washington three weeks ago and invited to tell what I knew of conditions out
+here. I didn&#8217;t exaggerate when I told the Secretary that hell was a more
+peaceful place for a law loving man to live in. Though,&#8221; he added with a
+smile, &#8220;I wasn&#8217;t ever in hell and couldn&#8217;t be positive. I was
+just accepting what I&#8217;ve heard preachers say about it. The Secretary asked
+me if I knowed you and I told him that though I didn&#8217;t I would be right
+glad to if you was doing anything in my line. He laughed and said he&#8217;d
+miss his guess if you wasn&#8217;t making things interesting. Told me to get you
+to one side and tell you to go to it.&#8221; He smiled dryly. &#8220;According
+to what I&#8217;ve read in the <i>Kicker</i> you don&#8217;t need to be told that and
+so I&#8217;m keeping my mouth shut.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He dropped his humor and spoke seriously, questioning Hollis about the
+location of his ranch, listening quietly and attentively to the latter&#8217;s
+answers. Half an hour later after having arranged with Judge Graney for the
+registering of his brand and the listing of his cattle, Hollis left the court
+house and went to his office. In running <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_212'></a>212</span> through his mail he came upon Judge Graney&#8217;s
+notification and also another letter, postmarked &#8220;Chicago,&#8221; which
+drew a pleased smile to his face. A few minutes later Norton came in, and though
+Hollis had done very little on the paper he rose and smilingly announced his
+intention of returning to the Circle Bar.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll take the Coyote trail,&#8221; he informed Norton, after
+they had mounted and were riding away from the <i>Kicker</i> office; &#8220;I&#8217;m
+stopping for a moment at the Hazelton cabin. Of course,&#8221; he added, seeing
+a knowing grin on Norton&#8217;s face, &#8220;I expected you would be
+suspicious&#8211;married folks have a habit of adopting a supercilious and
+all-wise attitude toward those of us who have been unfortunate enough to remain
+in a state of single blessedness.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Meanin&#8217; that you&#8217;re some sore because you ain&#8217;t got
+hooked up yet?&#8221; grinned Norton.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; laughed Hollis. &#8220;But I have been thinking
+seriously of trying to reach your altitude.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Girl willin&#8217;?&#8221; queried Norton, as they rode down through a
+little gully, then up to a stretch of plain that brought them to the Coyote
+trail.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s where I am all at sea,&#8221; returned Hollis. He
+laughed. &#8220;I suppose you&#8217;ve read Ace&#8217;s poem in the
+Kicker?&#8221; He caught Norton&#8217;s <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_213'></a>213</span> nod and continued. &#8220;Well, Ace succeeded in
+crowding a whole lot of truth into that effort. Of course you remember the first
+couplet:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Woman&#8211;she don&#8217;t need no tooter,<br /> Be she skule
+ma&#8217;am or biscut shooter.&#8221;&#8217;</p> </div><!-- poetry -->
+
+<p>he quoted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A woman seems to have an intuitive knowledge of man&#8217;s mental
+processes. At least she gauges him pretty well without letting him into the
+mystery of how she does it. A man can never tell where he will land.&#8221; Ace
+came very near striking the nail on the head when he wrote in the second couplet
+that:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>&#8216;She has most curyus ways about her,<br /> Which leads a man to kinda dout
+her.&#8217;</p> </div><!-- poetry -->
+
+<p>&#8220;And then, knowing man so well, she absolutely refuses to let him know
+anything of her thoughts. Which again, Ace has noted in this manner:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>&nbsp;&#8216;Though lookin&#8217; at her is sure a pleasure;<br /> There
+ain&#8217;t no way to get her measure.<br /> &nbsp;I reckon she had man on the
+run<br /> A long while before the world begun.&#8217;</p> </div><!-- poetry
+-->
+
+<p>&#8220;That seems to be the exact truth,&#8221; he laughed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214'></a>214</span>Norton grinned
+at him. &#8220;You single guys have certa&#8217;nly got a whole lot to
+learn,&#8221; he said, &#8220;for a fact. Of course if she&#8217;s any kind of a
+woman at all she&#8217;s got him runnin&#8217;. But which way?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, toward her, of course!&#8221; laughed Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Norton&#8217;s smile widened. &#8220;You&#8217;ve tumbled to that,
+then,&#8221; he observed dryly. &#8220;Then you&#8217;re ready for the next
+lesson.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And that?&#8221; questioned Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Norton smiled with ineffable pity. &#8220;Lordy!&#8221; he laughed;
+&#8220;you single guys don&#8217;t know a thing not a durned thing!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>After that they rode on in silence. When they came in sight of the Hazelton
+cabin Norton reined in his pony and sat motionless in the saddle, grinning at
+Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You run along now,&#8221; he advised. &#8220;I&#8217;ll be
+hittin&#8217; her off toward the Dry Bottom trail for the rest of the
+way&#8211;I sorta like that trail better anyway.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He urged his pony off at a tangent and Hollis continued on his way. He found
+Nellie alone, her brother having gone out on the range. She came out on the
+porch, hearing his pony&#8217;s hoofs on the hard sand and rocks of the trail,
+and there was a sincere welcome in her eyes. It was the <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_215'></a>215</span> first time that he had visited the
+cabin since he had returned to the Circle Bar.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; she said delightedly. And then, aware of the sudden light
+that had come into Hollis&#8217;s eyes at this evidence of interest, she blushed
+and looked down at the hem of her skirt, nervously pushing it out with the toe
+of her shoe.</p>
+
+<p>During the days of Hollis&#8217;s convalescence at the Hazelton cabin he had
+seen the young woman in many moods. In none of them, however, had she seemed so
+attractive as now. Confusion became her, he decided, and he regarded her with a
+new interest as he sat on his pony, awaiting her invitation to dismount. It came
+presently.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is frightfully hot,&#8221; she said, moving over to where stood two
+chairs&#8211;one in which he had passed many hours during the days of his
+convalescence, the other in which she had sat quite often&#8211;near him. Not
+until now did he realize how full and satisfying those days had been. As he
+dismounted and tied his pony to one of the slender porch columns he
+smiled&#8211;thinking of Norton&#8217;s question during their discussion of
+Ace&#8217;s poem. &#8220;Of course&#8221;&#8211;the range boss had
+said&#8211;&#8220;if she&#8217;s any kind of a woman at all she&#8217;s got him
+runnin&#8217;. But which way?&#8221; Of course&#8211;literally&#8211;she did not
+have him running, but <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_216'></a>216</span> he knew that some uncommon passion had gripped him
+and that he was unaccountably pleased.</p>
+
+<p>His smile grew when he remembered her sudden indignation over his thoughtless
+statement that women had never interested him. Of course he would not tell her
+that he felt a serious interest in <i>one</i> woman. When he dropped into his
+favorite chair, removing his hat and mopping the perspiration from his forehead
+with his handkerchief, he caught her looking swiftly at the scar under his right
+eye&#8211;which would always be a reminder of his experience on the night of the
+storm. She saw his brows contract in a frown.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You have quite recovered,&#8221; she said; &#8220;except for that
+slight scar under the eye you are the same as before the meeting with
+Dunlavey&#8217;s men.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He looked beyond her at the tawny mountains that rose in the
+distance,&#8211;miles on the other side of the big basin&#8211;swimming in the
+shimmering blur of white sky&#8211;somber guardians of a mysterious world. What
+secret did they guard? What did they know of this world of eternal sunlight, of
+infinite distance? Did they know as much of the world upon which they frowned as
+he knew of the heart of the slender, motherly <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_217'></a>217</span> girl whose eyes betrayed her each time he looked
+into them?</p>
+
+<p>A smile that lurked deep within him did not show in his face&#8211;it was
+unborn and it gripped him strangely, creating a sensation in his breast that he
+could not analyze, but which pleaded to be expressed. He could not express
+it&#8211;now. He feared to trust himself and so he fought it down, assuring
+himself that it was not yet time. But he knew that he was not the same as before
+his experience with Dunlavey on the night of the storm. Something had stolen
+into his heart and was enthroned there; something deeper than a mere
+scar&#8211;a girl who had mothered him in his extremity; who had hovered over
+him, attending to his bruises, binding his wounds, tenderly smoothing his brow
+during the days and nights of the fever; attending his wants during
+convalescence; erecting a citadel in his heart which would stand as a monument
+to his gratitude. No, not gratitude merely. The smile was born. He turned and
+looked at her, meeting her eyes fairly, and hers dropped in confusion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you think that I am the same as before?&#8221; he asked
+suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>She stood up, radiant, pointing a finger toward the Coyote trail. &#8220;Ed
+is coming!&#8221; she declared.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218'></a>218</span>Before he could
+say another word she was down off the porch and running toward her brother,
+holding his horse while he dismounted, kissing him, patting him lovingly as they
+came toward the porch.</p>
+
+<p>The latter greeted Hollis warmly. &#8220;A fellow couldn&#8217;t help but
+feel good with a sister like that&#8211;now could he?&#8221; he inquired as he
+came upon the porch and took the chair which Nellie had vacated. She had
+disappeared into the cabin, not even looking at Hollis, but she could not have
+heard Hollis&#8217;s reply had she remained. For it was wordless. There are
+times when men understand perfectly without speech.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis stayed for dinner. Nellie was radiantly silent during the meal,
+attending to the wants of the two men, listening while they discussed recent
+happenings in the county. Ed was much pleased to hear of the coming of Ben
+Allen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That guy is business&#8211;through and through,&#8221; he assured
+Hollis. &#8220;He was the best sheriff Colfax County ever had&#8211;and
+it&#8217;s had some good ones. Allen&#8217;s quiet, but there ain&#8217;t anyone
+going to herdride him. Some have tried it, but they found it didn&#8217;t pay
+and so they don&#8217;t try it any more.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>After dinner they went out on the porch for a <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_219'></a>219</span> smoke, leaving Nellie inside. They
+could hear her singing as she washed the dishes. Hazelton smiled as a
+particularly happy note reached his ears. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know what&#8217;s
+got into Sis,&#8221; he said, flashing a swift glance at Hollis. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t know as I ever heard her sing that well before.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis made no reply and the conversation turned to the drought&#8211;as all
+conversations did during that period. Word had come to Hazelton of
+Dunlavey&#8217;s warning to the cattle owners. He had heard also of
+Hollis&#8217;s announced intention of taking sides with the small owners.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dunlavey&#8217;s ten days is up the day after tomorrow,&#8221; said
+Hazelton. &#8220;If Dunlavey starts anything what are you going to
+do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That will depend on what Dunlavey starts,&#8221; smiled Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;H&#8217;m!&#8221; inexpressively grunted Hazelton. He flashed a glance
+at the face of the young man beside him, noting the firm mouth, the steady eyes,
+and the faint, grim smile. &#8220;H&#8217;m!&#8221; he said again. &#8220;I
+suppose you know who you&#8217;re going to give your water to?&#8221; he
+questioned.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis nodded. &#8220;To men who refused to help my father when he needed
+help,&#8221; he returned.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220'></a>220</span>Hazelton smiled
+oddly. &#8220;I&#8217;ve heard about that,&#8221; he said. He laughed. &#8220;It
+strikes me that I wouldn&#8217;t give such men any water,&#8221; he added.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis turned and looked at him, meeting his gaze fairly, and holding it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, you would, Hazelton,&#8221; he said, a broad smile on his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How do you know that?&#8221; queried the latter, slightly defiant.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis motioned toward the kitchen door. &#8220;I know,&#8221; he said;
+&#8220;you&#8217;re her brother.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; began Hazelton
+hesitatingly,&#8211;&#8220;I&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The screen door opened&#8211;slammed, and Nellie Hazelton came out upon the
+porch. She had found time to change her morning dress for a soft, fluffy
+creation of some sort, and she stood before them, flushing slightly as both
+looked at her, a picture that smote Hollis&#8217;s heart with a sudden longing.
+Only one glance did she give him and then she was over near Ed&#8217;s chair,
+leaning over him, stroking his hair.</p>
+
+<p>For a long time Hollis sat, watching them with sympathetic, appreciative
+eyes. Then he thought of the letter in his pocket, the one postmarked
+&#8220;Chicago,&#8221; which he had discovered at the <i>Kicker</i> office on
+returning from the court <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_221'></a>221</span> house. He drew it from his pocket and read the
+legend in the upper left hand corner:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dr. J. J. Hammond, &#8213; Hospital, Chicago, Ill.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He studied the legend for some little time, his thoughts busy with the
+contents of the envelope. Fortunately, his letter to the great physician had
+fallen into the hands of the son, Tom Hammond, and the latter, not forgetting
+his old schoolmate, had appealed to his father. This was what the surgeon had
+written in the letter&#8211;he would not have agreed to accept the case had it
+not been for the fact that Hollis had been, and was Tom&#8217;s friend. He would
+be pleased if the patient would make the journey to Chicago within a month, that
+he might be able to take up his case before entering upon some scientific
+investigations which had been deferred a long time, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had been reading the letter again. He finished it and looked up, to
+see Ed and Nellie watching him. He flushed and smiled, holding out the letter to
+Nellie.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I found this interesting.
+Perhaps you will also find it so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He leaned back with a smile and watched them. But he did not, watch long. He
+saw <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222'></a>222</span> Nellie start,
+saw the color slowly recede from her face, saw her hands clench tightly&#8211;as
+she began to read the letter. He turned away, not caring to watch them during
+that sacred moment in which they would read the line of hope that the great
+surgeon had written. He looked&#8211;it seemed&#8211;for a long time down the
+Coyote trail, and when he finally turned his head toward them he saw Ed Hazelton
+sitting erect in his chair, apparently stunned by the news. But before him,
+close to him, so close that he felt her breath in his face&#8211;her eyes wide
+with delight, thankfulness&#8211;and perhaps something more&#8211;Nellie was
+kneeling.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, thank you, Mr. Hollis!&#8221; she said earnestly, her lips all
+a-quiver; &#8220;Thank you, and God bless you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He tried to sit erect; tried to open his lips to tell her that he had done
+only what any man would have done under the circumstances. But he moved not, nor
+did he speak, for her arms had gone around his shoulders, and her lips were
+suddenly pressed firmly and quickly to his. Then he was released and she turned,
+crying:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come and thank him, Ed!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Ed had taken himself off&#8211;perhaps he did not care to allow anyone to
+witness his joy.</p>
+
+<p>Some time during the evening Hollis took his <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_223'></a>223</span> departure from the Hazelton cabin. Ed had come
+back, silently taking Hollis&#8217;s hand and gripping it earnestly. And before
+Hollis had departed Ed had taken himself into the house. Perhaps he divined that
+there were other&#8217;s joys beside his.</p>
+
+<p>That night before retiring Nellie stole softly into her brother&#8217;s room
+and kissed him lightly on the forehead. That same night also Hollis rode up to
+the Circle Bar corral gate&#8211;singing. Norton and Potter were sitting on the
+gallery, waiting for him. While Hollis was removing the saddle from his pony
+Norton rose from his chair and smiled at Potter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said to the latter, &#8220;I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to
+bed.&#8221; He moved a few steps toward the door and then turned and looked back
+at Potter, who had also risen. He laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Listen, Potter,&#8221; he said. Then he quoted:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>&#8220;Woman&#8211;she don&#8217;t need no tooter<br /> Be she skule
+ma&#8217;am or biscuit shooter.&#8221;</p> </div><!-- poetry -->
+
+<p>He hesitated and looked again at Potter. &#8220;Why,&#8221; said the latter,
+puzzled, &#8220;that&#8217;s from Ace&#8217;s poem!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; laughed Norton; &#8220;that&#8217;s just what it
+is!&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224'></a>224</span><a id='link_17'></a>CHAPTER XVII<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE RUSTLER</span></h2>
+
+<p>The following day Hollis rode to town over the Dry Bottom trail. Had he
+followed a perfectly natural inclination he would have taken the Coyote, for it
+would have brought him to the Hazelton cabin. But he succeeded in forcing
+himself to go the other way, arguing that Nellie and her brother might wish to
+be alone to consider the great good fortune that had come upon them.</p>
+
+<p>And so they did, though had Hollis appeared to them this morning as they sat
+upon the porch he would have been assured of a royal welcome. Indeed, during the
+early morning hours Nellie had cast many furtive, expectant glances down the
+Coyote trail. When eight o&#8217;clock came and Hollis did not appear she gave
+him up.</p>
+
+<p>The dawn found her kneeling beside her brother&#8217;s bed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ed!&#8221; she said, leaning over him, waking <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_225'></a>225</span> him, her eyes alight with joy;
+&#8220;Ed, he says you can be cured!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He struggled and sat up, rubbing his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Gosh, sis!&#8221; he said in an awed voice. &#8220;Then it&#8217;s
+true! I was afraid I&#8217;d been dreaming!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is no dream,&#8221; she returned ecstatically; &#8220;it is
+reality&#8211;beautiful reality! Wasn&#8217;t it simply <i>great</i> of him to
+take such an interest in us?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Us?&#8221; grinned Ed, noting her crimson, happy face. &#8220;Well,
+mebbe he did it for <i>us</i>,&#8221; he added subtly, &#8220;but I take it
+I&#8217;ve got a right to have another opinion on that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She fled from him without answering and a little later he heard her singing
+as she prepared breakfast. After the meal Ed made a short trip out into the
+basin to look after his cattle and then returned to the cabin. Sitting on the
+porch he and Nellie devoted several hours to a grave discussion of the
+situation. They discovered that it had a serious side.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place there was the dangerous nature of the operation. Here Ed
+laughed away his sister&#8217;s fears by assuring her that he had an excellent
+constitution and that since the fall from the pony had not killed him he was in
+no danger from the knife. If Nellie entertained any doubt of this she wisely
+remained silent, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226'></a>226</span>
+though Ed could see that she was not entirely reassured. He swept away her last
+objection to this forbidding feature when he told her that he preferred taking
+the risk to living in constant dread of a recurrence of an acute attack of his
+malady&#8211;such as he had experienced when he had attacked Hollis in
+Devil&#8217;s Hollow.</p>
+
+<p>There were many other things to be discussed&#8211;chiefly the care of the
+cattle and the cabin during his absence in Chicago. He would not listen to her
+suggestion to accompany him&#8211;he would prefer to have her remain at the
+cabin. Or he would try to arrange with Hollis for her to stay at the Circle Bar.
+There she would have Mrs. Norton for a companion, and she might ride each day to
+the cabin. He was certain that Hollis would arrange to have his men care for the
+cattle. He assured her that he would settle that question with Hollis when the
+latter passed the cabin that night on his return to the Circle Bar. Of course
+Hollis would take the Coyote trail to-night, he insinuated, grinning hugely at
+the blushes that reached her face.</p>
+
+<p>But Hollis did not pass the cabin that night. He had taken the Dry Bottom
+trail on his return to the Circle Bar.</p>
+
+<p>He had accomplished very little that day on account of the heat&#8211;and a
+certain vision that <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_227'></a>227</span> had troubled him&#8211;taking his mind off his work
+and projecting it to a little cabin in a small basin, to a porch where sat a
+girl&#8211;the girl of his vision. She had voluntarily kissed him. Had it been
+all on account of gratitude? Of course&#8211;though&#8211;Well, memory of the
+kiss still lingered and he was willing to forgive her the slight lapse of
+modesty because he had been the recipient.</p>
+
+<p>There had been one interesting development in Dry Bottom during the day. All
+day the town had swarmed with ranch owners who had come in to the court
+house to list their cattle for taxation and register their brands. Shortly after
+noon Ben Allen had dropped into the <i>Kicker</i> office with the news that
+every owner in the county with the exception of Dunlavey had responded to the
+law&#8217;s demands.</p>
+
+<p>To Hollis&#8217;s inquiry regarding the course he would pursue in forcing
+Dunlavey to comply with the law, Allen remarked with a smile that there was
+&#8220;plenty of time.&#8221; He had had much experience with men of the
+Dunlavey type.</p>
+
+<p>Potter and Hollis exchanged few words during the ride to the Circle Bar. The
+heat&#8211;the eternal, scorching, blighting heat&#8211;still continued; the
+dust had become an almost unbearable irritation. During the trip to the ranch
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228'></a>228</span> the two men came
+upon an arroyo over which Hollis had passed many times. At a water hole where he
+had often watered his horse they came upon several dead steers stretched prone
+in the green slime. The water had disappeared; the spring that had provided it
+had dried and there was nothing to tell of it except a small stretch of damp
+earth, baking in the sun. The steers were gaunt, lanky creatures, their hides
+stretched tight as drum-heads over their ribs, their tongues lolling out, black
+and swollen, telling mutely of their long search for water and their suffering.
+Coyotes had been at work on them; here lay a heap of bare bones; there a skull
+glistened in the white sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>A few miles farther on they came upon one of the punchers from the Circle Y
+with a calf thrown over the saddle in front of him. He was driving several
+gaunt, drooping cattle toward the Rabbit-Ear. The calf bellowed piteously at
+sight of Hollis and Potter. The puncher hailed them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re Hollis, of the Circle Bar, ain&#8217;t you?&#8221; he
+said when the latter had spurred his pony close to him. At Hollis&#8217;s nod he
+grinned ironically. &#8220;Hot!&#8221; he said, coming quickly to the universal
+topic of conversation; &#8220;I reckon this wouldn&#8217;t be called hot in some
+places&#8211;in hell, for instance. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_229'></a>229</span> Say,&#8221; he said as he saw Hollis&#8217;s lips
+straighten, &#8220;to-morrow the ten days is up. Mebbe it&#8217;ll be hotter
+then. The damned skunk!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Of course he referred to Dunlavey&#8211;the latter&#8217;s threat to drive
+all foreign cattle from the Rabbit-Ear had been carried far and wide by
+riders&#8211;the whole country knew of it. There had been much condemnation and
+some speculation, but there was nothing to be done until after the tenth day.
+Even then much depended upon Hollis&#8217;s attitude. Would he make war upon
+Dunlavey in defense of the men who had refused aid to his father in time of
+need?</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was still of the opinion that Dunlavey would not attempt to carry out
+his threat. He smiled at the malevolent expression in the puncher&#8217;s
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Somehow,&#8221; he said quietly, &#8220;I have always been able to
+distinguish between empty boast and determination. Dunlavey has done some
+foolish things, no doubt, and is doing a foolish thing in defying the law, but I
+don&#8217;t anticipate that he will do anything quite so rash as to further
+antagonize the small owners.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The puncher sat erect and laughed harshly. &#8220;You don&#8217;t?&#8221; he
+inquired in an over-gentle, polite voice. &#8220;Mister Hollis,&#8221; he added,
+as the <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230'></a>230</span> latter
+looked quickly at him, &#8220;you ain&#8217;t heard nothin&#8217; from the
+Circle Bar to-day, I reckon?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s answer was negative. The Circle Y man&#8217;s face grew
+suddenly serious. &#8220;You ain&#8217;t! Well, then, that&#8217;s the reason
+you&#8217;re talkin&#8217; so. The last I heard from the Circle Bar was that
+Norton an&#8217; some of your men had captured one of Dunlavey&#8217;s
+men&#8211;Greasy&#8211;rebrandin&#8217; some Circle Bar steers an&#8217; was
+gettin&#8217; ready to string him up. I reckon mebbe you&#8217;d call that
+doin&#8217; somethin&#8217;!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis straightened. He had suddenly forgotten the heat, the dust, and the
+problem of water.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How long ago did you hear this?&#8221; he demanded sharply.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Bout an hour ago,&#8221; returned the Circle Y man. &#8220;I was
+rustlin&#8217; up these strays down in the basin an&#8217; headin&#8217; them
+toward the crick when I runs plum into a man from the Three Bar outfit. He was
+plum excited over it. Said they&#8217;d ketched Greasy down by the Narrows
+sometime after noon an&#8217;&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But the Circle Y man finished to the empty air for Hollis&#8217;s pony had
+leaped forward into a cloud of dust, running desperately.</p>
+
+<p>The Circle Y man sat erect, startled. &#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll
+be&#8213;&#8221; he began, speaking to Potter. But <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_231'></a>231</span> the printer was following his chief and
+was already out of hearing. &#8220;Now what do you suppose&#8213;&#8221; again
+began the Circle Y man, and then fell silent, suddenly smitten with the
+uselessness of speech. He yelled at his gaunt steers and shifted the calf in
+front of him to a more comfortable position. Then he proceeded on his way. But
+as he rode his lips curled, his eyes narrowed, and speech again returned to him.
+&#8220;Now why in hell would a man get so damned excited over hearin&#8217; that
+someone was goin&#8217; to string up a measly rustler?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The interrogation remained unanswered. The Circle Y man continued on his way,
+watching the fast disappearing dust clouds on the Circle Bar trail.</p>
+
+<p>When Hollis reached the Circle Bar ranchhouse there was no one about. He rode
+up to the front gallery and dismounted, thinking that perhaps Norton would be in
+the house. But before he had crossed the gallery Mrs. Norton came to the door.
+She was pale and laboring under great excitement, but instantly divined
+Hollis&#8217;s errand.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ve taken him down to the cottonwood&#8221; she told Hollis,
+pointing toward the grove in which Hollis had tried the six-shooter that Norton
+had given him the first day after his <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_232'></a>232</span> arrival at the ranch. &#8220;They are going to hang
+him! Hurry!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was back in the saddle in an instant and racing his pony down past the
+bunk house at break-neck speed. He urged the little animal across an intervening
+stretch of plain, up a slight rise, down into a shallow valley, and into the
+cottonwood, riding recklessly through the trees and urging the pony at a
+headlong pace through the underbrush&#8211;crashing it down, scaring the
+rattlers from their concealment, and startling the birds from their lofty
+retreats.</p>
+
+<p>For ten minutes he rode as he had never ridden before. And then he came upon
+them. They stood at the base of a fir-balsam, whose gnarled limbs spread flatly
+outward&#8211;three Circle Bar men, a half dozen from the various outfits whose
+herds grazed his range, and the rustler&#8211;Greasy&#8211;a rope knotted about
+his neck, standing directly under one of the out-spreading limbs of the tree,
+his head bowed, but his face wearing a mocking, defiant grin. The rope had been
+thrown over the limb and several men were holding it, preparatory to drawing it
+taut. Norton was standing near, his face pale, his lips straight and grim with
+determination. Apparently Hollis had arrived just in time.</p>
+
+<p>None of the men moved from their places <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_233'></a>233</span> when Hollis dismounted, but all looked at him as
+though expecting him to express approval of what they were about to do. Several
+lowered their gaze with embarrassment when they saw that he did not approve.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What is all this about, Norton?&#8221; he asked, speaking to the
+latter, who had stepped forward and now stood beside Greasy. Whatever excitement
+had resulted from the sudden discovery that his men had captured a rustler and
+were about to hang him, together with the strain of his hard ride to the
+cottonwood, had disappeared, and Hollis&#8217;s voice was quiet as he addressed
+his range boss.</p>
+
+<p>Norton smiled grimly. &#8220;We were roundin&#8217; up a few strays just the
+other side of the Narrows this morning, and Ace and Weary were workin&#8217;
+down the river. In that little stretch of gully just the other side of the
+Narrows they came upon this sneak brandin&#8217; two of our beeves through a
+piece of wet blanket. He&#8217;d already done it an&#8217; so we ketched him
+with the goods. It&#8217;s the first time we&#8217;ve ever been able to lay a
+hand on one of Dunlavey&#8217;s pluguglies, an&#8217; we was figgerin&#8217; on
+makin&#8217; an example of him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis met Norton&#8217;s grim gaze and smiled. &#8220;I want to thank
+you&#8211;all of you, for guarding my interests so zealously,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;There is <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234'></a>234</span> no
+doubt that this man richly deserves hanging&#8211;that is, of course, according
+to your code of ethics. I understand that is the way things have been done
+heretofore. But I take it none of you want to make me appear
+ridiculous?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sure not,&#8221; came several voices in chorus.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis laughed. &#8220;But you took the surest way of making me appear
+so,&#8221; he returned.</p>
+
+<p>He saw Norton&#8217;s face flush and he knew that the latter had already
+grasped the significance of his words. But the others, simpler of mind,
+reasoning by no involved process, looked at him, plainly puzzled. He would have
+to explain more fully to them. He did so. When he had shown them that in hanging
+the rustler he would be violating the principle that he had elected to defend,
+they stood before him abashed, thoroughly disarmed. All except Ace. The
+poet&#8217;s mind was still active.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon you might say you didn&#8217;t know nothin&#8217; about us
+hangin&#8217; him?&#8221; he suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So I might,&#8221; returned Hollis. &#8220;But people would not think
+so. And there is my conscience. It wouldn&#8217;t be such a weight upon
+it&#8211;the hanging of this man; I believe I would enjoy standing here and
+watching him stretch your rope. But I would not be able to reconcile the action
+with the principle for which I am fighting. I believe <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_235'></a>235</span> none of you men would trust me very
+much if I advocated the law one day and broke it the next. The application of
+this principle would be much the same as if I stole a horse to-day and to-morrow
+had you arrested for stealing one.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s so,&#8221; they chorused, and fell silent, regarding him
+with a new interest.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But what are you goin&#8217; to do with the cuss?&#8221; queried one
+man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We have a sheriff in Dry Bottom, I expect?&#8221; questioned
+Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Grins appeared on the faces of several of the men; the prisoner&#8217;s face
+lighted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, yes,&#8221; said one; &#8220;I reckon Bill Watkins is the sheriff
+all right.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then we&#8217;ll take him to Bill Watkins,&#8221; decided Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>The grins on the faces of several of the men grew. Norton laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon you ain&#8217;t got acquainted with Bill yet, Hollis,&#8221;
+he said. &#8220;Bill owes his place to Dunlavey. There has never been a rustler
+convicted by Watkins yet. I reckon there won&#8217;t ever be any
+convicted&#8211;unless he&#8217;s been caught stealin&#8217; Dunlavey&#8217;s
+cattle. Bill&#8217;s justice is a joke.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled grimly. He had learned that much from Judge Graney. He did not
+expect <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236'></a>236</span> to secure
+justice, but he wished to have something tangible upon which to work to force
+the law into the country. His duty in the matter consisted only in delivering
+the prisoner into the custody of the authorities, which in this case was the
+sheriff. The sheriff would be held responsible for him. He said this much to the
+men. There was no other lawful way.</p>
+
+<p>He was not surprised that they agreed with him. They had had much experience
+in dealing with Dunlavey; they had never been successful with the old methods of
+warfare and they were quite willing to trust to Hollis&#8217;s judgment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon you&#8217;re just about right,&#8221; said one who had spoken
+before. &#8220;Stringin&#8217; this guy up would finish him all right. But that
+wouldn&#8217;t settle the thing. What&#8217;s needed is to get it fixed up for
+good an&#8217; all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Correct!&#8221; agreed Hollis; &#8220;you&#8217;ve got it exactly. We
+might hang a dozen men for stealing cattle and we could go on hanging them.
+We&#8217;ve got no right to hang anyone&#8211;we&#8217;ve got a law for that
+purpose. Then let us make the law act!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner had stood in his place, watching the men around him, his face
+betraying varying emotions. When it had been finally agreed to take him to Dry
+Bottom and deliver him over to <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_237'></a>237</span> the sheriff he grinned broadly. But he said nothing
+as they took the rope from around his neck, forced him to mount a horse and
+surrounding him, rode out of the cottonwood toward the Circle Bar
+ranchhouse.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238'></a>238</span><a id='link_18'></a>CHAPTER XVIII<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE TENTH DAY</span></h2>
+
+<p>Dusk had fallen by the time Greasy had been brought to the bunkhouse, and
+Mrs. Norton had lighted the kerosene lamps when Norton and Hollis, assured of
+the safety of the prisoner, left the bunkhouse and went into the house for
+supper. Potter had washed the dust of travel from him and when Norton and Hollis
+arrived he was seated on the porch, awaiting them. Mrs. Norton greeted them with
+a smile. Her eyes expressed gratitude as they met Hollis&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am so glad you were in time,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I told Neil not
+to do it, but he was determined and wouldn&#8217;t listen to me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You might have tried &#8216;bossing&#8217; him,&#8221; suggested Hollis,
+remembering his range boss&#8217;s words on the occasion of his first meeting
+with Norton&#8217;s wife. He looked straight at Norton, his eyes narrowing
+quizzically. &#8220;You know you told me once that&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mebbe I was stretchin&#8217; things a little when <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_239'></a>239</span> I told you that,&#8221; interrupted
+Norton, grinning shamelessly. &#8220;If a man told the truth all the time
+he&#8217;d have a hard time keepin&#8217; ahead of a woman.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Woman&#8211;she don&#8217;t need no tooter,&#8217;&#8221; quoted
+Hollis. &#8220;It has taken you a long time to discover what Ace has apparently
+known for years. And Ace is only a bachelor.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton&#8217;s eyes lighted. &#8220;You&#8217;re gettin&#8217; back at me for
+what I said to you the day before yesterday&#8211;when you stopped off at
+Hazelton&#8217;s,&#8221; he declared. &#8220;All the same you&#8217;ll know more
+about women when you&#8217;ve had more experience with them. When I told you
+that I&#8217;d been &#8216;bossed,&#8217; I didn&#8217;t mean that I&#8217;d been
+bossed regular. No woman that knows just how much she can run a man ever lets
+him know that she&#8217;s bossin&#8217; him. Mebbe she&#8217;ll act like
+she&#8217;s lettin&#8217; him have his own way. But she&#8217;s bossin&#8217;
+him just the same. He sort of likes it, I reckon. At least it&#8217;s only when
+a man gets real mad that he does a little bossin&#8217; on his own account. And
+then, like as not, he&#8217;ll find that he&#8217;s made a big mistake. Like I
+did to-day about hangin&#8217; Greasy, for instance.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis bowed gravely to Mrs. Norton. &#8220;I think he ought to be forgiven,
+Mrs. Norton,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Day before yesterday he presumed to <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240'></a>240</span> lecture me on the
+superiority of the married male over the unmarried one. And now he humbly admits
+to being bossed. What then becomes of his much talked of superiority? Shall
+I&#8211;free and unbossed&#8211;admit inferiority?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Norton smiled wisely as she moved around the table, arranging the
+dishes. &#8220;I couldn&#8217;t decide that,&#8221; she said, &#8220;until it is
+explained to me why so many men are apparently so eager to engage a
+boss.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon that settles that argument!&#8221; gloated Norton.</p>
+
+<p>Had this conversation taken place two months before Hollis might have
+answered, Why, indeed, were men so eager to engage a boss? Two months before he
+might have answered cynically, remembering the unhappiness of his parents. That
+he did not answer now showed that he was no longer cynical; that he had
+experienced a change of heart.</p>
+
+<p>Of course Mrs. Norton knew this&#8211;Norton must have told her. He could
+appreciate the subtle mockery that had suggested the question, but he did not
+purpose to allow Norton to sit there and enjoy the confusion that was sure to
+overtake him did he attempt to continue the argument with Mrs. Norton. He was
+quite certain that Norton anticipated such an outcome.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241'></a>241</span>&#8220;Perhaps
+Norton can answer that?&#8221; he suggested mildly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t no good at guessin&#8217; riddles,&#8221; jeered Norton.
+&#8220;But I reckon you know&#8211;if you wanted to tell.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Hollis did not tell, and the conversation shifted to other subjects.
+After supper they went out upon the porch. A slight breeze had sprung up with
+the dusk, though the sky was still cloudless. At ten o&#8217;clock, when they
+retired, the breeze had increased in velocity, sighing mournfully through the
+trees in the vicinity of the ranchhouse, though there was no perceptible change
+in the atmosphere&#8211;it seemed that the wind was merely shifting the heat
+waves from one point to another.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A good, decent rain would save lots of trouble to-morrow,&#8221; said
+Norton as he and Hollis stood on the porch, taking a last look at the sky before
+going to bed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you really think Dunlavey will carry out his threat?&#8221;
+questioned Hollis. &#8220;Somehow I can&#8217;t help but think that he was
+bluffing when he said it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He don&#8217;t do much bluffin&#8217;,&#8221; declared Norton.
+&#8220;At least he ain&#8217;t done much up to now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But there is plenty of water in the Rabbit-Ear,&#8221; <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242'></a>242</span> returned Hollis;
+&#8220;plenty for all the cattle that are here now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton flashed a swift glance at him. &#8220;That&#8217;s because you
+don&#8217;t know this country,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Four years ago we had a
+dry spell. Not so bad as this, but bad enough. The Rabbit-Ear held up good
+enough for two months. Then she went dry sudden. There wasn&#8217;t water enough
+in her to fill a thimble. I reckon you ain&#8217;t been watchin&#8217; her for
+the last day or so?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis admitted that he had not seen the river within that time. Norton
+laughed shortly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s dry in spots now,&#8221; he informed Hollis. &#8220;There
+ain&#8217;t any water at all in the shallows. It&#8217;s tricklin&#8217; through
+in some places, but mostly there&#8217;s nothin&#8217; but water holes an&#8217;
+dried, baked mud. In two days more, if it don&#8217;t rain, there won&#8217;t be
+water enough for our own stock. Then what?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There will be water for every steer on the range as long as it
+lasts,&#8221; declared Hollis grimly. &#8220;After that we&#8217;ll all take our
+medicine together.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; declared Norton. &#8220;That&#8217;s what I expected of
+you. But I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s goin&#8217; to work out that way. Weary
+was ridin&#8217; the Razor Back this mornin&#8217; and he says he saw Dunlavey
+an&#8217; Yuma and some more Circle Cross guys <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_243'></a>243</span> nosin&#8217; around behind some brush on the other
+side of the creek. They all had rifles.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s face paled slightly. &#8220;Where are the other
+men&#8211;Train and the rest?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Down on Razor Back,&#8221; Norton informed him; &#8220;they sneaked
+down there after Weary told me about seein&#8217; Dunlavey on the other side.
+Likely they&#8217;re scattered by now&#8211;keepin&#8217; an eye out for
+trouble.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; decided Hollis, &#8220;there isn&#8217;t any use of
+looking for it. It finds all of us soon enough. To-morrow is the tenth day and I
+am sure that if Dunlavey carries out his threat he won&#8217;t start anything
+until to-morrow. Therefore I am going to bed.&#8221; He laughed. &#8220;Call me
+if you hear any shooting. I may want to take a hand in it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They parted&#8211;Hollis going to his room and Norton stepping down off the
+porch to take a turn down around the pasture to look after the horses.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was tired after his experiences of the day and soon dropped off to
+sleep. It seemed that he had been asleep only a few minutes, however, when he
+felt a hand shaking him, and a voice&#8211;Norton&#8217;s voice.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hollis!&#8221; said the range boss. &#8220;Hollis! Wake up!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244'></a>244</span>Hollis sat
+erect, startled into perfect wakefulness. He could not see Norton&#8217;s face
+in the dark, but he swung around and sat on the edge of the bed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s up?&#8221; he demanded. &#8220;Have they
+started?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He heard Norton laugh, and there was satisfaction in the laugh.
+&#8220;Started?&#8221; he repeated. &#8220;Well, I reckon something&#8217;s
+started. Listen!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis listened. A soft patter on the roof, a gentle sighing of the wind, and
+a distant, low rumble reached his ears. He started up. &#8220;Why, it&#8217;s
+raining!&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Norton chuckled. &#8220;Rainin&#8217;!&#8221; he chirped joyously.
+&#8220;Well, I reckon it might be called that by someone who didn&#8217;t know
+what rain is. But I&#8217;m tellin&#8217; you that it ain&#8217;t
+rainin&#8217;&#8211;it&#8217;s pourin&#8217;! It&#8217;s a cloud-burst,
+that&#8217;s what it is!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis did not answer. He ran to the window and stuck his head out. The rain
+came against his head and shoulders in stinging, vicious slants. There was
+little lightning, and what there was seemed distant, as though the storm covered
+a vast area. He could dimly see the pasture&#8211;the horses huddled in a corner
+under the shelter that had been erected for them; he could see the tops of the
+trees in the cottonwood grove&#8211;bending, twisting, leaning from the wind;
+the bunkhouse <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245'></a>245</span> door
+was open, a stream of light illuminating a space in which stood several of the
+cowboys. Some were attired as usual, others but scantily, but all were outside
+in the rain, singing, shouting, and pounding one another in an excess of joy.
+For half an hour Hollis stood at the window, watching them, looking out at the
+storm. There was no break anywhere in the sky from horizon to horizon. Plainly
+there was to be plenty of rain. Convinced of this he drew a deep breath of
+satisfaction, humor moving him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I do hope Dunlavey and his men don&#8217;t get wet.&#8221; he said. He
+went to his trousers and drew forth his watch. He could not see the face of it
+and so he carried it to the window. The hands pointed to fifteen minutes after
+one. &#8220;It&#8217;s the tenth day,&#8221; he smiled. &#8220;Dunlavey might
+have saved himself considerable trouble in the future if he had placed a little
+trust in Providence&#8211;and not antagonized the small owners. I don&#8217;t
+think Providence has been looking out for my interests, but I wonder who will
+stand the better in the estimation of the people of this county&#8211;Dunlavey
+or me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He smiled again, sighed with satisfaction, and rolled into bed. For a long
+time he lay, listening to the patter of the rain on the roof, and then dropped
+off to sleep.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246'></a>246</span><a id='link_19'></a>CHAPTER XIX<br /><span class='h2fs'>HOW A RUSTLER ESCAPED</span></h2>
+
+<p>When Hollis got out of bed at six o&#8217;clock that same morning he heard
+surprising sounds outside. Slipping on his clothes he went to the window and
+looked out. Men were yelling at one another, screeching delightful oaths,
+capering about hatless, coatless, in the rain that still came steadily down. The
+corral yard was a mire of sticky mud in which the horses reared and plunged in
+evident appreciation of the welcome change from dry heat to lifegiving moisture.
+Riderless horses stood about, no one caring about the saddles, several calves
+capered awkwardly in the pasture. Norton&#8217;s dog&#8211;about which he had
+joked to Hollis during the latter&#8217;s first ride to the Circle Bar&#8211;was
+yelping joyously and running madly from one man to another.</p>
+
+<p>Norton himself stood down by the door of the bunkhouse, grinning with
+delight. Near him stood Lemuel Train, and several of the other <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247'></a>247</span> small ranchers whose
+stock had grazed for more than two weeks on the Circle Bar range without
+objection from Hollis. They saw him and motioned for him to come down, directing
+original oaths at him for sleeping so late on so &#8220;fine a
+morning.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He dressed hastily and went down. They all ate breakfast in the mess house,
+the cook being adjured to &#8220;spread it on for all he was
+worth&#8221;&#8211;which he did. Certainly no one left the mess house hungry.
+During the meal Lemuel Train made a speech on behalf of himself and the other
+owners who had enjoyed Hollis&#8217;s hospitality, assuring him that they were
+&#8220;with him&#8221; from now on. Then they departed, each going his separate
+way to round up his cattle and drive them back to the home ranch.</p>
+
+<p>The rain continued throughout the day and far into the night. The dried,
+gasping country absorbed water until it was sated and then began to shed it off
+into the arroyos, the gullies, the depressions, and the river beds. Every hollow
+overflowed with it; it seemed there could never be another drought.</p>
+
+<p>Before dawn on the following day all the small ranchers had departed. Several
+of them, on their way to their home ranches, stopped off at the Circle Bar to
+shake hands with Hollis and <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_248'></a>248</span> assure him of their appreciation. Lemuel Train did
+not forget to curse Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We ain&#8217;t likely to forget how he stood on the water
+proposition,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>After Train had departed Norton stood looking after him. Then he turned and
+looked at Hollis, his eyes narrowing quizzically. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got in
+right with that crowd,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Durned if I don&#8217;t believe
+you knowed all the time that it was goin&#8217; to rain before Dunlavey&#8217;s
+tenth day was over!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled oddly. &#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; he returned; &#8220;there is no
+law, moral or otherwise, to prevent a man from looking a little
+ahead.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>After breakfast Hollis gave orders to have Greasy prepared for travel, and an
+hour later he and the range boss, both armed with rifles, rode out of the corral
+yard with Greasy riding between them and took the Dry Bottom trail.</p>
+
+<p>The earth had already dried; the trail was hard, level, and dustless, and
+traveling was a pleasure. But neither of the three spoke a word to one another
+during the entire trip to Dry Bottom. Greasy bestrode his horse loosely,
+carelessly defiant; Norton kept a watchful eye on him, and Hollis rode steadily,
+his gaze fixed thoughtfully on the trail.</p>
+
+<p>At ten o&#8217;clock they rode into Dry Bottom.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249'></a>249</span> There were not many persons about, but
+those who were gave instant evidence of interest in the three by watching them
+closely as they rode down the street to the sheriff&#8217;s office, dismounted,
+and disappeared inside.</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff&#8217;s office was in a little frame shanty not over sixteen feet
+square, crude and unfinished. There were a front and back door, two
+windows&#8211;one in the side facing the court house, the other in the front.
+For furniture there were a bench, two chairs, some shelves, a cast iron stove, a
+wooden box partly filled with saw-dust which was used as a cuspidor, and a rough
+wooden table which served as a desk. In a chair beside the desk sat a tall,
+lean-faced man, with a nose that suggested an eagle&#8217;s beak, with its high,
+thin, arched bridge, little, narrowed, shifting eyes, and a hard mouth whose
+lips were partly concealed under a drooping, tobacco-stained mustache. He turned
+as the three men entered, leaning back in his chair, his legs a-sprawl,
+motioning them to the chairs and the bench. They filed in silently. Greasy
+dropped carelessly into one of the chairs, Norton took another near him, but
+Hollis remained standing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You are the sheriff, I suppose?&#8221; inquired the latter.</p>
+
+<p>The official spat copiously into the wooden box <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_250'></a>250</span> without removing his gaze from the
+three visitors.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yep,&#8221; he returned shortly, his voice coming with a truculent
+snap. &#8220;You wantin&#8217; the sheriff?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis saw a swift, significant glance pass between him and Greasy and he
+smiled slightly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he returned quietly; &#8220;we want you. We are delivering
+this man into your custody.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s he done?&#8221; demanded the sheriff.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I charge him with stealing two of my steers,&#8221; returned Hollis.
+&#8220;Several of my men discovered him at work the day before yesterday
+and&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hold on a minute now!&#8221; interrupted the sheriff.
+&#8220;Let&#8217;s git this thing goin&#8217; accordin&#8217; to the law.&#8221;
+He spat again into the wooden box, cocked his head sideways and surveyed Hollis
+with a glance in which there was much insolence and contempt. &#8220;Who might
+you be?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My name is Hollis,&#8221; returned the latter quietly, his eyes
+meeting the other&#8217;s steadily. &#8220;I own the Circle Bar.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;H&#8217;m!&#8221; The sheriff crossed his legs and stuck his thumbs
+into the arm-holes of his vest, revealing a nickle-plated star on the lapel of
+the latter. &#8220;H&#8217;m. Your name&#8217;s Hollis, an&#8217; you <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251'></a>251</span> own the Circle Bar.
+Seems I&#8217;ve heard of you.&#8221; He squinted his eyes at Hollis.
+&#8220;You&#8217;re Jim Hollis&#8217;s boy, ain&#8217;t you?&#8221; His eyes
+flashed with a sudden, contemptuous light. &#8220;Tenderfoot, ain&#8217;t you?
+Come out here to try an&#8217; show folks how to run things?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s face slowly paled. He saw Greasy grinning. &#8220;I suppose it
+makes little difference to you what I am or what I came out here for,&#8221; he
+said quietly; &#8220;though, if I were to be required to give an opinion I
+should say that there is room for improvement in this county in the matter of
+applying its laws.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff laughed harshly. &#8220;You&#8217;ll know more about this country
+after you&#8217;ve been here a while,&#8221; he sneered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mebbe he&#8217;ll know more about how to run a law shebang,
+too,&#8221; dryly observed Norton, &#8220;after he&#8217;s watched Bill Watkins
+run her a little.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t reckon anyone ast you to stick your gab in this here
+affair?&#8221; demanded the sheriff of Norton.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; returned Norton, drawling, &#8220;no one asked me. But
+while we&#8217;re handin&#8217; out compliments we might as well all have a hand
+in it. It strikes me that when a man&#8217;s runnin&#8217; a law shop he ought
+to run her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252'></a>252</span>&#8220;I reckon
+I&#8217;ll run her without any help from you, Norton!&#8221; snapped the
+sheriff.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, sure!&#8221; agreed the latter, his gaze level as his eyes met
+the sheriff&#8217;s, his voice even and sarcastic. &#8220;But I&#8217;m
+tellin&#8217; you that this man&#8217;s my friend an&#8217; if there&#8217;s any
+more of them compliments goin&#8217; to be handed around I&#8217;m warnin&#8217;
+you that you want to hand them out soft an&#8217; gentle like. That&#8217;s all.
+I reckon we c&#8217;n now proceed.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff&#8217;s face bloated poisonously. He flashed a malignant glance
+at Hollis. &#8220;Well,&#8221; he snapped, &#8220;what&#8217;s the
+charge?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have already told you,&#8221; returned Hollis. &#8220;It is stealing
+cattle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How stealin&#8217; them?&#8221; demanded the Sheriff truculenty.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Changing the brand,&#8221; Hollis informed him. He related how Ace and
+Weary had come upon the prisoner while the latter was engaged in changing his
+brand to the Circle Cross.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They see him brandin&#8217;?&#8221; questioned the sheriff when Hollis
+had concluded.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis told him that the two men had come upon Greasy after the brand had
+been applied, but that the cattle bore the Circle Bar ear-mark, and that Greasy
+had built a fire and that branding irons had been found in his
+possession&#8211;which <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_253'></a>253</span> which he had tried to hide when discovered by the
+Circle Bar men.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then your men didn&#8217;t really see him doin&#8217; the
+brandin&#8217;?&#8221; questioned Watkins.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was forced to admit that they had not. Watkins smiled
+sarcastically.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon you&#8217;re runnin&#8217; a little bit wild,&#8221; he
+remarked. &#8220;Some of your stock has been rebranded an&#8217; you&#8217;re
+chargin&#8217; a certain man with doin&#8217; it&#8211;only you didn&#8217;t see
+him doin&#8217; it.&#8221; He turned to Greasy. &#8220;What you got to say about
+this, Greasy?&#8221; he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Greasy grinned blandly at Hollis. &#8220;This guy&#8217;s talkin&#8217;
+through his hat,&#8221; he sneered. &#8220;I ain&#8217;t allowin&#8217; that I
+branded any of his cattle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Watkins smiled. &#8220;There don&#8217;t seem to be nothin&#8217; to this
+case a-tall&#8211;not a-tall. There ain&#8217;t nobody goin&#8217; to be took
+into custody by me for stealin&#8217; cattle unless they&#8217;re ketched with
+the goods&#8211;an&#8217; that ain&#8217;t been proved so far.&#8221; He turned
+to Hollis. &#8220;You got anything more to say about it?&#8221; he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Only this,&#8221; returned Hollis slowly and evenly, &#8220;I have
+brought this man here. I charge him with stealing my cattle. To use your
+term&#8211;he was caught &#8216;with the goods.&#8217; He is guilty. If you take him
+into custody and bring him to trial I shall have two witnesses there to <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254'></a>254</span> prove what I have
+already told you. If you do not take him into custody, it is perfectly plain
+that you are deliberately shielding him&#8211;that you are making a joke of the
+law.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Watkins&#8217;s face reddened angrily. &#8220;Mebbe I&#8217;m makin&#8217; a
+joke of it&#8213;&#8221; he began.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course we can&#8217;t force you to arrest this man,&#8221; resumed
+Hollis, interrupting Watkins. &#8220;Unfortunately the government has not yet
+awakened to the fact that such men as you are a public menace and danger. I did
+not expect you to arrest him&#8211;I tell you that frankly. I merely brought him
+here to see whether it were true that you were leagued with Dunlavey against the
+other ranchers in the country. You are, of course. Therefore, as we cannot
+secure justice by appealing to you we will be forced to adopt other
+means.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff&#8217;s right hand dropped to his gun-holster. He sneered, his
+lips writhing. &#8220;Mebbe you mean&#8213;&#8221; he began.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t lettin&#8217; this here situation get beyond my
+control,&#8221; came Norton&#8217;s voice, cold and even, as his six-shooter
+came out and was shoved menacingly forward. &#8220;Whatever he means, Watkins,
+he&#8217;s my friend an&#8217; you ain&#8217;t runnin&#8217; in no cold lead
+proposition on him.&#8221; He smiled mirthlessly.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255'></a>255</span>Watkins&#8217;s
+face paled; his right hand fell away from the pistol holster. There was a sound
+at the door; it swung suddenly open and Dunlavey&#8217;s gigantic frame loomed
+massively in the opening.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m looking for Greasy!&#8221; he announced in a soft, silky
+voice, looking around at the four men with a comprehending, appreciative smile.
+&#8220;I was expecting to find him here,&#8221; he added as his gaze sought out
+the prisoner, &#8220;after I heard that he&#8217;d been nabbed by the Circle Bar
+men.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton smiled coldly. &#8220;He&#8217;s here, Bill,&#8221; he said evenly.
+&#8220;He&#8217;s stayin&#8217; here till Mr. Hollis says it&#8217;s time for
+him to go.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He did not move the weapon in his hand, but a certain glint in his eyes told
+Dunlavey that the pistol was not in his hand for mere show. The latter smiled
+knowingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not interfering with the law,&#8221; he said mockingly.
+&#8220;And I certainly ain&#8217;t bucking your game, Norton.&#8221; He turned
+to Watkins, speaking with broad insinuation: &#8220;Of course you are putting a
+charge against Greasy, Watkins?&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>They all caught the sheriff&#8217;s flush; all saw the guilty embarrassment in his
+eyes as he answered that he had not. Dunlavey turned to Hollis with a bland
+smile.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256'></a>256</span>&#8220;Have you
+any objection to allowing Greasy to go now, Mr. Hollis?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis&#8217;s smile was no less bland as his gaze met Dunlavey&#8217;s.
+&#8220;Not the slightest objection, Mr. Dunlavey,&#8221; he returned. &#8220;I
+congratulate you upon the manner in which you have trained your servants!&#8221;
+He ignored Dunlavey and smiled at Norton. &#8220;Mr. Norton,&#8221; he said with
+polite mockery, &#8220;I feel certain that you agree with me that we have no
+wish to contaminate this temple of justice with our presence.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He bowed with mock politeness as he strode to the door and stepped down into
+the street. Norton followed him, grinning, though he did not sheath his weapon
+until he also was in the street.</p>
+
+<p>As they strode away from the door they turned to see Dunlavey looking out
+after them, his face wreathed in a broad smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There is plenty of law in Union County, Mr. Hollis,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;if you know how to handle it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257'></a>257</span><a id='link_20'></a>CHAPTER XX<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE &#8220;KICKER&#8217;S&#8221; CANDIDATE</span></h2>
+
+<p>The next issue of the <i>Kicker</i> contained many things of interest to its
+readers. Now that the drought had been broken, Union County could proceed with
+its business of raising cattle without fear of any future lack of water, with
+plenty of grass, and no losses except those from the usual causes. Dry Bottom
+merchants&#8211;depending upon the cattlemen for their trade&#8211;breathed
+easier and predicted a good year in spite of the drought. Their worries over,
+they had plenty of time&#8211;and inclination&#8211;to discuss the
+<i>Kicker</i>.</p>
+
+<p>More advertisements were appearing in the paper. Dry Bottom merchants were
+beginning to realize that it deserved their support, and with few exceptions
+they openly began to voice their opinions that the editor would &#8220;make
+good.&#8221;&#8217; The advertisements began to take on a livelier tone and the
+Lazette <i>Eagle</i> grew more sarcastic.</p>
+
+<p>When the <i>Kicker</i> appeared following the incident <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_258'></a>258</span> in the sheriff&#8217;s office, there
+was a detailed account of Dunlavey&#8217;s now famous &#8220;ten day
+edict,&#8221; together with some uncomplimentary comments upon the
+latter&#8217;s action. This was signed by Hollis. He called attention to
+Dunlavey&#8217;s selfishness, to the preparations that had been made by him to
+shoot down all the foreign cattle on the Rabbit-Ear. He made no reference to his
+part in the affair&#8211;to his decision to allow the small ranchers to water
+their cattle in the river at the imminent risk of losing his own. But though he
+did not mention this, the small owners and his friends took care that the matter
+received full publicity, with the result that Hollis was kept busy assuring his
+admirers that the incident had been much magnified&#8211;especially his part of
+it. Then his friends applauded his modesty.</p>
+
+<p>In the same issue of the paper was also related the story of Greasy&#8217;s
+capture by the Circle Bar men. But in telling this story Hollis was not so
+modest, for he spoke frankly of his part in it&#8211;how he had refused to allow
+his men to hang the thief, telling his readers that though Greasy deserved
+hanging, he did not purpose to violate the law while advocating it. Following
+the story of the capture was a detailed report of the incident in the
+sheriff&#8217;s office and a scathing commentary <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_259'></a>259</span> upon the subservience of the latter
+official to Dunlavey&#8217;s will. The article was entitled: &#8220;Handling the
+Law,&#8221; and Dunlavey&#8217;s exact words when he stood in the door of the
+sheriff&#8217;s office as Hollis and Norton departed were repeated.</p>
+
+<p>Below this, under the rubric, &#8220;Union County Needs a New Sheriff,&#8221;
+appeared an article that created a sensation. This dwelt upon the necessity of
+the county having a sheriff who would not permit his office to be prostituted by
+any man or influence. The <i>Kicker</i> named a man who would not be bribed or
+cowed and declared that his name would appear on the ballot at the next
+election&#8211;to be held on the first Monday in November. At the end of the
+article he printed the man&#8217;s name&#8211;Ben Allen!</p>
+
+<p>He had made this announcement without authority, and therefore he was not
+surprised, soon after the appearance of the issue containing the article, to see
+Allen&#8217;s tall figure darken the door of the <i>Kicker</i> office while he
+sat at his desk.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Durn your hide!&#8221; cried the latter as he stood in the doorway;
+&#8220;you&#8217;re the biggest disturber in seven states!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; smiled Hollis, motioning Allen to a chair.
+&#8220;Still, you don&#8217;t need to thank me. You see, I have decided to clean
+up this county <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260'></a>260</span> and
+I need some help. I supposed you were interested. Of course you may refuse if
+you like.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Refuse!&#8221; Allen&#8217;s eyes flashed as he took Hollis&#8217;s
+hand and wrung it heartily. &#8220;My boy,&#8221; he declared earnestly,
+&#8220;you couldn&#8217;t have done anything to suit me better. I&#8217;m just
+yearning to take a big hand in this game!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Interesting, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; smiled Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Some,&#8221; returned Allen. He grasped Hollis&#8217;s hand and wrung
+it heartily. &#8220;You&#8217;re a winner and I&#8217;m mighty glad to be able
+to work with you.&#8221; He spoke seriously. &#8220;Do you think there&#8217;s a
+chance for us to beat Dunlavey?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis laughed. &#8220;I flatter myself that a certain editor in this town
+stands rather well with the people of this county since a certain thing
+happened.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You sure do!&#8221; grinned Allen. &#8220;Lordy! how this county has
+needed a man like you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled. &#8220;Then you won&#8217;t object to being the
+<i>Kicker&#8217;s</i> candidate?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Object!&#8221; returned Allen with mock seriousness. &#8220;Say, young
+man, if you don&#8217;t keep my name at the head of your editorial column from
+now till the first Monday in November I&#8217;ll come down here and manhandle
+you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And so it was arranged. Dry Bottom gasped <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_261'></a>261</span> in public but rejoiced in secret. Many of the
+town&#8217;s merchants personally congratulated Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>But for two days following the appearance of the issue of the <i>Kicker</i>
+containing these sensations, Hollis stayed away from Dry Bottom. Now that he had
+launched Allen&#8217;s campaign and placed the other matters before his readers,
+he began to devote some attention to the problem of arranging for Ed
+Hazelton&#8217;s visit to the great Chicago surgeon. Both Nellie and Ed had been
+disappointed because of his continued absence, and when, on an afternoon a few
+days after his activity in Dry Bottom, he rode up to the Hazelton cabin his
+welcome was a cordial one.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It seems like a year since I&#8217;ve seen you!&#8221; declared
+Hazelton as he came down from the porch to lead Hollis&#8217;s pony into the
+shade at the rear of the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>While he was gone with the pony Hollis stood looking up at Nellie, who had
+remained seated in her chair on the porch and who was now regarding him with
+eyes in which shone unconcealed pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It hasn&#8217;t really been so long, you know,&#8221; said Hollis,
+smiling at her. &#8220;But then, I have been so busy that I may not have noticed
+it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Of course she could not tell him how many <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_262'></a>262</span> times she had sat on the porch during Ed&#8217;s
+absences watching the Coyote trail. But she blushed and made room for him on the
+porch. Ed appeared presently and joined them there. The young man was not able
+to conceal his joy over the prospect of his ultimate recovery from the peculiar
+malady that afflicted him, and gratitude mingled with it as he looked at his
+benefactor. He had not recovered from an attack the day before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve got it all arranged,&#8221; he told Hollis with a wan
+smile. &#8220;I&#8217;m going to Chicago just as soon as I can get things
+fixed.&#8221; He reddened with embarrassment as he continued:
+&#8220;There&#8217;s some things that I&#8217;d like to talk to you about before
+I make up my mind when to start,&#8221; he said; &#8220;I&#8217;ve been worrying
+about what to do with my stock while I&#8217;m gone. I wouldn&#8217;t want it to
+stray or be run off by Dunlavey&#8217;s gang.&#8221; The appeal in his eyes did
+not escape Hollis&#8217;s keen observation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have thought of that too,&#8221; smiled the latter. &#8220;In fact,
+I have talked it over with Norton. He tells me that he won&#8217;t have any
+trouble in caring for your stock while you are away.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thanks.&#8221; Hazelton did not trust himself to say more at that
+moment. He knew how great would be the task of caring for his stock <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263'></a>263</span> during his absence, and
+had not Hollis come to his aid with this offer he would have had to give up the
+proposed trip. He sat silent until his composure returned, and then he looked up
+at Hollis gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That will make things much easier for Nellie,&#8221; he said. And
+then, remembering that Hollis knew nothing of his intention to ask him for
+permission to allow Nellie to remain at the Circle Bar during his absence, he
+fell silent again.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Easier?&#8221; inquired Hollis, puzzled. He had supposed that Nellie
+would accompany her brother to Chicago. He did not look at either of the two for
+a time. He had been anticipating a period of lonesomeness and this unexpected
+news came like a bright shaft of light into the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you can&#8217;t allow her to stay at the cabin alone!&#8221; he
+said when Ed did not answer. And then the thought struck him that this peculiar
+silence on Ed&#8217;s part could mean only one thing&#8211;that he and Nellie
+had decided that she was not to accompany him, and that the problem that was now
+confronting them&#8211;since he had told them that his men would care for the
+cattle&#8211;was the girl&#8217;s welfare. He appreciated the situation and
+smiled wisely into the yawning <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_264'></a>264</span> distance. But a deep sympathy made the smile
+grim.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have sometimes wondered how it were possible for a woman to live in
+this country without having close at hand one of her sex with whom to
+gossip,&#8221; he remarked, looking at Ed and deliberately closing an eye at
+him. &#8220;It doesn&#8217;t bother a man so much&#8211;this being alone. If he
+is a drinking man there are the saloons; if a poet he may write wise saws
+concerning the inconstancy of women; he may punch cows, another man&#8217;s
+head&#8211;or run a newspaper. In any case his mind is occupied.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But a woman! Of course it is different with a woman. A woman must
+talk&#8211;she simply can&#8217;t help it. There&#8217;s Mrs. Norton. Only this
+morning I chanced to hear her remark to her lord and master that if he did not
+soon provide her with a companion with whom she might discuss the things which
+are dear to the feminine heart, he might as well make up his mind to requisition
+the mourners. All of which suggests the thought that perhaps it would not be a
+bad idea for Miss Hazelton to bundle up her things and advance on the Circle
+Bar. Thus two ends will be served&#8211;Mrs. Norton will secure her companion
+and Norton will find peace.&#8221; He turned to Nellie. &#8220;Of course if you
+are afraid that the <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_265'></a>265</span> cabin will stray during your absence I could manage
+to ride the Coyote trail each morning and evening&#8211;or you could ride over
+yourself occasionally.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He could tell by the light in her eyes that she was pleased over the
+suggestion. He was sure of it when she smiled at him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you really think that Mrs. Norton would like some one to talk
+to&#8213;&#8221; she began, and then hesitated, her eyes suddenly widening as
+she saw an odd light in his. &#8220;Oh!&#8221; she said, &#8220;it isn&#8217;t
+true about Mrs. Norton wanting to talk. You have guessed that I&#8211;that
+Ed&#8211;wanted me to go&#8213;&#8221; But confusion descended upon her and she
+flushed crimson with embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you think it isn&#8217;t true, why don&#8217;t you ride over to the
+Circle Bar and inquire?&#8221; he smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps I may,&#8221; she replied, looking at him in mock
+defiance.</p>
+
+<p>As a precaution against the carrying out of this threat, Hollis that night
+acquainted Mrs. Norton with the facts in the case, even going so far as to
+inform the lady brazenly that he had deliberately lied about her. But when she
+had been fully informed, she told Hollis that she did not blame him very much,
+and that should Nellie carry out her threat to come to her upon an errand having
+as its object a question of his veracity, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_266'></a>266</span> she would assure the young lady that he had spoken
+the plain truth. Would that be sufficient?</p>
+
+<p>Hollis told her that it would, and the following morning on his way to Dry
+Bottom, he took the Coyote trail and stopped off at the Hazelton cabin, where he
+informed Ed that he had decided to send Weary with him on his trip to
+Chicago.</p>
+
+<p>Nellie spoke a few words to him while he lingered beside the porch, but her
+threat of the night before was not repeated and Hollis rightly guessed that it
+would never be carried out.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267'></a>267</span><a id='link_21'></a>CHAPTER XXI<br /><span class='h2fs'>DUNLAVEY PLAYS A CARD</span></h2>
+
+<p>During the week following Ed Hazelton&#8217;s departure for Chicago Hollis
+did not see much of Nellie. In the few days preceding his departure she had not
+allowed her brother to see how his refusal to allow her to accompany him had
+hurt her, but once he had boarded the east-bound express at Dry Bottom, she had
+yielded to the emotions that she had so far succeeded in concealing. Hollis had
+ridden in to town with them, and not until Nellie and he had seen Ed and Weary
+safely on the train&#8211;indeed, not until the train was well under way and the
+two figures on the back platform could no longer be discerned&#8211;did Nellie
+break down. Then Hollis turned to her with a smile to see the sudden tears well
+up into her eyes. He had not attempted to console her, feeling the awkwardness
+of the situation.</p>
+
+<p>He was much relieved when she refused his offer to make the return trip with
+her, for he was certain that a few hours alone in which to <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_268'></a>268</span> meditate over her loss would enable her
+to regain her composure. But before leaving her he secured her promise not to
+stop at the cabin, but to go on to the Circle Bar. On her arrival at the ranch
+she was to tell Norton to send one of the men to the cabin after the few
+personal effects that she had decided to transfer. But once out of
+Hollis&#8217;s sight Nellie forgot her promise through fear over the safety of
+her things. She took the Coyote trail, riding slowly through the clear sunshine
+of the morning.</p>
+
+<p>After taking leave of Nellie Hollis rode slowly down the street to the
+<i>Kicker</i> office. He looked in through the window and seeing that Potter had
+not yet arrived, continued down to the court house. He talked for a few minutes
+with Judge Graney. Nothing new had developed. Ben Allen had gone to visit
+several small ranchers the day before and had not returned.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis returned to the <i>Kicker</i> office. At noon Potter had arrived,
+bearing the news that he had seen Nellie Hazelton on the Coyote trail, within a
+few miles of the Circle Bar. She had stopped at her cabin and there were several
+bundles strapped to the cantle of her saddle.</p>
+
+<p>That night Hollis did not see her at all. He did not inquire for her, but
+surmised that she was in her room. The next morning soon after <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269'></a>269</span> he had awakened and
+while he still debated the question of arising, he heard her singing in the
+kitchen. He smiled, thinking how quickly she had adapted herself to her new
+surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>At breakfast he looked closely at her several times, searching for evidence
+of her grief of yesterday. There was none. Therefore he was not surprised when,
+after breakfast, she told him that she intended riding with him as far as the
+cabin for the purpose of bringing the remainder of her effects. He gravely
+reminded her that she had broken her promise of yesterday, and that as a
+punishment he contemplated refusing her request. But when, an hour later, he
+urged his pony down the river trail she was riding beside him.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not ride again that week. She did not tell Hollis the reason;
+that returning that evening she had reached the Razor-Back and was riding along
+its crest when she happened to glance across the Rabbit-Ear toward the Circle
+Cross. On the opposite side of the river she had seen two men, sitting quietly
+in their saddles, watching her. They were Dunlavey and Yuma. She did not know
+what their presence there meant, but the sight was disquieting and she feared to
+return to the cabin for the few things that were still here.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270'></a>270</span>But as the days
+went her fears were dispersed. Time and the lure of her old home had revived her
+courage, and on a day about a week following her previous trip, she herself
+saddled and bridled her pony and set out over the Coyote trail toward her
+cabin.</p>
+
+<p>She had not told Hollis of her intention to ride there, fearing that the
+knowledge of what she had seen on the day of the other ride would be revealed in
+her eyes. It was a good hour after noon when she stole out of the house to her
+pony, mounted, and rode away toward the river.</p>
+
+<p>For many days she had been wondering at Dunlavey&#8217;s continued inaction.
+He had been known as an energetic enemy, and though at their last meeting in Dry
+Bottom he had threatened her and her brother, he had so far made no hostile
+move. Uusually he would go a considerable distance out of his way to speak to
+her. Perhaps, she thought, at their last meeting she had shown him that he was
+wasting his time. Yet she could not forget that day when she had seen Yuma and
+Dunlavey on the Circle Cross side of the Rabbit-Ear. The sight somehow had been
+significant and forbidding.</p>
+
+<p>But when she reached her cabin she had forgotten Dunlavey and Yuma; her
+thoughts dwelt upon more pleasant people. Had she <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_271'></a>271</span> done right in allowing Hollis to see
+that she was interested in him? Would he think less of her for revealing this
+interest? She could not answer these questions, but she could answer
+another&#8211;one that brought the blushes to her cheeks. Why had Hollis shown
+an interest in her? She had known this answer for a long time&#8211;when she had
+read Ace&#8217;s poem to him while sitting on the porch beside him, to be
+perfectly accurate. She had pretended then to take offense when he had assured
+her that Ace had succeeded in getting much truth into his lines, especially into
+the first couplet, which ran:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>&#8220;Woman&#8211;she don&#8217;t need no tutor,<br /> Be she school
+ma&#8217;am or biscuit shooter.&#8221;</p> </div><!-- poetry -->
+
+<p>The language had not been graceful, nor the diction, yet she knew that Ace
+had struck the mark fairly, for woman indeed needed no tutor to teach her to
+understand man&#8211;woman had always understood him.</p>
+
+<p>She dismounted from her pony at the edge of the porch, hitching the animal to
+one of the slender porch columns. Then she went into the house to gather up the
+few things that still remained there.</p>
+
+<p>But for a long time after entering the cabin <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_272'></a>272</span> she sat on a chair in the kitchen, sobbing softly,
+for now that Ed had gone she felt the desolation of the country more than ever.
