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- The Mesa Trail
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Title: The Mesa Trail
-
-Author: H. Bedford-Jones
-
-Release Date: January 25, 2011 [EBook #35078]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MESA TRAIL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net.
-
-
- [Illustration: "His blazing black eyes stared into the gaze of
- Ross"]
-
-
-THE MESA TRAIL
-
-BY
-H. BEDFORD-JONES
-
-GARDEN CITY -- NEW YORK
-DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
-1920
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
-DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
-
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF
-TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES,
-INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1919,
-BY STREET & SMITH CORPORATION
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- - CHAPTER I--THE MAN WHO HAD BEEN
- - CHAPTER II--THADY SHEA ENCOUNTERS PURPOSE
- - CHAPTER III--CORAVEL TIO ENJOYS A BUSY MORNING
- - CHAPTER IV--MRS. CRUMP HEADS SOUTHWEST
- - CHAPTER V--THE AMBITION OF MACKINTAVERS
- - CHAPTER VI--THADY SHEA SMELLS WHISKEY
- - CHAPTER VII--THADY SHEA HAS A VISITOR
- - CHAPTER VIII--DORALES GOES TO TOWN
- - CHAPTER IX--THE WICKER DEMIJOHN
- - CHAPTER X--MRS. CRUMP SAYS SOMETHING
- - CHAPTER XI--THADY SHEA DISCOVERS A PURPOSE
- - CHAPTER XII--THE STONE GODS VANISH
- - CHAPTER XIII--THADY SHEA STARTS HOME
- - CHAPTER XIV--DORALES KILLS
- - CHAPTER XV--MACKINTAVERS MAKES FRIENDS
- - CHAPTER XVI--DORALES POSTS NOTICES
- - CHAPTER XVII--DORALES RUNS AWAY
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I--THE MAN WHO HAD BEEN
-
-
-A ribbon of winding road leads northeast from the pueblo of Domingo and
-the snaky Bajada hill where gray rocks lie thickly; it is a yellowish
-ribbon of road, sweeping over the gigantic mesa toward Santa Fe and the
-sweetly glowing Blood of Christ peaks--great peaks of green spearing
-into the sky, white-crested, and tipped with blood at sunset.
-
-Along this ribbon of dusty yellow road was crawling a flivver. It was
-crawling slowly, in a jerky series of advances and pauses; as it crept
-along its intermittent course, the woman who sat behind the wheel was
-cursing her iron steed in a thorough and heartfelt manner.
-
-Both in flivver and woman was that which fired curious interest. The
-rear of the car was piled high with boxes and luggage; certain of the
-boxes were marked "Explosives--Handle With Care!" Prominent among this
-freight was a burlap sack tied about the neck and firmly roped to one of
-the top supports of the car.
-
-The woman was garbed in ragged but neat khaki. From beneath the edges of
-an old-fashioned bonnet, tied beneath the chin, protruded wisps of
-grayish hair, like an aureole of silver. The woman herself was of
-strikingly large frame and great in girth; her arms, bare to the elbows,
-were huge in size. Yet this giantess was not unhealthily fat. Hardened
-by toil, her hands were gripped carefully upon the steering wheel as
-though she were in some fear of wrenching it asunder in an unguarded
-moment.
-
-Her features were large, sun-darkened, creased and seamed with
-crow's-feet that betokened long exposure to wind and weather. Ever and
-anon she drew, with manifest enjoyment, at an old brown corncob pipe.
-Above her firm lips and beak-like nose a pair of blue eyes struck out
-gaily and keenly at the world; eyes of a piercing, intense blue, whose
-brilliancy, as of living jewels, gave the lie to their surrounding
-tokens of toil and age.
-
-"Drat it!" she burst forth, after a new bucking endeavour on the part of
-the car. "If I was to shoot this damned thing through the innards, maybe
-she'd quit sunfishin' on me! I'm goin' to sell her to Santy Fe sure's
-shooting; I'll get me a pair o' mules and a wagon, then I'll know what
-I'm doing. Dunno how come I ever was roped into buying this here
-contraption----"
-
-She suddenly halted her observations. Laying aside her pipe and peering
-out from the side of the dusty windshield, her keen eyes narrowed upon
-the road ahead.
-
-Against that yellowish ribbon, with its bordering emptiness of mesquite,
-greasewood, and sage, there was nothing moving; but squarely in the
-centre of the road showed up a dark, motionless blotch. It was the
-figure of a man lying as though asleep. No man would or could lie asleep
-in the middle of this road, however, under the withering blaze of the
-downpouring New Mexico sun.
-
-Suddenly the fitful flivver coughed under more gas; it roared, bucked,
-darted ahead, bucked again, and a dozen yards from the prostrate man it
-went leaping forward as though impelled by vindictive spite to run over
-the motionless figure. The woman swore savagely. She seemed
-inexperienced as a chauffeuse; only by a hair's breadth did she manage
-to avoid the man, and then she stopped the car.
-
-Her great size became more apparent as she alighted. Standing, she gazed
-down at the man, then leaned forward and turned the unfortunate vagrant
-upon his back. The body was listless to her hand, the head lolled idly.
-
-"Hm!" said the woman, reflectively. "Ain't drunk. Ain't hurt. Hm!"
-
-She reached into the car and produced a whiskey flask, then sat down in
-the dust and took upon her ample lap the head of the senseless man. A
-sudden deftness became manifest in her motions, an unguessed tenderness
-relieved the harshness of her features.
-
-"This here is breakin' the law," she ruminated, pouring liquor between
-the lips of the vagrant, "but it ain't the first time Mehitabel Crump
-has broke laws to help some poor devil! Hm! Looks to me like he ain't et
-for quite a spell."
-
-With increasing interest she surveyed the slowly reviving stranger.
-
-He was fully as lank as she was stout, and must have stood a good six
-foot two in height. His clothes were tattered remnants of once sober
-black. Long locks of iron-gray hair hung about his ears. His features
-were careworn and haggard, yet in them lingered some indefinable
-suggestion of fine lines and deeply carven strength. Had Mehitabel Crump
-ever viewed Sir Henry Irving--which she had not--she might have guessed
-a few things about her "find."
-
-Suddenly the eyes, the intensely black eyes, of the man opened. So did
-his lips.
-
-"Angels and ministers of grace!" His voice, although faint, was touched
-with a deep intonation, a roundness of the vowels, a clarity of accent.
-"As I do live and breathe, it is the kiss of lordly Bacchus which doth
-welcome me!"
-
-"Take it calm," advised Mehitabel Crump, pityingly. "You'll have your
-right sense pretty soon. Many's the time I've seen Crump keeled over,
-and come to with his mind awandering. Jest take it calm, pilgrim. I'll
-have a bite o' cornbread----"
-
-She lowered his head to the dust, rose, and went to the flivver.
-Presently she returned with a slab of cold cornbread divided by bacon,
-and a desert water bottle.
-
-"Heaps o' lunch in the car." She aided the gaunt one to sit up, and he
-clutched at the food feverishly. "My land! Ain't et real frequent
-lately, have ye?"
-
-The man, his mouth full, shook his head dumbly. About his eyes was a
-brilliancy which told of sheer starvation. To the full as worldly wise
-as any person in broad New Mexico, the woman asked no questions as yet;
-she procured from the car a basket which contained the remainder of her
-luncheon, and set forth the contents.
-
-"Figgered I might get held up 'fore reaching Santy Fe. If it warn't that
-dratted car, it sure would be something else, which same it is. Damned
-good luck it ain't worse, as Crump used to say when Providence went
-agin' him."
-
-She observed that the stranger ate ravenously, but drank sparingly. Not
-thirst had downed him, but starvation.
-
-He seemed startled at her disconcertingly frank manner of speech. She
-put him down as something better than an ordinary hobo; an out-of-luck
-Easterner, possibly a lunger. He was fifty or so; with decent clothes, a
-shave, and a haircut, he might be a striking-looking fellow, she
-decided. Although he had a hard mouth, what Mehitabel Crump had learned
-to know as a whiskey mouth, it was steady lipped.
-
-"You sure played in tough luck comin' this road," she said, musingly.
-"So did I. Ain't nothing between here and Santy Fe 'cept Injuns,
-greasers, and rattlers, any one of which is worse'n the other two. These
-rocks is playin' hell with my tires and the old Henry is coughin' fit to
-bust her innards. If I find the feller who sold her to me, I'd sure lay
-him one over the ear!"
-
-Her simple meal finished, she began to stuff her corncob pipe. The man,
-still eating wolfishly, watched her with fascinated eyes. She gazed out
-at the snowy, sun-flooded Sangre de Cristo peaks and continued her
-soliloquy. When it suited her, Mehitabel Crump could be very garrulous;
-and when it suited her, she could be as taciturn as the mountains
-themselves.
-
-"I ain't surprised at nothing no more, not these days. No, sir! When I
-first come to this country you knowed just what ye had to reckon agin'.
-They was Injuns to fight, greasers to work devilment, claim jumpers to
-rob ye, and such. But now the Injuns is all towerist peddlers, the
-greasers is called 'natives' and runs the courts an' legislature, and
-gun toting ain't popular. A lone woman gets skinned plumb legal, when in
-the old days it would ha' been suicide to rob a female. Yes pilgrim, set
-right in at what's left, and don't bother to talk yet a spell."
-
-She touched a match to her pipe, broke the match, tossed it away.
-
-"If Crump hadn't blowed up with a dry fuse in a shaft we was sinking
-over in the Mogollons, where we was prospecting at the time, he'd be
-plumb astonished at the changes. Yes, and I bet he'd swear to see me
-driving one of them contraptions yonder! Poor Crump, I never had the
-heart to dig him up, though it was a right smart prospect we was
-workin'. But somehow I couldn't never work that claim, with him still in
-it that-a-way. I won't need the money, neither, if I've got hold of----"
-
-She paused. Her gaze went to the devouring stranger. Abruptly she
-changed the subject.
-
-"You don't look like you was much more'n a poor, innercent pilgrim
-without any brains to mention. Yet, stranger, I'd gamble that we'd stack
-up high in morals agin' such old-timers as Abel Dorales, him what's half
-greaser and half Mormon, or old Sandy Mackintavers, what come straight
-from Scotland to Arizony and made a forchin in thirty years of thieving!
-Yes, I reckon ye've got a streak of real pay dirt in ye, stranger. And
-if I can't tell what breed o' cattle a man is by jest looking at him,
-it's a queer thing! I've knowed 'em all."
-
-The complimented pilgrim bolted the last scrap of food in sight, raised
-the canvas bag to his lips, and drank. Sighing, he wiped his lips with
-the frayed cuff of his sleeve. Then he disentangled his long legs and
-rose. One hand upon his heart, the other flourished magnificently, he
-made a bow that was the piteous ghost of a perished grandeur.
-
-"Madam!" His voice rang out firmly now, a deep and sonorous bass.
-"Madam, I thank you! In me you behold one who has received the plaudits
-of thousands, one who has bowed to the thunderous acclaim of----"
-
-"What d'ye say your name was?" snapped Mehitabel Crump. Her voice was
-suddenly acid, her blue eyes ice. The other was manifestly disconcerted
-by her change of front.
-
-"Madam, I am familiarly known as Thaddeus Roscius Shea. Under the more
-imposing title of Montalembert I have made known to thousands the
-aspiring genius of the immortal Avonian bard. I avow it, madam--I am a
-Thespian! I suit the action to the word, the word to the action----"
-
-"Huh!" cut in his audience with a ruthless lack of awe. "Huh! Never
-heard of them Thespians, but likely it's a new Mormon sect. I knowed a
-man of your name down to Silver City twelve year back; this Thady Shea
-was a good fightin' man, with one eye and a harelip. Glad to meet ye,
-pilgrim! I'm Mehitabel Crump, with Mrs. for a handle."
-
-Something in her manner seemed mightily to embarrass Mr. Shea, but he
-took a fresh start and set forth to conquer the difficulty.
-
-"Madam, a Thespian is of no religious persuasion, but one who treads the
-boards and who wears the buskin of Thespis. You behold in me the first
-tragedian of the age. My _Hamlet_, madam, has been praised by discerning
-critics from Medicine Hat to Jersey City. The accursed moving pictures
-have ruined my art."
-
-"Oh! It's usually whiskey or woman," said Mrs. Crump, her eyes ominous.
-"So you're a stage actor, eh? Then that explains it."
-
-"Explains, madam? Explains what?" faltered Shea, sensing a gathering
-storm.
-
-"Your damn foolishness. Shake it off, ye poor hobo! I no sooner hands ye
-a bit o' kindness than it swells ye up like a balloon. Now, don't you
-get gay with _me_, savvy? Don't come none o' that high-falutin' talk
-with me, or by hell I'll paralyze ye! I did think for a minute that ye
-had the makin's of a man, but I apologize."
-
-The blue eyes turned away. Had Shea been able to see them, he might have
-read in them a look that did not correspond to Mrs. Crump's spoken word.
-But he did not see them.
-
-He turned away from the woman. The carven lines of his face deepened,
-aged, as from him was rent the veil of his posturing. A weary and
-hopeless sadness welled in his eyes; the sadness of one who beholds
-around him the wreckage of all his little world, brought down to ruin by
-his own faults. When he spoke, it was with the same sonorous voice, yet
-lacking the fine rolling accent.
-
-"You are right, Mrs. Crump, you are right. God help me! I, who was once
-a man, am now less than the very dust. Your harshness is justified. At
-this time yesterday, madam, I was a wretched drunken fool, spouting
-lines of rhetoric in Albuquerque."
-
-"I'm surprised at that," said Mrs. Crump. "How'd ye get the liquor,
-since this here state an' nation ain't particularly wet no more? And how
-ye got here from Albuquerque I don't figger."
-
-"It is simply told." From the miserable Shea was stripped the last
-vestige of his punctured pose. "Twenty years ago my young wife died, and
-I started upon the whiskey trail; it has led me--here. Yesterday I came
-into Albuquerque, starving. At the railroad station, amid
-some--er--confusion, I encountered a company of those motion picture men
-who dare to call themselves actors. So far was my pride broken that I
-begged of them help in the name and memory of The Profession."
-
-Shea emphatically capitalized these last two words.
-
-"They took me aboard their train," he pursued, "and I was given drink.
-Some controversy arose, I know not how; I found myself ignominiously
-ejected from the train. I walked, not knowing nor caring whither. Nor is
-that all, madam. I am a fugitive from justice!"
-
-"Broke jail?" queried Mrs. Crump, betraying signs of interest.
-
-"No, madam. In Albuquerque I was starving and desperate. I--I stole
-fruit and--sandwiches--from a railroad stand."
-
-His voice failed. He turned away, staring at the snowy peaks as though
-awaiting a verdict.
-
-"Pretty low-down and worthless, ain't ye?" Mrs. Crump checked herself
-suddenly, glancing at the yellow ribbon of road over which she had so
-recently come. A flying cloud of dust gave notice of the approach of a
-large automobile.
-
-Suddenly rising, Mrs. Crump knocked out her pipe, then caught Shea by
-the shoulder. Her hand swung him about as though he were a child. His
-eyes widened in surprise upon meeting the warm regard in her face, the
-steady and sympathetic smile upon her lips.
-
-"Thady," she said, bluntly, "how old are ye?"
-
-"Fifty-eight," he mumbled in astonishment.
-
-"Huh! Two year older'n me. Made a mess of your life, ain't ye? Don't
-know as I blame ye none, Thady. When Crump passed out, I come near
-throwin' up the sponge; but I got to fightin' and I been fightin' ever
-since, and here I am! Now, Thady, you got strength and you got guts; I
-can see it in your eye. All ye need is backbone. Why don't ye buck up?"
-
-"I've tried," he faltered, controlled by her personality. "It's no
-use----"
-
-"You go get in that car." Mrs. Crump glanced again at the approaching
-automobile, then half flung the gaunt Shea toward her dust-white
-flivver. "Get in and don't say a word, savvy? One thing about you, ye
-can be trusted--which is more'n can be said for some skunks in this here
-country! Get in, now, and leave me palaver with Sheriff Tracy."
-
-Shea, shivering at mention of the sheriff, jack-knifed his length upon
-the car's front seat.
-
-From some mysterious recess of her ample person Mrs. Crump produced an
-immense old-fashioned revolver, which she began to burnish with seeming
-absorption. The big automobile slowed up. It halted a few feet behind
-the flivver, and a hearty hail came forth.
-
-"By jingoes, if it ain't Mis' Crump! Hello, old-timer--ain't seen you in
-ages!"
-
-From the car sprang a hale and vigorous man who advanced with hand
-extended.
-
-"I kind o' thought it was you, Sam Tracy," said Mrs. Crump. "Thought I
-recognized that there car o' yours. How's the folks?"
-
-"All fine. And you? But I needn't ask--why, you grow younger every
-month----"
-
-"See here! What ye doin' over in this county, Sam? Why don't ye get back
-to Bernalillo where ye belong?"
-
-The sheriff waved his hand.
-
-"Going to Santy Fe. I'm looking up a fellow who came this way from
-Albuquerque--a hobo and sneak thief name o' Shea. Where ye been keepin'
-yourself, ma'am? It don't seem like the same old state not to see ye
-from time to time."
-
-"Sam Tracy," observed Mrs. Crump with a look of severity, "I've knowed
-you more years than I care to reckon up. And you know me, I guess! Now,
-Sam, I sure hate to do it--but I got to. Stick up your hands, Sam, and
-do it damn sudden!"
-
-The muzzle of her revolver poked the astounded sheriff in the stomach.
-For a moment he gazed into her shrewd blue eyes, then slowly elevated
-his hands.
-
-"Are you crazy, ma'am?" he demanded.
-
-She removed his holstered weapon, then lowered her own and shook her
-head.
-
-"Nope. I'm heap sane right here and now. Set down and smoke whilst I
-explain."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--THADY SHEA ENCOUNTERS PURPOSE
-
-
-"Your man Shea is settin' in my car yonder," said Mrs. Crump.
-
-Heedless of the glaring sun, she picked up her pipe and disposed her
-giant frame for converse. From narrowed lids the sheriff eyed the lanky,
-up-drawn figure of Shea, which he now noticed for the first time. Then
-he produced the "makings" and proceeded to roll a cigarette.
-
-"Glad you picked him up," said he. "I'll take him back with me."
-
-"No, ye won't," retorted Mrs. Crump, calmly. "You'll not touch him, Sam
-Tracy."
-
-"He's a thief and a drunkard and a hobo," said the sheriff.
-
-"If they wasn't no drinks to be had in heaven, I reckon hell would be
-majority choice," quoth the lady. "When it comes to that, I've seen you
-and Crump so paralyzed you couldn't talk. There was that night down to
-Magdalena when the railroad spur was finished and they held a
-celebration----"
-
-The sheriff grinned. "No need to argue further along them lines, ma'am.
-You win!"
-
-"I reckon I do, Sam. Besides, you ain't got no authority over in this
-county. You can run a bluff on ignorant hoboes an' greasers, but not on
-Mehitabel Crump! Your authority quit quite a ways back. Thady Shea only
-stole because he was starving, which I'd do the same in his place. I
-picked him up here and I'm goin' to keep him."
-
-"You always was soft-hearted," reflected Tracy. "Now you got him, what's
-your programme?"
-
-Mrs. Crump refilled and lighted her corncob with deliberation, then made
-response:
-
-"Sam, I'm sure in a thunderin' bad pinch. Damned good luck it ain't
-worse, as Crump used to say at times. You know I ain't no legal shark,
-huh? Well, three weeks ago I had a blamed good hole in the hills, until
-Abel Dorales come along and located just below me. Then in rides old
-Sandy Mackintavers and offers a thousand even for my hole, saying that
-Abel had located the thrown apex of my claim----"
-
-"The apex law don't obtain here," put in Tracy.
-
-"I know it; but who's goin' to argue with Mackintavers? If it wasn't
-that, it'd be somethin' worse. Anyhow, he offered to compromise and so
-on."
-
-The sheriff nodded. "I see how you come to have the flivver," he
-observed, drily.
-
-"Yas, ye do!" Mrs. Crump's response was raw-edged. "If you was the kind
-o' man you used to be, ye'd up and give them jumpers a hemp necktie! But
-now ye play politics, Sam Tracy, and ye lick the boots o' Sandy
-Mackintavers----"
-
-"That's enough, Mis' Crump!" broke in the sheriff, icily. "I don't blame
-ye for feelin' sore, but the likes of us can't fight Mackintavers in the
-courts. We ain't slick enough! And Dorales is a Mormon-bred greaser,
-than which the devil ain't never fathered a worse combination. Now, Mis'
-Crump, you show me the least excuse for doin' it legally, and I'll pump
-them two men full o' lead any day! I'm only surprised that you didn't do
-it."
-
-"I did." A smile of grim satisfaction wreathed the lady's firm lips.
-"First I took Sandy's money, then I lets fly. They was several hired
-greasers with Dorales, and I reckon I got two-three; ain't right sure. I
-only got Abel glancingly, and when I threw down on Sandy his arms was
-both elevated for safety. All I could decently do was to nick his ear
-so's he'd remember me."
-
-"You didn't kill Dorales?"
-
-"Afraid not." Mrs. Crump sadly shook her head. "I didn't wait to inquire
-none, but it looked like I'd only blooded his shoulder and he was layin'
-low to plug me in the back, so I belted him over the head with the butt,
-and slid for home."
-
-The sheriff, astounded, emitted a long whistle. "Whew-w!" he said,
-slowly. "Say, whereabouts did all this happen?"
-
-"Down the Mogollons. Over Arizony way."
-
-"Why didn't ye go west into Arizony, then? After that doin's this state
-will be too hot to hold ye----"
-
-"Oh, Sandy won't go to law over the shootin'. It'd make him look too
-ridic'lous."
-
-The sheriff threw back his head and laughed with all the uproarious
-abandon of a man who laughs seldom but well.
-
-"Best look out for yourself," he cautioned. "That there Dorales will be
-on your trail till hell freezes over, ma'am! I sure would admire to see
-you in action on that crowd!"
-
-"You'll see me in action when that there car gets movin' again," she
-retorted. "She bucks like a range hoss and kicks to beat hell--why, I
-couldn't hardly keep the saddle!"
-
-The sheriff arose and went to the dust-white flivver. He adjusted the
-spark, cranked, and for a moment listened to the engine before killing
-it. Then he threw back the hood, and, under the sombre eyes of Thady
-Shea, worked in silence. At length he finished his task, started the
-engine again, and with a nod of satisfaction shut it off.
-
-"Thought mebbe so," he stated, rejoining the lady. "Your spark plugs was
-fouled. Well, ma'am, what can I be doin' for you?"
-
-"Ye might send me a wire in care of Coravel Tio whenever ye get a line
-on Dorales or Mackintavers. I'm fixing to meet them again."
-
-"How come?" demanded the sheriff in surprise.
-
-Mrs. Crump gestured with her pipe toward the flivver.
-
-"I got a sack of ore in there that I found in the lava beds or
-thereabouts. I suspicions it's one o' these new-fangled things nobody
-give a whoop for in the old days, but that draws down the money now. If
-it is, then you can lay that Sandy will hear I've found it, and he'll be
-after me to jump the claim."
-
-"He sure does keep a line on prospectors," reflected the sheriff. "And
-skins 'em, too, mostly. But he does it legal."
-
-"Yep. If this here stuff is any good, Sam, they's going to be some smoke
-'fore he gets his paws on it! Where you goin' from here? Back to
-Albuquerque?"
-
-"Nope. I got some business up at the capital."
-
-"Will ye tote that ore sack and a letter up to Coravel Tio for me--and
-do it strictly under your hat?"
-
-"You bet I will, ma'am!"
-
-Mrs. Crump unstrapped the burlap sack. With the sheriff's pencil and
-paper she settled down to write a letter. The process was obviously
-painful and laborious, but at length it was finished. The sheriff shook
-hands, picked up the sack, and turned to his car. Mrs Crump had already
-restored him his revolver.
-
-"Take good care of yourself, ma'am--and your hobo! Adios."
-
-Mrs. Crump watched the trail of dust disappear in the direction of Santa
-Fe, then she turned to the flivver and looked up at Thady Shea.
-
-"They's a new corncob laying in back somewheres. You can have it, Thady.
-Get out here and settle down for a spell o' talk. If ye act real good
-I'll give ye a drink."
-
-"I don't want any," came Shea's muffled voice as he leaned back in
-search of the pipe.
-
-"That's a lie. You're fair shaking for liquor and a drop will brace ye
-up."
-
-Shea procured the pipe, filled and lighted, and promptly assumed, as a
-garment, his usual histrionic pose. The gulp of liquor which Mrs. Crump
-carefully measured out sent a thin thread of colour into his gaunt,
-unshaven cheeks.
-
-"Madam, I owe you all," he announced sonorously. "I have not missed the
-heart of things set forth in this your discourse to the sheriff's ear,
-and I have gathered that your need is great for the strong arms of
-friends, the counsel wise----"
-
-"You got it," cut in Mrs. Crump, curtly. "The p'int is, Thady, where do
-you come in? Listen here, now! I got a good eye for men; ye ain't much
-account as ye stand, but ye got the makin's. Now cut out the booze and
-I'll take ye for partner, savvy? What's more, I'll spend a couple o'
-weeks attending to it that ye _do_ cut out the booze! I sure need a
-partner who ain't liable to sell me out to them heathen. Can ye down the
-booze, or not?"
-
-Something in her tone cut through the man's posturing like a knife. As a
-matter of fact, he was miserable in spirit; his soul quivered nakedly
-before him, and he was ashamed. For a space he did not answer, but
-stared at the far mountains. The strong tragedy of his face was
-accentuated and deepened into utter bitterness.
-
-What Mrs. Crump had only vaguely and darkly seen Thady Shea observed
-clearly and with wonder; yet, just as she missed the more mystical side
-of it, he missed the more practical side. More diverse creatures wearing
-human semblance could scarce have been found than these twain, here met
-upon a desert upland of New Mexico--the woman, a self-reliant
-mountaineer and prospector who knew only her own little world, the man a
-drunkard, a broken-down "hamfatter," who knew all the outside world
-which had rejected him. They had come together from different spheres.
-
-As he sat there staring, he mentally and for the last time reviewed the
-life that lay behind him; before him uprose all the contemptuous years,
-the sad wreckage of high hopes and tinsel glories, the hard and wretched
-fact of liquor. He would shut it out of his mind forever, after to-day,
-he thought. He would live in the present only, from day to day. He would
-try a new life--and let the dead bury their dead!
-
-He turned to Mrs. Crump, his sad and earnest eyes looking oddly cynical.
-
-"I do not think it humanly possible that I can resist liquor," he said,
-gravely. "I am frank with you. It were easy to swear that I would pluck
-out drowned honour by the roots--but, madam, I think that this morning I
-am weary of swearing. I have tried to abstain, and I cannot. Always it
-is the first week or two of torture that downs me----
-
-"You're showin' sense, now," said the lady. "Want to try it or not?"
-
-He rose in the car and attempted a bow in his showy and pitiful manner.
-In this bow, however, was an element of grace, the more pronounced by
-its sharp contrast to his gaunt, sombre aspect.
-
-"Madam, I am deeply sensible of the compliment you pay me. Yet, in
-picking from the gutter a drunken failure, are you wise? I am entirely
-ignorant of prospecting and----"
-
-"Don't worry none. Ye'll learn that quick enough."
-
-Again Thaddeus bowed. "But, madam, I understand that prospectors go off
-into the desert places and live. In justice to yourself, do you not
-think that your enemies might seize viciously upon the least excuse for
-misinterpretation of character----"
-
-For the first time Shea saw Mehitabel Crump gripped in anger. He paused,
-aghast.
-
-Her gigantic form quivered with rage then stiffened into towering wrath.
-Her tanned, age-touched features suddenly hardened into sentient bronze
-from which her blue eyes blazed forth terribly, jewelled indices of an
-indomitable and quick-flaming spirit within.
-
-"Thady Shea, it's well for you them words come from an honest heart,"
-said she, with a slow and grim emphasis. "They ain't no one goin' to say
-a word agin' me, except them for what I don't give a tinker's dam; and
-if one o' them dasts to say it in my hearin', chain lightnin' is goin'
-to strike quick and sudden! This here territory--state, I mean--knows
-Mehitabel Crump and has knowed her for some years back. Paste that in
-your hat, Thady Shea!"
-
-As some dread lioness hears in dreams the horns and shouts of hunters,
-and starting erect with bristling front mutters her low and terrible
-growl of challenge, so Mehitabel Crump defiantly faced Thaddeus.
-
-He, poor soul, inwardly cursed his too-nimble tongue, and shrank visibly
-from the spectacle of wrath. Before the hurt and amazed eyes of him Mrs.
-Crump suddenly abandoned her righteous attitude. Having palpably
-overawed him, she now felt ashamed of herself.
-
-"There, buck up," she brusquely ordered.
-
-"Tell me, now! If I answer for it that ye stay sober a couple o' weeks
-or so, will ye make the fight?"
-
-"Yes." Hope fought against despair in Shea's voice; he knew his own
-weakness well.
-
-"All right. Let's go, then!"
-
-"We're going to Santa Fe?"
-
-Mrs. Crump advanced to the front of the flivver, and seized the crank.
-Then she paused, her blue eyes striking up over the radiator at Shea.
-
-"No, I ain't goin' to Santy Fe; neither are you! We're goin' to the most
-man-forsaken spot they is in all the world, I reckon. We got grub, and
-everything else can wait a couple o' weeks or so. Accordin' to the Good
-Book, Providence was mighty rushed about creation, but I ain't in no
-special hurry about makin' a man of you----"
-
-Her words were drowned in the engine's roar. Thaddeus Roscius Shea made
-himself as small as possible; Mrs. Crump crowded in under the wheel, the
-car swaying to her weight, and they leaped forward.
-
-In silence she drove, pushing the flivver with a speed and abandon which
-left Shea clinging desperately to his seat. Twenty minutes later an
-intersecting road made its appearance; Mrs. Crump left the highway and
-followed this road due north for a couple of miles. There, coming to an
-east-and-west road which was decidedly rough, she headed west.
-
-"This here's the trail to Cochiti pueblo," she announced, enigmatically.
-
-Four miles of this, and she struck an even worse road that headed
-northwest. Shea's eyes opened as they progressed. Never in all his life
-had he encountered such grotesque country as this which now lay on every
-hand as though evoked by magic--utter desolation of huge rock masses,
-blistered and calcined by ancient fires, eroded into strange spires and
-pinnacles of weird formation. To the north towered Dome Rock with its
-adjacent crater. No sign of life was anywhere in evidence.
-
-Shea was helplessly gripped by the personality of the woman beside him.
-Mentally he was overborne and awed; physically he was sick--not ill, but
-downright sick, possibly due to the sparse gulps of liquor which he had
-downed, possibly to the glaring sun. He cared not whether he lived or
-died. He felt that this day had brought him to the end of his rope, and
-that nothing more could matter.
-
-"Getting into the lava beds," observed Mrs. Crump, cheerfully. Shea
-understood her words only dimly. "This here Henry sure does go pokin'
-where you'd think nothin' short of a mule could live! The trail peters
-out a bit farther, then we got to hoof it over to the Rio Grande and
-make camp."
-
-Poor Shea shivered. The frightful desolation of the scene horrified him.
-He had never been an outdoor man. His had ever been the weakness, the
-dependency of the sheltered and civilized being. Contact with this
-strangely primitive woman frightened him. He felt like babbling in his
-terror, begging to be taken back and allowed to resume his place among
-the swine. Here was something new, awful, incredible! But he held his
-peace.
-
-Had he been able to look a few miles ahead; had he foreseen what lay
-before him in that camp in White Rock Canon, a place which in grandeur
-and inaccessibility rivalled the great canon of the Colorado; had he
-known that he was about to tread a trail which few white men had ever
-followed--in short, had he understood what Mehitabel Crump's plan held
-in store for him, he would at that moment have yielded up the ghost,
-cheerfully!
-
-At last, reaching a sheer incline where boulders larger than the car
-itself filled all the trail and rendered further progress impossible,
-Mrs. Crump killed her engine and set her brakes hard.
-
-"I guess Henry can lay here all his life and never be stole," she said,
-with a sigh of relaxation. "Well, Thady, here we are! D'you know what?
-It ain't lack of ambition that makes folks mis'able and unsatisfied;
-it's lack o' purpose. Now, I aim to teach ye some purpose, Thady. Look
-at me! I been prospectin' all my life, and still goin' strong, just
-because I got a definite object ahead--to strike it rich somewheres!
-
-"Well, climb down. We got to rig up some grub into packs, hoof it to the
-nearest canoncito, and reach the Rio Grande. It's less'n two mile in a
-straight line to water, but twenty 'fore we gets there, if we gets there
-a-tall. Come on, limber up!"
-
-Thaddeus Roscius Shea groaned inaudibly--but limbered up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--CORAVEL TIO ENJOYS A BUSY MORNING
-
-
-Coravel Tio sold curios in the old town of Santa Fe. He also sold
-antiques, real and fraudulent; he had a wholesale business in Indian
-wares that extended over the whole land.
-
-Coravel Tio was one of the few Americans who could trace their ancestry
-in an unbroken line for three hundred years. It was almost exactly three
-hundred years since the ancestor of Coravel Tio had come to Santa Fe as
-a conquistador. Coravel Tio was wont to boast of this, an easily proven
-fact; and, boasting, he had sold the conquistador's battered old armour
-at least fifty times.
-
-When the boasts of Coravel Tio were questioned, he would admit with a
-chuckle that he was a philosopher; and do not all philosophers live by
-lying, senor? There was great truth in him when he was not selling his
-ancestor's armour to tourists--and even then, if he happened to like the
-looks of the tourist, he would gently insinuate that as a business man
-he sold fraudulent wares and lied nobly about them, but that in private
-he was a philosopher. And the tourists, liking this quaintly naive
-speech, bought the more.
-
-It was a big, dark, quiet shop, full of Indian goods and weapons,
-antique furniture that would have made Chippendale's eyes water,
-ivories, old paintings, manuscripts from ancient missions. A good half
-of Coravel Tio's shop was not for sale at any price. Neither, said men,
-was Coravel Tio.
-
-He was a soft-spoken little man, quiet, of strange smiles and strange
-silences. His was the art of making silence into a reproof, an assent, a
-curse. The world of Santa Fe moved about Uncle Coravel and heeded him
-not, shouldered him aside; and Coravel Tio, knowing his fathers to have
-been conquistadores, smiled gently at the world. His name was usually
-dismissed with a shrug--in effect, a huge tribute to him. Talleyrand
-would have given his soul to have been accorded such treatment from the
-diplomats of Europe; it would have rendered him invincible.
-
-One of those rare men was Coravel Tio whose faculties, masked by
-childish gentleness, grow more terribly keen with every passing year.
-His brain was like a seething volcano--a volcano which seems to be
-extinct and cold and impotent, yet which holds unguessed fires somewhere
-deep within itself.
-
-Upon a day, some time following the meeting of Mehitabel Crump with
-Thady Shea, this Coravel Tio was standing in talk with one Cota, a
-native member of the legislature then in session.
-
-"But, senor!" was volubly protesting the legislator, with excitement.
-"They say the majority is assured, that the bill already drawn, that the
-capital is to be moved to Albuquerque at this very session!"
-
-"I know," said Coravel, passively, his dark eyes gently mournful.
-
-"You know? But what--what is to be done? Shall those down-state people
-take away our capital? We must prevent it! We must do something! It's
-this man Mackintavers who is at the bottom of it, I suppose----"
-
-Coravel Tio fingered a blanket which topped a pile beside him--a gaudy
-red blanket. He regarded it with curious eyes.
-
-"I fear this is not genuine--it does not have the old Spanish uniform
-red," he murmured, as though inwardly he were thinking only of his
-wares. Then suddenly his eyes lifted to the other man, and he smiled. In
-his smile was a piercing hint of mockery like a half-sheathed sword;
-before that smile Cota stammered and fell silent.
-
-"Oh, senor, this matter of the capital!" answered Coravel Tio, softly.
-"Why, for many, many years men have said that the capital is to be moved
-to Albuquerque; yet it has not been moved! Nor will it be moved. And,
-Senor Cota, let me whisper something to you! I hear that you have bought
-a new automobile. That is very nice, very nice! But, senor, if by any
-chance you are misled into voting for that bill, it would be a very sad
-event in your life; a most unhappy event, I assure you! Senor, customers
-await me. _Adios._"
-
-As the legislator left the shop, he furtively crossed himself, wonder
-and fear struggling in his pallid features.
-
-The merchant now turned to his waiting customers. Of these, one was a
-Pueblo, a Cochiti man as the fashion of his high white moccasins and
-barbaric apparel testified to a knowing eye. The others were two white
-men who together approached the curio dealer. Coravel Tio stepped to a
-show case filled with onyx and other old carvings, and across this faced
-the two men with an uplift of his brows, a silent questioning.
-
-"You're Mr. Coravel--Coravel Tio?" queried one of the two. The dealer
-merely smiled and nodded, in his birdlike fashion. "Can we see you in
-private?"
-
-"I have no privacy," said Coravel Tio. "This is my shop. You may speak
-freely."
-
-"Huh!" grunted the other, surveying him in obvious hesitation. "Well, I
-dunno. Me and my partner here have been workin' down to Magdalena, and
-we had a scrap with some fellers and laid 'em out. Right after that, a
-native by the name of Baca tipped us off that they was Mackintavers'
-men, and we'd better light out in a hurry. He give us a loan and said to
-tell you about it, so we lit out here."
-
-Coravel Tio seemed greatly puzzled by this tale.
-
-"My dear sir," he returned, slowly, "I am a curio dealer. I do not know
-why you were sent to me. Do you?"
-
-"Hell, no!" The miner stared at him disgustedly. "Must ha' been some
-mistake."
-
-"Undoubtedly. I am most sorry. However, if you are looking for work, I
-might be able to help you--it seems to me that someone wrote me for a
-couple of men. Excuse me one moment while I look up the letter. What are
-your names, my friends?"
-
-"Me? I'm Joe Gilbert. My partner here is Alf Lewis."
-
-Coravel Tio left them, and crossed to a glassed-in box of an office. He
-opened a locked safe, swiftly inspected a telegraph form, and nodded to
-himself in a satisfied manner. He returned to the two men, tapped for a
-moment upon the glass counter, meditatively, then addressed them.
-
-"Senors, I regret the mistake exceedingly. Still, if you want work, I
-suggest that you drive over to Domingo this afternoon with my cousin,
-who lives there. You may stay a day or two with him, then this friend of
-mine will pick you up and take you to work."
-
-The second man, Lewis, spoke up hesitantly.
-
-"Minin' is our work, mister. We ain't no ranchers."
-
-"Certainly." Coravel Tio smiled, gazing at him. "You will not work for a
-native, my friends. Ah, no! Be here at two this afternoon, please."
-
-The two men left the shop. Outside, in the Street, they paused and
-looked at each other. The second man, Lewis, swore under his breath.
-
-"Joe, how in hell did he know we was worried over workin' for a greaser
-boss?"
-
-Gilbert merely shrugged his shoulders and strode away.
-
-Within the shop, Coravel Tio turned to the waiting Indian and
-spoke--this time neither in Spanish nor English, but in the Indian
-tongue itself. As he spoke, however, he saw the stolid redskin make a
-slight gesture. Catlike, Coravel Tio turned about and went to meet a man
-who had just entered the shop; catlike, too, he purred suave greeting.
-
-A large man, this new arrival--square of head and jaw and shoulder, with
-small gray eyes closely set, a moustache bristling over a square mouth,
-ruthless hardness stamped in every line of figure, face, and manner. He
-was dressed carelessly but well.
-
-"Morning," he said, curtly. His eyes bit sharply about the place, then
-rested with intent scrutiny upon the proprietor. "Morning, Coravel Tio.
-I been looking for someone who can talk Injun. I've got a proposition
-that won't handle well in Spanish; it's got to be put to 'em in their
-own tongue. I hear that you can find me someone."
-
-Regretfully, Coravel Tio shook his head.
-
-"No--o," he said, in reflective accents. "I am sorry, Mr. Mackintavers.
-My clerk, Juan Estrada, spoke their language, but he joined the army and
-is still in service. Myself, I know of it only a word or two. But wait!
-Here is a Cochiti man who sells me turquoise; he might serve you as
-interpreter, if he is willing."
-
-He called the loitering Indian, and in the bastard Spanish patois of the
-country put the query. Mackintavers, who also spoke the tongue well,
-intervened and tried to employ the Indian as interpreter. To both
-interrogators the Pueblo shook his head in stolid negation. He would not
-serve in the desired capacity, and knew of no one else who would.
-
-"It is a great pity he is so stubborn!" Coravel Tio gestured in despair
-as he turned to his visitor. "I owe you thanks, Mr. Mackintavers, for
-getting my wholesale department that order from the St. Louis dealer. I
-am in your debt, and I shall be grateful if I can repay the obligation.
-In this case, alas, I am powerless!"
-
-"Well, let it go." Mackintavers waved a large, square hand. He produced
-cigars, set one between his square white teeth, and handed the other to
-Coravel Tio. "You can repay me here and now. A man at Albuquerque sent a
-telegram to that Crump woman in your care. Where is she?"
-
-"What is all this?" Coravel Tio was obviously astonished. "Senor, I am a
-curio dealer, no more! You surely do not refer to the kind-hearted Mrs.
-Crump?"
-
-Mackintavers eyed him, chewing on his cigar. Then he nodded grimly.
-
-"I do! Is she a particular friend of yours?"
-
-"Certainly! Have I not known her these twenty years? I buy much from
-her--bits of turquoise, queer Indian things, odd relics. Her mail often
-comes here, remaining until she calls for it. I am a curio dealer,
-senor, and in other matters I take no interest."
-
-"Hm!" grunted Mackintavers. "Has she been here lately?"
-
-"No, senor, not for three months--no, more than that! Mail comes, also
-telegrams."
-
-"D'you know where she is?" demanded the other, savagely.
-
-Dreamily reflective, Coravel Tio fastened his eyes upon the right ear of
-Mackintavers. That ear bore a half-healed scar, like a bullet-nick.
-Beneath that silent scrutiny the other man reddened uneasily.
-
-"Let me see! My wife's second cousin, Estevan Baca, wrote me last week
-that he had met her in Las Vegas. Everyone knows her, senor. If I can
-send any message for you----"
-
-"No. Much obliged, all the same," grunted the other. "I'll probably be
-at the Aztec House for a few days. Let me know in case she comes to
-town, will you? I want to see her."
-
-With exactly the proper degree of bland eagerness, Coravel Tio assented
-to this, and Mackintavers departed heavily. The merchant accompanied him
-to the door and watched him stride up the narrow street, cursing the
-burros laden with mountain wood that blocked his way. Then, smiling a
-trifle oddly, the descendant of conquistadores returned to the waiting
-man from Cochiti pueblo.
-
-"Do you know why that man wanted an interpreter?" he asked the Indian,
-in the latter's native tongue. The redskin grinned wisely and shook the
-black hair from his eyes.
-
-"Yes. But it is not a matter to discuss with Christians, my father."
-
-Coravel Tio nodded carelessly. The question was closed. The Pueblo folk
-are, of course, very devoted converts to the Christian faith; yet those
-who know them intimately can testify that they sometimes have affairs,
-perhaps touching upon the queer stone idols of their fathers, which do
-not bear discussion with other Christians. They do not pray to the old
-gods--perhaps--but they hold them in tremendous respect.
-
-"You came to tell me something," prompted the curio dealer, gently.
-
-The Indian assented with a nod. He leaned against one of the wooden
-pillars that supported the roof, and began to roll a cigarette while he
-talked.
-
-"Yesterday, my father, I was near the painted caves of the Colorado, and
-I stood above White Rock Canon looking down at the river. There on the
-other side of the water I saw the strangest thing in the world. I went
-home and told the governor of the pueblo what I had seen, and it was his
-command that I come here and tell you also, for this is some queer
-affair of the white people."
-
-Coravel Tio said nothing at all. The Pueblo lighted his cigarette and
-continued:
-
-"Upon the east side of the river and canon, not so well hidden that I
-could not see it, was a camp, and in that camp were a white man and a
-white woman. I have never before seen white folk able to reach that
-place, unless it were the Trail Runner who takes pictures of us and
-sells them to tourists. These were strangers to me. One was a very large
-woman. The man was tall, but he acted very strangely. He acted as though
-God had touched his brain. So did they both."
-
-"In what way?" asked Coravel Tio, sharply.
-
-"In every way, my father. The man wore no shoes, and the hot rocks hurt
-his feet so that he limped. I saw him spring on the woman, and they
-fought. She beat him off and pointed a gun at him. Then he seemed to be
-weeping like a woman, and he grovelled before her. She threw something
-far off on the stones, and I think it was glass that broke--a bottle,
-perhaps."
-
-"Oh!" said Coravel Tio. "Oh! Perhaps it was."
-
-"There were other strange actions," pursued the stolid red man. "I could
-not understand them----"
-
-"No matter." Coravel Tio made a gesture as though dismissing the
-subject. "Could you get to that camp from your pueblo?"
-
-"Of course, by crossing the river, by swimming the water there. But that
-may be a hard thing to do, my father."
-
-"Undoubtedly, but you will do it, and I will pay you well. There is a
-package to give that woman. Wait."
-
-Coravel Tio went to his little box of an office, seated himself at the
-desk, and began to write in a fair, round hand. The epistle required
-neither superscription nor signature:
-
- The burlap sack proved to contain some interesting contents. The
- two small sacks in the centre were even more interesting. The
- samples have been assayed with the following results:
-
- Numbers one to five, quartzitic with bare traces of brittle
- silver ore; no good. Numbers six to fifteen, barytes, perhaps
- five dollars a ton; no good. Number sixteen is strontianite.
- This is converted into certain nitrates used in manufacture of
- fireworks and in beet sugar refining. Tremendously valuable and
- rare. This, senora, is enough.
-
- I think that M. has scented those assays. He is asking for you,
- but I have made him look toward Las Vegas. To-morrow you will
- find two men at Domingo who wish work--they will be there until
- you arrive: Joe Gilbert and Alf Lewis. Meet me there also,
- please. I will take one-third interest in Number Sixteen as you
- suggest, and will furnish whatever money you desire on account.
- I enclose an advance sum.
-
- I shall have articles of partnership ready. Suppose you meet me
- day after to-morrow, at Domingo. You must give me location,
- etc., in order to arrange details of filing, land and mineral
- right lease, etc. Be careful about the new explosives law,
- unless you already have a permit.
-
-"Being a woman," reflected Coravel Tio, "she should know that the most
-important thing in this letter is the very end of it."
-
-He sealed the letter, placed it upon a thick sheaf of bank notes,
-wrapped the parcel in oiled silk and again in a small waterproof Navaho
-saddle blanket. This package he gave to the waiting redskin.
-
-"It must go into the hands of that large woman, and no other," he said,
-gravely. "If you fail, there is trouble for all of us--and perhaps for
-the gods of the San Marcos also!"
-
-At these last words a flash of keen surprise sprang athwart the Indian's
-face; then he took the package and turned to the doorway without
-response. Coravel Tio looked after him, and smiled gently.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--MRS. CRUMP HEADS SOUTHWEST
-
-
-There was in Domingo a man named Baca. Domingo is a tiny village of
-adobes nestling along the curve of Santa Fe creek under the gray
-sharpness of Bajada hill; there is also an Indian pueblo of the same
-name.
-
-In every ancient native settlement there is at least one man named Baca,
-which signifies "cow" and may be spelled, in the old fashion, either
-Baca or Vaca. If these folk came all of one stock, they have increased
-and multiplied exceedingly.
-
-Under the big cottonwood tree that grew in front of the Baca home sat
-smoking Joe Gilbert and his partner Lewis. Up to them, and halting
-abruptly before the house, crept a dust-white flivver in which sat two
-people: one a woman, great of girth and frame, the other a man, gaunt
-and haggard, whose black eyes blazed like twin stars of desolation.
-
-The woman alighted and faced the two smokers. They rose and doffed their
-hats.
-
-"Gents, know where I can find Alf Lewis and Joe Gilbert?" she inquired,
-bluntly.
-
-"That's us, ma'am."
-
-"Thought so. My name's Mehitabel Crump, with Mrs. for a handle. I'm
-goin' to open up an ore outcrop. This here is Thady Shea, my partner.
-Want work, or not?"
-
-"I've heard of you, ma'am," said Gilbert.
-
-"So've I!" exclaimed Lewis. "You bet we want work! Only, ma'am, we'd
-ought to tell ye square that they's apt to be warrants out for us."
-
-"Warrants never made me lose sleep," said Mrs. Crump, eying them with a
-nod of satisfaction. "Howsomever, I'll return the favour by saying that
-if ye take up with me it ain't goin' to be no pleasure trip, gents.
-'Cause why, I've got something good, something that'll bring
-Mackintavers on the trail soon's he smells it--him or his friends. I
-don't aim to be bluffed out, I don't aim to be bought out, and I don't
-aim to be lawed out; I got something big, and I aim to hang on to it
-spite of hell and high water until I sell out big. Them's my openers."
-
-"They're plenty, ma'am," said Gilbert. "We sure would admire to work for
-you!"
-
-A brief discussion followed as to wages. Thaddeus Roscius Shea sat
-jack-knifed in the car's front seat, saying not a word. His face was
-sun-blistered and graven with gnawing desire, his black eyes were
-feverish, he looked anything but a mining man. Yet the two miners, who
-must have felt more than a slight curiosity touching him, evinced none.
-At length Mrs. Crump turned to the car.
-
-"Well, pile in here! Make room in the back, but handle them boxes
-gentle. Three or four holds blasting powder and dynamite. I had quite a
-stock left over, and brung it along."
-
-"Do we travel far?" asked Lewis, nervously.
-
-"You bet we do! But don't worry none. I ain't much farther from them
-boxes than you boys are, and I'm pickin' the soft spots in the road.
-Besides, I've driv' several hundred mile a'ready with this here outfit,
-and she ain't gone up on me yet. Barring bad luck, we'd ought to get
-where we're goin' by the night of day after to-morrow."
-
-"I've heard tell that you had cold iron for nerves," commented Gilbert.
-"But you ain't backing me down, none whatever, ma'am!"
-
-He sprang in, began to shift the load, and Lewis promptly joined him.
-Mrs. Crump turned and strode away through the dust. Thady Shea watched
-her out of sight, then twisted about, and for the first time broke the
-silence that had enveloped him.
-
-"Gentlemen! May I inquire whether either of you delvers in the deeps of
-earth are possessed of spirits?"
-
-At the sonorously booming voice Gilbert's jaw dropped in amazement.
-
-"Good gosh! Is that Scripture talk? What d'ye mean--spirits?"
-
-Shea made an impatient gesture. "The fiery fluids that do mingle soul
-with vaster inspiration! I pray you, give me to drink as you do value
-drink!"
-
-"Oh, he means a drink!" ejaculated Lewis, staring. "We ain't got a drop,
-Shea."
-
-The lanky figure jack-knifed together again in disconsolate despair. The
-two men in the rear of the car glanced at each other. Gilbert tapped his
-head; Lewis grimaced.
-
-Meantime, Mrs. Crump had passed along the winding row of adobes and
-finally turned into a corral of high boards. There, concealed from
-exterior view, she found an automobile at rest; she went on to the
-adjoining rear door of the adobe house. The door was opened to her by
-Coravel Tio, who greeted her with a quick smile and a bow.
-
-"My land, it's hot!" said Mrs. Crump. "Howdy!"
-
-"This place is hot indeed," responded the merchant. "Let us take the
-front room and we may talk in private. I have the papers all made out."
-
-They understood each other very well, these two. Presently, however,
-Coravel Tio discovered that a third interest in Number Sixteen was to be
-assigned to Thaddeus Shea, in whose name, also, the entire mining
-property was to stand. He leaned back and surveyed Mrs. Crump with
-interest.
-
-"I do not know this man Shea, senora. Why do you make him wealthy?"
-
-There was no hint of offence in his tone. He spoke as one having the
-right to ask, and Mrs. Crump promptly acquiesced.
-
-"He's an old stage actor, Coravel. I picks him up on the road and takes
-him along. I'm breakin' him of drink, and I got a hunch that he's goin'
-to turn out a real man. As for makin' him wealthy, none of us ain't
-going to thrive on Number Sixteen for quite a spell yet! I'm gambling
-that Thady Shea will earn all he gets. He's absolutely honest, and
-good-hearted. He won't know the mine's in his name, and won't care;
-bein' that way, it'll throw Mackintavers off the track. Besides, I feel
-downright sorry for Thady; he's had a heap o' misery in his life, looks
-to me."
-
-The other smiled gently and waved his hand.
-
-"Senora, you are the one woman whose great heart has no equal! It is in
-my mind that this man will be the cause of misfortune; but what matter?
-If not from one cause, then from another. Misfortunes are sent by the
-gods to make us great!
-
-"I shall attend to everything in his name; a good idea, since he will be
-unknown to Mackintavers or Dorales. You will uncover the vein, and send
-me more samples immediately. These other two men must become small
-shareholders, so that adjacent claims and mining rights may be secured
-for the company. Once we are secure, we may talk of eastern capital."
-
-"Once we're secure," said Mrs. Crump grimly, "look out for Mackintavers,
-then and before; likewise, after!"
-
-"Exactly." Coravel Tio bowed and finished his writing.
-
-A little later Mrs. Crump shook hands with him and departed. Coravel Tio
-watched her off, and heard the roar of her car's engine. The roar became
-a thrum that lessened and died into the distance like a droning fly.
-Only then, it seemed, a sudden thought shook the man.
-
-"_Dios_--I forgot!" he ejaculated. "I forgot to ask her about the permit
-for the explosives! Well, I warned her in the note. What matter? These
-incidents of destiny are intended to work out their own effects, and
-good somehow comes from everything. I am a philosopher!"
-
-Blissfully unconscious whether philosophy might be of aid in running a
-flivver, Mrs. Crump headed southward over the river road to Albuquerque.
-
-A rough road is that, and well travelled. Mrs. Crump was in some haste
-to get over this section unobserved, and it was entirely evident that
-her haste was greater than her caution regarding the jiggling boxes in
-the rear of the car.
-
-More than once the two men in the tonneau stared quickly at each other's
-white faces; more than once the boxes and bundles crashed and banged
-fearsomely, in view of their partial contents; but Mrs. Crump only threw
-in more gas and plunged ahead. As for Thaddeus Roscius Shea, he stared
-out upon the passing scenery with glazed and lack-lustre eyes, and held
-his peace.
-
-When at last they arrived in the outskirts of Albuquerque, Mrs. Crump
-paused at a wayside station to fill up with oil and gasoline, also to
-refill several emptied water bags which formed part of the equipment.
-
-"We ain't goin' into town," she vouchsafed, curtly, to her charges. "And
-when we gets reaching out over the mesa, you two boys act tender with
-them boxes! They's two-three places we got to ford cattle runs, and we
-got to do it sudden to keep out of the quicksands. But don't worry no
-more, there ain't no special danger."
-
-The advice was entirely superfluous. Gilbert and Lewis could by no means
-have worried more. They had reached the limit.
-
-Barely skimming the outlying streets of Albuquerque, Mrs. Crump avoided
-the better-known highway beside the railroad and took the shorter but
-deserted road that leads south over the mesa to Becker. Most of this was
-covered before darkness descended upon them.
-
-Then a brief and barren camp was made; it was also a fireless camp, and
-the "grub" was cold. Stiff and weary though the three passengers were,
-it was clearly impossible that they should prove less tough than a mere
-woman. So, when after an hour's halt Mrs. Crump grimly cranked up, they
-piled into the car without protest.
-
-On they went through the darkness. It was well after midnight when the
-iron nature of Mehitabel Crump acknowledged signs of approaching
-dissolution in the hand that rocked the steering wheel. Admitting her
-weakness with a sigh, she turned out of the interminable road and
-halted. Blanket rolls were unlashed, and sleep descended swiftly upon
-three members of that quartet.
-
-It must be told that this camp was a milepost in the life of Thaddeus
-Roscius Shea. He could not sleep. A hundred yards away from the camp he
-strode up and down under the cold stars, his gaunt body shivering with
-the chill of the night, his haggard features contorted with the
-desperate anguish of shattered nerves. All the old impertinences of his
-soul were risen strong within him; he wanted to run away and end this
-intolerable situation. He wanted to run away, here and now!
-
-Yet, when at length he clumsily wrapped himself in his blanket and fell
-asleep, tears beaded his hollow cheeks and reflected the pale starlight
-above; and like the stars, those tears were cleansing, and serenely sad.
-The first tears he had shed in years--the tears of a man, wrung from
-deep within him; tears of brief conquest over himself. He would stick!
-
-Sunrise found the dust-white flivver once more far afield.
-
-The remaining details of that odyssey have no place here. The dust-white
-flivver came safely to its destination, and work duly began upon Number
-Sixteen. Days of hard, back-breaking labour ensued--days in which living
-quarters had to be erected before the claim could be touched. In those
-days Thaddeus Roscius Shea became, for good and all, Thady Shea.
-
-Number Sixteen lay among the most desolate of desolate hills, just over
-the ridge of a long hogback. In the canon below there was a trickle of
-water from the mountains; beside this _rito_ were erected two rough
-shacks, and here the dust-white flivver rested peacefully. To the north
-towered the higher forested ranges whence came the canon--the
-continental divide, rugged crests leaping at the sky. Below, a few miles
-distant, stretched the bad lands and the lava beds; a scoriated,
-blasphemous strip such as is often found in the southwest. Behind this
-lay scattered ranches and the road into Zacaton City.
-
-Up on that hogback, leaning upon his pick, stood Thady Shea. Gone was
-the threadbare black raiment, gone and replaced by overalls, high boots,
-flannel shirt. Shea was less conscious of his changed exterior than were
-those about him. Lewis and Gilbert, preparing a blasting charge a
-hundred feet distant, glanced at the great, gaunt figure.
-
-"Bloomed out most amazing, ain't he?" said Lewis. "No tinhorn, neither.
-Dead game."
-
-Gilbert, cutting the fuse with deft fingers, wagged his head. "Sure
-looks that-a-way, partner. Reckon Mis' Crump knew her business, after
-all, when she tied up with him. Gosh! Ain't she one a-gile critter,
-though?"
-
-Shea stood rocklike, watching the blast. Even in this short space of
-time the swing of axe and pick had hardened him amazingly; his towering
-figure seemed to move with a more lissome flow of muscles; for the first
-time in his life, most wonderful of all, his deeply lined features had
-become centred about one fixed and determined purpose--to keep himself
-clean of liquor. He had conquered, and with the victory had come a new
-serenity.
-
-The muffled report of the blast echoed dully. From nowhere appeared Mrs.
-Crump, hastily coming to the scene. Shea dropped his pick and joined the
-others. Mrs. Crump, examining the results of the blast, flung out an
-exultant cry.
-
-"Got it!"
-
-"Ain't much of a vein," observed Gilbert, skeptically. "Veins,
-rather--looks like a lot of 'em, and they go deep. This here limestone
-runs clear to Chiny, I reckon."
-
-Mrs. Crump chuckled in a satisfied manner.
-
-"These here veins don't never come big, Gilbert. Who'd think this here
-greenish-white stuff was better'n a gold seam? But she is. Well, never
-mind any more work a while, boys. I got a letter already writ, and when
-I fill in the size o' these here openings, she's ready to mail--and
-she's got to be sent sudden. These samples likewise.
-
-"Let's see; I ain't goin' to town myself. Mackintavers' men are sure to
-be watchin' everywhere, and this here location has got to be kept secret
-if possible. I s'pose the devils will get it from the land office,
-though. Joe, can you and Al show up in Zacaton City without occasioning
-no rumpus?"
-
-Gilbert shook his head doubtfully.
-
-"I reckon not, ma'am. We're pretty well known there, and we ain't right
-sure how things is fixed for us. Still, it won't bother us none; if you
-say so, we'll go----"
-
-"Nope; can't take no chances with the letter and samples, boys. It's up
-to Thady. He's learned how to run the car, anyhow. Thady, you got to
-send them samples and a letter. No one's goin' to suspect you of bein'
-partners with me, and be sure to send the samples in your own name,
-savvy?