+Presently she rose and with a start looked out of the door. The dusk had fallen;
+darkness was stealing into the valley around the cabin!</p>
+
+<p>Flitting here and there, she hurriedly began packing things which she took
+from shelves and racks. It was an engrossing task and she was much interested in
+it, so much so that she did not hear a slight sound at the door that led out to
+the front porch. But when she saw a shadow darken the doorway of the room in
+which she was working she stood suddenly erect and with rapidly beating heart
+stole softly forward and peered around the door-jamb. Of course it could be no
+one but Hollis. He had taken the Coyote trail to-night. He would be surprised to
+see her.</p>
+
+<p>But it was she who was surprised. Yuma stood near the table in the center of
+the kitchen, looking straight at her, his insolent, evil face drawn into a
+foreboding smile.</p>
+
+<p>After the first gasp of horror and surprise a righteous anger stiffened
+her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What are you doing here?&#8221; she demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Yuma&#8217;s evil smile grew. She had seen him often, usually at a distance,
+for she had abhorred <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_273'></a>273</span> him, with his olive skin, his thin, cruel lips and
+small glittering eyes. He had always seemed like an animal to her, though she
+could not have told why. She thought it must be something in his attitude, in
+the stoop which was almost a crouch, in the stealthy, cat-like manner in which
+he walked. She had spoken to Ed about him more than once, conveying to him her
+abhorrence of the man, and he had told her that he felt the same about him. She
+shuddered now, thinking of what her brother had told her of the man&#8217;s
+cruelty. Dunlavey had often boasted that Yuma was the most venomous and
+bloodthirsty of his crew of cut-throats.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What are you doing here?&#8221; she repeated, her anger growing.</p>
+
+<p>Yuma laughed softly. &#8220;I saw you ridin&#8217; the Razor Back the other
+day,&#8221; he said, showing his teeth as the words came&#8211;even, smooth,
+burdened with a subtle mockery. &#8220;I saw you again thees afternoon&#8211;but
+you not see me like the other day&#8211;I watch you thees long.&#8221; He held
+up three fingers to denote that he had watched her three hours. She shuddered,
+suddenly realizing the significance of his attitude that day she had seen him
+from the Razor Back.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ed gone,&#8221; he continued, watching her narrowly; &#8220;nobody
+here; I come. I like <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_274'></a>274</span> you&#8211;much.&#8221; He grinned, his eyes
+brightening. &#8220;I reckon you know&#8211;you girl that
+understan&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She drew a slow deep breath. Curiously enough, next to the horror and doubt
+that she felt over Yuma&#8217;s presence at the cabin was a wonder for the
+idioms of cowboy speech that were interjected with his own. He had caught them
+from association, she supposed. She made a pretense of boldness, though she felt
+more like screaming.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Leave this cabin!&#8221; she commanded sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Yuma did not change his position. &#8220;Leave heem?&#8221; he laughed.
+&#8220;I theenk not. Dunlavey says me come here&#8211;make um love me&#8211;same
+as tenderfoot noospaper man!&#8221; He laughed again, exultantly.
+&#8220;Dunlavey say you spark tenderfoot&#8211;you spark me!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She trembled, realizing that a crisis was at hand and that she must meet it
+boldly. She thought of the ivory-handled weapon in the holster at her hip and
+involuntarily her right hand dropped to its butt. She had learned to shoot, but
+she had never yet shot at a man and she drew her hand away from the butt of the
+weapon with a shudder. Yuma had been watching her closely, his evil little eyes
+glittering, and when he saw her hand drop away he laughed derisively.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You no shoot heem!&#8221; he said. &#8220;You &#8217;fraid. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275'></a>275</span> Dunlavey say he reckon
+you no shoot&#8211;say you make love to um right away!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He smiled significantly and took a step toward her. She made an involuntary
+step backward and her right hand again sought the butt of the revolver, the left
+closing on the edge of the door that opened into her room. Terror had given her
+courage and as Yuma continued to advance with a soft, cautious, cat-like sliding
+movement, she drew the revolver and presented it, though her hand wavered a
+little.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you take another step toward me, Yuma, I will kill you!&#8221; she
+declared.</p>
+
+<p>She saw his little eyes glitter with decision, saw him measure the distance
+between them, saw him crouch for a spring.</p>
+
+<p>She fired, aiming at the lower edge of the scarf that sagged at his throat.
+The smoke from the pistol blinded her; she heard his laugh, heard the rush of
+his feet as he hurled himself forward. Terror stricken over her failure to hit
+him, she dropped the pistol and whirled, grasping the edge of the door and
+slamming it shut in his face. She felt his weight against it, but he had been
+taken by surprise by the movement; there was the strength of desperation in her
+body and she held the door closed against him while she shoved the fastenings
+into place.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276'></a>276</span>Then, suddenly
+overcome, she leaned weakly against the jamb, her heart thumping hard, her
+nerves tingling.</p>
+
+<p>For a long time she did not move, and there came no sound from the other side
+of the door to tell her of Yuma&#8217;s movements. There was a wild hope in her
+heart that he had gone, but presently, becoming a little calmer, she pressed her
+ear against the door. There was no doubt of Yuma&#8217;s presence; she could
+hear him stepping softly about the room. Had there been a window in the room in
+which she had imprisoned herself she might have escaped, but unfortunately there
+was not.</p>
+
+<p>She fell to thinking of the revolver she had dropped when Yuma had sprung
+upon her. It must have dropped very close to the door. Had Yuma picked it up?
+There was a chance that he had not. If the weapon were still there and she could
+open the door and secure it and close the door again, she would be in a position
+to defend herself. She could not defend herself without it. If Yuma should burst
+the door open she would be at his mercy. She must get the revolver.</p>
+
+<p>Convinced of this she stood for some little time at the door, her ear pressed
+against it, listening for any sound that might tell her of the whereabouts <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277'></a>277</span> of Yuma in the cabin.
+She heard nothing. Perhaps he had gone? But she listened a while longer,
+determined to be certain before loosening the fastenings of the door.
+Silence&#8211;a premonitory silence&#8211;filled the room beyond the door. She
+could hear nothing except her own rapid breathing. Presently she heard a horse
+whinny. Was Yuma at the horses? It seemed incredible that any man should visit
+the cabin purposely to attack her. Perhaps Yuma had only intended to frighten
+her; he had said that Dunlavey had told him to follow her, but she believed that
+Dunlavey, in spite of his reputation for lawlessness and trickery, was not so
+unmanly as to incite the half-breed to attack her. He may have told him to steal
+the horses&#8211;she could believe that of him!</p>
+
+<p>But for a long time, in spite of the quieting influence of these thoughts,
+she kept her ear pressed against the door. Then, moved by a sudden
+impulse&#8211;an accession of courage inspired by the continued
+silence&#8211;she cautiously loosened the fastenings and swung the door slowly
+open.</p>
+
+<p>Her revolver lay close and with a swift movement she reached for it. As her
+fingers grasped its butt she heard a slight sound and Yuma was upon her from
+behind, pinning her arms to her <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_278'></a>278</span> sides. She felt his breath on her neck, heard his
+laugh, exultant and derisive, mocking her. His right hand, gripping hers
+tightly, was slipping slowly down toward the hand that held the revolver. She
+struggled desperately, squirming and twisting in his grasp, silently matching
+her strength against his. Finding this hopeless and feeling his hand gradually
+slipping toward the revolver, she suddenly raised her hand toward her face,
+bringing Yuma&#8217;s hand, still on her arm, with it. Then she dropped her head
+to his arm near the wrist, and sank her teeth savagely into the flesh.</p>
+
+<p>Yuma howled in anguish, loosening his hold momentarily. In an instant she had
+wrenched herself free and had bounded to the center of the room, placing the
+kitchen table between herself and her assailant.</p>
+
+<p>But he was after her with a bound, his little eyes gleaming with a venomous
+expression, his face contorted with passion. She raised the revolver and fired.
+For a breathless instant she thought that she had hit him, for he sank almost to
+the floor. But she saw that it was only a trick for he was up again on the
+instant, a mocking smile on his face and closer than ever. She fired again, and
+when she saw him sink to the floor she pulled the trigger a second time. He had
+been <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279'></a>279</span> very close to
+the table when she fired the last time and before she could press the trigger
+again he had lurched forward under it, raising it on his shoulders and sending
+it crashing down behind him as he confronted her, his evil face close to hers,
+his hands again gripping her arms.</p>
+
+<p>She fought him silently, and together they reeled around the cabin. She bit
+him again, and then in an outburst of savage fury he brutally twisted the arm in
+which she still held the revolver, sending the weapon crashing to the floor.
+While twisting her arm he had been compelled to loosen his grasp of the other
+slightly, and she again wrenched herself free and darted toward the door leading
+to the porch. But he bounded forward, intercepting her, and with a last,
+despairing effort she raised both hands to his face and clawed furiously at his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She heard a savage curse from him, saw the lust of murder in his little,
+glittering eyes, felt his sinewy fingers at her throat. Then objects within the
+cabin swam in a dizzy, blurring circle before her. She heard a
+crash&#8211;seeming to come from a great distance; heard Yuma curse again. And
+then, borne resistlessly forward by the weight of his body, she tumbled to the
+floor in an inert heap.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280'></a>280</span><a id='link_22'></a>CHAPTER XXII<br /><span class='h2fs'>PROOF OF GRATITUDE</span></h2>
+
+<p>Shortly after noon on the same day Hollis, finding work irksome, closed his
+desk with a bang, told Potter that he was going home, mounted his pony, and
+loped the animal out the Dry Bottom trail. He remembered hearing Norton tell one
+of the men that morning that he suspected that several of Ed Hazelton&#8217;s
+cattle were still in the vicinity of the basin near the Hazelton cabin, and he
+determined to ride around that way and try to turn them back toward the Circle
+Bar. It would be recreation for him after a hot morning in the office.</p>
+
+<p>He also remembered another thing that had occurred that morning at the ranch
+house. Mrs. Norton had assured him&#8211;with a sly, eloquent glance at
+him&#8211;that he might do worse than to make arrangements to keep Nellie
+Hazelton at the Circle Bar indefinitely. At the risk of being considered obtuse
+Hollis had ignored the hint, broad though it had been. But Mrs. Norton&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281'></a>281</span> words had shown
+him that Nellie stood high in her estimation and he felt a queer, unaccountable
+elation.</p>
+
+<p>After striking the Dry Bottom trail he took a circuitous route and some time
+later came out upon a high ridge overlooking a basin. There were some cattle
+down there and he made a mental note of the locality so that he would be able to
+tell Norton where to have the men look for the cattle. Then he rode along the
+ridge until he could no longer see the basin. He spent most of the afternoon
+exploring the surrounding country, and then when the dusk began to fall he
+retraced his steps to the ridge upon which he had ridden earlier in the
+afternoon. Something familiar in the shape of the hills near him struck him and
+he halted his pony and smiled. These were the hills that he had seen many times
+from the Hazelton porch. He faced around, certain that if the hills could be
+seen from the porch he would be able to discern the porch from some point on the
+ridge, for he was satisfied that he must be nearly in line with it. He rode back
+and forth a few moments, and then, coming out on a bald spot on the ridge, he
+saw the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>It was about a mile away, snuggled comfortably down in a little basin, with
+some trees and <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282'></a>282</span>
+shrubbery flanking it on both sides. He smiled as he looked at it, and then
+suddenly his face clouded, for he saw two ponies hitched to the porch. His
+forehead wrinkled perplexedly over this. He was certain that Nellie rode the
+same animal each time, because she would not trust any of the others that were
+now with the remuda. One of the horses belonged to her of course, for he could
+see the gay ribbon with which she was accustomed to decorate her animal&#8217;s
+bridle. But to whom did the other horse belong? He gazed steadily toward the
+cabin, searching for signs of life on the porch. But though he could see
+clearly&#8211;even into the shadows from a rambling rose bush that clung to the
+eaves of the roof&#8211;no human figure appeared on the porch.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly Nellie must have a visitor. But who? He was not aware that the
+Hazeltons had made friends with anyone in the neighborhood besides himself and
+the Nortons. He smiled. Probably some cowboy from the Circle Bar had been in the
+vicinity looking for Hazelton&#8217;s cattle, had met Nellie, and had stopped at
+the cabin. He remembered to have heard Norton say that he was sending a man in
+that direction some time that day.</p>
+
+<p>That must be the explanation. But while he sat, debating the propriety of
+riding down to the <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283'></a>283</span>
+cabin to satisfy his curiosity, the sound of a pistol shot floated to his ears
+on the slight breeze that was blowing toward him.</p>
+
+<p>He sat erect, his face paling. Then he smiled again. He had been in the West
+long enough to become acquainted with the cowboy nature and he surmised that
+Nellie&#8217;s visitor was very likely exhibiting his skill with the revolver.
+But he turned his pony and urged it down the sloping side of the ridge, riding
+slowly in the direction of the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>After striking the bottom of the slope he rode cut upon a broad level that
+stretched away for half a mile. He made better time here and had almost covered
+half the width of the plain when two more reports reached his ears. He was close
+enough now to hear them distinctly and it seemed to him that they sounded
+muffled. He halted the pony and sat stiffly in the saddle, his gaze on the
+cabin. Then he saw a thin stream of blue-white smoke issue from the doorway and
+curl lazily upward.</p>
+
+<p>A grave doubt assailed him. No cowboy would be likely to exhibit his skill
+with a weapon in the cabin! Nellie&#8217;s visitor must be an unwelcome one!</p>
+
+<p>The pony felt the sudden spurs and raced like a whirlwind over the remaining
+stretch of plain. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284'></a>284</span>
+Hollis had become suddenly imbued with a suspicion that brought an ashen pallor
+to his face and an awful rage into his heart. He slid his pony down one side of
+a steep arroyo, sent it scrambling up the other side, jumped it over some rocks
+that littered the rise, spurred savagely through a little basin, and reaching
+the edge of the porch, dismounted and bounded to the door.</p>
+
+<p>He saw two figures&#8211;Nellie Hazelton and a man. He saw the man&#8217;s
+fingers gripping the girl&#8217;s throat and the lust of murder surged over and
+blinded him. In the dusk that had fallen he could only dimly see the man&#8217;s
+head and he swung his right fist at it, putting every ounce of his strength into
+the blow. He felt the fist strike, realized that it had glanced, and tried to
+recover for a second blow.</p>
+
+<p>But the terrific swing had carried him off his balance. He whirled clear
+around, slipped, and came down to the floor flat on his face. He was up in an
+instant, however, his brain afire with rage, his muscles tingling with
+eagerness. He did not think of the gun at his hip, for the lust of murder was in
+his soul and he wanted only to hit the man&#8211;to seize him and tear him
+apart&#8211;to crush and smash the vile hands that he had seen at the
+girl&#8217;s throat.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285'></a>285</span>Five feet from
+him, facing him, on his hands and knees and scrambling to rise, was the man. He
+recognized Yuma, and even as he bounded forward the latter gained his feet and
+tugged at his gun-holster. The weapon had not yet cleared the holster when
+Hollis was upon him. He struck again with his right fist and missed, crashing
+against Yuma in his eagerness and carrying him down to the floor with a force
+that shook the cabin. As they fell Hollis felt a sharp, agonizing pain in his
+left wrist, from which the splints had been only recently removed, and the hand
+hung limp at his side, entirely useless.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant after the fall Yuma lay still, breathing heavily. Then he made
+a sudden movement with his right arm and Hollis caught a glint of metal. He
+threw himself at the arm, catching it with his right hand just above the wrist
+and jamming it tight to the floor. Yuma tried to squirm free, failed, and with a
+curse drove his left fist into the side of Hollis&#8217;s face. Again he tried
+to squirm free and during the struggle that followed the hand holding the pistol
+was raised from the floor. Hollis saw it and wrenched desperately at the arm,
+twisting it and dragging it furiously downward to the floor. Yuma shrieked with
+rage and pain as the force of <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_286'></a>286</span> the impact cracked his knuckles and sent the weapon
+clattering ten feet away.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant both men lay silent, panting from their exertions. Then Yuma
+succeeded in getting one leg over Hollis&#8217;s body and one arm around his
+neck. With a quick motion&#8211;successful because of Hollis&#8217;s injured
+wrist&#8211;he turned the latter over on his back. His eyes alight with an
+exultant, malevolent fire, he gripped Hollis&#8217;s throat with one hand and
+drove at his face with the other. A quick movement of the head served to defeat
+Yuma&#8217;s aim and his fist thumped heavily against the floor, bringing a
+grimace of pain to his face. Disregarding his injured wrist, Hollis wrenched
+savagely and succeeded in rolling free of Yuma and reaching his feet. He had
+moved quickly, but the lithe, cat-like half-breed was before him, bounding
+toward the pistol on the floor. He was bending over it, his fingers gripping its
+butt, when Hollis, throwing himself forward bodily, crashed into him and hurled
+him heavily to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>This time Yuma lay face downward, his arms outstretched, and Hollis lay
+sprawled out on top of him. But Yuma had succeeded in holding to the pistol; it
+was grasped in his outstretched right hand, just out of Hollis&#8217;s
+reach.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant again both men lay silent, <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_287'></a>287</span> breathing rapidly. Then, yielding to the rage that
+still possessed him, Hollis bounded to his feet, striking Yuma a crashing blow
+in the face as he did so. While Yuma reeled he brought his booted foot down on
+the hand holding the pistol, grinding it under his heel.</p>
+
+<p>Yuma screamed with pain and rage and got to his feet, holding his injured
+hand with the other. The pistol lay on the floor where Yuma had dropped it when
+Hollis&#8217;s boot had come in contact with his hand. For an instant Yuma stood
+gripping his hand, his face hideous with passion. Then with a snarl of rage and
+hate he drew a knife from the folds of his shirt and sprang toward Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis tensed himself for the clash, rapidly measuring the distance, and when
+Yuma came close enough caught him squarely on the side of the jaw with a vicious
+right swing. But in some manner when Hollis stepped aside to avoid Yuma&#8217;s
+knife, his feet had become entangled with the legs of the table that Yuma had
+previously overturned. As he struck he slipped, the blow at Yuma&#8217;s jaw not
+having the force he intended it to have. He caught himself, slipped again and
+went down, turning completely over the table top and falling face downward to
+the floor. He saw Yuma throw himself forward <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_288'></a>288</span> and he tried to wriggle out of danger, but he
+failed. He felt the half-breed&#8217;s weight on his body, saw the knife flash
+in the dull light. He tried to roll over and grasp the knife in its descent, but
+could not, his left arm, now useless, being pinned to the floor by Yuma&#8217;s
+knee.</p>
+
+<p>A revolver roared spitefully&#8211;once&#8211;twice. Yuma&#8217;s knife
+hissed past Hollis&#8217;s ear and struck the floor, its point sunk deep, its
+handle swaying idly back and forth. Yuma himself&#8211;inert, limp, rolled from
+Hollis&#8217;s back and lay flat on his own, his eyes wide open and staring, two
+huge bullet holes in his forehead. And in the open doorway of the cabin stood
+Ten Spot.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Hollis could not realize his escape. He looked at Yuma and
+then again at Ten Spot. Slowly and painfully he got to his feet, looking around
+at the wreck of the room. Staggering a little, he walked to where Ten Spot
+stood, gripping the latter&#8217;s hand silently, at a loss for words with which
+to thank him.</p>
+
+<p>But apparently Ten Spot did not notice the omission, for he grinned
+broadly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon there&#8217;s folks which would call that a right clever bit
+of shootin&#8217;,&#8221; he said, &#8220;seem&#8217; a? there wasn&#8217;t time
+to pull off no fancy stuff!&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289'></a>289</span><a id='link_23'></a>CHAPTER XXIII<br /><span class='h2fs'>TEN SPOT USES HIS EYES</span></h2>
+
+<p>The crash of Ten Spot&#8217;s pistols aroused Nellie Hazelton, and she sat up
+and stared stupidly about&#8211;at Hollis, who was just rising from the floor;
+at Ten Spot, who still stood in the doorway; and then at Yuma&#8217;s body,
+stretched out on the floor beside the overturned table. She shuddered and
+covered her face with her hands. The next instant Hollis was bending over her,
+helping her to her feet, leading her to the door and assuring her in a low,
+earnest voice that everything was all right, and that Yuma would never trouble
+her again, and that he wanted her to get on her pony and go to the Circle Bar.
+She allowed herself to be led out on the porch, but once there she looked at him
+with renewed spirit.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was you who came first,&#8221; she said; &#8220;I didn&#8217;t see
+you, but I heard Yuma curse, felt something strike him, and then&#8211;I must
+have fainted. You see, I felt it must be you&#8211;I had been expecting
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290'></a>290</span>As she spoke she
+seized his hands and pressed them tightly, her eyes eloquent with thankfulness.
+&#8220;Oh, I am so glad!&#8221; she whispered. Then she saw Ten Spot standing in
+the doorway and she ran over and seized his hands also, shaking them
+hysterically. And Ten Spot stood, red of face, grinning bashfully at
+her&#8211;like a big, awkward, embarrassed schoolboy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the first time I&#8217;ve ever been thanked for
+shootin&#8217; anybody!&#8221; he confided to Hollis, later. &#8220;An&#8217; it
+cert&#8217;nly did feel some strange!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In spite of Hollis&#8217;s remonstrances the girl insisted on returning to
+the interior of the cabin, to &#8220;bundle up her things.&#8221; Feeling the
+futility of further objection, Hollis finally allowed her to enter. But while
+she was busy in one of the rooms he and Ten Spot carried Yuma&#8217;s body
+outside, around to the rear of the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>Then, when the girl had finally secured her &#8220;things&#8221; and they had
+been securely tied to her pony, and she had started down the trail toward the
+Circle Bar ranch, Hollis and Ten Spot returned to the rear of the cabin, took up
+Yuma&#8217;s body, carried it to a secluded spot at some little distance from
+the cabin and there buried it deep and quickly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I want to thank you again,&#8221; said Hollis as he and Ten Spot stood
+on the porch when Hollis <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_291'></a>291</span> was ready to depart; &#8220;it was a great stroke
+of luck that brought you here just when you were needed.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot grinned. &#8220;I don&#8217;t think it was just luck that brought
+me,&#8221; he said; &#8220;though mebbe it was luck that took me into the
+Fashion this morning. Whatever it was, I was in there, an&#8217; I heard
+Dunlavey an&#8217; Yuma cookin&#8217; this here deal. I wasn&#8217;t
+feelin&#8217; entirely ongrateful for the way you&#8217;d treated me after
+you&#8217;d got my gun that day in the <i>Kicker</i> office an&#8217; I
+wasn&#8217;t intendin&#8217; to let happen what Dunlavey wanted to happen. So I
+got out of the Fashion as soon as I could an&#8217; trailed Yuma. I&#8217;ve
+been after him all day, but somehow or other I lost him an&#8217; didn&#8217;t
+find out where he&#8217;d gone till a little while ago&#8211;when I heard a gun
+go off. Then I hit the breeze here&#8211;after Yuma. That&#8217;s all.
+That&#8217;s how I come to get here so lucky.&#8221; He stuck out a hand to
+Hollis. &#8220;Well, so-long,&#8221; he said; &#8220;I&#8217;m hittin&#8217; the
+breeze out of the country.&#8221; He stepped forward to his pony, but hesitated
+when he heard Hollis speak.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then you&#8217;re not going back to the Circle Cross&#8211;to work for
+Dunlavey?&#8221; questioned the latter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, no,&#8221; grinned Ten Spot. &#8220;You see, it might not be so
+pleasant now as it&#8217;s been. I <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_292'></a>292</span> reckon when Dunlavey hears this he won&#8217;t be
+exactly tickled.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis contemplated him gravely. &#8220;So you&#8217;re going to leave the
+country?&#8221; he said slowly, his eyes twinkling. &#8220;I take it you are not
+afraid&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t!&#8221; said Ten Spot coldly and sharply. Then he grinned
+with feline cordiality. &#8220;I reckon I ain&#8217;t scared of anyone,&#8221;
+he said, &#8220;but I ain&#8217;t likin&#8217; to go back to the Circle Cross
+after puttin&#8217; Yuma out of business. I&#8217;ve done some mean things in my
+time, but I ain&#8217;t dealin&#8217; double with no man, an&#8217; I
+couldn&#8217;t go back to the Circle Cross an&#8217; work for Dunlavey when I
+ain&#8217;t sympathizin&#8217; with him none.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m shy of good cowhands,&#8221; offered Hollis quietly.
+&#8220;If forty a month would be&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot&#8217;s right hand was suddenly gripping Hollis&#8217;s.
+&#8220;You&#8217;ve hired a man, boss!&#8221; he said, his eyes alight with
+pleasure. &#8220;Ever since you clawed me that day in the <i>Kicker</i> office
+I&#8217;ve had a hankerin&#8217; to work for you. I was wonder in&#8217; if
+you&#8217;d ast me. There ain&#8217;t no damn&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then it&#8217;s a bargain,&#8221; laughed Hollis, interrupting.
+&#8220;You can start right now.&#8221; He pointed to the ridge upon which he had
+been riding when he heard the shot that had brought him to the cabin.
+&#8220;Some of Ed Hazelton&#8217;s cattle <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_293'></a>293</span> are in the basin on the other side of that
+ridge,&#8221; he said. &#8220;You go over there and keep an eye on them until I
+can get a chance to send some one here to help you drive them back up the river
+toward the Circle Bar.&#8221; As he came to the edge of the porch to mount his
+pony his gaze fell on Yuma&#8217;s horse, still hitched to one of the columns.
+&#8220;What are we going to do with Yuma&#8217;s horse?&#8221; he
+questioned.</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot grinned. He walked over to the pony, unhitched it, and with a
+vicious slap on the flank sent it loping down the trail toward the river.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;ll be my message to Dunlavey that Yuma ain&#8217;t here any
+more,&#8221; he said grimly.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis mounted and rode a short distance, but halted and turned in the saddle
+when he heard Ten Spot call to him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Boss,&#8221; he said with a grin, &#8220;I ain&#8217;t exactly blind,
+an&#8217; mebbe you&#8217;ve got your eyes with you, too. But I saw that there
+Hazelton girl lookin&#8217; at you sorta&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He saw a smile on Hollis&#8217;s face, but the rest of his speech was drowned
+in a clatter of hoofs as the &#8220;boss&#8217;s&#8221; pony tore down the
+Coyote trail. Then Ten Spot smiled, mounted his pony, and rode away toward the
+ridge.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294'></a>294</span><a id='link_24'></a>CHAPTER XXIV<br /><span class='h2fs'>CAMPAIGN GUNS</span></h2>
+
+<p>Of course Yuma had been amply punished for his part in the attack on Nellie
+Hazelton, but there still remained Dunlavey&#8211;who had instigated it. Hollis
+was aware of the uselessness of bringing a charge against Dunlavey&#8211;he had
+not forgotten his experience with Bill Watkins when he had attempted to have
+Greasy brought to justice. He believed that he would not have brought such a
+charge had there been any probability of the sheriff taking action. He felt that
+in inciting Yuma to attack Nellie, Dunlavey had also contemplated a blow at him.
+The man&#8217;s devilish ingenuity appalled him, but it also aroused a fierce
+anger in his heart that, in the absence of a powerful will, would have moved him
+to immediate vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>But he contemplated no immediate action. Besides the attack on Nellie
+Hazelton there was another score to settle with Dunlavey, and when the time came
+for a final accounting he told himself that he would settle both. He knew there
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295'></a>295</span> would come such a
+time. From the beginning he had felt that he and the Circle Cross manager were
+marked by fate for a clash. He was eager for it, but content to wait until the
+appointed time. And he knew that the time was not far distant.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore he remained silent regarding the incident, and except to Norton and
+his wife, Nellie Hazelton, Ten Spot, and himself, the disappearance of Yuma
+remained a mystery.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey, perhaps, might have had his suspicions, but if so he communicated
+them to no one, and so as the days passed the mystery ceased to be discussed and
+Yuma was forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis received a letter from Weary, dated &#8220;Chicago,&#8221; announcing
+the safe arrival of himself and Ed Hazelton. &#8220;Town&#8221; suited him to a
+&#8220;T,&#8221; he wrote. But Doctor Hammond would not operate at once&#8211;he
+wanted time to study the symptoms of Ed&#8217;s malady. That was all. Hollis
+turned this letter over to Nellie, with another from Ed, addressed to
+her&#8211;whose contents remained a mystery to him.</p>
+
+<p>Ben Allen had returned from his visit to the small ranchers in the vicinity,
+had confided to Hollis that he had &#8220;mixed a little politics with
+business,&#8221; and then, after receiving a telegram from the Secretary of the
+Interior, had taken <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_296'></a>296</span> himself off to Santa Fe to confer with the
+governor.</p>
+
+<p>After several days he returned. He entered the <i>Kicker</i> office to greet
+Hollis, his face wreathed in smiles.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve got &#8217;em all stirred up, my boy!&#8221; he declared,
+placing his hand on Hollis&#8217;s shoulder with a resounding
+&#8220;smack&#8221;; &#8220;they&#8217;re goin&#8217; to enforce the little law
+we&#8217;ve got and they&#8217;ve passed some new ones. Here&#8217;s a few!
+First and foremost, cattle stealing is to be considered felony! Penalty, from
+one to twenty years! Next&#8211;free water! Being as the rivers in this
+Territory ain&#8217;t never been sold with what land the government sharks has
+disposed of, any cattleman&#8217;s got the right to water wherever he wants to.
+The governor told me that if it&#8217;s necessary he&#8217;ll send Uncle
+Sam&#8217;s blue coats anywhere in the Territory to enforce that! Third: after a
+man&#8217;s registered his brand he can&#8217;t change it unless he applies to
+the district judge. Them that ain&#8217;t registered their brand ain&#8217;t
+entitled to no protection. I reckon there&#8217;s trouble ahead for any man
+which monkeys with another man&#8217;s brand!</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Say!&#8221; Allen eyed Hollis whimsically; &#8220;that new
+governor&#8217;s all het up over you! Had a copy of the <i>Kicker</i> in front
+of him on his desk <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297'></a>297</span>
+when he was talkin&#8217; to me. Says you&#8217;re a scrapper from the word go,
+an&#8217; that he&#8217;d back you up long as there was a blue coat anywhere in
+the Territory!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Allen&#8217;s speech was ungrammatical, but its message was one of good cheer
+and Hollis&#8217;s eyes brightened. The Law was coming at last! He could not
+help but wonder what Dunlavey&#8217;s feelings would be when he heard of it. For
+himself, he felt as any man must feel who, laboring at a seemingly impossible
+task, endless and thankless, sees in the distance the possible, the end, and the
+plaudits of his friends.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, he could see the end, but the end was not yet. He looked gravely at
+Allen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did you happen to hear when these laws become effective?&#8221; he
+inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;On the first day of October!&#8221; returned Allen, triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled. &#8220;And election day is the third of
+November,&#8221; he said. &#8220;That gives Dunlavey, Watkins and Company a
+month&#8217;s grace&#8211;in case you are elected sheriff.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Allen grinned. &#8220;They can&#8217;t do a heap in a month,&#8221; he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; returned Hollis, &#8220;but in most elections that have
+come under my observation, I have noticed that the winning candidate does not
+assume <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298'></a>298</span> office for
+a considerable time after the election. What is the custom out here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Allen grinned grimly. &#8220;Usually it&#8217;s two weeks,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;but if I&#8217;m elected it will be the next day&#8211;if I have to go
+down to the sheriff&#8217;s office and drag Bill Watkins out by the
+hair!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That belligerent spirit does you credit,&#8221; dryly observed Hollis.
+&#8220;It will afford me great pleasure to participate in the festivities. But
+there is another matter to be thought of&#8211;which we seem to have overlooked.
+Usually before an election there is a primary, or a convention, is there
+not?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There is,&#8221; grinned Allen. &#8220;It&#8217;s to-night, and
+I&#8217;m ready for it!&#8221; His grin expanded to a wide, whimsical smile.
+&#8220;I told you that I&#8217;d been mixing a little politics with
+business,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve done so.&#8221; He got up and
+approached the front window of the office, sweeping a hand toward the street.
+&#8220;If you&#8217;ll just get up and look out here,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;you&#8217;ll see that I ain&#8217;t lying. There&#8217;s some good in
+being an ex-office-holder&#8211;you get experience enough to tell you how to run
+a campaign.&#8221; He bowed to Hollis. &#8220;Now, if you&#8217;ll look close at
+that gang which is mixing palaver in front of the Silver Dollar you&#8217;ll
+mebbe notice that Lemuel Train is in it, an&#8217; Truxton, of the Diamond Dot,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299'></a>299</span> Holcomb, of the
+Star, Yeager, of the Three Diamond, Clark, of the Circle Y, Henningson, of the
+Three Bar, Toban, of the T Down, an&#8217; some more which has come in for the
+racket tonight. Countin&#8217; &#8217;em all&#8211;the punchers which have come
+in with the fellows I have named&#8211;there&#8217;ll be about seventy-five.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217;, say!&#8221; he added, suddenly confronting Hollis and
+grasping him by the shoulder and shaking him playfully and admiringly,
+&#8220;there wouldn&#8217;t a durn one of them have come over here on my
+account. They up an&#8217; told me so when I asked them. Said they&#8217;d
+nothin&#8217; ag&#8217;in me, but they wasn&#8217;t considerin&#8217;
+votin&#8217; at all. But since Hollis wanted me&#8211;well, they&#8217;d come
+over just to show you that they appreciated what you&#8217;d done for
+them!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled. He did not tell Allen that since the appearance of the
+<i>Kicker</i> containing the announcement that he was to be its candidate he had
+written every small rancher in the vicinity, requesting as a personal favor that
+they appear in Dry Bottom on the day of the primary; that these letters had been
+delivered by Ace, and that when the poet returned he had presented Hollis with a
+list containing the name of every rancher who had promised to come, and that
+several days before Hollis had known approximately <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_300'></a>300</span> how many votes Allen would receive at
+the primary. He did not intend that Allen should know this&#8211;or that he had
+been going quietly from one Dry Bottom merchant to another, appealing to them
+for their support. And the earnestness with which many of them had promised had
+convinced him that the primary was to be the beginning of the end for Bill
+Watkins and Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>When he had first come to Dry Bottom it had been universally conceded by the
+town&#8217;s citizens that his differences with Dunlavey and the
+Cattlemen&#8217;s Association were purely personal, and there had been a
+disposition on the part of the citizens to let them fight it out between
+themselves. But of late there had come a change in that sentiment. The change
+had been gradual, beginning with the day when he had told the author of the
+notice that had appeared on the door of the <i>Kicker</i> office not to hold the
+express on his account. But the change had come and it was evident that it was
+to be permanent. It had only been necessary to arouse the government to the
+situation in order to secure intervention. He had hoped to secure this
+intervention without being forced to a hostile clash with the opposition, but
+his first meeting with Dunlavey had spoiled that. Subsequent events had widened
+the breach.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_301'></a>301</span>He was
+satisfied. Let Bill Watkins be defeated for sheriff and Dunlavey was beaten. But
+there was much to be done before that desirable end could be achieved.</p>
+
+<p>Following the custom the primary was to be held in the sheriff&#8217;s
+office. Watkins had issued a proclamation some weeks before; it had appeared on
+the door of the sheriff&#8217;s office&#8211;a written notice, tacked to the
+door&#8211;but it had been removed the same day. Obviously, it was the
+sheriff&#8217;s intention to conduct the primary as quietly as possible, hoping
+no doubt to disarm whatever opposition might develop. But Hollis had been
+apprised of the appearance of the proclamation and had quietly proceeded to
+plant the seed of opposition to Watkins in the minds of his friends.</p>
+
+<p>He had been warned by Judge Graney that Watkins would try to
+&#8220;pack&#8221; the sheriff&#8217;s office with his friends on the night of
+the primary. This had been the usual method employed by Dunlavey when opposition
+to Watkins developed. Drunken, dissolute, dangerous men were usually on hand to
+overawe the opposition; the Judge told of instances in which gunplay had
+developed. But Hollis had determined that Watkins must be beaten.</p>
+
+<p>Allen did not stay long in the <i>Kicker</i> office. Nor, for that matter,
+did Hollis. Once, during <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_302'></a>302</span> the morning, he went down to the court house to
+talk with Judge Graney. Then he returned to the <i>Kicker</i> office and worked
+until noon.</p>
+
+<p>During the morning there had been a surprising influx of visitors. Bronzed
+punchers on dusty, drooping ponies rode down the town&#8217;s one street,
+dropped from their saddles, and sought the saloons. Groups of them swarmed the
+streets and the stores. As Hollis walked down to his office after leaving the
+court house, he was kept busy nodding to friends&#8211;many of whom had become
+such during the later days of the drought. Merchants grinned at him from their
+doorways; Dunlavey&#8217;s friends sneered as he passed or sent ribald jokes
+after him.</p>
+
+<p>At noon he went to the Alhambra for lunch. Almost the first person he saw
+there was Dunlavey. The latter grinned at him mockingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Friends of yours in town to-day,&#8221; he said with a sneer.
+&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ll need them!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His voice had been loud enough for all in the restaurant to hear. Hollis did
+not answer, though he appreciated the significance of Dunlavey&#8217;s words;
+they told him that the Circle Cross manager was aware of the contemplated
+contest and was ready for it.</p>
+
+<p>During the afternoon Dry Bottom presented a decidedly different appearance
+from the day <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303'></a>303</span> when
+Hollis had first viewed it. Animation had succeeded desolation. Perhaps a
+hundred cowponies were hitched to the rails that paralleled the fronts of the
+saloons, the stores, and many of the private dwellings. It was apparent that
+many of the visitors had made the trip to town for the double purpose of voting
+and securing supplies, for mixed with the ponies were numerous wagons of various
+varieties, their owners loading them with boxes and crates. Men swarmed the
+sidewalks; the saloons buzzed.</p>
+
+<p>Toward dusk the volume of noise in the saloons drowned all sound outside.
+Having made their purchases the ranchers who had driven in for supplies and had
+loaded their wagons preparatory to departure found time to join their friends
+and acquaintances over a convivial glass. By the time the kerosene lamps were
+lighted in the saloons revelry reigned. From one saloon issued the shrieking,
+discordant notes of a violin, accompanied by the scuffling of feet; from another
+came laughter and the clinking of glasses; from still another came harsh oaths
+and obscene shouts. In the latter place rose the laughter of women.</p>
+
+<p>Seated at his desk near the front window of the <i>Kicker</i> office Hollis
+gravely watched the scene&#8211;listened to the sounds. In another chair <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304'></a>304</span> sat Potter. There was no
+light in the office; neither man had thought of a light. As the revelry in the
+saloons increased the printer glanced furtively at his chief.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;ll be hell to-night!&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I expect there will be trouble,&#8221; agreed Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>Potter shifted uneasily in his chair, eyeing his employer with a worried
+expression. He was silent for a moment. Then he cleared his throat
+nervously.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you intend to go there&#8211;to the sheriff&#8217;s
+office&#8211;to-night?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis looked quickly at him. &#8220;Of course!&#8221; he said with emphasis.
+&#8220;Why?&#8221; he interrogated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nothing,&#8221; returned Potter; &#8220;only&#8213;&#8221; he
+hesitated and then blurted out: &#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t go if I were you.
+They&#8217;ve been saying that if you do there&#8217;ll be trouble. You know
+what that means.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who has been saying that?&#8221; inquired Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I heard it at noon&#8211;in the Silver Dollar. Some of
+Dunlavey&#8217;s men sat near me and I heard them saying that Watkins was to win
+if they had to put two or three of his chief opponents out of
+business.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have been expecting that,&#8221; returned Hollis. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305'></a>305</span> He said nothing more and
+Potter, having done his duty, felt that he had no business to interfere
+further.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after dark there was a clatter of hoofs outside the <i>Kicker</i>
+office and four men dismounted from their ponies and strode to the office door.
+They were Norton, Ace, Lanky, and Bud. Evidently Hollis had been awaiting their
+coming, for he met them at the door, greeting them with the words:
+&#8220;We&#8217;ll be going at once; it&#8217;s about time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Followed by Potter the five strode rapidly down the street. When they arrived
+at the sheriff&#8217;s office there were a number of men congregated about the
+door. Inside a kerosene lamp flickered on a table that sat in the center of the
+room. Another lamp stood on Watkins&#8217;s desk, and beside the desk sat
+Watkins himself.</p>
+
+<p>Conversation died away as Hollis and his men approached the door and stood in
+the stream of light from the interior. A man stepped out of the shadow of the
+building and approached Hollis, drawing him and Norton aside. It was Allen. The
+latter had lost some of the sprightliness that had marked his manner during his
+conversation with Hollis in the <i>Kicker</i> office that morning&#8211;he was
+again the cool, deliberate, steady-eyed man he had been that day in Judge <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306'></a>306</span> Graney&#8217;s office
+when Hollis had met him the first time.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been waitin&#8217; for you,&#8221; he said;
+&#8220;we&#8217;re goin&#8217; to have a scrumptuous time. Dunlavey&#8217;s
+planning to pack her.&#8221; He swept a hand toward the interior of the office.
+&#8220;But each candidate is to be allowed two witnesses. I&#8217;ve selected
+you two. Dunlavey and Greasy are doing the honors for Watkins. We might just as
+well go inside; we can&#8217;t do anything out here. There won&#8217;t be
+anything done by any of this gang until Dunlavey says the word.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He turned and stepped into the sheriff&#8217;s office, Hollis and Norton
+following.</p>
+
+<p>Watkins looked up and surveyed them with a bland smile as they entered and
+dropped quietly into the several chairs that had been provided.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon she&#8217;s goin&#8217; to be some hot tonight?&#8221;
+significantly remarked Watkins, addressing himself to Allen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Maybe,&#8221; grinned Allen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re goin&#8217; to take a hand in handlin&#8217; the
+Law,&#8221; significantly remarked Norton.</p>
+
+<p>Watkins&#8217;s face reddened. He stared offensively at Hollis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon you&#8217;re a witness, too,&#8221; he said, sneering.
+&#8220;Well,&#8221; he went on as Hollis gravely nodded, &#8220;the law says
+that a witness to the count <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_307'></a>307</span> must be a resident of the county. An&#8217; I
+reckon you ain&#8217;t. You ain&#8217;t been&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He stays,&#8221; interrupted Allen, shortly. &#8220;That&#8217;s
+settled.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Watkins&#8217;s face bloated with a sudden anger, but he wheeled without
+replying and gave his attention to some papers lying on the desk in front of
+him.</p>
+
+<p>For a long time the four sat in silence. Outside arose voices of
+men&#8211;growing in volume. There was a jam around the door; looking out Hollis
+could see the bronzed, grim faces of the punchers as they crowded close, moved
+by a spirit of curiosity. Hollis could hear exclamations of impatience, though
+the majority of the men outside stood in silence, waiting.</p>
+
+<p>Plainly, nothing was to be done until the arrival of Dunlavey. And presently
+he came.</p>
+
+<p>He had not been drinking; he was undeniably sober and self-possessed. As he
+entered the door of the office there was a sudden surge on the part of the
+crowd&#8211;several of the men tried to force their way in behind Dunlavey. But
+he halted on the threshold, scowling back at them and uttering the one word:
+&#8220;Wait!&#8221; The crowd fell back at the command and watched.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey stepped across the room, standing beside Watkins, his rapid glance
+noting the presence <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_308'></a>308</span> of the three members of the opposition. He ignored
+Hollis and Norton, speaking to Allen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So you&#8217;re sure enough going to run?&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; returned Allen. He rose slowly, stepped deliberately
+across the room, closed the door, and stood with his back to it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re all here now,&#8221; he said quietly, &#8220;and I want to
+talk a little. There ain&#8217;t no one going to hear what I&#8217;ve got to say
+but them I&#8217;m going to say it to. I reckon that goes?&#8221; He turned to
+Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey had shown some evidence of surprise over Allen&#8217;s action in
+closing the door, but this immediately gave way to a sneer of mockery. &#8220;I
+reckon you&#8217;ve forgot Greasy,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, I sure have!&#8221; returned Allen evenly. He opened the door a
+trifle and called: &#8220;Greasy!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Evidently Greasy had been waiting at the door, for he immediately came in,
+slouching across the floor and standing beside Watkins and Dunlavey. Allen
+closed the door and adjusted the fastenings carefully. Then he turned again to
+Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now we&#8217;ll proceed to do the talking,&#8221; he said. He walked
+over to the chair that he had <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_309'></a>309</span> previously vacated, dropping carelessly into it and
+leaning comfortably back. His movements had been those of a man unquestionably
+sure of peace. The expression of his eyes, the tones of his voice, his
+deliberation hinted at a desire for a peaceful compromise.</p>
+
+<p>But once seated in his chair a startling change came over him. There was a
+rapid movement at his sides, a mere flash of light, and two heavy six-shooters
+appeared suddenly in his hands and lay there, unaimed, but forbiddingly ready.
+He sat erect, his eyes chilled and glittering, alert, filled with menace.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now,&#8221; he said sharply, &#8220;the first man who peeps above a
+whisper gets his so plenty that he won&#8217;t care a damn who&#8217;s nominated
+for sheriff!&#8221; He spoke to Norton and Hollis without turning his head.
+&#8220;You two get whatever guns them gentlemen happen to have on them, standing
+to one side so&#8217;s I can see to perforate anyone who ain&#8217;t agreeable
+to handing them over.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton rose and approached Dunlavey, while Hollis stepped forward to the
+sheriff and secured the weapon that reposed in a holster at his right hip. He
+did likewise with Greasy. While Norton was relieving Dunlavey of his weapon the
+sheriff opened his lips to speak, his gaze fixed doubtfully on one of
+Allen&#8217;s sixes.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_310'></a>310</span>&#8220;The
+law&#8213;&#8221; he began. But Allen interrupted with a grin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; he said, &#8220;the law didn&#8217;t figure on this. But
+I reckon you heard Big Bill say once that the law could be handled. I&#8217;m
+handling it now. But I reckon that lets you out&#8211;you ain&#8217;t in on this
+and the mourners&#8217;ll be after you to-morrow if you open your trap
+again!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The sheriff swelled with rage, but he closed his lips tightly. When Hollis
+and Norton had completed their search for weapons and had laid the result of
+their search on the table near Allen they sought their chairs.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey had said nothing. He stood beside Watkins&#8217;s desk, still
+self-possessed, the mocking smile still on his face, though into his eyes had
+come a doubting, worried expression. Plainly he had not anticipated such drastic
+action from Allen.</p>
+
+<p>The latter laughed grimly, quietly. &#8220;Sort of unexpected, wasn&#8217;t
+it, Bill?&#8221; he said, addressing Dunlavey. &#8220;It ain&#8217;t just the
+sort of politics that you&#8217;ve been used to. But I&#8217;m kind of used to
+it myself. Had to pull the same game off over in Colfax County when I was
+runnin&#8217; for sheriff the first time. It worked, too, because the folks that
+was mixed up in it knowed I wasn&#8217;t ringing in any bluff.&#8221; He looked
+at Dunlavey <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_311'></a>311</span> with a
+level, steady gaze, his eyes gleaming coldly. &#8220;If you think I&#8217;m
+bluffing now, chirp for some one of your pluguglies to bust into this game.
+I&#8217;d sort of like to let off my campaign guns into your dirty
+gizzard!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had been watching Dunlavey closely. There was no fear in the
+man&#8217;s eyes; even the doubt and worry that had been there had disappeared
+and his expression was now mildly ironical, contrasting oddly with the demeanor
+of Watkins&#8211;who was plainly frightened&#8211;and that of Greasy&#8211;who
+smirked and showed his teeth like some beast at bay and in fear of death. It was
+evident that Dunlavey possessed the spirit of the fighter, that indomitable
+courage which enables a man to face any situation and still retain his presence
+of mind, which permits him to face death unafraid and unyielding. In spite of
+the enmity that had existed between them from the beginning, Hollis had always
+respected Dunlavey for these very qualities, and within the last few minutes
+that respect had grown.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey&#8217;s eyes gleamed as he looked at Allen. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
+think you would try to work any bluff on me, Allen,&#8221; he said quietly.
+&#8220;You&#8217;ve took me by surprise, that&#8217;s a fact. But let&#8217;s
+get down to business. What&#8217;s your game?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon that&#8217;s a sensible way to look at it,&#8221; <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_312'></a>312</span> returned Allen evenly.
+&#8220;That&#8217;s the way I expected you&#8217;d look at it when you begun to
+realize that I was holding some pretty good cards. There ain&#8217;t nothing
+personal in this; I&#8217;m out for a square deal and I&#8217;m going to get it.
+I want you to understand that I&#8217;m running this game to-night and I&#8217;m
+running it square. If I get enough votes I&#8217;m going to be the next sheriff.
+If I don&#8217;t get enough votes Bill Watkins&#8217;ll be it. But the votes are
+going to be real votes. I ain&#8217;t figuring on letting your gang pack in here
+and keep my friends from voting.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to put your hat on this table. Then Norton will open
+the door and let one man come in. That man will vote&#8211;for whoever he
+pleases. Then Mr. Hollis will let him out the back door and Norton will let
+another man in the front. There won&#8217;t be any row. I&#8217;m telling you
+that you and Bill Watkins and Greasy are going to set here and watch the voting.
+I&#8217;m going to stand behind you with one of my guns tucked under your fifth
+rib. If you, or Watkins, or Greasy let out a yawp that can be construed as a
+signal for anyone to bust into the game, or if there&#8217;s anything started by
+your friends which ain&#8217;t your doing, I&#8217;m going to pump six chunks of
+lead into you so fast that they&#8217;ll be playing tag with one another going
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_313'></a>313</span> through. I reckon
+you get me. That ends the palaver.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He arose, snatched Dunlavey&#8217;s hat from his head, placed it on the
+table, and walked behind Dunlavey, standing against the wall.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Open the door!&#8221; he directed, looking at Norton.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_314'></a>314</span><a id='link_25'></a>CHAPTER XXV<br /><span class='h2fs'>HANDLING THE LAW</span></h2>
+
+<p>Norton opened the door a trifle and called &#8220;One man at a time!&#8221;
+There were some hoarse shouts from without&#8211;presumably from
+Dunlavey&#8217;s friends; a chorus of derisive laughter from Allen&#8217;s. Then
+the first man entered.</p>
+
+<p>It was Ace. The poet stood for an instant, blinking at the light, then he
+grinned as his gaze rested on the occupants of the room. He was directed how to
+cast his ballot. He took the piece of paper that was given him by Norton,
+scrawled &#8220;Allen&#8221; across it with a pencil that Norton had previously
+placed on the table, and dropped the paper into Dunlavey&#8217;s hat. Hollis
+opened the rear door for him, but he halted on the threshold, looking back into
+the room with a broad grin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Gawd A&#8217;mighty!&#8221; he said in an awed tone; &#8220;there must
+have been a wad of money blowed in in this here town to-day! Drunks! Man alive
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_315'></a>315</span> there ain&#8217;t
+nothin&#8217; but drunks; the town&#8217;s reelin&#8217; with &#8217;em!
+They&#8217;re layin&#8217; in the street; there&#8217;s a dozen in the Silver
+Dollar an&#8217; that many more in the Fashion&#8211;an&#8217; Gawd knows how
+many more in the other saloons. Their heads is under the tables; they&#8217;re
+hangin&#8217; on the walls an&#8217; clawin&#8217; around in
+spittoons&#8211;gle-or-i-ously, be-ut-i-fully paralyzed!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was suddenly outside, pushed through the door by Hollis, and the door
+closed after him. Hollis glanced furtively at Dunlavey to see that gentleman
+scowl. He thought he saw a questioning glint in Allen&#8217;s eyes as the latter
+looked suddenly at him, but he merely smiled and gave his attention to the next
+man, who was now entering.</p>
+
+<p>The latter proved to be Lemuel Train. He did his voting quietly and grimly.
+But as he went out through the door that Hollis opened for him he growled:
+&#8220;Lordy, what a drunken bunch!&#8221; He looked at Hollis. &#8220;One of
+your men, too,&#8221; he said, grinning slightly. &#8220;I thought you taught
+them better!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis frowned. He knew that Allen would need all his friends; none of them
+could be spared in this crisis. He smiled incredulously. It had been only a
+short time before that his men had accompanied him to the door of the
+sheriff&#8217;s <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_316'></a>316</span>
+office. At that time they were perfectly sober. It would have been impossible
+for any of them&#8211;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; Ten Spot&#8217;s a hummer when he gits started,&#8221; Train
+was saying. &#8220;I&#8217;ve seen him before when he cut loose an&#8217; he
+sure is a holy terror!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then with a word of parting Train was gone, saying that he had done all the
+&#8220;damage&#8221; he could and that he purposed &#8220;hitting&#8221; the
+trail back to his ranch.</p>
+
+<p>He had certainly done some damage to Hollis. The latter&#8217;s mind now
+rioted with all sorts of conjecture and he mechanically did his work of letting
+man after man out through the rear door, scarcely seeing them.</p>
+
+<p>He was aware of an odd expression that had come into Dunlavey&#8217;s eyes at
+the mention of Ten Spot. Had Dunlavey succeeded in bribing Ten Spot to desert
+him? He had left Ten Spot at the Circle Bar, not inviting him to Dry Bottom
+because he felt that the latter would rather not come since he had deserted
+Dunlavey. And Ten Spot had come to town anyway. What did it mean? Did it mean
+that Ten Spot had come to assist Dunlavey in nominating Watkins and defeating
+his new employer?</p>
+
+<p>He frowned again, and for the next few minutes gravely studied
+Dunlavey&#8217;s face. He was <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_317'></a>317</span> sure that the latter&#8217;s manner had changed.
+The mocking smile which had been on his face since his arrival at the
+sheriff&#8217;s office had been superseded by a huge grin&#8211;plainly of
+anticipation. Ten Spot&#8211;dangerous, reckless, drunk, at the head of a number
+of dissolute men, had it in his power to make things decidedly interesting
+should he advance on the sheriff&#8217;s office with the intention of assisting
+Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>Several times since hiring Ten Spot Hollis had doubted him. The suspicion had
+assailed him that perhaps the appearance of Ten Spot at the Hazelton cabin so
+opportunely had been a part of a plot by Dunlavey to place a spy in his employ.
+They might have purposely sacrificed Yuma.</p>
+
+<p>During the next quarter of an hour he gave more attention to Dunlavey than to
+the steady stream of men that passed through the room, though he recognized a
+goodly number as friends he had made during the latter days of the drought.</p>
+
+<p>Allen&#8217;s spirits had risen during the last quarter of an hour. His
+maneuver had dissipated Dunlavey&#8217;s strength and it was plain to be seen
+that a majority of the votes cast were for him. If nothing unusual or unexpected
+happened within the next hour, or until nine o&#8217;clock, the hour <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_318'></a>318</span> named in Watkins&#8217;s
+proclamation for the closing of the polls, he was assured of victory.</p>
+
+<p>Thoughts of the same character were passing through Hollis&#8217;s mind.
+There was silence in the office. A man was voting at the table&#8211;writing his
+favorite&#8217;s name on a piece of paper. Hollis consulted his watch. It lacked
+over an hour of the time for closing. The man at the table finished writing and
+tossed the paper into the hat. Hollis opened the rear door to allow him to go
+out. While the door remained open a sound floated in, which they all
+heard&#8211;an ear-splitting screech, followed instantly by a chorus of yells, a
+pistol report, more yells, and then a number of reports.</p>
+
+<p>Norton did not open the door. He exchanged glances with Hollis and Allen.
+Dunlavey grinned widely.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Something&#8217;s coming,&#8221; remarked Allen grimly.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey&#8217;s grin grew derisive. &#8220;It would sure be too bad if my
+friends should bust up this peace meeting,&#8221; he sneered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There won&#8217;t be nothin&#8217; spoiled,&#8221; grimly assured
+Allen. But he drew his other six-shooter.</p>
+
+<p>The sounds outside grew in volume as they swept toward the sheriff&#8217;s
+office. They broke presently at the door and an ominous silence succeeded. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_319'></a>319</span> Then a voice reached the
+interior&#8211;harsh authoritative&#8211;Ten Spot&#8217;s voice.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Open up, you damned shorthorns!&#8221; it said.</p>
+
+<p>Norton looked at Allen. The latter&#8217;s face was pale. &#8220;They come
+in,&#8221; he directed, &#8220;like the others&#8211;one at a time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Norton carefully withdrew the bar with which the door was fastened, swinging
+it open slightly. As he did so there was a sudden rush of bodies; Norton tried
+to jam the door shut, failed, and was flung back several steps by the surging,
+yelling crowd that piled tumultuously into the room.</p>
+
+<p>There were perhaps twenty of them and as they surged into the room, shouting
+and cursing and laughing Hollis recognized among them many men that he had come
+to know by sight. They were of the reckless, lawless element upon which Dunlavey
+had relied for his support&#8211;men of Ten Spot&#8217;s character. They had
+been drinking, but in spite of their laughter and loud talking it was plain to
+be seen that they had determined not to be balked in the purpose which had
+brought them into the office.</p>
+
+<p>There was now no need to guard the door; the damage had been wrought, and
+Norton backed away, leaving the door ajar, pale, grim eyed, alert, ready to take
+an active part in the trouble which he felt certain was sure to develop.
+Something <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_320'></a>320</span> in the
+faces of the men who had come in with Ten Spot proclaimed trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Allen had not moved. He still stood behind Dunlavey, but his weapons no
+longer menaced the Circle Cross manager; their muzzles, level and forbidding,
+were covering the other men.</p>
+
+<p>Standing quietly beside the rear door, his face pale, his eyes bright, his
+lips in straight lines, Hollis watched closely as the visitors, having gained
+entrance, gathered together in the center of the room. They were not awed by
+Allen&#8217;s weapons; they grinned hugely at him. One man, a young man of about
+Hollis&#8217;s age, bronzed, lean, reckless of eye, and unmistakably under the
+influence of liquor, lunged forward to Allen and stood within arm&#8217;s length
+of him, grinning at him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Two guns!&#8221; he said with a laugh. &#8220;Why, I reckon
+you&#8217;d make a hell of a sheriff!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A chorus of laughter greeted the young cowboy&#8217;s words. Dunlavey grinned
+widely. &#8220;You boys are just in time,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>There was another roar of laughter. Many of the men seemed only now to have
+become aware of Dunlavey&#8217;s presence and they surged forward around him,
+disregarding Allen&#8217;s guns. The latter seemed to realize that the situation
+had passed beyond his control, for catching Hollis&#8217;s <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_321'></a>321</span> eye he smiled grimly and sheathed his
+weapons, seeking Hollis&#8217;s side.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s no use,&#8221; he said shortly to Hollis as he came near;
+&#8220;they&#8217;ll run things to suit themselves now. I wasn&#8217;t
+expectin&#8217; Ten Spot to butt into the game.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon they&#8217;ve got us.&#8221; Norton had also sought
+Hollis&#8217;s side and the three stood near the rear door, watching the crowd
+around Dunlavey. Hollis tried to catch Ten Spot&#8217;s gaze but
+failed&#8211;the latter seemed studiously to avoid him.</p>
+
+<p>A wave of dull anger surged through Hollis&#8217;s veins. Until now the
+contest had been conducted fairly; they had given Dunlavey and Watkins an honest
+election, even though they had found it necessary to eliminate them as active
+participants. From now on he was assured the contest would be a
+joke&#8211;though a grim one. He had depended upon Allen&#8217;s
+success&#8211;it meant much to him. The thought of failure just when victory was
+within his grasp aroused him and in spite of Norton&#8217;s low word of caution
+he stepped forward and stood beside the table on which reposed the hat into
+which the ballots had been placed by the men who had previously voted. He
+intended to take personal charge of the hat, determined upon securing a fair
+deal in spite of the great odds.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_322'></a>322</span>As he stepped
+forward he saw Greasy grin maliciously and try to snatch a gun from the holster
+of a cowboy who stood near him. This attempt was frustrated by the puncher, who
+suddenly dropped his hand to his holster, where it closed upon Greasy&#8217;s.
+The puncher snarled, muttered profanely, and struck furiously at Greasy,
+knocking him down in a corner.</p>
+
+<p>Other men moved. There were curses; the flashing of metal as guns came out.
+Hollis felt rather than saw Norton and Allen advance toward the table and stand
+beside him. A grim smile wreathed his face over the knowledge that in the crowd
+there were at least two men upon whom he might depend to the end&#8211;whatever
+the end might be.</p>
+
+<p>He heard Dunlavey snarl an oath, saw his big form loom out of the crowd, saw
+one of his gigantic hands reach for the hat on the table.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon I&#8217;ll take charge of this now!&#8221; he sneered, his
+brutal face close to Hollis&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis would have struck the face that was so close to his, but at the
+instant he saw Dunlavey&#8217;s hand reach out for the hat he saw another hand
+dart out from the other side of the table, seize the hat, and draw it out of
+Dunlavey&#8217;s reach.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t reckon that you&#8217;ll take charge of her!&#8221; said
+a voice.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_323'></a>323</span>Hollis turned
+quickly. Over the table leaned Ten Spot, the captured hat in his hand, a big
+forty-five in the other, a cold, evil glitter in his eyes as he looked up at
+Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t reckon that you&#8217;re goin&#8217; to have a hand in
+runnin&#8217; this show a-tall, Bill,&#8221; he sneered. &#8220;Me an&#8217; my
+friends come down here special to tend to that.&#8221; He grinned the shallow,
+hard grin that marks the passing of a friendship and the dawn of a bitter
+hatred. &#8220;You see, Bill, me an&#8217; my friends has got sorta tired of the
+way you&#8217;ve been runnin&#8217; things an&#8217; we&#8217;re shufflin&#8217;
+the cards for a new deal. This here tenderfoot which you&#8217;ve been
+a-slanderin&#8217; shameful is man&#8217;s size an&#8217; we&#8217;re
+seein&#8217; that he gits a fair shake in this here. I reckon you git
+me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis felt Norton poking him in the ribs, but he did not turn; he was too
+intent upon watching the two principal actors in the scene. Tragedy had been
+imminent; comedy was slowly gaining the ascendency. For at the expression that
+had come over Dunlavey&#8217;s face several of the men were grinning broadly.
+Were the stakes not so great Hollis would have felt like smiling himself.
+Dunlavey seemed stunned. He stood erect, passing his hand over his forehead as
+though half convinced that the scene were an illusion and that the movement of
+the hand would dispel it. Several <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_324'></a>324</span> times his lips moved, but no words came and he
+turned, looking about at the men who were gathered around him, scanning their
+faces for signs that would tell him that they were not in sympathy with Ten
+Spot. But the faces that he looked upon wore mocking grins and sneers.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; I&#8217;ve been tellin&#8217; the boys how you set Yuma on
+Nellie Hazelton, an&#8217; they&#8217;ve come to the conclusion that a guy which
+will play a low down mean game like that on a woman ain&#8217;t no fit guy to
+have no hand in any law makin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ten Spot&#8217;s voice fell coldly and metallically in the silence of the
+room. Slowly recovering from the shock Dunlavey attempted a sneer, which
+gradually faded into a mirthless smile as Ten Spot continued:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; you ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to have a hand in any more
+law-makin&#8217; in this man&#8217;s town. Me an&#8217; my friends is
+goin&#8217; to see to that, an&#8217; my boss, Mr. Hollis. I reckon
+that&#8217;ll be about all. You don&#8217;t need to hang around here while we do
+the rest of the votin&#8217;. Watkins an&#8217; Greasy c&#8217;n stay to see
+that everything goes on regular.&#8221; He grinned wickedly as Dunlavey
+stiffened. &#8220;I reckon you know me, Bill. I ain&#8217;t palaverin&#8217;
+none. You an&#8217; Ten Spot is quits!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He stepped back a little, away from the table, his teeth showing in a mocking
+grin. Then he <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_325'></a>325</span>
+looked down at the hat which he still held in his hand&#8211;Dunlavey&#8217;s
+hat. He laughed. &#8220;Why, I&#8217;m cert&#8217;nly impolite!&#8221; he said
+insinuatingly. &#8220;Here you&#8217;ve been wantin&#8217; to go an&#8217;
+I&#8217;ve been keepin&#8217; your hat!&#8221; He dumped the ballots upon the
+table and passed the hat to Dunlavey. Without a word Dunlavey took it, jerking
+it savagely, placed it on his head, and strode to the door, stepping down into
+the street.</p>
+
+<p>There was a short silence. Then Ten Spot turned and looked at Hollis, his
+face wreathed in a broad grin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon you-all think you know somethin&#8217; about handlin&#8217;
+the law,&#8221; he said, &#8220;but your little Ten Spot ain&#8217;t exactly the
+measliest card in the deck! We&#8217;ll do our votin&#8217; now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A quarter of an hour later, after Ten Spot and his friends had cast their
+ballots and Watkins had been forced to make out a certificate of
+nomination,&#8211;which reposed safely in Ben Allen&#8217;s inside
+pocket&#8211;the kerosene lights were extinguished and the men filed out. Hollis
+and Ten Spot were the last to leave. As they stood for a moment on the threshold
+of the doorway Hollis seized Ten Spot&#8217;s hand and gripped it heartily.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I want to thank you, my friend,&#8221; he said earnestly.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_326'></a>326</span>Ten Spot jerked
+his hand away. &#8220;Aw, hell!&#8221; he said as they sought the darkness of
+the street, &#8220;I ain&#8217;t mushin&#8217; none. But,&#8221; he added, as a
+concession to his feelings, &#8220;I reckon to know a white man when I see
+one!&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_327'></a>327</span><a id='link_26'></a>CHAPTER XXVI<br /><span class='h2fs'>AUTUMN AND THE GODS</span></h2>
+
+<p>It was Sunday afternoon and a hazy, golden, late September sun was swimming
+lazily in the blue arc of sky, flooding the lower gallery of the Circle Bar
+ranchhouse, but not reaching a secluded nook in which sat Hollis and Nellie
+Hazelton. Mrs. Norton was somewhere in the house and Norton had gone down to the
+bunkhouse for a talk with the men&#8211;Hollis and Nellie could see him, sitting
+on a bench in the shade of the eaves, the other men gathered about him.</p>
+
+<p>Below the broad level that stretched away from the ranchhouse sank the big
+basin, sweeping away to the mountains. Miles into the distance the Circle Bar
+cattle could be seen&#8211;moving dots in the center of a great, green bowl. To
+the right Razor-Back ridge loomed its bald crest upward with no verdure saving
+the fringe of shrubbery at its base; to the left stretched a vast plain that met
+the distant horizon that stretched an <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_328'></a>328</span> interminable distance behind the cottonwood. Except
+for the moving dots there was a total absence of life and movement in the big
+basin. It spread in its wide, gradual, downward slope, bathed in the yellow
+sunshine of the new, mellow season, peacefully slumberous, infinitely
+beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>Many times had Hollis sat in the gallery watching it, his eyes glistening,
+his soul stirred to awe. Long since had he ceased regretting the glittering
+tinsel of the cities of his recollection; they seemed artificial, unreal. When
+he had first gazed out over the basin he had been oppressed with a sensation of
+uneasiness. Its vastness had appalled him, its silence had aroused in him that
+vague disquiet which is akin to fear. But these emotions had passed. He still
+felt awed&#8211;he would always feel it, for it seemed that here he was looking
+upon a section of the world in its primitive state; that in forming this world
+the creator had been in his noblest mood&#8211;so far did the lofty mountains,
+the wide, sweeping valleys, the towering buttes, and the mighty canyons dwarf
+the flat hills and the puny shallows of the land he had known. But he was no
+longer appalled; disquietude had been superseded by love.</p>
+
+<p>It all seemed to hold some mystery for him&#8211;an <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_329'></a>329</span> alluring, soul-stirring mystery. The
+tawny mountains, immutable guardians of the basin, whose peaks rose somberly in
+the twilight glow&#8211;did they hold it? Or was it hidden in the basin, in the
+great, green sweep that basked in the eternal sunlight?</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps there was no mystery. Perhaps he felt merely the romance that would
+inevitably come to one who deeply appreciated the beauty of a land into which he
+had come so unwillingly? For romance was here.</p>
+
+<p>He turned his head slightly and looked at the girl who sat beside him. She
+also was looking out over the basin, her eyes filled with a light that thrilled
+him. He studied her face long, noting the regular features, the slight tan,
+through which shone the dusky bloom of perfect health; the golden brown hair,
+with the wind-blown wisps straggling over her temples; he felt the
+unaccountable, indefinable something that told him of her inborn innocence and
+purity&#8211;qualities that he had worshiped ever since he had been old enough
+to know the difference between right and wrong.</p>
+
+<p>A deep respect moved him, a reverent smile wreathed his lips. Motherly? Yes,
+that world-thrilling word aptly described her. And as he continued to look at
+her he realized that this <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_330'></a>330</span> world held no mystery for him beyond that which was
+enthroned in the heart of the girl who sat beside him, unconscious of his
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>He turned again toward the basin. He did not want to uncover the
+mystery&#8211;yet. There were still several things to be done before he would
+feel free to speak the words that he had meditated upon for some weeks.
+Meanwhile&#8211;if the gods were with him&#8211;the solving of the mystery would
+be the more enjoyable.</p>
+
+<p>Two weeks of inaction had followed the primary incident. Several of Ten
+Spot&#8217;s friends were now in his employ; in spite of the drought the Circle
+Bar had so far experienced a very prosperous season, and, though the addition of
+the men represented quite an item of expense, he felt that it was much better to
+employ them than to allow them to be re-engaged by Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>He had been able to save considerable money. This he had transferred to a
+bank in Santa Fe, for he had determined to stay in the West. He had told his
+mother of this decision and had asked her to come, but she had written that she
+preferred to remain East for a time&#8211;at least until the following
+spring.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was satisfied. Affairs were progressing beyond his anticipations.
+Dunlavey&#8217;s influence <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_331'></a>331</span> in the county had received a mighty blow in the
+defeat of Watkins at the primary; he had received notice of the enactment of
+several new laws that would appreciably assist him in his fight; he had
+succeeded in winning many friends because of his attitude on the water question;
+the increased number of advertisements appearing in the <i>Kicker</i> would soon
+necessitate the addition of an extra sheet. It all presaged prosperity. Yes, he
+was satisfied. And yet&#8211;</p>
+
+<p>He turned again and looked at the girl. This time he caught her watching him.
+Evidently she had been watching him for a long time for her gaze was fixed and
+meditative, as though she had been studying him. She started and blushed when he
+turned and caught her, looking down in sudden and complete confusion. But she
+looked up again instantly, meeting his gaze steadily, her lips in a frank
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You have been thinking of this country,&#8221; she said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You have guessed it,&#8221; he returned gravely and gently; &#8220;I
+have been thinking of this country&#8211;and its people.&#8221; He smiled at
+her, his eyes shining with a light that caused hers to waver and droop.
+&#8220;But how did you discover that?&#8221; he questioned. &#8220;I was not
+aware that I had been speaking my thoughts.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_332'></a>332</span>&#8220;Do you
+think it is always necessary to speak?&#8221; she answered, looking at him with
+a quiet smile. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you think there are times when one&#8217;s
+thoughts find expression in one&#8217;s eyes? When we can not conceal
+them&#8211;no matter how hard we try? I know that you were thinking of the
+country,&#8221; she went on earnestly, &#8220;because a few moments ago I had
+been thinking of it too and I know that my emotions were exactly the same as
+those expressed in your eyes. It is magnificent, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; she said
+in an awed, eager voice. &#8220;It is so big, so mighty, so soul-stirring. It
+allures with its vastness, it dazzles with its beauty; it makes one feel closer
+to the Creator, even while pressing home a disquieting sense of one&#8217;s own
+insignificance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;For instance,&#8221; she went on, her eyes large and luminous, a new,
+quiet color coming into her face &#8220;there are times when our tasks seem
+stupendous, when we are filled with an overpowering consciousness of the
+importance of them; when we feel that we are carrying such a burden that the
+addition of another would make the load too heavy. Then we look upon God&#8217;s
+work and immediately a still, small voice within us cries: &#8216;What have ye done in
+comparison to this?&#8217; And what have we done?&#8221; she suddenly
+demanded.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_333'></a>333</span>&#8220;Nothing,&#8221; he returned gravely, awed by
+this fleeting illuminating glimpse into her soul.</p>
+
+<p>She leaned back into her chair with a smile. &#8220;Those were the things I
+was thinking about. And you, too, were thinking of them,&#8221; she added.