-
-"They's enough gas to take you into Zacaton, and ye can bring a fresh
-supply when ye come back. Then we need more flour an' grub, for which
-same I got a list made out already. A new axe helve, too. Don't forget
-that there axe helve, whatever ye do! It ain't on the list--I guess ye
-can remember it all right. Sure, now! Don't come without it. How soon
-can ye get going?"
-
-"Now," said Shea, a slight smile curving his wide lips.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--THE AMBITION OF MACKINTAVERS
-
-
-It is an established but peculiar trait of human nature, by which most
-of us desire to be that which we are not, or to do that for which we
-have no talent. I, who write, may aspire to be a great engineer; you,
-who read, may aspire to the study of the stars. We reach out toward that
-which we may never grasp.
-
-Sandy Mackintavers was a wealthy and a powerful man; his hands were
-gripped hard in both the politics and the mining properties of the
-state. Self-made and self-educated, he had accomplished a good job of
-it. He had, of necessity, seen a good deal of those men who were ever
-radiating out from Santa Fe; those men who, on behalf of many
-universities and great museums, were ever delving amid the thousands of
-pre-historic ruins which lay in and between the valleys of the Pecos and
-the Rio Grande.
-
-Slowly, Sandy had discovered that these men were digging in the earth
-for science, and that science and the world of letters honoured them. He
-had learned something of their "patter" and of the things they were
-seeking; he had studied their work and methods and ideals, and he had
-found within himself the makings of a scientist. In short, he had formed
-the stupendous ambition of becoming, at one fell stroke, a renowned
-ethnologist!
-
-Do not smile. In the course of thirty years a man can pick up a great
-many divers things, and it was the way of Mackintavers to pick up
-everything in sight. Sandy knew a great deal more than he appeared to
-know. He had mining properties all over, and he was a silent partner in
-a chain of Mormon trading stores that ran north from the Mexican border
-through three states. His sources of information were varied.
-
-Being unmarried and loving his ease when he was in the city,
-Mackintavers maintained a suite at the Aztec House. He had entertained
-many men in that place, some to their eternal sorrow. Never had he
-entertained a more distinguished visitor, however, than the Smithsonian
-professor with whom he was speaking on this Sunday morning--a scientist
-known around the world, and a man of supreme authority in ethnologic
-circles.
-
-"Now, professor," said Mackintavers, bluntly, "I ain't a
-college-educated man, but I've knocked around this country for thirty
-year, and I know a few things. When I die, I aim to be remembered as
-something more than a mining man, see?"
-
-The other, in puzzled suspense, nodded tacit understanding.
-
-"Now," pursued Sandy, chewing hard on a cigar, "if I had something to
-give the Smithsonian or some other museum, something that would be a
-tenstrike for science, something that 'ud make every scientific shark in
-the country water at the eyes for envy, what 'ud the Smithsonian do for
-_me_?"
-
-The professor cleared his throat and registered hesitation.
-
-"I--ah--I do not exactly apprehend your meaning, Mr. Mackintavers. You
-do not speak in a financial sense, I presume?"
-
-"Of course not. I tell you, I want to be known as a scientist! Man, I've
-got the biggest thing up my sleeve that you ever struck! Can your
-museum, or any other, make me famous as a scientist? That is, if I turn
-over a regular tenstrike?"
-
-"Ah--that is exceedingly difficult to answer. A scientific reputation,
-Mr. Mackintavers, is founded upon solid bases, upon research or
-discoveries. If your--ah--contribution were a thing of such merit as you
-say, it would undoubtedly be published far and wide. Your name,
-naturally, would be attached to it, according as your work justified."
-
-"In other words," amended Sandy, "if I turn over a complete job, I'd get
-full credit and publicity?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"That's what I want. I'm interested in this ethnology stuff, and I can
-do you sharks a whopping good turn. I want to get the credit, that's
-all. Folks call me a hard-fisted old mining crab, and I want to show 'em
-that I'm something more."
-
-"A highly laudable ambition, sir. You understand, however, that what to
-a lay mind might appear to be a most interesting ethnological fact, to a
-scientist might prove well known or insufficiently supported----"
-
-Mackintavers waved his square hand.
-
-"This thing is all assayed and fire tested, professor, and I'm no fool.
-May I give you an outline of it?"
-
-"If you care to, by all means do so!"
-
-"You know where the San Marcos pueblo is--away down south of Bonanza?"
-Mackintavers struck into his subject without further parley. "It was
-abandoned about 1680 because of attacks from the Comanches, who
-destroyed several pueblos down in that country. There's a tradition that
-the Injuns migrated west of the Rio Grande and settled the Cochiti and
-Domingo pueblos. Has that tradition ever been proved up?"
-
-The professor evinced an awakening interest.
-
-"No, sir. We know that the survivors of the Pecos pueblo went to Jimez,
-but the older migrations are hidden in the mists of time, unfortunately.
-Where the present Pueblos came from we do not know. The migrations----"
-
-"They won't be hid very long," said Mackintavers, complacently.
-"Aiblins, now, we'll clear 'em up a bit, eh?"
-
-The only Scottish evidences which remained from Sandy's youth were an
-uncanny acquisitiveness and a habit of interjecting the word "aiblins"
-into the conversation at random. When Sandy used that word, it betrayed
-mental effort.
-
-"Some time ago," he resumed, "a man found seven stone idols in a bit of
-the adobe ruins at San Marcos. They had been walled up and buried alive,
-ye might say. The heavy rains last year, which took out some pieces of
-the adobe walls, washed 'em out. I've got 'em now, down to my ranch near
-Magdalena."
-
-At this announcement the professor displayed mild disappointment. He had
-been more than interested in Sandy's preamble, but this supposed climax
-caused him to shake his gray head regretfully.
-
-"My dear sir, these idols are of course very rare things, but not
-exceptionally so. I fail to see how they would give any proof of
-migration----"
-
-"Hold on; I ain't done yet! A drunken Injun from Cochiti seen those
-idols and spilled a good deal of information, calling them by name and
-so on. That is not evidence which would stand on a scientific basis, I
-reckon. But if a Cochiti man could be made to talk, and if he was to
-recognize those idols first crack as his ancestral gods----"
-
-"And not be drunk at the time," interjected the other, smiling.
-
-"Sure. If he was to name 'em like old friends, and they corresponded
-with the same idols from Cochiti which are in various museums--then
-wouldn't all this go to show mighty plain that the migration theory was
-true?"
-
-Mackintavers leaned back, breathless and triumphant. The scientist
-nodded quickly.
-
-"Sir, this is an unusual and surprising proposal, but I cannot deny your
-premises. I do believe that such evidence would go a long way, could it
-be secured. That, of course, is the doubtful point, for these red men
-can very seldom be made to talk. However, you have an astounding
-perception of ethnologic values in merely conceiving the scheme!"
-
-"Taken by and large, that's nothing but human nature. Well?"
-
-"If this proof could really be adduced, it would be epochal! The
-possibilities, sir, would be tremendous in their application!"
-
-"It ain't proved up yet," returned Sandy, drily, "but it will be. It may
-take a bit of time gettin' things in shape--a week or so, maybe. Ye
-know, professor, these Injuns are touchy about questions o' deity, and
-they have to be handled wi' gloves. But I'll do it! A bag of silver
-dollars will loom mighty big to them. If ye care to be on hand when the
-time comes, I'd be glad to have ye as a guest at my ranch----"
-
-In many ways the professor had an extended knowledge of New Mexico. It
-is quite possible that he knew all about the playful habits of Sandy
-Mackintavers in regard to testimony along mining and mineral lines. So,
-while he did not restrain his enthusiasm over the ambition of his host,
-he made it plain that he certainly did wish to be on hand when the
-testimony in this case was obtained.
-
-Mackintavers agreed readily, for in this instance he was more or less
-resolved to play fair; and the interview ended.
-
-Scarcely had the scientist departed, than the door opened to admit an
-individual of striking appearance. This gentleman was the satellite, the
-adherent, and field marshal, the _ame damnee_, of Mackintavers.
-
-Mormon progenitors had given him a stocky, massive front and splendid
-build, a steely eye and projecting lower jaw. A touch of Mexican blood
-had given him coarse black hair, a swart complexion, and sinister mental
-attributes. He had much the appearance of a west-coast Irishman, with
-his black hair and gray eyes, but there the resemblance ended. Such was
-Abel Dorales, a man of reputation and education.
-
-"Well?" greeted Mackintavers, abruptly. "What's up now?"
-
-"Trouble," was the response. "Rodrigo Cota wants to see you. Also, I got
-a telegram from Ben Aimes, at Zacaton City, but haven't decoded it yet.
-I think it's about the Crump woman."
-
-"Then hurry it along," snapped Mackintavers. "Send Cota in here pronto."
-
-A moment later entered the room a nervous native, the same legislator
-who had briefly interviewed Coravel Tio regarding the moving of the
-capital. Mr. Cota stood mopping his brow and glancing around.
-
-"Well, Cota?" exploded Sandy, transfixing him with frowning gaze.
-"What's the matter now? Need more money to swing it?"
-
-"Senor," blurted the legislator in desperation, "it cannot be swung!"
-
-"Oh! And why not, Mr. Cota?"
-
-"I do not know. Three weeks ago we had a clear majority. The measure was
-to be presented to-morrow--but our men have gone to pieces!"
-
-"Do they want more money?" snapped Sandy, savagely.
-
-The native shrugged. "I have done my best! It is a question of the
-people. In some way, I know not how, word has been spread abroad that
-the capital is to be changed. Our people are furious. Our natives, sir,
-have sentiment about this----"
-
-"Sentiment, hell!" snarled Mackintavers, as his fist crashed down. "I
-tell ye, it's goin' to be done! Ain't there plenty in it for all, ye
-fool? Ain't new state buildings got to be built at Albuquerque?
-Ain't----"
-
-"Senor, it is no question of money; it cannot be done! I myself dare not
-propose this bill without voting for it; and I cannot vote for it."
-
-"Why not?" The face of Mackintavers was purpled, seething with furious
-passions. Livid, the native glared back at him.
-
-"Because I am afraid for my life."
-
-Mackintavers leaped to his feet in a whirlwind of rage at what he
-considered a palpable lie. The native shrank back, but doggedly, as
-though a greater fear were beside him than any fear of this political
-master of his.
-
-At this instant the door opened and Abel Dorales appeared. He made a
-slight gesture, a gesture of command, of authority. The empurpled
-countenance of Mackintavers composed itself by a mighty effort.
-
-"Very well, Mr. Cota," he said, thickly. "Let the bill pass over for
-this time, since I got more important business on hand than chasing down
-you native senators. But let me tell you this: When it comes up again,
-there'll be no more talk like you've just handed out--or I'll know the
-reason why. Get out!"
-
-Cota took his hat and left, thankfully. Dorales closed the door, while a
-flood of oaths burst from the lips of Mackintavers. With extended hand,
-Dorales checked the flood.
-
-"Never mind that, Sandy," he said, calmly. "We'll probably find later
-that the railroad is double-crossing us. There's no rush--we can get to
-the bottom of it in time. The more important affair is this of the Crump
-woman, so far as money goes. There's a bigger fortune in this mine than
-in any political game!"
-
-Uncouth bear that he was, Mackintavers could be swayed by this more
-polished tongue; he knew this tongue was devoted absolutely to his own
-interests, and he forced himself to accept the dictum of Dorales at the
-moment.
-
-"Well?" he growled. "Ye don't mean to say she's down at Zacaton?"
-
-"The wire was from your store manager there, Aimes. He said merely that
-he had smashed the Crump outfit flat, and that I had better get there in
-a hurry to take charge of things."
-
-"Aiblins, yes!" The thin lips of Sandy curled back. "We hadn't looked
-for such quick action, Abel. That Aimes is a good man! I s'pose this
-news don't grieve ye none, after what the lady done to you. How's your
-head?"
-
-A fleeting contraction passed across the face of Dorales. His eyes
-narrowed to thin slits. His nose quivered like the nose of a dog
-sniffing game.
-
-"Thank you, it's quite well," his voice was low and cruel. "If you think
-best, I shall go down there immediately."
-
-Mackintavers crammed a cigar between his teeth and chewed at it for a
-moment.
-
-"Aiblins, yes," he mused aloud. "Somebody has blocked us on this
-moving-the-capital bill. I won't get hold of the skunk right away,
-neither; we might's well call it off until the next session.
-
-"Tell ye what, Abel! I'm fixing to spend a while at my ranch, so I'll go
-south with ye. I'll need ye mighty bad to get that business of the Injun
-gods moving along, because I got my heart set on doin' that up brown.
-But as ye say, this mine means millions--the biggest strike in the state
-in a long time. The assayer was positive it was strontianite and not
-merely barytes?"
-
-"Dead certain," assented Dorales.
-
-"Well, it won't be such a long job; I'll be at the ranch where ye can
-reach me quick. We'll have to find out what Aimes has done, then make
-plans and go ahead. If there's one thing that the Lord gave me ability
-to do, it was to handle mining deals!"
-
-"With a cold deck," added Dorales. "Very well. If we go by auto, we can
-save a good deal of time."
-
-Mackintavers grimaced. "I ain't built for long trips, but go ahead. Get
-the big car, Abel. Want to run her yourself? All right. Land me at the
-ranch, then go on to Zacaton City with the ranch flivver, unless ye want
-the big car."
-
-"The flivver is the thing down there."
-
-"Aiblins, yes. And mind! What we got to do is to get that Crump female
-clear off'n her location; that's all. Aimes has evidently found some
-means of gettin' her arrested. We can take that for granted. By the time
-you get there, she'll be in the calaboose.
-
-"You telephone me at the ranch with a full account of what's happened,
-and I'll have a scheme ready for ye. The main thing is to get possession
-of the property; maybe we can frame a deal on this fellow Shea--it's all
-held in his name, ain't it? That was a foxy move, but not foxy enough to
-fool us long! Get possession, Abel, and the law will do the rest for
-us."
-
-"It ought to!" Dorales showed white and even teeth as he smiled.
-
-Mackintavers met those steely eyes beneath their strangely black brows,
-and his square mouth unfolded in a grin.
-
-"Get possession, that's all!" he uttered.
-
-"Consider it done, Sandy. If you'll be ready in an hour, I'll be around
-with the car."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--THADY SHEA SMELLS WHISKEY
-
-
-The little town of Zacaton City, within easy trucking distance of the
-railroad, formed the nucleus of a goodly mining centre. Its residential
-section was extensive, and consisted of adobes occupied by "native"
-miners or workmen. Its business section was made up chiefly of a bank,
-the Central Mercantile Store, hardware, drug, and harness shops, and a
-soda-water parlour that adjoined the Central Mercantile. This last was a
-blind pig, maintained with circumspection and profit by Ben Aimes,
-manager of the store. Aimes also ran the combination hotel-garage across
-the street.
-
-Thady Shea came into town about sunset. He had broken bread on the way,
-and disdained to seek further dinner. Having been much cautioned, he was
-wary of danger. Leaving the dust-white flivver at the garage, he went to
-the express office and sent off his ore samples and letter, then he
-sought the emporium of Ben Aimes.
-
-The two native clerks being busy, Aimes, a brisk fellow of thirty,
-espied the tall figure of Shea, and in person took charge of the
-customer.
-
-"Well, partner, what can I do for you?" he inquired, cheerfully. "Can't
-say as I've seen you before. Stranger in town?"
-
-Shea fumbled in his pocket for the list of supplies, and transfixed the
-merchant with his cavernous black eyes. He had been particularly warned
-against Aimes.
-
-"Friend," he trumpeted, "you say sooth. Truth sits upon thy lips, marry
-it does!"
-
-Aimes blinked rapidly. "Stranger, I don't get you! You're a prospector?"
-
-"That, sir, is somewhat of my present business," boomed Shea. "Yet have
-I seen the day when every room hath blazed with lights and brayed with
-minstrelsy, when thick-eyed musing and cursed melancholy fled from
-before me like twin evil spirits! Make ready, friend, thy pencil for its
-task."
-
-Those sonorous tones drew grinning attention from others. Aimes, quite
-overcome by the rounded periods and the imposing gestures, asked no more
-questions, but devoted himself to making ready packages as Shea read off
-from his list the supplies required.
-
-Two or three loafers sauntered along and listened to Shea's enunciation
-with awed delight. When the end of the list was reached, the amounts
-totalled, and the money handed over, Thady Shea carelessly crumpled up
-the list and tossed it behind the counter.
-
-His arms filled with the bundles, he left the store and crossed the
-street to his car. He had laid up the flivver for the night, and now
-attended to having it filled with gas and oil. He stated to the mechanic
-that he might be here for several days; at this juncture, it occurred to
-him that he had forgotten that axe helve which Mrs. Crump had demanded
-especially.
-
-Meantime, Ben Aimes had retrieved the list of supplies, and had stared
-at the uncrumpled paper with amazed recognition. He swiftly summoned one
-of the idling loafers.
-
-"If this ain't the writing of Mrs. Crump, I'm a liar! You chase over to
-the garage and get the number o' that feller's car--hump, now!"
-
-Thady Shea reentered the store, in blissful ignorance that he was done
-for, and demanded his axe helve. Ben Aimes, in blissful ignorance of
-what that axe helve was destined to mean to him and to others, filled
-the order. Then, handling Shea his change, Aimes gave him a meaning
-wink.
-
-"Step into the sody parlour a minute, stranger! Have a cigar on the
-store."
-
-The offer was entirely innocuous. Shea greatly desired to avoid any
-argument or trouble, so he followed Aimes into the adjoining room, which
-at this hour was deserted. Aimes procured cigars, then went to the soda
-fountain.
-
-"Want you to try somethin' new we got here," he said, and paused. "What
-did you say your name was?"
-
-"My cognomen, sir, is Shea. Thaddeus Shea."
-
-"Well, Shea, just hold this under your nose and see if it smells like
-sody."
-
-Unsuspicious as any innocent, Shea took the proffered glass and held it
-to his nose. A tremor ran through him--an uncontrollable shiver that
-sent fever into his eyes. He lowered the glass slightly and forced a
-ghastly smile. Already defeat had engulfed him.
-
-"Friend, I am sorry thus to disappoint you, but I have sworn that
-never----"
-
-"Shucks!" Aimes grinned and held up his own glass. To meet it, that of
-Shea again came within sniffing distance. "Just one between business
-acquaintances, Mr. Shea. It's the finest licker ever got to this city!
-Absolutely twenty year old, partner. One little snifter now--don't it
-smell good? The real thing, the real thing!"
-
-Thady Shea's entire system was impregnated by that whiff. His big
-fingers closed upon the little glass with a convulsive contraction.
-
-"One, sir, and one only!" he declaimed. "To the dead god Bacchus, all
-hail!"
-
-He tossed down the drink and smacked his lips.
-
-It was upon a Saturday evening that these things happened. That smell
-had done the business for Thady Shea; that raw odour of whiskey, which
-in a flash had permeated to the very deeps of his being with its awful
-lure. No guile, no argument could have forced him to drink, but that
-sniff had ruined him utterly.
-
-Twenty minutes later, in maudlin confidence, he was relating to Ben
-Aimes how two miners of his acquaintance had driven several hundred
-miles in deadly fear of being hoisted by dynamite at every jolt.
-
-Shea mentioned no names. Drunk or not, he knew subconsciously that he
-must mention no names. Also subconsciously, he knew that he must hang on
-to his axe helve or Mrs. Crump would be much disappointed in him. So he
-was still hanging on to it when, after a parting drink, he was thrust
-forth into the cold night air. That parting drink had been soggy with
-opiates.
-
-Ben Aimes went to the telephone and called up the sheriff at Silver
-City.
-
-"This is Aimes at Zacaton, Bill," he said. "A queer guy just blew in
-here to-night with a grand souse and is sleeping it off now. You know
-old lady Crump, don't you? Heard of her at any rate. Well, he says that
-she's out in the hills a piece with two other fellers. These two were
-run out o' Magdalena last month for talking agin' the gov'ment and
-they're said to be dangerous characters. The place is north o' the bad
-lands, over in Socorro County.
-
-"The p'int is, Bill, this here guy says they've got heap o' dynamite and
-such stuff out there. Them two anarchists ought to be prevented usin'
-it; according to this guy, they got no licenses and never heard o' the
-new license law. This here is plumb illegal and you'd ought to stop it.
-Both these fellers are I. W. W. organizers, he says, and prob'ly are
-German spies; this guy talked with a queer kind of accent.
-
-"No, I wouldn't think it o' Mrs. Crump, neither, but you never can tell
-these days. What's that? Well, I got the location pretty straight from
-this guy. Yep, a car can make it; he come into town that way. Get up on
-the night train and you can take my car out there. Sure, I'll meet the
-train. You're welcome."
-
-This pleasant duty finished, Aimes dispatched a lengthy telegram to Abel
-Dorales at Santa Fe. He then summoned the constable in search of Thady
-Shea. But Shea had vanished from human ken, although the dust-white
-flivver remained in the garage.
-
-Bright and early next morning Aimes departed in his automobile, went to
-the railroad and met the sheriff, and brought that official back to
-town. The hardware merchant was pressed into service as a deputy, and
-the sheriff took over Aimes' car.
-
-"I'd like to go along myself," said Aimes, regretfully, "but I got to
-'tend the garridge myself to-day account of my mechanic hurting himself
-last night and being laid up. Tell ye what, Bill! Why not take the whole
-crowd right down to Silver City? It'll save ye comin' back here, and
-your new deppity yonder can fetch the car back here. Sure, you're dead
-welcome! I ain't got no use for the car anyhow."
-
-To this arrangement the sheriff consented gladly, and Aimes watched them
-depart with a twinkle in his eye. Before Mrs. Crump could possibly
-return from Silver City, to say nothing of her two men, Abel Dorales
-would be on the spot to take charge of things. Aimes considered that he
-had managed things very neatly indeed, and he mentally patted himself on
-the back that morning.
-
-Ben Aimes, however, did not take local politics into account. It is such
-little unconsidered trifles which very often go to make up the warp of
-affairs of larger moment.
-
-Only a few months previously an ancient and honourable gentleman by the
-name of Ferris had been ousted from the job of justice of the peace,
-mainly on account of certain hostility to Ben Aimes and the Mackintavers
-forces. It is quite possible that old man Ferris was no good as a
-justice, yet he had an inconspicuous but important part to play in the
-tangled affairs of Thady Shea and Sandy Mackintavers, to say nothing of
-the seven stone gods.
-
-In broad daylight, therefore, Thady Shea came to his senses. While slow
-remembrance dawned upon him, he found himself reposing in the back yard
-of an adobe house; how he got there was never explained. A furred tongue
-and an aching head gradually brought home some errant sense of shame.
-This feeling was intensified by a goat-like visage above him.
-
-"Well, pilgrim!" sounded a raucous voice. "Slep' it off, have ye?"
-
-Shea groaned and sat up. "Where--where am I?"
-
-"Town of Zacaton City, county o' Grant, State o' New Mexico." The other
-chuckled. He was a disreputable old fellow, distinguished by shiftless
-garb and dirty gray hair. "I reckon Ben Aimes must have give ye quite a
-jag, eh? If I was you, I'd spill out o' town right smart. He's got the
-constable lookin' for ye."
-
-Shea clasped his head and groaned again, not understanding the words
-clearly.
-
-"I've fallen!" he moaned.
-
-"With a thud," agreed the other. "But worse'n that, pilgrim. Ye've gone
-and got ol' Mis' Crump in real bad. If ye wasn't so mis'able I'd boot ye
-out o' here for it."
-
-Thady Shea stared up dully. "What--what's that you say?"
-
-Old man Ferris surveyed him in pitying contempt, and carefully sank his
-remaining fangs into a plug of tobacco.
-
-"D'ye mean as ye don't know what ye been an' done? Well, I can't say as
-I can see why Mis' Crump ever's taken up with the likes of you, but it's
-plumb certain that ye've gone an' done for her this trip, ye no-account
-swine!"
-
-Shea's brow broke into cold perspiration. His quickening faculties began
-to grasp the sense of these words.
-
-"Expound!" he said. "What have I done?"
-
-"A plenty. The sheriff come over this mornin'. Him and a deppity has
-gone to arrest Mis' Crump--and all along o' you, ye mis'able coyote!"
-
-"Arrest her? Why?" Shea stared, his heart sinking. So piteous was his
-gaze that old man Ferris turned aside, spat, and resumed his discourse
-in kindlier tones.
-
-"Don't ye know that they's a new law about explosives? Well, they is.
-Everybody what handles powder or dynamite has got to have a license.
-From what I gather, Mis' Crump ain't wise to it and ain't got none.
-
-"Last night you done blabbed out your soul to Aimes. Danged fool! Why
-did Aimes git the sheriff after Mis' Crump? Ain't but one answer to
-that--so's that devil Mackintavers could profit! And sheriff's goin' to
-take 'em to Silver City, too. If Mis' Crump has located an ore prop'ty,
-as looks likely, Mackintavers is after it.
-
-"Once she gits out'n the way and they ain't nobody to hold down the
-location, some o' Mackintavers' crowd is going to jump it sure's
-shooting! Huh! Git out'n my back yard 'fore I come back, ye swine!"
-
-Snorting angrily, old man Ferris turned and stamped away, and so out of
-the story. He had fulfilled his share in destiny, with greater measure
-than he knew.
-
-Thady Shea sat staring, his eyes terrible with comprehension. With every
-moment that final exposition sank more deeply into his brain. The
-ghastly consequences of his own weakness left him stunned and paralyzed.
-
-He could dimly remember what had happened, up to that final drink. He
-was certain that he had not mentioned the name of Mehitabel Crump. Yet
-he could remember telling about those explosives; as he connected
-things, he groaned again. Aimes had been pumping him, of course; had
-somehow suspected something.
-
-The pitiless deduction of old man Ferris struck upon Shea's brain like a
-trip-hammer. The mine was left unprotected, or soon would be, and
-Mackintavers' men would grab it. Of course!
-
-Frightful remorse crumpled Thady Shea, mentally and bodily. He owed all
-that he was, all that he might be, to Mrs. Crump; yet his action had
-literally ruined her. That cursed sniff of whiskey had done it! Shea
-wasted no recrimination upon himself for his lapse from rectitude. He
-had gone through all that before. It was the consequence of this lapse
-that horrified him, that lashed down upon his soul.
-
-"What have I done!" he mumbled, groping for coherency. "What have I
-done!"
-
-All the old memories of Mrs. Crump flooded into his mind. He recalled
-all her actions and words, he pictured mentally all the deep waters of
-human kindness that lay hidden below her mask of harshness, he visioned
-anew how she had picked him out of the very gutter and had set him upon
-his feet, a man. How had he repaid her?
-
-In this hour Thady Shea was cast absolutely upon himself. There was none
-to whom he might go for advice or aid. He was alone with his
-consciousness of guilt, alone with the remorse that ate into his heart
-like acid. A month previously he would have mouthed a curse at the world
-and have gone shambling away in search of the nearest saloon, where he
-would have recited "The Face on the Barroom Floor" as the sure and
-certain price of liquor.
-
-This thought recurred to him. He pictured himself as he was a month ago.
-From his lips was wrenched an inarticulate cry, the voice of a soul in
-anguish. Heedless of the burning ache in his head, he brought his long
-body erect and looked up at the sky.
-
-"Oh, God!" he said, a dry sob in his throat. "Oh, God! I have scoffed
-and blasphemed because You let me stumble down into hell. It was my own
-fault, God. Now, for the sake of that woman who helped me to find
-myself, it's up to You to give me a hand! I don't know what to do. But
-I've got to make up for this thing that I've done, and there is no one
-to help me except You--and it's for her sake----"
-
-The words failed, for as he spoke out his heart the deepness of feeling
-that had laid hold upon him ebbed; just as the bitterness of grief ebbs
-with tears. A tremor shook him, and for a moment he stood motionless.
-
-Close at hand was an _acequia_, an open ditch with running water. He
-went to it, kneeled, and plunged his head into the water; it cooled his
-brain and steadied him. He rose and saw his axe helve lying where he had
-lain that night. He picked it up and stood there, indecision eating into
-him.
-
-What was to be done? He must do something. The constable was seeking
-him--why? No matter. The name of Ben Aimes explained everything. The
-morning was wearing along, and by this time all hope of warning Mrs.
-Crump was gone. Of course, there was the dust-white flivver. He could
-take that and sneak back to the mine. It would be deserted.
-
-Deserted? But that was what Mackintavers wanted, according to this
-disreputable ancient! That was why Mrs. Crump was under arrest! That was
-the aim and purpose of the whole affair--to have the mine left deserted,
-so that the man Dorales could step in and seize upon it.
-
-The gaunt, grim face of Shea tightened and hardened. "One thing I can
-do--go there," he reflected. "What the hell have I to worry about--can
-they do any worse to me than I have done to myself? No. They'll try to
-arrest me, they'll try to keep me here. They can't do it! I'm going."
-
-As he left the place and sought the road, there was a sublime
-unconsciousness of self in him. He was in no condition of mind to do the
-usual, the conventional thing, the thing that any sane man would have
-done, the thing that any one would be expected to do.
-
-No! From that hour, Shea was a different man. He had entered upon this
-new and primitive existence, and now it took hold upon him. His course
-of life had been abruptly shifted, and he was climbing new paths; as he
-climbed, the exhilaration of the heights sang in his blood. He had flung
-away the lessons of his old dreary years. Now his actions were to be the
-simple, terrible, and impulsive actions of a child who fears no
-consequences.
-
-Finding that he was only a couple of blocks from the main street of the
-town, Shea walked toward it, the axe helve still in his hand. He meant
-to take out his flivver and go.
-
-There was no church in Zacaton City, and it was not yet time for the
-Mormon chapel to open. The garage doors were wide. In front, standing in
-the warm sunlight, Ben Aimes was chatting with the constable about the
-mysterious disappearance of the man Shea. Half-a-dozen idlers were lined
-up to one side, smoking and discussing the coming and going of the
-sheriff. Around the corner of the store, across the street, swung the
-gaunt figure of Shea.
-
-"By gosh!" exclaimed Aimes, staring. He clutched the arm of the
-constable. "There's the cuss now! Lay him up until Dorales gets here
-to-morrow, anyhow. Whew! I'm glad he's showed up at last. Must ha' been
-laying in a ditch."