+&#8220;Now, don&#8217;t deny it!&#8221; she warned, &#8220;for I saw it in your
+eyes!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No!&#8221; he said with a quick smile; &#8220;I don&#8217;t deny it.
+But I was thinking of the people also.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, the people!&#8221; she said with a frown.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps I should have said &#8216;person,&#8217;&#8221; he modified with a
+quick glance at her, under which her eyes drooped in swift confusion&#8211;as
+they had drooped on another occasion which he remembered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; she said merely.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have been comparing this person to God&#8217;s other works,&#8221;
+he said, a light in his eyes which told that the former decision to postpone an
+attempt to uncover the mystery had been ruthlessly put aside, &#8220;and I have
+come to the conclusion that in spite of the infinite care he took in forming the
+beautiful world out yonder he did not neglect this person to whom I
+refer.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes met his in a glance of swift comprehension. She drew a slow, deep
+breath and averted her face, which was now crimson.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;As you have been able to illustrate man&#8217;s <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_334'></a>334</span> insignificance in comparison to
+God&#8217;s mighty creations, so has my own inferiority been forced upon me by
+my attempting to compare myself to the sweet character of the person of whom I
+speak,&#8221; said Hollis, his voice low and earnest. &#8220;It has been a
+question whether&#8211;when I speak to her of a thing which has been on my mind
+for many days&#8211;she could not with justice paraphrase the question asked by
+the still, small voice and say: What have you done to deserve this? And I should
+have to reply&#8211;nothing.&#8221; He had moved closer to her, leaning forward
+to look into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She sat very still, her gaze on the basin. &#8220;Perhaps this very estimable
+person holds other views?&#8221; she returned, with a flash of mischief in her
+eyes. She turned suddenly and looked straight at him, meeting his gaze
+unwaveringly, a demure smile on her face. &#8220;I told you that sometimes a
+person&#8217;s thoughts were expressed in their eyes,&#8221; she said&#8211;and
+now her lashes flickered&#8211;&#8220;perhaps you can tell what my thoughts
+are?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was a challenge, a defiance, and an unconditional surrender. Like a flash
+one of Hollis&#8217;s arms went out&#8211;she was drawn, vainly protesting,
+toward him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You haven&#8217;t answered,&#8221; she laughed, in a <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_335'></a>335</span> smothered voice;
+&#8220;you are not certain&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She did not finish the sentence. Mrs. Norton, coming to the door for a breath
+of fresh air, halted on the threshold, looked, smiled, and then
+quietly&#8211;very quietly&#8211;slipped back into the house.</p>
+
+<p>Away out over the basin a Mexican eagle circled, winging his slow way through
+the golden sunshine of the afternoon. Miles away the mountain peaks rose
+somberly, a mysterious, golden halo rising slowly above them. Perhaps there
+would always be mystery in the mountains, but a certain mystery that had
+troubled Hollis mightily had been successfully solved. The gods had favored
+him.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_336'></a>336</span><a id='link_27'></a>CHAPTER XXVII<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE SEAR AND YELLOW DAYS</span></h2>
+
+<p>&#8220;This here town,&#8221;&#8211;read a letter that Hollis received from
+Weary late in September&#8211;&#8220;aint fit for no man to live in which thinks
+anythink of hisself, in the first place theres two many folks here which dont
+seem to know what to do with themselves they just keep millin around an actin
+like they was ready to stampead any time. In the 2nd place im runnin shy of dust
+an id admire for to receave about a months pay which i wont charge two you bein
+as ive already spent more then i ought two its a good thing i got a return
+ticket or id be in a hell of a fix when i got ready to come back last nite the
+doctor at the hospittle said hed operate on ed today which hes already done this
+mornin an eds restin easy though the doc dont know whether hes goin to git well
+or not but hes hopin an ile let you know by telegraph if he gits any worse which
+is all for this time.</p>
+
+<p>P. S. say boss dont forgit to hustel that coin <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_337'></a>337</span> ile shure make it right with you i
+forgot to tell you that i got cleaned out by a card sharper here i would have
+tore him apart but about a million sheriffs piled onto me an i dident have no
+chancst what in hell does any town need with so many sheriffs.</p>
+
+<p class='tar'>&#8220;Weary.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;P. S. id like to be home for the round-up but reckon i wont make
+it.</p>
+
+<p class='tar'>&#8220;Weary.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Nellie Hazelton did not see this letter, though Hollis told her that Ed had
+been operated on and that he was doing as well as could be expected. And the
+telegraph that night flashed Weary&#8217;s &#8220;coin&#8221; to him.</p>
+
+<p>The days passed all too quickly now, for the time for the fall round-up was
+at hand and Hollis realized with regret that his daily rides&#8211;with Nellie
+Hazelton as a companion&#8211;must soon be discontinued.</p>
+
+<p>The nights had already grown cool; snow had appeared on the mountain peaks;
+the basin was no longer a great green bowl, but resembled a mammoth, concave
+palette upon which nature had mixed her colors&#8211;yellow and gold and brown,
+with here and there a blotch of red and purple, a dash of green,&#8211;lingering
+over the season&#8211;and great, wide stretches of gray. The <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_338'></a>338</span> barren spots seemed to
+grow more barren&#8211;mocked by the scarlet blossoms of the cactus that seemed
+to be everlasting, and the fringing, yellow soap weed, hardy, defying the
+advancing winter. Razor-Back ridge was a desolate place. Never attractive, it
+reared aloft barren and somber, frowning down upon its fringe of shrubbery the
+latter stripped of its leaves, its scant beauty gone and bending its bare
+branches stubbornly to the early winds.</p>
+
+<p>With the last day of the month came a rain&#8211;a cold, bitter, driving
+storm that raged for three days and started a drift that the cattlemen could not
+stop. Arrayed in tarpaulins the cowboys went forth, suffering, cursing, laboring
+heroically to stem the tide. The cattle retreated steadily before the
+storm&#8211;no human agency could halt them. On the second day Norton came into
+the Circle Bar ranchhouse, wet, disgusted, but fighting mad.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If this damn rain don&#8217;t stop pretty soon,&#8221; he told Hollis
+as he dried himself before the open fireplace, &#8220;we&#8217;ll have cattle
+down here from over the Colorado line. An&#8217; then there&#8217;ll be hell to
+pay!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But on the third day the rain ceased and the sun came out. The country lay
+smiling in the sunshine, mellow, glistening, inviting. But the <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_339'></a>339</span> damage had been wrought.
+From Lemuel Train of the Pig Pen outfit, came word that fifty per cent of his
+cattle were missing. Truxton of the Diamond Dot, Henningson of the Three Bar,
+and nearly all of the other small owners, reported losses. Of course the cattle
+would be recovered during the fall round up, but they were now scattered and
+fair prey for cattle thieves, and with the round up still two weeks away it
+seemed that many must be stolen.</p>
+
+<p>Yet there was nothing that could be done; it is folly to attempt to
+&#8220;cut out&#8221; cattle on the open range.</p>
+
+<p>From the editorial columns of the <i>Kicker</i> might be gleaned the fact
+that the Law had come into Union County. Many men of Dry Bottom entered the
+<i>Kicker</i> office to thank Hollis; others boldly draped their houses with
+flags and bunting.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey had visited Dry Bottom twice since the incident of the primary. He
+had said nothing concerning the incident to anyone save possibly his intimates,
+but from the sneer that appeared on his face when approached by those whom he
+considered friendly to Hollis it was plain that he intended continuing the
+fight.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had been compelled to record in the <i>Kicker</i> the unpleasant news
+that Dunlavey had <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_340'></a>340</span>
+refused to comply with the new law regulating brands and the submitting of lists
+for taxation, and also that he had threatened to shoot the first officer
+trespassed on his land. Dunlavey had not complied with the law, but he had
+failed to carry out his threat to &#8220;shoot the first officer that trespassed
+on his land,&#8221; for Allen had trespassed several times, openly and boldly.
+Moreover, Dunlavey had seen him, had even spoken to him, but had offered no
+violence.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps in a calmer mood Dunlavey had decided not to use his weapon; perhaps
+there was something about the quiet, cool, and deliberate Allen which convinced
+Dunlavey that the former might be able to give a good account of himself in the
+event of trouble. At any rate several times Allen had ridden the Circle Cross
+range unmolested by either Dunlavey or his men. He explored the farthest limits
+of the Circle Cross property, tallying the cattle, nosing around the corrals,
+examining brands, and doing sundry other things not calculated to allay
+Dunlavey&#8217;s anger over this new and odd condition of affairs.</p>
+
+<p>Then one day he failed to visit the Circle Cross. Instead, he appeared to
+Potter in the office of the <i>Kicker</i> with copy for a poster announcing the
+sale by auction of a thousand of Dunlavey&#8217;s best cattle. He ordered Potter
+to print it so that he <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_341'></a>341</span> might post copies throughout the county within a
+week. The night following the issue of the <i>Kicker</i> containing the
+announcement concerning the coming of the law Potter had informed Hollis that he
+had that day delivered the notices to Allen.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_342'></a>342</span><a id='link_28'></a>CHAPTER XXVIII<br /><span class='h2fs'>IN DEFIANCE OF THE LAW</span></h2>
+
+<p>Hollis had demonstrated the fact that a majority of Dry Bottom&#8217;s
+citizens welcomed the law. Dry Bottom had had a law, to be sure&#8211;the law of
+the six-shooter, with the cleverest man &#8220;on the trigger&#8221; as its
+chief advocate. Few men cared to appear before such a court with an argument
+against its jurisdiction. The law, as the citizens of Dry Bottom had seen it,
+was an institution which frowned upon such argument. Few men cared to risk an
+adverse decision of the established court to advocate laws which would come from
+civilized authority; they had remained silent against the day when it would come
+in spite of the element that had scoffed at it. And now that day had arrived.
+The Law had come.</p>
+
+<p>Even the evil element knew it. The atmosphere was vibrant with suppressed
+excitement; in the stores men and women were congregated; in the saloons rose a
+buzz of continuous conversation. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_343'></a>343</span> On the street men greeted one another with subdued
+voices, or halted one another to discuss the phenomenon. In a dozen conspicuous
+places were posted flaring, printed notices, informing the reader that a
+thousand of the Circle Cross cattle&#8211;a description of which
+followed&#8211;were, on the following day, to be sold to the highest bidder.
+Below this announcement, in small, neat print, was quoted the Law.</p>
+
+<p>Dry Bottom gasped. The saloons swarmed. In the Fashion two bartenders and the
+proprietor labored heroically to supply their customers with the liquid
+stimulant which would nerve them to look upon Ben Allen&#8217;s posters with a
+certain degree of equanimity. The reckless element&#8211;the gun-men who in a
+former day were wont to swagger forth with reckless disregard for the polite
+conventions&#8211;skulked in the background, sneering at this thing which had
+come to rob them of their power and which, they felt, presaged their ultimate
+downfall.</p>
+
+<p>But Dry Bottom ignored the gun-men, or smiled blandly at them, giving its
+attention to Ben Allen&#8217;s posters and discussing a rumor which had gained
+rapid credence, to the effect that the new governor had telegraphed Allen that
+he would hold a detail of United States soldiers in readiness for any
+contingency.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_344'></a>344</span>The good
+citizens smiled. And throughout the day many of them passed and repassed the
+<i>Kicker</i> office, anxious to get a glimpse of the man who had been
+instrumental in bringing about this innovation.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after noon on the same day Dunlavey rode into Dry Bottom, dismounted,
+hitched his pony to the rail in front of the Fashion, and entered.</p>
+
+<p>In former days Dunlavey&#8217;s appearance within the doors of the Fashion
+was the signal for boisterous greetings. For here might always be found the
+law&#8217;s chief advocates. To-day, however, there were no greetings. Minds
+were filled with vague and picturesque conjecture concerning Dunlavey&#8217;s
+probable actions and the outcome of this strange affair. Thus upon
+Dunlavey&#8217;s entrance a silence&#8211;strange and awkward&#8211;fell in the
+bar-room. There were short nods and men fell away from Dunlavey as he crossed
+the room and came to a halt before one of Ben Allen&#8217;s posters. He read
+every line of it&#8211;every word. No man interrupted him. Then, finishing his
+reading, he turned and faced the crowd, his face white with wrath, his lips
+snarling.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why in hell didn&#8217;t some of you damned fools tear this
+down?&#8221; he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>No man felt it incumbent upon him to reply to <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_345'></a>345</span> this and Dunlavey watched them for an
+instant, sneering, his eyes glittering menacingly. Then he suddenly turned,
+seized the poster, savagely tore it into pieces, hurled the pieces to the floor,
+and stamped upon them. Then he turned again to the silent crowd, his face
+inflamed, his voice snapping with a bitter, venomous sarcasm.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Scared!&#8221; he said. &#8220;Scared out clean&#8211;like a bunch of
+coyotes runnin&#8217; from the daylight!&#8221; He made a strange sound with his
+lips, expressing his unutterable contempt for men so weakly constituted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Quit!&#8221; he grated. &#8220;Quit clean because a tenderfoot comes
+out here and tries to run things! So long as things come your way you&#8217;re
+willing to stick it out, but when things go the other way&#8211;Ugh!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He turned abruptly, strode out through the door, mounted his pony, and rode
+rapidly down the street. Several of the men, who went to the door after his
+departure, saw him riding furiously toward the Circle Cross.</p>
+
+<p>Then one of his former friends laughed harshly&#8211;sarcastically. &#8220;I
+reckon that there tenderfoot is botherin&#8217; Big Bill a whole lot,&#8221; he
+said as he turned to the bar.</p>
+
+<hr class='tb' />
+
+<p>It had been a busy day for Hollis. His hand <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_346'></a>346</span> had been shaken so much that it pained him. The day
+had been a rather warm one for the season and so when late in the afternoon
+Norton rode into town, &#8220;To see the excitement,&#8221; he told Hollis, the
+latter determined to make the return trip to the Circle Bar in the evening.
+Therefore, after a short conference with Judge Graney and Allen&#8211;and a
+frugal, though wholesome supper in the Judge&#8217;s rooms back of the court
+house&#8211;which Allen cooked&#8211;he and Norton rode out upon the Coyote
+trail and jogged quietly toward the Circle Bar.</p>
+
+<p>There was a good moon; the air was invigorating, though slightly chill, and
+the trail lay clear and distinct before them, hard after the rain, ideal for
+riding.</p>
+
+<p>Many times during the first half hour of the ride Norton looked furtively at
+his chief. Certain things that Mrs. Norton had told him held a prominent place
+in his thoughts, and mingling with these thoughts was the recollection of a
+conversation that he had held with Hollis one day when both of them had been
+riding this same trail and Hollis had stopped off at the Hazelton cabin. Many
+times Norton smiled. He would have liked to refer to that conversation, but
+hesitated for fear of seeming to meddle with that which did not concern him. He
+remembered the days <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_347'></a>347</span> of his own courtship&#8211;how jealously he had
+guarded his secret.</p>
+
+<p>But the longer his thoughts dwelt upon the incident that had been related to
+him by Mrs. Norton the harder it became to keep silent. But he managed to
+repress his feelings for the first half hour and then, moved by an internal
+mirth that simply would not be held in check longer, he cackled aloud.</p>
+
+<p>He saw Hollis shoot a quick glance at him. He cackled again, his mirth
+swelling as he caught the surprised and puzzled expression of Hollis&#8217;s
+face.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have a very original opinion of people who laugh without any visible
+cause,&#8221; remarked the latter, grinning reluctantly in the
+semi-darkness.</p>
+
+<p>Norton&#8217;s reply was another cackle. They rode in silence for a long
+time.</p>
+
+<p>Then Norton spoke. &#8220;This is a great country,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Silence from Hollis, though taking a quick glance at him Norton again
+observed the puzzled grin on his face.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And original,&#8221; he remarked, placing upon the latter word the
+same peculiar emphasis that Hollis had given it a moment before.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis grinned widely; he began to detect a subtle meaning in the range
+boss&#8217;s speech and <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_348'></a>348</span> actions. But he did not answer; it would not strain
+his patience to await until such a time as Norton made his meaning clear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But there&#8217;s some things that ain&#8217;t original,&#8221;
+continued Norton in the same tone, after another short silence.</p>
+
+<p>This remark clearly required comment. Hollis grinned mildly. &#8220;Meaning
+what?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>Norton met his gaze gravely. &#8220;Meanin&#8217; that the ways of
+makin&#8217; love are pretty much the same in every country.&#8221; He laughed.
+&#8220;I know there&#8217;s different ways of makin&#8217; it&#8211;in
+books,&#8221; he continued; &#8220;the folks which write books make their men
+an&#8217; women go at it all kinds of ways. But did you ever know anyone in real
+life to make love to a girl any different than anyone else?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have had no experience in love making,&#8221; returned Hollis,
+puzzled again.</p>
+
+<p>Norton cackled. &#8220;No,&#8221; he said, &#8220;an&#8217; that&#8217;s the
+peculiar part of it. Mostly no one has ever had any experience when they start
+to makin&#8217; love the first time. But they all make it the same way.
+That&#8217;s why it ain&#8217;t original. You take a man which has got in love
+with a girl&#8211;any man. He don&#8217;t want anyone to know that he&#8217;s in
+love with her&#8211;he feels sorta sheepish about it. <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_349'></a>349</span> Goes around hangin&#8217; his head
+an&#8217; blushin&#8217;, an&#8217; mostly not sayin&#8217; anything about it.
+Once he gets it into his system he ain&#8217;t the same man any more. Takes to
+actin&#8217; reserved like an&#8217; gentle. But them that&#8217;s had
+experience can see the symptoms. There ain&#8217;t no way to hide it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Had Norton looked at Hollis now he might have observed a touch of red in the
+young man&#8217;s face. But he did not look; he was watching the trail ahead,
+smiling broadly.</p>
+
+<p>They had been riding through a deep depression, going toward a ridge whose
+crest was fringed with dense, tangled shrubbery. Hollis was about to reply to
+Norton&#8217;s remark when he saw the latter&#8217;s lips suddenly straighten;
+saw his body stiffen as he drew himself erect in the saddle and pulled his pony
+abruptly up. Surprised, Hollis also reined in and sat silent, looking at
+Norton.</p>
+
+<p>The latter&#8217;s hand went to one of his ears, the fingers spreading out,
+fan like. &#8220;Listen!&#8221; he warned sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had been listening. A low rumble greeted his ears. He looked suddenly
+upward at the sky, fearful that another storm, such as he had encountered months
+before, might be forming. But the sky was cloudless. He looked again at Norton.
+The latter&#8217;s eyes shone brightly <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_350'></a>350</span> in the moonlight as he leaned toward Hollis. The
+rumbling had grown more distinct.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It ain&#8217;t a stampede,&#8221; said Norton rapidly; &#8220;there
+wouldn&#8217;t be anything to stampede cattle on a night like this. An&#8217;
+them&#8217;s cattle!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was about a hundred yards to the ridge toward which they had been riding
+and Hollis saw Norton suddenly plunge the spurs into his pony&#8217;s flanks;
+saw the animal rush forward. He gave his own animal the spurs and in an instant
+was at Norton&#8217;s side, racing toward the ridge. The range boss dismounted
+at the bottom, swiftly threw the reins over his pony&#8217;s head, and running
+stealthily toward the crest. Hollis followed him. When he reached Norton&#8217;s
+side the latter was flat on a rim rock at the edge of a little cliff, behind
+some gnarled brush. Below them the country stretched away for miles, level,
+unbroken, basking in the moonlight. Hollis recognized the section as that
+through which he had traveled on the night he had been overtaken by the
+storm&#8211;the big level that led to Big Elk crossing, where he had met
+Dunlavey and his men that night.</p>
+
+<p>Looking out upon the plain he held his breath in amazement. During the time
+he had been at the Circle Bar he had seen cattle running, but never had he seen
+them run like this. About a <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_351'></a>351</span> quarter of a mile from the ridge on which he and
+Norton stood rose a dust cloud&#8211;moving swiftly. But ahead of the cloud,
+heads down, their horns tossing were a number of cattle, perhaps fifty, racing
+furiously. They were running parallel with the ridge and would probably pass it.
+Behind and flanking them raced several cowboys, silent, driving with their
+quirts.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Rustlers!&#8221; came Norton&#8217;s voice from beside him.
+&#8220;They&#8217;re headin&#8217; for Big Elk!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis had brought his rifle, which he had carried since the attack on the
+night of the storm. At Norton&#8217;s word he raised it. But Norton&#8217;s hand
+touched his and his voice came again, sharply, commandingly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t shoot!&#8221; he said. &#8220;It wouldn&#8217;t do any
+good; some of them would get away. Mebbe they&#8217;ll come close enough
+so&#8217;s we can see who they are!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis waited breathlessly. It seemed that but an instant had passed from the
+time he had caught a first glimpse of them until they were thundering by the
+ridge and he and Norton were blinded by the dust. They had gone before the dust
+settled, but through it as they passed, Hollis had caught sight of a familiar
+figure. Before the thunder of hoofs had died away Hollis felt Norton&#8217;s
+hand on his arm and his voice in his ear.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_352'></a>352</span>&#8220;Dunlavey!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There could be no doubt of that, for Hollis had recognized him also. He
+turned, to hear Norton&#8217;s dry voice in his ear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The new law don&#8217;t seem to be botherin&#8217; Dunlavey a
+heap,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis stepped boldly out on the ridge, his face grim and pale. But he was
+pulled back by Norton. &#8220;I take it you don&#8217;t want to let them see
+you,&#8221; he said. &#8220;When a thing like that comes off there&#8217;s
+always somebody sure to be lookin&#8217; back.&#8221; He was pulling at
+Hollis&#8217;s arm, directing his steps down the slope toward where they had
+left the horses. &#8220;You an&#8217; me ain&#8217;t enough,&#8221; he was
+saying to Hollis; &#8220;we&#8217;ll hit the breeze to the Circle Bar, get some
+of the boys, an&#8217; hustle back here an&#8217; take them cattle!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis accompanied him willingly as far as the horses. Then he halted, his
+eyes flashing brightly. &#8220;We won&#8217;t go to the Circle Bar,&#8221; he
+said. &#8220;We won&#8217;t fight them like that. There is a law in this country
+now and I am going to see that the law acts!&#8221; He seized Norton&#8217;s arm
+in a firm commanding grip. &#8220;You follow them,&#8221; he directed.
+&#8220;From the edge of the butte where they caught me on the night of the storm
+you can see the country for miles. Don&#8217;t cross the river,&#8221; he
+warned. &#8220;Stay there beside <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_353'></a>353</span> the butte until I come back&#8211;I won&#8217;t be
+long. Watch where they take the cattle!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Before Norton could offer a word of objection he was on his pony and racing
+over the back trail at terrific speed. For a moment Norton watched him. Then he
+disappeared and Norton grimly mounted his pony and rode down to the level
+following the trail taken by the thieves.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_354'></a>354</span><a id='link_29'></a>CHAPTER XXIX<br /><span class='h2fs'>THE ARM OF THE LAW</span></h2>
+
+<p>The lights in Dry Bottom&#8217;s saloons were flickering brightly when Hollis
+rode down the street and dismounted from his drooping pony in front of the court
+house. He ran stiffly around the side of the building and knocked loudly on a
+door. There was a short silence and then a movement inside and Ben Allen stuck
+his head out of a window. He saw at a glance the upward turned face of the
+nocturnal visitor and called shortly: &#8220;Wait! I&#8217;ll be
+down!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There was a short wait, during which Hollis impatiently paced back and forth
+and then Allen appeared in the door, fully dressed. Judge Graney, in a night
+shirt, stood behind him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Something&#8217;s up, of course,&#8221; drawled Allen as he stepped
+down from the door, &#8220;or you wouldn&#8217;t come around disturbing folks
+this way. What is it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis briefly related the events of the night, <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_355'></a>355</span> concluding with the statement that he
+was determined to force the law to act.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Correct!&#8221; laughed Allen. &#8220;She&#8217;s got to act
+now.&#8221; He caught Hollis&#8217;s arm and turned him toward a small
+cottonwood grove about half a mile distant. A dozen white objects dotting the
+grove caught Hollis&#8217;s gaze. He started.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Soldiers!&#8221; he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I might say that was a good guess,&#8221; drawled Allen. &#8220;I sent
+for them because I thought I might need them if our friend Dunlavey got to
+cuttin&#8217; up any. It&#8217;s been my experience that a detail of Uncle
+Sam&#8217;s boys is about as good a thing to have around in case of trouble as
+any man could want.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you can&#8217;t use them in this case,&#8221; remarked Judge
+Graney, who had stepped down beside the two men. &#8220;The governor&#8217;s
+instructions were that they should be used merely as an instrument in enforcing
+the court&#8217;s order regarding the sale of Dunlavey&#8217;s cattle. The theft
+of the Circle Bar cattle is a matter which comes directly under the jurisdiction
+of the sheriff. If he refuses to act&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hell!&#8221; broke in Allen. &#8220;We know he won&#8217;t do
+anything!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Judge smiled slightly. &#8220;I suspect he won&#8217;t,&#8221; he said
+dryly. He winked at Hollis.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_356'></a>356</span>&#8220;Being a
+judge in this district I am, of course, averse to advising any infractions of
+the law. But if I were not a judge I would suggest that two strong, energetic
+men&#8211;such as you appear to be&#8213;&#8221; He leaned forward and whispered
+in Allen&#8217;s ear, whereat that gentleman let out a joyous whoop and almost
+dragged Hollis around the corner of the building toward the street, leaving the
+Judge standing in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>Once on the street Allen set a pace that brought the two to the door of the
+sheriff&#8217;s office quickly. A light shone through the window and when Allen
+opened the door Watkins was sitting beside his desk, gravely fumbling a deck of
+cards. He dropped them when he saw his visitors and made a quick movement with
+his right hand toward his revolver. But Allen&#8217;s weapon was already
+out.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bill,&#8221; he said in a soft, even voice, &#8220;we&#8217;re
+wantin&#8217; a warrant for the arrest of Bill Dunlavey. The charge is
+stealin&#8217; cattle. Of course you&#8217;ll issue it,&#8221; he added
+insinuatingly.</p>
+
+<p>Watkins&#8217;s face slowly paled. &#8220;Why&#8213;&#8221; he began.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course I knowed you wouldn&#8217;t do it when I asked you,&#8221;
+said Allen with a dangerously soft smile. &#8220;That&#8217;s why I come down
+here. This town&#8217;s got a sheriff an&#8217; it ain&#8217;t. I wouldn&#8217;t
+care <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_357'></a>357</span> a damn if it
+didn&#8217;t have you. There&#8217;s lots of folks wouldn&#8217;t care either.
+So that if you&#8217;re one of them which does care you&#8217;re settin&#8217;
+right still an&#8217; not sayin&#8217; anything which can be construed as talk
+till my friend here goes down to the station.&#8221; He whispered to Hollis.
+&#8220;Be middlin&#8217; rapid,&#8221; he said aloud afterward, &#8220;an&#8217;
+use my name.&#8221; He turned to Watkins with a smile. &#8220;While we&#8217;re
+waitin&#8217; I&#8217;ll do some talkin&#8217;,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But if
+you let out one little wee chirp them folks which don&#8217;t care about you
+bein&#8217; sheriff of this man&#8217;s town will sure have a heap of cause to
+rejoice.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis was already far down the street toward the station. When he got there
+the station was dark&#8211;evidently the agent had gone to bed. Hollis pounded
+heavily on the door and presently the agent opened it, appearing in his night
+shirt, a heavy six-shooter in hand, his eyes blinking.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My name is Hollis,&#8221; said the latter from the darkness; &#8220;I
+want you to telegraph the governor.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come in.&#8221; The agent disappeared within, Hollis following.
+&#8220;This way,&#8221; he directed, as he disappeared through another door
+leading into the station, his night shirt flapping about his lean legs.
+&#8220;What you wantin&#8217; to telegraph?&#8221; he questioned, as he seated
+himself before the instrument <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_358'></a>358</span> and looked up at Hollis. And then, before the
+latter could answer he continued: &#8220;You&#8217;re the durndest man to stir
+up a muss I ever, seen in my life!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis smiled grimly as he seized a blank and wrote his message to the
+governor:</p>
+
+<div class='bquote'>
+<p>&#8220;Cattle thieves caught red-handed. Sheriff refuses to act. Crisis.
+Suggest you appoint me temporarily.</p>
+</div><!-- block quote -->
+
+<p class='tar2'>Ben Allen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The agent took the message, read it, and then monotonously began to drum on
+the keys of his instrument.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis found it impossible to sit still and so he nervously paced up and down
+the room during the sending of the message. The agent finished and, leaned his
+head sleepily on the table.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ought to answer in half an hour&#8211;if he&#8217;s home,&#8221; he
+informed Hollis. Upon which Hollis slipped out of the door and returned down the
+street to the sheriff&#8217;s office, peering within Watkins still sat at the
+table and in a chair near him lounged Allen, talking volubly. Hollis watched for
+a time and then returned to the station to find the agent asleep beside his
+instrument. Hollis had scarcely awakened him when the sounder began its
+monotonous ticking. <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_359'></a>359</span> He leaned over the agent&#8217;s shoulder and read
+the governor&#8217;s answer as the agent sleepily wrote it down.</p>
+
+<div class='bquote'>
+<p>&#8220;Ben Allen: You are hereby appointed sheriff of Union County in place
+of W. Watkins, dismissed. Have Judge certify,&#8221;</p> </div><!-- block quote
+-->
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon there must be somethin&#8217; goin&#8217; on,&#8221; remarked
+the agent. &#8220;What&#8217;s the matter with Bill&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Hollis had snatched the message from his hand and was out into the street
+in an instant and running down toward the sheriff&#8217;s office. When he
+arrived there Allen was still talking. He passed the telegram to him and the
+latter rose to his feet and smiled at Watkins, shoving the message under his
+nose.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You can read her,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Then you can go home
+an&#8217; quit sheriffin&#8217;&#8211;after I&#8217;ve got through with you.
+You&#8217;ve been called down to the court house. I&#8217;m takin&#8217; you,
+chargin&#8217; you with bein&#8217; an accessory before the fact, or
+somethin&#8217; like that. It don&#8217;t make no difference what it is,
+you&#8217;re goin&#8217; with me.&#8221; His voice came sharp and chill:
+&#8220;Jump!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Judge Graney had dressed himself by the time the three arrived at the court
+house and Watkins was roughly tumbled into the room which had <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_360'></a>360</span> been set aside as the
+jail. Then the judge led Hollis and Allen into the court room where he issued
+Allen&#8217;s certificate of appointment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now, I reckon we won&#8217;t have no trouble in gettin&#8217; the
+soldiers,&#8221; he grinned. &#8220;This sheriff is goin&#8217; to
+act!&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_361'></a>361</span><a id='link_30'></a>CHAPTER XXX<br /><span class='h2fs'>FORMING A FRIENDSHIP</span></h2>
+
+<p>At three o&#8217;clock in the afternoon Hollis closed his desk and announced
+to Potter that he was going to the Circle Bar. Potter watched him with a fond
+smile as he went out the door and placed the saddle on his pony, mounted and
+rode into the sunshine of the afternoon. The presence of the troopers in town
+had created a sensation and most of the town&#8217;s citizens were gathered
+about the court house, curiously watching Dunlavey and several of his men who
+had been taken into custody during the early hours of the morning. Neither
+Hollis or Norton had been allowed to participate in the final scene, the little
+captain informing them curtly that the presence of civilians at what promised to
+be a free-for-all fight was strictly forbidden. And so Norton had returned to
+the Circle Bar, while Hollis had gone to Dry Bottom to finish an article for the
+next issue of the <i>Kicker</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_362'></a>362</span>It had been in
+that bald, gray time between darkness and dawn when Ben Allen and Hollis, riding
+at the head of the detail of troopers beside the dapper little captain, had
+arrived at the edge of the butte where Hollis had directed Norton to await his
+coming.</p>
+
+<p>Norton&#8217;s only comment upon seeing the troopers had been: &#8220;Where
+in hell did them come from?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He told Allen that he had watched where Dunlavey and his men had driven the
+cattle, and that he would find them concealed in a narrow defile between two
+hills about a mile on the other side of the Rabbit-Ear. He and Hollis had
+announced their intention to accompany the troop to the scene, but had been
+refused permission by the captain.</p>
+
+<p>The capture of the thieves had been quite a simple matter. In single file the
+troopers had descended the slope of the river, crossed a shallow, and clattered
+up the other side. A mile dash at a gallop had brought them to one end of the
+defile mentioned by Norton, and in a grove of fir-balsam the captain had
+deployed his troopers and swooped suddenly down into the defile, surprising
+several men, who with Dunlavey, were busily at work altering the brands on the
+cattle they had stolen. There was a fire near the <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_363'></a>363</span> center of the defile, with branding
+irons scattered about it.</p>
+
+<p>The stolen cattle bore various brands. There were perhaps a dozen belonging
+to the Circle Bar, several from the Pig Pen; others bore the brands of the Three
+Bar and the Diamond Dot.</p>
+
+<p>Proof of Dunlavey&#8217;s guilt had been absolute. He had made some
+resistance, but had been quickly overpowered by Allen and the troopers. Then
+with their prisoners the troops had returned to Dry Bottom.</p>
+
+<p>Hollis rode slowly toward the Circle Bar. He was tired&#8211;dead tired. When
+he arrived at the Hazelton cabin the shade on the porch looked so inviting that
+he dismounted, tied his pony to one of the slender porch columns, and seated
+himself, leaning wearily against the column to which he had tied his pony.</p>
+
+<p>He sat there long, staring at a clump of nondescript weed that fringed the
+edge of the arroyo near the cabin, his thoughts filled with pictures of
+incidents that had occurred to him during his stay in the West. Nellie Hazelton
+appeared in every one of these pictures and therefore he smiled often.</p>
+
+<p>He had not liked the country when he had first come here; it had seemed to
+offer him no field for the pursuit of his ambition. Certainly the raising <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_364'></a>364</span> of cattle had never
+entered into his scheme of things. Yet he now realized that there was plenty of
+room in this country for success in this particular industry; all a man had to
+do was to keep up his end until the law came. And now the law had come and he
+had been partly responsible for its coming. The realization of this moved his
+lips into a grim smile.</p>
+
+<p>He filled and lighted his pipe, smoking placidly as he leaned against the
+slender column, his gaze shifting to a clump of dense shrubbery that skirted the
+trail within twenty feet of the cabin. He sat quiet, his long legs stretched out
+to enjoy the warmth of the sun that struck a corner of the porch floor. His pipe
+spluttered in depletion and he raised himself and looked around for his pony,
+observing that the animal was contentedly browsing the tops of some weeds at the
+edge of the porch. Then, resigning himself to the sensation of languor that
+oppressed him, he knocked the ash from the pipe, filled it again, lighted it,
+and resumed his former reclining position.</p>
+
+<p>During the past few days he had given much thought to Dunlavey. He was
+thinking of the man now, as his gaze went again to the clump of shrubbery that
+skirted the trail.</p>
+
+<p>Some men&#8217;s mental processes were incomprehensible. <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_365'></a>365</span> Dunlavey was one of these men. What did
+the man hope to gain by defying the law? Would there not be profit enough in the
+cattle business when conducted honestly?</p>
+
+<p>He felt a certain contempt for the man, but mingled with it was a sort of
+grim pity. No doubt Dunlavey felt justified in his actions, for he had lived
+here a good many years, no doubt suffering the privations encountered by all
+pioneers; living a hard life, dealing heavy blows to his enemies, and receiving
+some himself. No doubt his philosophy of life had been of the peculiar sort
+practiced by the feudal barons of the Old World, before civilization had come,
+carrying its banner of justice, which, summed up epigrammatically, though
+ironically, had been &#8220;Might is Right.&#8221; But might could never be
+right in this country. Dunlavey must learn this lesson; he could not hope
+to&#8211;!</p>
+
+<p>Hollis sat suddenly erect, putting aside his pipe and his ruminations at the
+same instant, the languor gone from him, his eyes narrowing coldly.</p>
+
+<p>For suddenly, from behind the shrubbery that skirted the edge of the trail,
+had appeared the man about whom he had been thinking! It was evident that he had
+not come upon Hollis unexpectedly. He reined in his pony and sat motionless
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_366'></a>366</span> in the saddle, his
+face white, his eyes alight with passion.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant neither man spoke. Hollis realized that the great moment for
+which he had waited many days had arrived. And it had arrived unexpectedly. It
+had arrived to find him tired after his activities of the night and in no
+condition for a fight. He drew a deep breath and got to his feet, a grim smile
+on his face. He stepped off the porch and stood by one of the columns, watching
+Dunlavey closely. As he watched the grim smile on his face slowly faded, his
+lips curled bitterly, his eyes chilled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you&#8217;ve come to collect that thrashing?&#8221; he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Dunlavey dismounted quickly, his right hand flew to his holster, drawing his
+revolver. He came toward Hollis crouching, a cold, merciless glitter in his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, you tenderfoot &#8213; &#8213;.&#8221; he snarled.</p>
+
+<hr class='tb' />
+
+<p>From the moment of Hollis&#8217;s arrival at the court house the night before
+Ben Allen had been constantly in action. It was late in the morning when he had
+returned to the court house with his prisoners. The men who had been captured
+with Dunlavey were still with the troopers, there not being sufficient room at
+the court house for <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a
+id='page_367'></a>367</span> them. Watkins had been released and Dunlavey had
+taken his place in the little room that answered for a jail. Shortly before noon
+Allen proceeded to the station, where he telegraphed to the governor the story
+of the capture. He had then deputized a dozen punchers and sent them to the
+Circle Cross to round up a thousand of Dunlavey&#8217;s cattle and hold them
+until the late afternoon when, according to Allen&#8217;s published program,
+they were to be sold to the highest bidder. Then, tired and hungry, Allen sought
+the Alhambra and ate a hearty meal.</p>
+
+<p>Dry Bottom was swarming with visitors that had come in for the sale. But by
+the time Allen had finished eating the exodus had begun. The trail leading to
+the Circle Cross ranch was dotted with probable bidders, curiosity seekers,
+idlers, and mere residents of the town. Now that the law had come there were
+many who discovered that their sympathies had always been with the men who had
+championed it. Allen found his way to the court house strewn with men who halted
+him to express their good will. Many people gathered in front of the
+<i>Kicker</i> office, eager for a glimpse of Hollis. Those who gathered there
+before twelve-thirty saw him seated at his desk, tall, angular, serious of face,
+absolutely unaffected by this thing which had caused a sensation. <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_368'></a>368</span> Passing the
+<i>Kicker</i> office on his way to the court house, Allen had paused to look
+within and shout a greeting to him. Then he had continued on his way.</p>
+
+<p>Arriving at the court house Allen looked in at Dunlavey to find him lying on
+the floor, apparently asleep. Allen did not disturb him. He went out, threw the
+saddle on his pony, and rode over to the grove where the soldiers were
+quartered, talking long with the captain. At two o&#8217;clock he returned to
+the court house to be greeted with the news that Dunlavey had escaped. Allen did
+not stop to inquire how the escape had been accomplished. He remounted his pony
+and raced down to the <i>Kicker</i> office, fearing that Dunlavey had gone
+there. Potter informed him that his chief had departed for the Circle Bar fully
+an hour and a half before. He had taken the Coyote trail&#8211;Potter had
+watched him.</p>
+
+<p>Allen wheeled his pony and returned to the court house. He was met at the
+door by Judge Graney. The latter&#8217;s face was white and drawn with fear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s gone to kill Hollis!&#8221; the judge told him through
+white, set lips. &#8220;I heard him threaten Hollis this morning and a moment
+ago a man told me that he had seen Dunlavey, not <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_369'></a>369</span> over half an hour ago, riding out the
+Coyote trail at a dead run!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Allen&#8217;s own face whitened. He did not stop to answer but drove the
+spurs deep into his pony&#8217;s flanks and rode furiously down the street
+toward a point near the <i>Kicker</i> office where he struck the trail.</p>
+
+<p>The distance to the Circle Bar ranch was ten miles and Dunlavey had a good
+half hour&#8217;s start! He fairly lifted his pony over the first mile, though
+realizing that he could not hope to arrive at the Circle Bar in time to prevent
+Dunlavey from carrying out his design to kill Hollis. No, he told himself as he
+rode, he could not prevent him from killing Hollis, should he catch the latter
+unprepared, but he promised himself that Dunlavey should not escape punishment
+for the deed.</p>
+
+<p>He had had some hope that Dunlavey would accept his defeat philosophically.
+The latter was not the only man he had seen who had been defeated by the law.
+Over in Colfax County and up in Wyoming he had dealt with many such men, and
+usually, after they had seen that the law was inevitable, they had resigned
+themselves to the new condition and had become pretty fair citizens. He had
+imagined that Dunlavey would prove to be no exception, that after the <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_370'></a>370</span> first sting of defeat
+had been removed he would meet his adversaries half way in an effort to patch up
+their differences. The danger was in the time immediately following the
+realization of defeat. A man of the Dunlavey type was then usually
+desperate.</p>
+
+<p>So Allen communed with himself as he rode at a head-long pace down the Coyote
+trail, risking his neck a dozen times. Not once since he had left Dry Bottom had
+he considered his own danger.</p>
+
+<p>He had been riding more than half an hour, and was coming up out of a little
+gully when he came upon a riderless pony, and close by it, browsing near a clump
+of shrubbery, another. He recognized one of them instantly as Dunlavey&#8217;s,
+and his teeth came together with a snap. He rode closer to the other pony,
+examining it. On one of its hips was a brand&#8211;the Circle Bar. Allen&#8217;s
+face whitened again. He had arrived too late. But he would not be too late to
+wreak vengeance upon Dunlavey.</p>
+
+<p>He dismounted and cautiously approached the brush at the side of the trail.
+Parting it, he saw the roof of a cabin. He recognized it; he had passed it a
+number of times during his exploration of the country. He drew back and crept
+crept farther along in the brush, certain that he <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_371'></a>371</span> would presently see Dunlavey. But he
+had not gone very far when he heard voices and he cautiously parted the brush
+again and peered through.</p>
+
+<p>He started back in surprise, an incredulous grin slowly appearing on his
+face. The incredulity changed to amusement a moment later&#8211;when he heard
+Hollis&#8217;s voice!</p>
+
+<p>The young man was seated on the edge of the porch&#8211;smoking a pipe! Near
+him, seated on a flat rock, his face horribly puffed out, with several ugly
+gashes disfiguring it, his eyes blackened, his clothing in tatters, one hand
+hanging limply by his side, the fingers crushed and bleeding, was Dunlavey! Near
+him, almost buried in the sand, was a revolver. Allen&#8217;s smile broadened
+when he saw Dunlavey&#8217;s empty holster. Evidently he had met with a
+surprise!</p>
+
+<p>While taking in these details Allen had not forgotten to listen to Hollis as
+the latter talked to Dunlavey. Apparently Hollis had about finished his talk,
+for his voice was singularly soft and even, and Dunlavey&#8217;s almost comical
+air of dejection could not have settled over him in an instant.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;... and so of course I had to thrash you&#8211;you had it coming to
+you. You haven&#8217;t been a man&#8211;you&#8217;ve acted like a sneak and a
+cur all <span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_372'></a>372</span> through
+this business. You made a thrashing inevitable when you set Yuma on Nellie
+Hazelton. You&#8217;ll have plenty of marks to remind you of the one you gave me
+that night.&#8221; He pointed to his cheek. &#8220;I&#8217;ve got even for that.
+But I think I wouldn&#8217;t have trimmed you quite so bad if you hadn&#8217;t
+tried to shoot me a few minutes ago.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He puffed silently at his pipe for a short time, during which Dunlavey sat on
+the rock and squinted pathetically at him. Then he resumed:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve heard people talk of damned fools, but never, until I met
+you, have I been unfortunate enough to come into personal contact with one. I
+should think that when you saw the soldiers had come you would have surrendered
+decently. Perhaps you know by now that you can&#8217;t fight the United States
+Army&#8211;and that you can&#8217;t whip me. If you&#8217;ve got any sense left
+at all you&#8217;ll quit fighting now and try your best to be a good
+citizen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He smiled grimly as he rose from the porch and walked to where Dunlavey sat,
+standing over him and looking down at him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dunlavey,&#8221; he said, extending his right hand to the beaten man,
+&#8220;let&#8217;s call it quits. You&#8217;ve been terribly worked up, but you
+ought to be over it now. You ought to be able to see <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_373'></a>373</span> that it doesn&#8217;t go. I&#8217;ve
+thrashed you pretty badly, but you and your men used me up pretty well that
+night and so it&#8217;s an even thing. Let&#8217;s shake and be friends. If you
+show signs of wanting to be a man again I&#8217;ll withdraw the charge of
+cattle stealing which I have placed against you, and I imagine I won&#8217;t
+have any trouble in inducing Allen to call off that auction sale and accept
+settlement of the claim against you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Until now Dunlavey had avoided looking at the outstretched hand. But now he
+looked at it, took it and held it for an instant, his bruised and swollen face
+taking on an expression of lugubrious self-pity.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I reckon I&#8217;ve got it in the neck all around,&#8221; he said
+finally. &#8220;But I ain&#8217;t no squealer and I&#8217;ve got&#8213;&#8221;
+His gaze met Hollis&#8217;s and his eyes gleamed with a reluctant admiration.
+&#8220;By God, you&#8217;re white! I reckon you could have tore the rest of me
+apart like you did my hand.&#8221; He held up the injured member for
+inspection.</p>
+
+<p>Allen&#8217;s grin could grow no broader, and now he showed his increased
+satisfaction with a subdued cackle. He backed stealthily out of the shrubbery,
+taking a final glance at the two men. He saw Hollis leading Dunlavey toward a
+small water hole at the rear of the cabin; saw him bathing <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_374'></a>374</span> Dunlavey&#8217;s injured hand and
+binding it with his handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>Then Allen proceeded to his pony, mounted, and departed for the court house
+to tell Judge Graney the news that kept his own face continually in a smile.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_375'></a>375</span><a id='link_31'></a>CHAPTER XXXI<br /><span class='h2fs'>AFTERWARD</span></h2>
+
+<p>From Razor-Back ridge the big basin spread away to the Blue Peak mountains.
+On the opposite side of the ridge began the big plain on which, snuggled behind
+some cottonwood trees, were the Circle Cross buildings. From where Hollis and
+Nellie Hazelton sat on the ridge they could look miles down the Coyote trail,
+into Devil&#8217;s Hollow; could see the two big cottonwood trees that stood
+beside Big Elk crossing, above which, on the night of the storm, Hollis had been
+attacked by Dunlavey&#8217;s men. Back on the stretch of plain above the basin
+they could make out the Circle Bar buildings, lying close to the banks of the
+river.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the late afternoon and the sun had gone down behind the Blue Peaks,
+though its last rays were just touching the crest of the ridge near Hollis and
+Nellie. He had called her attention to the sinking sun, telling her that it was
+time they started for the Circle Bar.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wait,&#8221; she said; &#8220;someone is coming up the <span
+class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_376'></a>376</span> Coyote trail. I have
+been watching him for ten minutes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Hollis faced the trail and watched also. In a quarter of an hour the horseman
+came out of Devil&#8217;s Hollow. Hollis and Nellie could see him plainly as he
+guided his pony around the huge boulders that filled the place. Hollis smiled
+whimsically.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the poet,&#8221; he told Nellie, catching her gaze and
+grinning widely at her. &#8220;I sent him to Dry Bottom this noon for the
+mail&#8211;Potter is going to stay in town over night.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For an instant it seemed that Ace would not see them, and Hollis rose from
+the rock on which he had been sitting and halloed to him. He responded with a
+shout and urged his pony up the steep side of the slope and then along the crest
+until he came within a few feet of where they sat. He dismounted and came
+forward, grinning broadly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Takin&#8217; the view?&#8221; he questioned. His eyes twinkled.
+&#8220;Sometimes there&#8217;s a heap of poetry could be got out of this county.
+But&#8211;&#8221; and his eyelashes flickered slightly&#8211;&#8220;a
+fellow&#8217;s got to be in the right frame of mind to get it out. I reckon you
+two&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you got the mail?&#8221; interrupted Hollis, grimacing at
+him.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_377'></a>377</span>&#8220;I sure
+did,&#8221; returned the poet, &#8220;one letter. I reckon the
+blacksmith&#8217;ll be kickin&#8217; because I&#8217;ve been galivantin&#8217;
+around the country for one letter. Here it is.&#8221; He passed an envelope to
+Hollis, and the latter, with a quick glance at the legend in the upper left hand
+corner, tore it open and read. It was from Weary.</p>
+
+<div class='bquote'>
+<p>Dear boss i got cleaned out agin what did you send me a hundred dollars for
+you might have knowed that id make a gol darned fool of myself with so much coin
+i never could keep no coin no how but its all right anyway cause me an eds comin
+home tomorrow eds all right except bein a littel week which the doc says he git
+over in a littel while.</p> </div><!-- block quote -->
+
+<p class='tar2'>ta ta.<br />Weary</p>
+
+<div class='bquote'>
+<p>P.S. i might have telegraphed but ed says it dont make no difference cause
+the letter will git there quick enough any way an hes afraid a telegram will
+scare some one. im dam glad i got a return ticket.</p> </div><!-- block quote
+-->
+
+<p class='tar2'>Weary</p>
+
+<p>After reading the letter Hollis passed it over to Nellie, watching her, his
+eyes alight with satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; she said. &#8220;Oh!&#8221; The letter dropped from her
+hand, was caught by the breezes and swirled several feet distant. Ace sprang to
+recover it. When he turned, the letter in hand, he <span class='pagenum
+pncolor'><a id='page_378'></a>378</span> saw something that brought a huge grin
+of sympathy to his face. But mingled with the sympathy was another emotion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Boss,&#8221; he said, as Hollis, disengaging himself, turned and faced
+him, &#8220;I&#8217;ve writ quite a nice little thing on &#8216;Love.&#8217; Mebbe
+you&#8217;d like to&#8213;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He caught Hollis&#8217;s frown and immediately retreated to his pony, his
+grin broadening as he went. He cackled with mirth as Hollis&#8217;s voice
+reached him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ace,&#8221; he said gravely, &#8220;don&#8217;t attempt to write a
+poem on &#8216;Love&#8217; until you&#8217;ve had some experience.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You havin&#8217; yours now?&#8221; insinuated Ace, as he mounted his
+pony.</p>
+
+<p>He alone caught Hollis&#8217;s reply. It was an expressive wink.</p>
+
+<p class='finis'>THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Coming of the Law, by Charles Alden Seltzer
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+Project Gutenberg's The Coming of the Law, by Charles Alden Seltzer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Coming of the Law
+
+Author: Charles Alden Seltzer
+
+Illustrator: R. W. Amick
+
+Release Date: March 5, 2010 [EBook #31512]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMING OF THE LAW ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "What have you done with Hollis?" demanded Norton,
+thrusting his big six-shooter against Ten Spot's stomach. _Page 165_
+_The Coming of the Law_]
+
+
+
+
+THE COMING OF THE LAW
+
+BY CHARLES ALDEN SELTZER
+
+Author of "The Range Riders," "The Two-Gun Man,"
+"The Triangle Cupid," etc.
+
+With Frontispiece in Colors by R. W. AMICK
+
+A. L. BURT COMPANY
+
+Publishers--New York
+
+
+
+
+Copyright 1912, By
+
+OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+All Rights Reserved
+
+First Printing, August, 1912
+
+Second Printing, September, 1912
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. The Arrival of the Man 9
+ II. The Rule of Cattle 25
+ III. Norton Makes a Discovery 42
+ IV. At the Circle Bar 53
+ V. The Girl of Dry Bottom 73
+ VI. Hollis Renews an Acquaintance 87
+ VII. The "Kicker" Becomes an Institution 107
+ VIII. Concerning the "Six O'Clock" 119
+ IX. How a Bad Man Left the "Kicker" Office 127
+ X. The Lost Trail 151
+ XI. Picking Up the Trail 161
+ XII. After the Storm 169
+ XIII. "Woman--She Don't Need No Tooter" 177
+ XIV. The Coalition 187
+ XV. To Support the Law 198
+ XVI. The Bearer of Good News 209
+ XVII. The Rustler 224
+ XVIII. The Tenth Day 238
+ XIX. How a Rustler Escaped 246
+ XX. The "Kicker's" Candidate 257
+ XXI. Dunlavey Plays a Card 267
+ XXII. Proof of Gratitude 280
+ XXIII. Ten Spot Uses His Eyes 289
+ XXIV. Campaign Guns 294
+ XXV. Handling the Law 314
+ XXVI. Autumn and the Gods 327
+ XXVII. The Sear and Yellow Days 336
+ XXVIII. In Defiance of the Law 342
+ XXIX. The Arm of the Law 354
+ XXX. Forming a Friendship 364
+ XXXI. Afterward 375
+
+
+
+
+THE COMING OF THE LAW
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE ARRIVAL OF THE MAN
+
+
+If the passengers on the west-bound train that pulled up at the little
+red wooden station at Dry Bottom at the close of a June day in 18--,
+were interested in the young man bearing the two suit cases, they gave
+no evidence of it. True, they noted his departure; with casual glances
+they watched him as he stepped down upon the platform; but immediately
+they forgot his athletic figure and his regular featured, serious face
+as their thoughts returned to the heat, the dust, and the monotony of
+travel.
+
+There was the usual bustle and activity which always follows the arrival
+of a train. A mail bag was dumped out of the mail car, another thrown
+in; some express packages were unceremoniously deposited near the door
+of the station by the agent; the conductor ran to the telegrapher's
+window to receive an order; ran back, signaling as he ran; the engine
+bell clanged, the drivers clanked, the wheels ground, the passengers
+sighed, and the train departed on its way.
+
+The young man who had alighted stood motionless for a moment, listening
+to the clatter of the wheels over the rail-joints, watching the smoke
+from the engine-stack befoul the clear blue of the sky. Then he smiled
+grimly, threw a rapid glance toward a group of loungers standing at a
+corner of the station, and walked over to where the station agent stood
+examining some newly arrived packages.
+
+"Do you mind directing me to the courthouse?" said the young man.
+
+The agent looked up, turned, and ran a measuring, speculative eye over
+the new arrival. He noted the Eastern cut of the young man's clothing
+and beneath the dust of travel the clear, healthy white skin of his
+face. "Stranger here?" observed the agent, with a slight, humorous
+narrowing of the eyes.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"No, I don't mind," resumed the agent, answering the young man's
+question. "You won't have any trouble findin' the courthouse. There's
+only one street in this town an' the courthouse is down to the other end
+of it--you couldn't miss it if you tried." He grinned with some
+amusement at the young man's back as the latter with a cordial "thank
+you," returned to his suit cases, gripped them firmly by the handles,
+and strode down the wooden platform toward the street, ignoring the
+group of loungers at the corner of the station.
+
+"'Nother tenderfoot," remarked one of the loungers as the young man
+passed out of hearing; "they're runnin' this country plum to hell!"
+
+The young man strode slowly down the board sidewalk that paralleled the
+buildings on one side of the street, mentally taking in the dimensions
+of the town. It was not an inviting picture. Many buildings of various
+descriptions snuggled the wide, vacant space which the station agent had
+termed a "street." Most of the buildings were unpainted and crude,
+composed of rough boards running perpendicularly, with narrow battens
+over the joints. There were several brick buildings two stories in
+height, bearing the appearance of having been recently erected, and
+these towered over the squat, one-story frames in seeming contemptuous
+dignity. There were many private dwellings, some stores, but the young
+man's first impression was that there was an enormous number of saloons.
+
+He saw few people; those who came within range of vision were apparently
+cowboys, for they were rigged in the picturesque garb that he had
+studied many times in the illustrations of Eastern magazines. He had
+admired them afar, for there was something about them, something in the
+free, wild life they led, that appealed to him; something that struck at
+the primitive in his heart. He had heard tales of them; travelers
+returning from these regions had related sundry stories of these wild
+men of the plains; stories of their hardihood, of their recklessness, of
+their absolute fearlessness--clothing them with a glamor and romance
+that had deeply impressed the young man. His own life had been rather
+prosaic.
+
+He saw some cowponies hitched to rails in front of several of the
+saloons; in front of a store he observed a canvas-covered wagon which he
+recognized (from sketches he had seen) as a "prairie schooner"; in front
+of another store he saw a spring wagon of the "buckboard" variety. That
+was all. The aroma of sage-brush filled his nostrils; the fine,
+flint-like, powdered alkali dust lay thick everywhere. It was
+unattractive and dismal.
+
+The town, as it lay before him, began in desolation and ended in
+desolation. Except that it was a trifle larger it differed in no
+important particular from many others that littered the face of the
+world through which he had passed during the last twenty-four hours. It
+was a mere dot in the center of a flat grass country covering a vast
+area. It sat, serene in its isolation, as far from civilization as
+Genesis from Revelation. In the stifling heat of the lazy June afternoon
+it drowsed, seemingly deserted except for the ponies and the two wagons,
+and the few incurious cowboys who had rewarded the young man with their
+glances. Apparently whatever citizens were here were busy in the
+saloons. As this thought flashed upon the young man his lips
+straightened grimly. But he continued slowly on his way, giving much
+attention to objects that came within his range of vision. The more he
+saw of the town, the less pleased he was with it.
+
+The suit cases were heavy; he paused in front of a building and set them
+down, while with his handkerchief he mopped the dust and perspiration
+from his forehead. He saw a flaring sign on the roof of the building in
+front of which he had stopped and he read the legend with a smile of
+derision: "The Fashion Saloon." Several ponies were hitched to the rail
+in front of the building; the bridle of one was gaily decorated with a
+bow of ribbon. Only a woman would have decorated a pony thus, the young
+man decided with a smile. Yet what sort of woman would hitch her pony in
+front of a saloon? He looked about him for some explanation and saw a
+vacant space beside him and beside the vacant space a store. There was
+no hitching rail in front of the store, therefore here was the
+explanation. He heard a sound behind him and turning he beheld the
+figures of a man and a woman in the vacant space between the two
+buildings.
+
+The woman seemed to be little more than a girl, for as the young man
+watched she turned slightly toward him--though not seeing him--and he
+saw youth pictured on her face, and innocence, though withal she gave
+the young man an impression of sturdy self-reliance that awakened
+instant admiration for her in his mind.
+
+She was attired in picturesque costume, consisting of short riding
+skirt, boots, felt hat, woolen blouse with a flowing tie at the throat,
+gloves, and spurs. It was not the sort of thing to which the young man
+was accustomed, but she made an attractive picture and he took in every
+detail of her appearance with eager eyes.
+
+It was some time before he noticed the man. The latter stood facing the
+girl and he could not get a view of his face. He had a gigantic frame,
+with huge shoulders that loomed above the girl, dwarfing her. The young
+man remained motionless, watching the two, for there was something in
+the big man's attitude that held him. The man turned presently and the
+young man had a glimpse of his face. It was heavy featured, coarse, and
+an unmistakable brutality was betrayed in it. The young man's lips
+curled. He did not like the type, and it was the girl's face that held
+him now that he had seen the man's.
+
+He leaned easily against the front of the building, not over fifteen
+feet distant from the two, trying to appear uninterested, but not
+concealing his interest. He believed the girl had not seen him, for
+though she had looked in his direction he was sure that her glance had
+passed him to rest on the pony at the hitching rail. Swift as the glance
+had been the young man had seen in her face an expression that caused
+him to decide to remain where he was until the girl mounted her pony, no
+matter how long that time might be. So he relaxed, leaning against the
+building--attentive, listening, though apparently entirely unconcerned
+over their conversation.
+
+The girl seemed moved with some deep emotion over something the big man
+had said, for her slight figure had stiffened and she stood looking at
+him with an angry, intense gaze. The big man had been taunting her, for
+his teeth showed in a mocking grin as he hovered near her, apparently
+sure of her. It was like a lion playing with a mouse. Then the young man
+heard the big man's voice:
+
+"So you don't take kindly to my courting? Don't want anything to do with
+me at all?" His forced laugh had a harshness in it that caused the young
+man's muscles to stiffen. He took a sly glance at the girl and saw her
+chin uplift with disdain.
+
+"Do you think it necessary for me to tell you that--again?" she said.
+
+A strange satisfaction thrilled the young man; sympathy for her drew his
+mouth into a peculiarly grim smile. But he had no time to enjoy his
+satisfaction for the big man spoke and this time he did not laugh.
+
+"Well," he said shortly, "you're going to have something to do with me.
+You're going to hook up with me or I'm putting that crazy brother of
+yours out of business!"
+
+The girl was suddenly rigid and a deep red as suddenly suffused her
+cheeks. The young man's face paled at the threat, his teeth came
+together with a snap, and he leaned forward, wishing to hear some more
+of this extraordinary conversation. More of it came quickly. The girl
+spoke, her voice even and well controlled, though burdened with a biting
+sarcasm:
+
+"What a terrible man you are, to be sure, to threaten to make war upon a
+defenseless girl and her afflicted brother. But I'm not afraid of you!"
+
+She took a step toward him, standing very close to him and looking
+straight into his eyes. She was fighting bravely for her composure, but
+the young man had seen that her lips had quivered pitifully during her
+brief speech. He stiffened with sympathy. He could not, of course,
+understand this strange conversation, but he could discern its drift,
+and the suggestive underplay in the big man's words. But plainly he had
+not been mistaken in his estimate of the young woman--she seemed
+entirely able to take care of herself.
+
+He crowded a little closer, though he knew that this conversation was
+none of his affair further than that he was interested--as any man would
+be interested--in seeing that the young woman received decent treatment.
+Certainly so far she had not received that, yet neither had the big man
+said anything to warrant interference by a stranger. Stealing another
+glance, the young man saw a heavy revolver at the man's hip, and he did
+not doubt, from what he had thus far seen of him, that he would use the
+weapon should he turn and discover that there was a listener to his
+conversation. Such an action would accord perfectly with tales that the
+young man had heard of this section of the country. But he edged closer.
+
+The big man's face had become poisonously bloated. The girl's defiance
+seemed to have enraged him.
+
+"Hell!" he said venomously. "You're talking damn brave!" He leaned
+closer to her. "And you think you'd be disgraced if folks knowed you was
+a friend of mine?" He laughed harshly. "Most folks are tickled to be
+known as my friend. But I'm telling you this: If I ain't a friend I'm an
+enemy, and you're doing as I say or I'm making things mighty unpleasant
+for you and your poor, 'afflicted' brother!"
+
+The young man saw the girl's hands clench, saw her face grow slowly
+pale. Twice now had the big man taunted her about her brother, and
+plainly his words had hurt her. Words trembled on her lips but refused
+to come. But for an instant she forced her eyes to meet those of the man
+and then they suddenly filled with tears. She took a backward step, her
+shoulders drooping. The big man followed her, gloating over her. Again
+the young man's thoughts went to the lion and the mouse.
+
+"Hurts, does it?" said the big man, brutally. "Well, you've brought it
+on yourself, being such a damn prude!"
+
+He reached out and grasped her by the shoulder. She shrank back,
+struggling with him, trying to grasp the butt of an ivory-handled
+revolver that swung at her right hip. The big man pinned her arms and
+the effort was futile.
+
+And then retribution--like an avalanche--struck the big man. He heard
+the movement, sensed the danger, and flung his right hand toward his
+pistol butt. There was a silent struggle; a shot, one of the young man's
+arms swung out--flail like--the clenched hand landing with a crash. The
+big man went down like a falling tree--prone to the ground, his revolver
+flying ten feet distant, a little blue-white smoke curling lazily upward
+out of its muzzle. The big man was raised again--bodily--and hurled down
+again. He lay face upward in the white sunlight--a mass of bruised and
+bleeding flesh.
+
+The young man's anger had come and gone. He stood over the big man,
+looking down at him, his white teeth gleaming through his slightly
+parted lips.
+
+"I think that will do for you," he said in an even, passionless voice.
+
+For an instant there was a tense silence. The young man turned and
+looked at the girl, who was regarding him with surprised and bewildered
+eyes.
+
+The young man smiled mirthlessly. "I think I waited rather too long. But
+he won't bother you again--at least for a few minutes."
+
+He saw the girl's gaze directed to a point somewhere behind him and he
+turned to see that a door in the side of the Fashion Saloon was vomiting
+men. They came rushing out, filling the space between the two
+buildings--cowboys mostly, with a sprinkling of other men whose
+appearance and attire proclaimed them citizens. The young man stood
+silent while the newcomers ranged themselves about him, others giving
+their attention to the big man who still lay on the ground. The girl had
+not moved; she was standing near the young man, her face pale, her
+slight figure rigid, her eyes wide and flashing. The young man looked
+from her to the men who had crowded about him and he became aware that
+one of the men--a slender, olive-skinned cowboy--evidently a
+half-breed--was speaking to him. He stood looking at the man, saw menace
+in his eyes, heard his voice, writhing in profane accusation:
+
+"So you've shot Beeg Beel, you tenderfoot----!" said the man. His right
+hand was hooked in his cartridge belt, near the butt of his six-shooter.
+
+The young man had been coldly scrutinizing the face of the half-breed;
+he had seen a sneering insolence on the thin, snarling lips, and he knew
+instantly that this man was a friend of his fallen adversary. He had
+smiled grimly when the man had begun speaking, being willing to argue
+the justice of his action in striking the big man, but at the man's vile
+insult his white teeth gleamed again and his right arm flew out--like a
+flail--the fist crashing against the half-breed's jaw. Like the big man
+the half-breed collapsed in a heap on the ground. There was a sudden
+movement in the crowd, and pistols flashed in the sunlight. The young
+man took a backward step, halted, drew himself up and faced them, his
+lips curling.
+
+"Of course you'll shoot now," he said bitterly.
+
+He heard a rustle beside him, and turned to see the girl standing within
+a foot of him, the ivory-handled pistol in hand, her eyes flashing
+coldly.
+
+"I don't think that any of them are going to shoot," she declared
+evenly, her voice resounding in the sudden silence that had fallen; "Big
+Bill got just what he deserved, and this gentleman will not be molested.
+He isn't armed," she said, with a dry laugh; "shooting him would be
+murder, and if he is shot I promise to avenge him immediately." She
+turned slightly, speaking to the young man while keeping her eyes on the
+men around her. During the pause that followed her words several of the
+men stealthily sheathed their weapons and stepped back.
+
+"I think Big Bill is able to fight his own battles," continued the girl,
+taking advantage of the evident reluctance of the men to force trouble.
+
+Her face became slightly paler as she saw the big man sit up and stare
+about him. He got to his feet and stood, swaying dizzily for an instant,
+and then his gaze sought out the young man and was fixed on him with
+foreboding malignance. His right hand fell to his holster, and finding
+no weapon there he turned and sought it, finding it, and returning to a
+point near the young man, the weapon in hand. As he halted there was
+another movement and the half-breed was on his feet and dragging at his
+revolver. The young man crouched, prepared to spring, and the big man
+spoke sharply to the half-breed.
+
+"Quit it!" he said, snarling. "Mind your own business!" Then he seemed
+to realize that the half-breed had been worsted also, for he looked at
+the latter, saw the dust on his clothing and grinned expressively.
+
+"So he got you too, did he, Yuma?" His heavy features wreathed into a
+mocking sneer as he faced the young man.
+
+"Knocked me down!" he said in a silky, even voice. "Knocked me cold with
+a punch. Knocked Yuma Ed down too!" He took another step toward the
+young man and surveyed him critically, his eyes glinting with something
+very near amusement. Then he stepped back, laughing shortly.
+
+"I ain't shooting you," he said. "I've got an idea that you and me will
+meet again." There was an ominous threat in his voice as he continued:
+"Shooting you wouldn't half pay you back. Mark that, young man--shooting
+you wouldn't half pay you back."
+
+He stepped away from the young man, motioning the other men into the
+door through which they had emerged to come to his assistance, and they
+filed slowly in without protest. The big man paused long enough to look
+again at the young man.
+
+"Knocked me down!" he said as though scarcely able to realize the truth;
+"knocked me cold with a punch!" He laughed, his coarse features twisting
+into an odd expression. "Well, I'll be damned!" He turned abruptly and
+disappeared through the door through which the other men had gone.
+
+For an instant the young man stood, looking after him. Then he turned
+and saw the young woman, standing near her pony, regarding him with
+grave eyes.
+
+"Thank you," she said. He caught a flashing smile and then she was in
+the saddle, loping her pony down the street toward the station. For a
+moment the young man looked after her and then with a smile he returned
+to his suit cases and was off down the street toward the courthouse,
+which he saw in the distance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE RULE OF CATTLE
+
+
+The courthouse was a low, one-story redbrick building, sitting well back
+from the street. It was evidently newly built, for an accumulation of
+debris, left by the workmen, still littered the ground in the vicinity.
+A board walk led from the street to the wide, arched entrance. From the
+steps one could look down the street at the station and the other
+buildings squatting in the sunlight, dingy with the dust of many dry
+days. Except for the cowponies and the buckboard and the prairie
+schooner there was a total absence of life or movement, offering a
+striking contrast to the bustling cities to which the young man had been
+accustomed.
+
+He walked rapidly down the board walk, entered the courthouse, and
+paused before a door upon which appeared the legend: "United States
+District Court. J. Blackstone Graney." The young man set his suit cases
+down, mopped his forehead with his handkerchief, making a wry face at
+the dust that appeared on the linen after his use of it, and then
+knocked lightly, but firmly, on the door. A voice inside immediately
+admonished him to "come in." The young man smiled with satisfaction,
+turned the knob and opened the door, standing on the threshold. A man
+seated at one of the windows of the room was gazing steadily out at the
+vast, dry, sun-scorched country. He turned at the young man's entrance
+and got slowly to his feet, apparently waiting for the visitor to speak.
+He was a short man, not heavily, but stockily built, giving a clear
+impression of stolidity. Yet there was a certain gleam in his eyes that
+gave the lie to this impression, a gleam that warned of an active,
+analytical mind. Judicial dignity lurked all over him.
+
+The young man bowed respectfully. "Are you Judge Graney?" he questioned.
+
+The judge nodded and the young man smiled slightly. "I am Kent Hollis,"
+he said.
+
+The judge had been approaching a big table that stood in the center of
+the room and at the young man's words he took a second glance at him,
+but did not hesitate in his walk toward the table. However, he smiled
+when he reached it, sinking into a chair and motioning the young man to
+another.
+
+"I have been expecting you," he said after he had become seated. "Take a
+chair." He waited until the young man had drawn a chair opposite him and
+then he leaned over the table and stretched out his hand in greeting.
+"I'm glad to see you," he continued cordially. He held the young man's
+hand for an instant, peering steadily into the latter's unwavering eyes,
+apparently making a mental estimate of him. Then he dropped the hand and
+sat back, a half smile on his face. "You look like your father," he
+said.
+
+The young man's face clouded. "Poor dad," he said slowly.
+
+For a moment there was a silence; the judge studied the young man's
+face. Something that he saw in it must have pleased him, for he smiled,
+becoming serious instantly.
+
+"I am sorry you could not get here in time," he said. "We buried your
+father yesterday."
+
+"I couldn't make it," returned the young man regretfully. "I should have
+liked to see him before he died. Where did you bury him?"
+
+"We took him out to his ranch--the Circle Bar," returned the judge,
+"where he said he wanted to be buried when he died. You'll find that the
+Circle Bar boys have done their best for him--which was little enough.
+Poor fellow, he deserved something better." He looked keenly at the
+young man.
+
+Lines of pain came into the latter's face; he bowed his head, nodding at
+the Judge's words.
+
+"I have always thought that it was his own fault," he said gently. "It
+might have been different." He looked slowly up at the judge, his face
+reddening with embarrassment. "Of course you know something of his
+life," he said. "You were his friend--he wrote me a while back, telling
+me that. I don't pretend to know what came between him and mother," he
+continued; "mother would never tell and father never mentioned it in his
+letters. I have thought it was drink," he added, watching the judge's
+face closely. He caught the latter's slight nod and his lips
+straightened. "Yes, it must have been drink," he continued; "I have
+inferred that from what mother has hinted now and then. But----" and a
+wistful gleam came into his eyes--"I have hoped that it would not be
+drink that would cause his----"
+
+He caught the judge's slow, grave nod and he broke off abruptly, his
+eyes filling with an expression of resignation. "Well," he said, "it is
+ended, no matter what did it." He shoved back his chair. "I thank you
+for what you did for him," he added, rising; "I assure you that if it is
+possible for me to repay----"
+
+"Sit down," said the judge, waving a hand to the young man's chair. "No
+thanks are due me. I did only what any friend would do for another. I
+have arranged for you to go out to the Circle Bar," he informed Hollis
+as the latter hesitated over resuming his chair. "Neil Norton, your
+range boss, is to be here at six o'clock with the buckboard." He
+consulted his watch. "He ought to be here in half an hour--if he is on
+time. Meantime there are some things I would like to say to you."
+
+Hollis smiled. "Fire away," he directed.
+
+The judge leaned his elbows on the table and narrowed his eyes at
+Hollis. "Don't think my questions impertinent," he said gravely, "for I
+assure you that nothing is further from my mind than a desire to pry
+into your affairs. But I take it you will need some advice--which, of
+course, you may disregard if you wish. I suppose you don't make a secret
+of your age?"
+
+"No," was the instant reply, given with a grin, "I am twenty-six."
+
+The judge smiled dryly. "We have great ambitions at twenty-six," he
+said. "I remember that at twenty-six I was rather determined on making
+the Supreme bench. You can see for yourself how far I missed it. I do
+not say that we never realize our ambitions," he added quickly as he saw
+a flash light up the young man's eyes; "I merely wish to show that in my
+case they were rather extravagant." He grimaced, continuing with a
+smile: "You are a college man, of course--I can see that."
+
+Hollis nodded. The judge continued, with an admiring glance at the young
+man's muscular frame and broad shoulders.
+
+"Went in for athletics--football, and such?" he said. "Well," he added,
+catching the young man's nod, "it didn't hurt you a particle--it doesn't
+hurt anybody. Rather prepares a man for hard knocks--which he is sure to
+get sooner or later. If you have decided to live in this country you
+must expect hard knocks. And I presume you are going to live here?"
+
+"That depends." returned Hollis. "If father has left his affairs in such
+shape that it is necessary for me to stay here and straighten them out,
+why of course I shall stay. Otherwise----" He hesitated and laughed
+quietly, continuing: "Well, I also have an ambition, and if I am
+compelled to remain here it will have to be sacrificed. It is a rather
+humble ambition compared to yours," he laughed. "It is journalism," he
+continued, suddenly serious; "I want to own a newspaper. I am city
+editor now and in a few years----" He laughed. "I am not going to
+prophesy, but I have been working hard."
+
+The judge's eyelashes flickered, but his face remained grave. "I am
+afraid that you will have to remain here. That is"--he added dryly--"if
+you expect to realize anything from the property."
+
+"I expect there can't be much property," observed Hollis.
+
+The judge smiled. "A thousand acres of good grass land, some buildings,
+and"--here the judge's eyes gleamed and he drawled his words--"a
+newspaper."
+
+Hollis sat erect. "A newspaper!" he gasped. "A newspaper in this
+country? Why, man, a newspaper----"
+
+The judge laughed. "So you will not have to go back East in order to be
+able to realize your ambition--you can own a newspaper here--your
+father's newspaper--the Dry Bottom _Kicker_. It was quite a recent
+venture; I believe it appeared about a dozen times--intermittently.
+Ostensibly it was a weekly, but in reality it was printed at those times
+when your father's affliction sat least heavily upon him. He used to
+hire a compositor from Las Vegas to set the type,--a man named Potter--a
+worthless sort of fellow, but a genius in his way--when sober. I suspect
+that much of the matter that went into the _Kicker_ emanated from
+the brain of Dave Potter."
+
+Hollis's smile revealed just a trace of derision. "You don't happen to
+know how father happened to think that a newspaper would pay--in this
+place?" he asked.
+
+The judge looked at him meditatively, a gleam of quiet amusement in his
+eyes. "I don't remember to have said that the paper made any money for
+your father," he returned slowly; "nor do I remember hearing your father
+say that he expected it to make any money. As I understand the
+situation, your father founded the paper on principle. He expected to
+use it as a weapon."
+
+"Please go on," urged Hollis. "That strikes me as a rather Quixotic
+proceeding."
+
+"It was, rather," admitted the judge; "that is, it would seem Quixotic
+as viewed by an Eastern newspaper man. But out here people are apt to
+ignore money and methods in considering results. After you have been
+here a while you will be able to see the force and truth of that
+statement. Your father was after results and he seized upon the idea of
+founding a newspaper as a means by which to obtain them. And I feel
+certain that had he lived he would have succeeded."
+
+"I plead ignorance," said Hollis, watching the judge closely. "What
+particular result did my father desire?"
+
+Judge Graney's eyes gleamed with earnestness. He leaned forward,
+speaking slowly and distinctly.
+
+"I am going to illustrate my point by giving you a brief history of your
+father's experiences out here--as I had it from him. He came out here
+about fifteen years ago and took up a quarter-section of land over on
+Rabbit-Ear Creek, the present site of the Circle Bar ranch. For quite a
+few years he was a nester--as the small owner is called in this country,
+but he was unmolested for the reason that there were few large owners in
+the vicinity and each man was willing that his neighbor should succeed.
+Your father prospered and after a few years began to buy land. He
+finally acquired a thousand acres; he told me that at one time he had
+about five thousand head of cattle. Of course, these cattle could not
+live on your father's thousand acres, but the ranges are free and the
+thousand acres answered very well as a headquarters.
+
+"Eight years ago some men in Santa Fe organized what is known as the
+Union County Cattlemen's Association. This company secured a section of
+land adjoining your father's property, on the other side of Rabbit-Ear
+Creek. The company called its ranch the Circle Cross. Perhaps it strikes
+you as peculiar that the Association should have chosen a brand so
+closely resembling your father's. I will digress long enough to explain
+the action."
+
+The judge drew out a pencil and picked up a piece of paper that lay near
+him on the desk, making some crude hieroglyphics and poising his pencil
+above them.
+
+"Here," he explained, indicating a sketch which he had drawn, "is the
+Circle Bar brand--a bar within a circle. And this--" indicating another
+sketch, "--is the Circle Cross--a cross within a circle. It is of course,
+perfectly obvious that all the Circle Cross company had to do when it
+desired to appropriate one of the Circle Bar cattle was to add a
+vertical bar to the Circle Bar brand and the brand became the Circle
+Cross. From a mechanical standpoint it was a very trifling operation,
+the manipulator of the brands having merely to apply the hot iron
+through a piece of wet blanket--that gives a new brand the appearance of
+age.
+
+"To get back to the main subject. The new company called its ranch the
+Circle Cross and it erected new buildings within a few miles of the
+Circle Bar buildings. Not long after the advent of the new company it
+tried to buy the Circle Bar, but your father refused to sell. Bill
+Dunlavey, the Circle Cross manager, attempted to negotiate the purchase
+of the Circle Bar and when he was met with refusal hard words passed
+between him and your father. Not long after that your father began to
+miss cattle--rustlers began a systematic attack upon his herds. Your
+father recognized this thievery as the work of the Cattlemen's
+Association and he fought back.
+
+"A number of times he changed his brands but each time the company
+checkmated him. To illustrate: Your father changed his brand to appear
+thus:" The judge drew again on the paper. "That is the 'Wine-Glass'
+brand. You can see that it resembles a wine glass when held up
+vertically, though of course as it appeared on the Circle Bar cattle it
+lay on its side. But this move was futile, for among the Circle Cross
+cattle now appeared many branded with the sign of the 'Hour-Glass,'
+thus:" The judge drew again. "This was achieved by merely adding a
+semi-circle to the wine-glass, closing over the bowl."
+
+"As I have said your father altered his brand a good many times. But the
+Circle Bar cattle continued to disappear. Years of warfare followed. The
+Cattlemen's Association lost no opportunity to harass your father or,
+for that matter, all the other small owners in the vicinity. Desperate,
+dissolute men were imported from Texas and Arizona, men who took delight
+in the shedding of human blood. These men roamed the ranges, stealing
+the Circle Bar cattle and killing Circle Bar cowboys. Your father had
+trouble in keeping men; in order to surround himself with enough men to
+protect his cattle and resist the aggressions of Dunlavey's hired
+assassins he was forced to pay ruinous wages.
+
+"Even then he could not prevent rustling. Dunlavey bribed his men; his
+herds dwindled; he saw that he was facing ruin if he did not devise some
+means to successfully cope with his enemies. He went over to Santa Fe to
+see the governor--a piffling carpet-bagger. He was told that the
+government was powerless; that the same condition existed all over the
+country, and that the government was unable to combat it. The Law had
+not come.
+
+"Your father returned home, discouraged but not beaten. He approached
+the several other small owners in the vicinity, asking for co-operation
+and assistance. Fearful of Dunlavey's wrath, the small owners refused to
+organize. But your father decided to carry on the fight alone. He
+recognized the fact that nothing but the Law could defeat the
+association's aims, and he determined to force the Law into the
+Territory. With this end in view he established his newspaper. He
+succeeded in arousing public interest with the result that a court was
+established here."
+
+The judge smiled dryly, continuing: "Yes, the Law is here. Or what is
+more to the point, a representative of the Law is here. 'I am the Law,'"
+he quoted, ironically. "But my hands are tied; this court is a mere
+travesty upon justice. The government at Washington has seen fit to send
+me here--alone. I can't go out and get evidence; I couldn't secure a
+conviction if I did. The people here who are not Dunlavey's friends were
+afraid of him. I can't get a jury. Dunlavey elects the sheriff--controls
+the election machinery. I am powerless--a mere figurehead. This is the
+situation in a nutshell. I could go into detail, but I imagine it is
+plain enough as it is."
+
+Hollis's face had become gravely serious; his lips were straightened
+with an expression that hinted at the conflict that was going on in his
+mind.
+
+"Isn't there an army post near?" he questioned.
+
+"Over at Fort Union--a hundred miles or so southwest. I have pleaded for
+a detail, but have been informed that it can't be had; that the soldiers
+are needed to keep the Indians in order. Independent cattlemen are
+supposed to fight it out alone. At least that is the inference, if we
+are to consider the attitude of the government."
+
+Hollis was gravely silent. The judge leaned back in his chair, watching
+him with a queer expression. He realized that he had said enough to
+discourage the average young man from remaining in the country a moment
+longer than was absolutely necessary. He would not have been surprised
+had Hollis told him that he did not intend to remain. But from what he
+had seen of the young man he felt sure that his decision, when it did
+come, would be final. More than once since Hollis had been in the office
+had the judge observed the serene, steady gleam in his eyes, and he had
+catalogued him with the rare class of men whose mental balance is so
+perfect that nothing disturbs it. The judge had met a few such men in
+the West and he knew the type. As he sat looking at the young man he
+decided that Providence had made a mistake in allowing him to waste his
+time in the East. The West teemed with opportunities for men of his
+kind.
+
+He was not surprised at Hollis's next question; it showed that he was
+considering the situation from many angles before committing himself.
+
+"What is the condition of Circle Bar ranch at present?" he asked.
+
+"The title to the land is intact and cannot be assailed. But Norton
+informs me that there are not above two hundred head of cattle on the
+range, and that the buildings are run down. Not a very cheerful
+prospect?"
+
+He had told the truth about the land and the cattle, but he had
+purposely exaggerated concerning the condition of the buildings, being
+grimly determined to place the situation in its most unfavorable light
+that he might be the better able to test the young man's mettle. He
+smiled as Hollis thoughtfully stroked his chin.
+
+"Well, now," admitted the latter, flashing a queer smile at the judge,
+"I quite agree with you that the prospect isn't cheering. But so long as
+the condition is such as it is there is no need to grumble. I didn't
+come out here expecting to fall into a bed of roses."
+
+"Then you won't be disappointed," returned the judge dryly. He filled
+and lighted a pipe, smoking meditatively, his eyes on the younger man
+with a curious expression. He had determined to push the test a little
+farther.
+
+"You could probably sell the Circle Bar," he said finally. "Your father
+told me before he died that he had been offered ten dollars an acre for
+his land. That would total to a tidy sum."
+
+Hollis looked quickly at the judge, his eyes flashing with grim
+amusement. "Would you advise me to sell?" he questioned.
+
+The judge laughed quietly. "That is an unfair question," he equivocated,
+narrowing his eyes whimsically. "If I were heir to the property and felt
+that I did not care to assume the danger of managing it I should sell,
+without doubt. If, on the other hand, I had decided to continue my
+father's fight against an unscrupulous company, I would stay no matter
+what the consequences. But"--He puffed slowly at his pipe, his voice
+filling with unmistakable sarcasm--"it would be so much easier to sell
+and return at once to a more peaceful atmosphere. With ten thousand
+dollars you could go back East and go on with your newspaper work, well
+equipped, with a chance of realizing your ambition--and not be troubled
+with continuing a fight in which, no doubt, there would be many blows to
+be taken."
+
+"Thank you," returned Hollis quietly. He looked steadily into the
+judge's eyes, his own glinting with a grim humor. "You have succeeded in
+making it very plain," he continued slowly. "But I am not going to
+run--I have decided on that. Of course I feel properly resentful over
+the way my father has been treated by this man Dunlavey and his
+association." His eyes flashed with a peculiar hardness. "And I would
+stay here and fight Dunlavey and his parcel of ruffians if for no other
+reason than to secure revenge on personal grounds.
+
+"But there is one other reason. There is a principle at stake. I don't
+care very much about the personal side of the question; little as I knew
+my father, I believe he would have ignored personalities were he
+confronted with the condition that confronts me. It is my belief that as
+an American citizen he chafed under conditions that prevented him from
+enjoying that freedom to which we are all entitled under the
+Constitution. Judging from your conversation you are in entire sympathy
+with that sentiment." He smiled at the judge. "Of course I am not
+mistaken?" he added.
+
+The tobacco in the bowl of the judge's pipe spluttered; he brought his
+right fist heavily down upon the table, rattling the pens and ink
+bottles that littered its top. "No, young man; you are not mistaken--you
+have hit the nail squarely on the head. If you are going to stay here
+and fight Dunlavey and his crew, Blackstone Graney is with you
+until----"
+
+"Until the Law comes," suggested Hollis.
+
+"Yes, by thunder!" declared the judge. "You can go further than that and
+say: 'until the Law rules!'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+NORTON MAKES A DISCOVERY
+
+
+Judge Graney rose and leaned over the table, taking the young man's hand
+and holding it tightly. Then he sat down again and resumed smoking.
+Neither man said a word during the hand-clasp and yet both knew that
+their hearts and minds were united in a common cause. Words would have
+been unnecessary and futile.
+
+Hollis's path of duty lay straight and open before him. There was no
+by-way that would lead him around the dangers that were sure to beset
+him. Nor had he thought to search for any. Long before the judge had
+concluded his recital of conditions in the county Hollis had decided to
+meet the issue squarely. He had been able to see beyond the petty,
+personal side of the question; had even ignored it to get at the big,
+pithy principle of equal rights. The Law must come. If he could assist
+in bringing it he would be accomplishing something real and tangible and
+he would be satisfied. He did not believe that Destiny had anything to
+do with his appearance upon the scene at this particular time; rather he
+felt that his coming was merely a result of a combination of
+circumstances such as might have occurred to any man. And like any man
+with courage and deeply settled convictions he was prepared to move
+forward to the issue, trusting himself. He had no thought of appearing
+heroic.
+
+Yet to the judge he appeared so. The latter had been prepared to hear
+excuses from him; had been prepared to resist a natural inclination to
+berate the young man soundly for lack of parental loyalty, though
+conscious that he could advance no valid reason for the young man
+sacrificing himself upon the altars of an old feud. It was against human
+nature for any man to so sacrifice himself, he had assured himself when
+trying to build up a defense for the young man.
+
+And now that Hollis had shown that he needed no defender; that he was
+willing to take up the cudgels in behalf of his father, the judge was
+scarcely able to restrain himself. To state calmly that he intended to
+fight the Cattlemen's Association when there was a life of comparative
+safety awaiting him in another section of the country was an heroic
+decision. Many another man would have cringed--would have surrendered
+without striking a blow.
+
+Judge Graney had long known that the action of his government in sending
+him to Union County was an ironical surrender on the part of the
+government to the forces in the West which had been long demanding the
+Law. He had been sent here, presumably to enforce the law, but in
+reality to silence the government's critics. He was not expected to
+convict anyone. Theoretically he was supposed to uphold the majesty of
+the law in Union County, but in reality he merely remained and drew his
+salary. There was no law to enforce.
+
+In the fight that had been waged between the elder Hollis and the
+Cattlemen's Association his sympathies had been with Hollis, though he
+had never been able to assist him in a legal way. But the judge knew
+that eventually the Law must come, and so he encouraged Hollis, assuring
+him that victory would be his in the end.
+
+And then Hollis had died--suddenly. The Las Vegas doctor who had
+attended him had shaken his head sagely when the judge had questioned
+him regarding his patient and had pointed significantly to one of Dry
+Bottom's saloons. The doctor had told the judge there was no hope, and
+the latter had telegraphed East. The appearance of young Hollis had been
+the result. The judge's heart had warmed toward the young man.
+
+"What are your intentions regarding the newspaper--the _Kicker_?"
+he questioned.
+
+Hollis looked up quickly, his face grave. "Perhaps if there had been no
+_Kicker_ here my decision might have been different," he said. "But
+so long as it is here it is in business to stay!"
+
+"I expect that decision won't please Dunlavey a whole lot," the judge
+returned.
+
+"Perhaps not," drawled Hollis; "still, we can't aim to please everybody.
+I expect I might be able to get hold of that printer--Potter I believe
+you called him?"
+
+"Potter won't be hard to find," assured the judge; "a search of the
+saloons would uncover him, I imagine." He smiled. "When you get ready to
+get the _Kicker_ out just let me know; I promise to have Potter on
+hand."
+
+To the ears of the two men came a rattle of wheels and a voice. The
+judge leaned back in his chair and looked out through the window. His
+face wreathed into a broad smile as he resumed his former position and
+looked at Hollis. "Your range boss is here," he said.
+
+They heard a step on the board walk, and a man stood in the doorway
+looking at them.
+
+The newcomer gave an instant impression of capability. He stood on the
+threshold, entirely composed, saturnine, serene eyed, absolutely sure of
+himself. He was arrayed in high heeled boots, minus spurs; the bottoms
+of a pair of dust-covered overalls were tucked into the boot legs; a
+woolen shirt, open at the throat, covered a pair of admirable shoulders;
+a scarlet handkerchief was knotted around his neck; and a wide brimmed
+hat, carelessly dented in the crown, was shoved rakishly back from his
+forehead. Sagging from his slim waist was a well filled cartridge belt
+and at the right hip a heavy revolver.
+
+"Howdy, judge!" he said with a smile, in response to Judge Graney's
+cordial greeting.
+
+"Just come in?" questioned the judge.
+
+"Been in town an hour," returned Norton.
+
+He flashed a searching glance at Hollis, which that young man met
+steadily. The thought crossed Hollis's mind that the buckboard that he
+had seen in front of a store soon after leaving the station must have
+been Norton's. But now Norton was speaking again and Hollis listened.
+
+"Dropped into the Fashion to see my friend Red Eggers," resumed Norton,
+smiling broadly. "Same old crowd--Dunlavey, Yuma Ed, Ten Spot,
+Greasy--most of the bunch which has been makin' things interestin' for
+us hereabouts."
+
+At the mention of "Yuma Ed" Hollis looked up. That was the name of the
+second man he had struck in the affair near the Fashion Saloon. He
+wondered if Norton knew. He did not remember to have seen the latter
+among the men who had surrounded him in the space between the two
+buildings. But the judge was now introducing him to Norton and he stood
+up, holding the latter's hand and meeting his inspecting gaze fairly. He
+found that the range boss was fully as tall as he; indeed, Hollis
+discovered that he was compelled to look up slightly in order to meet
+the latter's level gaze. Norton smiled peculiarly; there was a friendly
+expression in his eyes, but mingled with it was a reserved, appraising,
+speculative gleam, which drew a smile to Hollis's lips.
+
+"So you're Jim Hollis's boy?" said Norton. "My new boss?" He grinned,
+evidently willing to go more than half way in forming a friendship with
+his "new boss". "I don't reckon that you're much stuck on this here
+country--much as you've seen of it?"
+
+"I've been used to keeping busy," laughed Hollis, "and my impression is
+that it seems rather dull out here."
+
+Norton's eyelashes flickered. He deliberately closed one eye at the
+judge, carefully averting his face so that Hollis could not see.
+
+"So you're lookin' for action?" he said to Hollis in a grave voice.
+"Mebbe it ain't none of my business," he added, his eyes gleaming, "but
+I'm askin' you if you're thinkin' to stay in this country--keepin' your
+dad's ranch an' his newspaper?"
+
+Hollis nodded. Norton's eyes gleamed with a savage delight. "Bully!" he
+declared. "If you stay here you'll get plenty of action. I was afraid
+you wouldn't stay." He turned to Judge Graney, a grin of satisfaction on
+his face. "I'm tellin' you somethin' that will tickle you a heap," he
+said. "I told you that I had stopped in Red Egger's saloon. I did.
+Dunlavey's bunch was feelin' mighty sore over somethin'. I stayed there
+a while, tryin' to find out what it was all about, but there wasn't none
+of them sayin' anything to me. But pretty soon I got Red over into a
+corner an' he told me. Accordin' to him Dunlavey had corraled that
+Hazelton girl outside an' was tellin' her somethin' pretty strong when a
+tenderfoot, which hadn't any regard for Dunlavey's delicate feelin's, up
+an' lambasted him in the jaw!"
+
+"Struck him?" queried the judge, grinning delightedly.
+
+"Knocked him cold," affirmed Norton, his eyes dancing. "Pasted him so
+hard that he thought it was night an' went to sleep. Then Yuma busted in
+an' thought to work his guns. He got his'n, too. That there tenderfoot
+didn't have no respect for guns. Red says he never thought any man could
+hit so hard. It must have been sumptuous!" He laughed delightedly. "I'd
+like to shake hands with that tenderfoot--he's my friend!"
+
+Hollis pulled out a cigar case, selected a cigar, lighted it, and smoked
+in silence.
+
+So her name was Hazelton. Admiration over the manner in which she had
+held the men at bay before Dunlavey got to his feet still lingered; she
+had impressed him deeply. But a deeper satisfaction overshadowed his
+thoughts of the girl, for he had slugged Dunlavey, his father's enemy.
+His satisfaction grew to amusement. Did Dunlavey know who had slugged
+him? He must have suspected, for Hollis recalled the man's significant
+expression when, after he had risen from the ground he said: "I've got
+an idea that you an' me will meet again."
+
+Hollis's thoughts flitted rapidly from Dunlavey to the girl. Now that he
+had decided to stay he had determined to search her out. He remembered
+that Dunlavey had spoken slightingly of her brother and he assured
+himself that he would not be entirely satisfied until he had uncovered
+the mystery. He might have questioned Norton or the judge, for both men
+evidently knew the girl, but he was reluctant to betray his interest in
+her to either man.
+
+He heard Norton make an exclamation of surprise, and looking up he saw
+him holding his right hand out, the palm upward, examining it. There was
+a splotch of blood on the palm and another on the under side of the
+thumb.
+
+"Shucks!" Norton was saying. "Now where in thunder did I get that?" He
+looked again at the hand and then suddenly dove forward to Hollis's
+side, seized his right hand, peered at the knuckles and held the hand
+triumphantly aloft.
+
+"I reckon this is where I got it!" he grinned.
+
+Hollis looked ruefully down at his knuckles. The skin was
+gashed--evidently where it had come in contact with a bone in either
+Dunlavey's or Yuma's jaw. He had intended to keep the story of adventure
+to himself. But he saw that Norton had stepped back and was gazing
+soberly at the suitcases, which Hollis had deposited near the door.
+Norton suddenly let out a chirp of delight.
+
+"Two of them!" he said, suppressing his excitement; "Two grips! Red
+Eggers said there was two an' that the tenderfoot had come down toward
+the court house!" He walked to Hollis and halted in front of him,
+looking at him with admiration and satisfaction.
+
+"Own up now!" he said. "You ain't tellin' us that it wasn't you, durn
+you! Oh, say!" He uttered a whoop that must have startled the horses in
+front of the building. Then he sobered down, speaking in a low,
+regretful voice: "You durn tenderfoot! Here I've been waitin' for years
+to get a crack at that big four-flusher, an' here you come, a-fannin'
+along from your little old East an' get ahead of me!" He stifled a
+cackle of mirth. "An' so you're lookin' for action? Lordy! If you don't
+call what you done to Dunlavey an' Yuma action this country's goin' to
+set up an' take notice when you get to goin' in earnest!"
+
+Judge Graney loomed somberly over the table. "I suppose it must have
+been you?" he said gravely.
+
+Hollis nodded. "I may as well confess," he said. "I saw a man giving a
+young lady a mighty bad moment and I slugged him. Another man called me
+a vile name and I slugged him, too. That was all."
+
+The judge sat down again, his face slightly pale. A significant glance
+passed between him and Norton, but the latter laughed grimly.
+
+"I reckon he's opened the ball, right off the reel," he suggested.
+
+Judge Graney drew a deep breath. "Yes," he returned. "I suppose that way
+is as good as any other. It was bound to come anyway. It will be war to
+the finish now!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+AT THE CIRCLE BAR
+
+
+In the two weeks that followed his arrival at Dry Bottom, Hollis had
+much time to meditate upon the great change that had come into his life.
+His conclusion that there was nothing in common between cattle raising
+and journalism was not a result of an involved process of reasoning, and
+had he not been endowed with a sense of humor he might have become
+embittered. Though a sacrifice be made cheerfully, there lingers always
+its ghost to draw mental pictures of "what might have been." Hollis
+would have been more than human had he not felt some little regret over
+his sacrifice.
+
+It had seemed to him, as two weeks before he had ridden away from the
+court house--sitting on the seat of the buckboard beside Neil Norton,
+his suitcases tucked snugly away underneath--that he was once and for
+all severing his connection with the big, bustling world in which he had
+moved; in whose busy scenes he had been so vitally interested. His had
+been a big work; seated at his desk in the "city" room of his newspaper
+he had many times likened himself unto an argus-eyed recording angel
+whose business it was to keep in view each of the many atoms of a busy
+multitude and to accord to them that amount of space that their
+importance seemed to demand. He had loved his work; it had broadened
+him, had provided him with exactly the proportion of mental exercise
+needed to keep him on edge and in a position to enjoy life. He had lived
+in the East--really lived. Out here he would merely exist, though, he
+assured himself grimly, his enemies would have to pay dearly for his
+sacrifice.
+
+The picture of his journey to the Circle Bar ranch was still fresh in
+his mind as he rode slowly away from Neil Norton, whom he had left
+sitting in his saddle on a ridge, watching him. The long twilight had
+brought its lengthening shadows that night before Norton had struck the
+Circle Bar trail, and before they had traveled a mile of the ten that
+lay before them night had come. Hollis had been little inclined to talk
+and Norton did not disturb him, but gave his attention to the horses.
+There had been no moon and few stars, and darkness, as under a blanket,
+had settled over them before they were many miles from Dry Bottom.
+
+The country seemed nothing more than a vast plain, broken here and there
+by ridges and depressions. Occasionally a low hill loomed out of the
+darkness, the shadows deepening around it; now and then the buckboard
+passed through a draw, the wheels sinking hub-deep in the loose sand.
+Several dry arroyos crossed the trail, but with a knowledge that seemed
+almost marvelous Norton cleverly avoided these pitfalls. Hollis could
+not see a foot ahead, but the location of the trail seemed to be no
+mystery to the range boss, for he drove the horses steadily on,
+hesitating for nothing.
+
+Once during the ride Norton broke the silence with a subdued cackle of
+mirth, and at another time he laughed aloud.
+
+"I'd liked to have seen Big Bill when you hit him!" he observed, regret
+in his voice. "I reckon he might have been just a little surprised!"
+
+To which Hollis made no reply. At another time Norton broke the silence
+long enough to inquire:
+
+"I reckon mebbe you wouldn't have hit him so hard if you'd knowed who he
+was?"
+
+"I think I should have hit a little harder," returned Hollis quietly.
+
+"Why, hell!" declared Norton with a laugh; "I reckon you would have done
+just that!"
+
+About ten o'clock they came in sight of some straggling posts, and
+Norton assured Hollis that the posts were strung with wire, forming a
+fence which skirted one side of the Circle Bar pasture. A few minutes
+later a dog barked and at Norton's call came bounding up to the
+buckboard, yipping joyously. Hollis could make out his shape as he
+cavorted about.
+
+"My dog," offered the range boss. "Half wolf, the other half just dog."
+He chuckled over his joke. "Best dog you ever see," he boasted; "money
+couldn't buy him. Like dogs?"
+
+Hollis nodded and then realizing that Norton could not see him in the
+darkness, voiced a quick "yes".
+
+In the distance Hollis saw a sudden square of light illuminate the wall
+of darkness into which they had been driving; a door had been opened.
+Evidently the dog's barking had aroused the inmates of the building, for
+as the buckboard drew nearer Hollis saw several figures flit out of the
+door-way. Norton drove the horses close to the building and brought them
+to a halt with a sonorous "whoa"! Then he turned to Hollis and spoke
+with a drawl: "This here building is the Circle Bar bunkhouse; them's
+some of your men."
+
+Hollis remarked the size of the building and Norton laughed grimly.
+"There was a time when it wasn't any too big," he said. "Five years ago
+your dad had twenty-seven men on the pay-roll. If Dunlavey an' his damn
+association hadn't showed up he'd have had them yet." He turned toward
+three men who were lounging in the doorway. "Hey, you guys!" he yelled;
+"this here's your new boss. If you-all ain't glued there you might grab
+his grips an' tote them up to the ranchhouse. Tell the missus that I'll
+be along directly with the boss."
+
+Amusement over the Southern twang that marked Norton's speech filled
+Hollis. He had noticed it before and it had made plain to him the reason
+of Norton's unhurried movements, his slow humor, his habit of quiet
+scrutiny.
+
+But he had little time for reflection. At Norton's words two men sprang
+forward to the buckboard and he saw his suitcases disappear into the
+darkness in the direction of a light that he now saw flickering from
+some little distance. He jumped out of the buckboard and saw another man
+spring to the horses' heads and lead them away into the darkness. Then
+he followed Norton into the light from the open doorway. Presently he
+was shaking hands with a man who stood there, whose chief articles of
+raiment were overalls, boots, and a woolen shirt. Almost instantly, it
+seemed, two of the others had returned and Norton was introducing them
+as "Ace," "Lanky," and "Weary." These pseudonyms were picturesque and
+descriptive, though at the time Hollis was in a state of pained
+incomprehension concerning them. Later he was informed that Ace had been
+so named on account of having once been caught slipping a playing card
+of that character into his bootleg during a game of poker.
+Incidentally--Hollis was told--gun-play had resulted. That Ace was still
+active proved that the other man might have profited by keeping his
+knowledge to himself. Obviously, Lanky deserved his appellation--he was
+a trifle over six feet tall and proportioned like a young sapling. Weary
+had been born tired--so Hollis was told by the latter's defamers;
+defamers, for later Hollis discovered that no man in the outfit could
+show more surprising agility on occasion than this same Weary.
+
+Hollis found himself inside the bunkhouse, where he was critically
+inspected by the three men--and before he left, by the fourth, who
+answered to the name of "Bud." Norton told him that these four comprised
+his outfit--Bud acting as blacksmith. Hollis remained with the men only
+long enough to announce that there would be no change; that he intended
+to hang on and fight for his rights. When Norton told them that Hollis
+had already begun the fight by slugging Dunlavey and Yuma Ed, the
+enthusiasm of the four men was unbounded. They assured him profanely
+that they were with him to the "finish"--whatever it might be. After
+which Hollis departed to the ranchhouse.
+
+He found Mrs. Norton to be a pleasant faced woman of twenty-seven or
+eight, who had--according to Norton--"bossed him for seven years."
+Norton grinned hugely over his wife's embarrassed protest.
+
+"I haven't 'bossed' him," she told Hollis, while Norton looked on with
+amusement, "though there have been times when he richly deserved it."
+There was a spirited flash in the lady's eyes as she looked at her lord.
+
+"I don't wish to take sides in any marital controversy," Hollis told
+them. "I don't care to parade my ignorance. However," he smiled, with a
+wink at Norton, "most men need a boss, if for no other reason than to
+teach them the value of discipline."
+
+"There!" said Mrs. Norton with a triumphant laugh, and immediately left
+the two men and went into the kitchen.
+
+After partaking of a hearty meal Hollis and Norton went out on the porch
+for a smoke and a talk, and it was near midnight when Hollis tumbled
+into bed, distinctly pleased with the range boss and his admirable wife.
+He was asleep within five minutes.
+
+The sun was streaming into his window when he hopped out of bed the next
+morning, refreshed and eager to make a trip of inspection over his
+property. He came down stairs lightly, in the hope of being able to slip
+outside without disturbing anybody, but upon opening the stair door he
+was surprised to find the cloth on the table in the dining room already
+spread and hot food steaming upon it. Mrs. Norton was bustling about
+from the kitchen to the dining room. Evidently the Nortons had been
+astir for hours.
+
+Mrs. Norton smilingly directed him to a wash basin on a bench just
+outside the door and stood in the opening a moment, watching him as he
+drenched his face with the cold water. There was in her manner only the
+solicitous concern of the hostess whose desire is to place a guest at
+ease. Hollis decided that Norton had been most fortunate in his choice
+of a "boss."
+
+"Neil has gone down into the big basin to look after the men," she told
+him from the doorway. "I don't expect him to return for some little
+time. Come in to breakfast when you are ready."
+
+To his protest that he would wait until Norton's return before
+breakfasting she replied with a smile that her husband had already
+breakfasted, telling him also that in this part of the country everyone
+rose with the sun.
+
+He stood on the edge of the porch for a moment after washing, drinking
+in the air that came to him from the plains--a breeze laden with the
+clear aroma of the sage-brush moist with the dew of the night. When he
+entered the house Mrs. Norton was nowhere to be seen and he drew up a
+chair and breakfasted alone.
+
+A little later he embarked upon a tour of inspection. All of the
+buildings, with the exception of the ranchhouse, which was constructed
+of logs, with a gable roof and plastered interstices--were built of
+adobe, low, squat structures with flat roofs. There were six of
+them--the bunkhouse, mess house, blacksmith shop, the range boss's
+private shack (from which Norton and his wife had removed after the
+death of the elder Hollis), the stable, and one other building for the
+storing of miscellaneous articles. Hollis inspected them all and was not
+quite convinced that they had reached the stage of dilapidation
+suggested by Judge Graney.
+
+During his inspection Hollis had seen a patch of garden, some chickens,
+and down in a small pasture some cows that he supposed were kept for
+milking. He was leaning on the top rail of the corral fence after he had
+concluded his trip of inspection when he heard a clatter of hoofs behind
+him and turned to observe Norton, just riding up to the corral gate. The
+range boss wore a grin of pleasure.
+
+"How you findin' things?" he questioned.
+
+"In better shape than I expected--after listening to Judge Graney,"
+smiled Hollis.
+
+Norton looked critically at him. "Then you ain't changed your mind about
+stayin' here?" he inquired.
+
+"No," returned Hollis; "I believe I shall get used to it in time."
+
+Norton dismounted, his eyes alight with satisfaction. "That's the
+stuff!" he declared. He threw the reins over his pony's head and seized
+Hollis by an arm. "Come along with me--down to my shack," he said; "I've
+got somethin' to show you."
+
+Without further words he led Hollis toward a building--the one he had
+occupied previous to the death of the elder Hollis. There were three
+rooms in the building and in the front one were several articles of
+furniture and some boxes. One of these boxes Norton opened, taking
+therefrom several articles of wearing apparel, consisting of a pair of
+corduroy trousers, a pair of leathern chaps, boots, spurs, two woolen
+shirts, a blue neckerchief, a broad felt hat, and last, with a grin of
+amusement over Hollis's astonished expression, a cartridge belt to which
+was attached a holster containing a Colt .45.
+
+"I bought this outfit over at Santa Fe two months ago," he informed
+Hollis, who was gravely contemplating the lay-out, "expectin' to wear
+them myself some day. But when I got home I found they didn't quite
+fit." He surveyed Hollis with a critical eye. "I've been thinkin' ever
+since you come that you'd fit pretty snug in them." He raised a
+protesting hand as Hollis was about to speak. "I ain't givin' them to
+you," he grinned. "But you can't wear no tenderfoot clothes out here.
+Some day when we're together an' we've got time you can blow me to
+another outfit; I won't hesitate about takin' it." He leaned over and
+tapped the butt of the Colt. "You ever handle one of them?" he
+questioned.
+
+Hollis nodded. Once during a shooting tournament he had done good work
+with a pistol. But Norton laughed at his nod.
+
+"Mebbe we do it a little different out here," he smiled. "You hop into
+them duds an' we'll go out into the cottonwood yonder an' try out your
+gun." He pointed through the door to a small clump of cottonwoods beyond
+the bunkhouse.
+
+He went out and fifteen minutes later Hollis joined him, looking
+thoroughly at home in his picturesque rigging. An hour later they
+returned to the corral fence, where Norton caught up his pony and
+another, saddling the latter for Hollis. He commented briefly upon the
+new owner's ability with the six-shooter.
+
+"You use your fists a little better than you use a gun," he remarked
+with his peculiar drawl, "but I reckon that on the whole you'll be able
+to take care of yourself--after you've had a little practise gettin'
+your gun out." He laughed with a grim humor. "More men have been killed
+in this country on account of bein' slow on the draw than for any other
+reason. Don't never monkey with it unless you intend to use it, an' then
+see that you get it out middlin' rapid. That's the recipe," he advised.
+
+The pony that he had selected for Hollis was a slant-eyed beast, larger
+than the average, with rangy limbs, black in color with a white muzzle
+and fetlocks. Hollis voted him a "beaut" after he had ridden him a mile
+or two and found that he had an easy, steady stride.
+
+Together they made a round of the basin, returning to the ranchhouse for
+dinner. Hollis was saddle weary and when Norton proposed another trip
+during the afternoon he was met with the response that the new owner
+purposed enjoying the cool of the ranchhouse porch for the remainder of
+the day.
+
+The next morning Hollis was up with the dawn and out on the porch
+splashing water over his face from the wash basin that stood outside the
+door. For a long time after washing he stood on the porch, looking out
+over the big basin at this new and strange world. Endless it seemed,
+lying before him in its solemn silence; a world of peace, of eternal
+sunlight, smiling skies, and infinite distance. It seemed unreal to him.
+Did this same planet hold the busy cities to which he had been
+accustomed? The stuffy room, with its smell of damp ink, its litter of
+papers--his room in the newspaper offices, filled with desks and the
+clatter of typewriters? Through whose windows came the incessant clamor
+that welled up from the streets below? He laughed at the thought and
+turned to see Norton standing in the doorway looking at him with a
+smile.
+
+"Comparin' her with your little old East?" inquired the latter.
+
+Hollis confessed that he had been doing something of that sort.
+
+"Well," returned Norton, "there ain't any way to compare this country
+with anything else. Seems as though when the world was made the Lord had
+a few million miles left which he didn't know what to do with an' so he
+just dumped it down out here. An' then, havin' business somewhere else
+about that time he forgot about it an' left it to get along as best it
+could--which wasn't none too rapid."
+
+This conversation had taken place just twelve days ago, yet Norton's
+words still remained fresh in Hollis's mind. Yet he did not altogether
+agree with Norton. The West had impressed him far more than he cared to
+admit.
+
+This morning, directly after breakfast Hollis and Norton had saddled
+their horses and ridden out of the basin toward the river, into a
+section of the country that Hollis had not yet explored. Emerging from
+the basin, they came to a long, high ridge. On its crest Norton halted.
+Hollis likewise drew in his pony. From here they could see a great
+stretch of country, sweeping away into the basin beneath it, toward a
+mountain range whose peaks rose barren and smooth in the white sunlight.
+
+"This here's 'Razor-Back' ridge," explained Norton as the ponies halted;
+"called that on account of bein' so unusually narrow on the top." He
+pointed to some buildings which Hollis had seen but to which he had
+given very little attention, thinking they were those of the Circle Bar.
+"Them's the Circle Cross buildings," resumed Norton. "They're about
+three miles from the Circle Bar ranchhouse, directly north through that
+cottonwood back of the bunkhouse where you tried your gun the day after
+you come out here. Down below there--where you see them two big
+cottonwood trees--is 'Big Elk' crossin'. There's another somethin' like
+it back up the crick a ways, on the other side of the ranchhouse, called
+the 'Narrows.'" He laughed grimly. "But we don't use them crossins'
+much--they're dead lines; generally you'll find there's a Circle Cross
+man or so hangin' around them--with a rifle. So it don't pay to go
+monkeyin' around there unless you've got pressin' business."
+
+He made a grimace. "It's my opinion that a good many Circle Bar cattle
+have crossed the crick in them two places--never to come back." He swept
+a hand up the river, indicating the sentinel like buttes that frowned
+above the bed of the stream. "The crick is pretty shallow," he
+continued, "but Big Elk an' the Narrows are the only two places where a
+man can cross in safety--if we consider that there wouldn't be any
+Circle Cross man hangin' around them two places. But there ain't no
+other place to cross an' so we don't go on the other side much."
+
+He turned to Hollis, looking at him with a quaint smile. "From here you
+can see everything that amounts to anything in this section--which ain't
+a heap. Of course over there are some mountains--where we was a few days
+ago lookin' up the boys"--he pointed to some serrated peaks that rose
+somberly in the southwestern distance--"but as you saw there ain't much
+to them except rocks an' lava beds. There's some hills there"--pointing
+to the south--"but there ain't nothin' to see in them. They look a heap
+better from here than they do when you get close to them. That's the way
+with lots of things, ain't it?"
+
+Hollis smiled. "I like it," he said quietly, "much better than I did
+when I came." He turned to Norton with a whimsical smile. "I suppose it
+will strike you as peculiar, but I've got a notion that I would like to
+ride around a while alone. I don't mean that I don't like your company,
+for I do. But the notion has just struck me."
+
+Norton laughed indulgently. "I reckon I won't consider that you're
+trying to slight me," he returned. "I know exactly how you feel; that
+sort of thing comes over everybody who comes to this country--sooner or
+later. Generally it's later, when a man has got used to the silence an'
+the bigness an' so on. But in your case it's sooner. You'll have to have
+it out with yourself."
+
+His voice grew serious. "But don't go ridin' too far. An' keep away from
+the river trail."
+
+In spite of his ready acquiescence he sat for some time on his pony,
+watching Hollis as the latter urged his pony along the ridge. Just
+before Hollis disappeared down the slope of the ridge he turned and
+waved a hand to Norton, and the latter, with a grim, admiring smile,
+wheeled his pony and loped it over the back trail.
+
+Once down the slope of the ridge Hollis urged his pony out into the
+level of the basin, through some deep saccatone grass, keeping well away
+from the river trail as advised by the range boss.
+
+In spite of his serious thoughts Hollis had not been dismayed over the
+prospect of remaining at the Circle Bar to fight Dunlavey and his crew.
+He rather loved a fight; the thought of clashing with an opposing force
+had always filled him with a sensation of indefinable exultation. He
+reveled in the primitive passions. He had been endowed by nature with
+those mental and physical qualities that combine to produce the perfect
+fighter. He was six feet of brawn and muscle; not an ounce of
+superfluous flesh encumbered him--he had been hammered and hardened into
+a state of physical perfection by several years of athletic training,
+sensible living, and good, hard, healthy labor. Circumstances had not
+permitted him to live a life of ease. The trouble between his
+parents--which had always been much of a mystery to him--had forced him
+at a tender age to go out into the world and fight for existence. It had
+toughened him; it had trained his mind through experience; it had given
+him poise, persistence, tenacity--those rare mental qualities without
+which man seldom rises above mediocrity.
+
+Before leaving Dry Bottom to come to the Circle Bar he had telegraphed
+his mother that he would be forced to remain indefinitely in the West,
+and the sending of this telegram had committed him irrevocably to his
+sacrifice. He knew that when his mother received a letter from him
+explaining the nature of the work that required his presence in Dry
+Bottom she would approve his course. At least he was certain that she
+would not advise surrendering.
+
+After riding for more than an hour he came to a shallow draw and urged
+his pony through the deep sand of its center. On the other side of the
+draw the country became suddenly rocky; great boulders were strewn
+indiscriminately about, as though some giant hand had distributed them
+carelessly, without regard to their final resting place. A lava bed,
+looming gray and dead under a barren rock hill, caught his attention,
+and he drew his pony to a halt and sat quietly in the saddle examining
+it. From the lava bed his gaze went to a weird mineral shape that rose
+in the distance--an inverted cone that seemed perfectly balanced on its
+narrowest point. He studied this long without moving, struck with the
+miraculous stability of the thing; it seemed that a slight touch would
+send it tumbling down.
+
+He realized that he had stumbled upon a spot that would have provided
+pleasure to a geological student. To him it was merely a source of
+wonder and awe. Some mighty upheaval of nature had created this, and he
+continued to gaze at it, his mind full of conjecture.
+
+To his right rose a precipitous rock wall surmounted by a fringe of
+thick shrubbery. On the left was another wall, perpendicular, flat on
+its top and stretching away into the distance, forming a grass plateau.
+Directly in front of him was a narrow canyon through which he could see
+a plain that stretched away into the unknown distance.
+
+It was a magnificent country; he did not now regret his decision to
+remain here. He pulled out his watch, noting that its hands pointed to
+ten, and realized that he must be off if he expected to reach the Circle
+Bar by noon.
+
+He sat erect in the saddle, about to wheel his pony toward the draw
+through which he had entered, when he heard a sharp sound. Startled, he
+glanced swiftly to his right, searching the immediate vicinity for the
+agency which had created sound in this vast silence. He stiffened slowly
+in the saddle, his face gradually paling. Not over a hundred feet from
+him, partly concealed by a big boulder, stood a man with a rifle, the
+muzzle of the weapon trained fairly on him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE GIRL OF DRY BOTTOM
+
+
+Hollis was not frightened, though he was in a position that might have
+aroused fear or apprehension in any man's mind. He was alone, the man
+had him covered with the rifle, and assuredly this was one of Dunlavey's
+hirelings.
+
+Hollis glanced swiftly around. Certain signs--some shrubbery that he saw
+through the canyon, a bald butte or two rising in the distance--told him
+that he was near the river. And Norton had told him to keep away from
+the river trail. In his eagerness to explore the country he had
+forgotten all about Norton's warning.
+
+The prospect was not a hopeful one, yet Hollis could not have admitted
+to feeling any alarm. He realized that had the man intended any
+immediate harm he would have shot him down long before this--while he
+had sat motionless in the saddle inspecting the place. Concerning the
+man's intentions he could only speculate, but assuredly they were not
+peaceful.
+
+For a little time the man remained motionless and Hollis sat quiet,
+looking at him. The weapon had not moved; its muzzle still menaced him
+and he watched it closely, wondering whether the man would give him any
+warning when about to pull the trigger.
+
+Many minutes dragged and the man did not move. A slow anger began to
+steal over Hollis; the man's inaction grated on his nerves.
+
+"Well!" he challenged sharply. "What do you want?"
+
+There was no answer. Hollis could see only the man's head and shoulders
+projecting above the boulder, and the rifle--steady and level--menacing
+him. With an exclamation of rage and disdain he seized the bridle rein
+and pulled sharply on it, swinging the pony's head around. The rifle
+crashed venomously; Hollis felt the right sleeve of his shirt flutter,
+and he pulled the pony abruptly up.
+
+"Just to show you!" came the man's voice, mockingly. "If you move again
+until I give the word you won't know where you've been hit!"
+
+Hollis was satisfied--the man undoubtedly meant business. He settled
+back into the saddle and looked down at his shirt sleeve. The bullet had
+passed very close to the arm. If the man had meant the bullet for that
+particular spot he was a deadly marksman. In the face of such marvelous
+shooting Hollis did not care to experiment further. But his anger had
+not yet abated.
+
+"No doubt you are enjoying yourself!" he said with bitter sarcasm. "But
+the pleasure is all yours. I am not enjoying myself a bit, I assure you.
+And I don't like the idea of being a target for you to shoot at!"
+
+A laugh came back to Hollis--a strange, unnatural, sardonic cackle that,
+in spite of his self-control, caused his flesh to creep. And then the
+man's voice:
+
+"No, you don't like it. I knew that all along. But you're going to stay
+here for seven weeks while I shoot holes in you!" He laughed again, his
+voice high and shrill, its cackling cadences filling the place.
+
+"Seven weeks in Devil's Hollow!" came the voice again. "Seven weeks!
+Seven weeks!"
+
+Hollis felt his heart thumping heavily against his ribs, while a sinking
+sensation in the pit of his stomach told him that his courage was
+touched. He realized now why the man had not shot him down immediately.
+He was a maniac!
+
+For a few terrible seconds Hollis sat in the saddle while the world
+reeled around him; while the rocks and cliffs danced fantastically.
+Courage he had to be sure; he had already become resigned to death
+before the man's rifle, but he had imagined the man to be in full
+possession of his senses; imagined his death to have been planned out of
+the deliberate coolness of reason. Such a death would have been bad
+enough, but to meet death at the hands of a man mentally unbalanced!
+Somehow it seemed different, seemed horribly unreal--like a terrible
+nightmare.
+
+It was some seconds before he regained control of himself, and then he
+steadied himself in the saddle, assuring himself in a burst of bitter,
+ironic humor that death at the hands of a crazy man could be no worse
+than death at the hands of a rational one.
+
+He looked up again, a defiant smile on his lips, to see that both man
+and rifle had disappeared. In a flash he saw his chance and took
+advantage of it. In an instant he was off his pony; in another he was
+behind a convenient rock, breathing easier, his senses alert. For some
+little time he remained in the shelter of the rock, awaiting the other
+man's movements. He did not doubt that acting upon some freakish
+impulse, the man had left his boulder and was even now stalking him from
+some other direction. He peered carefully about him. He had no thought
+of shooting the man--that would be murder, for the man was not mentally
+responsible for his actions. His efforts must be centered solely upon
+some plan for saving his own life.
+
+To do this he realized that he must be careful. In view of the man's
+unerring marksmanship it would be certain death for him to expose
+himself for an instant. But he must take some chances. Convinced of this
+he peered around the edge of his rock, taking a flashing glance around
+him. The man was nowhere to be seen. Hollis waited some little time and
+then taking another glance and not seeing the man, rose slowly to his
+feet and crouched. Then, filled with a sudden, reckless impulse, he
+sprang for another rock a dozen feet distant, expecting each instant to
+hear the crash of the man's rifle. But he succeeded in gaining the
+shelter of the other rock intact. Evidently the man was looking for him
+in some other direction.
+
+Emboldened with his success he grimly determined on advancing to another
+rock some twenty or thirty feet farther on. As in the first instance he
+succeeded in gaining it in safety. His maneuvering had been circuitous,
+bringing him into a position from which he could see partly behind the
+rock where the man had been concealed.
+
+And now, having gained the second rock in safety, Hollis decided to take
+no more chances. Sooner or later, he was convinced, the man was sure to
+see him as he jumped. He did not like the picture that his imagination
+conjured up. Therefore his actions were now marked with more caution. It
+took him a long time to gain a position where he could peer over the
+upper edge of the rock behind which he was concealed. But he gained it
+finally and then dropped back with an exclamation of surprise. He had
+caught a glimpse of the man. He was lying face upward behind the
+boulder, his arms outstretched, his rifle lying in the dust near him.
+
+Hollis was tempted to make a run for his pony, mount, and race out of
+the hollow. But a second thought restrained him. He had considered the
+man's action merely a ruse, but why should he attempt it after he had
+once had an opportunity to make use of his rifle? Still for an instant
+Hollis hesitated, for he knew there was no rule by which a maniac's
+actions might be judged. Then with a grim laugh he sprang over the few
+feet that separated him from the man, approaching him carefully, still
+slightly doubtful.
+
+But the man was not shamming; Hollis could see that when he had
+approached close enough to see his face. It bore a curious pallor, his
+eyes were wide open and staring, and some foam flecked his lips.
+Evidently he had been overcome by a paroxysm of his malady at about the
+moment Hollis had discovered it.
+
+Hollis stepped back and heaved a sigh of relief. Then he stepped over to
+where the man's rifle lay, taking it up and removing the cartridges.
+Returning to the man he removed the cartridges from his belt and drew
+his six-shooter from its holster, determined that when the man recovered
+from his stupor there would be no danger of a recurrence of the previous
+incident. Then he leaned against the boulder to await the man's
+recovery.
+
+Ten minutes later, while he still watched the man, he heard a clatter of
+hoofs. Determined not to be taken by surprise again he drew his own
+six-shooter and peered cautiously around the edge of the boulder. What
+he saw caused him to jam the weapon back into its holster very
+hurriedly. Then he stepped out of his concealment with a red,
+embarrassed face to greet a young woman whose expression of doubt and
+fear was instantly replaced by one of pleasure and recognition as she
+caught sight of him. It was the girl of Dry Bottom.
+
+"Oh!" she said. "Is it you? I was afraid----" And then she saw the man
+and was off her pony in a flash and at his head, supporting it and
+pouring something down his throat from a bottle.
+
+She rose presently, embarrassment crimsoning her face. Hollis saw her
+lips quiver when she turned and spoke to him.
+
+"He will be all right--now," she said, facing Hollis, her eyes drooping
+as though ashamed to meet his. "He has had another attack of his--his
+trouble." She looked suddenly up at Hollis, bravely trying to repress
+her emotion--but with little success.
+
+"You heard what he--Big Bill Dunlavey--said about my brother?" she
+questioned, her eyes full and moist. Hollis nodded and she continued
+rapidly, her voice quavering: "Well, he told the truth." Her voice
+trailed away into a pitiful wail, and she stepped over and leaned
+against the boulder, sobbing quietly into her hands. "That's why it
+hurts so," she added.
+
+Hollis yielded to a sudden wave of sympathy. He stood close to her,
+aware of his inability to cope with this strange situation. She looked
+so small, so out of place, he felt that whatever he did or said would
+not help matters. What he did say, however, assisted in restoring her
+composure.
+
+"I am glad I slugged him!" he said heatedly.
+
+She turned suddenly to him, her eyes flashing spiritedly through the
+moisture in them.
+
+"Oh, it was great!" she declared, her hands clenching at the
+recollection. "I could have shaken hands with you--with the hand that
+struck him!"
+
+Hollis smiled whimsically. "I've still got the hand," he said
+significantly, extending it toward her--"if you have not reconsidered."
+He laughed as she took it and pressed it firmly. "I rather think that
+we've both got a shake coming on that," he added. "I didn't understand
+then about your brother or I would have added a few extra pounds to that
+punch."
+
+Her face clouded as he mentioned her brother. "Poor Ed," she said in a
+low voice. She went over to the man, leaning over him and smoothing back
+the hair from his forehead, Hollis looking glumly on, clenching his
+teeth in impotent sympathy.
+
+"These attacks do not come often," she volunteered as she again
+approached Hollis. "But they do come," she added, her voice catching.
+Hollis did not reply, feeling that he had no right to be inquisitive.
+But she continued, slightly more at ease and plainly pleased to have
+some one in whom she might confide.
+
+"Ed was injured a year ago through a fall," she informed Hollis. "He was
+breaking a wild horse and a saddle girth broke and he fell, striking on
+his head. The wound healed, but he has never been the same. At intervals
+these attacks come on and then he is irresponsible--and dangerous." She
+shuddered. "You were watching him," she added, looking suddenly at him;
+"did you find him as he is or did he attack you? Frequently when he has
+these attacks he comes here to Devil's Hollow, explaining that he
+expects to find some of Dunlavey's men. He doesn't like Dunlavey," she
+added with a flush, "since Dunlavey----" She hesitated and then went on
+determinedly--"well, since Dunlavey told him that he wanted to marry me.
+But Ed says that Dunlavey has a wife in Tucson and--well, I wouldn't
+have married him anyway--the brute!"
+
+"Exactly," agreed Hollis gravely, trying to repress a thrill of
+satisfaction; "of course you couldn't marry him." He understood now the
+meaning of Dunlavey's words to her in Dry Bottom. "If you wasn't such a
+damn prude," he had said. He looked at the girl with a sudden, grim
+smile. "He said something about running you and your brother out of the
+country," he said; "of course you won't allow him to do that?"
+
+The girl's slight figure stiffened. "I would like to see him try it!"
+she declared defiantly.
+
+Hollis grinned. "That's the stuff!" he sympathized. "I rather think that
+Dunlavey is something of a bluffer--that folks in this country have
+allowed him to have his own way too much."
+
+She shook her head doubtfully. "I don't know about that," she returned.
+Then she smiled. "You are the new owner of the Circle Bar, aren't you?"
+
+Hollis startled, looking at her with a surprised smile. "Yes," he
+returned, "I am the new owner. But how did you know it? I haven't told
+anyone here except Neil Norton and Judge Graney. Have Norton and the
+Judge been talking?"
+
+"They haven't talked to me," she assured him with a demure smile. "You
+see," she added, "you were a stranger in Dry Bottom, and after you left
+the Fashion you went right down to the court house. I knew Judge Graney
+had been your father's friend. And then I saw Neil Norton coming into
+town with the buckboard." She laughed. "You see, it wasn't very hard to
+add two and two."
+
+"Why, no," Hollis agreed, "it wasn't. But how did you happen to see me
+go down to the court house?"
+
+"Why, I watched you!" she returned. And then suddenly aware of her
+mistake in admitting that she had felt an interest in him at their first
+meeting, she lowered her gaze in confusion and stood, kicking with her
+booted toe into a hummock, her face suddenly very red.
+
+The situation might have been embarrassing for her had not her brother
+created a diversion by suddenly sighing and struggling to sit up. The
+girl was at his side in an instant, assisting him. The young man's
+bewilderment was pitiful. He sat silent for a full minute, gazing first
+at his sister and then at Hollis, and finally at his surroundings. Then,
+when a rational gleam had come into his eyes he bowed his head, a blush
+of shame sweeping over his face and neck.
+
+"I expect I've been at it again," he muttered, without looking up.
+
+The girl leaned over him, reassuring him, patting his face lovingly,
+letting him know by all a woman's arts of the sympathy and love she bore
+for him. Hollis watched her with a grim, satisfied smile. If he had had
+a sister he would have hoped that she would be like her. He stepped
+forward and seized the young man by the arm, helping him to his feet.
+
+"You are right now," he assured him; "there has been no harm done."
+
+Standing, the young man favored Hollis with a careful inspection. He
+flushed again. "You're the man that rode through the draw," he said. "I
+saw you and thought you were one of Dunlavey's men. I shot at you once,
+and was going to shoot again, but something cracked in my head. I hope I
+didn't hit you." Embarrassment again seized him; his eyes drooped. "Of
+course you are not one of Dunlavey's men," he added, "or you wouldn't be
+here, talking to sis. No friend of Dunlavey's could do that." He looked
+at the girl with a tender smile. "I don't know what I'd do if it wasn't
+for her," he added, speaking to Hollis. "But I expect it's a good thing
+that I'm not crazy all the time." He looked searchingly at Hollis. "I've
+never seen you before," he said. "Who are you?"
+
+"I am Kent Hollis."
+
+The young man's eyes lighted. "Not Jim Hollis's son?" he asked.
+
+Hollis nodded. The young man's face revealed genuine pleasure. "You
+going to stay in this here country?" he asked.
+
+"I am going to run the Circle Bar," returned Hollis slowly.
+
+"Bully!" declared the young man. "There's some folks around here said
+you wouldn't have nerve enough to stay." He made a wry face. "But I
+reckon you've got nerve or you'd have hit the breeze when I started to
+stampede." He suddenly held out a hand. "I like you," he said
+impulsively. "You and me are going to be friends. Shake!"
+
+Hollis saw a smile of pleasure light up the girl's face, which she tried
+to conceal by brushing the young man's clothing with a gloved hand,
+meanwhile keeping him between her and Hollis.
+
+Hollis stood near the boulder, watching them as they prepared to depart,
+the girl telling her brother that he would find his pony on the plains
+beyond the canyon.
+
+"I am glad I didn't hit you," the young man told Hollis as he started
+away with the girl. "If you are not scared off you might take a run down
+to the shack some time--it's just down the creek a ways."
+
+Hollis hesitated and then, catching the girl's glance, he smiled.
+
+"I can't promise when," he said, looking at the girl, "but you may be
+sure that I will look you up the first chance I get."
+
+He stood beside the boulder until he saw them disappear around the wall
+of the canyon. Then with a satisfied grin he walked to his pony,
+mounted, and was off through the draw toward the Circle Bar ranchhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HOLLIS RENEWS AN ACQUAINTANCE
+
+
+Rumor, that mysterious disseminator of news whose tongues are legion,
+whispered that the Dry Bottom _Kicker_ was to come to life.
+Wherefore curiosity led many of Dry Bottom's citizens past the door of
+the _Kicker_ office to steal covert glances at the young man whose
+figure was bent over the desk inside. Many passed in silence after
+looking at the young man--he did not see them. Others commented gravely
+or humorously according to their whim--the young man did not hear them.
+Seated at the desk he gave his attention to the tasks before him--he was
+not concerned with rumor; the curiosity of Dry Bottom's citizens did not
+affect him. Seriously, methodically, steadily, he worked at his desk,
+while rumor wagged her tongues and curiosity lounged past the window.
+
+It was Hollis's first visit to the _Kicker_ office; he had come to
+work and there was much that he could do. He had found the _Kicker_
+installed in a one story frame building, verging upon dilapidation,
+unpainted, dingy. The appearance of its exterior had given Hollis a
+queer sensation in the pit of the stomach. He was cheered a little by
+the businesslike appearance of the interior. It was not what he had been
+used to, but he felt that it would answer very well in this locality,
+and--well, he planned to make improvements.
+
+About twenty by forty, he estimated the size of the interior. Originally
+there had been only one room. This had been divided into three sections
+by partitions. An old, flat-topped desk sat near the front window, a
+swivel chair before it. Along the wall above the desk were several rows
+of shelving with paste-board boxes and paper piled neatly up. Calendars,
+posters, and other specimens of the printer's art covered the walls. In
+the next room was another desk. Piles of advertising electrotypes, empty
+forms, and papers filled the corners. The composing room was in the
+rear. Everything was in order here; type cases, stands, forms. There
+were a proof press, some galley racks, a printing press, with a
+forlorn-looking gasolene engine near it. A small cast-iron stove stood
+in a corner with its door yawning open, its front bespattered with
+tobacco juice. A dilapidated imposing stone ranged along the rear wall
+near a door that opened into the sunlight. A man stood before one of the
+type cases distributing type. He did not look up at Hollis's entrance.
+
+"Hello!" greeted Hollis.
+
+The man hesitated in his work and looked up. "Hello," he returned,
+perfunctorily.
+
+"I suppose your name is Potter?" Hollis inquired cordially. Judge Graney
+had told him that if he succeeded in finding the compositor he would
+have him at the _Kicker_ office this morning. Potter had gone to
+work without further orders.
+
+"Yes," said the man. He came forward.
+
+"I am the new owner of the _Kicker_," Hollis informed him with a
+smile.
+
+"Jim Hollis's boy?" inquired Potter, straightening. At Hollis's nod he
+stepped quickly forward and grasped the hand the latter offered him,
+squeezing it tightly. "Of course you are Jim Hollis's boy!" he said,
+finishing his inspection. "You are the living image of him!" He swept
+his hand around toward the type case. "I am working, you see. Judge
+Graney wrote me last week that you wanted me and I came as soon as I
+could. Is it true that the _Kicker_ is going to be a permanent
+institution?"
+
+"The _Kicker_ is here to stay!" Hollis informed him.
+
+Potter's face lighted with pleasure. "That's bully!" he said. "That's
+bully!"
+
+He was of medium height, slender, lean faced, with a magnificent head,
+and a wealth of brown hair thickly streaked with silver. His thin lips
+were strong; his chin, though a trifle weak, was well formed; his eyes
+slightly bleared, but revealing, in spite of this defect, unmistakable
+intelligence. In the first flashing glance which Hollis had taken at him
+he had been aware that here was a person of more than ordinary mental
+ability and refinement. It was with a pang of pity that he remembered
+Judge Graney's words to the effect that he was a good workman--"when
+sober." Hollis felt genuinely sorry for him.
+
+"I have had a talk with Judge Graney," volunteered Potter. "He tells me
+that you are a newspaper man. Between us we ought to be able to get out
+a very respectable paper."
+
+"We will," calmly announced Hollis; "and we'll get the first issue out
+Saturday. Come in here and we'll talk about it."
+
+He led the way to the front room and seated himself at the desk,
+motioning Potter to another chair. Within the next hour he knew all
+about the _Kicker_. It was a six-column sheet of four pages. The
+first page was devoted to local news. The second carried some local
+advertisements, exchange clippings, and two or three columns of
+syndicate plate matter. On the third page two columns were devoted to
+editorials, one to advertisements, and three to local news in large
+type. The fourth, and last page was filled with more plate matter and a
+litter of "foreign" advertising--patent-medicines, soaps, hair-dye.
+
+At the first glance it appeared that the paper must be a paying
+proposition, for there were a goodly proportion of advertisements. Yet
+Hollis had his suspicions about the advertisements. When he had spoken
+to Potter about them he discovered that quite a number of them were what
+is known to the craft as "dead ads"--which meant advertisements upon
+which payment had ceased and which were carried either for the purpose
+of filling up the paper or because it was found cheaper to run them than
+to set type for the space which would be left by their absence.
+
+"We won't carry any dead ads!" announced Hollis.
+
+"Several of these are big merchants," said Potter, pointing them out
+with inky forefinger; "though the contracts have run out the appearance
+of their ads lends the _Kicker_ a certain moral support--the little
+fellows don't know that they are not paid for and it draws their
+business."
+
+"We don't care for that kind of business," smiled Hollis; "we're going
+to run a real newspaper. We're going to get paid ads!"
+
+"I hope so," hesitatingly replied Potter.
+
+"Of course you do," laughed Hollis; "but whether we get paid ads or not
+this newspaper is coming out regularly and on time. Furthermore, we're
+going to cut down on this plate stuff; we don't want a paper filled with
+stale articles on snakes, antedated ocean disasters, Egyptian monoliths,
+and the latest style in opera hats. We'll fill the paper with local
+news--we'll ginger things up a little. You are pretty well acquainted
+here--I'll leave the local items to you. What town near here compares
+with Dry Bottom in size?"
+
+"There's Lazette," returned Potter; "over in Colfax County."
+
+"How far from here?"
+
+"Eighty miles."
+
+"Got a newspaper?"
+
+"Yes; the _Eagle_."
+
+"Bully! Step on the _Eagle's_ toes. Make the _Eagle_ scream.
+Get into an argument with it about something--anything. Tell Lazette
+that as a town it's forty miles behind Dry Bottom. That will stir up
+public spirit and boom our subscription list. You see, Potter, civic
+pride is a big asset to a newspaper. We'll start a row right off the
+reel. Furthermore, we're going to have some telegraph news. I'll make
+arrangements for that to-day."
+
+Hollis's enthusiasm was infectious; a flash of spirit lighted up
+Potter's eyes as he rose from his chair. "I'm going to set up the head
+for the first page," he said. "Probably you'll want a slogan; that sort
+of thing is the style out here."
+
+"We'll have one," returned Hollis briskly. "Set this in triple leads:
+_'We Herald the Coming of the Law! The Kicker is Here to Stay!'_"
+
+"Good!" declared Potter. He went into the composing room and Hollis saw
+his fine old head bent over a type case. Hollis turned to his desk.
+
+He sat there long, his tall, lithe body slack, grim, serious lines in
+his lean face. He had thought of his conversation with Judge Graney
+concerning ambition--his ambition, the picture upon which his mind had
+dwelt many times. A little frame printing office in the West was not one
+of its features. He sighed with resignation and began methodically to
+look over the papers in the desk, finding many things to interest him.
+He discovered that in spite of his father's one great fault he had been
+a methodical man. He smiled regretfully, wishing that he might have been
+able to have seen more of him. Among the papers he hoped to find a
+personal note--a word--from his father. He found nothing of that
+character.
+
+After a time he took up a pen and began to write. Long ago he had
+decided that in the first issue of the paper he would attack the
+Cattlemen's Association. Judge Graney had ridden out to the Circle Bar
+on the previous Saturday afternoon, remaining over Sunday, and
+accompanying Hollis on the return trip Monday morning.
+
+While at the ranch the Judge had spent much of his time in communicating
+to Hollis his views of the situation in Union County and in acquainting
+him with the elder Hollis's intentions regarding the newspaper. Hollis
+had made some inquiries on his own account, with the result that when he
+reached the _Kicker_ office this morning he felt that he had
+acquired a good and sufficient knowledge of the situation.
+
+Looking over the old copy of the _Kicker_ he studied some of the
+advertisements. Evidently some Dry Bottom merchants had been brave
+enough to antagonize Dunlavey by advertising in the _Kicker_. With
+this copy of the _Kicker_ in hand Hollis rose from his desk, told
+Potter he was going out, and proceeded to visit some of the merchants
+whose advertisements appeared in the paper, hoping that their bravery
+still abided with them. He made a good solicitor. Some of the merchants
+flatly refused, saying they did not care to risk Dunlavey's anger.
+Others demurred, confidentially announcing that they had never
+considered the paper seriously and that there was really no good in
+advertising in Dry Bottom anyway--the town wasn't big enough. Half a
+dozen listened quietly while he told them that the _Kicker_ was in
+Dry Bottom to stay and then smiled and told him to run their
+advertisements. They rather admired his "nerve" and were not afraid of
+Dunlavey.
+
+At noon Hollis stepped into a restaurant called the Alhambra. While he
+ate he was critically inspected; the Alhambra swarmed with customers,
+and the proprietor quietly informed him that he was a "drawin' card" and
+hoped he'd "grub" there regularly. In return for his promise to do so
+Hollis secured his advertisement.
+
+Leaving the Alhambra he returned to the _Kicker_ office, seating
+himself again at his desk. The sun came slantwise through the window
+full upon him; the heat was oppressive; the flint-like alkali dust
+sifted through the crevices in the building and settled over everything
+in the room; myriad flies droned in the white sunlight before the open
+door. He heard nothing, felt nothing, saw nothing--for his thoughts were
+miles away, in an upper story of a big office building in the East from
+whose windows he even now looked down upon a bustling city.
+
+Life would be so different here. He heard a sound behind him and turned.
+Dunlavey was standing just inside the door, his great arms folded over
+his chest. He had been watching Hollis, his eyes narrowed with a
+cynically humorous expression.