-
-The loafers galvanized into sudden interest. The constable started
-across the street and met Shea midway. He held out one hand, with the
-other showing his badge of office.
-
-"Get out of my way," said Shea, lifelessly, looking through him.
-
-"None o' that, now," snorted the constable. "You come along with me."
-
-With a smack that was heard for half a block, the axe helve swung a
-vicious half-circle and landed over the officer's ear. The constable
-threw out his hands and fell on his face, lying motionless. Shea strode
-forward.
-
-"Lay on to him, boys, he's locoed!" cried Aimes, turning to the men
-behind. He whirled again to face Shea, and his right hand crept to his
-hip. "Hello, Shea! lay down that----"
-
-"You gave me a drink last night, didn't you?" said Shea, halting before
-him.
-
-Aimes laughed, thinking that he perceived what was in the other's mind.
-
-"Oh, want another, do ye?" he returned. "Well, lay down that----"
-
-"You're the man that gave me a drink," said Shea. His deep bass voice
-boomed upon the morning air like a bell. "If any man dares to give me a
-drink again, he'll get worse than this."
-
-Aimes suddenly perceived danger, and whipped out his weapon. Swifter
-than his hand was the axe helve. It struck his wrist and knocked the
-revolver away. As he staggered to the blow, the axe helve swung again
-and smote him over the head. Aimes made a queer noise in his throat and
-limply sank down.
-
-There was something frightful in the deliberate way those two men had
-been felled. For a moment Shea stood gazing at the loafers, who shrank
-back before his blazing eyes. Then:
-
-"I'll do worse than this to any man who dares give me a drink again," he
-said.
-
-Without further heed, he passed into the garage. Up and down the street
-men were calling, running. The group outside the place looked at each
-other, their faces blanched.
-
-"My Lord!" gasped someone. "He's done killed 'em both! In after him,
-boys."
-
-Thady Shea laid down his bludgeon in front of the dust-white flivver,
-and began to crank. For almost the first time in his life he had struck
-a man in cold anger; more terrible than this thought, however, was the
-acid-like bitterness in his soul.
-
-Just as the engine caught and roared, Shea, rising, saw over his
-shoulder the string of men pouring in upon him. He had no time to get
-into his car. With a quick motion he caught up the axe helve; swiftly
-the foremost men flung themselves upon him, and found him facing them.
-
-There in the obscurity of the little garage ensued a scene that is still
-told of from Silver City to Magdalena. All noise was drowned in the roar
-of the engine that throbbed behind Shea. Outside, other men paused to
-ask what was going on, to group about the figures of Aimes and the
-constable. Inside, Shea fought for more than his life.
-
-There were six men against him; yet, in the felling of those two
-outside, the battle had been half won, for the cold terror of Shea's
-blows had made itself felt. The first man at him shrieked out and fell,
-crawling away with a broken arm. The others came in before Shea could
-recover from the blow, and fastened upon him like dogs upon a mountain
-lion.
-
-Silent, deadly, Shea swung up his weapon and waited. He took their blows
-without return. He braced himself against the throbbing car behind him,
-and awaited his time. Then he began to strike. There was nothing blind
-and frantic in his blows; rather there was something fearful and
-inhuman, for inside him was that which rendered him insensible to the
-smiting fists, and when he brought down his weapon it was with simple
-and deadly intent.
-
-Three times he struck, each time lifting on his toes, and twice lifting
-one man who had fastened about his waist. To his three blows, a man
-reeled away into the darkness; a second plunged forward beneath an
-adjacent car; a third ran screaming into the open air, across his face a
-bloody blotch. A fourth man, unhurt, turned and ran.
-
-Shea looked down, curiously, at the last assailant, who was still
-gripping him around the waist, trying to bend him backward. Then he
-deliberately heaved up his axe helve and brought down the rounded oval
-of the halt against the man's head twice. At the second crunching blow
-the man's grip relaxed. Shea threw him, staggering and clutching, clear
-across the garage floor, then turned and leaped into his car.
-
-With a grinding roar and a honk of the horn, the dust-white flivver went
-out of the wide-open doorway into the street.
-
-Men jumped aside, yelled, pursued. Somebody fired a revolver, and the
-bullet smashed the windshield in front of Shea's face. Other shots
-sounded, but flew wild. The car went around the nearest corner on two
-wheels, and shot away toward the west at thirty miles an hour.
-
-Thady Shea had come and gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--THADY SHEA HAS A VISITOR
-
-
-Thady Shea was on his way to Number Sixteen. The sheriff was on his way
-to Silver City with Mrs. Crump, Gilbert, and Lewis. In the ordinary
-course of events, Thady Shea would have encountered them in the canon
-north of No Agua. The ordinary course of events did not obtain, however,
-because of Ben Aimes.
-
-Having sustained nothing worse than a broken wrist and a sore head, Ben
-Aimes upon being revived at once telephoned the store and post office at
-No Agua to stop Thady Shea. No Agua was the jumping-off place at the
-edge of the bad lands, and it was nothing but a long frame building from
-which radiated all the canon trails to north and west.
-
-When Shea arrived, he found a reception committee awaiting him in the
-shape of a dozen men, most of whom were mounted upon horses or mules as
-if they had convened for a Sunday holiday. Shea needed no information
-upon the subject of his reception. He had previously observed the
-telephone wires and had drawn his own conclusions. As he drew near to No
-Agua he was the recipient of a bullet that finished off the windshield
-and sent a sliver of glass slithering across his forehead.
-
-What next happened was wild and incoherent in all subsequent reports.
-Shea cared absolutely nothing for results, so long as he got through.
-When he found his path barred by mounted men, he opened up the throttle
-wide, shut his eyes, and gripped hard to the wheel. General opinion was
-that the first bullet had killed him and that the car was running wild;
-for blood was trickling over his face from his slashed brow, and he was
-a fearsome sight.
-
-The dust-white flivver smashed head-on into the mass of men and horses.
-It paused as though for breath, then went ahead. The radiator was
-boiling over; and when that red-hot projectile began to bore its way,
-things happened. The steam seared into a big mule, and the mule
-instantly began to plunge and kick. Two horses went down and the flivver
-climbed over them and their riders. A vaquero was pitched across the
-hood and with screams of anguish managed to leap away to earth. A horse
-sat on the right-hand fender and toppled over upon his rider as the car
-went ahead.
-
-After a moment Thady Shea opened his eyes and looked back upon a scene
-of wonderful confusion. Men and horses strewed the ground or were
-plunging in all directions. With a sigh of relief Thady Shea found that
-he was still going forward; so, in order to avoid the bullets that came
-swarming and buzzing after him, he aimed for the nearest canon, which
-was not his proper road at all, and followed the trail blindly.
-
-An hour later this trail petered out at an abandoned mine in the bad
-lands. With a vague general idea of his directions, Shea went plunging
-off through the sand, winding his way past huge, eroded masses and amid
-weird pinnacles of wind-blown rock. Somewhere past noon he was in the
-lava beds, and was apprised of the fact by his tires blowing out one by
-one.
-
-Lack of pneumatic cushions did not trouble Shea in the least. He
-punished the poor flivver unmercifully, and by the eternal miracle of
-flivvers the car kept going. Shea climbed rocky masses, shoved through
-sand, rolled over jutty fields of volcanic rock, and when the afternoon
-was half gone, came upon automobile tracks. He had found his road at
-last. From the tracks, he could tell that the sheriff's automobile had
-lately gone that way--but in the direction of Silver City.
-
-When, late in the afternoon, Shea came to Number Sixteen, it was
-deserted. Upon the door of the shack which Mrs. Crump had occupied was
-pinned a brief note. It read:
-
- Thady: Set rite here till I get back. We are pinched but not for
- long. My gun is over my bunk. Set tite. Yours,
-
- ---- M. CRUMP.
-
-Methodically, Shea went to the other shack and began to wash the dried
-blood from his face, plastering the cut on his brow.
-
-In front of him he propped the note and studied it, tried to read
-between the lines. It had been written, he thought grimly, as a forlorn
-hope, a desperate chance that Thady Shea might yet save the day. Mrs.
-Crump had not been aware of his culpability; or, if she had been aware
-of it, she had mercifully indulged in no recriminations.
-
-"Well, I'm here," said Shea, then glanced quickly around. The sound of
-his voice in that solitude was startling.
-
-He felt in no mood for theatricalisms, and that morning he had given
-vent to none; but now, when he tried to express himself otherwise,
-homely words failed him. So long had he mantled himself in the
-braggadocio rhetoric and rounded phrases of The Profession, that he
-could not rid himself of the bluff which had bolstered up his years of
-miserable failure. Therefore, he held his peace and tried to face facts
-squarely. The lesson of primitive silence was another thing that he
-learned in this strange land.
-
-Now, for the first time, he became aware that he had not come off
-undamaged that morning. His body was bruised, his face and head were
-much cut about by hard knuckles. Also, he had not eaten since the
-previous night, and hunger was beginning to ride him. So he took
-temporary possession of Mrs. Crump's shack and began to prepare a meal.
-
-The single room of the shack was fairly large, since it had to serve not
-only as living quarters for Mrs. Crump, but as a dining room for all
-hands. The walls were rough and bare; like the bunk in the corner, they
-were formed from hewn timbers, unchinked. Gilbert had knocked together a
-big mess table; the seats were puncheon stools; in the lean-to adjoining
-was the kitchen, consisting of a small sheet-iron stove, frying pan, and
-a kettle. And yet, about this primitive bareness Mrs. Crump had
-contrived to throw a fragrance of femininity--a rag of curtain to the
-unglazed window, a faded photograph of the late departed Crump, a
-battered clock decorated by a scarlet cactus flower, an ancient, white,
-mended lace counterpane that covered her bunk. And upon the table, a red
-cloth that was always spick and span. Only a Mrs. Crump would have
-bothered to bring such tag ends of womanly presence into this bare and
-rugged spot in the wilderness.
-
-Contemplating these things, Thady Shea sighed; he sighed at thought of
-Mehitabel Crump, doomed to live in such a place, destitute of all things
-her woman's heart must have craved. He ceased his sighing, suddenly
-aware that his bacon was burned.
-
-Thady Shea knew more about prospecting for tungsten than he did about
-cooking. His coffee was miserable and wretched in spirit. His bacon was
-brown and hard as wood. Trying to get the beans warmed throughout, he
-forgot to stir them until unpleasantly reminded of his remissness.
-However, by the time he had to light the oil lamp in order to see his
-food, he had managed to make a fair meal, in quantity if not in quality.
-
-Afterward, he filled his pipe and sat in the doorway, staring upon the
-empurpled masses of the mountains that were piled into the evening sky,
-and trying to conclude what he must do next.
-
-Mrs. Crump's scribbled mention of her revolver drew a whimsical smile to
-his lips. He could not remember having fired a revolver in all his life,
-except with stage blanks; and he had not the slightest intention of
-learning the art at this time.
-
-He was slightly surprised at his own lack of feeling in regard to the
-men whom he had hurt. His one uneasiness was lest he be arrested--or,
-rather, lest someone try to arrest him. He did not intend to leave
-Number Sixteen until it was safe to do so; until he was certain the
-place was secure. Therefore, if any officers appeared, a fight must
-ensue. Consequences did not matter. Thady Shea was quite willing to face
-any ultimate dispensation of justice so long as he kept Number Sixteen
-intact for Mrs. Crump.
-
-"I must make up for what I've done," he reflected. "Then I can go. I am
-a failure, a sodden wreck upon the shoals of self. Once let my
-reparation be established, and I shall go forth into the world again to
-seek the dregs of fortune with the bent diviner's rod of Thespian
-mimicry."
-
-He broke short off, smiling at his own language.
-
-Shea knew inwardly that the old life was gone from him forever. He
-looked up at the looming mountains and felt a sudden savage joy in
-himself; a joy that frightened him, so primitive and sweeping was it. He
-had fought with men--had conquered them! In a measure he was done with
-all self-recrimination for his weakness and failure. Those were things
-of the past. He would not be weak again! Remorse fell away from him, and
-peace came.
-
-The more he thought about arrest, however, the less probable it seemed.
-Ben Aimes had given him liquor, which was in defiance of law. Shea
-already knew that Mackintavers et. al. were not desirous of getting into
-court unless they had an ironclad hold upon the other fellow; this was
-proven by Mrs. Crump's having "shot up" Dorales with impunity. If the
-proceedings of the past twenty-four hours were given a public airing,
-sundry matters might require explanations which would be uncomfortable
-for Mackintavers.
-
-No, upon that count he was perhaps safe enough; but there would be other
-counts. They would try to get him--how? No matter. Here was another
-reason why he must leave Number Sixteen. He must lose himself from those
-enemies, and he must not involve Mrs. Crump in the mix-up.
-
-Thus deciding, it must be admitted rather vaguely, Thady Shea knocked
-out his pipe and sought his bunk. He was not so ill pleased with
-himself, after all; he would yet save Number Sixteen for Mrs. Crump!
-
-The following morning, for the first time in the weeks since Mrs. Crump
-had picked him up, Thady Shea relaxed in blissful indolence. He had no
-idea of how the vein or veins of strontianite should be worked. There
-was little to do about the cabin. So he climbed the long hogback and
-settled down to smoke and watch the road that wound down from the canon
-toward the lava beds, the road that led into the world.
-
-The day passed idly and uneventful. With its passing, Shea felt more
-assured that his theory was correct; that he was not to be arrested. So
-convinced of this was he, that when, toward sunset, he discerned a dusty
-streak betokening the approach of an automobile, he made certain that
-Mrs. Crump was returning.
-
-Thady Shea sat where he was, resolved to tell her frankly the whole
-story of his disgrace, then to pause for no argument, but to go. He did
-not so misjudge her as to think that she would kick him out; still, he
-felt that he had been false to her trust, and as a part of his penance
-he must go away, until he might be able to come back a man renewed. A
-most indistinct idea, this, but strongly persistent. Besides, he would
-now be a marked man and he must not involve her in his possible danger.
-
-Somewhat to his surprise and uneasiness, as the approaching flivver drew
-up the canon Shea could not recognize the gigantic figure of Mehitabel
-Crump aboard. He saw only three men in the car, and he knew none of
-them. Two in the rear seat were evidently natives; from the dirty and
-heavily laden appearance of the car, Shea deduced that these men had
-come upon no errand of the law. They seemed, rather, to be prospectors
-or campers.
-
-Near the dust-white flivver the car came to a halt. The driver alighted,
-and having previously made out the motionless figure of Thady Shea on
-the hillside above, waved a hand and started upward. The two natives
-climbed out and began to unstrap bundles.
-
-As the visitor came near to him, Shea saw that the man was powerfully
-built, roughly dressed, and possessed striking gray eyes beneath black
-brows and hair.
-
-"Howdy, old-timer!" greeted the new arrival, pausing with outstretched
-hand and a frank smile. "My name's Logan, Tom Logan. We got lost over in
-the lava beds and struck your auto tracks. We're prospecting. You don't
-mind if we camp out here for the night?"
-
-Shea rose and gravely shook hands.
-
-"Not a bit, my friends," he said, then pointed a hundred yards beyond
-the halted car. "You see that big rock down the valley? Instruct your
-comrades to make camp at that point or below it."
-
-Logan gave him a puzzled look. That word "valley" was strange in these
-parts.
-
-"Eh, partner? You're not joking?"
-
-"Sir, the habiliments of jest do not become me," returned Shea, his
-cavernous eyes piercingly steady.
-
-"But this is all free country, isn't it?"
-
-"It is not. No person may intrude upon this property, sir. You are
-welcome to water and food if your needs be such, and I am fain of your
-company. Kindly instruct your knaves to move as I have said."
-
-For a moment Logan met the gravely firm gaze of Shea, then turned and
-lifted his hands to his mouth. He shouted something in the patois, to
-which the two natives waved assent. They turned their car and took it to
-the rock that marked the limit of Mrs. Crump's location in the canon.
-Logan began to roll a cigarette with deft fingers.
-
-"Prospecting hereabouts, I presume?" he inquired. "I didn't get your
-name."
-
-Shea found himself warming to the cultivated accents.
-
-"My name, sir, is Shea."
-
-"W-whew!" A long whistle broke from Logan, whose thin lips parted in a
-smile. "So you're the man! I heard about you at Zacaton City last night.
-They say you cleaned up Aimes and his crowd for giving you a drink, and
-that you threatened to do worse to any man who offered you one again!
-Good thing I didn't do it, eh? Glad to meet you, Shea. I'm set against
-liquor myself. You've sure become famous in this part of the country!"
-
-Thady Shea did not altogether like the swarthy features and the odd
-contrast between steely eyes and coarse black hair, but he did like
-applause. He took the stranger down to the shacks and when Logan set
-about cooking an excellent dinner, Shea was delighted.
-
-Over their meal the two men conversed at length, chiefly on the subject
-of mining. Tom Logan asked no questions about Number Sixteen, but he
-formed the private opinion that Thady Shea was earnest, upright, and a
-simpleton. Two thirds of this diagnosis was correct. The other third was
-destined to make trouble for Tom Logan.
-
-At last, over their third pipe, Logan yawned.
-
-"This here is a queer country," he observed. "You're prospecting for
-gold hereabouts, of course. But d'you know, Shea, the old prospecting
-business is changed? Yes, it is. Nowadays two thirds of the prospectors
-turn up their noses at gold. There are new things in the field, things
-that pay better than gold.
-
-"Platinum, for instance; or tungsten or manganese. Take my own case--I'm
-one of a dozen men sent out by a big New York chemical house. I'm after
-strontium. It comes in two forms, celestite and strontianite. Celestite
-brings about twenty dollars a ton at seaboard; but strontianite, when
-converted into nitrates, brings five hundred. The average old-time
-prospector hasn't the chemical knowledge to find such things as those."
-
-"Maybe," said Shea, reflectively. "But yonder hillock, black against the
-stars, holds in its deep heart veins of mineral; and in those veins, my
-friend, there runs an ichor bearing the self-same name as that you
-seek."
-
-Logan stared over this for a moment. Then:
-
-"By jasper! D'you mean that you've got strontianite here?"
-
-"So they do tell me," averred Shea, modestly. He added with frankness,
-that while he held a third interest in the claim, he knew little of
-minerals.
-
-Logan displayed a cordial and friendly interest, and asked to see
-samples. Shea found one or two and set them forth, telling what he knew
-of the veins. The interest of the visitor grew and waxed enthusiastic.
-Logan examined the samples closely, and then his gray eyes suddenly
-struck up at Shea.
-
-"Look here!" he exclaimed, eagerly. "Would you, provided the veins and
-so forth run as you describe them, accept ten thousand dollars cash for
-your interest in this location?"
-
-To Thady Shea this offer came like a thunderbolt from a clear sky.
-
-"You see," pursued Logan, "a deposit like this would answer my company's
-purposes admirably. We might never find another like it. Ten thousand is
-not a large offer, but it would be a year or more before you'd begin to
-pull money out of the property. Say yes, and I'll examine the location
-to-morrow; if it's what you say, I'll buy your right and interest in the
-property, sign the papers, and before to-morrow night you'll cash my
-check."
-
-Shea rose to his feet. He wanted to get away from the influence of this
-man's personality. He wanted to ask counsel from the friendly stars.
-
-"I'll think it over," he said, unsteadily. "By myself----"
-
-"Sure," Logan agreed, heartily. "I'll make out the papers, eh? We're not
-the kind of men to haggle and fight each other for price."
-
-Thady Shea stalked forth into the darkness, his soul a riot of emotions.
-"Ten thousand dollars!" he murmured, staring up at the blazing stars.
-What a sum to turn over to Mrs. Crump upon leaving! With that sum, Mrs.
-Crump could at once begin development work, independently of Logan's
-company. With that sum, she could set trucks at work hauling ore to the
-railroad. With that sum, she could do--anything!
-
-It never occurred to him that he might keep the money for himself; it
-never occurred to him that he was actually one third owner of the mine,
-and could sell out any time. Never had he thought about money in
-connection with Number Sixteen; he had not mentally placed his
-partnership with Mrs. Crump upon any financial basis. It was because of
-this very simplicity of thought that Mrs. Crump had felt drawn to him.
-It was because of this, too, that she had instructed Coravel Tio to
-record the entire property in the name of Thady Shea, in order to
-camouflage her ownership from the many eyes of Sandy Mackintavers. But
-this Shea did not know.
-
-Thady Shea came to the big gray bowlder that marked the limit of the
-canon location. He stood against it, gazing upward at the stars, lost in
-his dream. The rocky mass shut off from him the flickering fire, built
-by Logan's native companions. Behind, the light in the shack was as
-another star. He was alone. He was alone, and in the valley of decision.
-
-Ten thousand dollars--for Mrs. Crump! Never had Thady Shea visioned so
-much money all in one lump. Nor did he now vision it as his own.
-
-Shea did not know that he was technically and legally the owner of
-Number Sixteen. But the fact was on record, and Tom Logan knew it
-perfectly well. Back in the shack, under the oil lamp, Logan was already
-chuckling over the cleverly drawn papers which would make him the sole
-owner of Number Sixteen--for the comparatively unimportant sum of ten
-thousand dollars! He had persuaded Sandy Mackintavers to gamble that
-sum, to play it as a table stake.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--DORALES GOES TO TOWN
-
-
-Standing by that big bowlder, Shea suddenly awakened from his dream. Out
-of the night on the other side of the bowlder, where the dim fire of the
-two natives had flickered into red embers, floated a slow, musical laugh
-and a few words. The patois was totally unknown to Shea. One of those
-words, however, drifted across the darkness and smote upon his brain
-with jarring force. The laugh, too, was not honest; it was a silky
-laugh, a laugh pregnant with sly meanings and furtive humours. The word
-was "Dorales."
-
-Shea trembled. Dorales! Why did these natives speak of Dorales in this
-way?
-
-Now it came into his mind how Tom Logan had known all about him; how
-Logan had been in Zacaton City the previous night; how Logan had gotten
-lost in the lava beds--even to Shea's innocence a very improbable thing.
-Prospectors for limestone formations do not enter the lava beds.
-
-Latent suspicion crystallized within Shea's brain. Tom Logan was no
-other than Abel Dorales; he was certain of it, he knew it absolutely.
-His eyes were opened, and he sought for no proof.
-
-Dorales had intended to come here, thinking the place deserted. In
-Zacaton City he had learned that Thady Shea was probably at Number
-Sixteen. He had come with cunning intent, he had come with cunning words
-and a false tongue. The offer of ten thousand dollars might or might not
-be genuine; no matter!
-
-To the terribly childlike Shea it seemed that Providence had sent that
-low word and laugh through the night to his ears, to save him from
-temptation. At thought of how, a few minutes ago, he had been on the
-point of swallowing the gilded lure of Dorales, he shivered and wiped
-sweat from his brow.
-
-He turned about and started toward the shacks.
-
-Beside the table where the oil lamp burned, Dorales was sitting and
-writing. He filled out a previously prepared paper which would transfer
-to the Empire State Chemical Company, for the sum of ten thousand
-dollars, all the rights, holdings, and so forth, of Thaddeus Shea in the
-property underfoot. The company in question consisted of Sandy
-Mackintavers.
-
-This paper ready for signatures and witnessing, Dorales produced a blank
-check which bore the almost illegible but widely known signature of A.
-Mackintavers. This Dorales filled out in the name of Thaddeus Shea, and
-in the amount of ten thousand dollars. At this instant he heard a hoarse
-voice whisper his name--"Dorales!"
-
-"Well?" He glanced up sharply, taken by surprise.
-
-Into the lighted doorway stepped Thady Shea, his cavernous eyes blazing.
-For an instant Dorales was too completely astounded to move--astounded
-by the realization of how he had just betrayed himself, astounded by the
-fact that this gaunt fellow was no simpleton after all!
-
-That instant of indecision was fatal. Dorales pushed back his chair and
-came to his feet, one hand sliding to his coat pocket. Too late! The big
-fingers of Thady Shea gripped down on his wrist, and Shea's right hand
-took him by the left shoulder, and he was staring into the blazing black
-eyes of the man he had thought to cheat.
-
-"I am glad to meet you, friend Dorales!" A grim smile sat on Shea's wide
-lips. "The airy tongues that syllable men's names have borne to me your
-rightful cognomen."
-
-Dorales writhed under that iron grip. His left hand drove up to Shea's
-face, landed hard. From his lips broke a shout for aid.
-
-Under the blow, Shea staggered; he knew nothing of fighting. He did
-know, however, that the shout of Dorales would bring the two Mexicans,
-and the knowledge fired him. He merely threw himself bodily and blindly
-at Dorales and carried the latter to the floor.
-
-Luck was kind. Dorales, trying not to fall underneath, writhed aside;
-the impetus of Shea's rush, or rather fall, threw Abel Dorales headlong
-against the wall and knocked him senseless.
-
-After a moment Shea realized that Dorales was knocked out, relaxed his
-iron grip, and rose. His first thought was to turn out the lamp. Then,
-taking from the corner the axe helve, Shea passed outside the shack. He
-discerned two figures running toward him in the starlight, and he strode
-at them.
-
-The two natives were not at all sure of what had been going on. They
-called to Shea, who made no answer but came steadily at them. Hesitant,
-they awaited his approach, again addressing him in English. For
-response, Shea heaved up the axe helve and struck the nearer man
-senseless.
-
-Here was answer enough. The second man whipped up a ready revolver and
-fired hastily; too hastily, for the bullet only whipped Shea's lean
-cheek and passed over the hogback. An instant later the axe helve broke
-the man's arm.
-
-"Be quiet!" commanded Shea; then considered that the groaning wretch
-could not well obey such an order with a smashed arm. "Go down and climb
-into your automobile. Wait there."
-
-"Si, senor." The native turned and went into the night, groaning.
-
-Stooping, Shea picked up the body of the second man, the one whom he had
-stricken senseless. He heaved it up over his shoulder, and returned to
-the shack. There he lighted a match, got the lamp burning again, and
-clumsily tied Abel Dorales hand and foot. He rightly considered that the
-fight was taken out of the two natives.
-
-Dorales evinced no symptoms of recovery. Shea threw some water over the
-face of his native prisoner, and presently the man sat up and stared
-around. At sight of Shea's figure, he shrank back and crossed himself.
-
-"I'll not hurt you," said Shea. "Where's Mackintavers?"
-
-"At the ranch, senor," whimpered the wide-eyed native.
-
-"Is he coming here?"
-
-"No, senor, not until Senor Dorales sends for him."
-
-"That will not be for some time." And Shea smiled. "Do you know where
-Mrs. Crump is?"
-
-"I heard Senor Dorales say that she would not get there until to-morrow
-night, senor."
-
-This explained to Shea why Dorales had planned on cleaning up the sale
-so hastily. It also set his mind at rest about Mackintavers, whose
-arrival he had feared.
-
-There was no doubt whatever that Dorales had figured things closely and
-accurately. Therefore, Mrs. Crump would return upon the following
-afternoon or evening, and in the meantime no other attempt would be made
-upon the property.
-
-With this thought in mind, Thady Shea set about making his departure,
-for he intended to be gone when Mrs. Crump arrived home. If Dorales were
-safely out of the way for a day or two, there would be no danger in
-leaving the mine deserted; and Shea was already possessed of a scheme
-for putting Dorales in cold storage.
-
-Prompt to act upon the swift impulse in his mind, Shea turned over the
-cleverly drawn paper which Dorales had been studying, and upon its back
-wrote a note to Mrs. Crump. The check caught his eye, and he pulled it
-toward him; smiling sardonically, he read and reread that magic slip of
-paper which stood for ten thousand dollars.
-
-He picked up the check and held it for a moment over the oil lamp--then
-he quickly jerked it back.
-
-"No, I'll leave it," he muttered. "She'll know I'm honest, perchance! It
-will be a tongue most eloquent."
-
-That sardonic smile still curving his wide lips, he turned over the
-check and carefully indorsed it; across the back of the paper he wrote
-the same name which he had signed to the note. The whimsical thought
-came to him that, if he presented this paper at a bank, he would get ten
-thousand dollars for Mrs. Crump; he had no intention of so presenting
-it, however--had he not refused the proffered negotiations? He indorsed
-that check merely as a mute message to Mrs. Crump. It quite escaped him
-that, by so indorsing it, he had made it good.
-
-He picked up the epistle which he had written, and read it over,
-frowning:
-
- MADAM: If you do not already know of my unhappy share in your
- misfortunes, you may be easily apprised of it from other lips.
- Farewell! I take my leave to seek an errant soul upon the roads,
- and I shall not return until some testing has surfeited my most
- uneasy spirit.
-
- ---- Thaddeus R. Shea.
-
-He folded up the note, and nodded to himself.
-
-"'Tis not so clear as crystal, yet 'twill serve," he murmured.
-
-Whether Mrs. Crump would fully understand the reasons for his departure
-was immaterial, since Shea himself did not fully understand them; at
-least, he had not figured them into concrete bases. His idea of doing
-penance, of seeking either ultimate strength or ultimate failure again
-in the world, was vague. His secondary motive, that of not drawing his
-benefactress into his own danger from the Mackintavers forces, was
-equally vague, since Mrs. Crump was far more imperilled and far better
-equipped to face such peril than he.
-
-However, it is these vague impulses which often lead men upon the trail
-of fate, and thus it proved with Thady Shea.
-
-He left the note upon the table, and with it the indorsed check and
-legally phrased paper, knowing that these would in some measure make
-matters clear to Mrs. Crump. Then he procured that lady's whiskey and
-poured a generous portion into a tin cup. This time, he deliberately
-smelled of it, and smiled grimly. Mrs. Crump kept on hand a vial of
-laudanum for the sake of recurrent toothache, and from this vial he
-dropped a little of the drug into the whiskey.
-
-"Friend Dorales will sleep to-night, methinks," he said to the staring
-native captive. "Lift up his head!"
-
-The native picked up the head and shoulders of the still senseless
-Dorales. Forcing open the thin, strong lips, Shea poured his mixture
-into the man's mouth. Dorales choked, but swallowed it and began to
-revive.
-
-Shea packed his few belongings, regretfully left the historic axe helve
-for Mrs. Crump, then motioned his prisoner to help him lift Dorales. The
-latter was now swearing luridly but feebly. Together they carried him
-out into the darkness.