+
+Hollis knew that by this time Dunlavey must have discovered his
+identity. He swung slowly around in his chair, his face wearing an
+expression of whimsical amusement as he greeted his victim of a few days
+previous.
+
+"Welcome to the _Kicker_ office," he said quietly.
+
+Dunlavey did not move. Evidently he had expected another sort of
+greeting and was slightly puzzled over Hollis's manner. He remained
+motionless and Hollis had an opportunity to study him carefully and
+thoroughly. His conclusions were brief and comprehensive. They were
+expressed tersely to himself as he waited for Dunlavey to speak: "A
+trickster and a cheat--dangerous."
+
+Dunlavey's eyes flashed metallically for an instant, but immediately the
+humorous cynicism came into them again. "I don't think you mean all of
+that," he said evenly.
+
+Hollis laughed. "I am not in the habit of saying things that I do not
+mean," he said quietly. "I am here to do business and I am ready to talk
+to anybody who wants to do business with me."
+
+Dunlavey's hands fell to his sides and were shoved into his capacious
+trousers' pockets. "Right," he said tersely: "that's what I'm here
+for--to talk business."
+
+He pulled a chair over close to Hollis and seated himself in it, moving
+deliberately, a certain grim reserve in his manner. Hollis watched him,
+marveling at his self-control. He reflected that it required will power
+of a rare sort to repress or conceal the rage which he surely must feel
+over his humiliation of two weeks before. That Dunlavey was able to so
+mask his feelings convinced Hollis that he had to deal with a man of
+extraordinary character.
+
+"I recollect meeting you the other day," said Dunlavey after he had
+become seated. He smiled with his lips, his eyes glittering again. "I'll
+say that we got acquainted then. There ain't no need for us to shake
+hands now." He showed his teeth in a mirthless grin. "I didn't know you
+then, but I know you now. You're Jim Hollis's boy."
+
+Hollis nodded. Dunlavey continued evenly: "Your father and me wasn't
+what you might call bosom friends. I reckon Judge Graney has told you
+that--if he ain't you've heard it from some one else. It don't make any
+difference. So there won't be any misunderstanding I'll tell you that I
+ain't figgering on you and me hitching up to the mutual friendship wagon
+either. I might say that we wasn't introduced right." He grinned evilly.
+"But I ain't letting what happened interfere with the business that's
+brought me here to-day. I've heard that you're intending to start the
+_Kicker_ again; that you're figgering on staying here and running
+the Circle Bar. What I'm here for is to buy you out. I'm offering you
+fifteen thousand dollars for the Circle Bar and this damn newspaper."
+
+Dunlavey had lost a little of the composure which had characterized his
+actions since entering the office and the last words of his speech had
+writhed venomously through his lips.
+
+Hollis's face betrayed absolutely no emotion. Though Dunlavey's visit to
+the _Kicker_ office had surprised him he was not surprised at his
+offer for the ranch and the newspaper, for according to Judge Graney he
+had made some such offer to the elder Hollis. Coming now, with an
+addition of five thousand dollars, Dunlavey's offer seemed to advertise
+his reluctance to continue the war that he had waged. Hollis appreciated
+the situation. If Dunlavey were to buy him off now there would come an
+end to the warfare that had already been an expensive one for the
+interests represented by Dunlavey. Likewise, the acceptance of the offer
+would give Hollis an opportunity to withdraw gracefully. Dunlavey had
+placed the issue squarely before him. The young man held his future in
+his hands and he did not reply at once.
+
+He sat silent for a few moments, studying the coarse, brutal face of the
+man seated before him, noting that his under jaw had come forward
+slightly, and that the cold, hard glitter had come again in his eyes.
+However, Hollis's silence meant nothing beyond the fact that he was
+going slowly over the history of the fight between his father and the
+man who sat there representing the interests which had begun the war. He
+had no thought of surrendering--that would be dishonorable. He was
+merely revolving the situation in his mind, considering how best to word
+his refusal. He did not want to appear belligerent; he did not want to
+precipitate war. But he did want Dunlavey to know that he purposed to
+have his rights; he wanted Dunlavey to know that he could not be
+frightened into surrendering them. He clasped one hand over his knee and
+leaned back in his chair, his gaze meeting Dunlavey's steadily.
+
+"Dunlavey," he said quietly, "what is the actual value of the Circle Bar
+ranch?"
+
+Dunlavey smiled blandly. "You couldn't find any man around these parts
+to take it at any price," he returned.
+
+"Why?" questioned Hollis.
+
+Dunlavey grinned mysteriously. "I reckon you know why," he returned;
+"you're pretty much of a tenderfoot, but I reckon Judge Graney has put
+you wise to the situation. There ain't nobody wants to buy the Circle
+Bar except me."
+
+"Why?" persisted Hollis.
+
+"I reckon you know that too," laughed Dunlavey. "It ain't no secret. The
+Cattlemen's Association is running things in this here county and it
+ain't wanting anyone to buy the Circle Bar except me. And nobody is fool
+enough to antagonize the Association. That's the why, if you want to
+know real bad."
+
+"You are frank about it at any rate," conceded Hollis smiling slightly.
+"But that doesn't get us anywhere. What I am trying to get at is this:
+what would the Circle Bar bring in cash if the Cattlemen's Association
+ceased to be a factor in the county?" Dunlavey grinned broadly. "For a
+tenderfoot you're real amusing," he derided. "There ain't nobody out
+here crazy enough to think that the Cattlemen's Association will ever be
+put out of business!"
+
+Hollis's lips curled a little, but his gaze was still steady.
+
+"That's evasion, Dunlavey," he said quietly. "You will remember that I
+asked you what the Circle Bar would bring 'if' the Association ceased to
+be a factor."
+
+Dunlavey favored Hollis with a perplexed grin. "I don't know what
+difference that makes," he returned. "We're dealing with what's before
+us now--we ain't considering what might be. But if you want to know my
+personal opinion it's that the Circle Bar might bring thirty thousand."
+
+"Thanks," said Hollis dryly; "that's getting somewhere. And now we'll be
+able to talk business. We've got thirty thousand to start with. I am
+told that when the Association began its war against my father he was
+rather prosperous. Usually he rounded up about two thousand head of
+cattle. But we'll call it a thousand. We'll say that they brought about
+thirty dollars a head, which would make an income of thirty thousand
+dollars a year, gross. We'll deduct fifty per cent for operating
+expenses, losses, and so on. That would leave about fifteen thousand.
+You've been fighting the Circle Bar for several years. We'll call it
+five. Five times fifteen thousand is seventy-five thousand. That
+represents the sum which my father would have made from the Circle Bar
+if you had not fought him. Add to that the thirty thousand which you
+admit would be a fair figure for the ranch if the Association were
+eliminated as a factor, and we have a total of one hundred and five
+thousand dollars." He smiled and leaned a little farther back in his
+chair, narrowing his eyes at Dunlavey. "Now we have reached a point
+where we can get somewhere. I'll take one hundred thousand dollars for
+the Circle Bar."
+
+The calm announcement had no effect upon Dunlavey except to cause him to
+grin derisively.
+
+"For a tenderfoot you're pretty slick," he allowed, his teeth showing.
+"You've figgered it out so that it sounds right reasonable. But you've
+forgot one thing. The Cattlemen's Association ain't eliminated. It says
+that the Circle Bar is worth fifteen thousand. You'll take that or----"
+He smiled grimly, holding back the threat.
+
+"I think I know what you mean," said Hollis quietly, without changing
+color. "You mean that the Cattlemen's Association will continue its
+fight and eventually ruin the Circle Bar. Perhaps it will--no man can
+tell what lies in the future. But I can tell you this: you can't retard
+progress."
+
+"No?" said Dunlavey with an irritating drawl.
+
+Hollis smiled composedly. He spoke without bitterness. "Dunlavey," he
+said, "I'm going to tell you something which you perhaps know but will
+not admit. Your Association has been successful in pulling the strings
+which make the politicians at Washington jump to do your bidding. I
+don't accuse you of buying them, but in any event they have greased the
+ways over which your Association has slipped to power. And now you think
+that the impetus you have gained will carry you along indefinitely. It
+won't. Everything in this world runs its natural course and when it does
+there comes an end.
+
+"If you were endowed with the average foresight you would be able to see
+that things cannot always go on the way they have. The law must come. It
+is inevitable. Its coming will be facilitated by such organizations as
+the Cattlemen's Association and by such men as you. Back in the East the
+forces of Good and Bad are battling. The forces of Good will be
+victorious. The government at Washington is familiar with the conditions
+that exist here and sooner or later will be compelled to act. When it
+does the small cattle owner will receive protection."
+
+"We're holding tight till the law comes," sneered Dunlavey; "which won't
+be soon."
+
+"Perhaps not," admitted Hollis dryly; "good things come slowly.
+Meanwhile, if you don't care to accept my figure for the Circle Bar I
+shall follow your example and hold tight until the law comes."
+
+"Meaning that you won't sell, I suppose?" sneered Dunlavey.
+
+"Meaning just that," returned Hollis quietly. "I am going to fight you.
+I have offered the Circle Bar at a fair figure and you have responded
+with threats. I wouldn't sell to you now if you offered one hundred and
+fifty thousand. The Circle Bar is not for sale!"
+
+Dunlavey had not moved. He sat quiet, leaning a little forward, his
+hands resting on his knees, his eyes narrowed to glittering pin-points
+as he watched Hollis. When the latter had concluded he leaned back,
+laughing hoarsely.
+
+"What are you going to do with this damn newspaper?" he demanded.
+
+"The newspaper will be used as a weapon against you," returned Hollis.
+"It will kick loud and long against such organizations as the
+Cattlemen's Association--against such men as you. Ostensibly the
+_Kicker_ will be a Dry Bottom newspaper, but it will appear in
+every city in the East; the matter that appears in it will be reprinted
+in Chicago, in Washington, in New York--in fact in every city in which I
+have a friend engaged in the newspaper business--and I have a number. I
+am going to stir up sentiment against you. I am going to be the Law's
+advance agent!"
+
+Dunlavey rose, his lips curling with contempt. "You make me sick!" he
+sneered. He turned his back and walked to the door, returning and
+standing in front of Hollis, ominously cool and deliberate. "So that's
+the how of it?" he said evenly. "You've come out here looking for fight.
+Well, you'll get it--plenty of it. I owe you something----"
+
+"Wait, Dunlavey," Hollis interrupted, without excitement; "I want you to
+understand that there isn't anything personal in this. I am going to
+fight you because you are a member of the Cattlemen's Association and
+not because you were my father's enemy. I am not afraid of you. I
+suspect that you will try to make things decidedly interesting for me
+from now on and I suppose I ought to be properly troubled. But I am not.
+I shall not be surprised at anything you do. I think that is all. Please
+close the door when you go out."
+
+He turned to the desk, ignoring Dunlavey. Sitting there, his senses
+alert, he heard the door slam. From beyond it came a curse. Silence
+again reigned in the office; Hollis was alone with the dust and the
+heat--and some very original thoughts.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE "KICKER" BECOMES AN INSTITUTION
+
+
+It was mid-July--and hot. The sun shone continually; the nights were
+uncomfortable, stifling. The dust was everywhere and grew deeper and
+lighter as the days passed. Water grew scarce; cattle suffered, lowing
+throughout the night, during the day searching the bogs and water holes
+for drops of moisture. Men looked up at the clear, cloudless sky and
+prayed--and cursed--for rain. The rain did not come. It was one long,
+continuous nightmare of heat.
+
+The _Kicker_ had appeared four times--on Saturdays--on time.
+Telegraphic communication with the outside world had been established.
+Potter had taken up his residence at the Circle Bar. War had been
+declared between the _Kicker_ and the Lazette _Eagle_. Hollis
+had written an argumentative essay on the virtues of Dry Bottom as a
+town, dwelling upon its superiority over Lazette. The editor of the
+_Eagle_ had replied with some bitterness, setting forth in detail
+why Dry Bottom did _not_ compare with Lazette. As the editor of the
+_Eagle_ mentioned population and civic spirit in his bill of
+particulars the war promised to be of long duration--questions of
+superiority between spirited persons are never settled. And Hollis had
+succeeded in arousing the spirit of Dry Bottom's citizens. They began to
+take some interest in the _Kicker_. Many subscribed; all read it.
+
+From the "local" columns of the paper one might have discovered that
+many public and private improvements were contemplated. Among these the
+following items were of the greatest interest:
+
+ Steps are being taken by the government toward the erection of a
+ fence around the court house grounds. Judge Graney is
+ contemplating a lawn and flowers. When these improvements are
+ completed there will be no comparison between our court house and
+ the dilapidated hovel which disgraces the county seat of Colfax.
+ The Lazette _Eagle_ please notice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ William Dunn, the proprietor of the Alhambra eating house,
+ announces that in the near future he will erect a new sign.
+ Thereafter the Alhambra will be known as the Alhambra
+ Restaurant. This is a step forward. We have been informed that
+ there is no restaurant in Lazette. Good boy, Dunn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Chet Miller's general merchandise store is to be repainted
+ throughout. Chet is public spirited.
+
+Everybody of any importance in Dry Bottom received weekly mention of
+some sort in the _Kicker_. Chet Miller was heard to say that the
+_Kicker_ was a "hummer," and no one ascribed his praise of the
+paper to thanks for the appearance of his name therein, for all who
+would have criticized were silenced by the appearance of their own
+names.
+
+In the fourth issue of the paper appeared several new advertisements.
+Judicious personal mention and lively news locals had aroused public
+spirit to a point where it ignored thoughts of Dunlavey's displeasure.
+
+Upon the Saturday which had marked the first issue of the _Kicker_
+under Hollis's ownership he had employed a circulation manager. That
+afternoon on the street near the _Kicker_ office he had almost
+collided with a red haired youth of uncertain age who had bounded out
+through the door of a private dwelling. In order to keep from knocking
+the youth over Hollis was forced to seize him by the arms and literally
+lift him off his feet. While in the air the youth's face was close to
+Hollis's and both grinned over the occurrence. When Hollis set the youth
+down he stood for an instant, looking up into Hollis's face and a grin
+of amusement overspread his own.
+
+"Shucks!" he said slowly. "If it ain't the tenderfoot editor!"
+
+"That's just who it is," returned Hollis with a smile.
+
+The youth grinned as he looked critically at Hollis. "You gittin' out
+that there paper to-day, mister?" he questioned.
+
+"Right now," returned Hollis.
+
+"Bully!" exclaimed the youth. He surveyed Hollis with a frank
+admiration. "They said you wouldn't have the nerve to do it," he said;
+"but, say! I reckon they ain't got you sized up right!"
+
+Hollis smiled, remembering that though the paper had been printed it was
+not yet distributed. He placed a hand on the youth's shoulder.
+
+"Have you got nerve enough to pass the _Kicker_ around to the
+people of this town?" he questioned.
+
+"I reckon," grinned the youth. "I was comin' down to ast you for the job
+when you bumped into me. I used to peddle them for your dad. My name's
+Jiggs Lenehan--mebbe you've heard of me?"
+
+Hollis smiled. "The question of delivering the _Kicker_ was one of
+the details that I overlooked," he said. "But fortunately it is arranged
+now. Henceforth, Jiggs, you are the _Kicker's_ official circulation
+manager. Likewise, if you care to add to your income, you can help
+Potter around the office."
+
+So it had been arranged, and Jiggs entered upon his duties with an
+energy that left little doubt in his employer's mind that he would prove
+a valuable addition to the force.
+
+In Hollis's "Salutatory" to the people of Dry Bottom he had announced in
+a quiet, unostentatious paragraph that while he had not come to Dry
+Bottom for a free fight, he would permit no one to tread on his toes.
+His readers' comprehension of the metaphor was complete--as was
+evidenced by the warm hand-clasps which he received from citizens who
+were not in sympathy with the Dunlavey regime. It surprised him to find
+how many such there were in town. He was convinced that all this element
+needed was a leader and he grimly determined to step quietly into that
+position himself.
+
+The second issue of the _Kicker_ was marked by a more aggressive
+spirit--a spirit engendered by the sympathetic reception of the first
+issue. In it he stated concisely his views of the situation in Union
+County, telling his readers that the best interests of the community
+demanded that Dunlavey's evil influence be wiped out. This article was
+headed: "Dry Bottom's Future," and won him many friends.
+
+The third issue contained stronger language, and the fourth was
+energetically aggressive. As he had decided before the first appearance
+of the paper, he took a certain number of copies of each issue, folded
+them neatly, stamped and addressed them, and mailed them to a number of
+newspapers throughout the country whose editors he knew. He also
+directed copies to a number of his friends in the East--to the president
+of his college, and last, to the Secretary of the Interior at
+Washington, who had formerly resided near him in Boston, and with whom
+he had a long acquaintance. There had been a change of administration
+the fall previous and he was certain that the new administration would
+not ignore the situation. To the Secretary, and also to a number of his
+friends, he wrote personal letters, explaining in detail the exact
+condition of affairs in Union County.
+
+He had not seen Dunlavey since the day the latter had come to the
+_Kicker_ office to negotiate for the purchase of the paper. On
+several of his rides to and from the Circle Bar ranch he had seen signs
+of life at the Circle Cross; once or twice he thought he saw someone
+watching him from a hill on the Circle Cross side of the Rabbit-Ear, but
+of this he was not quite certain, for the hill-top was thickly wooded
+and the distance great.
+
+He had been warned by Norton not to ride too often over the same trail
+lest Dunlavey send someone to ambush him.
+
+Hollis had laughed at the warning, though thanking Norton for it. He
+told his range boss that he did not anticipate any immediate trouble
+with Dunlavey.
+
+"It all depends on how Big Bill feels," returned Norton with a grim
+smile. "If you've got him mad there's no telling. And there are plenty
+of places between here and Dry Bottom where a man might be shot from
+ambush. And nobody'd ever know who done it. I wouldn't ride the Dry
+Bottom trail every day. There's the old Coyote trail, that takes you
+past the Razor-Back and through Devil's Hollow to Little Canyon an'
+along the hills to the other side."
+
+He laughed. "There's only one thing you need to be afraid of if you take
+the Coyote trail, an' that's Ed Hazelton. Ed gets spells when he's plum
+crazy. He's Nellie Hazelton's brother--her that Dunlavey was pesterin'
+when you slammed him." He laughed again, significantly. "Though if Ed
+knowed you was the man who took his sister's part you wouldn't need to
+be much scared of him--I've heard that he's got a pretty good memory for
+his friends--even when he's off."
+
+Hollis had not told Norton of his experience in Devil's Hollow, nor did
+he tell him now. But he followed his advice about taking the Coyote
+trail, and the following day when he made the trip to Dry Bottom he
+returned that way. About half way between Dry Bottom and the Circle Bar
+he came upon a little adobe cabin snuggling an arroyo through which
+trickled a small stream of water.
+
+It was an ideal location for a small rancher, and Hollis observed that
+the buildings were in order--evidently Nellie Hazelton and her brother
+were provident. He saw some cattle grazing on the edge of a small grass
+plateau which began at the slope of the arroyo through which the stream
+of water ran. A shout reached his ears as he sat motionless in the
+saddle looking about him, and he saw Ed Hazelton on the plateau among
+the cattle, waving a hand to him. The young man began to descend the
+side of the plateau, but before he had fairly started Nellie Hazelton
+had come out of the front door of the cabin and stood on the edge of the
+small porch, smiling at him.
+
+"So you did come, after all?" was her greeting.
+
+Hollis spurred his pony closer and sat smiling down at her. "I don't
+think anything could have stopped me after your invitation," he returned
+quickly.
+
+"Oh!" she said. The sudden color that came into her face told of her
+confusion. It betrayed the fact that she knew he had come because of
+her. Her brother's invitation in Devil's Hollow had been merely formal;
+there had been another sort of invitation in her eyes as she and her
+brother had left him that day.
+
+"Won't you get off your horse?" she said while he still sat motionless.
+"It's quite a while before sundown and you have plenty of time to reach
+the Circle Bar before dark."
+
+He had determined to discover something of the mystery that surrounded
+her and her brother, and so he was off his pony quickly and seating
+himself in a chair that she drew out of the cabin for him. By the time
+her brother had reached the porch Hollis was stretched comfortably out
+in the chair and was answering several timid questions concerning his
+opinion of the country and his new responsibilities.
+
+She was glad he liked the country, she said. It was wonderful. In the
+five years they had been here they had enjoyed it thoroughly--that was,
+of course, barring the trouble they had had with Dunlavey.
+
+Of their trouble with Dunlavey Hollis would hear much later, he told
+himself. At present he was more interested in discovering something
+about her and her brother, though he did not wish to appear inquisitive.
+Therefore his voice was politely casual.
+
+"Then you are not a Westerner?" he said.
+
+She smiled mournfully. "No," she returned; "we--Ed and I--were raised in
+Illinois, near Springfield. We came out here five years ago after--after
+mother died." Her voice caught. "Sometimes it seems terribly lonesome
+out here," she added; "when I get to thinking of--of our other home.
+But"--she smiled bravely through the sudden moisture that had come into
+her eyes--"since Ed got hurt I don't have much time to think of myself.
+Poor fellow."
+
+Hollis was silent. He had never had a sister but he could imagine how
+she must feel over the misfortune that had come to her brother. It must
+be a sacrifice for her to remain in this country, to care for a brother
+who must be a great burden to her at times, to fight the solitude, the
+hardships, to bear with patience the many inconveniences which are
+inevitable in a new, unsettled country. He felt a new admiration for her
+and a profound sympathy.
+
+"I think that you must be a very brave young woman," he said earnestly.
+
+"Oh!" she returned with a sudden, illuminating smile. "It isn't hard to
+be brave. But at times I find it hard to be patient."
+
+"Patience is one of the cardinal virtues," declared Hollis, "but it
+takes bravery of a rare sort to remain in this country, surrounded with
+the care----"
+
+Her fingers were suddenly over her lips warningly, and he saw Ed
+Hazelton nearing the porch.
+
+"I wouldn't have him know for the world," she said rapidly. "It isn't a
+care to look after someone you love."
+
+Hollis smiled grimly at the reproach in her voice and rose to greet her
+brother.
+
+The latter seemed to be quite recovered from the attack he had suffered
+in Devil's Hollow and talked freely and intelligently of affairs in the
+country. Hollis found that on the whole he was a well informed young
+man--quiet, modest, and apparently well able to give a good account of
+himself in spite of his affliction. He was bitter against Dunlavey and
+thanked Hollis warmly for his defense of his sister.
+
+At sundown Hollis departed, telling the Hazeltons that since he was
+their neighbor he would not neglect to see them occasionally. As he rode
+away into the dusk Nellie Hazelton stood on the porch smilingly waving
+her hand at him. As he threaded his way through the rapidly growing
+darkness he felt an unaccountable satisfaction over the fact that he had
+elected to remain in Union County; that henceforth his fortunes were to
+be linked with those of a brave young woman who had also accepted the
+robes of sacrifice and who was committed to war against their common
+enemy--Dunlavey. Curiously, during the past few days he had felt a
+decided change in his attitude toward life. His old ambition was no
+longer uppermost in his mind--it had been crowded out of his existence.
+In its place had been erected a new pinnacle of promise. A seat among
+the mighty was a worthy goal. Yet the lowly bench of sacrifice was not
+without its compensations.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+CONCERNING THE "SIX-O'CLOCK"
+
+
+On Friday evening previous to the Saturday on which the _Kicker_
+was to be issued for the fifth consecutive time by Hollis, Potter did
+not ride out to the Circle Bar. There still remained some type to be set
+and Potter had declared his intention of completing the work and staying
+overnight in town. Hollis had acquiesced and had departed for the Circle
+Bar alone.
+
+When he reached Dry Bottom the following morning he found a small crowd
+of people in front of the _Kicker_ office. During the night someone
+had posted a written notice on the front door, and when Hollis
+dismounted from his pony there were perhaps a dozen interested citizens
+grouped about the door, reading the notice. There were several of the
+town's merchants and a number of cowboys--new arrivals and those who had
+remained overnight to gamble and participate in the festivities that
+were all-night features of the dives. There were also the usual loafers,
+who constitute an element never absent in any group of idlers in any
+street. All, however, gave way before Hollis and allowed him to reach
+the door without molestation, though in passing he observed significant
+grins on several faces.
+
+The notice was written in a bold, legible hand.
+
+"Mr. Hollis:"--it read, the prefix under-scored--"The express leaves
+town this afternoon at six o'clock--goin' east. Better be on it."
+
+ Signed--"Y. Z."
+
+Hollis read the notice and then turned and quietly surveyed his
+watchful, interested audience. He smiled grimly, seeing several faces
+which, though plainly expressing amusement, seemed quietly sympathetic.
+He felt that these were wishing him success, though doubting his ability
+to cope with his enemies. Other faces were plainly antagonistic in
+expression. He looked at both for an instant and then turned again to
+the notice and producing a pencil printed boldly on its face the slogan
+he had devised:
+
+_"We Herald the Coming of the Law! The Kicker is Here to Stay!"_
+
+And below he indulged in this sarcasm: _"Don't hold the express on my
+account!"_
+
+ Signed--"KENT HOLLIS"
+
+Leaving his audience to stare after him Hollis pushed open the door of
+the office and entered.
+
+He found Potter bending over the imposing table, hard at work on one of
+the forms. Three other forms, locked and ready for the press, stood in a
+corner. Potter looked up and smiled as his chief entered.
+
+"See the notice on the door?" he inquired.
+
+"Some of Dunlavey's work, I suppose," returned Hollis.
+
+"Well, yes. I suppose Dunlavey is back of it. But Yuma tacked the sign
+up." He smiled soberly as Hollis flashed a grin at him. "They tried hard
+last night to get me to drink. Of course their purpose was to get me
+drunk so that I wouldn't be able to get the paper out today. I am not
+going to tell you how hard I had to fight myself to resist the
+temptation to drink. But you can see for yourself that I succeeded. The
+_Kicker_ will be ready to go to press in an hour."
+
+He felt Hollis's hand patting his shoulder approvingly and he continued,
+a little hoarsely. "I took one drink at the Fashion last night after I
+got through here. Then I came back and went to sleep. I am a light
+sleeper and when some time after midnight I heard a sound at the door I
+got up and peered out of the window. I saw Yuma tacking up the notice. I
+suppose Dunlavey wrote it." He looked at Hollis with a whimsical
+expression. "I suppose you are going to take the express?" he inquired.
+
+"Tried to get you drunk, did they?" shaking his head negatively to
+Potter's question, a smile on his face. "I can't understand that game,"
+he continued, soberly. "Of course getting you drunk would have prevented
+the appearance of the paper on scheduled time. But if they wanted to do
+serious damage--of course I mean to the paper," he apologized with a
+grim smile, "why didn't they come down here--some of them--during your
+absence, and smash things up? That would have made the thing sure for
+them."
+
+Potter laughed mirthlessly. "Of course they could have done that," he
+said; "it would have been easy--will be easy any time. But it wouldn't
+be artistic, would be coarse in fact. Dunlavey doesn't do things that
+way. If they smash your stuff, destroy your plant here, ruin your type
+and press, and so forth, they invite sympathy in your behalf. But if
+they prevent the appearance of your paper without having done any damage
+to your plant they accomplish something--they expose you to ridicule.
+And in this country ridicule is a potent weapon--even if it involves
+nothing more serious than a drunken printer."
+
+Hollis shook Potter's hand in silence. He had expected violence from
+Dunlavey; long before this he had expected him to show his hand, to
+attempt some covert and damaging action. And he had been prepared to
+fight to get the _Kicker_ out. He had not expected subtlety from
+Dunlavey.
+
+He went to his desk and sat in the chair, looking out through the window
+at the crowd that still lingered in front of the office. Most of the
+faces wore grins. Plainly they were amused, but Hollis saw that the
+amusement was of a grim sort. They appreciated the situation and enjoyed
+its humor but felt the tragedy behind it. Probably most of them were
+acquainted with Dunlavey's methods; some of them probably knew of the
+attempt that had been made to incapacitate Potter. Certainly those of
+them that did know had seen the failure of the attempt and were now
+speculating upon Dunlavey's next move. Looking out of the window Hollis
+felt that some of his audience must be wondering whether the editor of
+the _Kicker_ would pay any attention to the notice on the door.
+Would he scare?
+
+Hollis had already decided that he would not "scare." He grinned at
+several of the men who watched him and then turned and instructed Potter
+to take down a column of type on the first page of the paper to make
+room for an article that he intended to write. Then he seized a pen and
+wrote a red hot defiance directed at the authors of the notice, which
+Potter set up under the heading:
+
+"Why the Editor of the _Kicker_ Won't Take the Express."
+
+In clear, terse language he told his audience his reasons. This was
+America; he was an American, and he didn't purpose to allow the
+Cattlemen's Association--or any other association, gang, or
+individual--to dictate the policy of his paper or influence his private
+actions. Least of all did he purpose to allow anyone to "run him out of
+town." He printed the notice entire, adding his answer, assuring readers
+that he was sending copies of the _Kicker_ to every newspaper in
+the East and that notices such as had been affixed to his door would
+react against the authors. He ended with the prophecy that the law would
+come into Union County and that meanwhile the _Kicker_ purposed to
+fight.
+
+At noon Hollis took the usual number of copies to the station and mailed
+them. Walking down the street on his return from the station he
+attracted much attention. Men stood in the open doorways of saloons
+watching him, a number openly jeered; others sent subtle jibes after
+him. Still others were silent, their faces expressing amusement.
+
+But he looked at none of them. He swung along the board walk, his face a
+little pale, his lips tightly closed, determined to pay no attention to
+the jeers that reached his ears.
+
+When he passed the Fashion there were a number of men draped along its
+front; and he was conscious of many grins. Passing the men he heard low
+laughter and profane reference which caused his cheeks to redden. But he
+walked steadily on. Near the _Kicker_ office he met Jiggs Lenehan.
+Followed by the youth he reached the office to find that Potter had
+completed the press work and that several hundred copies of the paper,
+the ink still moist on its pages, were stacked in orderly array on the
+imposing stone. In a very brief time Jiggs burst out of the office door,
+a bundle of papers under his arm, and began the work of distribution.
+Standing back from the window with Potter, Hollis watched Jiggs until
+the latter reached the crowd in front of the Fashion saloon. Then all
+that Hollis could see of him was his red head. But that trade was brisk
+was proved by the press around Jiggs--the youth was passing out papers
+at a rapid rate and soon nearly every man in the crowd about the Fashion
+was engaged in reading, or,--if this important feature of his education
+had been neglected--in questioning his neighbor concerning the things
+that appeared in the paper.
+
+Presently Jigg's customers in front of the Fashion were all supplied.
+Then other purchasers appeared. Soon the _Kicker_ was being read
+by--it seemed--nearly every grown person in Dry Bottom. Business was
+suspended. Down the street men were congregated about the doors of many
+of the stores; others were sitting in doorways, still others leaned
+against buildings; some, not taking time to search for support, read
+while walking, or stood motionless on the board sidewalks, satisfying
+their curiosity.
+
+Hollis watched through the window until he began to be certain that
+every person in town was supplied with a paper. Then with a grim smile
+he left the window and sought his chair beside the desk. He was
+satisfied. Dunlavey had made the first aggressive movement and the fight
+was on.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HOW A BAD MAN LEFT THE "KICKER" OFFICE
+
+
+It was about one o'clock in the afternoon when the _Kicker_
+appeared on Dry Bottom's street. At about five minutes after one, Potter
+left the front of the office and walked to the rear room where he halted
+at the imposing stone. There he proceeded to "take down" the four forms.
+This done he calmly began distributing type.
+
+While Potter worked Hollis sat very quietly at his desk in the front
+office, his arms folded, one hand supporting his chin, his lips forming
+straight lines, his eyes narrowed with a meditative expression.
+Occasionally Potter glanced furtively at him, his eyes filled with
+mingled expressions of sympathy, admiration, and concern.
+
+Potter appreciated his chief's position. It meant something for a man of
+Hollis's years and training to bury himself in this desolate sink-hole
+of iniquity; to elect to carry on an unequal war with interests that
+controlled the law machinery of the county and Territory--whose power
+extended to Washington. No doubt the young man was even now brooding
+over the future, planning his fight, pessimistically considering his
+chances of success. Potter's sympathy grew. He thought of approaching
+his chief with a word of encouragement. But while he hesitated, mentally
+debating the propriety of such an action, Hollis turned quickly and
+looked fairly at him, his forehead perplexed.
+
+"Potter," he remarked, "I suppose there isn't a good brain specialist in
+this section of the country?"
+
+"Why--why----" began Potter. Then he stopped and looked at his chief in
+wordless astonishment. His sympathy had been wasted.
+
+"No," laughed Hollis, divining the cause of the compositor's
+astonishment, "personally I have no use for a brain specialist. I was
+thinking of some other person."
+
+"Not me?" grinned Potter from behind his type case. He flushed a little
+at the thought of how near he had come to offering encouragement to a
+man who had not been in need of it, who, evidently, had not been
+thinking of the big fight at all. "Perhaps I need one," he added, eyeing
+Hollis whimsically; "a moment ago I thought you were in the dumps on
+account of the situation here--you seemed rather disturbed. It surprised
+me considerably to find that you had not been thinking of Dunlavey at
+all."
+
+"No," admitted Hollis gravely, "I was not thinking of Dunlavey. I was
+wondering if something couldn't be done for Ed Hazelton."
+
+"Something ought to be done for him," declared Potter earnestly. "I have
+watched that young man closely and I am convinced that with proper care
+and treatment he would recover fully. But I never heard of a specialist
+in this section--none, in fact, nearer than Chicago. And I've forgotten
+his name."
+
+"It is Hammond," supplied Hollis. "I've been thinking of him. I knew his
+son in college. I am going to write to him."
+
+He turned to his desk and took up a pen, while Potter resumed his work
+of distributing type.
+
+About half an hour later Jiggs Lenehan strolled into the office wearing
+a huge grin on his face. "'Pears like everybody in town wants to read
+the _Kicker_ to-day," he said with a joyous cackle. "Never had so
+much fun sellin' them. Gimme some more," he added breathlessly; "they's
+a gang down to the station howlin' for them. Say," he yelled at Hollis
+as he went out of the door with a big bundle of _Kickers_ under his
+arm, "you're cert'nly some editor man!" He grinned admiringly and widely
+as he disappeared.
+
+Hollis finished his letter to Hammond and then leaned back in his chair.
+For half an hour he sat there, looking gravely out into the street and
+then, answering a sudden impulse, he rose and strode to the door.
+
+"Going down to the court house," he informed Potter.
+
+He found Judge Graney in his room, seated at the big table, a copy of
+the _Kicker_ spread out in front of him. At his appearance the
+Judge pushed back his chair and regarded him with an approving smile.
+
+"Well, Hollis," he said, "I see Dunlavey has played the first card."
+
+"He hasn't taken the first trick," was the young man's quick reply.
+
+"Fortunately not," laughed the judge. He placed a finger on a column in
+the _Kicker_. "This article about the Cattlemen's Association is a
+hummer--if I may be allowed the phrase. A straight, manly citation of
+the facts. It ought to win friends for you."
+
+"I've merely stated the truth," returned Hollis, "and if the article
+seems good it is merely because it defends a principle whose virtue is
+perfectly obvious."
+
+"But only a man who felt strongly could have written it," suggested the
+Judge.
+
+"Perhaps. I admit feeling a deep interest in the question of cattle."
+
+"Your ambition?" slyly insinuated the Judge.
+
+"Is temporarily in abeyance--perhaps permanently."
+
+"Then your original decision about remaining here has been--well,
+strengthened?"
+
+Hollis nodded. The Judge grinned mysteriously. "There is an article on
+the first page of the _Kicker_ which interested me greatly," he
+said. "It concerns the six o'clock train--going east. Do you happen to
+know whether the editor of the _Kicker_ is going to use the
+express?"
+
+Hollis smiled appreciatively. "The editor of the _Kicker_ is going
+to use the express," he admitted, "though not in the manner some people
+are wishing. The usual number of copies of the _Kicker_ are going
+to ride on the express, as are also some very forceful letters to the
+President of the United States and the Secretary of the Interior."
+
+"Good!" said the Judge. He looked critically at Hollis. "I know that you
+are going to remain in Dry Bottom," he said slowly; "I have never
+doubted your courage. But I want to warn you to be careful. Don't make
+the mistake of thinking that the notice which you found on the door of
+the _Kicker_ office this morning is a joke. They don't joke like
+that out here. Of course I know that you are not afraid and that you
+won't run. But be careful--there are men out here who would snuff out a
+human life as quickly as they would the flame of a candle, and with as
+little fear of the consequences. I shouldn't like to hear of you using
+your revolver, but if you do have occasion to use it, use it fast and
+make a good job of it."
+
+"I don't like to use a gun," returned Hollis gravely, "but all the same
+I shall bear your advice in mind." An expression of slight disgust swept
+over his face. "I don't see why men out here don't exhibit a little more
+courage," he said. "They all 'pack' a gun, as Norton says, and all are
+apparently yearning to use one. I don't see what satisfaction there
+could be in shooting a man with whom you have had trouble; it strikes me
+as being a trifle cowardly." He laughed grimly. "For my part," he added,
+"I can get more satisfaction out of slugging a man. Perhaps it isn't so
+artistic as shooting, but you have the satisfaction of knowing that your
+antagonist realizes and appreciates his punishment."
+
+Judge Graney's gaze rested on the muscular frame of the young man. "I
+suppose if all men were built like you there would be less shooting
+done. But unfortunately nature has seen fit to use different molds in
+making her men. Not every man has the strength or science to use his
+fists, nor the courage. But there is one thing that you will do well to
+remember. When you slug a man who carries a gun you only beat him
+temporarily; usually he will wait his chance and use his gun when you
+least expect him."
+
+"I suppose you refer to Yuma Ed and Dunlavey?" suggested Hollis.
+
+"Well, no, not Dunlavey. I have never heard of Dunlavey shooting
+anybody; he plays a finer game. But Yuma Ed, Greasy, Ten Spot, and some
+more who belong to the Dunlavey crowd are professional gun-men and do
+not hesitate to shoot. The chances are that Dunlavey will try to square
+accounts with you in some other manner, but I would be careful of
+Yuma--a blow in the face never sets well on a man of that character."
+
+An hour later, when Hollis sat at his desk in the _Kicker_ office,
+Judge Graney's words were recalled to him. He was thinking of his
+conversation with the Judge when Jiggs Lenehan burst into the office,
+breathless, his face pale and his eyes swimming with news. He was
+trembling With excitement.
+
+"Ten Spot is comin' down here to put you out of business!" he blurted
+out when he could get his breath. "I was in the Fashion an' I heard him
+an' Yuma talkin' about you. Ten Spot is comin' here at six o'clock!"
+
+Hollis turned slowly in his chair and faced the boy. His cheeks whitened
+a little. Judge Graney had been right. Hollis had rather expected at
+some time or other he would have to have it out with Yuma, but he had
+expected he would have to deal with Yuma himself. He smiled a little
+grimly. It made very little difference whether he fought Yuma or some
+other man; when he had elected to remain in Dry Bottom he had realized
+that he must fight somebody--everybody in the Dunlavey crew. He looked
+at his watch and saw that the hands pointed to four. Therefore he had
+two hours to prepare for Ten Spot's coming. He smiled at the boy, looked
+back into the composing room and saw that Potter had ceased his labors
+and was leaning on a type case, watching him soberly. He grinned broadly
+at Potter and turned to Jiggs.
+
+"How many _Kickers_ did you sell?"
+
+"Two hundred an' ten," returned the latter; "everybody bought them." He
+took a step forward; his hands clenching with the excitement that still
+possessed him. "I told you Ten Spot was comin' down here to kill you!"
+he said hoarsely and insistently. "Didn't you hear me?"
+
+"I heard you," smiled Hollis, "and I understand perfectly. But I don't
+think we need to get excited over it. Just how much money did you
+receive for the two hundred and ten papers?"
+
+"Six dollars an' two bits," responded the boy, regarding Hollis
+wonderingly.
+
+"It is yours," Hollis informed him; "there was to be no charge for the
+_Kicker_ to-day."
+
+The boy grinned with pleasure. "Don't you want none of it?" he inquired.
+
+"It is yours," repeated Hollis. He reached out and grasped the boy by
+the arm, drawing him close. "Now tell me what you heard at the Fashion,"
+he said.
+
+Rapidly, but with rather less excitement in his manner than he had
+exhibited on his entrance, the boy related in detail the conversation he
+had overheard at the Fashion. When he had finished Hollis patted him
+approvingly on the back.
+
+"The official circulation manager of the _Kicker_ has made good,"
+he said with a smile. "Now go home and take a good rest and be ready to
+deliver the _Kicker_ next Saturday."
+
+The boy backed away and stood looking at Hollis in surprise. "Why!" he
+said in an awed voice, "you ain't none scared a-tall!"
+
+"I certainly am scared," laughed Hollis; "scared that Ten Spot will
+change his mind before six o'clock. Do you think he will?"
+
+"No!" emphatically declared the boy. "I don't reckon that Ten Spot will
+change his mind a-tall. He'll sure come down here to shoot you!"
+
+"That relieves me," returned Hollis dryly. "Now you go home. But," he
+warned, "don't tell anyone that I am scared."
+
+For an instant the boy looked at Hollis critically, searching his face
+with all a boy's unerring judgment for signs which would tell of
+insincerity. Seeing none, he deliberately stretched a hand out to
+Hollis, his lips wreathing into an approving grin.
+
+"Durned if you ain't the stuff!" he declared. "I'm just bettin' that Ten
+Spot ain't scarin' you none!" Then he backed out of the door and still
+grinning, disappeared.
+
+After Jiggs had gone Hollis turned and smiled at Potter. "I suppose you
+know this man Ten Spot," he said. "Will he come?"
+
+"He will come," returned Potter. His face was pale and his lips quivered
+a little as he continued: "Ten Spot is the worst of Dunlavey's set," he
+said; "a dangerous, reckless taker of human life. He is quick on the
+trigger and a dead shot. He is called Ten Spot because of the fact that
+once, with a gun in each hand, he shot all the spots from a ten of
+hearts at ten paces."
+
+Hollis sat silent, thoughtfully stroking his chin. Potter smiled
+admiringly.
+
+"I know that you don't like to run," he said; "you aren't that kind. But
+you haven't a chance with Ten Spot--unfortunately you haven't had much
+experience with a six-shooter." Potter's hands shook as he tried to
+resume work at the type case. "I didn't think they would have nerve
+enough for that game," he added, advancing again toward Hollis. "I
+rather thought they would try some other plan--something not quite so
+raw. But it seems they have nerve enough for anything. Hollis" he
+concluded dejectedly, "you've got to get out of town before six o'clock
+or Ten Spot will kill you!
+
+"You've got plenty of time," he resumed as Hollis kept silent; "it's
+only a little after four. You can get on your horse and be almost at the
+Circle Bar at six. No one can blame you for not staying--everybody knows
+that you can't handle a gun fast enough to match Ten Spot. Maybe if you
+do light out and don't show up in town for a week or so this thing will
+blow over."
+
+"Thank you very much for that advice, Potter," said Hollis slowly. "I
+appreciate the fact that you are thinking of my safety. But of course
+there is another side to the situation. You of course realize that if I
+run now I am through here--no one would ever take me seriously after it
+had been discovered that I had been run out of town by Ten Spot."
+
+"That's a fact," admitted Potter. "But of course----"
+
+"I think that is settled," interrupted Hollis. "You can't change the
+situation by argument. I've got to face it and face it alone. I've got
+to stay here until Ten Spot comes. If I can't beat him at his game he
+wins and you can telegraph East to my people." He rose and walked to the
+window, his back to the printer.
+
+"You can knock off for to-day, Potter. Jump right on your pony and get
+out to Circle Bar. I wouldn't say anything to Norton or anyone until
+after nine to-night and then if I don't show up at the ranch you will
+know that Ten Spot has got me."
+
+He stood at the window while Potter slowly drew off his apron, carefully
+folded it and tucked it into a corner. He moved very deliberately, as
+though reluctant to leave his chief. Had Hollis shown the slightest sign
+of weakening Potter would have stayed. But watching closely he saw no
+sign of weakness in the impassive face of his chief, and so, after he
+had made his preparations for departure, he drew a deep breath of
+resignation and walked slowly to the back door, where his pony was
+hitched. He halted at the threshold, looking back at his chief.
+
+"Well, good-bye then," he said.
+
+Hollis did not turn. "Good-bye," he answered.
+
+Potter took one step outward, hesitated, and then again faced the front
+of the office.
+
+"Damn it, Hollis," he said hoarsely, "don't wait for Ten Spot to start
+anything; when you see him coming in the door bore him. You've got a
+right to; that's the law in this country. When a man gives you notice to
+leave town you've got a right to shoot him on sight!"
+
+For a moment he stood, awaiting an answer. None came. Potter sighed and
+stepped out through the door, leaving his chief alone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At one minute to six Hollis pulled out his watch. He sighed, replaced
+the time-piece, and leaned back in his chair. A glance out through the
+window showed him that the street was deserted except for here and there
+a cow pony drooping over one of the hitching rails and a wagon or two
+standing in front of a store. The sun was coming slantwise over the
+roofs; Hollis saw that the strip of shade in front of the _Kicker_
+building had grown to wide proportions. He looked at his watch again. It
+was one minute after six--and still there were no signs of Ten Spot.
+
+A derisive grin appeared on Hollis's face. Perhaps Ten Spot had
+reconsidered. He decided that he would wait until ten minutes after six;
+that would give Ten Spot a decent margin of time for delay.
+
+And then there was a sudden movement and a man stood just inside the
+office door, a heavy revolver in his right hand, its muzzle menacing
+Hollis. The man was tall and angular, apparently about thirty years old,
+with thin, cruel lips and insolent, shifty eyes.
+
+"'Nds up!" he said sharply, swinging the revolver to a threatening
+poise. "It's six o'clock, you tenderfoot ---- ---- ---- ----!"
+
+This was the vile epithet that had been applied to Hollis by Yuma Ed,
+which had been the direct cause of Yuma's downfall the day of Hollis's
+arrival in Dry Bottom. Hollis's eyes flashed, but the man was several
+feet from him and out of reach of his fists. Had Hollis been standing he
+would have had no chance to reach the man before the latter could have
+made use of his weapon. Therefore Hollis remained motionless in his
+chair, catching the man's gaze and holding it steadily with unwavering,
+narrowed eyes.
+
+Though he had waited for the coming of Ten Spot, he had formulated no
+plan of action; he had felt that somehow he would come out of the clash
+with him without injury. He still thought so. In spite of his danger he
+felt that some chance of escape would be offered him. Grimly confident
+of this he smiled at the man, though still holding his gaze, determined,
+if he saw the faintest flicker of decision in his eyes, to duck and
+tackle him regardless of consequences.
+
+"I suppose you are Ten Spot?" he said slowly. He was surprised at the
+steadiness of his voice.
+
+The man grinned, his eyes alert, shifty, filled with a chilling menace.
+"You've got her right, tenderfoot," he said; "'Ten Spot's' m' handle,
+an' if you're a-feelin' like criticizin' of her do her some rapid before
+I starts dealin' out the lead which is in my pritty."
+
+Just how one man could be so entirely remorseless as to shoot another
+when that other man was looking straight into his eyes Hollis could not
+understand. He could readily realize how a man could kill when provoked
+to anger, or when brooding over an injury. But he had done nothing to
+Ten Spot--did not even know him--had never seen him before, and how Ten
+Spot could deliberately shoot him--without provocation--was
+incomprehensible. He was convinced that in order to shoot, Ten Spot must
+work himself into an artificial rage, and he believed that the vile
+epithet which Ten Spot had applied to him immediately upon his entrance
+must be part of his scheme. He was convinced that had he shown the
+slightest resentment over the application of the epithet Ten Spot would
+have shot him down at once. Therefore he resolved to give the man no
+opportunity to work himself into a rage. He smiled again as Ten Spot
+concluded and carelessly twisted himself about in his chair until he was
+in a position to make a quick spring.
+
+"'Ten Spot' is a picturesque name," he remarked quietly, not removing
+his gaze from Ten Spot's eyes for the slightest fraction of a second; "I
+have no criticism to make. I have always made it a point to refrain from
+criticizing my visitors. At least I do not recollect ever having
+criticized a visitor who carried a gun," he concluded with a smile.
+
+Ten Spot's lips curled sarcastically. Apparently he would not swerve in
+his determination to provoke trouble.
+
+"Hell," he said truculently, "that there palaver makes me sick. I reckon
+you're too damn white livered to criticize a man that's lookin' at you.
+There ain't no tenderfoot (here he applied the unprintable epithet
+again) got nerve enough to criticize nothin'!"
+
+Hollis slowly raised his hands and placed them on the arms of his chair,
+apparently to steady himself, but in reality to be ready to project
+himself out of the chair in case he could discern any indication of
+action on Ten Spot's part.
+
+"Ten Spot," he said in a low, even, well controlled voice, conciliatory,
+but filled with a manliness which no man could mistake, "at four o'clock
+this afternoon I heard that you and Yuma Ed were framing up your present
+visit. I am not telling who gave me the information," he added as he saw
+Ten Spot's eyes brighten, "but that is what happened. So you see I know
+what you have come for. You have come to kill me. Is that correct?"
+
+Ten Spot's eyes narrowed--into them had come an appraising, speculative
+glint. He nodded. "You've got her right," he admitted gruffly. "But if
+you knowed why didn't you slope?" He looked at Hollis with a half sneer,
+as though unable to decide whether Hollis was a brave man or merely a
+fool.
+
+Hollis saw the indecision in Ten Spot's eyes and his own brightened. At
+last he had planned a form of action and he cooly estimated the distance
+between himself and Ten Spot. While Hollis had been speaking Ten Spot
+had taken a step forward and he was now not over four or five feet
+distant. Into Ten Spot's eyes had come an amused, disdainful gleam;
+Hollis's quiet, argumentative attitude had disarmed him. This was
+exactly what Hollis had been waiting for.
+
+Ten Spot seemed almost to have forgotten his weapon; it had sagged, the
+muzzle pointing downward--the man's mind had become temporarily diverted
+from his purpose. When he saw Hollis move suddenly forward he remembered
+his gun and tried to swing its muzzle upward, but it was too late.
+Hollis had lunged forward, his left hand closing on Ten Spot's right
+wrist, his right fist reaching Ten Spot's jaw in a full, sweeping,
+crashing uppercut.
+
+The would-be killer did not have even time enough to pull the trigger of
+his six-shooter. It fell from his hand and thudded dully to the floor as
+his knees doubled under him and he collapsed in an inert, motionless
+heap near the door.
+
+With a grim smile on his face Hollis picked up Ten Spot's weapon and
+placed it on the desk. For an instant he stood at the window, looking
+out into the street. Down near the Fashion he saw some men--Yuma Ed
+among them. No doubt they were waiting the sound of the pistol shot
+which would tell them that Ten Spot had disposed of Hollis. Hollis
+grinned widely--Yuma and his gang were due for a surprise. For perhaps a
+minute Hollis stood beside the desk, watching Ten Spot. Then when the
+latter's hands began to twitch and a trace of color appeared in his
+face, Hollis pulled out his own revolver and approached him, standing
+within a few feet of him and looking down at him.
+
+There was no mark on Ten Spot's jaw to show where Hollis's blow had
+landed, for his fist had struck flush on the point, its force directed
+upward. Ten Spot's mouth had been open at the instant and the snapping
+of his teeth from the impact of the blow no doubt had much to do with
+his long period of unconsciousness.
+
+He stirred presently and then with an effort sat up and looked at his
+conqueror with a glance of puzzled wonderment. Seeing Hollis's weapon
+and his own on the desk, the light of past events seemed to filter into
+his bewildered brain. He grinned owlishly, felt of his jaw and then
+bowed his head, a flush of shame overspreading his face.
+
+"Herd-rode!" he said dismally. "Herd-rode, an' by a tenderfoot! Oh,
+Lordy!" He suddenly looked up at Hollis, his eyes flashing with rage and
+defiance.
+
+"Damn your hide, why don't you shoot?" he demanded. He placed his hands,
+palm down, on the floor, preparatory to rising, but ceased his efforts
+when he heard Hollis's voice, coldly humorous:
+
+"I shall shoot you just the instant you get to your feet. I rather think
+that I am running things here now."
+
+Ten Spot sagged back and looked up at him. "Why I reckon you are," he
+said. No method of action having suggested itself to him, he continued
+to sit, watching Hollis narrowly.
+
+The latter retreated to his chair and dropped into it, moving
+deliberately. When he spoke his voice was cold and metallic.
+
+"When you first came into the office," he said, "you applied a vile
+epithet to me. Once after that you did it again. You have asked me why I
+don't shoot you. If you really want me to shoot you you can keep your
+mouth closed for just one minute. If you want to continue to live you
+can tell me that you didn't mean a word of what you said on those two
+occasions. It's up to you." He sat silent, looking steadily at Ten Spot.
+
+The latter fidgeted, shame again reddening his cheeks. "Why," he said
+finally, "I reckon she don't go, tenderfoot. You see, she's only a noma
+de ploom which we uses when we wants to rile somebody. I cert'nly didn't
+mean nothin' by it."
+
+"Thanks," drawled Hollis dryly; "I'll call that sufficient. But you
+certainly did 'rile' me some."
+
+"I reckon I must have done just that," grinned Ten Spot ruefully.
+"You're shorely some she-wolf with them there claws of your'n. An' I
+done laffed at Dunlavey an' Yuma after you'd clawed them." His face
+sobered, his eyes suddenly filling with an expression of defiant
+resignation.
+
+"I reckon when you're done triflin' with me you c'n start to pumpin'
+your lead," he said. "There ain't no use of prolongin' the agony." He
+looked steadily at Hollis, his eyes filling with decision as he again
+placed his hands beside him on the floor to rise.
+
+"You c'n open the ball when you get damn good an' ready," he sneered,
+"but I'm gettin' up right now. I ain't goin' to die off my pins like a
+damn coyote!"
+
+He rose quickly, plainly expecting to be shot down the moment he reached
+his feet. When he discovered that Hollis evidently intended to delay the
+fatal moment he stiffened, his lips twitching queerly.
+
+"Ten Spot," said Hollis quietly, "by apologizing for what you said when
+you came in you have shown that there is a great deal of the man left in
+you despite your bad habits and associations. I am going to show you
+that I think there is enough of the man left in you to trust you with
+your gun."
+
+He turned abruptly to the desk and took up Ten Spot's weapon, holding it
+by the muzzle and presenting it to the latter. Ten Spot looked from the
+weapon to Hollis and back again to the weapon, blank amazement pictured
+on his face. Then he reached out mechanically, taking the weapon and
+holding it in his hands, turning it over and over as though half
+inclined to believe that it was not a revolver at all.
+
+"Chuck full of cattridges, too!" he exclaimed in amazement, as he
+examined the chambers.
+
+"Why, hell----" He crouched and deftly swung the six-shooter around, the
+butt in his hand, his finger resting on the trigger. In this position he
+looked at Hollis.
+
+The latter had not moved, but his own weapon was in his right hand, its
+muzzle covering Ten Spot, and when the latter swung his weapon up Hollis
+smiled grimly at him.
+
+"Using it?" he questioned.
+
+For an instant it seemed that Ten Spot would. An exultant, designing
+expression came into his eyes, he grinned, his teeth showing tigerishly.
+Then suddenly he snapped himself erect and with a single, dexterous
+movement holstered the weapon. Then his right hand came suddenly out
+toward Hollis.
+
+"Shake!" he said. "By ----, you're white!"
+
+Hollis smiled as he returned the hearty handclasp.
+
+"You're cert'nly plum grit," assured Ten Spot as he released Hollis's
+hand and stepped back the better to look at the latter. "But I reckon
+you're some damn fool too. How did you know that I wouldn't turn you
+into a colander when you give me back my gun?"
+
+"I didn't know," smiled Hollis. "I just took a chance. You see," he
+added, "it was this way. I never intended to shoot you. That sort of
+thing isn't in my line and I don't intend to shoot anyone if there is
+any way out of it. But I certainly wasn't going to allow you to shoot
+me." He smiled oddly. "So I watched my chance and slugged you. Then when
+I was certain that you weren't dangerous any more I had to face another
+problem. If I had turned you loose after taking your gun what would you
+have done?"
+
+"I'd have gone out an' rustled another gun an' come back here an'
+salivated you."
+
+"That's just what you would have done," smiled Hollis. "I intend to stay
+in this country, Ten Spot, and if I had turned you loose without an
+understanding you would have shot me at the first opportunity. As it
+stands now you owe me-----"
+
+"As it stands now," interrupted Ten Spot, a queer expression on his
+face, "I'm done shootin' as far as you're concerned." He walked to the
+door, hesitated on the threshold and looked back. "Mister man," he said
+slowly, "mebbe you won't lick Big Bill in this here little mix-up, but
+I'm telling you that you're goin' to give him a damn good run for his
+money! So-long."
+
+He stepped down and disappeared. For a moment Hollis looked after him,
+and then he sat down at the desk, his face softening into a satisfied
+smile. It was something to receive a tribute from a man like Ten Spot.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE LOST TRAIL
+
+
+It was after seven o'clock when Hollis mounted his pony in the rear of
+the _Kicker_ office and rode out over the plains toward the Circle
+Bar. He was properly elated by the outcome of his affair with Ten Spot.
+The latter had come to the _Kicker_ office as an enemy looking for
+an opportunity to kill. He had left the office, perhaps not a friend,
+but at least a neutral, sympathetic onlooker, for according to Hollis's
+interpretation of his words at parting he would take no further part in
+Dunlavey's campaign--at least he would do no more shooting.
+
+Hollis was compelled to make a long detour in order to strike the Circle
+Bar trail, and when at seven-thirty o'clock he rode down through a dry
+arroyo toward a little basin which he must cross to reach a ridge that
+had been his landmark during all his trips back and forth from Dry
+Bottom to the Circle Bar, dusk had fallen and the shadows of the
+oncoming night were settling somberly down over the plains.
+
+He rode slowly forward; there was no reason for haste, for he had told
+Potter to say nothing about the reason of his delay in leaving Dry
+Bottom, and Potter would not expect him before nine o'clock. Hollis had
+warmed toward Potter this day; there had been in the old printer's
+manner that afternoon a certain solicitous concern and sympathy that had
+struck a responsive chord in his heart. He was not a sentimentalist, but
+many times during his acquaintance with Potter he had felt a genuine
+pity for the man. It had been this sentiment which had moved him to ask
+Potter to remove temporarily to the Circle Bar, though one consideration
+had been the fact at the Circle Bar he would most of the time be beyond
+the evil influence of Dry Bottom's saloons. That Potter appreciated this
+had been shown by his successful fight against temptation the night
+before, when postponement of the publication of the _Kicker_ would
+have been fraught with serious consequences.
+
+Riding down through the little basin at the end of the arroyo Hollis
+yielded to a deep, stirring satisfaction over the excellent beginning he
+had made in his fight against Dunlavey and the interests behind him.
+Many times he smiled, thinking of the surprise his old friends in the
+East must have felt over the perusal of their copies of the
+_Kicker_; over the information that he--who had been something of a
+figure in Eastern newspaperdom--had become the owner and editor of a
+newspaper in a God-forsaken town in New Mexico, and that at the outset
+he was waging war against interests that ridiculed a judge of the United
+States Court. He smiled grimly. They might be surprised, but they must
+feel, all who knew him, that he would stay and fight until victory
+rewarded him or until black, bitter defeat became his portion. There
+could be no compromise.
+
+When he reached the ridge toward which he had been riding for the
+greater part of an hour night had come. The day had been hot, but there
+had been a slight breeze, and in the _Kicker_ office, with the
+front and rear doors open, he had not noticed the heat very much. But
+just as he reached the ridge he became aware that the breeze had died
+down; that waves of hot, sultry air were rising from the sun-baked
+earth. Usually at this time of the night there were countless stars, and
+now as he looked up into the great, vast arc of sky he saw no stars at
+all except away down in the west in a big rift between some mountains.
+He pulled up his pony and sat motionless in the saddle, watching the
+sky. A sudden awe for the grandeur of the scene filled him. He
+remembered to have seen nothing quite like it in the East.
+
+Back toward Dry Bottom, and on the north and south, rose great, black
+thunderheads with white crests, seeming like mountains with snowcapped
+peaks. Between the thunder-heads were other clouds, of grayish-white,
+fleecy, wind-whipped, weird shapes, riding on the wings of the
+Storm-Kings. Other clouds flanked these, moving slowly and
+majestically--like great ships on the sea--in striking contrast to the
+fleecy, unstable shapes between the thunderheads, which, though rushing
+always onward, were riven and broken by the irresistible force behind
+them. To Hollis it seemed there were two mighty opposing forces at work
+in the sky, marshalling, maneuvering, preparing for conflict. While he
+sat motionless in the saddle watching, a sudden gust of cold wind
+swirled up around him, dashed some fine, flint-like sand against his
+face and into his eyes, and then swept onward. He was blinded for an
+instant, and allowed the reins to drop on his pony's neck while he
+rubbed his eyes with his fingers. He sat thus through an ominous hush
+and then to his ears came a low, distant rumble.
+
+He touched his pony lightly on the flanks with his spurs and headed it
+along the ridge, convinced that a storm was coming and suddenly
+realizing that he was many miles from shelter.
+
+He had traveled only a little distance when clouds of sand and dust,
+wind-driven, enveloped him, blinding him again, stinging his face and
+hands and blotting out the landmarks upon which he depended to guide him
+to the Circle Bar. The sky had grown blacker; even the patch of blue
+that he had seen in the rift between the distant mountains was now gone.
+There was nothing above him--it seemed--except inky black clouds,
+nothing below but chaos and wind. He could not see a foot of the trail
+and so he gave the pony the rein, trusting to its instinct.
+
+When Norton had provided him with an outfit the inevitable tarpaulin had
+not been neglected. Hollis remembered that this was attached to the
+cantle of the saddle, and so, after he had proceeded a little way along
+the crest of the ridge, he halted the pony, dismounted, unstrapped the
+tarpaulin, and folded it about him. Then he remounted and continued on
+his way, mentally thanking Norton for his foresight.
+
+The pony had negotiated the ridge; had slowly loped down its slope to a
+comparatively low and level stretch of country, and was traveling
+steadily forward, when Hollis noticed a change in the atmosphere. It had
+grown hot again--sultry; the heat seemed to cling to him. An ominous
+calm had succeeded the aerial disturbance. From a great distance came a
+slight sound--a gentle sighing--gradually diminishing until it died away
+entirely. Then again came the ominous, premonitory silence--an absolute
+absence of life and movement. Hollis urged the pony forward, hoping the
+calm would last until he had covered a goodly part of the distance to
+the Circle Bar. For a quarter of an hour he went on at a good pace. But
+he had scarcely reached the edge of a stretch of broken country--which
+he dreaded even in the daylight--when the storm was upon him.
+
+It did not come unheralded. A blinding flash of lightning illuminated
+miles of the surrounding country, showing Hollis the naked peaks of
+ridges and hills around him; gullies, draws, barrancas, the levels, lava
+beds, fantastic rock shapes--mocking his ignorance of the country. He
+saw them all for an instant and then they were gone and
+darkness--blacker than before--succeeded. It was as though a huge map
+had suddenly been thrust before his eyes by some giant hand, an intense
+light thrown upon it, and the light suddenly turned off. Immediately
+there came a heavy crash as though the Storm-Kings, having marshalled
+their forces, had thrown them together in one, great, clashing onrush.
+And then, straight down, roaring and shrieking, came the deluge.
+
+The wise little plains-pony halted, standing with drooping head,
+awaiting the end of the first fierce onslaught. It lasted long and when
+it had gone another silence, as ominous as the preceding one, followed.
+The rain ceased entirely and the pony again stepped forward, making his
+way slowly, for the trail was now slippery and hazardous. The baked
+earth had become a slimy, sticky clay which clung tenaciously to the
+pony's hoofs.
+
+For another quarter of an hour the pony floundered through the mud,
+around gigantic boulders, over slippery hummocks, across little gullies,
+upon ridges and small hills and down into comparatively level stretches
+of country. Hollis was beginning to think that he might escape a bad
+wetting after all when the rain came again.
+
+This time it seemed the Storm-Kings were in earnest. The rain came down
+in torrents; Hollis could feel it striking against his tarpaulin in
+long, stinging, vicious slants, and the lightning played and danced
+along the ridges and into the gullies with continuing energy, the
+thunder following, crashing in terrific volleys. It was uncomfortable,
+to say the least, and the only consoling thought was that the deluge
+would prove a God-send to the land and the cattle. Hollis began to wish
+that he had remained in Dry Bottom for the night, but of course Dry
+Bottom was not to be thought of now; he must devote all his energy to
+reaching the ranch.
+
+It was slow work for the pony. After riding for another quarter of an
+hour Hollis saw, during another lightning flash, another of his
+landmarks, and realized that in the last quarter of an hour he had
+traveled a very short distance. The continuing flashes of lightning had
+helped the pony forward, but presently the lightning ceased and a dense
+blackness succeeded. The pony went forward at an uncertain pace; several
+times it halted and faced about, apparently undecided about the trail.
+After another half hour's travel and coming to a stretch of level
+country, the pony halted again, refusing to respond to Hollis's repeated
+urging to go forward without guidance. For a long time Hollis continued
+to urge the animal--he cajoled, threatened--but the pony would not
+budge. Hollis was forced to the uncomfortable realization that it had
+lost the trail.
+
+For a long time he sat quietly in the saddle, trying in the dense
+darkness to determine upon direction, but he finally gave it up and with
+a sudden impulse took up the reins and pulled the pony to the left,
+determined to keep to the flat country as long as possible.
+
+He traveled for what seemed several miles, the pony gingerly feeling its
+way, when suddenly it halted and refused to advance. Something was
+wrong. Hollis leaned forward, attempting to peer through the darkness
+ahead, but not succeeding. And now, as though having accomplished its
+design by causing Hollis to lose the trail, the lightning flashed again,
+illuminating the surrounding country for several miles.
+
+Hollis had been peering ahead when the flash came and he drew a deep
+breath of horror and surprise. The pony had halted within a foot of the
+edge of a high cliff whose side dropped away sheer, as though cut with a
+knife. Down below, perhaps a hundred feet, was an immense basin, through
+which flowed a stream of water. To Hollis's right, parallel with the
+stream, the cliff sloped suddenly down, reaching the water's edge at a
+distance of two or three hundred feet. Beyond that was a stretch of
+sloping country many miles in area, and, also on his right, was a long,
+high, narrow ridge. He recognized the ridge as the one on which he and
+Norton had ridden some six weeks before--on the day he had had the
+adventure with Ed Hazelton. Another flash of lightning showed him two
+cotton-wood trees--the ones pointed out to him by Norton as marking Big
+Elk crossing--the dead line set by Dunlavey and his men.
+
+Hollis knew his direction now and he pulled the pony around and headed
+it away from the edge of the cliff and toward the flat country which he
+knew led down through the canyon to Devil's Hollow, where he had taken
+leave of Ed and Nellie Hazelton. He was congratulating himself upon his
+narrow escape when a flash of lightning again illuminated the country
+and he saw, not over a hundred feet distant, sitting motionless on their
+ponies, a half dozen cowboys. Also on his pony, slightly in advance of
+the others, a grin of derision on his face, was Dunlavey.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+PICKING UP THE TRAIL
+
+
+At about the time that the storm had overtaken Hollis, Potter was
+unsaddling his pony at the Circle Bar corral gate. A little later he was
+on the wide lower gallery of the ranchhouse washing the stains of travel
+from his face and hands. At supper he was taciturn, his face deeply
+thoughtful. Had Ten Spot come? What had been the outcome of the meeting?
+These questions preyed on his mind and brought furrows into his face.
+
+At supper he caught Norton watching him furtively and he flushed
+guiltily, for he felt that in spite of Hollis's order to say nothing to
+Norton he should have told. He had already informed Norton that Hollis
+intended remaining in Dry Bottom until a later hour than usual, but he
+had said nothing about the intended visit of Ten Spot to the
+_Kicker_ office. Loyalty to Hollis kept him from communicating to
+Norton his fears for Hollis's safety. It was now too late to do anything
+if he did tell Norton; whatever had been done had been done already and
+there was nothing for him to do but to wait until nine o'clock.
+
+After he finished his meal he drew a chair out upon the gallery and
+placing it in a corner from where he could see the Dry Bottom trail he
+seated himself in it and tried to combat the disquieting fears that
+oppressed him. When Norton came out and took a chair near him he tried
+to talk to the range boss upon those small subjects with which we fill
+our leisure, but he could not hold his thoughts to these trivialities.
+He fell into long silences; his thoughts kept going back to Dry Bottom.
+
+When the rain came he felt a little easier, for he had a hope that
+Hollis might have noticed the approach of the storm and decided to
+remain in town until it had passed. But after the rain had ceased his
+fears again returned. He looked many times at his watch and when Mrs.
+Norton came to the door and announced her intention of retiring he
+scarcely noticed her. Norton had repeatedly referred to Hollis's
+absence, and each time Potter had assured him that Hollis would come
+soon. Shortly before nine o'clock, when the clouds lifted and the stars
+began to appear, Potter rose and paced the gallery floor. At nine, when
+it had become light enough to see quite a little distance down the Dry
+Bottom trail and there were still no signs of Hollis, he blurted out the
+story of the day's occurrences.
+
+The information acted upon Norton like an electric shock. He was on his
+feet before Potter had finished speaking, grasping him by the shoulders
+and shaking him roughly.
+
+"Why didn't you say something before?" he demanded. "Why did you leave
+him? Wasn't there somebody in Dry Bottom that you could have sent out
+here to tell me?" He cursed harshly. "Ten Spot's got him!" he declared
+sharply, his eyes glittering savagely. "He'd have been here by this
+time!" He was taking a hitch in his cartridge belt while talking, and
+before concluding he was down off the gallery floor and striding toward
+the corral.
+
+"Tell my wife that I've gone to Dry Bottom," he called back to Potter.
+"Important business! I'll be back shortly after midnight!"
+
+Leaving Potter on the porch staring after him he ran to the corral,
+roped his pony, threw on a saddle and bridle and mounted with the animal
+on a run.
+
+The stars were shining brilliantly now and from the porch Potter could
+see Norton racing down the Dry Bottom trail with his pony in a furious
+gallop. For a time Potter watched him, then he disappeared and Potter
+went into the house to communicate his message to his wife.
+
+The rain had been heavy while it lasted, but by the time Norton had
+begun his race to Dry Bottom very little evidence of it remained and the
+pony's flying hoofs found the sand of the trail almost as dry and hard
+as before the storm. Indeed, there was now little evidence that there
+had been a storm at all.
+
+Norton spared the pony only on the rises and in something over an hour
+after the time he had left the Circle Bar he drew up in front of the
+_Kicker_ office in Dry Bottom, dismounted, and bounded to the door.
+It was locked. He placed a shoulder against it and crashed it in,
+springing inside and lighting a match. He smiled grimly when he saw no
+signs of Hollis; when he saw that the interior was in an orderly
+condition and that there were no signs of a conflict. If Ten Spot had
+killed Hollis he had done the deed outside the _Kicker_ office.
+
+Norton came out again, pulling the wreck of the door after him and
+closing it as well as he could. Then, leaving his pony, he strode toward
+the Fashion saloon. As he came near he heard sounds of revelry issuing
+from the open door and he smiled coldly. A flashing glance through the
+window showed him that Ten Spot was there, standing at the bar. In the
+next instant Norton was inside, confronting Ten Spot, his big
+six-shooter out and shoved viciously against Ten Spot's stomach.
+
+"What have you done with Hollis, you mangy son-of-a-gun?" he demanded.
+
+Several men who had been standing at the bar talking and laughing fell
+silent and looked at the two men, the barkeeper sidled closer, crouching
+warily, for he knew Norton.
+
+Ten Spot had spread his arms out on the bar and was leaning against it,
+looking at Norton in unfeigned bewilderment. He did not speak at once.
+Then suddenly aware of the foreboding, savage gleam in Norton's eyes, a
+glint of grim humor came into his own and his lips opened a little,
+curling sarcastically.
+
+"Why," he said, looking at Norton, "I don't reckon to be anyone's
+keeper." He smiled widely, with a suddenly ludicrous expression. "If
+you're talkin' about that tenderfoot noospaper guy, he don't need no
+keeper. What have I done to him?" he repeated, his smile growing. "Why,
+I reckon I didn't do a heap; I went down to call on him. He was right
+sociable. I was goin' to be mean to him, but I just couldn't. When he
+left he was sayin' that he'd be right glad to see me again--he'd been
+right playful durin' my talk with him. I reckon by now he's over at the
+Circle Bar laffin' hisself to sleep over the mean way I treated him. You
+just ast him when you see him."
+
+A flicker of doubt came into Norton's eyes--Ten Spot's words had the
+ring of truth.
+
+"You went down there to shoot him!" he said coldly, still unconvinced.
+
+"Mebbe I did," returned Ten Spot. "Howsomever, I didn't. I ain't tellin'
+how I come to change my mind--that's my business, an' you can't shoot it
+out of me. But I'm tellin' you this: me an' that guy has agreed to call
+it quits, an' if I hear any man talkin' extravagant about him, me an'
+that man's goin' to have a run in mighty sudden!" He laughed. "Someone's
+been funnin' you," he said. "When he handed me back my gun after
+sluggin'----"
+
+But he was now talking to Norton's back, for the range boss was at the
+door, striding rapidly toward his pony. He mounted again and rode out on
+the trail, proceeding slowly, convinced that something had happened to
+Hollis after he had left Dry Bottom. It was more than likely that he had
+lost his way in the storm, and in that case he would probably arrive at
+the Circle Bar over some round-about trail. He was now certain that he
+had not been molested in town; if he had been some of the men in the
+Fashion would have told him about it. Hollis would probably be at the
+ranch by the time he arrived, to laugh at his fears. Nevertheless he
+rode slowly, watching the trail carefully, searching the little gullies
+and peering into every shadow for fear that Hollis had been injured in
+some accident and might be lying near unable to make his presence known.
+
+The dawn was just showing above the horizon when he rode up to the
+ranchhouse to find Potter standing on the porch--apparently not having
+left there during his absence. Beside Potter stood Ed Hazelton, and near
+the latter a drooping pony, showing signs of hard riding.
+
+Norton passed the corral gate and rode up to the two men. A glance at
+their faces told him that something had gone wrong. But before he could
+speak the question that had formed on his lips Hazelton spoke.
+
+"They got him, Norton," he said slowly.
+
+"Dead?" queried Norton sharply, his lips straightening.
+
+"No," returned Hazelton gloomily; "he ain't dead. But when I found him
+he wasn't far from it. Herd-rode him, the damned sneaks! Beat him up
+so's his own mother wouldn't know him!"
+
+"Wait!" commanded Norton. "I'm going with you. I suppose you've got him
+over to your shack?" He caught Hazelton's nod and issued an order to
+Potter. "Go down to the bunkhouse and get Weary out. Tell him to hit the
+breeze to Cimarron for the doctor. If the doc' don't want to come drag
+him by the ears!"
+
+He spurred his pony furiously to the corral gate and in a short time had
+saddled another horse and was back where Hazelton was awaiting him.
+Without speaking a word to each other the two men rode rapidly down the
+Coyote trail, while Potter, following directions, his face haggard and
+drawn from loss of sleep and worry, hurried to the bunkhouse to arouse
+Weary and send him on his long journey to Cimarron.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+AFTER THE STORM
+
+
+Hollis's tall figure lay pitifully slack on a bed in the Hazelton cabin.
+Nellie Hazelton had given him what care she could out of her limited
+knowledge and now nothing more could be done until the arrival of the
+Cimarron doctor. Swathed in bandages, his clothing torn and soiled--as
+though after beating him his assailants had dragged him through the
+mud--one hand queerly twisted, his face swollen, his whole great body
+looking as though it had received the maximum of injury, Hollis moved
+restlessly on the bed, his head rolling oddly from side to side,
+incoherent words issuing from between his bruised and swollen lips.
+
+Norton stood beside the bed, looking down at the injured man with a
+grim, savage pity.
+
+"The damned cowards!" he said, his voice quivering. "There must have
+been a dozen of them--to do him up like that!"
+
+"Seven," returned Ed Hazelton grimly. "They left their trail there; I
+counted the hoof prints, an' they led down the slope toward Big Elk
+crossin'." He looked at Norton with a frown. "We can't do anything
+here," he said shortly, "until the doctor comes. I'll take you down
+where I found him."
+
+They went out and mounted their ponies. Down the trail a mile or so they
+came to a level that led away toward Rabbit-Ear Creek. From the level
+they could see the Circle Cross buildings, scattered over a small
+stretch of plain on the opposite side of the river. There was no life
+around them, no movement. Norton grimaced toward them.
+
+Hazelton halted his pony in some tall grass near a bare, sandy spot on
+the plains. The grass here grew only in patches and Norton could plainly
+see a number of hoof prints in the sand. One single set led away across
+the plains toward the Dry Bottom trail. Seeing the knowing expression in
+Norton's eyes, Hazelton spoke quietly.
+
+"That's Hollis's trail. He must have took the Dry Bottom trail an' lost
+it in the storm. Potter says he would probably take it because it's
+shorter. Anyways, it's his trail; I followed it back into the hills
+until I was sure. I saw that he had been comin' from Dry Bottom. He lost
+his way an' rode over here. I remember there was an awful darkness, for
+I was out scoutin' around to see if my stock was all right. Well, he got
+this far--rode right up to the edge of the butte over there an' then
+come back this way. Then he met--well, the men that did it."
+
+"They all stood there for a little while; you can see where their horses
+pawed. Then mebbe they started somethin', for you can see where Hollis's
+pony throwed up a lot of sand, tryin' to break out. The others were in a
+circle--you can see that. I've figured it out that Hollis saw there
+wasn't any chance for him against so many an' he tried to hit the breeze
+away from here. I'll show you."
+
+They followed the hoof prints down the slope and saw that all the riders
+must have been traveling fast at this point, for the earth was cut and
+the hoof prints bunched fore and aft. They ran only a little way,
+however. About a hundred yards down the slope, in a stretch of bare,
+sandy soil, the horses had evidently come to a halt again, for they were
+bunched well together and there were many of them, showing that there
+had been some movement after the halt.
+
+Norton dismounted and examined the surrounding soil.
+
+"They all got off here," he said shortly, after the examination;
+"there's the prints of their boots. They caught him here and handed it
+to him."
+
+Hazelton silently pointed to a queer track in the sand--a shallow groove
+running about fifty feet, looking as though some heavy object had been
+drawn over it. Norton's face whitened.
+
+"Drug him!" he said grimly, his lips in two straight lines. "It's likely
+they roped him!" He remounted his pony and sat in the saddle, watching
+Hazelton as the latter continued his examination. "They're a fine, nervy
+bunch!" he sneered as Hazelton also climbed into his saddle. "They must
+have piled onto him like a pack of wolves. If they'd have come one at a
+time he'd have cleaned them up proper!"
+
+They rode away down the trail toward the cabin. Norton went in and
+looked again at Hollis, and then, telling Hazelton that he would return
+in the afternoon, he departed for the Circle Bar. He stopped at the
+ranchhouse and communicated the news to his wife and Potter and then
+rode on up the river to a point about ten miles from the
+ranchhouse--where the outfit was working.
+
+The men received his news with expressions of rage and vengeance. They
+had come to admire Hollis for his courage in electing to continue the
+fight against Dunlavey; they had seen that in spite of his ignorance of
+the customs of their world he possessed a goodly store of common sense
+and an indomitable spirit. Yet none of them expressed sympathy, though
+their faces showed that they felt it. Expressions of sympathy in a case
+such as this would have been unnecessary and futile. But their
+expressions of rage showed how the news had affected them. Though they
+knew that Dunlavey's forces outnumbered their own they were for striking
+back immediately. But Norton discouraged this.
+
+"We're layin' low for a while," he said. "Mebbe the boss will get well.
+If he does he'll make things mighty interestin' for Dunlavey--likely
+he'll remember who was in the crowd which beat him up. If he dies----"
+His eyes flashed savagely. "Well, if he dies you boys can go as far as
+you like an' I'll go with you without doin' any kickin'."
+
+"What's goin' to be done with that noospaper of his'n?" inquired Ace.
+"You reckon she'll miss fire till he's well again?"
+
+Norton's brows wrinkled; he had not thought of the newspaper. But he
+realized now that if the paper failed to appear on scheduled time the
+people in Union County would think that Hollis had surrendered; they
+would refuse to believe that he had been so badly injured that he could
+not issue the paper, and Dunlavey would be careful to circulate some
+sort of a story to encourage this view. Now that Ace had brought the
+matter to his attention he began to suspect that this had been the
+reason of the attack on Hollis. That they had not killed him when they
+had the opportunity, showed that they must have had some purpose other
+than that of merely desiring to get him out of the way. That they had
+merely beaten him showed that their wish was only to incapacitate him
+temporarily. Norton's eyes flashed with a sudden determination.
+
+"I don't reckon that the _Kicker_ will miss fire," he declared;
+"not if I have to go to Dry Bottom an' get her out myself!"
+
+Ace eyed him furtively and now spoke with an embarrassed
+self-consciousness.
+
+"I've been considerin' this here situation ever since you told us about
+the boss," he said diffidently, "an' if you're goin' to get that paper
+out, a little poem or two might help out considerable."
+
+"Meanin'?" interrogated Norton, his eyelashes flickering.
+
+Ace's face reddened painfully. "Meanin' that I've got several little
+pieces which I've wrote when I didn't have anything else to do an' that
+I'd be right willin' to have them put into the _Kicker_ to help
+fill her up. Some of the boys think they're right classy."
+
+Norton looked around at the other men for confirmation of the truth of
+this modest statement. He caught Lanky's glance.
+
+"I reckon that's about right," said that sober-faced puncher; "Ace is
+the pote lariat of this here outfit, an' he sure has got a lot of right
+clever lines in his pomes. I've read them which wasn't one-two-three
+with his'n."
+
+Norton smiled, a little cynically. He wasn't quite sure about it, he
+said, but if Ace could write poetry he hadn't any doubt that during the
+next few weeks there would be plenty of opportunity to print some of it
+in the Kicker. He smiled when he saw Ace's face brighten. But he told
+him he would have to see Hollis--if the latter got well enough to endure
+an interview. If the boss recovered enough to be able to look at Ace's
+poetry before it was printed, why of course it would have to be shown
+him. He didn't want anything to go into the _Kicker_ which the boss
+wouldn't like. But if he wasn't able to look at it, why he would leave
+the decision to Potter, and if it suited the latter he would be
+satisfied. He would keep the boys posted on the boss's condition. Then
+he rode away toward the ranchhouse.
+
+Late in the afternoon he again visited the Hazelton cabin. He found the
+Cimarron doctor already there. Hollis was still unconscious, though
+resting easier. The doctor declared that he would remain with him
+throughout the night. He followed Norton out on to the porch and told
+him that at present he could not tell just how serious Hollis's injuries
+were. There was a great wound in his head which he feared might turn out
+seriously, but if not, Hollis would recover quickly and be as good as
+ever within a few weeks--except for his left wrist--which was broken. He
+praised Nellie Hazelton for the care she was giving the injured man.
+Convinced that there was nothing more to be done, Norton returned to the
+Circle Bar to give his attention to his work.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+"WOMAN--SHE DON'T NEED NO TOOTER"
+
+
+The Cimarron doctor's fears for the wound on Hollis's head had proved
+unfounded and on the tenth day after his experience on the night of the
+storm, Hollis was sitting on the Hazelton porch, his head still swathed
+in bandages, his left wrist in a splint, but his spirit still untouched.
+The marks on his face had all disappeared, except an ugly gash under his
+right eye--which still showed a slight discoloration--and a smaller cut
+on the chin. The Cimarron doctor had told him that the wound under his
+eye would leave a permanent scar--the wound had been deep and in spite
+of the doctor's care, had drawn together queerly, affecting the eye
+itself and giving it an odd expression. Many times since becoming able
+to move about had Hollis looked at his face in his mirror, and each time
+there had come into his eyes an expression that boded ill for the men
+who had been concerned in the attack on him.
+
+It was mid-afternoon and the sun was coming slant-wise over the roof of
+the cabin, creating a welcome shade on the porch. Ed Hazelton had been
+gone since morning, looking after his cattle, and Nellie was in the
+house, busily at work in the kitchen--Hollis could hear her as she
+stepped about the room.
+
+Norton had left the cabin an hour before and a little later Potter had
+stopped in on his way over to Dry Bottom to set up an article that he
+had written at Hollis's dictation. Hollis had told Norton of his
+experiences on the night of the storm.
+
+After the flash of lightning had revealed Dunlavey and his men, Hollis
+had attempted to escape, knowing that Dunlavey's intentions could not be
+peaceable, and that he would have no chance in a fight with several men.
+He had urged his pony toward the two buttes that he had seen during the
+lightning flash, making a circuit in order to evade his enemies. He
+might have succeeded, but unfortunately the darkness had lifted and they
+had been able to intercept him. He could give no clear account of what
+had happened after they had surrounded him. There had been no words
+spoken. He had tried to break out of the circle; had almost succeeded
+when a loop settled over his shoulders and he was dragged from his
+pony--dragged quite a distance.
+
+The fall had hurt him, but when the rope had slackened he had regained
+his feet--to see that all the men had surrounded him. One man struck at
+him and he had immediately struck back, knocking the man down. After
+that the blows came thick and fast. He hit several more faces that were
+close to him and at one time was certain he had put three of his
+assailants out of the fight. But the others had crowded him close. He
+fought them as well as he could with the great odds against him, and
+once was inspired with a hope that he might escape. Then had come a
+heavy blow on the head--he thought that one of the men had used the butt
+of a revolver. He could dimly remember receiving a number of other blows
+and then he knew nothing more until he had awakened in the Hazelton
+cabin.
+
+Hollis's opinion of Dunlavey's motive in thus attacking him coincided
+with Norton's. They might easily have killed him. That they did not
+showed that they must have some peculiar motive. Aside from a perfectly
+natural desire on Dunlavey's part to deal to Hollis the same sort of
+punishment that Hollis had inflicted on Dunlavey on the occasion of
+their first meeting, the latter could have no motive other than that of
+preventing the appearance of the _Kicker_ on its regular
+publication day.
+
+Hollis was convinced that Dunlavey had been inspired by both motives.
+But though Dunlavey had secured his revenge for the blow that Hollis had
+struck him in Dry Bottom, Hollis did not purpose to allow him to prevent
+the appearance of the _Kicker_. It had been impossible for him to
+make the trip to Dry Bottom, but he had summoned Potter and had dictated
+considerable copy, Potter had written some, and in this manner they had
+managed to get the _Kicker_ out twice.
+
+Ace had not been able to get any of his poems into the _Kicker_. He
+had submitted some of them to Potter, but the printer had assured him
+that he did not care to assume the responsibility of publishing them.
+Thereupon Ace had importuned Norton to intercede with Hollis on his
+behalf. On his visit this morning Norton had brought the matter to
+Hollis's attention. The latter had assured the range boss that he
+appreciated the puncher's interest and would be glad to go over some of
+his poems. Therefore Hollis was not surprised when in the afternoon he
+saw Ace loping his pony down the Coyote trail toward the Hazelton cabin.
+
+Ace's approach was diffident, though ambition urged him on. He rode up
+to the edge of the porch, dismounted, and greeted his boss with an
+earnestness that contrasted oddly with his embarrassment. He took the
+chair that Hollis motioned him to, sitting on the edge of it and
+shifting nervously under Hollis's direct gaze.
+
+"I reckon Norton told you about my poems," he began. He caught Hollis's
+nod and continued: "Well, I got a bunch of 'em here which I brung over
+to show you. Folks back home used to say that I was a genyus. But I
+reckon mebbe they was hittin' her up a little bit strong," he admitted,
+modestly; "folks is that way--they like to spread it on a bit. But"--and
+the eyes of the genius flashed proudly--"I reckon I've got a little
+talyunt, the evidence of which is right here!" With rather more
+composure than had marked his approach he now drew out a prodigious
+number of sheets of paper, which he proceeded to spread out on his knee,
+smoothing them lovingly.
+
+"Mebbe I ain't much on spellin' an' grammar an' all that sort of thing,"
+he offered, "but there's a heap of sense to be got out of the stuff I've
+wrote. Take this one, for instance. She's a little oday to 'Night,'
+which I composed while the boys was poundin' their ears one night--not
+bein' affected in their feelin's like I was. If you ain't got no
+objections I'll read her." And then, not waiting to hear any objections,
+he began:
+
+ The stars are bright to-night;
+ They surely are a sight,
+ Sendin' their flickerin' light
+ From an awful, unknown height.
+
+ Why do they shine so bright?
+ I'm most o'ercome with fright----
+
+"Of course I reely wasn't scared," he offered with a deprecatory smile,
+"but there wasn't any other word that I could think of just then an' so
+I shoved her in. It rhymes anyhow an' just about says what I wanted."
+
+He resumed:
+
+ When I look up into the night,
+ An' see their flickerin' light.
+
+He ceased and looked at Hollis with an abashed smile. "It don't seem to
+sound so good when I'm readin' her out loud," he apologized. "An' I've
+thought that mebbe I've worked that 'night' an' 'light' rhyme over-time.
+But of course I've got 'fright' an' 'sight' an' 'height' in there to
+kind of off-set that." He squirmed in his chair. "You take her an' read
+her." He passed the papers over to Hollis and rose from his chair. "I'll
+be goin' back to the outfit; Norton was sayin' that he wanted me to look
+up some strays an' I don't want him to be waitin' for me. But I'd like
+to have one of them pomes printed in the _Kicker_--just to show the
+folks in this here country that there's a real pote in their midst."
+
+"Why----" began Hollis, about to express his surprise over his guest's
+sudden determination to depart. But he saw Nellie Hazelton standing just
+outside the door, and the cause of Ace's projected departure was no
+longer a mystery. He had gone before Hollis could have finished his
+remonstrance, and was fast disappearing in a cloud of dust down the
+trail when Hollis turned slowly to see Nellie Hazelton smiling broadly.
+
+"I just couldn't resist coming out," she said. "It rather startled me to
+discover that there was a real poet in the country."
+
+"There seems to be no doubt of it," returned Hollis with a smile. But he
+immediately became serious. "Ace means well," he added. "I imagine that
+it wasn't entirely an ambition to rush into print that moved him to
+submit his poems; he wants to help fill up the paper."
+
+Miss Hazelton laughed. "I really think," she said, looking after the
+departing poet, "that he might have been fibbing a little when he said
+that the 'night' had not 'scared' him. He ran from me," she added,
+amusement shining in her eyes, "and I should not like to think that any
+woman could appear so forbidding and mysterious as the darkness."
+
+Hollis had been scanning one of the poems in his hand. He smiled
+whimsically at Miss Hazelton as she concluded.
+
+"Here is Ace's opinion on that subject," he said. "Since you have
+doubted him I think it only fair that you should give him a hearing.
+Won't you read it?"
+
+She came forward and seated herself in the chair that the poet had
+vacated, taking the mass of paper that Hollis passed over to her.
+
+"Shall I read it aloud?" she asked with a smile at him.
+
+"I think you had better not," he returned; "it might prove
+embarrassing."
+
+She blushed and gave her attention to the poem. It was entitled:
+"Woman," and ran;
+
+ "Woman she dont need no tooter,
+ be she skule mam or biscut shooter.
+ she has most curyus ways about her,
+ which leads a man to kinda dout her.
+
+ Though lookin at her is shure a pleasur
+ there aint no way to get her measure
+ i reckon she had man on the run
+ a long while before the world begun.
+
+ I met a biscut shooter in the chance saloon
+ when i was blowin my coin in ratoon
+ while the coin lasted i owned her an the town
+ but when it was gone she throwed me down.
+
+ An so i say she dont need no tooter
+ be she skule mam or biscut shooter
+ she fooled me an my hart she stole
+ which has opened my eyes an hurt my sole."
+
+Miss Hazelton laid the manuscript in her lap and laughed heartily.
+
+"What a harrowing experience!" she declared. Hollis was grinning at her.
+
+"That was a bad thing to have happen to a man," he observed; "I suppose
+it rather shattered Ace's faith in woman. At least you could observe by
+his actions just a moment ago that he isn't taking any more chances."
+
+She fixed him with a defiant eye. "But he still admits that he takes
+pleasure in looking at a woman!" she told him triumphantly.
+
+"So he does. Still, that isn't remarkable. You see, a man couldn't help
+that--no matter how badly he had been treated."
+
+She had no reply to make to this, though she gave him a look that he
+could not mistake. But he laughed. "I think Ace's effort ought to go
+into the _Kicker_" he said. "I have no doubt that many who read the
+poem will find in it a great deal of truth--perhaps a reflection of
+their own personal experiences."
+
+Her face clouded and she regarded him a little soberly. "Of your own,
+perhaps?" she suggested.
+
+"Not guilty," he returned laughing. "You see, I have never had any time
+to devote to the study of women, let alone time to allow them to fool
+me. Perhaps when I do have time to study them I may find some truth in
+Ace's effort."
+
+"Then women do not interest you?" She was looking down the Coyote trail.
+
+"Well, no," he said, thinking of the busy days of his past, and not
+being aware of the furtive, significant glance she threw toward him.
+"You see, there have always been so many important things to engage my
+attention."
+
+"How fortunate!" she said mockingly, after a pause during which he had
+time to realize that he had been very ungracious. He saw Ace's
+manuscript flutter toward him, saw her rise and heard the screen door
+slam after her. During the remainder of the afternoon he was left alone
+on the porch to meditate upon the evils that arise from thoughtless
+speech.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE COALITION
+
+
+Perhaps there were some persons in Union County who, acquainted with the
+details of the attack on Hollis, expected to read an account of it in
+the _Kicker_. If there were any such they were disappointed. There
+was nothing about the attack printed in the _Kicker_--nor did
+Hollis talk to any stranger concerning it.
+
+Ace's poem entitled "Woman" had gone into the paper, causing the
+poet--for many days following the appearance of his composition--to look
+upon his fellow punchers with a sort of condescending pity. On the
+second day after his discussion with Miss Hazelton over Ace's poem
+Hollis returned to the Circle Bar. He had succeeded in convincing Nellie
+that he had answered thoughtlessly when he had informed her that he took
+no interest in women, and though she had defiantly assured him that she
+had not taken offense, there had been a light in her eyes upon his
+departure which revealed gratification over his repentance. She stood
+long on the porch after he had taken leave of her, watching him as he
+rode slowly down the trail and disappeared around a turn. Then she
+smiled regretfully, sighed, and went into the house.
+
+Hollis's return to the Circle Bar was unostentatious and quite in
+keeping with his method of doing things. Within the next few days he met
+several of the Circle Bar men and there were mutterings against
+Dunlavey, but Hollis discouraged action, assuring the mutterers that his
+differences with Dunlavey were entirely personal and that he intended
+carrying on the fight alone.
+
+His wounds mended rapidly, and within two weeks--except for the broken
+wrist--he was well as ever. Meanwhile Potter had succeeded in getting
+the _Kicker_ out on time, though there had been a noticeable lack
+of aggressiveness in the articles. Especially was this true of the
+articles bearing upon the situation in Union County. Hollis had dictated
+some of these, but even those which he had dictated had seemed to lack
+something.
+
+Nothing had been heard of Dunlavey--it seemed that after the attack upon
+Hollis he had withdrawn from the scene to await the latter's next move.
+
+But Hollis was in no hurry; he had lost some of the enthusiasm that had
+marked his attitude in the beginning, but this enthusiasm had been
+replaced by determination. He was beginning to realize that in Dunlavey
+he had met a foe worthy of his most serious efforts. He had determined
+that there would be no repetition of the attack upon him, and therefore
+during his convalescence he had sent to Las Vegas for a repeating rifle,
+and this he carried with him on his trips to and from Dry Bottom.
+
+Meanwhile the drought continued. The sky was cloudless, the desultory
+breezes that swept the plains blighted growing things, raising little
+whirlwinds of fine, flinty alkali dust and spreading it over the face of
+the world. The storm that had caught Hollis on the Dry Bottom trail had
+covered only a comparatively small area; it had lasted only a brief time
+and after its passage the country was dry as before.
+
+Rabbit-Ear Creek of all the streams in the vicinity of Dry Bottom held
+water. From all points of the compass cattle drifted to the Rabbit-Ear,
+slaking their thirst and refusing to leave. Bronzed riders on drooping
+ponies trailed them, cutting them out, trying to keep their herds
+intact, but not succeeding. Confusion reigned. For miles in both
+directions Rabbit-Ear Creek became one huge, long watering trough.
+Temporary camps were made; chuck wagons rattled up to them, loaded with
+supplies for the cowboys, and rattled back to distant ranches for more.
+There had been other droughts, but this one was
+unexpected--unprecedented. There had always been a little water
+everywhere. Now Rabbit-Ear Creek held all there was.
+
+Only the small cattle owners suffered because of the drought. Riders
+told of the presence of plenty of water in the Canadian, the Cimarron,
+and the Ute. Carrizo held some. In fact, nearly all the streams held by
+the large ranchers seemed to contain plenty. The smaller owners, whose
+herds were smaller and whose complement of punchers was necessarily
+limited, had apparently been selected by Providence for ruin.
+
+There were mutterings against the large owners, against Providence.
+Particularly were there mutterings against Dunlavey when word came to
+the owners of the herds that if the drought was not broken within the
+next ten days the Circle Cross manager would drive all foreign cattle
+from the Rabbit-Ear. He would not allow his own herds to suffer to save
+theirs, he said.
+
+On the night following the day upon which the small owners had received
+this word from Dunlavey a number of the former waited upon Hollis. They
+found him seated on the lower gallery of the ranchhouse talking to
+Norton and Potter. Lemuel Train, of the Pig-pen outfit, had been
+selected as their spokesman. He stood before Hollis, a big man,
+diffident in manner and rough in appearance, surrounded by his fellow
+ranchers, bronzed, bearded, serious of face. Though the sun had been
+down three hours the heat was frightful and the visitors shuffled their
+feet and uncomfortably wiped the perspiration from their brows.
+
+"Sit down," invited Hollis. He rose and stood while the men draped
+themselves on the edge of the gallery floor--all except the spokesman,
+Lemuel Train. The latter faced Hollis. His face was grim in the dusk.
+
+"We've come to see what you've got to say about water," he said.
+
+Days before Norton had told Hollis that these men who were now herding
+at the Rabbit-Ear were the small ranchers who had refused to aid the
+elder Hollis in his fight against Dunlavey some years before. Therefore
+Hollis did not answer at once. When he did his voice was dry and cold.
+He too had heard of Dunlavey's ultimatum concerning the water.
+
+"Before I say anything on that subject I should like to know to whom I
+am talking," he said.
+
+Train swept a ponderous hand toward his fellow visitors, pointing them
+out in turn. "There's Truxton, of the Diamond Dot; Holcomb, of the Star;
+Henningson, of the Three Bar; Yeager, of the Three Diamond; an' Clark,
+of the Circle Y."
+
+"Correct," affirmed Norton, behind Hollis.
+
+Hollis smiled grimly; he had caught a belligerent note in Norton's
+voice. Plainly, if the range boss were allowed a voice in the matter,
+these visitors would have now received as little encouragement as they
+had received from Dunlavey. But Hollis's smile showed that he held
+different views.
+
+"I am Kent Hollis," he said to the men; "I suppose you know that."
+
+"I reckon we know you," said Train; "you're Jim Hollis's boy."
+
+"Then you know that Dunlavey and my father were not exactly bosom
+friends," returned Hollis.
+
+Several heads bobbed affirmatively; others sat grimly silent. Hollis
+smiled.
+
+"How many of you offered to help my father when he came to you asking
+for assistance in his fight against Dunlavey?"
+
+Train fidgeted. "I reckon they wasn't much chance----" he began, and
+then hesitated, looking around at his fellows.
+
+"Of course," returned Hollis quietly, after an embarrassed pause, "there
+wasn't much chance for you to win then. And you had to take a big risk
+to help my father. But he had to take a bigger risk to fight alone.
+Still he fought. And he fought alone. He was almost ruined. And now you
+men are facing ruin. And you have come to Jim Hollis's son to help you.
+Do you think he ought?"
+
+The men sat silent; the spokesman was without words.
+
+"How many men can the six of you muster--in case Dunlavey should try to
+carry out his decision to drive your cattle from the Rabbit-Ear--or
+shoot them?"
+
+"Eighteen, I reckon," returned Train, looking at the others, who nodded
+affirmatively to his question.
+
+Hollis turned to Norton. "How many men does Dunlavey employ?" he
+questioned.
+
+"Thirty," snapped Norton. "But in case he needed them he c'n get a
+hundred."
+
+"Big odds," smiled Hollis. "Why should I volunteer to help you fight
+Dunlavey? My cattle are certain of getting enough water. Why should I
+not be selfish, as you men were when my father went to you for
+assistance?"
+
+There was no answer. The faces that surrounded Hollis in the
+semi-darkness showed plainly that their owners had given up thoughts of
+assistance. Grim, hard lines came into them; two or three sneered. Of
+course they would fight Dunlavey; there was no alternative, for they
+could not stand idly by and see their cattle slain--Dunlavey could not
+drive them from water, they would have to be shot. They had reckoned on
+securing help from Hollis; he held one side of the Rabbit-Ear and with
+his support they were in a position to make things very unpleasant for
+any of Dunlavey's men who might, from the opposite side of the river,
+attempt to shoot their cattle. But with Hollis against them they would
+be powerless; with Hollis against them Dunlavey's men could swarm both
+sides of the river and the destruction of their cattle would be certain.
+
+All of the men knew this. Yet they did not answer Hollis's question.
+They had not come to plead with him; they knew that the situation had
+narrowed down to a point where they could depend only on their own
+resources. They would not plead, yet as they silently started to file
+off the gallery there were bitter smiles on several of their faces.
+There were no threats; perhaps Hollis had succeeded in showing them the
+similarity between his conduct and their own in the long ago, when his
+father had gone to them for assistance. At least this was what he had
+tried to show them.
+
+Lemuel Train was the last man down the gallery. He turned as he reached
+the ground and looked back over his shoulder at Hollis.
+
+"So-long," he said shortly. "I reckon you're even now."
+
+Hollis had not moved. "Wait, Train!" he said. The visitors halted and
+faced him.
+
+"Men," he said quietly, "you have not answered my question. I am going
+to repeat it: Why should I not be selfish, as you men were when my
+father went to you for assistance?"
+
+Lemuel Train smiled ironically. "Why, I reckon it's your trick, mister
+man," he said; "you've got all the cards."
+
+"Come back here, men," said Hollis. "Since none of you care to answer my
+question I will answer it myself." He stood silent while the men filed
+back and resumed seats on the gallery edge. Darkness had come on while
+he had been talking to the men and inside the ranchhouse Mrs. Norton had
+lighted the kerosene lamp and its weak, flickering rays straggled out
+into the darkness and upon Hollis's face and the faces of several of the
+men who sat on the edge of the gallery.
+
+Hollis knew that he might readily become melodramatic in the few words
+that he purposed to say to the men, and so when he began talking he
+adopted a low, even tone, confidential, serious. He told them that the
+things he had written in his salutatory in the _Kicker_, months
+before, had been an honest declaration of the principles in which he
+believed. This was America, he repeated; they were all Americans; they
+were all entitled to that freedom of thought, speech, and movement for
+which their forefathers had fought. For one, he purposed to fight, if
+necessary, to retain his rights.
+
+He told them that he held no ill-feeling against them on account of
+their refusal to assist his father. That was past history. But now they
+were to look into the future; they were all facing ruin if they did not
+combine in a common cause. So far as he was concerned their cattle might
+remain at the Rabbit-Ear until the drought ended, or until the stream
+went dry. And if Dunlavey fought them--well, he would be with them to
+the finish.
+
+When he had concluded Lemuel Train stepped forward and shook his hand.
+The others followed. There was no word spoken. The men filed down from
+the gallery, sought their horses, mounted, and rode slowly away into the
+darkness. When they had gone Hollis turned to resume his chair, but
+found Norton standing near him, looking at him with a curious smile.
+
+"Shake!" said the latter. "I knowed you'd do it that way!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+TO SUPPORT THE LAW
+
+
+Hollis alone, of all the men whose cattle grazed on the Circle Bar side
+of the Rabbit-Ear, really doubted that Dunlavey would have the courage
+to inaugurate a war against the small owners. Lemuel Train was
+particularly strong in his belief that Dunlavey would not hesitate to
+shoot whatever cattle infringed on what he considered were his rights.
+"I know the skunk!" he declared heatedly to Hollis a day or two after
+the conversation on the porch at the Circle Bar. "He'll do it. I'm only
+scared that he won't wait till the tenth day before beginnin'. Why in
+hell don't it rain?"
+
+This remained the great, universal interrogation. But at the end of a
+week it was unanswered. The sun swam in its endless circles, a great
+ball of molten silver at which no man could look with the naked eye,
+traveling its slow way through a blurred, white sky, sinking to the
+horizon in the evening and leaving a scorched, blasted, gasping country
+behind. The nights brought no relief. Clark, of the Circle Y,
+sarcastically declared it to be his belief that some meddler in things
+firmamental was paying the owner of the sun to work it overtime.
+
+Hollis's daily twenty mile ride from the Circle Bar to Dry Bottom and
+return became a trial to him. At night, when he returned from the trip,
+hot, dry, dusty, he would draw a chair out on the gallery floor and scan
+the sky for signs of rain. To his recollection since his adventure on
+the night of the storm there had not been a cloud in the sky. On the
+trails the dust was inches deep and light as a feather. It rose in
+stifling whirlwinds, filling the nostrils and the lungs, parching the
+tongues of man and beast and accentuating the suffering caused by lack
+of water.
+
+All the pleasure had been drawn from Hollis's rides because of the
+dryness and heat. On a morning a week following the day upon which
+Dunlavey had issued his warning to the cattle owners, Hollis made his
+usual trip to Dry Bottom. Norton accompanied him, intending to make some
+purchases in town. They rode the ten miles without incident and Hollis
+left Norton at the door of the _Kicker_ office, after telling the
+range boss to come back to the office when he had made his purchases as
+he intended returning to the Circle Bar before noon. Hollis found Potter
+inside. The latter had remained in Dry Bottom over night and was busy at
+a type case when his chief entered. Hollis did not remain long in the
+office. He looked over some letters that Potter had placed on his desk,
+placed one in a pocket and rose, telling Potter that he would be back
+and instructing him to tell Norton to await his coming should the latter
+return before him. Then he went down to the court house.
+
+He found the door of Judge Graney's court room slightly ajar and without
+knocking he pushed it open and entered. On the threshold he halted and
+drew a deep breath. Judge Graney was seated at the big table, and
+directly opposite him, leaning heavily on his elbows, his face inflamed
+with anger, sat Dunlavey. Near a window at the side of the room stood a
+grave faced man of medium height, slender and muscular, who was watching
+the Judge and Dunlavey soberly.
+
+At Hollis's sudden appearance the Judge looked up and smiled, while
+Dunlavey faced around, a derisive, mocking grin on his face. Hollis bore
+no marks of the recent attack beyond the left wrist, still in splints.
+
+"Come in," invited Judge Graney, his smile growing, his eyes glinting
+oddly. "I think, since you are responsible for the startling innovation
+which we have been discussing, that you are entitled to a word."
+
+He gravely waved Hollis to a chair and stood silent while the latter
+sank into it. Then he smiled, glancing furtively at Dunlavey and
+addressing Hollis.
+
+"Perhaps you will remember that some time ago you printed an article in
+the _Kicker_ urging upon the Government the necessity of bringing
+the law into Union County?"
+
+Hollis nodded. "Yes," he said quietly; "I remember."
+
+"Well," resumed the Judge, "the article has borne fruit. But perhaps not
+in the manner you expected." He laughed around at the three,
+deliberately closing an eye at Hollis. "You know," he resumed,
+addressing them all, his eyes twinkling as his gaze met Dunlavey's,
+"that the law is an expensive institution. It is a fundamental
+principle--at least of some governments," he smiled--"that a community
+that desires the law must pay, and pay dearly--for it. In short, if it
+wants the law it must pay taxes. I do not say that that is a principle
+which our government is applying, but I do say that it is an eminently
+fair proposition.
+
+"At all events I have received word from the Interior Department that if
+we want the law to come out here we must pay for it. That is not said in
+so many words, but that is the inference, if we are to consider the
+instructions of the Secretary of the Interior--which are: 'I am informed
+that several large ranch owners in Union County are inclined to evade
+taxation. Especially is this true--I am told--of a man named Dunlavey,
+who, if the report is correct, paid, during the last half year, taxes on
+five hundred head of cattle, whereas it is claimed that his holdings
+will amount to about five thousand, yearly average. In view of this
+ridiculously low return it seems incumbent upon me to appoint an
+inquisitor, whose duty----"
+
+Dunlavey laughed harshly, interrupting the Judge. Then he turned
+suddenly to Hollis, his face inflamed with passion.
+
+"I reckon this is some of your work?" he snarled.
+
+Hollis met his gaze steadily. "I imagine it is," he said quietly. He
+could not keep a flash of triumph from his eyes. "Nothing could please
+me better than to discover that I had a hand in bringing the law to this
+country. It needs plenty of law."
+
+Judge Graney cleared his throat. "This does not apply to you alone,
+Dunlavey," he said, facing the latter. "Letters have been sent to every
+cattleman in Union County, demanding their appearance before me. The
+government is determined to re-adjust conditions out here--to enforce
+this new law to the letter. Beginning on the first of next
+month,--September--which will be the day after to-morrow, every cattle
+owner in the county will be required to register his brand and return a
+list of his cattle, for taxation. Any owner refusing to make a fair
+return on his stock will make a grave mistake. Upon his failure to make
+such return the government will seize his stock and dispose of it to the
+highest bidder, deducting such an amount as will cover taxes, court
+costs, and fines, and returning the remainder, if any, to the owner."
+Judge Graney faced Hollis. "I suppose you have received your
+notification to that effect?" he inquired.
+
+"I haven't paid much attention to my mail since--since I met Mr.
+Dunlavey and several of his friends one night--some weeks ago." He
+smiled grimly at Dunlavey, who met his gaze with a derisive grin. "I
+haven't been very much interested in anything except getting well,"
+continued Hollis. "But whether I have been notified or not I shall take
+pleasure in complying with the law. I shall have my list ready on
+time--likewise I shall register my brand."
+
+Dunlavey sneered. "That won't be such an almighty big job--counting your
+steers," he said.
+
+Hollis laughed shortly. "Perhaps not as big a job as it would have been
+had conditions been different," he observed dryly.
+
+"Meaning?" snapped Dunlavey, stiffening in his chair.
+
+"You may draw your own inference," drawled Hollis.
+
+For an instant it seemed that Dunlavey contemplated attacking Hollis; he
+placed both hands on the table before him, preparatory to rising,
+evidently thought better of the idea and sank into the chair again, his
+eyes flashing venomously as they met Hollis's.
+
+"This country's going plum to hell!" he sneered; "when tenderfeet and
+half-baked lawyers get to running things it will be time for the
+cattlemen to pull up stakes and hit the breeze! But I'm telling you one
+thing!" He banged his fist heavily down upon the table in front of him
+and scowled at the Judge, his voice vibrating with passion: "You let
+your damned tenderfoot owners bring in their lists. Mebbe they don't
+know any better. But I ain't bringin' in no list. It's one thing to pass
+a law and another thing to enforce it!" He sat silent for an instant,
+glaring at the Judge, who smiled quietly at him, then he turned to
+Hollis.
+
+"You've been carrying on like you was intending to own this here country
+some day," he sneered; "with your damned newspaper and your lawyer
+friend here. What we handed you the other night was just a sample of
+what you'll get if you don't hit the breeze out of this country!" He got
+to his feet and stood beside the table, glaring around at the three men.
+
+For a moment neither of the three spoke. There was a saturnine, almost
+mocking, smile on the face of the man who stood at the window. In his
+expression one could discover much appreciation of the character of the
+man at whom he was looking--it revealed the fact that he had met such
+men before--and admired them little. There was no fear in the
+expression, yet had one of the other men taken the trouble to look at
+him they would have seen that his right hand was now lingering very
+close to the butt of the revolver at his hip.
+
+Judge Graney cleared his throat. The smile was still on his face, but a
+sudden brightness of the eyes and a flush in each cheek showed that
+Dunlavey's defiance had affected him. Both he and the man at the window
+watched closely as Hollis got to his feet and approached Dunlavey.
+
+Hollis's face was slightly pale, but there was a steady, unwavering
+gleam in his eyes as he walked to within five feet of Dunlavey and stood
+quietly beside the table looking at him.
+
+"Dunlavey," he began slowly, in a soft, even voice, in which there was
+not a hint of excitement, "I haven't anything to do with enforcing the
+law that seems to have come to Union County. You can defy the law if you
+please. But I have something to say in reply to what you have said to
+me. It is this: I haven't any ambition to own the entire country--such
+talk from a grown man is childish. But I do intend to own the little
+I've got in spite of you or anyone else. I am not in the least afraid of
+you. I owe you something on account of the other night and some day I am
+going to thrash you within an inch of your life!"
+
+Dunlavey's hand fell suggestively to his side. "There's no time like the
+present," he sneered.
+
+"Of course I know that you carry a gun," said Hollis still evenly,
+without excitement; "most of you folks out here don't seem to be able to
+get along without one--it seems to be the fashion. Also, I might add,
+every man that carries one seems to yearn to use it. But it has always
+seemed to me that a man who will use a gun without great provocation is
+a coward!" He smiled grimly into Dunlavey's face.
+
+For an instant Dunlavey did not move. His eyes glittered malevolently as
+they bored into Hollis's. Then his expression changed until it was a
+mingling of contempt, incredulity, and mockery.
+
+"So you're thinking of thrashing me?" he sniffed, backing away a little
+and eyeing Hollis critically. "You slugged me once and you're thinking
+to do it again. And you think that any man who uses a gun on another is
+a coward?" He laughed sardonically. "Well, all I've got to say to you is
+that you ain't got your eye-teeth cut yet." He deliberately turned his
+back on Hollis and the others and walked to the door. On the threshold
+he halted, looking back at them all with a sneering smile.
+
+"You know where I live," he said to Judge Graney. "I ain't bringing in
+no list nor I ain't registering my brand. I don't allow no man to come
+monkeying around on my range and if you come out there, thinking to run
+off any of my stock, you're doing it at your own risk!" His gaze went
+from the Judge to Hollis and his smile grew malignant.
+
+"I'm saying this to you," he said, "no man ain't ever thrashed Bill
+Dunlavey yet and I ain't allowing that any man is ever going to. Put
+that in your pipe and smoke it!"
+
+He slammed the door and was gone. Hollis turned from the door to see a
+dry smile on the face of the man at the window.
+
+"Fire eater, ain't he?" observed the latter, as he caught Hollis's
+glance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE BEARER OF GOOD NEWS
+
+
+Hollis smiled. The Judge got to his feet and approached the two men.
+
+"Hollis," he said, "shake hands with Mr. Allen, of Lazette."
+
+Allen's hand came out quickly and was grasped by Hollis's, both grips
+being hearty and warm.
+
+"My name's Ben Allen," explained the stranger with a smile. "Tacking on
+a handle like 'Mister' would sure make me feel like a stranger to
+myself."
+
+"We'll not quarrel about that," remarked the Judge with a smile; "we'll
+call you Ben." He looked soberly at Hollis, continuing:
+
+"Allen has been sent over here from Lazette to assist us in establishing
+the law. He was formerly sheriff of Colfax County, having been defeated
+by the Cattlemen's Association because he refused to become a party to
+its schemes. On several occasions since severing his official connection
+with Colfax County he has acted in a special capacity for the
+government. He is an old acquaintance of the new Secretary of the
+Interior and much trusted by him. He is to be the inquisitor mentioned
+in the letter which I read in the presence of Dunlavey."
+
+Hollis looked at Allen with a new interest. After noting again the
+steady, serene eyes, narrowed always with a slight squint; the firm
+straight lips, the well set jaws, Hollis mentally decided that the
+Secretary of the Interior could not have made a better choice.
+Certainly, if he had served as sheriff of Colfax County, he had had some
+excellent experiences, for from reading the _Lazette Eagle_, Hollis had
+acquired considerable knowledge of the character of the inhabitants of
+Colfax. The editor of the _Eagle_ had many times felicitated himself upon
+the fact that his town (Lazette) had not been built ten miles farther
+east--in which case he would have been a resident of Union--and ashamed
+of it.
+
+"I think we need you," said Hollis simply. "But I imagine you will have
+to concentrate your efforts upon one ranch only--the Circle Cross. If
+you make Dunlavey bow to the law you may consider your work finished."
+
+"I think Dunlavey will change his views of things shortly," remarked
+Allen, quietly, but significantly. He smiled at Hollis. "I have read
+your paper regularly," he said. "You've got the editor of our paper
+hopping mad--with your claims about Dry Bottom being superior to
+Lazette. Also, you've stirred up the Secretary of the Interior some. I
+was called to Washington three weeks ago and invited to tell what I knew
+of conditions out here. I didn't exaggerate when I told the Secretary
+that hell was a more peaceful place for a law loving man to live in.
+Though," he added with a smile, "I wasn't ever in hell and couldn't be
+positive. I was just accepting what I've heard preachers say about it.
+The Secretary asked me if I knowed you and I told him that though I
+didn't I would be right glad to if you was doing anything in my line. He
+laughed and said he'd miss his guess if you wasn't making things
+interesting. Told me to get you to one side and tell you to go to it."
+He smiled dryly. "According to what I've read in the _Kicker_ you don't
+need to be told that and so I'm keeping my mouth shut."
+
+He dropped his humor and spoke seriously, questioning Hollis about the
+location of his ranch, listening quietly and attentively to the latter's
+answers. Half an hour later after having arranged with Judge Graney for
+the registering of his brand and the listing of his cattle, Hollis left
+the court house and went to his office. In running through his mail he
+came upon Judge Graney's notification and also another letter,
+postmarked "Chicago," which drew a pleased smile to his face. A few
+minutes later Norton came in, and though Hollis had done very little on
+the paper he rose and smilingly announced his intention of returning to
+the Circle Bar.
+
+"We'll take the Coyote trail," he informed Norton, after they had
+mounted and were riding away from the _Kicker_ office; "I'm stopping for a
+moment at the Hazelton cabin. Of course," he added, seeing a knowing
+grin on Norton's face, "I expected you would be suspicious--married
+folks have a habit of adopting a supercilious and all-wise attitude
+toward those of us who have been unfortunate enough to remain in a state
+of single blessedness."
+
+"Meanin' that you're some sore because you ain't got hooked up yet?"
+grinned Norton.
+
+"Perhaps," laughed Hollis. "But I have been thinking seriously of trying
+to reach your altitude."
+
+"Girl willin'?" queried Norton, as they rode down through a little
+gully, then up to a stretch of plain that brought them to the Coyote
+trail.
+
+"That's where I am all at sea," returned Hollis. He laughed. "I suppose
+you've read Ace's poem in the Kicker?" He caught Norton's nod and
+continued. "Well, Ace succeeded in crowding a whole lot of truth into
+that effort. Of course you remember the first couplet:
+
+ "'Woman--she don't need no tooter,
+ Be she skule ma'am or biscut shooter."'
+
+he quoted.
+
+"A woman seems to have an intuitive knowledge of man's mental processes.
+At least she gauges him pretty well without letting him into the mystery
+of how she does it. A man can never tell where he will land." Ace came
+very near striking the nail on the head when he wrote in the second
+couplet that:
+
+ 'She has most curyus ways about her,
+ Which leads a man to kinda dout her.'
+
+"And then, knowing man so well, she absolutely refuses to let him know
+anything of her thoughts. Which again, Ace has noted in this manner:
+
+ 'Though lookin' at her is sure a pleasure;
+ There ain't no way to get her measure.
+ I reckon she had man on the run
+ A long while before the world begun.'
+
+"That seems to be the exact truth," he laughed.
+
+Norton grinned at him. "You single guys have certa'nly got a whole lot
+to learn," he said, "for a fact. Of course if she's any kind of a woman
+at all she's got him runnin'. But which way?"
+
+"Why, toward her, of course!" laughed Hollis.
+
+Norton's smile widened. "You've tumbled to that, then," he observed
+dryly. "Then you're ready for the next lesson."
+
+"And that?" questioned Hollis.
+
+Norton smiled with ineffable pity. "Lordy!" he laughed; "you single guys
+don't know a thing not a durned thing!"
+
+After that they rode on in silence. When they came in sight of the
+Hazelton cabin Norton reined in his pony and sat motionless in the
+saddle, grinning at Hollis.
+
+"You run along now," he advised. "I'll be hittin' her off toward the Dry
+Bottom trail for the rest of the way--I sorta like that trail better
+anyway."
+
+He urged his pony off at a tangent and Hollis continued on his way. He
+found Nellie alone, her brother having gone out on the range. She came
+out on the porch, hearing his pony's hoofs on the hard sand and rocks of
+the trail, and there was a sincere welcome in her eyes. It was the first
+time that he had visited the cabin since he had returned to the Circle
+Bar.
+
+"Oh!" she said delightedly. And then, aware of the sudden light that had
+come into Hollis's eyes at this evidence of interest, she blushed and
+looked down at the hem of her skirt, nervously pushing it out with the
+toe of her shoe.
+
+During the days of Hollis's convalescence at the Hazelton cabin he had
+seen the young woman in many moods. In none of them, however, had she
+seemed so attractive as now. Confusion became her, he decided, and he
+regarded her with a new interest as he sat on his pony, awaiting her
+invitation to dismount. It came presently.
+
+"It is frightfully hot," she said, moving over to where stood two
+chairs--one in which he had passed many hours during the days of his
+convalescence, the other in which she had sat quite often--near him. Not
+until now did he realize how full and satisfying those days had been. As
+he dismounted and tied his pony to one of the slender porch columns he
+smiled--thinking of Norton's question during their discussion of Ace's
+poem. "Of course"--the range boss had said--"if she's any kind of a
+woman at all she's got him runnin'. But which way?" Of
+course--literally--she did not have him running, but he knew that some
+uncommon passion had gripped him and that he was unaccountably pleased.
+
+His smile grew when he remembered her sudden indignation over his
+thoughtless statement that women had never interested him. Of course he
+would not tell her that he felt a serious interest in _one_ woman.
+When he dropped into his favorite chair, removing his hat and mopping
+the perspiration from his forehead with his handkerchief, he caught her
+looking swiftly at the scar under his right eye--which would always be a
+reminder of his experience on the night of the storm. She saw his brows
+contract in a frown.
+
+"You have quite recovered," she said; "except for that slight scar under
+the eye you are the same as before the meeting with Dunlavey's men."
+
+He looked beyond her at the tawny mountains that rose in the
+distance,--miles on the other side of the big basin--swimming in the
+shimmering blur of white sky--somber guardians of a mysterious world.
+What secret did they guard? What did they know of this world of eternal
+sunlight, of infinite distance? Did they know as much of the world upon
+which they frowned as he knew of the heart of the slender, motherly girl
+whose eyes betrayed her each time he looked into them?
+
+A smile that lurked deep within him did not show in his face--it was
+unborn and it gripped him strangely, creating a sensation in his breast
+that he could not analyze, but which pleaded to be expressed. He could
+not express it--now. He feared to trust himself and so he fought it
+down, assuring himself that it was not yet time. But he knew that he was
+not the same as before his experience with Dunlavey on the night of the
+storm. Something had stolen into his heart and was enthroned there;
+something deeper than a mere scar--a girl who had mothered him in his
+extremity; who had hovered over him, attending to his bruises, binding
+his wounds, tenderly smoothing his brow during the days and nights of
+the fever; attending his wants during convalescence; erecting a citadel
+in his heart which would stand as a monument to his gratitude. No, not
+gratitude merely. The smile was born. He turned and looked at her,
+meeting her eyes fairly, and hers dropped in confusion.
+
+"Do you think that I am the same as before?" he asked suddenly.
+
+She stood up, radiant, pointing a finger toward the Coyote trail. "Ed is
+coming!" she declared.
+
+Before he could say another word she was down off the porch and running
+toward her brother, holding his horse while he dismounted, kissing him,
+patting him lovingly as they came toward the porch.
+
+The latter greeted Hollis warmly. "A fellow couldn't help but feel good
+with a sister like that--now could he?" he inquired as he came upon the
+porch and took the chair which Nellie had vacated. She had disappeared
+into the cabin, not even looking at Hollis, but she could not have heard
+Hollis's reply had she remained. For it was wordless. There are times
+when men understand perfectly without speech.
+
+Hollis stayed for dinner. Nellie was radiantly silent during the meal,
+attending to the wants of the two men, listening while they discussed
+recent happenings in the county. Ed was much pleased to hear of the
+coming of Ben Allen.
+
+"That guy is business--through and through," he assured Hollis. "He was
+the best sheriff Colfax County ever had--and it's had some good ones.
+Allen's quiet, but there ain't anyone going to herdride him. Some have
+tried it, but they found it didn't pay and so they don't try it any
+more."
+
+After dinner they went out on the porch for a smoke, leaving Nellie
+inside. They could hear her singing as she washed the dishes. Hazelton
+smiled as a particularly happy note reached his ears. "I don't know
+what's got into Sis," he said, flashing a swift glance at Hollis. "I
+don't know as I ever heard her sing that well before."
+
+Hollis made no reply and the conversation turned to the drought--as all
+conversations did during that period. Word had come to Hazelton of
+Dunlavey's warning to the cattle owners. He had heard also of Hollis's
+announced intention of taking sides with the small owners.
+
+"Dunlavey's ten days is up the day after tomorrow," said Hazelton. "If
+Dunlavey starts anything what are you going to do?"
+
+"That will depend on what Dunlavey starts," smiled Hollis.
+
+"H'm!" inexpressively grunted Hazelton. He flashed a glance at the face
+of the young man beside him, noting the firm mouth, the steady eyes, and
+the faint, grim smile. "H'm!" he said again. "I suppose you know who
+you're going to give your water to?" he questioned.
+
+Hollis nodded. "To men who refused to help my father when he needed
+help," he returned.
+
+Hazelton smiled oddly. "I've heard about that," he said. He laughed. "It
+strikes me that I wouldn't give such men any water," he added.
+
+Hollis turned and looked at him, meeting his gaze fairly, and holding
+it.
+
+"Yes, you would, Hazelton," he said, a broad smile on his face.
+
+"How do you know that?" queried the latter, slightly defiant.
+
+Hollis motioned toward the kitchen door. "I know," he said; "you're her
+brother."
+
+"Well," began Hazelton hesitatingly,--"I----"
+
+The screen door opened--slammed, and Nellie Hazelton came out upon the
+porch. She had found time to change her morning dress for a soft, fluffy
+creation of some sort, and she stood before them, flushing slightly as
+both looked at her, a picture that smote Hollis's heart with a sudden
+longing. Only one glance did she give him and then she was over near
+Ed's chair, leaning over him, stroking his hair.
+
+For a long time Hollis sat, watching them with sympathetic, appreciative
+eyes. Then he thought of the letter in his pocket, the one postmarked
+"Chicago," which he had discovered at the _Kicker_ office on
+returning from the court house. He drew it from his pocket and read the
+legend in the upper left hand corner:
+
+"Dr. J. J. Hammond, ---- Hospital, Chicago, Ill."
+
+He studied the legend for some little time, his thoughts busy with the
+contents of the envelope. Fortunately, his letter to the great physician
+had fallen into the hands of the son, Tom Hammond, and the latter, not
+forgetting his old schoolmate, had appealed to his father. This was what
+the surgeon had written in the letter--he would not have agreed to
+accept the case had it not been for the fact that Hollis had been, and
+was Tom's friend. He would be pleased if the patient would make the
+journey to Chicago within a month, that he might be able to take up his
+case before entering upon some scientific investigations which had been
+deferred a long time, etc.
+
+Hollis had been reading the letter again. He finished it and looked up,
+to see Ed and Nellie watching him. He flushed and smiled, holding out
+the letter to Nellie.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said. "I found this interesting. Perhaps you
+will also find it so."
+
+He leaned back with a smile and watched them. But he did not, watch
+long. He saw Nellie start, saw the color slowly recede from her face,
+saw her hands clench tightly--as she began to read the letter. He turned
+away, not caring to watch them during that sacred moment in which they
+would read the line of hope that the great surgeon had written. He
+looked--it seemed--for a long time down the Coyote trail, and when he
+finally turned his head toward them he saw Ed Hazelton sitting erect in
+his chair, apparently stunned by the news. But before him, close to him,
+so close that he felt her breath in his face--her eyes wide with
+delight, thankfulness--and perhaps something more--Nellie was kneeling.
+
+"Oh, thank you, Mr. Hollis!" she said earnestly, her lips all a-quiver;
+"Thank you, and God bless you!"
+
+He tried to sit erect; tried to open his lips to tell her that he had
+done only what any man would have done under the circumstances. But he
+moved not, nor did he speak, for her arms had gone around his shoulders,
+and her lips were suddenly pressed firmly and quickly to his. Then he
+was released and she turned, crying:
+
+"Come and thank him, Ed!"
+
+But Ed had taken himself off--perhaps he did not care to allow anyone to
+witness his joy.
+
+Some time during the evening Hollis took his departure from the Hazelton
+cabin. Ed had come back, silently taking Hollis's hand and gripping it
+earnestly. And before Hollis had departed Ed had taken himself into the
+house. Perhaps he divined that there were other's joys beside his.
+
+That night before retiring Nellie stole softly into her brother's room
+and kissed him lightly on the forehead. That same night also Hollis rode
+up to the Circle Bar corral gate--singing. Norton and Potter were
+sitting on the gallery, waiting for him. While Hollis was removing the
+saddle from his pony Norton rose from his chair and smiled at Potter.
+
+"Well," he said to the latter, "I'm goin' to bed." He moved a few steps
+toward the door and then turned and looked back at Potter, who had also
+risen. He laughed.
+
+"Listen, Potter," he said. Then he quoted:
+
+ "Woman--she don't need no tooter
+ Be she skule ma'am or biscuit shooter."
+
+He hesitated and looked again at Potter. "Why," said the latter,
+puzzled, "that's from Ace's poem!"
+
+"Sure," laughed Norton; "that's just what it is!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE RUSTLER
+
+
+The following day Hollis rode to town over the Dry Bottom trail. Had he
+followed a perfectly natural inclination he would have taken the Coyote,
+for it would have brought him to the Hazelton cabin. But he succeeded in
+forcing himself to go the other way, arguing that Nellie and her brother
+might wish to be alone to consider the great good fortune that had come
+upon them.
+
+And so they did, though had Hollis appeared to them this morning as they
+sat upon the porch he would have been assured of a royal welcome.
+Indeed, during the early morning hours Nellie had cast many furtive,
+expectant glances down the Coyote trail. When eight o'clock came and
+Hollis did not appear she gave him up.
+
+The dawn found her kneeling beside her brother's bed.
+
+"Ed!" she said, leaning over him, waking him, her eyes alight with joy;
+"Ed, he says you can be cured!"
+
+He struggled and sat up, rubbing his eyes.
+
+"Gosh, sis!" he said in an awed voice. "Then it's true! I was afraid I'd
+been dreaming!"
+
+"It is no dream," she returned ecstatically; "it is reality--beautiful
+reality! Wasn't it simply _great_ of him to take such an interest
+in us?"
+
+"Us?" grinned Ed, noting her crimson, happy face. "Well, mebbe he did it
+for _us_," he added subtly, "but I take it I've got a right to have
+another opinion on that."
+
+She fled from him without answering and a little later he heard her
+singing as she prepared breakfast. After the meal Ed made a short trip
+out into the basin to look after his cattle and then returned to the
+cabin. Sitting on the porch he and Nellie devoted several hours to a
+grave discussion of the situation. They discovered that it had a serious
+side.
+
+In the first place there was the dangerous nature of the operation. Here
+Ed laughed away his sister's fears by assuring her that he had an
+excellent constitution and that since the fall from the pony had not
+killed him he was in no danger from the knife. If Nellie entertained any
+doubt of this she wisely remained silent, though Ed could see that she
+was not entirely reassured. He swept away her last objection to this
+forbidding feature when he told her that he preferred taking the risk to
+living in constant dread of a recurrence of an acute attack of his
+malady--such as he had experienced when he had attacked Hollis in
+Devil's Hollow.
+
+There were many other things to be discussed--chiefly the care of the
+cattle and the cabin during his absence in Chicago. He would not listen
+to her suggestion to accompany him--he would prefer to have her remain
+at the cabin. Or he would try to arrange with Hollis for her to stay at
+the Circle Bar. There she would have Mrs. Norton for a companion, and
+she might ride each day to the cabin. He was certain that Hollis would
+arrange to have his men care for the cattle. He assured her that he
+would settle that question with Hollis when the latter passed the cabin
+that night on his return to the Circle Bar. Of course Hollis would take
+the Coyote trail to-night, he insinuated, grinning hugely at the blushes
+that reached her face.
+
+But Hollis did not pass the cabin that night. He had taken the Dry
+Bottom trail on his return to the Circle Bar.
+
+He had accomplished very little that day on account of the heat--and a
+certain vision that had troubled him--taking his mind off his work and
+projecting it to a little cabin in a small basin, to a porch where sat a
+girl--the girl of his vision. She had voluntarily kissed him. Had it
+been all on account of gratitude? Of course--though--Well, memory of the
+kiss still lingered and he was willing to forgive her the slight lapse
+of modesty because he had been the recipient.
+
+There had been one interesting development in Dry Bottom during the day.
+All day the town had swarmed with ranch owners who had come in to the
+court house to list their cattle for taxation and register their brands.
+Shortly after noon Ben Allen had dropped into the _Kicker_ office
+with the news that every owner in the county with the exception of
+Dunlavey had responded to the law's demands.
+
+To Hollis's inquiry regarding the course he would pursue in forcing
+Dunlavey to comply with the law, Allen remarked with a smile that there
+was "plenty of time." He had had much experience with men of the
+Dunlavey type.
+
+Potter and Hollis exchanged few words during the ride to the Circle Bar.
+The heat--the eternal, scorching, blighting heat--still continued; the
+dust had become an almost unbearable irritation. During the trip to the
+ranch the two men came upon an arroyo over which Hollis had passed many
+times. At a water hole where he had often watered his horse they came
+upon several dead steers stretched prone in the green slime. The water
+had disappeared; the spring that had provided it had dried and there was
+nothing to tell of it except a small stretch of damp earth, baking in
+the sun. The steers were gaunt, lanky creatures, their hides stretched
+tight as drum-heads over their ribs, their tongues lolling out, black
+and swollen, telling mutely of their long search for water and their
+suffering. Coyotes had been at work on them; here lay a heap of bare
+bones; there a skull glistened in the white sunlight.
+
+A few miles farther on they came upon one of the punchers from the
+Circle Y with a calf thrown over the saddle in front of him. He was
+driving several gaunt, drooping cattle toward the Rabbit-Ear. The calf
+bellowed piteously at sight of Hollis and Potter. The puncher hailed
+them.
+
+"You're Hollis, of the Circle Bar, ain't you?" he said when the latter
+had spurred his pony close to him. At Hollis's nod he grinned
+ironically. "Hot!" he said, coming quickly to the universal topic of
+conversation; "I reckon this wouldn't be called hot in some places--in
+hell, for instance. Say," he said as he saw Hollis's lips straighten,
+"to-morrow the ten days is up. Mebbe it'll be hotter then. The damned
+skunk!"
+
+Of course he referred to Dunlavey--the latter's threat to drive all
+foreign cattle from the Rabbit-Ear had been carried far and wide by
+riders--the whole country knew of it. There had been much condemnation
+and some speculation, but there was nothing to be done until after the
+tenth day. Even then much depended upon Hollis's attitude. Would he make
+war upon Dunlavey in defense of the men who had refused aid to his
+father in time of need?
+
+Hollis was still of the opinion that Dunlavey would not attempt to carry
+out his threat. He smiled at the malevolent expression in the puncher's
+eyes.
+
+"Somehow," he said quietly, "I have always been able to distinguish
+between empty boast and determination. Dunlavey has done some foolish
+things, no doubt, and is doing a foolish thing in defying the law, but I
+don't anticipate that he will do anything quite so rash as to further
+antagonize the small owners."
+
+The puncher sat erect and laughed harshly. "You don't?" he inquired in
+an over-gentle, polite voice. "Mister Hollis," he added, as the latter
+looked quickly at him, "you ain't heard nothin' from the Circle Bar
+to-day, I reckon?"
+
+Hollis's answer was negative. The Circle Y man's face grew suddenly
+serious. "You ain't! Well, then, that's the reason you're talkin' so.
+The last I heard from the Circle Bar was that Norton an' some of your
+men had captured one of Dunlavey's men--Greasy--rebrandin' some Circle
+Bar steers an' was gettin' ready to string him up. I reckon mebbe you'd
+call that doin' somethin'!"
+
+Hollis straightened. He had suddenly forgotten the heat, the dust, and
+the problem of water.
+
+"How long ago did you hear this?" he demanded sharply.
+
+"'Bout an hour ago," returned the Circle Y man. "I was rustlin' up these
+strays down in the basin an' headin' them toward the crick when I runs
+plum into a man from the Three Bar outfit. He was plum excited over it.
+Said they'd ketched Greasy down by the Narrows sometime after noon
+an'----"
+
+But the Circle Y man finished to the empty air for Hollis's pony had
+leaped forward into a cloud of dust, running desperately.
+
+The Circle Y man sat erect, startled. "Well, I'll be----" he began,
+speaking to Potter. But the printer was following his chief and was
+already out of hearing. "Now what do you suppose----" again began the
+Circle Y man, and then fell silent, suddenly smitten with the
+uselessness of speech. He yelled at his gaunt steers and shifted the
+calf in front of him to a more comfortable position. Then he proceeded
+on his way. But as he rode his lips curled, his eyes narrowed, and
+speech again returned to him. "Now why in hell would a man get so damned
+excited over hearin' that someone was goin' to string up a measly
+rustler?"
+
+The interrogation remained unanswered. The Circle Y man continued on his
+way, watching the fast disappearing dust clouds on the Circle Bar trail.
+
+When Hollis reached the Circle Bar ranchhouse there was no one about. He
+rode up to the front gallery and dismounted, thinking that perhaps
+Norton would be in the house. But before he had crossed the gallery Mrs.
+Norton came to the door. She was pale and laboring under great
+excitement, but instantly divined Hollis's errand.
+
+"They've taken him down to the cottonwood" she told Hollis, pointing
+toward the grove in which Hollis had tried the six-shooter that Norton
+had given him the first day after his arrival at the ranch. "They are
+going to hang him! Hurry!"
+
+Hollis was back in the saddle in an instant and racing his pony down
+past the bunk house at break-neck speed. He urged the little animal
+across an intervening stretch of plain, up a slight rise, down into a
+shallow valley, and into the cottonwood, riding recklessly through the
+trees and urging the pony at a headlong pace through the
+underbrush--crashing it down, scaring the rattlers from their
+concealment, and startling the birds from their lofty retreats.
+
+For ten minutes he rode as he had never ridden before. And then he came
+upon them. They stood at the base of a fir-balsam, whose gnarled limbs
+spread flatly outward--three Circle Bar men, a half dozen from the
+various outfits whose herds grazed his range, and the rustler--Greasy--a
+rope knotted about his neck, standing directly under one of the
+out-spreading limbs of the tree, his head bowed, but his face wearing a
+mocking, defiant grin. The rope had been thrown over the limb and
+several men were holding it, preparatory to drawing it taut. Norton was
+standing near, his face pale, his lips straight and grim with
+determination. Apparently Hollis had arrived just in time.
+
+None of the men moved from their places when Hollis dismounted, but all
+looked at him as though expecting him to express approval of what they
+were about to do. Several lowered their gaze with embarrassment when
+they saw that he did not approve.
+
+"What is all this about, Norton?" he asked, speaking to the latter, who
+had stepped forward and now stood beside Greasy. Whatever excitement had
+resulted from the sudden discovery that his men had captured a rustler
+and were about to hang him, together with the strain of his hard ride to
+the cottonwood, had disappeared, and Hollis's voice was quiet as he
+addressed his range boss.
+
+Norton smiled grimly. "We were roundin' up a few strays just the other
+side of the Narrows this morning, and Ace and Weary were workin' down
+the river. In that little stretch of gully just the other side of the
+Narrows they came upon this sneak brandin' two of our beeves through a
+piece of wet blanket. He'd already done it an' so we ketched him with
+the goods. It's the first time we've ever been able to lay a hand on one
+of Dunlavey's pluguglies, an' we was figgerin' on makin' an example of
+him."
+
+Hollis met Norton's grim gaze and smiled. "I want to thank you--all of
+you, for guarding my interests so zealously," he said. "There is no
+doubt that this man richly deserves hanging--that is, of course,
+according to your code of ethics. I understand that is the way things
+have been done heretofore. But I take it none of you want to make me
+appear ridiculous?"
+
+"Sure not," came several voices in chorus.
+
+Hollis laughed. "But you took the surest way of making me appear so," he
+returned.
+
+He saw Norton's face flush and he knew that the latter had already
+grasped the significance of his words. But the others, simpler of mind,
+reasoning by no involved process, looked at him, plainly puzzled. He
+would have to explain more fully to them. He did so. When he had shown
+them that in hanging the rustler he would be violating the principle
+that he had elected to defend, they stood before him abashed, thoroughly
+disarmed. All except Ace. The poet's mind was still active.
+
+"I reckon you might say you didn't know nothin' about us hangin' him?"
+he suggested.
+
+"So I might," returned Hollis. "But people would not think so. And there
+is my conscience. It wouldn't be such a weight upon it--the hanging of
+this man; I believe I would enjoy standing here and watching him stretch
+your rope. But I would not be able to reconcile the action with the
+principle for which I am fighting. I believe none of you men would trust
+me very much if I advocated the law one day and broke it the next. The
+application of this principle would be much the same as if I stole a
+horse to-day and to-morrow had you arrested for stealing one."
+
+"That's so," they chorused, and fell silent, regarding him with a new
+interest.
+
+"But what are you goin' to do with the cuss?" queried one man.
+
+"We have a sheriff in Dry Bottom, I expect?" questioned Hollis.
+
+Grins appeared on the faces of several of the men; the prisoner's face
+lighted.
+
+"Oh, yes," said one; "I reckon Bill Watkins is the sheriff all right."
+
+"Then we'll take him to Bill Watkins," decided Hollis.
+
+The grins on the faces of several of the men grew. Norton laughed.
+
+"I reckon you ain't got acquainted with Bill yet, Hollis," he said.
+"Bill owes his place to Dunlavey. There has never been a rustler
+convicted by Watkins yet. I reckon there won't ever be any
+convicted--unless he's been caught stealin' Dunlavey's cattle. Bill's
+justice is a joke."