-
-Ten minutes later Dorales was snoring in the tonneau of Mackintavers'
-flivver, beside the injured native. By the light of the lamps, the
-uninjured captive was working under the directions of Shea, who had
-realized that upon reaching home Mrs. Crump would be unable to use her
-own car without tires.
-
-So Shea stripped the enemy car, left the tires beside the dust-white
-flivver, and then climbed into his captured vehicle. Having disarmed his
-conquered foemen, he had nothing to fear from them, and headed his bumpy
-equipage toward No Agua. When the canon road warned him that he was
-close to that lone hovel of desolation, he stopped the car and took from
-his pocket Mrs. Crump's flask into which he had emptied the laudanum
-vial. He turned to the two natives, one of whom was groaning and
-shivering, the other merely shivering.
-
-"Friends," he said, sonorously, "drink--or take the consequences."
-
-Knowing from the example of Abel Dorales that the flask contained
-nothing worse than sleep, mingled with liquor, the two natives drank the
-contents with avidity. Shea tossed away the empty flask, envy in his
-eye; he wanted a drink very badly--but he did not want one badly enough
-to take it.
-
-Passing the No Agua store with a rattle and clatter, Shea considered
-swiftly. If he went south to Silver City he might meet Mrs. Crump, and
-he had no desire to meet her at present. If he went west, he would get
-into Arizona. All he knew about Arizona was founded upon the drama of
-that name; the prospect of being scalped by Apaches or otherwise
-mutilated did not invite his soul particularly.
-
-So he turned east to Zacaton City, confident that he could pass through
-that nest of enemies before dawn, and with a vague scheme already in his
-mind. All he wanted was to get clear away, and he mentally blessed that
-vial of laudanum.
-
-It was shortly before dawn when the snoring mechanic in Aimes' garage
-was awakened by a tall, gaunt stranger.
-
-"Friend," said Shea to the yawning mechanic, "in this my vehicle behold
-three villains, scoundrels of the deepest dye! But yesternight they
-tried to jump my claim, wherefore I laid them by the heels, and charge
-you, upon your honest visage, guard them well until the sheriff shall
-appear to claim them."
-
-After some repetition the astonished mechanic gathered that this gaunt
-stranger had brought in three claim jumpers to be held until the sheriff
-arrived. Not having participated in the events of Sunday morning, the
-mechanic was blissfully ignorant of Shea's identity, and Thady had no
-intention of disclosing it. Despite protest, Shea left the crippled
-flivver in the garage, the three snoring occupants being obviously safe
-for another twenty-four hours. Having been carefully dirtied and
-disguised by Dorales himself, the flivver was not recognized immediately
-as that of Sandy Mackintavers.
-
-These things successfully accomplished, Thady Shea faded into the gray
-dawn. For lack of better direction, he took the rough and rugged road
-that led off to Datil and the transcontinental highway into Magdalena.
-He had no illusions about arrest not being probable in _this_ case, and
-he desired to avoid arrest.
-
-Zacaton City was ere long in a roar of half-wrathful enjoyment. The
-three "claim jumpers," who slept like the dead and refused to be
-awakened, were soon known as Abel Dorales, tied hand and foot, and two
-natives from the Mackintavers ranch, one having a broken arm. The garage
-mechanic's description of Thady Shea was accurate and recognizable.
-Details were lacking and could not be obtained until the drugged men
-awakened--but details were largely unnecessary.
-
-Ben Aimes did not telephone to Mackintavers at the ranch; at the time,
-this seemed a rather superfluous detail. The news bearer would have a
-thankless and possibly dangerous job, so Ben Aimes left Mackintavers
-alone, and left Dorales to tell the sorry tale in person. However, Aimes
-swore out warrants charging battery and other things, and sent
-automobiles forth to bring in Thady Shea.
-
-Him they did not find; but they went as far as Magdalena, spreading the
-story as they progressed. Within three days, this immediate section of
-the state was in a roar of laughter; Dorales had a reputation as "the
-worst man to monkey with" in existence. Added to the joke was the story
-of Thady Shea and the axe helve, which travelled fast and far. Neither
-story reached the Mackintavers ranch fast enough, however.
-
-On the afternoon following Thady Shea's desertion of Number Sixteen,
-Mrs. Crump arrived there in a hired car from Silver City. She came
-alone; Gilbert and Lewis were in jail awaiting bail, and she came only
-to make sure that Number Sixteen had escaped the ravishers.
-
-By this time Mrs. Crump knew all about what had happened to Thady Shea
-in Zacaton City, and how the disaster had come upon her, but she had
-made no comments. At the shack, she found the papers which Thady Shea
-had left. She read his note, and muttered something about "damned fool."
-Then she took the check which he had indorsed, returned to her hired
-car, and before midnight was back in Silver City.
-
-At nine the next morning the Silver City bank telephoned Sandy
-Mackintavers over long distance regarding a check for ten thousand
-dollars issued to one Thady Shea, and properly indorsed, which had been
-presented for payment by Mrs. Crump. Promptly and delightedly
-Mackintavers gave it his O. K. Quite naturally, he considered that Abel
-Dorales had carried his mission to success, and that Number Sixteen now
-belonged to the Empire State Chemical Company.
-
-But that evening, when Dorales arrived with new tires on the flivver,
-Mackintavers learned what had really taken place. Then he telephoned to
-Silver City in all haste, only to find that he was out ten thousand big
-round dollars. He had gambled, and he had lost his stake.
-
-Dorales spent a most unpleasant evening. Despite everything, even the
-monetary loss, which rankled to the very bottom of his soul,
-Mackintavers had a deep grain of humour. This was the first time he had
-ever known Abel Dorales to be put absolutely down and out; he gave his
-humour full vent until Dorales, who had no humour whatever, writhed
-under the lash.
-
-"It's your loss most of all," growled Dorales, white lipped and
-venomous.
-
-"Aiblins, yes." Mackintavers fell grave. "We'll leave Mrs. Crump alone
-for the present; never fear, I'll get that money back, with interest!
-I've a scheme in the back of my head that will work on her a bit later.
-Are ye going to hide out till the laughing's done with?"
-
-"Hide--hell!" snarled Dorales, viciously. "The first man that laughs to
-my face, except you, gets something to remember. And," he added, slowly,
-"I'm not so sure about excepting you, Sandy."
-
-"There, there, cannot ye take a joke?" returned Mackintavers, hastily.
-"I've suffered the most, but leave Mrs. Crump be for the present. I want
-to get the matter o' those stone idols settled, and under cover o' the
-noise it will make when I become a scientist, then we'll take over this
-strontianite mine.
-
-"I want ye to go up to Santa Fe, and get a big sack o' silver dollars.
-I've me eye on two or three o' them Cochiti redskins and I think ye can
-bribe 'em. If----"
-
-"What about this man Shea?" snapped Dorales. "I'm going to get him if it
-takes me ten years! I'm going to write my name in his hide with a
-knife!"
-
-"Ye shall; he'll be here when ye get back from Santa Fe," soothed
-Mackintavers. "He can't hide out long, Abel. I'll have him held for ye."
-
-"You'd better," said the other, sourly. "I don't like wasting time on
-these idols, anyway. I never knew any good to come of bothering the
-Indian gods, Sandy."
-
-Mackintavers only laughed, although not without a frown to follow the
-laugh. He was wondering if the presence of those gods in his house had
-brought him the loss of ten thousand dollars. He was the last man on
-earth to let superstition alter his plans; yet he was Scottish, and he
-could not help wondering--just a little.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--THE WICKER DEMIJOHN
-
-
-As has been related, Thady Shea somewhat vaguely set out upon the way to
-Magdalena, after disposing of his shoeless flivver and its snoring load.
-
-The dawn came up and found him plodding onward. An hour later he was
-hailed from the roadside by a venerable ancient having one very blue eye
-and a long white beard. This worthy proved to be a tramp printer, who
-intended to get work at Magdalena when his money gave out.
-
-For the present, however, the ancient had no intention of working; so he
-proposed a road partnership, stating that he liked Shea's looks. Thady
-Shea wanted to sleep, which "Dad" Griffith, as the ancient was named,
-deemed a highly laudable ambition.
-
-Accordingly, a little while afterward, Shea found himself snugly
-ensconced in a camp well back from the road and well hidden in a clump
-of trees. Before sleeping, he explored his pockets and found some money,
-left from the sum given him by Mrs. Crump for his Zacaton City
-purchases.
-
-"Take it, friend," he said, drowsily, thrusting the money upon the
-ancient. "Take it, and add it to thy scanty store, that so we may have
-wherewithal to live."
-
-"You bet I will, partner," and Dad Griffith seized it. "It'll keep us
-quite a spell, with what I got. No sense workin', I says, when they's no
-need. I figger on gettin' a job to Magdalena when I got to work. I had a
-job there two year ago. These here goshly-gorful linotypes is puttin'
-honest printers out o' business. Why, I seen th' day----"
-
-In the midst of a dissertation upon the elegancies of hand-set type and
-the blasted frightfulness of an existence surrounded by linotype
-machines, Shea stretched out and fell asleep. The ancient droned along,
-regardless. When Shea wakened toward sunset, old Griffith was still
-discoursing upon the same topic.
-
-Over a tiny smokeless fire Griffith conjured biscuits, coffee, and
-beans, and the two men ate. Thady Shea probed his companion's mind for
-future plans, and found only a vague emptiness; the ancient liked to
-spend each night in a different spot, that was all. Thady Shea proposed,
-with pursuit in mind, that it might be better to camp during the day and
-to tramp at night.
-
-At this suggestion the ancient winked his one intensely blue eye. He
-winked with the uncanny gusto of an old man, with the horrible
-craftiness of an old man. His one eye winked, and the ancient was
-transformed. He became an emblem of doddering truancy, a living symbol
-of the soul which desires ever to flee responsibilities and to shirk the
-onus of labour inherited from Father Adam.
-
-"Suits me, pardner. I used to do that over in Missouri, one time, 'count
-of a hawg bein' missed from a pen. Anyhow, these nights is too cold to
-sleep 'thout blankets, which mine ain't extra good.
-
-"Still, a spry young feller like you, Thady, ought to have more get up
-an' get to him than to be gettin' in a mess o' trouble. Take a
-goshly-gorful old ranger like me, and it's all right; I'm a sinful man,
-an' proud of it. But you, now--you'd ought to be aimin' for something. I
-know, I do! That's the trouble with folks; ain't got no aim ahead. But
-no use talkin'. You got your reasons, I reckon."
-
-Thady Shea sat and stared into the fire. He did not take the hint to
-retail his story. He was suddenly thinking.
-
-Memory worked within him. "It ain't lack of ambition that makes folks
-mis'able and unsatisfied; it's lack o' purpose!" Mrs. Crump had said
-those words, and they had been burned into Shea's brain. Purpose,
-indeed! What purpose now lay ahead, except the vague desire to
-rehabilitate himself? To become a vagrant with this tramp printer--why,
-this would be to shake off all the shackles of purpose! Yet, what else
-was there to do? What could be done, except to evade the law which by
-this time must be seeking him?
-
-His head drooped. Was some higher Power extending its hand against him,
-closing every avenue of escape from his old drifting existence, forcing
-him back into vagrancy? His eyes widened under the thought. The thought
-staggered him. Then, slowly, his mouth tightened, his wide lips drew
-firmly clenched. A flush of fever darkened his high cheekbones.
-
-Very well; he would go on fighting! For once the superstitious nature of
-the man was borne down by his inward anger, was borne down by the
-impotent feeling that he was a pawn in Destiny's game; he rebelled
-against it. He rebelled against everything.
-
-"By heaven, I'll _make_ a purpose!" he mentally vowed. "I'll look for
-one--find one--fight for one!"
-
-Even as the words rose in him, he choked down a vague feeling that they
-were false and erroneous, a feeling that this purpose could not be
-sought, but must seek him out, must come to him of itself. Yet he choked
-down the feeling, repulsed it. He reiterated his mental vow, fiercely
-insistent upon it.
-
-All this while the ancient had been droning something about the beauties
-of the old flat-bed presses, and the goshly-gorfulness of machine
-printing. Now Shea became aware of a more personal note in the droning.
-
-"If I was you," and the ancient chuckled in his dirty white beard,
-transfixing Thady Shea with his one bright-blue eye, "if I was you, I'd
-grow whiskers!
-
-"They's places and places I can't never go no more without these here
-whiskers. Yes, they is! I'm a sinful man an' proud of it; mebbe ye think
-I'm old, but I can show you young fellers a thing or two, he, he! Grow
-whiskers, Thady. You can take 'em with ye to go a-sinning, and then go
-back over the same trail without 'em, and nobody the wiser!"
-
-Shea's gorge rose. He suddenly saw Dad Griffith as the latter really
-was--a foul old man, a worthless wastrel of humanity, seemingly dead to
-all higher things. He grew afraid for himself; he was vaguely alarmed,
-as though he had touched some slimy, crawling thing in the darkness. He
-came to his feet with an impellent desire to crush this unholy man like
-a toad, to flee into the night, to lie under the stars and seek
-clearance for his troubles. However, he did none of these things. Shea
-reached for his pipe, filled it, lighted it with an ember from the fire.
-Here he got a new sensation--the tang and sweetness of an ember-lighted
-pipe!
-
-"Let's be moving," said Thady Shea, crisply. "It's a fine night."
-
-An hour later they were plodding along, sharing the load of provisions.
-Thady Shea was quite aware that something was wrong with him in the
-body, but he felt no definite pain. It was an errant "something" which
-he could not place, and which he was too uplifted in spirit to heed.
-
-The night wore on. With every step, Thady Shea was learning from the
-lore of Dad Griffith. He was learning the worldly wise lore of the
-roads--to walk with straight feet, to carry his body uphill on bended
-knees, to take the high side of a wet trail. The ancient talked
-continually, eternally. The ancient seemed to like Thady Shea immensely.
-
-Some time after midnight they left the road by a faint and unknown
-trail, followed it until they were weary, and then camped. Griffith had
-a pair of tattered blankets. Thady Shea refused to share them; he slept
-in his clothes. When he wakened at sunrise his head was heavy with
-fever. A mile distant the ancient descried a creek, and they moved over
-to it for the day. Thady Shea felt peculiar, and detailed his symptoms,
-whereupon the ancient produced a tattered little case of leather. He
-opened the case and disclosed three vials.
-
-"All the med'cine a man needs, I claim," he declared. "Middle one's
-quinine; right's physic; left's physic again, only more so. Take your
-choice, one or all!"
-
-"Give me the more so," said Thady, who felt miserable in the extreme.
-
-The ancient began to look alarmed. His one intensely blue eye shone with
-an uneasy light. His continual talk became querulous. After a time he
-forced Thady Shea to continue their progress; the trail, said he, must
-lead them to a ranch. Groaning, Shea protested; but presently he yielded
-to the urgings of Griffith. The two men followed the trail.
-
-There was a man named Fred Ross, who had homesteaded a canon in the
-hills beyond the Datils. Thus far unmarried, although he had his hopes,
-he lived alone; a hard, rough man, kindly at heart, redly wrinkled of
-face, and keenly alert of eye, he shot beaver and turkey when the forest
-rangers were not around, and fared well. Indeed, he was wont to say that
-he was the last man in the United States to know the taste of that
-succulent morsel, a beaver's tail.
-
-Fred Ross was plowing on the flat behind his shack when he observed the
-approach of a tattered old man who moved in trembling haste. Having no
-liking for tramps, Ross set his hands on his hips and met the visitor
-with a vigilant eye.
-
-"Well?" he snapped. "Who in time are _you_?"
-
-"Don't matter 'bout me, mister," said the other, agitatedly pawing a
-long and dirty white beard. "A friend o' mine is down the canon a ways,
-plumb petered out. He was took sick last night--I reckon he's got a
-touch o' fever. D'you s'pose you could let him lay somewheres--mebbe in
-that cowshed yonder?"
-
-"You be damned, you old fool," said Ross, harshly. "I ain't got no room
-for sick men in my shed--which ain't no cowshed, neither. Where is he?"
-
-"He--he give out by them trees," faltered Dad Griffith, backing away. "I
-got a little money, mister----"
-
-"You be blistered, you an' your money!" roared Ross. "I don't want no
-tramps around here, savvy? I got trouble of my own. Let's have a look at
-this friend o' yours--if you-all are tryin' any skin game on _me_, look
-out!"
-
-He strode forward, and Dad Griffith fluttered away. After him strode
-Ross. Ten minutes later they came to the gaunt figure of Thady Shea
-lying beneath some scrub oaks and muttering faintly. Ross leaned over
-him then straightened up and faced the ancient.
-
-"You--on your way!" he said, roughly, "I'll take care o' this feller,
-but I don't aim to keep two of ye."
-
-"Devil take ye, I don't want none of ye!" quavered Griffith in querulous
-anger. "I'm goin' to Magdalena to get me a job; you tell him so when he
-can travel, ye goshly-gorful old ranch hand!"
-
-Disdaining a response, Ross stooped; after some effort, he got Thady
-Shea in the "fireman's grip" and staggered erect, the delirious man
-still muttering. He turned and walked toward his shack, striding heavily
-under the burden. Dad Griffith hesitated, then wagged his beard--he did
-not deem it wise to follow.
-
-"Hey!" he lifted his voice after the departing rancher. "You be good to
-him, hear me? Mind my words, if ye ain't good to him I'll--I'll come
-back and burn ye out some night!"
-
-Ross paid no heed but strode on out of sight. Dad Griffith shook his
-fist in senile rage, then slowly, and with a sigh, turned about and
-started in the opposite direction.
-
-The shack which Ross had built, anticipating matrimony, was a two-room
-affair with a lean-to kitchen. Grunting beneath his load, Ross stooped
-into the house and deposited Thady Shea upon an iron bed.
-
-Ross came erect, panting, and stared down at Shea's fever-flushed
-features. He scratched his head, as though in perplexity, and his eyes
-were suddenly very kindly.
-
-"Poor devil!" he said, being a man who talked much to himself. "Poor
-devil! Got a real good face, too. What in time can I do? The car's broke
-down and there's no doctor closer'n Magdalena anyhow. Well, I never
-knowed whiskey to fail curin' any trouble, and I guess a bit o' quinine
-will help out. Thank the Lord I got whiskey to burn!"
-
-He went to a cupboard in the corner and drew forth a wicker demijohn, a
-new demijohn, a demijohn that hung heavy in his hand. Upon the chair
-beside the bed he put a big crockery cup, thick and heavy. He poured
-whiskey into it; he filled it nearly to the brim with raw red liquor; a
-ray of sunlight fell upon the cup and made it seem filled with rich thin
-blood.
-
-"Just for a starter," murmured Ross. "Now the quinine."
-
-The hours passed, and darkness fell. Ross went out to stable and bed
-down his team. He came back, ate, resumed his vigil.
-
-Ross was starkly amazed by his muttering patient. Cup upon cup of
-whiskey and quinine he poured down the gaunt man's throat; the man drank
-it like water, avidly, without visible effect. He seemed to soak up the
-raw red liquid as a sponge soaks up water. It seeped down his throat and
-was gone.
-
-"My Lord!" exclaimed Ross at last, awed despite himself. "The man ain't
-human!"
-
-Thady Shea was human; although invisible, the effect was there. Through
-the hours of darkness his sonorous voice rose and filled the shack. He
-spoke of things past the understanding of the watching Ross. He used
-strange names--names like Ophelia or Rosalind or Desdemona; at times
-passion shook his voice, a fury of resonant passion; at times his words
-trembled with grief, his rolling words quavered and surged with a
-vehemently agonized utterance, until the listening Ross felt a vague
-ache wrenched into his own throat.
-
-About midnight, Thady Shea fell asleep. It was a deep, full slumber, a
-slumber of stertorous breathing, a sound and absolute slumber, a drunken
-slumber. Thady Shea lay motionless except for his deeply heaving chest.
-His hands, face, and body were glistening wet, were wet with
-perspiration that streamed from him, were wet with salty sweat oozing
-from his fever-baked flesh. Fred Ross turned out the lamp and climbed
-into a bunk in the corner.
-
-"That ends it," he said, drowsily. "He'll sweat out the fever and sleep
-off the whiskey, and wake up cured. Can't beat whiskey! Cures
-everything!"
-
-Upon the following morning Ross returned from his chores to find Thady
-Shea still lustily snoring, the fever gone. He got breakfast and
-departed to his work, leaving the coffee ready to hand. From time to
-time he came in from the nearer end of the flat to inspect his patient.
-He was a big man, a rough-tongued man, a deep-hearted man.
-
-Thady Shea wakened to an uncomfortable sensation. He dimly and vaguely
-recognized the sensation; he was bewildered and frightened by it. He had
-felt that uncomfortable sensation many times in his life, always on the
-morning after a night spent with the jorum.
-
-He tried to sit up, and succeeded, only to close his eyes before a
-blinding wave of pain. A headache? It went with the other symptoms, of
-course. He had no remembrance of drinking. Indeed, he had a fierce
-remembrance of having meant never to drink again. Where was he and how
-had he come here? His last memory was of trees, and the ancient helping
-him as he sank down. He looked around; the strange room bewildered him.
-
-He was maddeningly conscious that his body, his soul, his whole being,
-was a soaked and impregnated thing, soaked and impregnated with whiskey.
-His body cried out for more whiskey, his soul writhed within him for
-more whiskey. His haggard gaze fell upon a cup, on a chair at his
-bedside. He reached out and picked up the cup. It was half full of
-bitter whiskey, and a bottle of powdered quinine explained the
-bitterness.
-
-Even then, Shea hesitated. He hesitated, but he could not resist. No
-living man could have resisted the fearful outcry of body and soul upon
-such an awakening. It was no mere craving. It was a tumultuous, riotous,
-lawless eagerness--a fierceness for whiskey, an awful tormenting passion
-for whiskey such as he had never before known. That was because of the
-flood that had seeped and soaked through his whole being. The raw red
-liquor like thin blood had permeated all his body tissues and nerves, as
-water permeates the sun-dried earth, leaving it not the hard white earth
-but the brown soft mud. The earth dries again and cracks open, calling
-avidly for more water. So with Thady Shea's body and soul.
-
-He drank gulpingly, until the cup was empty. He sat down the cup; it was
-a heavy cup of thick crockery. His nostrils quivered to the smell of
-coffee. He began to take in his surroundings, to realize them, to
-appraise them. He began to understand that he must have been drunk.
-Drunk! Who was responsible?
-
-A shadow darkened the morning sunlight in the doorway. There on the
-threshold, a black blotch against the brightness outside, stood Fred
-Ross, staring at the man who sat on the edge of the bed and stared back
-at him. Shea saw only a man--the man responsible.
-
-"Did you----" He paused, licked his lips, and continued thickly. "Did
-you give me whiskey? Did you?"
-
-Ross stepped into the room.
-
-"Yes, I did," he began, roughly. He did not finish.
-
-Something shot from the bedside, something large and thick, something
-white and heavy, that left the hand of Thady Shea like a bullet. It was
-the thick, heavy crockery cup. Shea flung it blindly. It struck Ross
-over the ear with a "_whick!_"
-
-Fred Ross looked vaguely surprised. His knees appeared to give way
-beneath him. He caught at the table and seemed to swing himself forward,
-half around. He fell, and lay without moving. The heavy white crockery
-cup, unhurt by the impact, rolled in the doorway.
-
-Relaxing on the edge of the bed, Thady Shea gave no more attention to
-Fred Ross, but lowered his face in his two hands. They were big, strong
-hands; they clutched into his hair and skin until their knuckles stood
-out white. Shea sat motionless, thus, as though he were trying to
-produce some exterior which would quell the anguish within him.
-
-His voice rang with a sonorous bitterness as he spoke aloud. The
-recumbent Ross moved, then sat up with a lithe, agile motion; but Thady
-Shea did not stir. He was lost in the words that seemed wrung from his
-very soul.
-
-"I've tried, I've tried! How have I been weak, how have I failed? Yet I
-have failed. I've been drunk. I always fail."
-
-His speech was heavy, slow, words coming tenuously to his numbed brain.
-He did not hear the slight sound made by Ross in rising erect, in
-stepping to the wall. He did not see Ross at all, nor the hand of Ross
-that plucked a revolver from a holster suspended on the wall. He spoke
-again, the words coming with more coherence.
-
-"Always an unseen hand blocks me. Is it your doing, oh, God? Before, it
-was my own fault, for I was weak. This time it was not my fault; I knew
-nothing about it. God, are You trying to turn me back into the old
-shiftless life, into the old vagabond, aimless existence? God, are You
-trying to make me a drunkard again? Are You trying to rob me of all
-purpose?"
-
-He paused. The breath came from his lungs; it was a deep and uneven
-breath, a sobbing breath, the breath of one who is fast in the grip of
-terrible emotion. At him stood and stared Ross. Inch by inch the
-revolver lowered. The keen, alert, battling eyes of the rancher were
-filled with perplexity, with comprehension, with a strange gentleness.
-Again Shea spoke, his face still in his hands:
-
-"I've done my best, God knows! I've put whiskey out of my life, stifled
-the craving for it, forgotten about it. And now--now! Why is it that
-even this one purpose is denied me? Is there no help--is there no help?
-Is there no help for----"
-
-His fingers clenched upon his iron-gray hair, swept through it. His head
-came up. His blazing black eyes stared into the gaze of Ross. For half a
-moment the two men looked at each other, motionless.
-
-Then, abruptly, Ross pushed home the revolver into its holster.
-
-"Pardner," he said, casually, "let's have a cup o' coffee."
-
-He went to the stove in the kitchen, raked up charred black brands,
-opened the draft, and put the coffeepot over the kindling embers. He set
-two thick crockery cups upon the boards of the table. He got out spoons
-and sugar and "canned cow." Then he turned to the other room and with a
-jerk of the head invited his guest.
-
-Thady Shea rose, very unsteadily, and came.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--MRS. CRUMP SAYS SOMETHING
-
-
-Over the rough table Fred Ross delivered himself.
-
-"Something about you I like, Thady Shea," he said, level-eyed. "The old
-man who fetched you here told me your name. Don't know anything more
-about you. Didn't know whiskey was bad for you; anyway, it cured the
-fever. First I knew about you was in yonder, when you talked. Damn good
-thing for you, pardner! Savvy? Yes.
-
-"Tell you somethin'. I used to be range rider--a puncher, savvy? Forty a
-month. No future. Never mind the details, but it come to me that if I
-didn't get somethin' to work for, I might's well quit livin'. So I took
-up this here quarter section and started in. It cost me dear, I'm
-tellin' you!
-
-"I sweat blood over every inch o' this here land. Folks said it was no
-good. I put up this shack, put it up right. I set in to raise crops. I
-put my body into it. I put my heart into it. I put my livin' eternal
-soul into it--and by the Lord I'm goin' to win! I had somethin' to work
-for, that's all."
-
-Ross leaned back. The flame died from his eyes. He surveyed Thady Shea
-critically, appraisingly, generously.
-
-"When I heard what you said, in yonder," he pursued, "I seen all of a
-sudden that you were a man like me. Savvy? Yes. I don't blame you, now,
-for lamming me over the ear like you done. My Lord! Ain't I talked to
-God like you done in there? Ain't things come up to rip the very guts
-out o' my soul? Well, it's like that with all folks, I guess, only it
-comes different. Savvy? Yes. I gave you whiskey, and I was a damn fool.
-That's all."
-
-Ross rose and began to clatter dishes into the dishpan. Thady Shea rose
-and went to the doorway. He stood there, looking up the east-running
-canon toward the morning sun. He did not see the half-plowed flat, he
-did not see the horses and plow; he did not see the pinon trees and the
-trickle of water. Tears were in his eyes. For one blazing moment he had
-seen into the soul of Fred Ross, the iron soul, the gentle soul, the
-brave soul of Fred Ross.
-
-Suddenly he turned about, feeling upon his shoulder the hand of the
-other man.
-
-"Shea, you asked a while ago if there wasn't no help. Well, maybe there
-is--if you want it. Do you?"
-
-"Yes," said Thady Shea, huskily.
-
-Upon the following morning he started in to work; he was a bit weak, but
-he insisted upon working. He dared not do without working. He began to
-clear another flat farther up the canon, ridding it of brush and scrub
-oak and pinons.
-
-As he worked, Thady Shea thought much of that wicker demijohn, back in
-the cupboard of the shack. Once, when he came in to luncheon ahead of
-Ross, he opened the cupboard. He looked at the clean wicker demijohn,
-the new demijohn, the demijohn which hung so heavily and lovingly to the
-hand; as he looked, a sunbeam struck the glass behind the woven wicker
-and made it seem filled with rich thin blood. Thady Shea shivered--and
-shut the door. But he could not shut that demijohn from his thoughts.
-
-He prayed, every hour he worked, that Ross would hide away that
-demijohn. He said nothing to Ross about it; he felt vaguely ashamed to
-let Ross know of his struggles with himself. He shrank from revealing
-how he was tempted.
-
-Days passed. Twice, now, Thady Shea had come in from work merely to open
-that door and look at the demijohn. The first time, he had forced
-himself to be content with the look. The second time he hefted it; then
-he reached for the cork, trembling--but just then the step of Ross
-approached, and Shea replaced the demijohn. He knew that he had been
-saturated with liquor, that in his involuntary carouse his body had
-seeped up the whiskey as the thirsty earth seeps up water. The craving
-was there, the wicked craving of the cracked earth for water.
-
-Terrible were the first few nights. Despite weariness, sleep would not
-come. On tiptoe Thady Shea would sneak out of the shack, out into the
-bitter cold night, out under the white, cold stars. He would stride up
-and down the cold earth until the chill ate into his bones; then,
-shivering, he would tiptoe back and roll up in his blankets, thinking
-how a drink would warm him.
-
-As the days passed, he worked harder. He slaved until, at darkness, he
-would nod over his pipe. He did not shave, remembering the words of the
-ancient, and his gaunt face became filled and strengthened by an
-iron-gray beard.
-
-All the while he cursed his aimlessness, his lack of purpose. He was
-looking out, beyond the present; he was looking over the horizon. He was
-thinking of Mrs. Crump. He prayed under a sweat-soaked brow that some
-great flaming purpose would come into his life. The word "purpose" had
-become to him a creed, a mania.
-
-He did not realize, except very dimly, that for him life had already
-centred upon one immediate and tremendous purpose: to avoid, to shrink
-from, that clean wicker demijohn in the corner cupboard! Unawares, the
-purpose had come to him.
-
-And then, upon a day, Fred Ross patched the broken flivver and went to
-Datil for grub. Thady Shea was left alone, alone with the ranch, alone
-with the pinon trees and the horses, alone with the shack, alone with
-the corner cupboard and the clean wicker demijohn. Fred Ross did not
-seem to perceive any danger in leaving Shea thus alone.
-
-Fred Ross reached the store at Datil about noon, after a long pull.
-Datil lay on the highway, where lordly Packards and lowly Fords wended
-east and west, between California and St Louis. Datil was nothing more
-than a frame store-hotel-post office. In the rear of the long building
-were sheds, relics of the days when the far ranchers came in on
-horseback, of the days when burros and bearded prospectors and
-unrestricted Indians roused talk of great and blood-stirring events.
-
-A mixed company lunched that day in the long dining room. Ross was too
-late for the first table, and he stood waiting in the adjoining room,
-smoking by the huge cobbled fireplace, talking with other men who had
-drifted along too late for the first serving.
-
-The talk struck upon Thady Shea and the huge joke of which Abel Dorales
-had been the victim. Ross listened and said nothing, as was his wont. He
-heard that Thady Shea had skipped the country; had, at any rate, not
-been found--must have gone over the Arizona line.
-
-"Too bad," commented a sturdy rancher from Quemado way. "He must ha'
-been a right strapping guy, eh? And what he done down to Zacaton, when
-Ben Aimes give him a drink--say, ain't ye heard 'bout that? It's sure
-rich!"
-
-The speaker recounted, with many added elaborations and details, the
-story of Thady Shea and his axe helve. Fred Ross listened in silence.
-Fred Ross thought of that heavy white crockery cup; reflectively, he
-rubbed his head above his ear, and grinned to himself. He was not the
-only one who had suffered for giving Thady Shea a drink, then!
-
-When the talk turned upon reprisals, Fred Ross listened with more
-attention. Charges had been sworn out against Shea, it appeared; they
-had been sworn out by that fool Aimes, but had later been withdrawn.
-Abel Dorales had seen to it that they had been withdrawn. Abel Dorales
-had come to Magdalena; there he had half killed three drunken miners who
-had ventured to taunt him, and for the same reason he had taken a
-blacksnake to a sheepman. Abel Dorales had given out that he, and he
-alone, intended to deal with Thady Shea whenever the latter was found.
-It was a personal matter, outside the law. This attitude met with
-general approval.
-
-"Not so bad!" reflected Fred Ross, as he passed in to his meal. "Not so
-bad! The law ain't after him, anyhow. Now, if he's let that demijohn
-alone to-day, I reckon he's all right. Pretty tough on him, maybe, to
-leave him alone, but----"
-
-The ins and outs of the business transaction attempted by Dorales, the
-transaction concerning Number Sixteen, had, of course, not been made
-public. But the general gist of the matter was an open secret. The joke
-on Dorales was huge, and was immensely appreciated.
-
-The meal over, Ross went out to his car in order to get his tobacco. He
-idly observed that alongside his own flivver had been run another, a
-dust-white flivver with new tires. He paid no attention to it until he
-was drawn by the sound of a voice which he instantly recognized. He
-stood quiet, listening, looking toward the two figures on the far side
-of the dust-white flivver; they did not see him at all.
-
-"No'm," said the voice which Ross had recognized. "No'm, I couldn't get
-no work to Magdalena. Things is in a goshly-gorful state in the printing
-business! I done walked here, aiming to make for Saint Johns, over the
-Arizony line. Seein's you're headed that way, ma'am, if ye could give me
-a lift----"
-
-"Walked here, did ye?" cut in a voice strange to Ross. "Had any
-vittles?"
-
-"Not to speak of, ma'am. I'm busted."
-
-"Well, you trot right in alongside o' me. Hurry up, now--ain't got much
-time to waste. My land, of all the fool men--and at your age! Hurry up."
-
-The two figures departed toward the stirrup-high open flooring that
-formed a porch the length of the frame building. One was the figure of
-Dad Griffith. The other was the figure of a very large woman, harsh of
-features; she was clad in ragged but neat khaki, and beneath her chin
-were tied the strings of an old black bonnet. Against her wrinkled
-features glowed two bright-blue eyes with the brilliancy of living
-jewels, giving the lie to their surrounding tokens of age. She was
-unknown to Fred Ross.
-
-Filling his pipe, the homesteader sought out the store, and, with
-inevitable delays, set to work making his purchases. This was an
-occupation demanding ceremony. Other men were here on the same errand,
-and there was gossip of crops, land, and war to be swapped. This was the
-forum of the countryside, the agora of the scattered ranches.
-
-Thus it happened that by the time Ross went to his car with an armload
-of supplies old Dad Griffith had finished his meal and was lounging on
-the steps of the stirrup-high porch. He started up at sight of Ross, who
-paid no attention to him, and followed the rancher out to the car.
-
-"Hey!" he exclaimed, eagerly. "Where's that there partner of mine?"
-
-Ross dumped his purchases into the car and turned. He desired only to be
-rid of this parasite, to be rid of him for good and all--and to rid
-Thady Shea of him.
-
-"He's where you left him, old-timer--and where you're not wanted."
-
-"Is--is he all right?"
-
-"Sure. I fed him whiskey until he got well. He's there now with a
-demijohn. I never seen a man able to swallow more red licker than that
-partner of yours! But you needn't go showing your nose around there,
-savvy? He's workin' for me and you're not wanted."
-
-"You go to hell!" spluttered the wrathful ancient. "You goshly-gorful
-old ranch hand! That's what you are!"
-
-Ross laughed, swung about to his flivver, and cranked up. He turned the
-car and vanished amid a trail of dust, leaving the ancient to sputter
-senile threats and curses. He accounted himself well rid of that old
-vagabond, in which he was quite right.
-
-It was late in the afternoon when Ross got home; the trail to his canon
-from the county road was wretchedly rough. As he drove, he began to
-blame himself for having left Thady Shea all alone, throughout the day
-from sunrise to sunset, with that wicker demijohn. He began to think
-that he had stacked the cards too heavily. He began to think that his
-desire to test Thady Shea had been a mite too strong.
-
-He drove up to the shed, seeing no sign of his guest. The house, too,
-was deserted. Ross went straight to the corner cupboard and jerked open
-the door. The clean wicker demijohn was gone. It was not in the house.
-
-"Hell's bells!" quoth Ross, savagely.
-
-He strode outside and scanned the vicinity. Nothing was in sight. The
-team was gone. He walked up the canon, seeing that the lower flat was
-empty of life. At the turn he came in sight of the upper flat, and
-paused.
-
-The team was there; Thady Shea had been plowing. Thady Shea was there,
-too, but he was not plowing. He was standing at one corner of the flat
-beside a pile of brush. He was lifting something in his hand. It was the
-wicker demijohn. He set it on his arm and laid the mouth to his lips.
-Ross could see him drink, gulpingly. He drank long, avidly, until Ross
-swore in blank amazement that a man could drink thus; he drank as the
-sun-cracked earth drinks water.
-
-Ross strode forward. Thady Shea turned to meet him.
-
-"Hello, Ross! I was just knocking off work for the day. Drink?"
-
-Ross took the demijohn. He looked at Thady Shea with hard, bitter cold
-eyes. His eyes softened as he remembered his misgivings. After all, was
-it not his own fault? He lifted the demijohn on his arm and laid the
-mouth to his lips.
-
-"Hell!" He spluttered in stark surprise. He stared at the demijohn,
-stared at the smiling Thady Shea. "Hell! I thought----"
-
-Thady Shea laughed. It was a deep, sonorous laugh.
-
-"I couldn't stand it, Ross," he said. "That cursed jug was too much for
-me. So I emptied out the whiskey and filled it with water, and went to
-work. I'm sorry about the whiskey--I'll pay you back."
-
-"Damn the whiskey!" roared Fred Ross, delightedly, and wiped his lips.
-"Come on back to the shack and let's eat!"
-
-For the first time in long days, the two men talked over their meal.
-They talked of the world outside, talked of ranch gossip, talked of the
-war and the government and the high price of wool. Ross meant to run
-some sheep up at the head of the canon, and discoursed on the project at
-length. Not until their pipes were going, and the red afterglow was
-shrouding the fading day, did he mention what he had learned at Datil.
-
-"Heard something over to the hotel," he mentioned, casually. "They were
-talking about you. It appears that Abel Dorales has called off the
-sheriff and withdrawn all charges agin' you. He's lookin' for you his
-own self, I hear. Makin' it a personal matter."
-
-Thady Shea drew a deep breath. Nothing to fear from the law, then! The
-more personal menace of Abel Dorales he did not consider at all.
-
-"I'll tell you what happened--if you don't mind," he said, diffidently.
-It was the first time, since that day when he had felled Ross with the
-cup, that personalities had been touched upon between them.
-
-He told his story. Ross made no comment whatever; in that story he
-perceived that Thady Shea was a queer, impulsive child, a man whose fear
-and reason were overruled by his impulses, a man whose primitive soul
-arose in a lonely grandeur of sincerity, of absolute and wonderful
-sincerity. Ross felt awed, as a man feels awed when confronted by the
-mystery of a child's soul.
-
-The name of Mehitabel Crump meant nothing to the rancher; he had perhaps
-heard of her in past years, but had forgotten her name. When Thady Shea
-fell silent, Ross knocked the dottle from his pipe and filled it anew.
-
-"You watch out for Dorales," he said. "I know him. He's bad med'cine."
-
-"So everyone says," returned Shea, gravely serious. "I hadn't found it
-so."
-
-Ross seemed to discern humour in this, and chuckled. "Think ye'll stay
-here, Shea? Glad to have ye."
-
-"Unless something turns up--yes. I--well, I haven't found that purpose
-we spoke about once. I'm trying hard. I'm trying to find it, to make it
-come, to figure out what I must do. Yet I seem all helpless,
-bewildered----"
-
-"I never heard of any one puttin' a rush label on Providence, not with
-any success to mention," said Ross, dryly. "You're lookin' so hard for
-something that you can't find it. You're too damn serious. About sixty,
-ain't ye? Well, at sixty you're goin' through what ye should ha' gone
-through at thirty or less. Limber up your joints an' take it easier,
-pardner. Wait for what turns up, an' remember God ain't dealing from a
-cold deck."
-
-Here was wisdom, and Thady Shea tried to accept it.
-
-Upon the following afternoon Thady Shea was laboriously plowing the
-upper flat. Down at the shack, Fred Ross was cleaning house. He was
-cleaning house in his own simple and thorough fashion. He took
-everything outside in the sun. Then he set to work with a bucket of suds
-and a broom, and scrubbed the walls, floor, and ceiling; he was figuring
-on papering the walls a little later. The result of this cleaning was
-damp but satisfactory.
-
-Having returned most of his belongings to their proper places, Ross was
-engaged in fitting together the iron bed. He heard the grinding roar of
-a car coming up the canon trail in low gear, and went to the doorway. A
-dust-white flivver was approaching. As he watched, it came up to the
-shed and halted. There was but one person in the car.
-
-From the dust-white flivver alighted a tall, large woman clad in old but
-neat khaki, upon her head a black bonnet. With surprise, Ross recognized
-her; it was the woman whom he had seen at Datil the previous day. It was
-the woman who had bought Dad Griffith a meal, and who, presumably, had
-given the ancient a lift toward the Arizona line.
-
-She approached the doorway and transfixed Ross with keen, glittering
-blue eyes. Her look was one of unmistakable truculence, of hostility.
-
-"Your name Ross?" she demanded.
-
-"It is, ma'am," he meekly answered. "Will----"
-
-"My name's Mehitabel Crump, with a Mrs. for a handle," she stated. "You
-got a man by the name o' Shea workin' here?"
-
-"Yes'm," said Ross, staring. So this was the Mrs. Crump of whom Shea had
-spoken! "Yes'm. Will ye come in? I'll go right up the canon and fetch
-him----"
-
-"You shut up," she snapped, harshly. "I aim to do my own fetchin', and I
-aim to have a word with you here and now, stranger. I hear you been
-keepin' Thady Shea filled up with booze."
-
-Ross was staggered, not only by the amazing appearance of this woman
-here, but by her direct attack. She meant business, savage business, and
-showed it.
-
-Those last words, however, suggested an explanation to Ross. On the
-previous day he had given the ancient an "earful" about Thady Shea and
-the whiskey. This woman, who now turned out to be Shea's friend Mrs.
-Crump, had given the ancient a ride westward. The connection was too
-obvious to miss.
-
-"You got all that dope from old Griffith, eh?" he said. "I was at Datil
-yesterday and seen you there. If I ever see that old fool Griffith
-again, I'll poke a bullet through him!"
-
-"Then you ain't real liable to do it," said Mrs. Crump, grimly. "If that
-old vagabone told me the truth, I aim to put you where you won't give
-whiskey to no more men. Now, hombre, speak up real soft and sudden! Did
-you give Thady Shea whiskey--or not?"
-
-In the blue eyes of Mrs. Crump was a look which Ross had not seen since
-the days of his boyhood. Even then he had seen it only once or twice,
-before the "killers" of the old days were put under sod. Knowing what
-caused that look, Ross laughed--but he laughed to himself.
-
-"Well," he responded, gravely, "in a way it is true, ma'am. I sure did
-fill Shea with red licker, filled him plumb to the brim. And when I went
-to Datil yesterday, there was a jug two thirds full o' licker in that
-cupboard. When I come home las' night, ma'am, there wasn't a single drop
-o' whiskey left. For a fact."
-
-Try as he might, he could not keep the twinkle from his eye. That
-twinkle was something Mrs. Crump could not understand; it bade her go
-slow, be cautious. She knew her type of man animal, and that twinkle
-gave her covert warning not to make a fool of herself.
-
-"I'm goin' to see him," she declared, after compressing her lips and
-eying Fred Ross suspiciously. "If you've made a soak out o' him, pilgrim
-Ross, I'm coming right back here and perforate you without no further
-warning. That goes as it lays--so ile up your gun."
-
-She turned about and strode away, up the canon. Once she glanced back,
-to see Ross standing where she had left him, and upon his face was a
-wide grin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--THADY SHEA DISCOVERS A PURPOSE
-
-
-"What in hell made you run off?" demanded Mrs. Crump in an aggrieved
-tone.
-
-"Well," hesitated Thady Shea, "I figured I might get you into trouble
-with Mackintavers and his crowd; Dorales would be after me, you know.
-And then I wanted to make up for what I'd done. I wanted to go away and
-prove to myself that I could do something--without any one else helping
-me. It's a little vague, but----"
-
-"Oh, I savvy," finished Mrs. Crump for him. "My land, Thady! I been
-hunting you all over creation, but I never aimed to see you lookin' like
-this--never!" Hands on her hips, she surveyed him with appraising,
-delighted eyes.
-
-As he stood there awkwardly beside the plow, Thady Shea did look unlike
-her last view of him. Also, he sounded different. They had talked at
-length, but in all their talk, in all his tale to date, he had not once
-broken into the rolling, rounded phrases which formerly he had so loved.
-
-He showed the lack of self-consciousness that was upon him. It was not
-the bristly beard which had wrought the change, although this disguised
-him startlingly. Perhaps it was the gruelling work which he had been
-doing of late, with its effects.
-
-In this man of fifty-eight there showed a strange boyishness. He was no
-longer gaunt and haggard. True, there was a haunting gentleness, a
-sadness, in his eyes, but it was the sadness of time past, not of the
-present. His look, his manner, had taken on a definite personality. No
-longer was he Thaddeus Roscius, the actor who fitted himself into the
-characters of other men; Montalembert was dead and here stood Thady
-Shea, man of his hands; one whose eyes met the world honestly and
-earnestly, with wide questioning, with a balanced poise and surety in
-self.
-
-"My land!" pursued Mrs. Crump, meditatively. "When I think of the
-knock-kneed, blear-eyed critter I found layin' up above the Bajada
-grade, I can't hardly recognize ye, Thady! Ye look's if ye'd got used to
-leaning on yourself. Want to come back to Number Sixteen with me?"
-
-Shea frowned in perplexity. His eyes were serious. He had set forth all
-that had happened to him, all that he had done; Mrs. Crump had given him
-no blame, but in her eyes had shone pride and praise.
-
-"I--I don't know," he said, slowly. "I'm looking for a purpose in life.
-I'm trying to find something definite. It's so long since I've had
-anything definite! These twenty years, and more, there has seemed to be
-a knot gripped about my soul, somewhere--stifling me. I don't seem
-to----"
-
-"No need for all that," said Mrs. Crump, impatiently. "You're rich now."
-
-Shea's eyes widened. "You mean--the mine?"
-
-"No, I don't. That mine is a humdinger, or will be once it gets started
-to paying. I got Lewis an' Gilbert workin' there now, they bein' out o'
-jail and shut o' that old charge. No, Thady; I mean the ten thousand we
-screwed out o' that skunk Mackintavers."
-
-Shea looked blank. "Ten thousand? I don't understand."
-
-Mrs. Crump sighed in resignation, and set herself to explain.
-
-"It was a right smart trick to indorse that check Dorales had made ready
-for ye--'bout the smartest thing I ever knowed ye to do, Thady. I takes
-that check and lights out and cashes it 'fore old Mackintavers heard
-what had happened to Dorales. The money's in your name, down to the
-First National at Silver City; I ain't touched it."
-
-She fumbled in her bosom and produced a folded check book.
-
-"Here's the check book they give me, all proper. Sign your checks the
-same way ye indorsed that one, savvy? I turned in the note ye left me at
-the shack, with your signature on it, to the bank."
-
-She broke off. She came to a faltering but decided halt.
-
-For, as she had spoken, a queer look had stolen across the beard-blurred
-features of Thady Shea, and had settled there. It was such a look as she
-had never previously seen upon his face. It was a look of incredulous
-wonder, of grief, of dismay.
-
-The personal equation in that look silenced and startled Mrs. Crump. It
-conveyed to her that she must have said some terrible thing, something
-which had shocked Thady Shea beyond words, something which had struck
-and hurt him like a blow. She rapidly thought back--no, she had not even
-sworn!
-
-"What the devil ails ye?" she demanded.
-
-"Why--why--that check!" blurted Shea. He drew back from the check book
-which she was extending to him. His eyes were wide, fixed. "I never
-meant it--that way! I never dreamed you'd do anything with it. I left it
-there with the other paper to show you what Dorales had been up to."
-
-Mrs. Crump laughed suddenly.
-
-"Oh, then I gave ye too much credit? Never mind, Thady----"
-
-"You don't understand!" In his voice was a harsh note, a note of pain.
-"Don't you realize what you've done? That money--why, it's stolen! It'll
-have to go back to Mackintavers! It isn't ours."
-
-For the first time in many years Mehitabel Crump was shocked into
-immobile silence. She was absolutely petrified. She could not believe
-the words she heard.
-
-"You didn't look at it that way, of course," added Shea hastily.
-Earnestness grew upon him, and deep conviction. "But it's true. If it
-were ten cents or ten dollars, it might not matter. But--ten thousand
-dollars! It must go back."
-
-The blue eyes of Mrs. Crump hardened like agates. Her mouth clenched
-grimly. Her wrinkled features tightened into fighting lines. She was
-dumbly amazed that the magnitude of the sum did not appeal to Thady
-Shea's cupidity; but she was vigorously and fiercely determined that the
-money was to be his. It was not for herself that she wanted it.
-
-When she made answer, it was with a virile insistence that drove home
-every word like a blow.
-
-"You got no call to insult me, Thady Shea, by callin' me a thief; mind
-that! Are you crazy or just plain fool? Mackintavers an' Dorales comes
-along thinking to trim us right and proper, like they done by other poor
-folks, thinking to rob a lone widder woman, thinking to fool you into
-robbing me. That there check for ten thousand was the jackpot.
-Mackintavers signed it as such, knowin' it to be such, stakin' it agin'
-Number Sixteen to win or lose. You didn't know that the prop'ty was
-recorded in your name--but he knew!
-
-"He lost, and you can bet he ain't said nothing about losing them table
-stakes! What call you got to beef about winning that bet? It's plumb
-legal, cashed at a bank, sanctified by Sandy hisself over the phone.
-You'd be a fool not to take money after you'd won it in a game like
-that! If ye want----"
-
-For the second time Mrs. Crump came to a decided and bewildered halt.
-
-She was entirely convinced that to take the money was legitimate; she
-was convinced that it had been lawfully won, that Thady Shea was
-actually entitled to it. She had chuckled over the coup a hundred times.
-She had chuckled a hundred times over the grimly delightful irony of
-cashing that check, of giving Mackintavers a counter-thrust that he
-would remember. Yet, although she was presenting her argument with
-entire conviction, she was conscious that it was like presenting her
-argument in the face of a stone wall.
-
-Somehow Thady Shea was ignoring her argument. Its point seemed quite
-lost upon him. He stood before her, flinty, untouched, unheeding. The
-slight glint of scorn in his eye, real or fancied, flicked Mrs. Crump on
-the raw; it lashed her into real and unassumed anger.
-
-"All that is quite true," he said. In his manner was a gentleness, a
-frightful gentleness, a gentleness so entire and calm that it was
-hideous. One would have said that he was speaking to a little child.
-
-"All that is true, Mrs. Crump. Of course your intentions were
-whole-souled and generous, and from your viewpoint the action was
-justified. I didn't mean to call you a thief, heaven knows! I didn't
-mean any such thing.
-
-"But--the money was to be given in exchange for something. The exchange
-did not take place. Therefore, to keep the money would be theft. That is
-the way I look at it. That is all I can see to it--all! The money must
-go back."
-
-There was a terrible simplicity in the man's face, in the words he used,
-in the argument he used. It was a simplicity which nothing could change.
-It was a simplicity above all argument or question. It was a simplicity
-that stood up like a gray naked rock. Against this implacable front Mrs.
-Crump was impotent and knew it.
-
-Thady Shea reached out and took the check book from her hand. He opened
-it. He stripped one check from the book and placed this check in his
-pocket. Then he took the check book, tore it across, and flung the
-pieces away. He did it casually, impatiently, carelessly.
-
-Now, to tear a check book across is not an easy thing. To do it
-carelessly, casually, is a most unusual and significant thing. It jerked
-at Mrs. Crump's attention. She wondered just how strong Thady Shea was.
-Yet, the thought that the one check in Shea's pocket was destined for
-Mackintavers fired the anger within her, and fanned the flame. She could
-deal gently, pityingly, with a weak man. With a strong man, strong as
-Thady Shea was strong, she had but one argument.
-
-"I'll write out that check----" began Shea.
-
-"You're a coward!" said Mrs. Crump, savagely. She knew the words were
-fearfully unjust, but they rose within her and she said them. The
-thought that Mackintavers would deem her weak and silly enough to return
-that money maddened her. "You're a coward!"
-
-She leaned forward and struck him in the mouth. She struck a man's blow,
-a full, hard-fisted, strong blow, a blow that might have felled another
-man than Thady Shea. Under it he reeled. Then he came upright and stood
-motionless, looking at her. He did not speak. Slowly he lifted his hand
-to his mouth, and his eyes shifted to the red smear upon his hand. Then
-his gaze went again to her face.
-
-Under his look, Mrs. Crump shivered a little. The anger went out of her
-suddenly and utterly. Before his calm, hurt strength she recoiled. Her
-brittle, false hardness was broken and shattered. He did not speak, and
-his silence frightened her. She went to pieces.
-
-"Thady!" The words came from her in a breath, a groan. Her burning blue
-eyes were gone dull and lifeless, dumb with misery, as she realized what
-she had just done. "Oh, Thady! I--Heaven forgive me, Thady, I didn't
-mean to do it. I wanted you to have that money."
-
-"I wonder if you really think I'm a coward?" said Shea, curiously calm.
-"I am one, of course, but I don't see how a desire for justice can be
-cowardly."
-
-"I don't!" she burst forth impetuously, passionately. "Thady, I'm
-sorry--I never meant it; it didn't come from the heart, Thady! I'm an
-old fool of a woman, that's what I am. An old fool of a woman! Don't
-look at me that way; I tell ye I can't stand it--it's awful! I'm sorry
-for it, bitter sorry."
-
-"I'm sorry, too," said Shea, simply. "Listen to me, now. You've given me
-something real; a purpose. Maybe Ross was right. Maybe I had to wait
-till it came to me. Now I'm going to find Mackintavers and give him his
-money, make things right. I may be a coward in physical things, but----"
-
-"Don't talk that way!" she broke in, harshly. "Thady, I'm sorry. Come
-back to the mine with me; forget this foolishness. I'm a fool of an old
-woman, that's all. I need ye at the mine, Thady."
-
-He smiled a little. "Do you really mean it, Mrs. Crump? May I come
-back--after I have seen Mackintavers?"
-
-"Come now! Don't go chasing off like a dratted mule. Come back with me
-now!"
-
-"No." Shea looked away from her. He motioned toward the horses, their
-tails switching in the arrogant sunlight. He motioned toward the
-half-plowed field. "I'll finish this job first. Then, in a few days,
-I'll go and see Mackintavers. You see? I have to do it. The purpose has
-come to me; maybe it'll lead into something else. I don't know. After
-that, I'll come back to Number Sixteen and go to work, if you still want
-me."
-
-"Yes," she said, humbly. "I'll need ye, Thady. I'm sorry ye won't come
-now."
-
-She turned from him and walked down the canon. Around the bend, out of
-Shea's sight, she leaned against a bowlder. She was a woman, and God has
-given tears to women. Great sobs shook her for the first time in years.
-Passionate sobs were they, holding the pent-up emotion of a deep spirit
-that had broken through its mask of cynic harshness.
-
-Presently Mrs. Crump recalled that, although she was beyond the sight of
-Thady Shea, she was in full view of the distant shack. Muttering that
-she was a dratted old fool, she wiped her eyes. She tucked in loosened
-wisps of hair about the edge of her bonnet. She pulled her bonnet
-straight and started for the dust-white flivver, beyond the shack.
-
-Mrs. Crump found Fred Ross cheerfully whistling "Silver Threads Among
-the Gold" and finishing his house-cleaning.
-
-"That there Thady Shea," she stated, harshly, "is the most amazing human
-critter I've ever run up against!"
-
-Ross grinned amiably. "Meaning, ma'am?"
-
-"Meaning you can figger it out for yourself. Adios!"
-
-"Hold on, ma'am. Ain't you goin' to set a while?"
-
-"I am not. I got work to do. So long, and good luck to ye!"
-
-Ross insisted upon cranking the dust-white flivver, and she departed
-with no more words.
-
-An hour later Thady Shea brought in the horses, and put them up for the
-night. He came into the house and helped Ross get supper. He commented
-on the house-cleaning with admiration. He discussed, from an amateur's
-standpoint, fencing the upper end of the canon against the proposed
-flock of sheep. He seemed to enjoy his supper hugely.
-
-The meal over, both men lounged outside, smoking and watching the
-crimsoned peaks that overhung them.
-
-"Mrs. Crump," observed Shea at last, "is the most generous, whole-souled
-woman I ever knew. She's a wonder, Ross!"
-
-"She is," assented the rancher, dryly. "I suppose you're goin' to leave
-me?"
-
-"Yes," said Shea, gravely. "After that upper flat is plowed."
-
-"Tell you what. Wait till Sunday. I'm goin' to Magdalena then, to see a
-lady friend. Take ye in the car if you're goin' that way. Then I'll pay
-you--got to give you something for the work, Shea. So go to Magdalena
-with me Sunday."
-
-"Mackintavers' ranch lies over there, doesn't it?"
-
-"North. Yes."
-
-"All right. That'll suit me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--THE STONE GODS VANISH
-
-
-The loss of ten thousand dollars was not a negligible matter, even to
-Sandy Mackintavers, who was accustomed to gambling on a large scale.
-Like a good gamester, he swallowed the bitter pill and said nothing.
-However, the loss left a scar which, contrary to the custom of scars,
-grew more red and angry with each passing week.
-
-The realization that he had been outwitted and outgamed by the despised
-Mehitabel Crump was bad enough; the actual monetary loss made itself
-more gradually felt. However, Mackintavers knew that he would recoup
-tenfold once his hands gripped Number Sixteen. So, by means of various
-reports from Eastern sources, he discovered that Coravel Tio, the curio
-dealer of Santa Fe, was negotiating for the sale of the property, and
-held an interest in the mine. Over this, Mackintavers laughed long and
-loud--and perfected his plans for taking over Number Sixteen.
-
-In the meantime, he gave his attention to the seven stone gods and his
-scientific reputation.
-
-His ranch house was a roomy, comfortable place; one half was inhabited
-by Old Man Durfee, who ran the ranch, and the other half was inhabited
-by Sandy and his frequent guests. At the present moment he had three
-guests besides Abel Dorales. Two were withered, wrinkled old bucks from
-the Cochiti pueblo, and these were quartered in the bunk house a half
-mile distant, by the corrals. The third was the eminent archaeologist
-previously mentioned, who had arrived to witness the establishment of
-Sandy as a scientist.
-
-"To-morrow is the big day, eh?" Sandy Mackintavers spread his square
-bulk to the blaze in the big library fireplace, and surveyed his
-scientific guest with complacent expectation. "Dorales is goin' to bring
-them bucks up here. We'll have the little gods all ready, then we'll see
-what happens."
-
-He glanced at the wide mantel whereon sat seven worn stone images,
-grinning widely over the room.
-
-"You've not coached them, of course?" demanded the wary scientist. "If
-they had an inkling of what you wanted, they'd say anything to please
-you."
-
-"Huh!" snorted Mackintavers with honest indignation. "I should say not!
-Surprise is the thing, professor. Aiblins, now, I'll explain to ye the
-system we've invented to make these Cochiti bucks talk--but first, take
-a look at this. I'm coming fast, eh? Aiblins, in another year or two
-I'll be having a world-wide reputation, eh? Just look at this, now."
-
-He handed the scientist a letter. Now, Mackintavers himself could not
-read that letter; but it had been translated for him, and he was
-inordinately proud of it.