+
+Hollis smiled grimly. He had learned that much from Judge Graney. He did
+not expect to secure justice, but he wished to have something tangible
+upon which to work to force the law into the country. His duty in the
+matter consisted only in delivering the prisoner into the custody of the
+authorities, which in this case was the sheriff. The sheriff would be
+held responsible for him. He said this much to the men. There was no
+other lawful way.
+
+He was not surprised that they agreed with him. They had had much
+experience in dealing with Dunlavey; they had never been successful with
+the old methods of warfare and they were quite willing to trust to
+Hollis's judgment.
+
+"I reckon you're just about right," said one who had spoken before.
+"Stringin' this guy up would finish him all right. But that wouldn't
+settle the thing. What's needed is to get it fixed up for good an' all."
+
+"Correct!" agreed Hollis; "you've got it exactly. We might hang a dozen
+men for stealing cattle and we could go on hanging them. We've got no
+right to hang anyone--we've got a law for that purpose. Then let us make
+the law act!"
+
+The prisoner had stood in his place, watching the men around him, his
+face betraying varying emotions. When it had been finally agreed to take
+him to Dry Bottom and deliver him over to the sheriff he grinned
+broadly. But he said nothing as they took the rope from around his neck,
+forced him to mount a horse and surrounding him, rode out of the
+cottonwood toward the Circle Bar ranchhouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE TENTH DAY
+
+
+Dusk had fallen by the time Greasy had been brought to the bunkhouse,
+and Mrs. Norton had lighted the kerosene lamps when Norton and Hollis,
+assured of the safety of the prisoner, left the bunkhouse and went into
+the house for supper. Potter had washed the dust of travel from him and
+when Norton and Hollis arrived he was seated on the porch, awaiting
+them. Mrs. Norton greeted them with a smile. Her eyes expressed
+gratitude as they met Hollis's.
+
+"I am so glad you were in time," she said. "I told Neil not to do it,
+but he was determined and wouldn't listen to me."
+
+"You might have tried 'bossing' him," suggested Hollis, remembering his
+range boss's words on the occasion of his first meeting with Norton's
+wife. He looked straight at Norton, his eyes narrowing quizzically. "You
+know you told me once that----"
+
+"Mebbe I was stretchin' things a little when I told you that,"
+interrupted Norton, grinning shamelessly. "If a man told the truth all
+the time he'd have a hard time keepin' ahead of a woman."
+
+"'Woman--she don't need no tooter,'" quoted Hollis. "It has taken you a
+long time to discover what Ace has apparently known for years. And Ace
+is only a bachelor."
+
+Norton's eyes lighted. "You're gettin' back at me for what I said to you
+the day before yesterday--when you stopped off at Hazelton's," he
+declared. "All the same you'll know more about women when you've had
+more experience with them. When I told you that I'd been 'bossed,' I
+didn't mean that I'd been bossed regular. No woman that knows just how
+much she can run a man ever lets him know that she's bossin' him. Mebbe
+she'll act like she's lettin' him have his own way. But she's bossin'
+him just the same. He sort of likes it, I reckon. At least it's only
+when a man gets real mad that he does a little bossin' on his own
+account. And then, like as not, he'll find that he's made a big mistake.
+Like I did to-day about hangin' Greasy, for instance."
+
+Hollis bowed gravely to Mrs. Norton. "I think he ought to be forgiven,
+Mrs. Norton," he said. "Day before yesterday he presumed to lecture me
+on the superiority of the married male over the unmarried one. And now
+he humbly admits to being bossed. What then becomes of his much talked
+of superiority? Shall I--free and unbossed--admit inferiority?"
+
+Mrs. Norton smiled wisely as she moved around the table, arranging the
+dishes. "I couldn't decide that," she said, "until it is explained to me
+why so many men are apparently so eager to engage a boss."
+
+"I reckon that settles that argument!" gloated Norton.
+
+Had this conversation taken place two months before Hollis might have
+answered, Why, indeed, were men so eager to engage a boss? Two months
+before he might have answered cynically, remembering the unhappiness of
+his parents. That he did not answer now showed that he was no longer
+cynical; that he had experienced a change of heart.
+
+Of course Mrs. Norton knew this--Norton must have told her. He could
+appreciate the subtle mockery that had suggested the question, but he
+did not purpose to allow Norton to sit there and enjoy the confusion
+that was sure to overtake him did he attempt to continue the argument
+with Mrs. Norton. He was quite certain that Norton anticipated such an
+outcome.
+
+"Perhaps Norton can answer that?" he suggested mildly.
+
+"I ain't no good at guessin' riddles," jeered Norton. "But I reckon you
+know--if you wanted to tell."
+
+But Hollis did not tell, and the conversation shifted to other subjects.
+After supper they went out upon the porch. A slight breeze had sprung up
+with the dusk, though the sky was still cloudless. At ten o'clock, when
+they retired, the breeze had increased in velocity, sighing mournfully
+through the trees in the vicinity of the ranchhouse, though there was no
+perceptible change in the atmosphere--it seemed that the wind was merely
+shifting the heat waves from one point to another.
+
+"A good, decent rain would save lots of trouble to-morrow," said Norton
+as he and Hollis stood on the porch, taking a last look at the sky
+before going to bed.
+
+"Do you really think Dunlavey will carry out his threat?" questioned
+Hollis. "Somehow I can't help but think that he was bluffing when he
+said it."
+
+"He don't do much bluffin'," declared Norton. "At least he ain't done
+much up to now."
+
+"But there is plenty of water in the Rabbit-Ear," returned Hollis;
+"plenty for all the cattle that are here now."
+
+Norton flashed a swift glance at him. "That's because you don't know
+this country," he said. "Four years ago we had a dry spell. Not so bad
+as this, but bad enough. The Rabbit-Ear held up good enough for two
+months. Then she went dry sudden. There wasn't water enough in her to
+fill a thimble. I reckon you ain't been watchin' her for the last day or
+so?"
+
+Hollis admitted that he had not seen the river within that time. Norton
+laughed shortly.
+
+"She's dry in spots now," he informed Hollis. "There ain't any water at
+all in the shallows. It's tricklin' through in some places, but mostly
+there's nothin' but water holes an' dried, baked mud. In two days more,
+if it don't rain, there won't be water enough for our own stock. Then
+what?"
+
+"There will be water for every steer on the range as long as it lasts,"
+declared Hollis grimly. "After that we'll all take our medicine
+together."
+
+"Good!" declared Norton. "That's what I expected of you. But I don't
+think it's goin' to work out that way. Weary was ridin' the Razor Back
+this mornin' and he says he saw Dunlavey an' Yuma and some more Circle
+Cross guys nosin' around behind some brush on the other side of the
+creek. They all had rifles."
+
+Hollis's face paled slightly. "Where are the other men--Train and the
+rest?" he inquired.
+
+"Down on Razor Back," Norton informed him; "they sneaked down there
+after Weary told me about seein' Dunlavey on the other side. Likely
+they're scattered by now--keepin' an eye out for trouble."
+
+"Well," decided Hollis, "there isn't any use of looking for it. It finds
+all of us soon enough. To-morrow is the tenth day and I am sure that if
+Dunlavey carries out his threat he won't start anything until to-morrow.
+Therefore I am going to bed." He laughed. "Call me if you hear any
+shooting. I may want to take a hand in it."
+
+They parted--Hollis going to his room and Norton stepping down off the
+porch to take a turn down around the pasture to look after the horses.
+
+Hollis was tired after his experiences of the day and soon dropped off
+to sleep. It seemed that he had been asleep only a few minutes, however,
+when he felt a hand shaking him, and a voice--Norton's voice.
+
+"Hollis!" said the range boss. "Hollis! Wake up!"
+
+Hollis sat erect, startled into perfect wakefulness. He could not see
+Norton's face in the dark, but he swung around and sat on the edge of
+the bed.
+
+"What's up?" he demanded. "Have they started?"
+
+He heard Norton laugh, and there was satisfaction in the laugh.
+"Started?" he repeated. "Well, I reckon something's started. Listen!"
+
+Hollis listened. A soft patter on the roof, a gentle sighing of the
+wind, and a distant, low rumble reached his ears. He started up. "Why,
+it's raining!" he said.
+
+Norton chuckled. "Rainin'!" he chirped joyously. "Well, I reckon it
+might be called that by someone who didn't know what rain is. But I'm
+tellin' you that it ain't rainin'--it's pourin'! It's a cloud-burst,
+that's what it is!"
+
+Hollis did not answer. He ran to the window and stuck his head out. The
+rain came against his head and shoulders in stinging, vicious slants.
+There was little lightning, and what there was seemed distant, as though
+the storm covered a vast area. He could dimly see the pasture--the
+horses huddled in a corner under the shelter that had been erected for
+them; he could see the tops of the trees in the cottonwood
+grove--bending, twisting, leaning from the wind; the bunkhouse door was
+open, a stream of light illuminating a space in which stood several of
+the cowboys. Some were attired as usual, others but scantily, but all
+were outside in the rain, singing, shouting, and pounding one another in
+an excess of joy. For half an hour Hollis stood at the window, watching
+them, looking out at the storm. There was no break anywhere in the sky
+from horizon to horizon. Plainly there was to be plenty of rain.
+Convinced of this he drew a deep breath of satisfaction, humor moving
+him.
+
+"I do hope Dunlavey and his men don't get wet." he said. He went to his
+trousers and drew forth his watch. He could not see the face of it and
+so he carried it to the window. The hands pointed to fifteen minutes
+after one. "It's the tenth day," he smiled. "Dunlavey might have saved
+himself considerable trouble in the future if he had placed a little
+trust in Providence--and not antagonized the small owners. I don't think
+Providence has been looking out for my interests, but I wonder who will
+stand the better in the estimation of the people of this
+county--Dunlavey or me?"
+
+He smiled again, sighed with satisfaction, and rolled into bed. For a
+long time he lay, listening to the patter of the rain on the roof, and
+then dropped off to sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+HOW A RUSTLER ESCAPED
+
+
+When Hollis got out of bed at six o'clock that same morning he heard
+surprising sounds outside. Slipping on his clothes he went to the window
+and looked out. Men were yelling at one another, screeching delightful
+oaths, capering about hatless, coatless, in the rain that still came
+steadily down. The corral yard was a mire of sticky mud in which the
+horses reared and plunged in evident appreciation of the welcome change
+from dry heat to lifegiving moisture. Riderless horses stood about, no
+one caring about the saddles, several calves capered awkwardly in the
+pasture. Norton's dog--about which he had joked to Hollis during the
+latter's first ride to the Circle Bar--was yelping joyously and running
+madly from one man to another.
+
+Norton himself stood down by the door of the bunkhouse, grinning with
+delight. Near him stood Lemuel Train, and several of the other small
+ranchers whose stock had grazed for more than two weeks on the Circle
+Bar range without objection from Hollis. They saw him and motioned for
+him to come down, directing original oaths at him for sleeping so late
+on so "fine a morning."
+
+He dressed hastily and went down. They all ate breakfast in the mess
+house, the cook being adjured to "spread it on for all he was
+worth"--which he did. Certainly no one left the mess house hungry.
+During the meal Lemuel Train made a speech on behalf of himself and the
+other owners who had enjoyed Hollis's hospitality, assuring him that
+they were "with him" from now on. Then they departed, each going his
+separate way to round up his cattle and drive them back to the home
+ranch.
+
+The rain continued throughout the day and far into the night. The dried,
+gasping country absorbed water until it was sated and then began to shed
+it off into the arroyos, the gullies, the depressions, and the river
+beds. Every hollow overflowed with it; it seemed there could never be
+another drought.
+
+Before dawn on the following day all the small ranchers had departed.
+Several of them, on their way to their home ranches, stopped off at the
+Circle Bar to shake hands with Hollis and assure him of their
+appreciation. Lemuel Train did not forget to curse Dunlavey.
+
+"We ain't likely to forget how he stood on the water proposition," he
+said.
+
+After Train had departed Norton stood looking after him. Then he turned
+and looked at Hollis, his eyes narrowing quizzically. "You've got in
+right with that crowd," he said. "Durned if I don't believe you knowed
+all the time that it was goin' to rain before Dunlavey's tenth day was
+over!"
+
+Hollis smiled oddly. "Perhaps," he returned; "there is no law, moral or
+otherwise, to prevent a man from looking a little ahead."
+
+After breakfast Hollis gave orders to have Greasy prepared for travel,
+and an hour later he and the range boss, both armed with rifles, rode
+out of the corral yard with Greasy riding between them and took the Dry
+Bottom trail.
+
+The earth had already dried; the trail was hard, level, and dustless,
+and traveling was a pleasure. But neither of the three spoke a word to
+one another during the entire trip to Dry Bottom. Greasy bestrode his
+horse loosely, carelessly defiant; Norton kept a watchful eye on him,
+and Hollis rode steadily, his gaze fixed thoughtfully on the trail.
+
+At ten o'clock they rode into Dry Bottom. There were not many persons
+about, but those who were gave instant evidence of interest in the three
+by watching them closely as they rode down the street to the sheriff's
+office, dismounted, and disappeared inside.
+
+The sheriff's office was in a little frame shanty not over sixteen feet
+square, crude and unfinished. There were a front and back door, two
+windows--one in the side facing the court house, the other in the front.
+For furniture there were a bench, two chairs, some shelves, a cast iron
+stove, a wooden box partly filled with saw-dust which was used as a
+cuspidor, and a rough wooden table which served as a desk. In a chair
+beside the desk sat a tall, lean-faced man, with a nose that suggested
+an eagle's beak, with its high, thin, arched bridge, little, narrowed,
+shifting eyes, and a hard mouth whose lips were partly concealed under a
+drooping, tobacco-stained mustache. He turned as the three men entered,
+leaning back in his chair, his legs a-sprawl, motioning them to the
+chairs and the bench. They filed in silently. Greasy dropped carelessly
+into one of the chairs, Norton took another near him, but Hollis
+remained standing.
+
+"You are the sheriff, I suppose?" inquired the latter.
+
+The official spat copiously into the wooden box without removing his
+gaze from the three visitors.
+
+"Yep," he returned shortly, his voice coming with a truculent snap. "You
+wantin' the sheriff?"
+
+Hollis saw a swift, significant glance pass between him and Greasy and
+he smiled slightly.
+
+"Yes," he returned quietly; "we want you. We are delivering this man
+into your custody."
+
+"What's he done?" demanded the sheriff.
+
+"I charge him with stealing two of my steers," returned Hollis. "Several
+of my men discovered him at work the day before yesterday and----"
+
+"Hold on a minute now!" interrupted the sheriff. "Let's git this thing
+goin' accordin' to the law." He spat again into the wooden box, cocked
+his head sideways and surveyed Hollis with a glance in which there was
+much insolence and contempt. "Who might you be?" he questioned.
+
+"My name is Hollis," returned the latter quietly, his eyes meeting the
+other's steadily. "I own the Circle Bar."
+
+"H'm!" The sheriff crossed his legs and stuck his thumbs into the
+arm-holes of his vest, revealing a nickle-plated star on the lapel of
+the latter. "H'm. Your name's Hollis, an' you own the Circle Bar. Seems
+I've heard of you." He squinted his eyes at Hollis. "You're Jim Hollis's
+boy, ain't you?" His eyes flashed with a sudden, contemptuous light.
+"Tenderfoot, ain't you? Come out here to try an' show folks how to run
+things?"
+
+Hollis's face slowly paled. He saw Greasy grinning. "I suppose it makes
+little difference to you what I am or what I came out here for," he said
+quietly; "though, if I were to be required to give an opinion I should
+say that there is room for improvement in this county in the matter of
+applying its laws."
+
+The sheriff laughed harshly. "You'll know more about this country after
+you've been here a while," he sneered.
+
+"Mebbe he'll know more about how to run a law shebang, too," dryly
+observed Norton, "after he's watched Bill Watkins run her a little."
+
+"I don't reckon anyone ast you to stick your gab in this here affair?"
+demanded the sheriff of Norton.
+
+"No," returned Norton, drawling, "no one asked me. But while we're
+handin' out compliments we might as well all have a hand in it. It
+strikes me that when a man's runnin' a law shop he ought to run her."
+
+"I reckon I'll run her without any help from you, Norton!" snapped the
+sheriff.
+
+"Why, sure!" agreed the latter, his gaze level as his eyes met the
+sheriff's, his voice even and sarcastic. "But I'm tellin' you that this
+man's my friend an' if there's any more of them compliments goin' to be
+handed around I'm warnin' you that you want to hand them out soft an'
+gentle like. That's all. I reckon we c'n now proceed."
+
+The sheriff's face bloated poisonously. He flashed a malignant glance at
+Hollis. "Well," he snapped, "what's the charge?"
+
+"I have already told you," returned Hollis. "It is stealing cattle."
+
+"How stealin' them?" demanded the Sheriff truculenty.
+
+"Changing the brand," Hollis informed him. He related how Ace and Weary
+had come upon the prisoner while the latter was engaged in changing his
+brand to the Circle Cross.
+
+"They see him brandin'?" questioned the sheriff when Hollis had
+concluded.
+
+Hollis told him that the two men had come upon Greasy after the brand
+had been applied, but that the cattle bore the Circle Bar ear-mark, and
+that Greasy had built a fire and that branding irons had been found in
+his possession--which which he had tried to hide when discovered by the
+Circle Bar men.
+
+"Then your men didn't really see him doin' the brandin'?" questioned
+Watkins.
+
+Hollis was forced to admit that they had not. Watkins smiled
+sarcastically.
+
+"I reckon you're runnin' a little bit wild," he remarked. "Some of your
+stock has been rebranded an' you're chargin' a certain man with doin'
+it--only you didn't see him doin' it." He turned to Greasy. "What you
+got to say about this, Greasy?" he demanded.
+
+Greasy grinned blandly at Hollis. "This guy's talkin' through his hat,"
+he sneered. "I ain't allowin' that I branded any of his cattle."
+
+Watkins smiled. "There don't seem to be nothin' to this case a-tall--not
+a-tall. There ain't nobody goin' to be took into custody by me for
+stealin' cattle unless they're ketched with the goods--an' that ain't
+been proved so far." He turned to Hollis. "You got anything more to say
+about it?" he demanded.
+
+"Only this," returned Hollis slowly and evenly, "I have brought this man
+here. I charge him with stealing my cattle. To use your term--he was
+caught 'with the goods.' He is guilty. If you take him into custody and
+bring him to trial I shall have two witnesses there to prove what I have
+already told you. If you do not take him into custody, it is perfectly
+plain that you are deliberately shielding him--that you are making a
+joke of the law."
+
+Watkins's face reddened angrily. "Mebbe I'm makin' a joke of it----" he
+began.
+
+"Of course we can't force you to arrest this man," resumed Hollis,
+interrupting Watkins. "Unfortunately the government has not yet awakened
+to the fact that such men as you are a public menace and danger. I did
+not expect you to arrest him--I tell you that frankly. I merely brought
+him here to see whether it were true that you were leagued with Dunlavey
+against the other ranchers in the country. You are, of course.
+Therefore, as we cannot secure justice by appealing to you we will be
+forced to adopt other means."
+
+The sheriff's right hand dropped to his gun-holster. He sneered, his
+lips writhing. "Mebbe you mean----" he began.
+
+"I ain't lettin' this here situation get beyond my control," came
+Norton's voice, cold and even, as his six-shooter came out and was
+shoved menacingly forward. "Whatever he means, Watkins, he's my friend
+an' you ain't runnin' in no cold lead proposition on him." He smiled
+mirthlessly.
+
+Watkins's face paled; his right hand fell away from the pistol holster.
+There was a sound at the door; it swung suddenly open and Dunlavey's
+gigantic frame loomed massively in the opening.
+
+"I'm looking for Greasy!" he announced in a soft, silky voice, looking
+around at the four men with a comprehending, appreciative smile. "I was
+expecting to find him here," he added as his gaze sought out the
+prisoner, "after I heard that he'd been nabbed by the Circle Bar men."
+
+Norton smiled coldly. "He's here, Bill," he said evenly. "He's stayin'
+here till Mr. Hollis says it's time for him to go."
+
+He did not move the weapon in his hand, but a certain glint in his eyes
+told Dunlavey that the pistol was not in his hand for mere show. The
+latter smiled knowingly.
+
+"I'm not interfering with the law," he said mockingly. "And I certainly
+ain't bucking your game, Norton." He turned to Watkins, speaking with
+broad insinuation: "Of course you are putting a charge against Greasy,
+Watkins?" he said.
+
+They all caught the sheriff's flush; all saw the guilty embarrassment in
+his eyes as he answered that he had not. Dunlavey turned to Hollis with
+a bland smile.
+
+"Have you any objection to allowing Greasy to go now, Mr. Hollis?"
+
+Hollis's smile was no less bland as his gaze met Dunlavey's. "Not the
+slightest objection, Mr. Dunlavey," he returned. "I congratulate you
+upon the manner in which you have trained your servants!" He ignored
+Dunlavey and smiled at Norton. "Mr. Norton," he said with polite
+mockery, "I feel certain that you agree with me that we have no wish to
+contaminate this temple of justice with our presence."
+
+He bowed with mock politeness as he strode to the door and stepped down
+into the street. Norton followed him, grinning, though he did not sheath
+his weapon until he also was in the street.
+
+As they strode away from the door they turned to see Dunlavey looking
+out after them, his face wreathed in a broad smile.
+
+"There is plenty of law in Union County, Mr. Hollis," he said, "if you
+know how to handle it!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE "KICKER'S" CANDIDATE
+
+
+The next issue of the _Kicker_ contained many things of interest to
+its readers. Now that the drought had been broken, Union County could
+proceed with its business of raising cattle without fear of any future
+lack of water, with plenty of grass, and no losses except those from the
+usual causes. Dry Bottom merchants--depending upon the cattlemen for
+their trade--breathed easier and predicted a good year in spite of the
+drought. Their worries over, they had plenty of time--and
+inclination--to discuss the _Kicker_.
+
+More advertisements were appearing in the paper. Dry Bottom merchants
+were beginning to realize that it deserved their support, and with few
+exceptions they openly began to voice their opinions that the editor
+would "make good."' The advertisements began to take on a livelier tone
+and the Lazette _Eagle_ grew more sarcastic.
+
+When the _Kicker_ appeared following the incident in the sheriff's
+office, there was a detailed account of Dunlavey's now famous "ten day
+edict," together with some uncomplimentary comments upon the latter's
+action. This was signed by Hollis. He called attention to Dunlavey's
+selfishness, to the preparations that had been made by him to shoot down
+all the foreign cattle on the Rabbit-Ear. He made no reference to his
+part in the affair--to his decision to allow the small ranchers to water
+their cattle in the river at the imminent risk of losing his own. But
+though he did not mention this, the small owners and his friends took
+care that the matter received full publicity, with the result that
+Hollis was kept busy assuring his admirers that the incident had been
+much magnified--especially his part of it. Then his friends applauded
+his modesty.
+
+In the same issue of the paper was also related the story of Greasy's
+capture by the Circle Bar men. But in telling this story Hollis was not
+so modest, for he spoke frankly of his part in it--how he had refused to
+allow his men to hang the thief, telling his readers that though Greasy
+deserved hanging, he did not purpose to violate the law while advocating
+it. Following the story of the capture was a detailed report of the
+incident in the sheriff's office and a scathing commentary upon the
+subservience of the latter official to Dunlavey's will. The article was
+entitled: "Handling the Law," and Dunlavey's exact words when he stood
+in the door of the sheriff's office as Hollis and Norton departed were
+repeated.
+
+Below this, under the rubric, "Union County Needs a New Sheriff,"
+appeared an article that created a sensation. This dwelt upon the
+necessity of the county having a sheriff who would not permit his office
+to be prostituted by any man or influence. The _Kicker_ named a man
+who would not be bribed or cowed and declared that his name would appear
+on the ballot at the next election--to be held on the first Monday in
+November. At the end of the article he printed the man's name--Ben
+Allen!
+
+He had made this announcement without authority, and therefore he was
+not surprised, soon after the appearance of the issue containing the
+article, to see Allen's tall figure darken the door of the _Kicker_
+office while he sat at his desk.
+
+"Durn your hide!" cried the latter as he stood in the doorway; "you're
+the biggest disturber in seven states!"
+
+"Perhaps," smiled Hollis, motioning Allen to a chair. "Still, you don't
+need to thank me. You see, I have decided to clean up this county and I
+need some help. I supposed you were interested. Of course you may refuse
+if you like."
+
+"Refuse!" Allen's eyes flashed as he took Hollis's hand and wrung it
+heartily. "My boy," he declared earnestly, "you couldn't have done
+anything to suit me better. I'm just yearning to take a big hand in this
+game!"
+
+"Interesting, isn't it?" smiled Hollis.
+
+"Some," returned Allen. He grasped Hollis's hand and wrung it heartily.
+"You're a winner and I'm mighty glad to be able to work with you." He
+spoke seriously. "Do you think there's a chance for us to beat
+Dunlavey?"
+
+Hollis laughed. "I flatter myself that a certain editor in this town
+stands rather well with the people of this county since a certain thing
+happened."
+
+"You sure do!" grinned Allen. "Lordy! how this county has needed a man
+like you!"
+
+Hollis smiled. "Then you won't object to being the _Kicker's_
+candidate?" he inquired.
+
+"Object!" returned Allen with mock seriousness. "Say, young man, if you
+don't keep my name at the head of your editorial column from now till
+the first Monday in November I'll come down here and manhandle you!"
+
+And so it was arranged. Dry Bottom gasped in public but rejoiced in
+secret. Many of the town's merchants personally congratulated Hollis.
+
+But for two days following the appearance of the issue of the
+_Kicker_ containing these sensations, Hollis stayed away from Dry
+Bottom. Now that he had launched Allen's campaign and placed the other
+matters before his readers, he began to devote some attention to the
+problem of arranging for Ed Hazelton's visit to the great Chicago
+surgeon. Both Nellie and Ed had been disappointed because of his
+continued absence, and when, on an afternoon a few days after his
+activity in Dry Bottom, he rode up to the Hazelton cabin his welcome was
+a cordial one.
+
+"It seems like a year since I've seen you!" declared Hazelton as he came
+down from the porch to lead Hollis's pony into the shade at the rear of
+the cabin.
+
+While he was gone with the pony Hollis stood looking up at Nellie, who
+had remained seated in her chair on the porch and who was now regarding
+him with eyes in which shone unconcealed pleasure.
+
+"It hasn't really been so long, you know," said Hollis, smiling at her.
+"But then, I have been so busy that I may not have noticed it."
+
+Of course she could not tell him how many times she had sat on the porch
+during Ed's absences watching the Coyote trail. But she blushed and made
+room for him on the porch. Ed appeared presently and joined them there.
+The young man was not able to conceal his joy over the prospect of his
+ultimate recovery from the peculiar malady that afflicted him, and
+gratitude mingled with it as he looked at his benefactor. He had not
+recovered from an attack the day before.
+
+"We've got it all arranged," he told Hollis with a wan smile. "I'm going
+to Chicago just as soon as I can get things fixed." He reddened with
+embarrassment as he continued: "There's some things that I'd like to
+talk to you about before I make up my mind when to start," he said;
+"I've been worrying about what to do with my stock while I'm gone. I
+wouldn't want it to stray or be run off by Dunlavey's gang." The appeal
+in his eyes did not escape Hollis's keen observation.
+
+"I have thought of that too," smiled the latter. "In fact, I have talked
+it over with Norton. He tells me that he won't have any trouble in
+caring for your stock while you are away."
+
+"Thanks." Hazelton did not trust himself to say more at that moment. He
+knew how great would be the task of caring for his stock during his
+absence, and had not Hollis come to his aid with this offer he would
+have had to give up the proposed trip. He sat silent until his composure
+returned, and then he looked up at Hollis gratefully.
+
+"That will make things much easier for Nellie," he said. And then,
+remembering that Hollis knew nothing of his intention to ask him for
+permission to allow Nellie to remain at the Circle Bar during his
+absence, he fell silent again.
+
+"Easier?" inquired Hollis, puzzled. He had supposed that Nellie would
+accompany her brother to Chicago. He did not look at either of the two
+for a time. He had been anticipating a period of lonesomeness and this
+unexpected news came like a bright shaft of light into the darkness.
+
+"But you can't allow her to stay at the cabin alone!" he said when Ed
+did not answer. And then the thought struck him that this peculiar
+silence on Ed's part could mean only one thing--that he and Nellie had
+decided that she was not to accompany him, and that the problem that was
+now confronting them--since he had told them that his men would care for
+the cattle--was the girl's welfare. He appreciated the situation and
+smiled wisely into the yawning distance. But a deep sympathy made the
+smile grim.
+
+"I have sometimes wondered how it were possible for a woman to live in
+this country without having close at hand one of her sex with whom to
+gossip," he remarked, looking at Ed and deliberately closing an eye at
+him. "It doesn't bother a man so much--this being alone. If he is a
+drinking man there are the saloons; if a poet he may write wise saws
+concerning the inconstancy of women; he may punch cows, another man's
+head--or run a newspaper. In any case his mind is occupied.
+
+"But a woman! Of course it is different with a woman. A woman must
+talk--she simply can't help it. There's Mrs. Norton. Only this morning I
+chanced to hear her remark to her lord and master that if he did not
+soon provide her with a companion with whom she might discuss the things
+which are dear to the feminine heart, he might as well make up his mind
+to requisition the mourners. All of which suggests the thought that
+perhaps it would not be a bad idea for Miss Hazelton to bundle up her
+things and advance on the Circle Bar. Thus two ends will be served--Mrs.
+Norton will secure her companion and Norton will find peace." He turned
+to Nellie. "Of course if you are afraid that the cabin will stray during
+your absence I could manage to ride the Coyote trail each morning and
+evening--or you could ride over yourself occasionally."
+
+He could tell by the light in her eyes that she was pleased over the
+suggestion. He was sure of it when she smiled at him.
+
+"If you really think that Mrs. Norton would like some one to talk
+to----" she began, and then hesitated, her eyes suddenly widening as she
+saw an odd light in his. "Oh!" she said, "it isn't true about Mrs.
+Norton wanting to talk. You have guessed that I--that Ed--wanted me to
+go----" But confusion descended upon her and she flushed crimson with
+embarrassment.
+
+"If you think it isn't true, why don't you ride over to the Circle Bar
+and inquire?" he smiled.
+
+"Perhaps I may," she replied, looking at him in mock defiance.
+
+As a precaution against the carrying out of this threat, Hollis that
+night acquainted Mrs. Norton with the facts in the case, even going so
+far as to inform the lady brazenly that he had deliberately lied about
+her. But when she had been fully informed, she told Hollis that she did
+not blame him very much, and that should Nellie carry out her threat to
+come to her upon an errand having as its object a question of his
+veracity, she would assure the young lady that he had spoken the plain
+truth. Would that be sufficient?
+
+Hollis told her that it would, and the following morning on his way to
+Dry Bottom, he took the Coyote trail and stopped off at the Hazelton
+cabin, where he informed Ed that he had decided to send Weary with him
+on his trip to Chicago.
+
+Nellie spoke a few words to him while he lingered beside the porch, but
+her threat of the night before was not repeated and Hollis rightly
+guessed that it would never be carried out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+DUNLAVEY PLAYS A CARD
+
+
+During the week following Ed Hazelton's departure for Chicago Hollis did
+not see much of Nellie. In the few days preceding his departure she had
+not allowed her brother to see how his refusal to allow her to accompany
+him had hurt her, but once he had boarded the east-bound express at Dry
+Bottom, she had yielded to the emotions that she had so far succeeded in
+concealing. Hollis had ridden in to town with them, and not until Nellie
+and he had seen Ed and Weary safely on the train--indeed, not until the
+train was well under way and the two figures on the back platform could
+no longer be discerned--did Nellie break down. Then Hollis turned to her
+with a smile to see the sudden tears well up into her eyes. He had not
+attempted to console her, feeling the awkwardness of the situation.
+
+He was much relieved when she refused his offer to make the return trip
+with her, for he was certain that a few hours alone in which to meditate
+over her loss would enable her to regain her composure. But before
+leaving her he secured her promise not to stop at the cabin, but to go
+on to the Circle Bar. On her arrival at the ranch she was to tell Norton
+to send one of the men to the cabin after the few personal effects that
+she had decided to transfer. But once out of Hollis's sight Nellie
+forgot her promise through fear over the safety of her things. She took
+the Coyote trail, riding slowly through the clear sunshine of the
+morning.
+
+After taking leave of Nellie Hollis rode slowly down the street to the
+_Kicker_ office. He looked in through the window and seeing that
+Potter had not yet arrived, continued down to the court house. He talked
+for a few minutes with Judge Graney. Nothing new had developed. Ben
+Allen had gone to visit several small ranchers the day before and had
+not returned.
+
+Hollis returned to the _Kicker_ office. At noon Potter had arrived,
+bearing the news that he had seen Nellie Hazelton on the Coyote trail,
+within a few miles of the Circle Bar. She had stopped at her cabin and
+there were several bundles strapped to the cantle of her saddle.
+
+That night Hollis did not see her at all. He did not inquire for her,
+but surmised that she was in her room. The next morning soon after he
+had awakened and while he still debated the question of arising, he
+heard her singing in the kitchen. He smiled, thinking how quickly she
+had adapted herself to her new surroundings.
+
+At breakfast he looked closely at her several times, searching for
+evidence of her grief of yesterday. There was none. Therefore he was not
+surprised when, after breakfast, she told him that she intended riding
+with him as far as the cabin for the purpose of bringing the remainder
+of her effects. He gravely reminded her that she had broken her promise
+of yesterday, and that as a punishment he contemplated refusing her
+request. But when, an hour later, he urged his pony down the river trail
+she was riding beside him.
+
+But she did not ride again that week. She did not tell Hollis the
+reason; that returning that evening she had reached the Razor-Back and
+was riding along its crest when she happened to glance across the
+Rabbit-Ear toward the Circle Cross. On the opposite side of the river
+she had seen two men, sitting quietly in their saddles, watching her.
+They were Dunlavey and Yuma. She did not know what their presence there
+meant, but the sight was disquieting and she feared to return to the
+cabin for the few things that were still here.
+
+But as the days went her fears were dispersed. Time and the lure of her
+old home had revived her courage, and on a day about a week following
+her previous trip, she herself saddled and bridled her pony and set out
+over the Coyote trail toward her cabin.
+
+She had not told Hollis of her intention to ride there, fearing that the
+knowledge of what she had seen on the day of the other ride would be
+revealed in her eyes. It was a good hour after noon when she stole out
+of the house to her pony, mounted, and rode away toward the river.
+
+For many days she had been wondering at Dunlavey's continued inaction.
+He had been known as an energetic enemy, and though at their last
+meeting in Dry Bottom he had threatened her and her brother, he had so
+far made no hostile move. Uusually he would go a considerable distance
+out of his way to speak to her. Perhaps, she thought, at their last
+meeting she had shown him that he was wasting his time. Yet she could
+not forget that day when she had seen Yuma and Dunlavey on the Circle
+Cross side of the Rabbit-Ear. The sight somehow had been significant and
+forbidding.
+
+But when she reached her cabin she had forgotten Dunlavey and Yuma; her
+thoughts dwelt upon more pleasant people. Had she done right in allowing
+Hollis to see that she was interested in him? Would he think less of her
+for revealing this interest? She could not answer these questions, but
+she could answer another--one that brought the blushes to her cheeks.
+Why had Hollis shown an interest in her? She had known this answer for a
+long time--when she had read Ace's poem to him while sitting on the
+porch beside him, to be perfectly accurate. She had pretended then to
+take offense when he had assured her that Ace had succeeded in getting
+much truth into his lines, especially into the first couplet, which ran:
+
+ "Woman--she don't need no tutor,
+ Be she school ma'am or biscuit shooter."
+
+The language had not been graceful, nor the diction, yet she knew that
+Ace had struck the mark fairly, for woman indeed needed no tutor to
+teach her to understand man--woman had always understood him.
+
+She dismounted from her pony at the edge of the porch, hitching the
+animal to one of the slender porch columns. Then she went into the house
+to gather up the few things that still remained there.
+
+But for a long time after entering the cabin she sat on a chair in the
+kitchen, sobbing softly, for now that Ed had gone she felt the
+desolation of the country more than ever. Presently she rose and with a
+start looked out of the door. The dusk had fallen; darkness was stealing
+into the valley around the cabin!
+
+Flitting here and there, she hurriedly began packing things which she
+took from shelves and racks. It was an engrossing task and she was much
+interested in it, so much so that she did not hear a slight sound at the
+door that led out to the front porch. But when she saw a shadow darken
+the doorway of the room in which she was working she stood suddenly
+erect and with rapidly beating heart stole softly forward and peered
+around the door-jamb. Of course it could be no one but Hollis. He had
+taken the Coyote trail to-night. He would be surprised to see her.
+
+But it was she who was surprised. Yuma stood near the table in the
+center of the kitchen, looking straight at her, his insolent, evil face
+drawn into a foreboding smile.
+
+After the first gasp of horror and surprise a righteous anger stiffened
+her.
+
+"What are you doing here?" she demanded.
+
+Yuma's evil smile grew. She had seen him often, usually at a distance,
+for she had abhorred him, with his olive skin, his thin, cruel lips and
+small glittering eyes. He had always seemed like an animal to her,
+though she could not have told why. She thought it must be something in
+his attitude, in the stoop which was almost a crouch, in the stealthy,
+cat-like manner in which he walked. She had spoken to Ed about him more
+than once, conveying to him her abhorrence of the man, and he had told
+her that he felt the same about him. She shuddered now, thinking of what
+her brother had told her of the man's cruelty. Dunlavey had often
+boasted that Yuma was the most venomous and bloodthirsty of his crew of
+cut-throats.
+
+"What are you doing here?" she repeated, her anger growing.
+
+Yuma laughed softly. "I saw you ridin' the Razor Back the other day," he
+said, showing his teeth as the words came--even, smooth, burdened with a
+subtle mockery. "I saw you again thees afternoon--but you not see me
+like the other day--I watch you thees long." He held up three fingers to
+denote that he had watched her three hours. She shuddered, suddenly
+realizing the significance of his attitude that day she had seen him
+from the Razor Back.
+
+"Ed gone," he continued, watching her narrowly; "nobody here; I come. I
+like you--much." He grinned, his eyes brightening. "I reckon you
+know--you girl that understan'?"
+
+She drew a slow deep breath. Curiously enough, next to the horror and
+doubt that she felt over Yuma's presence at the cabin was a wonder for
+the idioms of cowboy speech that were interjected with his own. He had
+caught them from association, she supposed. She made a pretense of
+boldness, though she felt more like screaming.
+
+"Leave this cabin!" she commanded sharply.
+
+Yuma did not change his position. "Leave heem?" he laughed. "I theenk
+not. Dunlavey says me come here--make um love me--same as tenderfoot
+noospaper man!" He laughed again, exultantly. "Dunlavey say you spark
+tenderfoot--you spark me!"
+
+She trembled, realizing that a crisis was at hand and that she must meet
+it boldly. She thought of the ivory-handled weapon in the holster at her
+hip and involuntarily her right hand dropped to its butt. She had
+learned to shoot, but she had never yet shot at a man and she drew her
+hand away from the butt of the weapon with a shudder. Yuma had been
+watching her closely, his evil little eyes glittering, and when he saw
+her hand drop away he laughed derisively.
+
+"You no shoot heem!" he said. "You 'fraid. Dunlavey say he reckon you no
+shoot--say you make love to um right away!"
+
+He smiled significantly and took a step toward her. She made an
+involuntary step backward and her right hand again sought the butt of
+the revolver, the left closing on the edge of the door that opened into
+her room. Terror had given her courage and as Yuma continued to advance
+with a soft, cautious, cat-like sliding movement, she drew the revolver
+and presented it, though her hand wavered a little.
+
+"If you take another step toward me, Yuma, I will kill you!" she
+declared.
+
+She saw his little eyes glitter with decision, saw him measure the
+distance between them, saw him crouch for a spring.
+
+She fired, aiming at the lower edge of the scarf that sagged at his
+throat. The smoke from the pistol blinded her; she heard his laugh,
+heard the rush of his feet as he hurled himself forward. Terror stricken
+over her failure to hit him, she dropped the pistol and whirled,
+grasping the edge of the door and slamming it shut in his face. She felt
+his weight against it, but he had been taken by surprise by the
+movement; there was the strength of desperation in her body and she held
+the door closed against him while she shoved the fastenings into place.
+
+Then, suddenly overcome, she leaned weakly against the jamb, her heart
+thumping hard, her nerves tingling.
+
+For a long time she did not move, and there came no sound from the other
+side of the door to tell her of Yuma's movements. There was a wild hope
+in her heart that he had gone, but presently, becoming a little calmer,
+she pressed her ear against the door. There was no doubt of Yuma's
+presence; she could hear him stepping softly about the room. Had there
+been a window in the room in which she had imprisoned herself she might
+have escaped, but unfortunately there was not.
+
+She fell to thinking of the revolver she had dropped when Yuma had
+sprung upon her. It must have dropped very close to the door. Had Yuma
+picked it up? There was a chance that he had not. If the weapon were
+still there and she could open the door and secure it and close the door
+again, she would be in a position to defend herself. She could not
+defend herself without it. If Yuma should burst the door open she would
+be at his mercy. She must get the revolver.
+
+Convinced of this she stood for some little time at the door, her ear
+pressed against it, listening for any sound that might tell her of the
+whereabouts of Yuma in the cabin. She heard nothing. Perhaps he had
+gone? But she listened a while longer, determined to be certain before
+loosening the fastenings of the door. Silence--a premonitory
+silence--filled the room beyond the door. She could hear nothing except
+her own rapid breathing. Presently she heard a horse whinny. Was Yuma at
+the horses? It seemed incredible that any man should visit the cabin
+purposely to attack her. Perhaps Yuma had only intended to frighten her;
+he had said that Dunlavey had told him to follow her, but she believed
+that Dunlavey, in spite of his reputation for lawlessness and trickery,
+was not so unmanly as to incite the half-breed to attack her. He may
+have told him to steal the horses--she could believe that of him!
+
+But for a long time, in spite of the quieting influence of these
+thoughts, she kept her ear pressed against the door. Then, moved by a
+sudden impulse--an accession of courage inspired by the continued
+silence--she cautiously loosened the fastenings and swung the door
+slowly open.
+
+Her revolver lay close and with a swift movement she reached for it. As
+her fingers grasped its butt she heard a slight sound and Yuma was upon
+her from behind, pinning her arms to her sides. She felt his breath on
+her neck, heard his laugh, exultant and derisive, mocking her. His right
+hand, gripping hers tightly, was slipping slowly down toward the hand
+that held the revolver. She struggled desperately, squirming and
+twisting in his grasp, silently matching her strength against his.
+Finding this hopeless and feeling his hand gradually slipping toward the
+revolver, she suddenly raised her hand toward her face, bringing Yuma's
+hand, still on her arm, with it. Then she dropped her head to his arm
+near the wrist, and sank her teeth savagely into the flesh.
+
+Yuma howled in anguish, loosening his hold momentarily. In an instant
+she had wrenched herself free and had bounded to the center of the room,
+placing the kitchen table between herself and her assailant.
+
+But he was after her with a bound, his little eyes gleaming with a
+venomous expression, his face contorted with passion. She raised the
+revolver and fired. For a breathless instant she thought that she had
+hit him, for he sank almost to the floor. But she saw that it was only a
+trick for he was up again on the instant, a mocking smile on his face
+and closer than ever. She fired again, and when she saw him sink to the
+floor she pulled the trigger a second time. He had been very close to
+the table when she fired the last time and before she could press the
+trigger again he had lurched forward under it, raising it on his
+shoulders and sending it crashing down behind him as he confronted her,
+his evil face close to hers, his hands again gripping her arms.
+
+She fought him silently, and together they reeled around the cabin. She
+bit him again, and then in an outburst of savage fury he brutally
+twisted the arm in which she still held the revolver, sending the weapon
+crashing to the floor. While twisting her arm he had been compelled to
+loosen his grasp of the other slightly, and she again wrenched herself
+free and darted toward the door leading to the porch. But he bounded
+forward, intercepting her, and with a last, despairing effort she raised
+both hands to his face and clawed furiously at his eyes.
+
+She heard a savage curse from him, saw the lust of murder in his little,
+glittering eyes, felt his sinewy fingers at her throat. Then objects
+within the cabin swam in a dizzy, blurring circle before her. She heard
+a crash--seeming to come from a great distance; heard Yuma curse again.
+And then, borne resistlessly forward by the weight of his body, she
+tumbled to the floor in an inert heap.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+PROOF OF GRATITUDE
+
+
+Shortly after noon on the same day Hollis, finding work irksome, closed
+his desk with a bang, told Potter that he was going home, mounted his
+pony, and loped the animal out the Dry Bottom trail. He remembered
+hearing Norton tell one of the men that morning that he suspected that
+several of Ed Hazelton's cattle were still in the vicinity of the basin
+near the Hazelton cabin, and he determined to ride around that way and
+try to turn them back toward the Circle Bar. It would be recreation for
+him after a hot morning in the office.
+
+He also remembered another thing that had occurred that morning at the
+ranch house. Mrs. Norton had assured him--with a sly, eloquent glance at
+him--that he might do worse than to make arrangements to keep Nellie
+Hazelton at the Circle Bar indefinitely. At the risk of being considered
+obtuse Hollis had ignored the hint, broad though it had been. But Mrs.
+Norton's words had shown him that Nellie stood high in her estimation
+and he felt a queer, unaccountable elation.
+
+After striking the Dry Bottom trail he took a circuitous route and some
+time later came out upon a high ridge overlooking a basin. There were
+some cattle down there and he made a mental note of the locality so that
+he would be able to tell Norton where to have the men look for the
+cattle. Then he rode along the ridge until he could no longer see the
+basin. He spent most of the afternoon exploring the surrounding country,
+and then when the dusk began to fall he retraced his steps to the ridge
+upon which he had ridden earlier in the afternoon. Something familiar in
+the shape of the hills near him struck him and he halted his pony and
+smiled. These were the hills that he had seen many times from the
+Hazelton porch. He faced around, certain that if the hills could be seen
+from the porch he would be able to discern the porch from some point on
+the ridge, for he was satisfied that he must be nearly in line with it.
+He rode back and forth a few moments, and then, coming out on a bald
+spot on the ridge, he saw the cabin.
+
+It was about a mile away, snuggled comfortably down in a little basin,
+with some trees and shrubbery flanking it on both sides. He smiled as he
+looked at it, and then suddenly his face clouded, for he saw two ponies
+hitched to the porch. His forehead wrinkled perplexedly over this. He
+was certain that Nellie rode the same animal each time, because she
+would not trust any of the others that were now with the remuda. One of
+the horses belonged to her of course, for he could see the gay ribbon
+with which she was accustomed to decorate her animal's bridle. But to
+whom did the other horse belong? He gazed steadily toward the cabin,
+searching for signs of life on the porch. But though he could see
+clearly--even into the shadows from a rambling rose bush that clung to
+the eaves of the roof--no human figure appeared on the porch.
+
+Certainly Nellie must have a visitor. But who? He was not aware that the
+Hazeltons had made friends with anyone in the neighborhood besides
+himself and the Nortons. He smiled. Probably some cowboy from the Circle
+Bar had been in the vicinity looking for Hazelton's cattle, had met
+Nellie, and had stopped at the cabin. He remembered to have heard Norton
+say that he was sending a man in that direction some time that day.
+
+That must be the explanation. But while he sat, debating the propriety
+of riding down to the cabin to satisfy his curiosity, the sound of a
+pistol shot floated to his ears on the slight breeze that was blowing
+toward him.
+
+He sat erect, his face paling. Then he smiled again. He had been in the
+West long enough to become acquainted with the cowboy nature and he
+surmised that Nellie's visitor was very likely exhibiting his skill with
+the revolver. But he turned his pony and urged it down the sloping side
+of the ridge, riding slowly in the direction of the cabin.
+
+After striking the bottom of the slope he rode cut upon a broad level
+that stretched away for half a mile. He made better time here and had
+almost covered half the width of the plain when two more reports reached
+his ears. He was close enough now to hear them distinctly and it seemed
+to him that they sounded muffled. He halted the pony and sat stiffly in
+the saddle, his gaze on the cabin. Then he saw a thin stream of
+blue-white smoke issue from the doorway and curl lazily upward.
+
+A grave doubt assailed him. No cowboy would be likely to exhibit his
+skill with a weapon in the cabin! Nellie's visitor must be an unwelcome
+one!
+
+The pony felt the sudden spurs and raced like a whirlwind over the
+remaining stretch of plain. Hollis had become suddenly imbued with a
+suspicion that brought an ashen pallor to his face and an awful rage
+into his heart. He slid his pony down one side of a steep arroyo, sent
+it scrambling up the other side, jumped it over some rocks that littered
+the rise, spurred savagely through a little basin, and reaching the edge
+of the porch, dismounted and bounded to the door.
+
+He saw two figures--Nellie Hazelton and a man. He saw the man's fingers
+gripping the girl's throat and the lust of murder surged over and
+blinded him. In the dusk that had fallen he could only dimly see the
+man's head and he swung his right fist at it, putting every ounce of his
+strength into the blow. He felt the fist strike, realized that it had
+glanced, and tried to recover for a second blow.
+
+But the terrific swing had carried him off his balance. He whirled clear
+around, slipped, and came down to the floor flat on his face. He was up
+in an instant, however, his brain afire with rage, his muscles tingling
+with eagerness. He did not think of the gun at his hip, for the lust of
+murder was in his soul and he wanted only to hit the man--to seize him
+and tear him apart--to crush and smash the vile hands that he had seen
+at the girl's throat.
+
+Five feet from him, facing him, on his hands and knees and scrambling to
+rise, was the man. He recognized Yuma, and even as he bounded forward
+the latter gained his feet and tugged at his gun-holster. The weapon had
+not yet cleared the holster when Hollis was upon him. He struck again
+with his right fist and missed, crashing against Yuma in his eagerness
+and carrying him down to the floor with a force that shook the cabin. As
+they fell Hollis felt a sharp, agonizing pain in his left wrist, from
+which the splints had been only recently removed, and the hand hung limp
+at his side, entirely useless.
+
+For an instant after the fall Yuma lay still, breathing heavily. Then he
+made a sudden movement with his right arm and Hollis caught a glint of
+metal. He threw himself at the arm, catching it with his right hand just
+above the wrist and jamming it tight to the floor. Yuma tried to squirm
+free, failed, and with a curse drove his left fist into the side of
+Hollis's face. Again he tried to squirm free and during the struggle
+that followed the hand holding the pistol was raised from the floor.
+Hollis saw it and wrenched desperately at the arm, twisting it and
+dragging it furiously downward to the floor. Yuma shrieked with rage and
+pain as the force of the impact cracked his knuckles and sent the weapon
+clattering ten feet away.
+
+For an instant both men lay silent, panting from their exertions. Then
+Yuma succeeded in getting one leg over Hollis's body and one arm around
+his neck. With a quick motion--successful because of Hollis's injured
+wrist--he turned the latter over on his back. His eyes alight with an
+exultant, malevolent fire, he gripped Hollis's throat with one hand and
+drove at his face with the other. A quick movement of the head served to
+defeat Yuma's aim and his fist thumped heavily against the floor,
+bringing a grimace of pain to his face. Disregarding his injured wrist,
+Hollis wrenched savagely and succeeded in rolling free of Yuma and
+reaching his feet. He had moved quickly, but the lithe, cat-like
+half-breed was before him, bounding toward the pistol on the floor. He
+was bending over it, his fingers gripping its butt, when Hollis,
+throwing himself forward bodily, crashed into him and hurled him heavily
+to the floor.
+
+This time Yuma lay face downward, his arms outstretched, and Hollis lay
+sprawled out on top of him. But Yuma had succeeded in holding to the
+pistol; it was grasped in his outstretched right hand, just out of
+Hollis's reach.
+
+For an instant again both men lay silent, breathing rapidly. Then,
+yielding to the rage that still possessed him, Hollis bounded to his
+feet, striking Yuma a crashing blow in the face as he did so. While Yuma
+reeled he brought his booted foot down on the hand holding the pistol,
+grinding it under his heel.
+
+Yuma screamed with pain and rage and got to his feet, holding his
+injured hand with the other. The pistol lay on the floor where Yuma had
+dropped it when Hollis's boot had come in contact with his hand. For an
+instant Yuma stood gripping his hand, his face hideous with passion.
+Then with a snarl of rage and hate he drew a knife from the folds of his
+shirt and sprang toward Hollis.
+
+Hollis tensed himself for the clash, rapidly measuring the distance, and
+when Yuma came close enough caught him squarely on the side of the jaw
+with a vicious right swing. But in some manner when Hollis stepped aside
+to avoid Yuma's knife, his feet had become entangled with the legs of
+the table that Yuma had previously overturned. As he struck he slipped,
+the blow at Yuma's jaw not having the force he intended it to have. He
+caught himself, slipped again and went down, turning completely over the
+table top and falling face downward to the floor. He saw Yuma throw
+himself forward and he tried to wriggle out of danger, but he failed. He
+felt the half-breed's weight on his body, saw the knife flash in the
+dull light. He tried to roll over and grasp the knife in its descent,
+but could not, his left arm, now useless, being pinned to the floor by
+Yuma's knee.
+
+A revolver roared spitefully--once--twice. Yuma's knife hissed past
+Hollis's ear and struck the floor, its point sunk deep, its handle
+swaying idly back and forth. Yuma himself--inert, limp, rolled from
+Hollis's back and lay flat on his own, his eyes wide open and staring,
+two huge bullet holes in his forehead. And in the open doorway of the
+cabin stood Ten Spot.
+
+For an instant Hollis could not realize his escape. He looked at Yuma
+and then again at Ten Spot. Slowly and painfully he got to his feet,
+looking around at the wreck of the room. Staggering a little, he walked
+to where Ten Spot stood, gripping the latter's hand silently, at a loss
+for words with which to thank him.
+
+But apparently Ten Spot did not notice the omission, for he grinned
+broadly.
+
+"I reckon there's folks which would call that a right clever bit of
+shootin'," he said, "seem' a? there wasn't time to pull off no fancy
+stuff!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+TEN SPOT USES HIS EYES
+
+
+The crash of Ten Spot's pistols aroused Nellie Hazelton, and she sat up
+and stared stupidly about--at Hollis, who was just rising from the
+floor; at Ten Spot, who still stood in the doorway; and then at Yuma's
+body, stretched out on the floor beside the overturned table. She
+shuddered and covered her face with her hands. The next instant Hollis
+was bending over her, helping her to her feet, leading her to the door
+and assuring her in a low, earnest voice that everything was all right,
+and that Yuma would never trouble her again, and that he wanted her to
+get on her pony and go to the Circle Bar. She allowed herself to be led
+out on the porch, but once there she looked at him with renewed spirit.
+
+"It was you who came first," she said; "I didn't see you, but I heard
+Yuma curse, felt something strike him, and then--I must have fainted.
+You see, I felt it must be you--I had been expecting you."
+
+As she spoke she seized his hands and pressed them tightly, her eyes
+eloquent with thankfulness. "Oh, I am so glad!" she whispered. Then she
+saw Ten Spot standing in the doorway and she ran over and seized his
+hands also, shaking them hysterically. And Ten Spot stood, red of face,
+grinning bashfully at her--like a big, awkward, embarrassed schoolboy.
+
+"That's the first time I've ever been thanked for shootin' anybody!" he
+confided to Hollis, later. "An' it cert'nly did feel some strange!"
+
+In spite of Hollis's remonstrances the girl insisted on returning to the
+interior of the cabin, to "bundle up her things." Feeling the futility
+of further objection, Hollis finally allowed her to enter. But while she
+was busy in one of the rooms he and Ten Spot carried Yuma's body
+outside, around to the rear of the cabin.
+
+Then, when the girl had finally secured her "things" and they had been
+securely tied to her pony, and she had started down the trail toward the
+Circle Bar ranch, Hollis and Ten Spot returned to the rear of the cabin,
+took up Yuma's body, carried it to a secluded spot at some little
+distance from the cabin and there buried it deep and quickly.
+
+"I want to thank you again," said Hollis as he and Ten Spot stood on the
+porch when Hollis was ready to depart; "it was a great stroke of luck
+that brought you here just when you were needed."
+
+Ten Spot grinned. "I don't think it was just luck that brought me," he
+said; "though mebbe it was luck that took me into the Fashion this
+morning. Whatever it was, I was in there, an' I heard Dunlavey an' Yuma
+cookin' this here deal. I wasn't feelin' entirely ongrateful for the way
+you'd treated me after you'd got my gun that day in the _Kicker_
+office an' I wasn't intendin' to let happen what Dunlavey wanted to
+happen. So I got out of the Fashion as soon as I could an' trailed Yuma.
+I've been after him all day, but somehow or other I lost him an' didn't
+find out where he'd gone till a little while ago--when I heard a gun go
+off. Then I hit the breeze here--after Yuma. That's all. That's how I
+come to get here so lucky." He stuck out a hand to Hollis. "Well,
+so-long," he said; "I'm hittin' the breeze out of the country." He
+stepped forward to his pony, but hesitated when he heard Hollis speak.
+
+"Then you're not going back to the Circle Cross--to work for Dunlavey?"
+questioned the latter.
+
+"Well, no," grinned Ten Spot. "You see, it might not be so pleasant now
+as it's been. I reckon when Dunlavey hears this he won't be exactly
+tickled."
+
+Hollis contemplated him gravely. "So you're going to leave the country?"
+he said slowly, his eyes twinkling. "I take it you are not afraid----"
+
+"Don't!" said Ten Spot coldly and sharply. Then he grinned with feline
+cordiality. "I reckon I ain't scared of anyone," he said, "but I ain't
+likin' to go back to the Circle Cross after puttin' Yuma out of
+business. I've done some mean things in my time, but I ain't dealin'
+double with no man, an' I couldn't go back to the Circle Cross an' work
+for Dunlavey when I ain't sympathizin' with him none."
+
+"I'm shy of good cowhands," offered Hollis quietly. "If forty a month
+would be----"
+
+Ten Spot's right hand was suddenly gripping Hollis's. "You've hired a
+man, boss!" he said, his eyes alight with pleasure. "Ever since you
+clawed me that day in the _Kicker_ office I've had a hankerin' to
+work for you. I was wonder in' if you'd ast me. There ain't no damn----"
+
+"Then it's a bargain," laughed Hollis, interrupting. "You can start
+right now." He pointed to the ridge upon which he had been riding when
+he heard the shot that had brought him to the cabin. "Some of Ed
+Hazelton's cattle are in the basin on the other side of that ridge," he
+said. "You go over there and keep an eye on them until I can get a
+chance to send some one here to help you drive them back up the river
+toward the Circle Bar." As he came to the edge of the porch to mount his
+pony his gaze fell on Yuma's horse, still hitched to one of the columns.
+"What are we going to do with Yuma's horse?" he questioned.
+
+Ten Spot grinned. He walked over to the pony, unhitched it, and with a
+vicious slap on the flank sent it loping down the trail toward the
+river.
+
+"That'll be my message to Dunlavey that Yuma ain't here any more," he
+said grimly.
+
+Hollis mounted and rode a short distance, but halted and turned in the
+saddle when he heard Ten Spot call to him.
+
+"Boss," he said with a grin, "I ain't exactly blind, an' mebbe you've
+got your eyes with you, too. But I saw that there Hazelton girl lookin'
+at you sorta----"
+
+He saw a smile on Hollis's face, but the rest of his speech was drowned
+in a clatter of hoofs as the "boss's" pony tore down the Coyote trail.
+Then Ten Spot smiled, mounted his pony, and rode away toward the ridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+CAMPAIGN GUNS
+
+
+Of course Yuma had been amply punished for his part in the attack on
+Nellie Hazelton, but there still remained Dunlavey--who had instigated
+it. Hollis was aware of the uselessness of bringing a charge against
+Dunlavey--he had not forgotten his experience with Bill Watkins when he
+had attempted to have Greasy brought to justice. He believed that he
+would not have brought such a charge had there been any probability of
+the sheriff taking action. He felt that in inciting Yuma to attack
+Nellie, Dunlavey had also contemplated a blow at him. The man's devilish
+ingenuity appalled him, but it also aroused a fierce anger in his heart
+that, in the absence of a powerful will, would have moved him to
+immediate vengeance.
+
+But he contemplated no immediate action. Besides the attack on Nellie
+Hazelton there was another score to settle with Dunlavey, and when the
+time came for a final accounting he told himself that he would settle
+both. He knew there would come such a time. From the beginning he had
+felt that he and the Circle Cross manager were marked by fate for a
+clash. He was eager for it, but content to wait until the appointed
+time. And he knew that the time was not far distant.
+
+Therefore he remained silent regarding the incident, and except to
+Norton and his wife, Nellie Hazelton, Ten Spot, and himself, the
+disappearance of Yuma remained a mystery.
+
+Dunlavey, perhaps, might have had his suspicions, but if so he
+communicated them to no one, and so as the days passed the mystery
+ceased to be discussed and Yuma was forgotten.
+
+Hollis received a letter from Weary, dated "Chicago," announcing the
+safe arrival of himself and Ed Hazelton. "Town" suited him to a "T," he
+wrote. But Doctor Hammond would not operate at once--he wanted time to
+study the symptoms of Ed's malady. That was all. Hollis turned this
+letter over to Nellie, with another from Ed, addressed to her--whose
+contents remained a mystery to him.
+
+Ben Allen had returned from his visit to the small ranchers in the
+vicinity, had confided to Hollis that he had "mixed a little politics
+with business," and then, after receiving a telegram from the Secretary
+of the Interior, had taken himself off to Santa Fe to confer with the
+governor.
+
+After several days he returned. He entered the _Kicker_ office to
+greet Hollis, his face wreathed in smiles.
+
+"You've got 'em all stirred up, my boy!" he declared, placing his hand
+on Hollis's shoulder with a resounding "smack"; "they're goin' to
+enforce the little law we've got and they've passed some new ones.
+Here's a few! First and foremost, cattle stealing is to be considered
+felony! Penalty, from one to twenty years! Next--free water! Being as
+the rivers in this Territory ain't never been sold with what land the
+government sharks has disposed of, any cattleman's got the right to
+water wherever he wants to. The governor told me that if it's necessary
+he'll send Uncle Sam's blue coats anywhere in the Territory to enforce
+that! Third: after a man's registered his brand he can't change it
+unless he applies to the district judge. Them that ain't registered
+their brand ain't entitled to no protection. I reckon there's trouble
+ahead for any man which monkeys with another man's brand!
+
+"Say!" Allen eyed Hollis whimsically; "that new governor's all het up
+over you! Had a copy of the _Kicker_ in front of him on his desk
+when he was talkin' to me. Says you're a scrapper from the word go, an'
+that he'd back you up long as there was a blue coat anywhere in the
+Territory!"
+
+Allen's speech was ungrammatical, but its message was one of good cheer
+and Hollis's eyes brightened. The Law was coming at last! He could not
+help but wonder what Dunlavey's feelings would be when he heard of it.
+For himself, he felt as any man must feel who, laboring at a seemingly
+impossible task, endless and thankless, sees in the distance the
+possible, the end, and the plaudits of his friends.
+
+Yes, he could see the end, but the end was not yet. He looked gravely at
+Allen.
+
+"Did you happen to hear when these laws become effective?" he inquired.
+
+"On the first day of October!" returned Allen, triumphantly.
+
+Hollis smiled. "And election day is the third of November," he said.
+"That gives Dunlavey, Watkins and Company a month's grace--in case you
+are elected sheriff."
+
+Allen grinned. "They can't do a heap in a month," he said.
+
+"No," returned Hollis, "but in most elections that have come under my
+observation, I have noticed that the winning candidate does not assume
+office for a considerable time after the election. What is the custom
+out here?"
+
+Allen grinned grimly. "Usually it's two weeks," he said, "but if I'm
+elected it will be the next day--if I have to go down to the sheriff's
+office and drag Bill Watkins out by the hair!"
+
+"That belligerent spirit does you credit," dryly observed Hollis. "It
+will afford me great pleasure to participate in the festivities. But
+there is another matter to be thought of--which we seem to have
+overlooked. Usually before an election there is a primary, or a
+convention, is there not?"
+
+"There is," grinned Allen. "It's to-night, and I'm ready for it!" His
+grin expanded to a wide, whimsical smile. "I told you that I'd been
+mixing a little politics with business," he said. "Well, I've done so."
+He got up and approached the front window of the office, sweeping a hand
+toward the street. "If you'll just get up and look out here," he said,
+"you'll see that I ain't lying. There's some good in being an
+ex-office-holder--you get experience enough to tell you how to run a
+campaign." He bowed to Hollis. "Now, if you'll look close at that gang
+which is mixing palaver in front of the Silver Dollar you'll mebbe
+notice that Lemuel Train is in it, an' Truxton, of the Diamond Dot,
+Holcomb, of the Star, Yeager, of the Three Diamond, Clark, of the Circle
+Y, Henningson, of the Three Bar, Toban, of the T Down, an' some more
+which has come in for the racket tonight. Countin' 'em all--the punchers
+which have come in with the fellows I have named--there'll be about
+seventy-five.
+
+"An', say!" he added, suddenly confronting Hollis and grasping him by
+the shoulder and shaking him playfully and admiringly, "there wouldn't a
+durn one of them have come over here on my account. They up an' told me
+so when I asked them. Said they'd nothin' ag'in me, but they wasn't
+considerin' votin' at all. But since Hollis wanted me--well, they'd come
+over just to show you that they appreciated what you'd done for them!"
+
+Hollis smiled. He did not tell Allen that since the appearance of the
+_Kicker_ containing the announcement that he was to be its
+candidate he had written every small rancher in the vicinity, requesting
+as a personal favor that they appear in Dry Bottom on the day of the
+primary; that these letters had been delivered by Ace, and that when the
+poet returned he had presented Hollis with a list containing the name of
+every rancher who had promised to come, and that several days before
+Hollis had known approximately how many votes Allen would receive at the
+primary. He did not intend that Allen should know this--or that he had
+been going quietly from one Dry Bottom merchant to another, appealing to
+them for their support. And the earnestness with which many of them had
+promised had convinced him that the primary was to be the beginning of
+the end for Bill Watkins and Dunlavey.
+
+When he had first come to Dry Bottom it had been universally conceded by
+the town's citizens that his differences with Dunlavey and the
+Cattlemen's Association were purely personal, and there had been a
+disposition on the part of the citizens to let them fight it out between
+themselves. But of late there had come a change in that sentiment. The
+change had been gradual, beginning with the day when he had told the
+author of the notice that had appeared on the door of the _Kicker_
+office not to hold the express on his account. But the change had come
+and it was evident that it was to be permanent. It had only been
+necessary to arouse the government to the situation in order to secure
+intervention. He had hoped to secure this intervention without being
+forced to a hostile clash with the opposition, but his first meeting
+with Dunlavey had spoiled that. Subsequent events had widened the
+breach.
+
+He was satisfied. Let Bill Watkins be defeated for sheriff and Dunlavey
+was beaten. But there was much to be done before that desirable end
+could be achieved.
+
+Following the custom the primary was to be held in the sheriff's office.
+Watkins had issued a proclamation some weeks before; it had appeared on
+the door of the sheriff's office--a written notice, tacked to the
+door--but it had been removed the same day. Obviously, it was the
+sheriff's intention to conduct the primary as quietly as possible,
+hoping no doubt to disarm whatever opposition might develop. But Hollis
+had been apprised of the appearance of the proclamation and had quietly
+proceeded to plant the seed of opposition to Watkins in the minds of his
+friends.
+
+He had been warned by Judge Graney that Watkins would try to "pack" the
+sheriff's office with his friends on the night of the primary. This had
+been the usual method employed by Dunlavey when opposition to Watkins
+developed. Drunken, dissolute, dangerous men were usually on hand to
+overawe the opposition; the Judge told of instances in which gunplay had
+developed. But Hollis had determined that Watkins must be beaten.
+
+Allen did not stay long in the _Kicker_ office. Nor, for that
+matter, did Hollis. Once, during the morning, he went down to the court
+house to talk with Judge Graney. Then he returned to the _Kicker_
+office and worked until noon.
+
+During the morning there had been a surprising influx of visitors.
+Bronzed punchers on dusty, drooping ponies rode down the town's one
+street, dropped from their saddles, and sought the saloons. Groups of
+them swarmed the streets and the stores. As Hollis walked down to his
+office after leaving the court house, he was kept busy nodding to
+friends--many of whom had become such during the later days of the
+drought. Merchants grinned at him from their doorways; Dunlavey's
+friends sneered as he passed or sent ribald jokes after him.
+
+At noon he went to the Alhambra for lunch. Almost the first person he
+saw there was Dunlavey. The latter grinned at him mockingly.
+
+"Friends of yours in town to-day," he said with a sneer. "Well, you'll
+need them!"
+
+His voice had been loud enough for all in the restaurant to hear. Hollis
+did not answer, though he appreciated the significance of Dunlavey's
+words; they told him that the Circle Cross manager was aware of the
+contemplated contest and was ready for it.
+
+During the afternoon Dry Bottom presented a decidedly different
+appearance from the day when Hollis had first viewed it. Animation had
+succeeded desolation. Perhaps a hundred cowponies were hitched to the
+rails that paralleled the fronts of the saloons, the stores, and many of
+the private dwellings. It was apparent that many of the visitors had
+made the trip to town for the double purpose of voting and securing
+supplies, for mixed with the ponies were numerous wagons of various
+varieties, their owners loading them with boxes and crates. Men swarmed
+the sidewalks; the saloons buzzed.
+
+Toward dusk the volume of noise in the saloons drowned all sound
+outside. Having made their purchases the ranchers who had driven in for
+supplies and had loaded their wagons preparatory to departure found time
+to join their friends and acquaintances over a convivial glass. By the
+time the kerosene lamps were lighted in the saloons revelry reigned.
+From one saloon issued the shrieking, discordant notes of a violin,
+accompanied by the scuffling of feet; from another came laughter and the
+clinking of glasses; from still another came harsh oaths and obscene
+shouts. In the latter place rose the laughter of women.
+
+Seated at his desk near the front window of the _Kicker_ office
+Hollis gravely watched the scene--listened to the sounds. In another
+chair sat Potter. There was no light in the office; neither man had
+thought of a light. As the revelry in the saloons increased the printer
+glanced furtively at his chief.
+
+"There'll be hell to-night!" he said.
+
+"I expect there will be trouble," agreed Hollis.
+
+Potter shifted uneasily in his chair, eyeing his employer with a worried
+expression. He was silent for a moment. Then he cleared his throat
+nervously.
+
+"Do you intend to go there--to the sheriff's office--to-night?" he
+questioned.
+
+Hollis looked quickly at him. "Of course!" he said with emphasis. "Why?"
+he interrogated.
+
+"Nothing," returned Potter; "only----" he hesitated and then blurted
+out: "I wouldn't go if I were you. They've been saying that if you do
+there'll be trouble. You know what that means."
+
+"Who has been saying that?" inquired Hollis.
+
+"I heard it at noon--in the Silver Dollar. Some of Dunlavey's men sat
+near me and I heard them saying that Watkins was to win if they had to
+put two or three of his chief opponents out of business."
+
+"I have been expecting that," returned Hollis. He said nothing more and
+Potter, having done his duty, felt that he had no business to interfere
+further.
+
+Shortly after dark there was a clatter of hoofs outside the
+_Kicker_ office and four men dismounted from their ponies and
+strode to the office door. They were Norton, Ace, Lanky, and Bud.
+Evidently Hollis had been awaiting their coming, for he met them at the
+door, greeting them with the words: "We'll be going at once; it's about
+time."