-
-The scientist glanced at the letter-head above, a large and flaunting
-letter-head of the _Societe Academique_, and below, in very small
-letters, the remainder of the legend: _d'ethnologie Amerique_. In other
-words, not particularly good French, denoting the Academic Society of
-American Ethnology, of Paris.
-
-The eminent scientist repressed the smile that rose to his lips. It was
-obvious that Sandy, keenly canny in most things, was highly susceptible
-to this sort of flattery.
-
-"I'm sending for their gold medal," went on the speaker. "Costs about
-fifteen bucks, but I guess it'll be worth it when the papers write me
-up, eh? They sent along an engraved parchment to show I'm a member. Some
-day I'll go to Paris and visit 'em."
-
-The eminent scientist, who knew all the ins and outs of that game, did
-not spoil poor Sandy's dream by any intrusion of cold and hard facts.
-Instead, he reflected to himself upon the odd twists and quirks of
-character, which would bring such a man as Sandy Mackintavers into the
-toils of a vain ambition, and into the nets of smooth sharpers who knew
-well how to flatter the American ignoramus into parting with his
-dollars.
-
-Cordial and warm was Sandy Mackintavers that evening, expanding under
-the genial thought of what was to happen on the morrow, and making
-himself a wondrous fine host. He told how Abel Dorales had secured an
-interpreter, had approached two withered, wrinkled old Cochiti bucks who
-loved round silver dollars, and had brought them here upon specious
-pretexts. He told how, on the following morning, those two withered,
-wrinkled Cochiti bucks were to be left for an hour in this same room,
-alone with the seven stone gods on the mantel and a whiskey bottle on
-the table; and he told how a dictagraph, already concealed and in
-readiness, would be waiting for them.
-
-Being presumably alone, being mellowed by one or two stolen drinks,
-being in the amazing presence of those seven stone gods, the two
-withered, wrinkled old Cochiti bucks would most unquestionably talk to
-each other in their own language. Later, the dictagraph record could be
-translated.
-
-It never occurred to Sandy that the entire Cochiti pueblo might have
-been aware that he was in possession of these seven stone gods almost
-from the very day he obtained them. Sandy had picked up some knowledge
-about the relics of dead redskins; but he had a good deal to learn about
-Indians in the flesh.
-
-So the morning came--the morning that was to bring about the
-satisfaction of ambition. Abel Dorales left the breakfast table in order
-to bring the two withered, wrinkled old Cochiti bucks. Mackintavers drew
-the eminent scientist into the library for a last look at the
-preparations--ah!
-
-"It might be an excellent idea," said the professor, dryly, "to set your
-stone gods in place, Mr. Mackintavers."
-
-"Aiblins, yes!" And Mackintavers stared blankly at the mantel. "Where
-the devil have they gone? They were here last night!"
-
-That the seven stone gods had sat, grinning, upon the mantel only the
-evening previous, was true; but they were not on the mantel now. They
-were not in the room. They were not in the ranch house at all!
-
-Curious to incoherence, suspecting everyone around him, Sandy
-Mackintavers sought an explanation. He obtained none. The two wrinkled,
-withered old bucks had been in the bunk house all night. Every man about
-the place established a convincing alibi.
-
-Every building upon the place was searched from ground to rafters,
-without avail. Noon came, and Mackintavers had relapsed into a dour,
-grim rage. At this juncture, the old Chinaman who served as cook related
-that, while emptying the slops the previous evening, he had seen a
-strange horseman down near the creek. He could give no description.
-
-"Stolen!" howled Sandy, beside himself with fury. "Out and after him!"
-
-Now ensued confusion great and dire. Every man on the ranch, except the
-cook and Abel Dorales and the eminent scientist, shared the general
-exodus. Dorales openly expressed profound disgust for gods, for
-Mackintavers, and for the whole accursed business; having assumed
-responsibility for the safe return of the two wrinkled, withered old
-Cochiti bucks, he loaded them into the ranch flivver and set out for
-Socorro and the main line of the railroad. Sandy and Old Man Durfee were
-gone with the big car.
-
-The professor, left alone, secured a volume of scientific reports and
-settled himself in comfort on the wide, screened veranda. The noon meal
-had not been pleasant. The afternoon was hot and dusty. Presently the
-scientific gentleman slept.
-
-Just when his slumbers had deepened into snoring somnolence, the
-archaeologist was aroused by a sonorous bass voice that boomed like a
-bell. Startled, he sat up. He first visualized a buckboard close at
-hand, within a dozen feet of the veranda--a strange thing, for he well
-knew that natives of the country would have driven their teams to the
-corrals. Upon the seat of the buckboard was a suitcase.
-
-It was a small wicker suitcase, a battered little yellow suitcase with
-loose ends of wicker torn and protruding from its faded surface; it was
-a suitcase manifestly third or fourth-hand, cheap in the first place,
-and now absolutely contemptible. It looked more like a lunch basket than
-a suitcase.
-
-Then the professor was aware of a tall man, a large, shaggy-bearded man,
-who stood at the screen door of the veranda and spoke in sonorous
-accents.
-
-"Sir, it grieves me thus to break your slumber, but I am searching with
-such power as lies within my soul for one named Mackintavers. I charge
-you, if you be fair Scotia's son and him whom I do seek, declare
-yourself!"
-
-"Bless my soul!" exclaimed the scientist. "Do I gather that you are
-looking for Mr. Mackintavers?"
-
-"Such indeed are my intent and purpose," declaimed Thady Shea.
-
-"He's gone. Everyone's gone." The professor inspected this specimen of
-humanity with swiftly growing interest. "They'll be back presently;
-things are a bit upset. Won't you come in? Better take your team over to
-the corrals."
-
-The scientist rose and introduced himself. Thady Shea solemnly gave his
-abbreviated cognomen and stated that, since he had hired the team at
-Magdalena and expected to return almost at once, the horses could stay
-where they were. He then entered the screen veranda, shook hands, and
-with a sigh sat himself down.
-
-Mackintavers gone! It upset all his calculations. However, he soon found
-himself engaged in sprightly discourse.
-
-Lemonade and cigars made an incongruous accompaniment. This entire
-situation, in fact, was the most incongruous the professor had ever
-experienced. He could not make out whether Thady Shea were here as a
-guest or as an enemy, as a chance caller, or as a business acquaintance.
-Thady Shea kept a tight mouth on some things.
-
-"You'd better take those horses into the shade," reiterated the
-professor at length. "And that suitcase of yours--why, the sun will
-broil it!"
-
-Thady Shea smiled slightly.
-
-"I perceive dust upon the horizon," he said, gesturing toward the road,
-"which doth to my mind betoken the speedy return of our host, and the
-conclusion of my business. As for the suitcase, sir, therein lie food
-for musing!"
-
-"What's in it then?" The professor chuckled. "A set of Shakespeare?"
-
-"Nay, sir, of its contents I am ignorant."
-
-Thady Shea eyed the approaching dust cloud, which might give birth
-either to Mackintavers or to Abel Dorales. In his own fashion, he
-proceeded to tell his companion how he had acquired that suitcase, two
-hours previously, and while on his way here.
-
-He had encountered a horse, saddled and bridled and still alive, lying
-in the road with a broken leg. Of the rider, there had been no sign. A
-little distance farther on Shea had come upon this battered little
-suitcase lying in the dust. Whether the suitcase appertained to the
-vanished horseman could not be told. There had been some sort of
-accident, yet there was no human being in evidence. All this upon the
-main highway.
-
-"Did you notice the brand on the animal, or anything which might
-identify it?" queried the professor, who was well versed in the ways of
-the country.
-
-Thady Shea had learned enough, also, to notice a few such things. The
-brand was a queer mark, a queer zig-zag which to him meant nothing. The
-animal's saddle blanket had been an Indian rug, woven for such use. The
-bridle had also been woven. Upon the suitcase, however, there was no
-mark of ownership.
-
-"H'm! Sounds like a Navaho brand," commented the professor, sagely.
-
-At this point, Thady Shea rose and abruptly closed the discussion. The
-approaching automobile had drawn up.
-
-From the car alighted Sandy Mackintavers, who stood for a moment staring
-at the buckboard; Old Man Durfee went on with the car to the garage, in
-the rear of the ranch house. Thady Shea did not need the professor's
-vouchsafed admonition to know who this square-hewn man was, this man
-with the square jaw and mouth and figure, this man who turned from the
-buckboard and came dourly up to the veranda.
-
-"Who's here?" Mackintavers stood in the screen doorway.
-
-"You're Mr. Mackintavers?" Theatricalisms fell away from Thady Shea. He
-fumbled in his pocket. He produced the check which he had previously
-filled out. He extended it. "This belongs to you, I think. There was
-some mistake in the matter. Your check was cashed through a
-misapprehension."
-
-Mackintavers swept Thady Shea with keen, puzzled eyes; then he glanced
-at the check.
-
-His square mouth contracted slightly at the corners. Otherwise, not a
-muscle moved in his face. After an instant he folded the check and
-glanced up at the professor.
-
-"No luck with the thief," he said, curtly. "That is, unless some of the
-boys bring in news. There was an accident on the Magdalena trail this
-morning--a fool Navaho buck was hit by the flivver from Doniphan's
-ranch. Knocked him and his cayuse to glory. I thought for a time he was
-our man, but telephoned into town from Doniphan's and found otherwise.
-Took a look at the horse to make sure. Nothing doing."
-
-His eyes went back to Thady Shea. He held open the door and gestured.
-
-"You're Shea, eh? Come on into the office, will you? Excuse me,
-professor."
-
-Shea followed his enemy host into the house, and into a small room which
-served Mackintavers as office and study. Sandy dropped into a chair,
-motioned Shea to another, and set out a box of cigars.
-
-This greeting left Thady Shea entirely at sea. Mackintavers did not seem
-to be infuriated; he seemed to understand perfectly all about the check.
-He seemed alert, precise, cold-blooded, as though this were some
-ordinary business deal.
-
-"So you're Shea!" he repeated. "Aiblins, now--ye look it. Friend o' Mrs.
-Crump, eh?"
-
-"I am." Thady Shea began to feel sorry that he had come inside.
-
-"How come you're turning back that money? The old lady feelin' her
-conscience?"
-
-"I told you, sir, that there had been an error. When the mistake was
-brought to my attention, I posted straightway hither, seeking you; the
-money was not mine to store away; reparation was incumbent on me."
-
-"What the hell!" muttered Sandy, with a touch of wonder.
-
-Mackintavers knew men. He could read men at a glance, but Thady Shea was
-slightly beyond his visual acuity. None the less, he came fairly close
-to the mark in that he adjudged Shea to be of a simple and wonderful
-honesty, a man of fundamental virtue. Sandy took for granted that Thady
-Shea was mentally unbalanced; a theory which would explain this amazing
-refund, and also the wild stories which were current about the man.
-
-"I hear you own that claim Mrs. Crump is workin', Shea."
-
-"No. It belongs to her." Thady Shea rose to his feet. "We need not
-prolong this----"
-
-"Oh, don't be in a rush!" soothed Mackintavers, cordially. "Now, I'll
-have your team attended to, and you'd better stay overnight with us, eh?
-We'll have a talk, and we'll get squared up on the trouble between you
-and Dorales----"
-
-Thady Shea looked down at him. Under those eyes Mackintavers fell
-silent.
-
-"Sir, you are an infernal villain," said Thady Shea calmly. "I want none
-of your hospitality. There is no trouble whatever, save in your own
-greed and covetous rapacity. You are an arrant rogue, a caitiff vile;
-there can be naught between us. Sir, farewell!"
-
-Thady Shea strode from the room and slammed the door after him.
-
-Sandy Mackintavers sat motionless, completely astounded by this
-outburst. He looked down at the check in his hand, then looked out the
-window; he could see Thady Shea climbing into the buckboard and driving
-off.
-
-"Aiblins, yes; the man's mad!" he reflected. A slow chuckle came to his
-lips. "And to think I never so much as said thank'ee! If the check's
-good, now--h'm! Better find out about it. A fool, that's what the fellow
-is. A loose-brained fool."
-
-He sought the telephone and spoke with the Silver City bank. The check
-was good.
-
-Later in the afternoon came the first word of the actual thief who had
-made off with the seven stone gods. One of the men brought in a report
-that he had found signs of a camp on the creek a mile distant.
-Mackintavers and Old Man Durfee went out to investigate. They were good
-at reading signs; they discovered that a man had spent the previous
-night in this spot, and that he had presumably been an Indian. The
-tracks of his unshod horse showed a cracked off hind hoof. A few tiny
-shreds of gray wool showed where his saddle blanket had been laid.
-
-Over the supper table that evening Sandy Mackintavers recounted these
-results to the archaeologist. Abel Dorales had not yet returned from
-Socorro.
-
-"The gods are gone, professor," he stated, disconsolately. "Clean gone!
-Aye. D'ye see, the thief, that fellow camped by the creek, was the same
-Indian who got wiped out by Doniphan's flivver this morning! The same,
-aye. That saddle blanket was gray, and that horse had the off hind foot
-cracked. Aye. The Navaho dog was the thief. And now the gods are clean
-gone! There was no sign of 'em about the horse, and the man himself had
-nothing. But he took 'em, right enough."
-
-The professor glanced up, roused from his abstraction.
-
-"That's queer!" he ejaculated. Excitement rapidly grew upon him. "Look
-here, Mackintavers! The man who was here this afternoon, the man
-Shea--did you notice that queer little grip on his buckboard? He told me
-he had picked up that grip near the crippled horse, and he did not know
-what was in it!"
-
-Just then Abel Dorales returned, to find that Thady Shea had come and
-gone.
-
-Thirty minutes later Mackintavers and Dorales were on their way to
-Magdalena in the big car; Mackintavers was after the seven stone gods,
-and Dorales was after Thady Shea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THADY SHEA STARTS HOME
-
-
-In the early evening Thady Shea reached Magdalena. He turned in his team
-and buckboard to the livery stable, paid for its use from the money
-given him by Fred Ross, and with the little suitcase in his hand left
-the stable office. The first person he encountered was Fred Ross.
-
-"Hello!" said Ross, grinning. "Thought maybe you'd show up this evenin',
-so I hung around. How's tricks?"
-
-"Fine," answered Shea, delightedly. "I'm hungry."
-
-"So'm I. Let's eat. I got a friend waitin' to meet ye--he's leavin'
-to-night."
-
-Shea gladly followed to the Hotel Aragon. He was to-night blissfully
-happy. For the first time in years he felt like a boy. It was as though
-the reparation made to Mackintavers, and the brief but emphatic
-expression of his own mind to Mackintavers, had wiped away all past
-things. Atonement was over and done with. He was free to go where he
-would.
-
-From one of the rocking-chairs in the long, narrow lobby of the hotel
-arose a man of girth and twinkling of eye, who came to meet them. Him
-Ross briefly introduced as Bill Murray, and urged haste in reaching the
-dining room. Thady Shea left the battered little yellow suitcase on the
-hat rack beside the dining-room doors, which were just about to close,
-and the three men hastily entered the nearly empty room.
-
-Fred Ross had known nothing definite about Thady Shea's business with
-Mackintavers, but possibly he had conjectured a good deal. He was
-plainly much relieved to see his friend safely back.
-
-"Bill's running a newspaper over to St. Johns," he confided, when the
-meal was under way. "He'd heard about you, Shea, and was kind o' set on
-meeting you. Wants to get the straight o' that yarn about you and
-Dorales. He got laid up here with a busted steering gear, and aimed to
-go home to-day, but waited over. Now he's goin' back to-night, so he
-says. It sure beats all how a fellow gets in a hell of a hurry just when
-other folks want him to loaf around a spell!"
-
-Murray tipped Thady Shea a jovial wink.
-
-"Fred ain't lonesome, much," he said, wheezily. "Got a girl here. Fred
-reckons that the more he talks about stayin', the more I'll be set on
-goin'--which is the same true. Human nature is ornery as the devil,
-ain't it now? Well, I s'pose you ain't picked up any news to-day, Shea?"
-
-"I have, sir," intoned Thady, "an item of importance. A striped Indian,
-of name unknown, was overcome by dire fatality this morn. Upon the road
-Death ambushed him, and maimed his faithful steed, and laid him low. An
-automobile--mark the irony!--became the instrument of darkling fate, and
-brought to this poor aborigine the end of all things, and the close of
-life."
-
-Bill Murray stared open-mouthed, as did most people who heard Thady's
-sonorously rolling accents for the first time. Then he emitted a wheezy
-chuckle.
-
-"Oh! You mean the Injun buck that got straddled by Doniphan's flivver!
-Heard all about him to-day. He's layin' over to the funeral parlours
-now. Some of his tribe's in town, and they made Doniphan give him a real
-burial. Joke on Doniphan, ain't it?"
-
-"And," pursued Thady, "at Mackintavers' ranch this afternoon I gathered
-there had been a robbery. What worldly pelf was taken, I know not, but
-dread confusion reigned upon the place."
-
-"Gosh!" Bill Murray started up from his chair. "Say--that's red-hot
-news, Shea! Don't tell any one else around here. I'll run out and phone
-the ranch. Got to run off my paper to-morrow night; I'll pull some o'
-that plate off the front page and run this in a box. Whee! Back in a
-minute!"
-
-Bill Murray departed like a genial cyclone.
-
-Now Thady Shea told about that battered little suitcase. He was not sure
-what should be done with the thing, and asked the advice of Fred Ross.
-He had not opened the suitcase; ever since finding it, he had been on
-the go. Besides, the suitcase was locked, and Thady hesitated to smash
-it open.
-
-"Likely it was bounced off some ranch car or buckboard," deduced Ross.
-"Belong to that dead Injun? No chance. None whatever! You never seen an
-Injun with one o' them things, and anyhow, no Injun riding hossback
-would tote a suitcase along. No, none whatever! And that grip wasn't
-made to tie on a saddle, neither. Reckon you'd better look inside, and
-if there ain't any indication of the owner, then read the papers for an
-ad. Well, what ye going to do? Will ye come back to the ranch with me?"
-
-Thady Shea did not know what he wanted to do. He wondered if he had
-fulfilled his extremely vague ideas of wandering and making good in the
-world. In a sense, he had done so. He realized it now, just as he
-realized that it is very difficult to view one's own immediate self and
-environment with any degree of cool detachment.
-
-As to Mackintavers, as to any peril which he himself might bring upon
-Mrs. Crump, Thady Shea had long since abandoned that nebulous idea. He
-had met Mackintavers, and feared him no longer. Of Dorales he did not
-think particularly.
-
-He had no great desire to return to the Ross ranch. Try as he would, he
-could see no purpose ahead of him save in the one place--Number Sixteen.
-All that held him back was that strange feeling in his soul, a feeling
-that had been there twenty years and more; a feeling as though something
-were knotted somewhere about his soul, stifling him. What use to return
-to Mrs. Crump? Still, there was the only purpose he could see.
-
-He had conquered the old enemy; of this he felt certain. Temptations
-would come, of course. Temptations were bound to come; they came at odd
-intervals; they came here in this hotel dining room, where he could
-catch some vagrant odour of whiskey from an indefinable source. Yet they
-would not overcome him anew, he was confident.
-
-"I think," he said, slowly, staring at the tablecloth, "I think I'd
-better head for Mrs. Crump's mine, Ross."
-
-There was that in his voice which admitted of no argument. Ross shoved
-back his chair.
-
-"Well, wait a minute, will you? I want to speak to Bill Murray. Order me
-some o' that pie and another cup o' coffee, Shea."
-
-Fred Ross opened the dining-room doors, which had been closed, and
-departed to the lobby of the hotel. He found genial Bill Murray just
-turning from the telephone, and wearing a look of puzzled excitement.
-
-"Get the ranch?" asked Ross. The other nodded and glanced around
-cautiously.
-
-"Yes. Talked to Old Man Durfee--he's manager for Sandy. He said that
-Sandy and Abel Dorales had just left for Magdalena; he admitted there
-had been a robbery but would say nothing except that it didn't amount to
-much. Injun relics, he said."
-
-"Huh!" Fred Ross gazed at his friend, narrow-eyed. "I bet if it was
-Injun relics, it was some partic'lar kind, then. That sounds damn'
-fishy, Bill."
-
-"Sure does, but she'll make a grand little story, played up. This here
-Shea just came from there, didn't he? And everybody knows about him and
-Dorales and the bad blood."
-
-The two men looked at each other, surmise in their eyes. Ross
-thoughtfully rubbed his chin, remembering about that battered little
-suitcase on the hat rack. He did not entirely believe the tale told by
-Thady Shea, the tale about finding it in the road. That was too
-improbable, unless the dead Indian had been carrying the suitcase--which
-seemed, likewise, very improbable.
-
-"I shouldn't wonder, now," said Ross, musingly. "Shea, he's the calm,
-hell-nervy sort, he sure is. Likely Dorales or old Sandy tried to run a
-blazer on him, and he played merry hell with them. Likely they had
-something he thought belonged to someone else, and he just up and took
-it. H'm! But the robbery had happened before he got there, he _said_.
-Well, if he don't want to tell all he knows, that's his business. Eh?"
-
-"I coincide," assented Murray, curtly. Fred Ross briefly told him about
-the suitcase, in so far as he knew about it.
-
-"Now," pursued Ross, "you and I ain't blamin' him or any other man for
-gettin' old Mackintavers up on his ear. But Shea, in spite o' the
-stories goin' around about him, ain't no fighter, Bill. He's a downright
-honest man, and he's terrible when he gets roused, but I don't guess he
-could fight for little apples. _And_, he don't know Sandy and Dorales
-are comin' to town."
-
-"I see," said Murray, thoughtfully. "But he ain't the kind to run away,
-Fred."
-
-"C'rect. But why should he know anything about Sandy coming? We'd ought
-to see that he avoids 'em, so to speak. You're goin' west to-night. You
-got room, ain't you?"
-
-"Oh!" Murray chuckled, admiringly. "So that's the game! Sure, I got
-room. Where is he goin', though?"
-
-"Near as I got the location o' the mine he's aiming for, it's in the
-hills above them lava beds, down beyond Zacaton City and No Agua. You're
-goin' west by the highway, which is north o' there--a long sight north.
-But if you were to run a few mile out of your way, you could hit down
-the Old Fort Tularosa trail, which is an auto road now; you could drop
-Shea by the Beaver Canon trail, down within thirty mile o' home, more or
-less. I'll send Sandy and Dorales on to St. Johns after you, savvy?"
-
-For a moment the two men conferred eagerly.
-
-Unobserved by them, meantime, a man had entered the hotel and was
-standing at the cigar case, at one side of the desk. He was buying
-cigars. He was roughly dressed, but spoke perfect English. When he
-turned to the cigar lighter, disclosing his face to view, one could see
-that he was very swarthy, very dark of colour--an Indian, perhaps.
-
-This man straightened up, puffing at his cigar. His eyes flitted to the
-little battered suitcase, which reposed on the hat rack, and dwelt
-there; thus dwelling, his eyes narrowed slightly. He turned and left the
-hotel.
-
-"Who? Him?" said the hotel proprietor in response to a question from a
-man near by. "Why, he's Thomas Twofork; yep, an Injun, from Cochiti
-pueblo, I hear. Been in town two-three days now. Got money, they say,
-heaps of it."
-
-Ignorant of what had transpired in the lobby, Thady Shea was glad when
-his companions rejoined him and sat down to their interrupted repast.
-Fred Ross broached the subject of departure; he broached it with
-elaborate carelessness.
-
-"Bill is headin' for home right away," he said, "and he goes within
-thirty mile, more or less, of where your mine's located, Shea. If you
-figger on walking, that would be a good lift. If you go back with me
-to-morrow, you won't get near so nigh home."
-
-"Oh!" Thady Shea saw no guile; he looked gratefully surprised, and felt
-it. He had anticipated a long trip via Zacaton City. That route would be
-attended with dangers from Dorales or the latter's men, besides having
-the expense of a car to take him to Number Sixteen.
-
-"Oh! I'd be glad indeed--but do you have to leave to-night?"
-
-"You bet," said Murray, emphatically. "The minute I get this here pie
-down. I got the ol' car all ready to hike, and I'm goin' to hike some. I
-aim to get home about sun-up, sleep two-three hours, then get to work on
-the paper. She's got to be run off to-morrow night, see? And I'd sure be
-glad o' your company, Shea. It's a lonesome trip at night from here over
-through Datil Canon and all."
-
-Surely, thought Shea, here was fate aiding him! Barely had he resolved
-to seek Mrs. Crump and the mine, than this opportunity offered. A walk
-of a few miles did not worry him in the least.
-
-"Thank you, Murray," he rejoined. "I'll go, with pleasure."
-
-Ten minutes later, the three men left the hotel, walked up to the
-corner, and turned in to the garage behind the trading store. Bill
-Murray paid his debts to the proprietor and sought his own car.
-
-"Well, Ross, I'll say good-bye for a while, at least." Shea turned and
-shook hands with his friend. "I'll see you again, that's sure. Oh--by
-the way, hadn't we better open that suitcase? I forgot about it. Let's
-get it broken open here, and----"
-
-Ross interposed a hasty negation. He wanted only to get Shea safely out
-of town before Mackintavers and Dorales should arrive.
-
-"No, don't get Murray nervous, hangin' around here, Shea. He's dead
-anxious to be off, and we better not give him any delay. I'm sure
-curious about what's in that case, just the same. S'pose you drop me a
-line when you find out, and give my regards to Mis' Crump! Maybe I'll
-drift over your way some time; if not, you know where to find me."
-
-"You bet," assented Thady Shea, warmly.
-
-Murray motioned Thady Shea into the front seat, and took the battered
-little suitcase to shove it into the rear of the car. An ejaculation
-almost escaped his lips as he felt its weight. It was heavy,
-tremendously heavy!
-
-"Ore, likely," he muttered. "I bet he don't walk thirty mile with
-_that_!"
-
-Thady Shea and Fred Ross parted with a last handshake. Each of them had
-probed deep into the other man; each of them had found the other
-strangely dissimilar, yet strangely attuned in spirit to himself; each
-of them had found the other to be a man. Their handshake was firm and
-quick and strong.
-
-Ross cranked the car. Bill Murray backed her from the garage, roared a
-last farewell, and headed out into the west and the night.
-
-Fred Ross went back to the hotel after calling upon certain friends of
-his; for Ross had a fairly good idea of what was coming next. His
-theories were not altogether correct, but they attained pretty correct
-results.
-
-So, after a short time, Fred Ross returned to the hotel and sat down in
-the lobby, just under the big map of New Mexico that hung upon the south
-wall. Immediately around him the comfortable oak rocking-chairs were
-vacant; but to right and left, three chairs away, sat red-faced men who
-read newspapers--two on either hand. These four men displayed an
-ostentatious lack of interest in each other and in Fred Ross. Over that
-section of the lobby hung an ill-defined air of crisis, of expectation,
-of foreboding.
-
-Over opposite, in a corner of the big front window, sat a man, a
-stranger to Fred Ross. This man had come into town on the late afternoon
-train. He was palpably a city man, palpably not of this part of the
-country; he had registered at the desk as James Z. Premble of New York.
-Speculating idly as he waited, Fred Ross set him down as a high-class
-drummer.
-
-Thus waited the six men, as though they were awaiting some event about
-to happen: Ross, seated under the big wall map; the four red-faced men
-who read newspapers with marked absorption; and, in the corner of the
-window, James Z. Premble of New York.
-
-Suddenly and abruptly it happened. It happened just as Fred Ross had
-anticipated. The hotel door opened and into the lobby walked Sandy
-Mackintavers with Abel Dorales at his elbow. They had been to the livery
-stable, they had been to one place and another, and they had soon
-learned that Thady Shea, easily noted and remembered by all who saw him,
-had been in the company of Ross and Murray. Both Ross and Murray were
-known to Mackintavers and his field marshal.
-
-Upon entering, Abel Dorales passed straight on to the cigar stand, where
-he stood idly gossiping with the proprietor. Mackintavers, with a wave
-of his hand and a grunt, halted in front of Fred Ross, and dropped into
-a chair beside the latter.
-
-"Hello, Ross. Just the man I was looking for. Know a man name o' Shea,
-Thady Shea?"
-
-"Evening," returned Ross, easily. "Sure I know him. Seen him a while
-ago."
-
-"Know where he is now?" asked Mackintavers without too great show of
-interest.
-
-"Uh-huh. He went off with Bill Murray to St. Johns a couple of hours
-ago. Murray was in some hurry, believe me! He'd been laid up here with a
-busted car, and had to get out his paper to-morrow sure pop, so he aimed
-to travel some to-night. You interested in Shea?"
-
-"Some." Mackintavers bit into a cigar. Over the cigar, his eyes fell
-upon James Z. Premble of New York, who was also looking at him. After an
-instant Premble rose and left the hotel.
-
-Ross had not hesitated to impart the information about Thady Shea, for
-the excellent reason that if Mackintavers followed Shea to St. Johns, he
-would miss Thady Shea entirely. Therein Fred Ross made a mistake. It did
-not occur to him that Dorales, in a high-powered car, might follow the
-tracks of Murray's flivver where it struck from the highroad upon the
-Old Fort Tularosa trail.
-
-"'Bliged to ye, Ross." With this curt speech, Mackintavers heaved
-himself out of his chair and went to the door. He passed out into the
-night.
-
-Abel Dorales left the cigar stand, and also started for the door. But he
-stopped before Fred Ross, exchanged a word of greeting, and his white
-teeth showed in a smile. It was not a pleasant smile.
-
-"I hear you're going to run sheep on your ranch, Ross," he said clearly.
-"Bad manners for an old cowman, isn't it?"
-
-The four red-faced men laid aside their newspapers. They seemed to take
-sudden interest in Abel Dorales. Fred Ross looked up, unsmiling, his
-eyes hard and cold.
-
-"Handsome is as handsome does, Abel. Reckon I'd sooner run sheep than
-get chloroformed and hogtied tryin' to jump a claim."
-
-A fleeting contraction passed across the face of Abel Dorales. His eyes
-narrowed to thin slits. His nostrils quivered like the nose of a dog
-sniffing game. He became white-lipped, cruel, venomous.