+
+Followed by Potter the five strode rapidly down the street. When they
+arrived at the sheriff's office there were a number of men congregated
+about the door. Inside a kerosene lamp flickered on a table that sat in
+the center of the room. Another lamp stood on Watkins's desk, and beside
+the desk sat Watkins himself.
+
+Conversation died away as Hollis and his men approached the door and
+stood in the stream of light from the interior. A man stepped out of the
+shadow of the building and approached Hollis, drawing him and Norton
+aside. It was Allen. The latter had lost some of the sprightliness that
+had marked his manner during his conversation with Hollis in the
+_Kicker_ office that morning--he was again the cool, deliberate,
+steady-eyed man he had been that day in Judge Graney's office when
+Hollis had met him the first time.
+
+"I've been waitin' for you," he said; "we're goin' to have a scrumptuous
+time. Dunlavey's planning to pack her." He swept a hand toward the
+interior of the office. "But each candidate is to be allowed two
+witnesses. I've selected you two. Dunlavey and Greasy are doing the
+honors for Watkins. We might just as well go inside; we can't do
+anything out here. There won't be anything done by any of this gang
+until Dunlavey says the word."
+
+He turned and stepped into the sheriff's office, Hollis and Norton
+following.
+
+Watkins looked up and surveyed them with a bland smile as they entered
+and dropped quietly into the several chairs that had been provided.
+
+"I reckon she's goin' to be some hot tonight?" significantly remarked
+Watkins, addressing himself to Allen.
+
+"Maybe," grinned Allen.
+
+"We're goin' to take a hand in handlin' the Law," significantly remarked
+Norton.
+
+Watkins's face reddened. He stared offensively at Hollis.
+
+"I reckon you're a witness, too," he said, sneering. "Well," he went on
+as Hollis gravely nodded, "the law says that a witness to the count must
+be a resident of the county. An' I reckon you ain't. You ain't been----"
+
+"He stays," interrupted Allen, shortly. "That's settled."
+
+Watkins's face bloated with a sudden anger, but he wheeled without
+replying and gave his attention to some papers lying on the desk in
+front of him.
+
+For a long time the four sat in silence. Outside arose voices of
+men--growing in volume. There was a jam around the door; looking out
+Hollis could see the bronzed, grim faces of the punchers as they crowded
+close, moved by a spirit of curiosity. Hollis could hear exclamations of
+impatience, though the majority of the men outside stood in silence,
+waiting.
+
+Plainly, nothing was to be done until the arrival of Dunlavey. And
+presently he came.
+
+He had not been drinking; he was undeniably sober and self-possessed. As
+he entered the door of the office there was a sudden surge on the part
+of the crowd--several of the men tried to force their way in behind
+Dunlavey. But he halted on the threshold, scowling back at them and
+uttering the one word: "Wait!" The crowd fell back at the command and
+watched.
+
+Dunlavey stepped across the room, standing beside Watkins, his rapid
+glance noting the presence of the three members of the opposition. He
+ignored Hollis and Norton, speaking to Allen.
+
+"So you're sure enough going to run?" he said.
+
+"Sure," returned Allen. He rose slowly, stepped deliberately across the
+room, closed the door, and stood with his back to it.
+
+"We're all here now," he said quietly, "and I want to talk a little.
+There ain't no one going to hear what I've got to say but them I'm going
+to say it to. I reckon that goes?" He turned to Dunlavey.
+
+Dunlavey had shown some evidence of surprise over Allen's action in
+closing the door, but this immediately gave way to a sneer of mockery.
+"I reckon you've forgot Greasy," he said.
+
+"Why, I sure have!" returned Allen evenly. He opened the door a trifle
+and called: "Greasy!"
+
+Evidently Greasy had been waiting at the door, for he immediately came
+in, slouching across the floor and standing beside Watkins and Dunlavey.
+Allen closed the door and adjusted the fastenings carefully. Then he
+turned again to Dunlavey.
+
+"Now we'll proceed to do the talking," he said. He walked over to the
+chair that he had previously vacated, dropping carelessly into it and
+leaning comfortably back. His movements had been those of a man
+unquestionably sure of peace. The expression of his eyes, the tones of
+his voice, his deliberation hinted at a desire for a peaceful
+compromise.
+
+But once seated in his chair a startling change came over him. There was
+a rapid movement at his sides, a mere flash of light, and two heavy
+six-shooters appeared suddenly in his hands and lay there, unaimed, but
+forbiddingly ready. He sat erect, his eyes chilled and glittering,
+alert, filled with menace.
+
+"Now," he said sharply, "the first man who peeps above a whisper gets
+his so plenty that he won't care a damn who's nominated for sheriff!" He
+spoke to Norton and Hollis without turning his head. "You two get
+whatever guns them gentlemen happen to have on them, standing to one
+side so's I can see to perforate anyone who ain't agreeable to handing
+them over."
+
+Norton rose and approached Dunlavey, while Hollis stepped forward to the
+sheriff and secured the weapon that reposed in a holster at his right
+hip. He did likewise with Greasy. While Norton was relieving Dunlavey of
+his weapon the sheriff opened his lips to speak, his gaze fixed
+doubtfully on one of Allen's sixes.
+
+"The law----" he began. But Allen interrupted with a grin.
+
+"Sure," he said, "the law didn't figure on this. But I reckon you heard
+Big Bill say once that the law could be handled. I'm handling it now.
+But I reckon that lets you out--you ain't in on this and the mourners'll
+be after you to-morrow if you open your trap again!"
+
+The sheriff swelled with rage, but he closed his lips tightly. When
+Hollis and Norton had completed their search for weapons and had laid
+the result of their search on the table near Allen they sought their
+chairs.
+
+Dunlavey had said nothing. He stood beside Watkins's desk, still
+self-possessed, the mocking smile still on his face, though into his
+eyes had come a doubting, worried expression. Plainly he had not
+anticipated such drastic action from Allen.
+
+The latter laughed grimly, quietly. "Sort of unexpected, wasn't it,
+Bill?" he said, addressing Dunlavey. "It ain't just the sort of politics
+that you've been used to. But I'm kind of used to it myself. Had to pull
+the same game off over in Colfax County when I was runnin' for sheriff
+the first time. It worked, too, because the folks that was mixed up in
+it knowed I wasn't ringing in any bluff." He looked at Dunlavey with a
+level, steady gaze, his eyes gleaming coldly. "If you think I'm bluffing
+now, chirp for some one of your pluguglies to bust into this game. I'd
+sort of like to let off my campaign guns into your dirty gizzard!"
+
+Hollis had been watching Dunlavey closely. There was no fear in the
+man's eyes; even the doubt and worry that had been there had disappeared
+and his expression was now mildly ironical, contrasting oddly with the
+demeanor of Watkins--who was plainly frightened--and that of Greasy--who
+smirked and showed his teeth like some beast at bay and in fear of
+death. It was evident that Dunlavey possessed the spirit of the fighter,
+that indomitable courage which enables a man to face any situation and
+still retain his presence of mind, which permits him to face death
+unafraid and unyielding. In spite of the enmity that had existed between
+them from the beginning, Hollis had always respected Dunlavey for these
+very qualities, and within the last few minutes that respect had grown.
+
+Dunlavey's eyes gleamed as he looked at Allen. "I don't think you would
+try to work any bluff on me, Allen," he said quietly. "You've took me by
+surprise, that's a fact. But let's get down to business. What's your
+game?"
+
+"I reckon that's a sensible way to look at it," returned Allen evenly.
+"That's the way I expected you'd look at it when you begun to realize
+that I was holding some pretty good cards. There ain't nothing personal
+in this; I'm out for a square deal and I'm going to get it. I want you
+to understand that I'm running this game to-night and I'm running it
+square. If I get enough votes I'm going to be the next sheriff. If I
+don't get enough votes Bill Watkins'll be it. But the votes are going to
+be real votes. I ain't figuring on letting your gang pack in here and
+keep my friends from voting.
+
+"I'm going to put your hat on this table. Then Norton will open the door
+and let one man come in. That man will vote--for whoever he pleases.
+Then Mr. Hollis will let him out the back door and Norton will let
+another man in the front. There won't be any row. I'm telling you that
+you and Bill Watkins and Greasy are going to set here and watch the
+voting. I'm going to stand behind you with one of my guns tucked under
+your fifth rib. If you, or Watkins, or Greasy let out a yawp that can be
+construed as a signal for anyone to bust into the game, or if there's
+anything started by your friends which ain't your doing, I'm going to
+pump six chunks of lead into you so fast that they'll be playing tag
+with one another going through. I reckon you get me. That ends the
+palaver."
+
+He arose, snatched Dunlavey's hat from his head, placed it on the table,
+and walked behind Dunlavey, standing against the wall.
+
+"Open the door!" he directed, looking at Norton.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+HANDLING THE LAW
+
+
+Norton opened the door a trifle and called "One man at a time!" There
+were some hoarse shouts from without--presumably from Dunlavey's
+friends; a chorus of derisive laughter from Allen's. Then the first man
+entered.
+
+It was Ace. The poet stood for an instant, blinking at the light, then
+he grinned as his gaze rested on the occupants of the room. He was
+directed how to cast his ballot. He took the piece of paper that was
+given him by Norton, scrawled "Allen" across it with a pencil that
+Norton had previously placed on the table, and dropped the paper into
+Dunlavey's hat. Hollis opened the rear door for him, but he halted on
+the threshold, looking back into the room with a broad grin.
+
+"Gawd A'mighty!" he said in an awed tone; "there must have been a wad of
+money blowed in in this here town to-day! Drunks! Man alive there ain't
+nothin' but drunks; the town's reelin' with 'em! They're layin' in the
+street; there's a dozen in the Silver Dollar an' that many more in the
+Fashion--an' Gawd knows how many more in the other saloons. Their heads
+is under the tables; they're hangin' on the walls an' clawin' around in
+spittoons--gle-or-i-ously, be-ut-i-fully paralyzed!"
+
+He was suddenly outside, pushed through the door by Hollis, and the door
+closed after him. Hollis glanced furtively at Dunlavey to see that
+gentleman scowl. He thought he saw a questioning glint in Allen's eyes
+as the latter looked suddenly at him, but he merely smiled and gave his
+attention to the next man, who was now entering.
+
+The latter proved to be Lemuel Train. He did his voting quietly and
+grimly. But as he went out through the door that Hollis opened for him
+he growled: "Lordy, what a drunken bunch!" He looked at Hollis. "One of
+your men, too," he said, grinning slightly. "I thought you taught them
+better!"
+
+Hollis frowned. He knew that Allen would need all his friends; none of
+them could be spared in this crisis. He smiled incredulously. It had
+been only a short time before that his men had accompanied him to the
+door of the sheriff's office. At that time they were perfectly sober. It
+would have been impossible for any of them--
+
+"An' Ten Spot's a hummer when he gits started," Train was saying. "I've
+seen him before when he cut loose an' he sure is a holy terror!"
+
+Then with a word of parting Train was gone, saying that he had done all
+the "damage" he could and that he purposed "hitting" the trail back to
+his ranch.
+
+He had certainly done some damage to Hollis. The latter's mind now
+rioted with all sorts of conjecture and he mechanically did his work of
+letting man after man out through the rear door, scarcely seeing them.
+
+He was aware of an odd expression that had come into Dunlavey's eyes at
+the mention of Ten Spot. Had Dunlavey succeeded in bribing Ten Spot to
+desert him? He had left Ten Spot at the Circle Bar, not inviting him to
+Dry Bottom because he felt that the latter would rather not come since
+he had deserted Dunlavey. And Ten Spot had come to town anyway. What did
+it mean? Did it mean that Ten Spot had come to assist Dunlavey in
+nominating Watkins and defeating his new employer?
+
+He frowned again, and for the next few minutes gravely studied
+Dunlavey's face. He was sure that the latter's manner had changed. The
+mocking smile which had been on his face since his arrival at the
+sheriff's office had been superseded by a huge grin--plainly of
+anticipation. Ten Spot--dangerous, reckless, drunk, at the head of a
+number of dissolute men, had it in his power to make things decidedly
+interesting should he advance on the sheriff's office with the intention
+of assisting Dunlavey.
+
+Several times since hiring Ten Spot Hollis had doubted him. The
+suspicion had assailed him that perhaps the appearance of Ten Spot at
+the Hazelton cabin so opportunely had been a part of a plot by Dunlavey
+to place a spy in his employ. They might have purposely sacrificed Yuma.
+
+During the next quarter of an hour he gave more attention to Dunlavey
+than to the steady stream of men that passed through the room, though he
+recognized a goodly number as friends he had made during the latter days
+of the drought.
+
+Allen's spirits had risen during the last quarter of an hour. His
+maneuver had dissipated Dunlavey's strength and it was plain to be seen
+that a majority of the votes cast were for him. If nothing unusual or
+unexpected happened within the next hour, or until nine o'clock, the
+hour named in Watkins's proclamation for the closing of the polls, he
+was assured of victory.
+
+Thoughts of the same character were passing through Hollis's mind. There
+was silence in the office. A man was voting at the table--writing his
+favorite's name on a piece of paper. Hollis consulted his watch. It
+lacked over an hour of the time for closing. The man at the table
+finished writing and tossed the paper into the hat. Hollis opened the
+rear door to allow him to go out. While the door remained open a sound
+floated in, which they all heard--an ear-splitting screech, followed
+instantly by a chorus of yells, a pistol report, more yells, and then a
+number of reports.
+
+Norton did not open the door. He exchanged glances with Hollis and
+Allen. Dunlavey grinned widely.
+
+"Something's coming," remarked Allen grimly.
+
+Dunlavey's grin grew derisive. "It would sure be too bad if my friends
+should bust up this peace meeting," he sneered.
+
+"There won't be nothin' spoiled," grimly assured Allen. But he drew his
+other six-shooter.
+
+The sounds outside grew in volume as they swept toward the sheriff's
+office. They broke presently at the door and an ominous silence
+succeeded. Then a voice reached the interior--harsh authoritative--Ten
+Spot's voice.
+
+"Open up, you damned shorthorns!" it said.
+
+Norton looked at Allen. The latter's face was pale. "They come in," he
+directed, "like the others--one at a time."
+
+Norton carefully withdrew the bar with which the door was fastened,
+swinging it open slightly. As he did so there was a sudden rush of
+bodies; Norton tried to jam the door shut, failed, and was flung back
+several steps by the surging, yelling crowd that piled tumultuously into
+the room.
+
+There were perhaps twenty of them and as they surged into the room,
+shouting and cursing and laughing Hollis recognized among them many men
+that he had come to know by sight. They were of the reckless, lawless
+element upon which Dunlavey had relied for his support--men of Ten
+Spot's character. They had been drinking, but in spite of their laughter
+and loud talking it was plain to be seen that they had determined not to
+be balked in the purpose which had brought them into the office.
+
+There was now no need to guard the door; the damage had been wrought,
+and Norton backed away, leaving the door ajar, pale, grim eyed, alert,
+ready to take an active part in the trouble which he felt certain was
+sure to develop. Something in the faces of the men who had come in with
+Ten Spot proclaimed trouble.
+
+Allen had not moved. He still stood behind Dunlavey, but his weapons no
+longer menaced the Circle Cross manager; their muzzles, level and
+forbidding, were covering the other men.
+
+Standing quietly beside the rear door, his face pale, his eyes bright,
+his lips in straight lines, Hollis watched closely as the visitors,
+having gained entrance, gathered together in the center of the room.
+They were not awed by Allen's weapons; they grinned hugely at him. One
+man, a young man of about Hollis's age, bronzed, lean, reckless of eye,
+and unmistakably under the influence of liquor, lunged forward to Allen
+and stood within arm's length of him, grinning at him.
+
+"Two guns!" he said with a laugh. "Why, I reckon you'd make a hell of a
+sheriff!"
+
+A chorus of laughter greeted the young cowboy's words. Dunlavey grinned
+widely. "You boys are just in time," he said.
+
+There was another roar of laughter. Many of the men seemed only now to
+have become aware of Dunlavey's presence and they surged forward around
+him, disregarding Allen's guns. The latter seemed to realize that the
+situation had passed beyond his control, for catching Hollis's eye he
+smiled grimly and sheathed his weapons, seeking Hollis's side.
+
+"It's no use," he said shortly to Hollis as he came near; "they'll run
+things to suit themselves now. I wasn't expectin' Ten Spot to butt into
+the game."
+
+"I reckon they've got us." Norton had also sought Hollis's side and the
+three stood near the rear door, watching the crowd around Dunlavey.
+Hollis tried to catch Ten Spot's gaze but failed--the latter seemed
+studiously to avoid him.
+
+A wave of dull anger surged through Hollis's veins. Until now the
+contest had been conducted fairly; they had given Dunlavey and Watkins
+an honest election, even though they had found it necessary to eliminate
+them as active participants. From now on he was assured the contest
+would be a joke--though a grim one. He had depended upon Allen's
+success--it meant much to him. The thought of failure just when victory
+was within his grasp aroused him and in spite of Norton's low word of
+caution he stepped forward and stood beside the table on which reposed
+the hat into which the ballots had been placed by the men who had
+previously voted. He intended to take personal charge of the hat,
+determined upon securing a fair deal in spite of the great odds.
+
+As he stepped forward he saw Greasy grin maliciously and try to snatch a
+gun from the holster of a cowboy who stood near him. This attempt was
+frustrated by the puncher, who suddenly dropped his hand to his holster,
+where it closed upon Greasy's. The puncher snarled, muttered profanely,
+and struck furiously at Greasy, knocking him down in a corner.
+
+Other men moved. There were curses; the flashing of metal as guns came
+out. Hollis felt rather than saw Norton and Allen advance toward the
+table and stand beside him. A grim smile wreathed his face over the
+knowledge that in the crowd there were at least two men upon whom he
+might depend to the end--whatever the end might be.
+
+He heard Dunlavey snarl an oath, saw his big form loom out of the crowd,
+saw one of his gigantic hands reach for the hat on the table.
+
+"I reckon I'll take charge of this now!" he sneered, his brutal face
+close to Hollis's.
+
+Hollis would have struck the face that was so close to his, but at the
+instant he saw Dunlavey's hand reach out for the hat he saw another hand
+dart out from the other side of the table, seize the hat, and draw it
+out of Dunlavey's reach.
+
+"I don't reckon that you'll take charge of her!" said a voice.
+
+Hollis turned quickly. Over the table leaned Ten Spot, the captured hat
+in his hand, a big forty-five in the other, a cold, evil glitter in his
+eyes as he looked up at Dunlavey.
+
+"I don't reckon that you're goin' to have a hand in runnin' this show
+a-tall, Bill," he sneered. "Me an' my friends come down here special to
+tend to that." He grinned the shallow, hard grin that marks the passing
+of a friendship and the dawn of a bitter hatred. "You see, Bill, me an'
+my friends has got sorta tired of the way you've been runnin' things an'
+we're shufflin' the cards for a new deal. This here tenderfoot which
+you've been a-slanderin' shameful is man's size an' we're seein' that he
+gits a fair shake in this here. I reckon you git me?"
+
+Hollis felt Norton poking him in the ribs, but he did not turn; he was
+too intent upon watching the two principal actors in the scene. Tragedy
+had been imminent; comedy was slowly gaining the ascendency. For at the
+expression that had come over Dunlavey's face several of the men were
+grinning broadly. Were the stakes not so great Hollis would have felt
+like smiling himself. Dunlavey seemed stunned. He stood erect, passing
+his hand over his forehead as though half convinced that the scene were
+an illusion and that the movement of the hand would dispel it. Several
+times his lips moved, but no words came and he turned, looking about at
+the men who were gathered around him, scanning their faces for signs
+that would tell him that they were not in sympathy with Ten Spot. But
+the faces that he looked upon wore mocking grins and sneers.
+
+"An' I've been tellin' the boys how you set Yuma on Nellie Hazelton, an'
+they've come to the conclusion that a guy which will play a low down
+mean game like that on a woman ain't no fit guy to have no hand in any
+law makin'."
+
+Ten Spot's voice fell coldly and metallically in the silence of the
+room. Slowly recovering from the shock Dunlavey attempted a sneer, which
+gradually faded into a mirthless smile as Ten Spot continued:
+
+"An' you ain't goin' to have a hand in any more law-makin' in this man's
+town. Me an' my friends is goin' to see to that, an' my boss, Mr.
+Hollis. I reckon that'll be about all. You don't need to hang around
+here while we do the rest of the votin'. Watkins an' Greasy c'n stay to
+see that everything goes on regular." He grinned wickedly as Dunlavey
+stiffened. "I reckon you know me, Bill. I ain't palaverin' none. You an'
+Ten Spot is quits!"
+
+He stepped back a little, away from the table, his teeth showing in a
+mocking grin. Then he looked down at the hat which he still held in his
+hand--Dunlavey's hat. He laughed. "Why, I'm cert'nly impolite!" he said
+insinuatingly. "Here you've been wantin' to go an' I've been keepin'
+your hat!" He dumped the ballots upon the table and passed the hat to
+Dunlavey. Without a word Dunlavey took it, jerking it savagely, placed
+it on his head, and strode to the door, stepping down into the street.
+
+There was a short silence. Then Ten Spot turned and looked at Hollis,
+his face wreathed in a broad grin.
+
+"I reckon you-all think you know somethin' about handlin' the law," he
+said, "but your little Ten Spot ain't exactly the measliest card in the
+deck! We'll do our votin' now."
+
+A quarter of an hour later, after Ten Spot and his friends had cast
+their ballots and Watkins had been forced to make out a certificate of
+nomination,--which reposed safely in Ben Allen's inside pocket--the
+kerosene lights were extinguished and the men filed out. Hollis and Ten
+Spot were the last to leave. As they stood for a moment on the threshold
+of the doorway Hollis seized Ten Spot's hand and gripped it heartily.
+
+"I want to thank you, my friend," he said earnestly.
+
+Ten Spot jerked his hand away. "Aw, hell!" he said as they sought the
+darkness of the street, "I ain't mushin' none. But," he added, as a
+concession to his feelings, "I reckon to know a white man when I see
+one!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+AUTUMN AND THE GODS
+
+
+It was Sunday afternoon and a hazy, golden, late September sun was
+swimming lazily in the blue arc of sky, flooding the lower gallery of
+the Circle Bar ranchhouse, but not reaching a secluded nook in which sat
+Hollis and Nellie Hazelton. Mrs. Norton was somewhere in the house and
+Norton had gone down to the bunkhouse for a talk with the men--Hollis
+and Nellie could see him, sitting on a bench in the shade of the eaves,
+the other men gathered about him.
+
+Below the broad level that stretched away from the ranchhouse sank the
+big basin, sweeping away to the mountains. Miles into the distance the
+Circle Bar cattle could be seen--moving dots in the center of a great,
+green bowl. To the right Razor-Back ridge loomed its bald crest upward
+with no verdure saving the fringe of shrubbery at its base; to the left
+stretched a vast plain that met the distant horizon that stretched an
+interminable distance behind the cottonwood. Except for the moving dots
+there was a total absence of life and movement in the big basin. It
+spread in its wide, gradual, downward slope, bathed in the yellow
+sunshine of the new, mellow season, peacefully slumberous, infinitely
+beautiful.
+
+Many times had Hollis sat in the gallery watching it, his eyes
+glistening, his soul stirred to awe. Long since had he ceased regretting
+the glittering tinsel of the cities of his recollection; they seemed
+artificial, unreal. When he had first gazed out over the basin he had
+been oppressed with a sensation of uneasiness. Its vastness had appalled
+him, its silence had aroused in him that vague disquiet which is akin to
+fear. But these emotions had passed. He still felt awed--he would always
+feel it, for it seemed that here he was looking upon a section of the
+world in its primitive state; that in forming this world the creator had
+been in his noblest mood--so far did the lofty mountains, the wide,
+sweeping valleys, the towering buttes, and the mighty canyons dwarf the
+flat hills and the puny shallows of the land he had known. But he was no
+longer appalled; disquietude had been superseded by love.
+
+It all seemed to hold some mystery for him--an alluring, soul-stirring
+mystery. The tawny mountains, immutable guardians of the basin, whose
+peaks rose somberly in the twilight glow--did they hold it? Or was it
+hidden in the basin, in the great, green sweep that basked in the
+eternal sunlight?
+
+Perhaps there was no mystery. Perhaps he felt merely the romance that
+would inevitably come to one who deeply appreciated the beauty of a land
+into which he had come so unwillingly? For romance was here.
+
+He turned his head slightly and looked at the girl who sat beside him.
+She also was looking out over the basin, her eyes filled with a light
+that thrilled him. He studied her face long, noting the regular
+features, the slight tan, through which shone the dusky bloom of perfect
+health; the golden brown hair, with the wind-blown wisps straggling over
+her temples; he felt the unaccountable, indefinable something that told
+him of her inborn innocence and purity--qualities that he had worshiped
+ever since he had been old enough to know the difference between right
+and wrong.
+
+A deep respect moved him, a reverent smile wreathed his lips. Motherly?
+Yes, that world-thrilling word aptly described her. And as he continued
+to look at her he realized that this world held no mystery for him
+beyond that which was enthroned in the heart of the girl who sat beside
+him, unconscious of his thoughts.
+
+He turned again toward the basin. He did not want to uncover the
+mystery--yet. There were still several things to be done before he would
+feel free to speak the words that he had meditated upon for some weeks.
+Meanwhile--if the gods were with him--the solving of the mystery would
+be the more enjoyable.
+
+Two weeks of inaction had followed the primary incident. Several of Ten
+Spot's friends were now in his employ; in spite of the drought the
+Circle Bar had so far experienced a very prosperous season, and, though
+the addition of the men represented quite an item of expense, he felt
+that it was much better to employ them than to allow them to be
+re-engaged by Dunlavey.
+
+He had been able to save considerable money. This he had transferred to
+a bank in Santa Fe, for he had determined to stay in the West. He had
+told his mother of this decision and had asked her to come, but she had
+written that she preferred to remain East for a time--at least until the
+following spring.
+
+Hollis was satisfied. Affairs were progressing beyond his anticipations.
+Dunlavey's influence in the county had received a mighty blow in the
+defeat of Watkins at the primary; he had received notice of the
+enactment of several new laws that would appreciably assist him in his
+fight; he had succeeded in winning many friends because of his attitude
+on the water question; the increased number of advertisements appearing
+in the _Kicker_ would soon necessitate the addition of an extra
+sheet. It all presaged prosperity. Yes, he was satisfied. And yet--
+
+He turned again and looked at the girl. This time he caught her watching
+him. Evidently she had been watching him for a long time for her gaze
+was fixed and meditative, as though she had been studying him. She
+started and blushed when he turned and caught her, looking down in
+sudden and complete confusion. But she looked up again instantly,
+meeting his gaze steadily, her lips in a frank smile.
+
+"You have been thinking of this country," she said.
+
+"You have guessed it," he returned gravely and gently; "I have been
+thinking of this country--and its people." He smiled at her, his eyes
+shining with a light that caused hers to waver and droop. "But how did
+you discover that?" he questioned. "I was not aware that I had been
+speaking my thoughts."
+
+"Do you think it is always necessary to speak?" she answered, looking at
+him with a quiet smile. "Don't you think there are times when one's
+thoughts find expression in one's eyes? When we can not conceal them--no
+matter how hard we try? I know that you were thinking of the country,"
+she went on earnestly, "because a few moments ago I had been thinking of
+it too and I know that my emotions were exactly the same as those
+expressed in your eyes. It is magnificent, isn't it?" she said in an
+awed, eager voice. "It is so big, so mighty, so soul-stirring. It
+allures with its vastness, it dazzles with its beauty; it makes one feel
+closer to the Creator, even while pressing home a disquieting sense of
+one's own insignificance.
+
+"For instance," she went on, her eyes large and luminous, a new, quiet
+color coming into her face "there are times when our tasks seem
+stupendous, when we are filled with an overpowering consciousness of the
+importance of them; when we feel that we are carrying such a burden that
+the addition of another would make the load too heavy. Then we look upon
+God's work and immediately a still, small voice within us cries: 'What
+have ye done in comparison to this?' And what have we done?" she
+suddenly demanded.
+
+"Nothing," he returned gravely, awed by this fleeting illuminating
+glimpse into her soul.
+
+She leaned back into her chair with a smile. "Those were the things I
+was thinking about. And you, too, were thinking of them," she added.
+"Now, don't deny it!" she warned, "for I saw it in your eyes!"
+
+"No!" he said with a quick smile; "I don't deny it. But I was thinking
+of the people also."
+
+"Oh, the people!" she said with a frown.
+
+"Perhaps I should have said 'person,'" he modified with a quick glance
+at her, under which her eyes drooped in swift confusion--as they had
+drooped on another occasion which he remembered.
+
+"Oh!" she said merely.
+
+"I have been comparing this person to God's other works," he said, a
+light in his eyes which told that the former decision to postpone an
+attempt to uncover the mystery had been ruthlessly put aside, "and I
+have come to the conclusion that in spite of the infinite care he took
+in forming the beautiful world out yonder he did not neglect this person
+to whom I refer."
+
+Her eyes met his in a glance of swift comprehension. She drew a slow,
+deep breath and averted her face, which was now crimson.
+
+"As you have been able to illustrate man's insignificance in comparison
+to God's mighty creations, so has my own inferiority been forced upon me
+by my attempting to compare myself to the sweet character of the person
+of whom I speak," said Hollis, his voice low and earnest. "It has been a
+question whether--when I speak to her of a thing which has been on my
+mind for many days--she could not with justice paraphrase the question
+asked by the still, small voice and say: What have you done to deserve
+this? And I should have to reply--nothing." He had moved closer to her,
+leaning forward to look into her eyes.
+
+She sat very still, her gaze on the basin. "Perhaps this very estimable
+person holds other views?" she returned, with a flash of mischief in her
+eyes. She turned suddenly and looked straight at him, meeting his gaze
+unwaveringly, a demure smile on her face. "I told you that sometimes a
+person's thoughts were expressed in their eyes," she said--and now her
+lashes flickered--"perhaps you can tell what my thoughts are?"
+
+It was a challenge, a defiance, and an unconditional surrender. Like a
+flash one of Hollis's arms went out--she was drawn, vainly protesting,
+toward him.
+
+"You haven't answered," she laughed, in a smothered voice; "you are not
+certain----"
+
+She did not finish the sentence. Mrs. Norton, coming to the door for a
+breath of fresh air, halted on the threshold, looked, smiled, and then
+quietly--very quietly--slipped back into the house.
+
+Away out over the basin a Mexican eagle circled, winging his slow way
+through the golden sunshine of the afternoon. Miles away the mountain
+peaks rose somberly, a mysterious, golden halo rising slowly above them.
+Perhaps there would always be mystery in the mountains, but a certain
+mystery that had troubled Hollis mightily had been successfully solved.
+The gods had favored him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE SEAR AND YELLOW DAYS
+
+
+"This here town,"--read a letter that Hollis received from Weary late in
+September--"aint fit for no man to live in which thinks anythink of
+hisself, in the first place theres two many folks here which dont seem
+to know what to do with themselves they just keep millin around an actin
+like they was ready to stampead any time. In the 2nd place im runnin shy
+of dust an id admire for to receave about a months pay which i wont
+charge two you bein as ive already spent more then i ought two its a
+good thing i got a return ticket or id be in a hell of a fix when i got
+ready to come back last nite the doctor at the hospittle said hed
+operate on ed today which hes already done this mornin an eds restin
+easy though the doc dont know whether hes goin to git well or not but
+hes hopin an ile let you know by telegraph if he gits any worse which is
+all for this time.
+
+P. S. say boss dont forgit to hustel that coin ile shure make it right
+with you i forgot to tell you that i got cleaned out by a card sharper
+here i would have tore him apart but about a million sheriffs piled onto
+me an i dident have no chancst what in hell does any town need with so
+many sheriffs.
+ "Weary.
+
+"P. S. id like to be home for the round-up but reckon i wont make it.
+
+ "Weary."
+
+Nellie Hazelton did not see this letter, though Hollis told her that Ed
+had been operated on and that he was doing as well as could be expected.
+And the telegraph that night flashed Weary's "coin" to him.
+
+The days passed all too quickly now, for the time for the fall round-up
+was at hand and Hollis realized with regret that his daily rides--with
+Nellie Hazelton as a companion--must soon be discontinued.
+
+The nights had already grown cool; snow had appeared on the mountain
+peaks; the basin was no longer a great green bowl, but resembled a
+mammoth, concave palette upon which nature had mixed her colors--yellow
+and gold and brown, with here and there a blotch of red and purple, a
+dash of green,--lingering over the season--and great, wide stretches of
+gray. The barren spots seemed to grow more barren--mocked by the scarlet
+blossoms of the cactus that seemed to be everlasting, and the fringing,
+yellow soap weed, hardy, defying the advancing winter. Razor-Back ridge
+was a desolate place. Never attractive, it reared aloft barren and
+somber, frowning down upon its fringe of shrubbery the latter stripped
+of its leaves, its scant beauty gone and bending its bare branches
+stubbornly to the early winds.
+
+With the last day of the month came a rain--a cold, bitter, driving
+storm that raged for three days and started a drift that the cattlemen
+could not stop. Arrayed in tarpaulins the cowboys went forth, suffering,
+cursing, laboring heroically to stem the tide. The cattle retreated
+steadily before the storm--no human agency could halt them. On the
+second day Norton came into the Circle Bar ranchhouse, wet, disgusted,
+but fighting mad.
+
+"If this damn rain don't stop pretty soon," he told Hollis as he dried
+himself before the open fireplace, "we'll have cattle down here from
+over the Colorado line. An' then there'll be hell to pay!"
+
+But on the third day the rain ceased and the sun came out. The country
+lay smiling in the sunshine, mellow, glistening, inviting. But the
+damage had been wrought. From Lemuel Train of the Pig Pen outfit, came
+word that fifty per cent of his cattle were missing. Truxton of the
+Diamond Dot, Henningson of the Three Bar, and nearly all of the other
+small owners, reported losses. Of course the cattle would be recovered
+during the fall round up, but they were now scattered and fair prey for
+cattle thieves, and with the round up still two weeks away it seemed
+that many must be stolen.
+
+Yet there was nothing that could be done; it is folly to attempt to "cut
+out" cattle on the open range.
+
+From the editorial columns of the _Kicker_ might be gleaned the
+fact that the Law had come into Union County. Many men of Dry Bottom
+entered the _Kicker_ office to thank Hollis; others boldly draped
+their houses with flags and bunting.
+
+Dunlavey had visited Dry Bottom twice since the incident of the primary.
+He had said nothing concerning the incident to anyone save possibly his
+intimates, but from the sneer that appeared on his face when approached
+by those whom he considered friendly to Hollis it was plain that he
+intended continuing the fight.
+
+Hollis had been compelled to record in the _Kicker_ the unpleasant
+news that Dunlavey had refused to comply with the new law regulating
+brands and the submitting of lists for taxation, and also that he had
+threatened to shoot the first officer trespassed on his land. Dunlavey
+had not complied with the law, but he had failed to carry out his threat
+to "shoot the first officer that trespassed on his land," for Allen had
+trespassed several times, openly and boldly. Moreover, Dunlavey had seen
+him, had even spoken to him, but had offered no violence.
+
+Perhaps in a calmer mood Dunlavey had decided not to use his weapon;
+perhaps there was something about the quiet, cool, and deliberate Allen
+which convinced Dunlavey that the former might be able to give a good
+account of himself in the event of trouble. At any rate several times
+Allen had ridden the Circle Cross range unmolested by either Dunlavey or
+his men. He explored the farthest limits of the Circle Cross property,
+tallying the cattle, nosing around the corrals, examining brands, and
+doing sundry other things not calculated to allay Dunlavey's anger over
+this new and odd condition of affairs.
+
+Then one day he failed to visit the Circle Cross. Instead, he appeared
+to Potter in the office of the _Kicker_ with copy for a poster
+announcing the sale by auction of a thousand of Dunlavey's best cattle.
+He ordered Potter to print it so that he might post copies throughout
+the county within a week. The night following the issue of the
+_Kicker_ containing the announcement concerning the coming of the
+law Potter had informed Hollis that he had that day delivered the
+notices to Allen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN DEFIANCE OF THE LAW
+
+
+Hollis had demonstrated the fact that a majority of Dry Bottom's
+citizens welcomed the law. Dry Bottom had had a law, to be sure--the law
+of the six-shooter, with the cleverest man "on the trigger" as its chief
+advocate. Few men cared to appear before such a court with an argument
+against its jurisdiction. The law, as the citizens of Dry Bottom had
+seen it, was an institution which frowned upon such argument. Few men
+cared to risk an adverse decision of the established court to advocate
+laws which would come from civilized authority; they had remained silent
+against the day when it would come in spite of the element that had
+scoffed at it. And now that day had arrived. The Law had come.
+
+Even the evil element knew it. The atmosphere was vibrant with
+suppressed excitement; in the stores men and women were congregated; in
+the saloons rose a buzz of continuous conversation. On the street men
+greeted one another with subdued voices, or halted one another to
+discuss the phenomenon. In a dozen conspicuous places were posted
+flaring, printed notices, informing the reader that a thousand of the
+Circle Cross cattle--a description of which followed--were, on the
+following day, to be sold to the highest bidder. Below this
+announcement, in small, neat print, was quoted the Law.
+
+Dry Bottom gasped. The saloons swarmed. In the Fashion two bartenders
+and the proprietor labored heroically to supply their customers with the
+liquid stimulant which would nerve them to look upon Ben Allen's posters
+with a certain degree of equanimity. The reckless element--the gun-men
+who in a former day were wont to swagger forth with reckless disregard
+for the polite conventions--skulked in the background, sneering at this
+thing which had come to rob them of their power and which, they felt,
+presaged their ultimate downfall.
+
+But Dry Bottom ignored the gun-men, or smiled blandly at them, giving
+its attention to Ben Allen's posters and discussing a rumor which had
+gained rapid credence, to the effect that the new governor had
+telegraphed Allen that he would hold a detail of United States soldiers
+in readiness for any contingency.
+
+The good citizens smiled. And throughout the day many of them passed and
+repassed the _Kicker_ office, anxious to get a glimpse of the man
+who had been instrumental in bringing about this innovation.
+
+Shortly after noon on the same day Dunlavey rode into Dry Bottom,
+dismounted, hitched his pony to the rail in front of the Fashion, and
+entered.
+
+In former days Dunlavey's appearance within the doors of the Fashion was
+the signal for boisterous greetings. For here might always be found the
+law's chief advocates. To-day, however, there were no greetings. Minds
+were filled with vague and picturesque conjecture concerning Dunlavey's
+probable actions and the outcome of this strange affair. Thus upon
+Dunlavey's entrance a silence--strange and awkward--fell in the
+bar-room. There were short nods and men fell away from Dunlavey as he
+crossed the room and came to a halt before one of Ben Allen's posters.
+He read every line of it--every word. No man interrupted him. Then,
+finishing his reading, he turned and faced the crowd, his face white
+with wrath, his lips snarling.
+
+"Why in hell didn't some of you damned fools tear this down?" he
+demanded.
+
+No man felt it incumbent upon him to reply to this and Dunlavey watched
+them for an instant, sneering, his eyes glittering menacingly. Then he
+suddenly turned, seized the poster, savagely tore it into pieces, hurled
+the pieces to the floor, and stamped upon them. Then he turned again to
+the silent crowd, his face inflamed, his voice snapping with a bitter,
+venomous sarcasm.
+
+"Scared!" he said. "Scared out clean--like a bunch of coyotes runnin'
+from the daylight!" He made a strange sound with his lips, expressing
+his unutterable contempt for men so weakly constituted.
+
+"Quit!" he grated. "Quit clean because a tenderfoot comes out here and
+tries to run things! So long as things come your way you're willing to
+stick it out, but when things go the other way--Ugh!"
+
+He turned abruptly, strode out through the door, mounted his pony, and
+rode rapidly down the street. Several of the men, who went to the door
+after his departure, saw him riding furiously toward the Circle Cross.
+
+Then one of his former friends laughed harshly--sarcastically. "I reckon
+that there tenderfoot is botherin' Big Bill a whole lot," he said as he
+turned to the bar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It had been a busy day for Hollis. His hand had been shaken so much that
+it pained him. The day had been a rather warm one for the season and so
+when late in the afternoon Norton rode into town, "To see the
+excitement," he told Hollis, the latter determined to make the return
+trip to the Circle Bar in the evening. Therefore, after a short
+conference with Judge Graney and Allen--and a frugal, though wholesome
+supper in the Judge's rooms back of the court house--which Allen
+cooked--he and Norton rode out upon the Coyote trail and jogged quietly
+toward the Circle Bar.
+
+There was a good moon; the air was invigorating, though slightly chill,
+and the trail lay clear and distinct before them, hard after the rain,
+ideal for riding.
+
+Many times during the first half hour of the ride Norton looked
+furtively at his chief. Certain things that Mrs. Norton had told him
+held a prominent place in his thoughts, and mingling with these thoughts
+was the recollection of a conversation that he had held with Hollis one
+day when both of them had been riding this same trail and Hollis had
+stopped off at the Hazelton cabin. Many times Norton smiled. He would
+have liked to refer to that conversation, but hesitated for fear of
+seeming to meddle with that which did not concern him. He remembered the
+days of his own courtship--how jealously he had guarded his secret.
+
+But the longer his thoughts dwelt upon the incident that had been
+related to him by Mrs. Norton the harder it became to keep silent. But
+he managed to repress his feelings for the first half hour and then,
+moved by an internal mirth that simply would not be held in check
+longer, he cackled aloud.
+
+He saw Hollis shoot a quick glance at him. He cackled again, his mirth
+swelling as he caught the surprised and puzzled expression of Hollis's
+face.
+
+"I have a very original opinion of people who laugh without any visible
+cause," remarked the latter, grinning reluctantly in the semi-darkness.
+
+Norton's reply was another cackle. They rode in silence for a long time.
+
+Then Norton spoke. "This is a great country," he said.
+
+Silence from Hollis, though taking a quick glance at him Norton again
+observed the puzzled grin on his face.
+
+"And original," he remarked, placing upon the latter word the same
+peculiar emphasis that Hollis had given it a moment before.
+
+Hollis grinned widely; he began to detect a subtle meaning in the range
+boss's speech and actions. But he did not answer; it would not strain
+his patience to await until such a time as Norton made his meaning
+clear.
+
+"But there's some things that ain't original," continued Norton in the
+same tone, after another short silence.
+
+This remark clearly required comment. Hollis grinned mildly. "Meaning
+what?" he questioned.
+
+Norton met his gaze gravely. "Meanin' that the ways of makin' love are
+pretty much the same in every country." He laughed. "I know there's
+different ways of makin' it--in books," he continued; "the folks which
+write books make their men an' women go at it all kinds of ways. But did
+you ever know anyone in real life to make love to a girl any different
+than anyone else?"
+
+"I have had no experience in love making," returned Hollis, puzzled
+again.
+
+Norton cackled. "No," he said, "an' that's the peculiar part of it.
+Mostly no one has ever had any experience when they start to makin' love
+the first time. But they all make it the same way. That's why it ain't
+original. You take a man which has got in love with a girl--any man. He
+don't want anyone to know that he's in love with her--he feels sorta
+sheepish about it. Goes around hangin' his head an' blushin', an' mostly
+not sayin' anything about it. Once he gets it into his system he ain't
+the same man any more. Takes to actin' reserved like an' gentle. But
+them that's had experience can see the symptoms. There ain't no way to
+hide it."
+
+Had Norton looked at Hollis now he might have observed a touch of red in
+the young man's face. But he did not look; he was watching the trail
+ahead, smiling broadly.
+
+They had been riding through a deep depression, going toward a ridge
+whose crest was fringed with dense, tangled shrubbery. Hollis was about
+to reply to Norton's remark when he saw the latter's lips suddenly
+straighten; saw his body stiffen as he drew himself erect in the saddle
+and pulled his pony abruptly up. Surprised, Hollis also reined in and
+sat silent, looking at Norton.
+
+The latter's hand went to one of his ears, the fingers spreading out,
+fan like. "Listen!" he warned sharply.
+
+Hollis had been listening. A low rumble greeted his ears. He looked
+suddenly upward at the sky, fearful that another storm, such as he had
+encountered months before, might be forming. But the sky was cloudless.
+He looked again at Norton. The latter's eyes shone brightly in the
+moonlight as he leaned toward Hollis. The rumbling had grown more
+distinct.
+
+"It ain't a stampede," said Norton rapidly; "there wouldn't be anything
+to stampede cattle on a night like this. An' them's cattle!"
+
+It was about a hundred yards to the ridge toward which they had been
+riding and Hollis saw Norton suddenly plunge the spurs into his pony's
+flanks; saw the animal rush forward. He gave his own animal the spurs
+and in an instant was at Norton's side, racing toward the ridge. The
+range boss dismounted at the bottom, swiftly threw the reins over his
+pony's head, and running stealthily toward the crest. Hollis followed
+him. When he reached Norton's side the latter was flat on a rim rock at
+the edge of a little cliff, behind some gnarled brush. Below them the
+country stretched away for miles, level, unbroken, basking in the
+moonlight. Hollis recognized the section as that through which he had
+traveled on the night he had been overtaken by the storm--the big level
+that led to Big Elk crossing, where he had met Dunlavey and his men that
+night.
+
+Looking out upon the plain he held his breath in amazement. During the
+time he had been at the Circle Bar he had seen cattle running, but never
+had he seen them run like this. About a quarter of a mile from the ridge
+on which he and Norton stood rose a dust cloud--moving swiftly. But
+ahead of the cloud, heads down, their horns tossing were a number of
+cattle, perhaps fifty, racing furiously. They were running parallel with
+the ridge and would probably pass it. Behind and flanking them raced
+several cowboys, silent, driving with their quirts.
+
+"Rustlers!" came Norton's voice from beside him. "They're headin' for
+Big Elk!"
+
+Hollis had brought his rifle, which he had carried since the attack on
+the night of the storm. At Norton's word he raised it. But Norton's hand
+touched his and his voice came again, sharply, commandingly.
+
+"Don't shoot!" he said. "It wouldn't do any good; some of them would get
+away. Mebbe they'll come close enough so's we can see who they are!"
+
+Hollis waited breathlessly. It seemed that but an instant had passed
+from the time he had caught a first glimpse of them until they were
+thundering by the ridge and he and Norton were blinded by the dust. They
+had gone before the dust settled, but through it as they passed, Hollis
+had caught sight of a familiar figure. Before the thunder of hoofs had
+died away Hollis felt Norton's hand on his arm and his voice in his ear.
+
+"Dunlavey!"
+
+There could be no doubt of that, for Hollis had recognized him also. He
+turned, to hear Norton's dry voice in his ear.
+
+"The new law don't seem to be botherin' Dunlavey a heap," he said.
+
+Hollis stepped boldly out on the ridge, his face grim and pale. But he
+was pulled back by Norton. "I take it you don't want to let them see
+you," he said. "When a thing like that comes off there's always somebody
+sure to be lookin' back." He was pulling at Hollis's arm, directing his
+steps down the slope toward where they had left the horses. "You an' me
+ain't enough," he was saying to Hollis; "we'll hit the breeze to the
+Circle Bar, get some of the boys, an' hustle back here an' take them
+cattle!"
+
+Hollis accompanied him willingly as far as the horses. Then he halted,
+his eyes flashing brightly. "We won't go to the Circle Bar," he said.
+"We won't fight them like that. There is a law in this country now and I
+am going to see that the law acts!" He seized Norton's arm in a firm
+commanding grip. "You follow them," he directed. "From the edge of the
+butte where they caught me on the night of the storm you can see the
+country for miles. Don't cross the river," he warned. "Stay there beside
+the butte until I come back--I won't be long. Watch where they take the
+cattle!"
+
+Before Norton could offer a word of objection he was on his pony and
+racing over the back trail at terrific speed. For a moment Norton
+watched him. Then he disappeared and Norton grimly mounted his pony and
+rode down to the level following the trail taken by the thieves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+THE ARM OF THE LAW
+
+
+The lights in Dry Bottom's saloons were flickering brightly when Hollis
+rode down the street and dismounted from his drooping pony in front of
+the court house. He ran stiffly around the side of the building and
+knocked loudly on a door. There was a short silence and then a movement
+inside and Ben Allen stuck his head out of a window. He saw at a glance
+the upward turned face of the nocturnal visitor and called shortly:
+"Wait! I'll be down!"
+
+There was a short wait, during which Hollis impatiently paced back and
+forth and then Allen appeared in the door, fully dressed. Judge Graney,
+in a night shirt, stood behind him.
+
+"Something's up, of course," drawled Allen as he stepped down from the
+door, "or you wouldn't come around disturbing folks this way. What is
+it?"
+
+Hollis briefly related the events of the night, concluding with the
+statement that he was determined to force the law to act.
+
+"Correct!" laughed Allen. "She's got to act now." He caught Hollis's arm
+and turned him toward a small cottonwood grove about half a mile
+distant. A dozen white objects dotting the grove caught Hollis's gaze.
+He started.
+
+"Soldiers!" he exclaimed.
+
+"I might say that was a good guess," drawled Allen. "I sent for them
+because I thought I might need them if our friend Dunlavey got to
+cuttin' up any. It's been my experience that a detail of Uncle Sam's
+boys is about as good a thing to have around in case of trouble as any
+man could want."
+
+"But you can't use them in this case," remarked Judge Graney, who had
+stepped down beside the two men. "The governor's instructions were that
+they should be used merely as an instrument in enforcing the court's
+order regarding the sale of Dunlavey's cattle. The theft of the Circle
+Bar cattle is a matter which comes directly under the jurisdiction of
+the sheriff. If he refuses to act----"
+
+"Hell!" broke in Allen. "We know he won't do anything!"
+
+The Judge smiled slightly. "I suspect he won't," he said dryly. He
+winked at Hollis.
+
+"Being a judge in this district I am, of course, averse to advising any
+infractions of the law. But if I were not a judge I would suggest that
+two strong, energetic men--such as you appear to be----" He leaned
+forward and whispered in Allen's ear, whereat that gentleman let out a
+joyous whoop and almost dragged Hollis around the corner of the building
+toward the street, leaving the Judge standing in the doorway.
+
+Once on the street Allen set a pace that brought the two to the door of
+the sheriff's office quickly. A light shone through the window and when
+Allen opened the door Watkins was sitting beside his desk, gravely
+fumbling a deck of cards. He dropped them when he saw his visitors and
+made a quick movement with his right hand toward his revolver. But
+Allen's weapon was already out.
+
+"Bill," he said in a soft, even voice, "we're wantin' a warrant for the
+arrest of Bill Dunlavey. The charge is stealin' cattle. Of course you'll
+issue it," he added insinuatingly.
+
+Watkins's face slowly paled. "Why----" he began.
+
+"Of course I knowed you wouldn't do it when I asked you," said Allen
+with a dangerously soft smile. "That's why I come down here. This town's
+got a sheriff an' it ain't. I wouldn't care a damn if it didn't have
+you. There's lots of folks wouldn't care either. So that if you're one
+of them which does care you're settin' right still an' not sayin'
+anything which can be construed as talk till my friend here goes down to
+the station." He whispered to Hollis. "Be middlin' rapid," he said aloud
+afterward, "an' use my name." He turned to Watkins with a smile. "While
+we're waitin' I'll do some talkin'," he said. "But if you let out one
+little wee chirp them folks which don't care about you bein' sheriff of
+this man's town will sure have a heap of cause to rejoice."
+
+Hollis was already far down the street toward the station. When he got
+there the station was dark--evidently the agent had gone to bed. Hollis
+pounded heavily on the door and presently the agent opened it, appearing
+in his night shirt, a heavy six-shooter in hand, his eyes blinking.
+
+"My name is Hollis," said the latter from the darkness; "I want you to
+telegraph the governor."
+
+"Come in." The agent disappeared within, Hollis following. "This way,"
+he directed, as he disappeared through another door leading into the
+station, his night shirt flapping about his lean legs. "What you wantin'
+to telegraph?" he questioned, as he seated himself before the instrument
+and looked up at Hollis. And then, before the latter could answer he
+continued: "You're the durndest man to stir up a muss I ever, seen in my
+life!"
+
+Hollis smiled grimly as he seized a blank and wrote his message to the
+governor:
+
+ "Cattle thieves caught red-handed. Sheriff refuses to act.
+ Crisis. Suggest you appoint me temporarily.
+
+ BEN ALLEN"
+
+The agent took the message, read it, and then monotonously began to drum
+on the keys of his instrument.
+
+Hollis found it impossible to sit still and so he nervously paced up and
+down the room during the sending of the message. The agent finished and,
+leaned his head sleepily on the table.
+
+"Ought to answer in half an hour--if he's home," he informed Hollis.
+Upon which Hollis slipped out of the door and returned down the street
+to the sheriff's office, peering within Watkins still sat at the table
+and in a chair near him lounged Allen, talking volubly. Hollis watched
+for a time and then returned to the station to find the agent asleep
+beside his instrument. Hollis had scarcely awakened him when the sounder
+began its monotonous ticking. He leaned over the agent's shoulder and
+read the governor's answer as the agent sleepily wrote it down.
+
+ "Ben Allen: You are hereby appointed sheriff of Union County in
+ place of W. Watkins, dismissed. Have Judge certify,"
+
+"I reckon there must be somethin' goin' on," remarked the agent. "What's
+the matter with Bill----"
+
+But Hollis had snatched the message from his hand and was out into the
+street in an instant and running down toward the sheriff's office. When
+he arrived there Allen was still talking. He passed the telegram to him
+and the latter rose to his feet and smiled at Watkins, shoving the
+message under his nose.
+
+"You can read her," he said. "Then you can go home an' quit
+sheriffin'--after I've got through with you. You've been called down to
+the court house. I'm takin' you, chargin' you with bein' an accessory
+before the fact, or somethin' like that. It don't make no difference
+what it is, you're goin' with me." His voice came sharp and chill:
+"Jump!"
+
+Judge Graney had dressed himself by the time the three arrived at the
+court house and Watkins was roughly tumbled into the room which had been
+set aside as the jail. Then the judge led Hollis and Allen into the
+court room where he issued Allen's certificate of appointment.
+
+"Now, I reckon we won't have no trouble in gettin' the soldiers," he
+grinned. "This sheriff is goin' to act!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+FORMING A FRIENDSHIP
+
+
+At three o'clock in the afternoon Hollis closed his desk and announced
+to Potter that he was going to the Circle Bar. Potter watched him with a
+fond smile as he went out the door and placed the saddle on his pony,
+mounted and rode into the sunshine of the afternoon. The presence of the
+troopers in town had created a sensation and most of the town's citizens
+were gathered about the court house, curiously watching Dunlavey and
+several of his men who had been taken into custody during the early
+hours of the morning. Neither Hollis or Norton had been allowed to
+participate in the final scene, the little captain informing them curtly
+that the presence of civilians at what promised to be a free-for-all
+fight was strictly forbidden. And so Norton had returned to the Circle
+Bar, while Hollis had gone to Dry Bottom to finish an article for the
+next issue of the _Kicker_.
+
+It had been in that bald, gray time between darkness and dawn when Ben
+Allen and Hollis, riding at the head of the detail of troopers beside
+the dapper little captain, had arrived at the edge of the butte where
+Hollis had directed Norton to await his coming.
+
+Norton's only comment upon seeing the troopers had been: "Where in hell
+did them come from?"
+
+He told Allen that he had watched where Dunlavey and his men had driven
+the cattle, and that he would find them concealed in a narrow defile
+between two hills about a mile on the other side of the Rabbit-Ear. He
+and Hollis had announced their intention to accompany the troop to the
+scene, but had been refused permission by the captain.
+
+The capture of the thieves had been quite a simple matter. In single
+file the troopers had descended the slope of the river, crossed a
+shallow, and clattered up the other side. A mile dash at a gallop had
+brought them to one end of the defile mentioned by Norton, and in a
+grove of fir-balsam the captain had deployed his troopers and swooped
+suddenly down into the defile, surprising several men, who with
+Dunlavey, were busily at work altering the brands on the cattle they had
+stolen. There was a fire near the center of the defile, with branding
+irons scattered about it.
+
+The stolen cattle bore various brands. There were perhaps a dozen
+belonging to the Circle Bar, several from the Pig Pen; others bore the
+brands of the Three Bar and the Diamond Dot.
+
+Proof of Dunlavey's guilt had been absolute. He had made some
+resistance, but had been quickly overpowered by Allen and the troopers.
+Then with their prisoners the troops had returned to Dry Bottom.
+
+Hollis rode slowly toward the Circle Bar. He was tired--dead tired. When
+he arrived at the Hazelton cabin the shade on the porch looked so
+inviting that he dismounted, tied his pony to one of the slender porch
+columns, and seated himself, leaning wearily against the column to which
+he had tied his pony.
+
+He sat there long, staring at a clump of nondescript weed that fringed
+the edge of the arroyo near the cabin, his thoughts filled with pictures
+of incidents that had occurred to him during his stay in the West.
+Nellie Hazelton appeared in every one of these pictures and therefore he
+smiled often.
+
+He had not liked the country when he had first come here; it had seemed
+to offer him no field for the pursuit of his ambition. Certainly the
+raising of cattle had never entered into his scheme of things. Yet he
+now realized that there was plenty of room in this country for success
+in this particular industry; all a man had to do was to keep up his end
+until the law came. And now the law had come and he had been partly
+responsible for its coming. The realization of this moved his lips into
+a grim smile.
+
+He filled and lighted his pipe, smoking placidly as he leaned against
+the slender column, his gaze shifting to a clump of dense shrubbery that
+skirted the trail within twenty feet of the cabin. He sat quiet, his
+long legs stretched out to enjoy the warmth of the sun that struck a
+corner of the porch floor. His pipe spluttered in depletion and he
+raised himself and looked around for his pony, observing that the animal
+was contentedly browsing the tops of some weeds at the edge of the
+porch. Then, resigning himself to the sensation of languor that
+oppressed him, he knocked the ash from the pipe, filled it again,
+lighted it, and resumed his former reclining position.
+
+During the past few days he had given much thought to Dunlavey. He was
+thinking of the man now, as his gaze went again to the clump of
+shrubbery that skirted the trail.
+
+Some men's mental processes were incomprehensible. Dunlavey was one of
+these men. What did the man hope to gain by defying the law? Would there
+not be profit enough in the cattle business when conducted honestly?
+
+He felt a certain contempt for the man, but mingled with it was a sort
+of grim pity. No doubt Dunlavey felt justified in his actions, for he
+had lived here a good many years, no doubt suffering the privations
+encountered by all pioneers; living a hard life, dealing heavy blows to
+his enemies, and receiving some himself. No doubt his philosophy of life
+had been of the peculiar sort practiced by the feudal barons of the Old
+World, before civilization had come, carrying its banner of justice,
+which, summed up epigrammatically, though ironically, had been "Might is
+Right." But might could never be right in this country. Dunlavey must
+learn this lesson; he could not hope to--!
+
+Hollis sat suddenly erect, putting aside his pipe and his ruminations at
+the same instant, the languor gone from him, his eyes narrowing coldly.
+
+For suddenly, from behind the shrubbery that skirted the edge of the
+trail, had appeared the man about whom he had been thinking! It was
+evident that he had not come upon Hollis unexpectedly. He reined in his
+pony and sat motionless in the saddle, his face white, his eyes alight
+with passion.
+
+For an instant neither man spoke. Hollis realized that the great moment
+for which he had waited many days had arrived. And it had arrived
+unexpectedly. It had arrived to find him tired after his activities of
+the night and in no condition for a fight. He drew a deep breath and got
+to his feet, a grim smile on his face. He stepped off the porch and
+stood by one of the columns, watching Dunlavey closely. As he watched
+the grim smile on his face slowly faded, his lips curled bitterly, his
+eyes chilled.
+
+"I suppose you've come to collect that thrashing?" he said.
+
+Dunlavey dismounted quickly, his right hand flew to his holster, drawing
+his revolver. He came toward Hollis crouching, a cold, merciless glitter
+in his eyes.
+
+"Yes, you tenderfoot ---- ----." he snarled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the moment of Hollis's arrival at the court house the night before
+Ben Allen had been constantly in action. It was late in the morning when
+he had returned to the court house with his prisoners. The men who had
+been captured with Dunlavey were still with the troopers, there not
+being sufficient room at the court house for them. Watkins had been
+released and Dunlavey had taken his place in the little room that
+answered for a jail. Shortly before noon Allen proceeded to the station,
+where he telegraphed to the governor the story of the capture. He had
+then deputized a dozen punchers and sent them to the Circle Cross to
+round up a thousand of Dunlavey's cattle and hold them until the late
+afternoon when, according to Allen's published program, they were to be
+sold to the highest bidder. Then, tired and hungry, Allen sought the
+Alhambra and ate a hearty meal.
+
+Dry Bottom was swarming with visitors that had come in for the sale. But
+by the time Allen had finished eating the exodus had begun. The trail
+leading to the Circle Cross ranch was dotted with probable bidders,
+curiosity seekers, idlers, and mere residents of the town. Now that the
+law had come there were many who discovered that their sympathies had
+always been with the men who had championed it. Allen found his way to
+the court house strewn with men who halted him to express their good
+will. Many people gathered in front of the _Kicker_ office, eager
+for a glimpse of Hollis. Those who gathered there before twelve-thirty
+saw him seated at his desk, tall, angular, serious of face, absolutely
+unaffected by this thing which had caused a sensation. Passing the
+_Kicker_ office on his way to the court house, Allen had paused to
+look within and shout a greeting to him. Then he had continued on his
+way.
+
+Arriving at the court house Allen looked in at Dunlavey to find him
+lying on the floor, apparently asleep. Allen did not disturb him. He
+went out, threw the saddle on his pony, and rode over to the grove where
+the soldiers were quartered, talking long with the captain. At two
+o'clock he returned to the court house to be greeted with the news that
+Dunlavey had escaped. Allen did not stop to inquire how the escape had
+been accomplished. He remounted his pony and raced down to the
+_Kicker_ office, fearing that Dunlavey had gone there. Potter
+informed him that his chief had departed for the Circle Bar fully an
+hour and a half before. He had taken the Coyote trail--Potter had
+watched him.
+
+Allen wheeled his pony and returned to the court house. He was met at
+the door by Judge Graney. The latter's face was white and drawn with
+fear.
+
+"He's gone to kill Hollis!" the judge told him through white, set lips.
+"I heard him threaten Hollis this morning and a moment ago a man told me
+that he had seen Dunlavey, not over half an hour ago, riding out the
+Coyote trail at a dead run!"
+
+Allen's own face whitened. He did not stop to answer but drove the spurs
+deep into his pony's flanks and rode furiously down the street toward a
+point near the _Kicker_ office where he struck the trail.
+
+The distance to the Circle Bar ranch was ten miles and Dunlavey had a
+good half hour's start! He fairly lifted his pony over the first mile,
+though realizing that he could not hope to arrive at the Circle Bar in
+time to prevent Dunlavey from carrying out his design to kill Hollis.
+No, he told himself as he rode, he could not prevent him from killing
+Hollis, should he catch the latter unprepared, but he promised himself
+that Dunlavey should not escape punishment for the deed.
+
+He had had some hope that Dunlavey would accept his defeat
+philosophically. The latter was not the only man he had seen who had
+been defeated by the law. Over in Colfax County and up in Wyoming he had
+dealt with many such men, and usually, after they had seen that the law
+was inevitable, they had resigned themselves to the new condition and
+had become pretty fair citizens. He had imagined that Dunlavey would
+prove to be no exception, that after the first sting of defeat had been
+removed he would meet his adversaries half way in an effort to patch up
+their differences. The danger was in the time immediately following the
+realization of defeat. A man of the Dunlavey type was then usually
+desperate.
+
+So Allen communed with himself as he rode at a head-long pace down the
+Coyote trail, risking his neck a dozen times. Not once since he had left
+Dry Bottom had he considered his own danger.
+
+He had been riding more than half an hour, and was coming up out of a
+little gully when he came upon a riderless pony, and close by it,
+browsing near a clump of shrubbery, another. He recognized one of them
+instantly as Dunlavey's, and his teeth came together with a snap. He
+rode closer to the other pony, examining it. On one of its hips was a
+brand--the Circle Bar. Allen's face whitened again. He had arrived too
+late. But he would not be too late to wreak vengeance upon Dunlavey.
+
+He dismounted and cautiously approached the brush at the side of the
+trail. Parting it, he saw the roof of a cabin. He recognized it; he had
+passed it a number of times during his exploration of the country. He
+drew back and crept crept farther along in the brush, certain that he
+would presently see Dunlavey. But he had not gone very far when he heard
+voices and he cautiously parted the brush again and peered through.
+
+He started back in surprise, an incredulous grin slowly appearing on his
+face. The incredulity changed to amusement a moment later--when he heard
+Hollis's voice!
+
+The young man was seated on the edge of the porch--smoking a pipe! Near
+him, seated on a flat rock, his face horribly puffed out, with several
+ugly gashes disfiguring it, his eyes blackened, his clothing in tatters,
+one hand hanging limply by his side, the fingers crushed and bleeding,
+was Dunlavey! Near him, almost buried in the sand, was a revolver.
+Allen's smile broadened when he saw Dunlavey's empty holster. Evidently
+he had met with a surprise!
+
+While taking in these details Allen had not forgotten to listen to
+Hollis as the latter talked to Dunlavey. Apparently Hollis had about
+finished his talk, for his voice was singularly soft and even, and
+Dunlavey's almost comical air of dejection could not have settled over
+him in an instant.
+
+"... and so of course I had to thrash you--you had it coming to you. You
+haven't been a man--you've acted like a sneak and a cur all through this
+business. You made a thrashing inevitable when you set Yuma on Nellie
+Hazelton. You'll have plenty of marks to remind you of the one you gave
+me that night." He pointed to his cheek. "I've got even for that. But I
+think I wouldn't have trimmed you quite so bad if you hadn't tried to
+shoot me a few minutes ago."
+
+He puffed silently at his pipe for a short time, during which Dunlavey
+sat on the rock and squinted pathetically at him. Then he resumed:
+
+"I've heard people talk of damned fools, but never, until I met you,
+have I been unfortunate enough to come into personal contact with one. I
+should think that when you saw the soldiers had come you would have
+surrendered decently. Perhaps you know by now that you can't fight the
+United States Army--and that you can't whip me. If you've got any sense
+left at all you'll quit fighting now and try your best to be a good
+citizen."
+
+He smiled grimly as he rose from the porch and walked to where Dunlavey
+sat, standing over him and looking down at him.
+
+"Dunlavey," he said, extending his right hand to the beaten man, "let's
+call it quits. You've been terribly worked up, but you ought to be over
+it now. You ought to be able to see that it doesn't go. I've thrashed
+you pretty badly, but you and your men used me up pretty well that night
+and so it's an even thing. Let's shake and be friends. If you show signs
+of wanting to be a man again I'll withdraw the charge of cattle
+stealing which I have placed against you, and I imagine I won't have any
+trouble in inducing Allen to call off that auction sale and accept
+settlement of the claim against you."
+
+Until now Dunlavey had avoided looking at the outstretched hand. But now
+he looked at it, took it and held it for an instant, his bruised and
+swollen face taking on an expression of lugubrious self-pity.
+
+"I reckon I've got it in the neck all around," he said finally. "But I
+ain't no squealer and I've got----" His gaze met Hollis's and his eyes
+gleamed with a reluctant admiration. "By God, you're white! I reckon you
+could have tore the rest of me apart like you did my hand." He held up
+the injured member for inspection.
+
+Allen's grin could grow no broader, and now he showed his increased
+satisfaction with a subdued cackle. He backed stealthily out of the
+shrubbery, taking a final glance at the two men. He saw Hollis leading
+Dunlavey toward a small water hole at the rear of the cabin; saw him
+bathing Dunlavey's injured hand and binding it with his handkerchief.
+
+Then Allen proceeded to his pony, mounted, and departed for the court
+house to tell Judge Graney the news that kept his own face continually
+in a smile.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+AFTERWARD
+
+
+From Razor-Back ridge the big basin spread away to the Blue Peak
+mountains. On the opposite side of the ridge began the big plain on
+which, snuggled behind some cottonwood trees, were the Circle Cross
+buildings. From where Hollis and Nellie Hazelton sat on the ridge they
+could look miles down the Coyote trail, into Devil's Hollow; could see
+the two big cottonwood trees that stood beside Big Elk crossing, above
+which, on the night of the storm, Hollis had been attacked by Dunlavey's
+men. Back on the stretch of plain above the basin they could make out
+the Circle Bar buildings, lying close to the banks of the river.
+
+It was in the late afternoon and the sun had gone down behind the Blue
+Peaks, though its last rays were just touching the crest of the ridge
+near Hollis and Nellie. He had called her attention to the sinking sun,
+telling her that it was time they started for the Circle Bar.
+
+"Wait," she said; "someone is coming up the Coyote trail. I have been
+watching him for ten minutes."
+
+Hollis faced the trail and watched also. In a quarter of an hour the
+horseman came out of Devil's Hollow. Hollis and Nellie could see him
+plainly as he guided his pony around the huge boulders that filled the
+place. Hollis smiled whimsically.
+
+"It's the poet," he told Nellie, catching her gaze and grinning widely
+at her. "I sent him to Dry Bottom this noon for the mail--Potter is
+going to stay in town over night."
+
+For an instant it seemed that Ace would not see them, and Hollis rose
+from the rock on which he had been sitting and halloed to him. He
+responded with a shout and urged his pony up the steep side of the slope
+and then along the crest until he came within a few feet of where they
+sat. He dismounted and came forward, grinning broadly.
+
+"Takin' the view?" he questioned. His eyes twinkled. "Sometimes there's
+a heap of poetry could be got out of this county. But--" and his
+eyelashes flickered slightly--"a fellow's got to be in the right frame
+of mind to get it out. I reckon you two----"
+
+"I suppose you got the mail?" interrupted Hollis, grimacing at him.
+
+"I sure did," returned the poet, "one letter. I reckon the blacksmith'll
+be kickin' because I've been galivantin' around the country for one
+letter. Here it is." He passed an envelope to Hollis, and the latter,
+with a quick glance at the legend in the upper left hand corner, tore it
+open and read. It was from Weary.
+
+ Dear boss i got cleaned out agin what did you send me a hundred
+ dollars for you might have knowed that id make a gol darned fool
+ of myself with so much coin i never could keep no coin no how
+ but its all right anyway cause me an eds comin home tomorrow eds
+ all right except bein a littel week which the doc says he git
+ over in a littel while.
+
+ ta ta.
+ WEARY
+
+ P.S. i might have telegraphed but ed says it dont make no
+ difference cause the letter will git there quick enough any way
+ an hes afraid a telegram will scare some one. im dam glad i got
+ a return ticket.
+
+ WEARY
+
+After reading the letter Hollis passed it over to Nellie, watching her,
+his eyes alight with satisfaction.
+
+"Oh!" she said. "Oh!" The letter dropped from her hand, was caught by
+the breezes and swirled several feet distant. Ace sprang to recover it.
+When he turned, the letter in hand, he saw something that brought a huge
+grin of sympathy to his face. But mingled with the sympathy was another
+emotion.
+
+"Boss," he said, as Hollis, disengaging himself, turned and faced him,
+"I've writ quite a nice little thing on 'Love.' Mebbe you'd like to----"
+
+He caught Hollis's frown and immediately retreated to his pony, his grin
+broadening as he went. He cackled with mirth as Hollis's voice reached
+him.
+
+"Ace," he said gravely, "don't attempt to write a poem on 'Love' until
+you've had some experience."
+
+"You havin' yours now?" insinuated Ace, as he mounted his pony.
+
+He alone caught Hollis's reply. It was an expressive wink.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Coming of the Law, by Charles Alden Seltzer
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