-
-The four red-faced men stirred. One of them rose, yawning, and stretched
-himself as does a weary man who thinks well of bed for the night. Abel
-Dorales took sudden warning. He looked to the right and to the left;
-then, without a word more, he turned on his heel and walked away,
-following Mackintavers out into the night.
-
-"Trust a Mex to smell trouble!" said one of the men to the left of Fred
-Ross. "He reckoned we was planted to do him up."
-
-"Well, wasn't we?" queried someone. All laughed in unison. Ross smiled
-grimly and left his chair.
-
-"Much obliged to ye, boys. I didn't know they would come alone, or I
-wouldn't ha' bothered ye."
-
-Outside the hotel, meantime, Mackintavers had joined James Z. Premble,
-who appeared to have been awaiting him. A moment later Abel Dorales,
-mouthing low and vitriolic curses, joined them. In silence the three men
-turned to the left and walked down to the railroad track. There, beyond
-the warehouse, they stood with open and empty space around them, and
-none to overhear.
-
-"Didn't look for ye quite so soon, Premble," said Mackintavers,
-chuckling a little as he used the name.
-
-"Got a good chance at my man," returned the other. "Came in this
-afternoon, Sandy, but couldn't catch you at the ranch. Ready for me to
-work?"
-
-"Aiblins, yes; reckon we'd better get busy, you and I." He turned to
-Dorales. "Abel, our man has gone to St. Johns with Murray. You have
-plenty o' friends in that Mormon town, so take the big car and mosey
-along. Do whatever you want with Shea, but bring me back that bunch o'
-stone gods if ye value your life! I'll be at Mrs. Crump's location."
-
-"All right," snapped Dorales. "Is he much ahead of me?"
-
-"Two hours, in a flivver. You can't fail to land him this time. Good
-luck, boy!"
-
-Dorales snarled farewell, and swung off in the darkness. Mackintavers
-turned to his friend, James Z. Premble.
-
-"I'm gettin' old," he complained. "Been out chasin' a thief all day and
-I'm no good for an all-night ride now. I'll take a room at the hotel.
-Drop in after a spell and we'll arrange the details. You got the stuff?"
-
-"Every blessed paper and letter. Everything O.K.," asserted Premble.
-
-The two men melted into the night.
-
-Five minutes later Dorales was filling his gasoline tank at the garage.
-He made brief inquiries about Murray's flivver and the brand of tires
-thereon. Off to one side, a swarthy man was hastily working upon the fan
-belt of a big car, which had twice broken as his engine started; this
-swarthy man took keen and unobserved interest in the questions of
-Dorales. The name of this swarthy man was Thomas Twofork, and he was an
-Indian of the Cochiti pueblo. Twenty minutes after Dorales had departed
-Thomas Twofork had finished his repairs and headed his car out upon the
-westward road to St. Johns.
-
-An hour afterward, well into the night, an automobile came into
-Magdalena from the opposite direction. It came in by the eastern road,
-the road that comes up from Socorro through Blue Canon, the road that
-comes south to Socorro from Albuquerque and Santa Fe. This automobile
-did not turn into a garage; instead, it passed on through the business
-section of the town and did not slacken speed until it reached the
-Mexican or western quarter.
-
-There it came to a halt and its horn squawked four times. Its
-searchlight revealed a small adobe house with blue-painted doors. One of
-these doors opened to show a man clad in dishevelled night attire. The
-automobile drove on into the yard; its lights flickered out.
-
-"Is that you, Juan Baca?" queried a soft, gentle voice. "Ah, yes; it is
-I, Coravel Tio. Will you give me lodging for the night?"
-
-"Senor, my house and all it contains belong to you!"
-
-Coravel Tio passed into the little adobe house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--DORALES KILLS
-
-
-In the chill darkness that precedes the early dawn Thady Shea alighted
-from Bill Murray's car. Before him, a few miles distant, were Old Fort
-Tularosa and Aragon; many miles behind was the highway. Down to the
-southeast--somewhere--was his destination.
-
-"Mind, now," cautioned Murray, "you take this here trail and it'll lead
-up through them hills into Beaver Canon. Follow Beaver Crick all the
-rest o' the way. Near as I can judge, your place is somewhere down
-beyond Eagle Peak. If you get clear lost, send up a smoke and a ranger
-will be dead sure to trail you down. G'bye and good luck!"
-
-"Good-bye, and many thanks for the lift!" responded Shea, his sonorous
-voice pierced with the chill of the early morning. Murray went buzzing
-away on the back trail.
-
-Carrying his battered little suitcase, Thady Shea started off, gradually
-accustoming his eyes to picking out the rough trail. It mattered nothing
-to him that he might be days upon this road; it mattered nothing that he
-was about to negotiate the continental divide afoot. Time and space did
-not concern him, nor bodily discomfort. His was the supremely ignorant
-confidence of a child as he headed into the mountains to find a mine
-whose entire location, going at it from this direction, was a matter of
-guesswork.
-
-To be more accurate and practical, Thady Shea, having slept lightly
-while riding, was weary. He was also cold and confused. Now that he had
-reached a decision and was really on his way to Number Sixteen, he felt
-unaccountably homesick. Not that Number Sixteen meant home, but Mrs.
-Crump would be there. As usual, Thady Shea was a bit vague in analyzing
-his feelings; but he had a solid and definite purpose in view, at least.
-He was going to rejoin Mrs. Crump. He was going to learn mining work.
-
-He went on, trudging bravely under his burden, until the cold had
-pierced and chilled and numbed him. At last he could endure the cold no
-longer. Ignorant of forest rangers or forest law, he had quite missed
-the point of Miller's parting joke about sending up a smoke. He
-contrived to build himself a fire; a fine roaring fire, a ruddy, leaping
-fire that warmed him. It was a fire that blazed forth patent defiance of
-all law. Its darting glow was caught by a forest ranger in a lookout on
-Indian Peaks fifteen miles away.
-
-With the first gleam of the rising sun Thady Shea abandoned his blazing
-fire and took up his journey again, following the winding trail without
-trouble. A little later he halted and made a cold breakfast from some of
-the food that filled his pockets. Then he decided to open the suitcase
-and see if it were worth carrying farther, or if it held tokens of
-ownership. By this time, he was sorry that he had dragged the thing
-along.
-
-He smashed open the suitcase. Within it he found wads of crumpled
-newspapers, and among the newspapers seven stones. At first he thought
-they were nothing but stones. Gradually he realized that they were
-carven images of some sort. Except for these, there was nothing in the
-suitcase. There was nothing to denote its ownership--not a mark, not a
-line, not a card nor a word.
-
-Thady Shea set out the seven stone gods on the ground, and regarded
-them. The more he looked at them, the more he saw in them. Each one was
-somewhat different in shape, but all were of a size. They were smooth
-and rounded, as if from much handling, or as if worn sleek by many
-centuries. They were crude, uncouth little figures, those gods; they
-were fashioned rudely in the semblance of man, with every angle and
-sharp line worn down, obliterated, rounded.
-
-"They look as if some kid had been making mud dolls, and the mud had
-hardened," observed Shea in some wonder. The description was accurate
-and perfect.
-
-Thady Shea knew nothing about Indians or their gods. He had not the
-slightest idea what these things really were; but he was a member of The
-Profession, an actor of the old school. All his life he had been
-surrounded by the superstitions of the old school. As everyone knows,
-there are no stronger, firmer, and more absolute superstitions than
-those of The Profession.
-
-As Thady Shea gazed upon those seven stone gods which sat in the dust
-and grinned stonily back at him, various things suggested themselves to
-his fertile brain. Seven of them--and seven was beyond question a lucky
-number! Then, fate had undoubtedly placed them in his hand and had
-removed any clew to their former owners. Luck had come to him, and if he
-threw the luck away because of a little bother involved in carrying
-it--well, that would be an ill thing to do!
-
-Out of his subconscious self evolved a curious idea, a remembrance. What
-did these things represent? He dimly remembered something about the
-seven heavenly virtues and the seven deadly sins. The vague thought
-stirred him. These images were ugly enough to represent the seven
-sins--or the seven virtues. He must keep them at all costs; in the
-manner of their coming was something fated, something that appealed to
-all the latent superstition within him. He dared not refuse these
-talismen!
-
-So he replaced them in the suitcase and took up his road anew.
-
-It was a rough road that called to him. It was a long and lonely road, a
-road that took him out of human ken and into the heart of the high
-hills.
-
-He swung along at a good four-mile clip, his long legs fast covering the
-ground. He had never before this day been actually among the mountains,
-and he liked their friendly, forested faces. The rough trail denoted
-very little usage, yet this absence of all humanity did not oppress
-Thady Shea. He felt gloriously independent, free!
-
-About noon he was following Beaver Creek through a rough and rugged
-canon. Here he lunched, with a silver-black pool of water foaming and
-bubbling fifty feet below him; a pool that foamed green and silver with
-sunlight and bubbled with black shadows. Over on the opposite wall of
-the canon was a broken line of masonry, half hiding a niche in the rock
-where once had lived and died the cliff dwellers. It was a spot to
-remember. It was a place that stirred the deep things in a man's soul,
-that caused him to think upon the mysteries, the flashing glimpses of
-occult things. About that place there lingered a sense of the futility
-of man, a sense of the gorgeously foaming and bubbling eternity of the
-Creator. Thady Shea was glad that he had seen that place.
-
-Afterward, he halted for a smoke, this time beside the stream itself,
-farther along the canon. Thady Shea had never been a boy--until to-day.
-At ten years he had been an accomplished actor, a child marvel, drunken
-and drugged with the unhealthy atmosphere of the stage. But now--now!
-The altitude was high, and he was drunk as with fine wine. He waded in
-the stony creek, he even thought of fishing with a bent pin on a string;
-but he had neither pin nor string. He enjoyed a truant hour. Then he
-went on his way anew, vowing inwardly that some day he would return to
-this little bubbling creek and the winding canon amid the mountains.
-
-Despite the altitude, weariness had left him, and he carried the seven
-stone gods without feeling their weight. Deeper and lonelier grew his
-trail, the mountains folding him in upon every side. He began to feel
-the infinity of distance. He was a mere tiny atom here among these great
-solitudes. His insignificance was borne home upon him, mellowing all his
-spirit.
-
-In this chastened mood he came, suddenly and without warning, upon the
-tragic shack of the sheep-herder.
-
-It was a shack of logs and hewn timbers, a rough little shack, a tragic
-little shack. Upon one wall was fastened a faded paper, a permit issued
-by the forest ranger to cut these same timbers. In the sun by the
-doorway sat a little brown, half-naked baby, perhaps a year of age,
-whimpering and chewing upon a strip of raw white bacon. There was no one
-else visible. Over the place, tainting the clear high air, hung a
-fearful odour of mortality; an odour of tragic suggestion, an odour of
-blood and liquor.
-
-Seeing no one about except the baby, who stopped whimpering at sight of
-him, Thady Shea advanced to the doorway. He glanced inside. As he did
-so, cold and awful horror stiffened upon him. Even to his tyro's eye the
-story was plain to read.
-
-Upon the bare earthen floor, just inside the door, sat the sheep-herder.
-The effluvia of his garments told eloquently his profession. Between his
-outstretched feet lay a cheap revolver. His swarthy, brutal face, the
-face of a Mexican, the face of a barbarian drawn from mingled Indian and
-bastard Spanish blood, was sunken upon his chest. He was breathing
-stertorously, horribly. He was drunk, stupefied with liquor. Upon the
-floor beneath his hand had fallen an empty bottle which stank of the
-vilest mescal.
-
-Only a few feet distant, sprawled under one wall of the room, was the
-body of a woman, a brown native woman. She had been upon her knees
-beneath a little crucifix. She had fallen partly forward, partly
-sideways; a cotton garment had been torn from her left shoulder and
-breast, as though in some last agony. Beneath the left breast, black
-with flies, a pool of black blood was coagulating. She had not been dead
-a long time; an hour or two, no more.
-
-Thady Shea took a step backward. He put one hand to his eyes, as if to
-shut from his vision that sordid and horrible scene. For a moment he
-stood thus, his brain in riotous turmoil; then he started violently as a
-hand touched his arm.
-
-"Hello, stranger! I been looking for you!"
-
-Shea stared at the man who had just dismounted from a pony; a white man,
-grave and steady of eye. Something in the horror-smitten face of Shea
-drew an exclamation from this other man.
-
-"Here--what's the matter?"
-
-"In there. Look!" Thady Shea motioned to the doorway.
-
-The other man, the forest ranger who had come from the lookout station
-on Indian Peaks, quickly strode forward. His figure filled the doorway
-for a long moment. He stood there silently, gazing in upon that tragic
-shack, reading every detail with skilled eyes. At last he turned and
-rejoined Thady Shea, who was staring down at the baby.
-
-"You built a fire early this morning on the old trail up from the
-Tularosa Road?" The ranger gave his name and office. "H'm-m. Know
-anything about the fire laws?"
-
-"Fire laws? No," Shea was disturbed and wondering. "Why? Shouldn't I
-have built any fire?"
-
-"Not that kind--not a big hell-roarer. No harm done, I reckon; I stamped
-out your fire. But see to it that you don't do it again. Here's a copy
-of the laws."
-
-He extended a card. Shea pocketed it with a helpless gesture, and looked
-again at the doorway of the shack. The ranger caught his look, and
-nodded.
-
-"I guess you'd just found 'em, eh? It's a hell of a note. This fellow
-Garcia, with his wife and kid, came up from Mexico; refugees. He's been
-herding some sheep; some that the Y Ranch got a permit to run in a big
-box canon last winter--and he's not a bad sort when he's sober. But
-now--well, there's no doubt about him now. He'll be a good greaser in
-two-three weeks, when the drop's sprung. Suppose I got to take him in;
-hell of a note! You ain't been inside?"
-
-Thady Shea shuddered. "No," he answered. He looked down at the baby. The
-baby looked up at him, removed the strip of white bacon from her mouth,
-and smiled.
-
-"It's a girl!" said Thady Shea in surprise and awe.
-
-The ranger gave him a curious look, then took out his notebook and
-pencil.
-
-"Name and where from, if you please," he said. "We'll likely have to
-come and take down your testimony later on."
-
-Thady Shea gave his name, and gave as well as he was able the location
-of Mrs. Crump's mine. The ranger once more eyed him, but this time with
-a new air.
-
-"Hell! I've heard o' you, Shea. Partners with Mrs. Crump, eh? That's a
-pretty good recommend. Where you goin' from here?"
-
-"To the mine. I believe that by following this creek I'll get into the
-right territory sooner or later. I know how to reach the mine from
-Zacaton City, but from this direction I'm not so sure."
-
-Thady Shea was badly off. He was thoroughly shaken by the fearful scene
-within the tragic shack. It had unnerved him, and he wanted a drink with
-avid and terrible longing. The ranger observed it.
-
-"I ain't offering you any drinks, Shea," he said, drily. "Heard a few
-things about what happens to folks that offer you drinks. Still, I
-always do carry a drop for emergencies, and I have a notion that you
-need a sip mighty bad."
-
-Thady Shea forced a grim smile. "Thanks. But--the need will have to be
-greater than it is now, my friend. You think I can reach the mine
-to-night?"
-
-"No. Some time to-morrow, most likely. Now listen close and I'll give
-you directions where to leave this canon, or else you'll come out clear
-down on the Gila!"
-
-Having gleaned a fairly precise knowledge of the location of Number
-Sixteen, the ranger proceeded to give Thady Shea an accurate mental map
-of the trails, backed up by a rough drawing. Then he entered the shack,
-carried out the murderer, and bound the man on his pony like a sack of
-flour.
-
-"What the devil will become o' the kid?" he queried. "Come on, Shea,
-let's get the poor woman buried. That baby, now--d'you suppose you could
-wait here until I send back for her? I can't handle the greaser and the
-baby, too."
-
-Thady Shea did not respond at once. He seemed oblivious of the question;
-but as a matter of fact, he was deep in thought.
-
-The two men together dug a grave and decently interred the poor murdered
-woman. Over the mound Thady Shea intoned a fragmentary burial service.
-What he lacked in words he made up in rolling phrases culled from other
-sources than the prayer book, and in a deeply sincere manner which sat
-upon him with stately dignity.
-
-They returned to the front of the shack, where the ranger rolled a
-cigarette with studied care, and returned to his perplexity.
-
-"What about this here kid, now? These folks haven't any kin this side
-the border, and these greasers don't give a whoop for babies anyhow; too
-common. This Garcia is the one that deserves my close and personal
-attention until he gets shoved into the kind o' hell he's bound
-for--which won't be very long. Of course, the kid can go to some
-orphanage or the State will take care of her. She's a smilin' little
-cuss!"
-
-Thady Shea fingered his shaggy, gray-black beard.
-
-"If there's a razor around the place, I think I'll shave," he uttered,
-thoughtfully. His words drew a look of frowning surprise from the
-ranger, so utterly at variance with the subject did they seem. "Yes, I
-think I'll shave."
-
-"Why, friend, I've been thinking about that infant," pursued Shea. "You
-know Mrs. Crump, I gather? I think she would care for the little one.
-I'll take care of the child on the journey there; I imagine we can get
-along. I--er--I don't mind saying that--er--there is a whimsey born of
-infancy's fond smiles which warms the kindlier soul within a man."
-
-He broke off, quite at a loss for further words. But the ranger
-understood, and smiled to himself.
-
-"That suits me, Shea. You'll be at the mine, eh? May call on you later
-in regard to the evidence here. Yes, that's a good plan. Let's see if we
-can chase up a razor, now."
-
-The ranger disappeared inside the tragic shack.
-
-Upward of two hours later a new Thady Shea was continuing his journey;
-the tragic shack was far lost to view in the wilderness behind him.
-
-His upper lip, his long under jaw, were shaven and in white contrast
-with the bronzed skin of cheeks and brow. His wide, mobile mouth and
-chin differed from those of the wastrel Thaddeus Roscius who had lain in
-the road above the Bajada hill. They were firmer, more virile of set,
-stronger of muscle.
-
-In one hand he carried the battered little yellow suitcase. Upon the
-other arm was perched the half-naked brown baby, for whose benefit Shea
-also carried a blanket tied to his shoulders. This was not the ideal
-trim for a walking tour across the Continental Divide, but Thady Shea
-had no complaints to make.
-
-Never before had Thady Shea communed alone with a baby, particularly
-with a baby quite dependent upon him. This baby could not talk but she
-could coo, and she did coo. She could laugh, and she did laugh. She
-seemed to find a kinship within the deep, sadly earnest eyes of Thady
-Shea. She made it evident that she liked his eyes, and whenever they
-were turned upon her, she giggled with self-conscious and adorable
-delight.
-
-The day wore on. When darkness descended, Thady Shea camped at the brink
-of the canon, at the edge of a deep and stony gully which ran down into
-the canon below. He built a fire, this time in accord with the laws of
-the land, and produced his scant store of food. Fortunately, the baby
-was used to living by rough ways and pastures sere.
-
-In this one day Thady Shea lived long years. He realized it himself. He
-realized the change within him; he perceived it at once, without any
-vagueness or obscurity. He was filled with wonder and awe. He felt
-clearly that the manifest friendship and love of this brown baby had
-loosened something far inside of him. Within a few hours she had
-loosened something which had been hard and clenched and bitter inside of
-him these twenty years--something like a knot gripped about a part of
-his soul, stifling it. But now, at last, the knot was loosened, was
-gone.
-
-Once again he fell asleep under the stars with glinting tears bedewing
-his brown cheeks; they were tears of joy and thankfulness. He knew that
-he was no longer to drift upon the earth. From depending upon the
-applause of others for happiness, others were now depending upon him. He
-had someone for whom to live. Vanity was gone from him, and the worth of
-life was come in unto him. He now had a purpose, a real purpose, to
-drive him.
-
-That this purpose was very definite and earnest, he had realized with
-the unloosing of that knot about his soul. He knew whither he was going,
-and why--why he wanted to find Mrs. Crump. He fell asleep with tears
-upon his cheeks and in his heart a dumbly vibrant song.
-
-Some time during the night he was awakened; the baby was whimpering, was
-cold. The fire was dying down. He had been awakened by a queer noise, a
-noise like the clank of a shod hoof against a stone. He rose and kicked
-the ember ends into the fire. He removed his coat and laid it over the
-baby, then he stood looking down at the bundle. The fire flickered up
-until its glowing flare lighted his tall figure redly and distinctly.
-
-From somewhere in the darkness came a slight sound. Thady Shea lifted up
-his head and peered about, the vague thought of wild animals disturbing
-him. From the darkness echoed a faint laugh--a thin, ironic laugh, a
-laugh that thrilled Thady Shea with evil memories and swift
-apprehension. He seemed to recognize it as the laugh of Abel Dorales.
-
-Before he could do more than lift his head and peer into the darkness,
-that darkness was suddenly split and rended by a red flash. The crack of
-a weapon lifted and lessened among the hills; as it died away, the baby
-cried out, whimpering. Across the face of Thady Shea flickered a look of
-dismay, of surprise, of utmost horror. Thady Shea took a step backward,
-as though something had lifted him off his balance, as though something
-unseen had impacted against him with terrific force. He staggered and
-lifted both hands to his head. Then his knees seemed to loosen, and he
-pitched downward, at the very brink of the gully.
-
-From the stony ravine below came a heavy sound, as of a body pitching
-and dragging downward. It ceased, and there was abrupt silence. In that
-silence, the baby cried out, whimpering thinly.
-
-Into the circle of light cast by the tiny fire came a man leading a
-pony. The man was Abel Dorales and he was smiling.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--MACKINTAVERS MAKES FRIENDS
-
-
-Mrs. Crump was grimly jubilant. She had just killed, not far from the
-shack which she inhabited, a rattler. It was a peculiarly deadly
-rattler, a big diamond-back, and its black-and-yellow body looked very
-beautiful lying out in the morning sunlight.
-
-Mrs. Crump had killed that rattler most expertly; she had killed it with
-one snapping crack of a blacksnake whip. That one whip snap had coiled
-about the rattler's head and had neatly decapitated the reptile.
-Somewhere among the rocks that head lay naked and ugly, jaws wide agape,
-white fangs gleaming like needles.
-
-Now, up on the long hogback, Mrs. Crump directed the work of getting out
-ore, Lewis and Gilbert working steadily under her orders. There was
-already a goodly heap of ore ready for hauling. Mrs. Crump was awaiting
-the arrival of Coravel Tio, whom she expected hourly; she had written
-Coravel Tio very explicitly, and was looking forward to making some
-money in the near future.
-
-When Coravel Tio arrived, they would arrange about getting a light truck
-to haul the ore to railroad, and they would arrange about selling the
-ore. Coravel Tio would handle all such details. Actual production was
-well under way, and inside of another month Mrs. Crump hoped to have a
-good force of men working. Provided, of course, that the mine was not
-sold outright.
-
-"Looks like he's a-coming." Gilbert swung out his hand toward the trail
-from No Agua. Shading her eyes, Mrs. Crump perceived a smudge of white
-dust. An automobile was approaching.
-
-It was not Coravel Tio who came, however. It was Sandy Mackintavers,
-driven in a hired car from Magdalena.
-
-Mehitabel Crump was stiff-necked and uncompromising. She stood in the
-door of her shack, storm in her eyes, and waited grimly. Outside,
-sprawled on a bench that ran the length of the shack, Lewis and Gilbert
-smoked and also waited, ready to act if called upon.
-
-Sandy Mackintavers left his automobile and approached the shack, quick
-to note the arrangements for his reception. He came up to the doorway
-where Mrs. Crump awaited him. He removed his hat as he came, and mopped
-his brow; the sun was pitiless, streaming down with direct and scorching
-glare, absolute and insufferable. In another hour or two it would be
-much worse. Sandy Mackintavers held his hat in his left hand; he
-extended his right hand, square-fingered and strong, to Mrs. Crump.
-
-"Madam, I have come here as a friend. Will you shake hands with me?"
-
-"Not by a damn' sight!"
-
-Mrs. Crump's eyes were snapping dangerously. Her retort did not seem to
-affect Mackintavers, however. His square-hewn features assumed an oddly
-hypocritical expression of patient resignation. His hand remained
-extended.
-
-"I must explain. Your friend Shea has repaid the money--you understand?"
-
-"Reckon I do. What about it?"
-
-"We had quite a conversation, Mrs. Crump. That man is a wonder! Yes'm.
-Most remarkable! I never did see things so clear as he made me see 'em,
-aiblins yes. If I may say so, I feel ashamed of myself. I've done some
-unhandsome things; aiblins, now, I'll turn around. I'm right sorry for
-some things, Mrs. Crump. Will ye take my hand?"
-
-Now, if there was anything which could shake the uncompromising
-hostility of Mrs. Crump, it was to hear her bitterest enemy praise Thady
-Shea. Aside from this, to hear Sandy Mackintavers express penitence for
-past sins, even to hear him admit that he had sinned, was an astounding
-thing. The incredibility of it was tremendous.
-
-That mention of Thady Shea softened Mrs. Crump. She realized that Thady
-had made a great impression, had made so great an impression that here
-was Sandy Mackintavers, in the flesh, making apologies for past deeds!
-
-"Well, Sandy," she returned, bluntly, "I will say that I think ye to be
-more or less of a skunk. Howsomever, I'll meet any man halfway--even
-you--when he talks that-a-way. I don't guess we'd ever be bosom friends,
-but I don't aim to be mean or ornery when a man's tryin' to be as white
-as his nature allows him. Here y'are."
-
-She seized his hand and shook it vigorously. Mackintavers looked rather
-red about the face, as though her frank opinion of his character had
-bitten into him.
-
-"Now, if you have time to be talkin' over a little matter o'
-business----"
-
-"About this here location?" Mrs. Crump's eyes began to snap again.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Gilbert! Lewis! Come on in here. Meet Sandy Mackintavers. They're
-members o' the company, Sandy. They got claims along the canon, which
-same they turned in for stock. Stock ain't issued yet, but that's all
-right. Come on inside an' talk."
-
-The lady was truculent and openly suspicious; the two men were
-narrow-eyed, hostile. Mackintavers seemed quite oblivious, and entered
-the shack. All four seated themselves. Mackintavers produced cigars.
-Mrs. Crump lighted her pipe and uttered a single emphatic word.
-
-"Shoot!"
-
-"You have a valuable mine here," said Mackintavers, without preamble. "I
-want to control it. I'm talking frank and laying my cards on the table,
-ma'am. First, let me give you folks an idea of the railroad situation."
-
-He briefly described the prevalent car shortage, with the reasons
-therefore.
-
-"You'll get no ore cars until the war's over, and maybe not then," he
-pursued. "But I have a standing contract that can't be broken, for so
-many cars a month--and I'm getting them. Ye see? Aiblins, now, that
-contract's worth something; set your own figure on it. For the rest,
-I'll buy stock at your own price, a controlling interest."
-
-"Sandy, who'd ever trust you once ye got your nose into this thing?"
-Mrs. Crump laughed scornfully. "Not me!"
-
-"Then don't trust me," returned Sandy, meekly, although the veins in his
-temples swelled into blue cords. "Don't trust me. Hire your own lawyers
-to draw up the matter, protect your interests fully. Give me charge of
-the actual mine, and then sit back an' draw down the coin from your
-interest; savvy? If I'm not able to make millions out o' this here mine,
-I'll quit! Ain't that frank talk? Ain't I human? I tell ye, when that
-man Shea came along and turned back that money, I learned something!"
-
-"Where's Thady Shea now?" demanded Mrs. Crump.
-
-"Went to St. Johns night before last, with Fred Ross and Bill Murray.
-Said he'd be here later, maybe. I like that man! Something about him
-kind o' draws you. Aiblins, he'd be grand in the legislature, now! Eh?
-Well, well, about this mine matter; as I say, use any means ye like. I
-don't blame you for not trusting me. But it's a good thing and I'll buy
-into it, savvy? Protect yourself, certainly. But why not let me buy into
-it? I have a bit of influence; aiblins, now, I'd be able to help
-production here an' there, and to furnish no end of money for the work."
-
-The snap had gone out of Mrs. Crump's blue eyes. They were suddenly
-warm, kindly, unguarded. Thady Shea in the legislature! Why not? And
-Sandy was dead right. Everyone seemed to be drawn to Thady Shea.
-
-There was some subsequent discussion to which Mackintavers himself put
-an end.
-
-"Let it hang fire for a day or so, Mis' Crump. If ye don't mind, I'll
-hang around and look over the place and vicinity for my own self. Mebbe
-Shea will get back; the place is in his name, ain't it? Understood so."
-
-"Yes," assented Mrs. Crump, unthinking. "And each of us owns a third
-interest, or at least, so it'll be arranged."
-
-"And the other third?" Mackintavers looked swiftly at her. "I heard
-somethin' about a greaser up to Santy Fe making inquiries with Eastern
-firms about strontianite--that old curio dealer--Coravel Tio! He ain't
-the man, aiblins, now?"
-
-"Yes. He'll be here to-day, I hope. All right, Sandy, let her hang over
-a day or so. I don't know but what we might consider it."
-
-Mrs. Crump felt suddenly cold at that mention of Coravel Tio. How much
-had he discovered? He must have learned through Eastern connections that
-Coravel Tio had been making inquiries. Was this pose of honesty a blind,
-or not? What lay behind this visit? Had anything happened to Thady Shea?
-
-She cursed herself furiously for having been beguiled even into
-listening to Sandy Mackintavers. Yet--why not? His proposal offered no
-loophole for trickery. Mrs. Crump would have preferred to sell the place
-entirely; but to retire in security and draw down fat dividends would be
-a very comfortable thing.
-
-Late in the afternoon arrived Coravel Tio. He was mildly surprised to
-see Mackintavers. He was urbane, shy, suave, and professed great
-ignorance of everything. He readily listened to the plan of
-Mackintavers, and discussed it; but he reserved any opinion on the
-matter.
-
-Mackintavers had sent his hired car back to Magdalena, and would bunk
-with Gilbert and Lewis for the night. Coravel Tio had driven his own
-car, which was fitted with a camping outfit. He made his own little camp
-down the canon.
-
-Late that evening, after all hands had retired to rest, Mrs. Crump
-picked her way down the rocky slope and joined Coravel Tio, who sat
-smoking beside his car.
-
-"This here location is gettin' right crowded," she began, irritably,
-settling down and filling her corncob. "No chance even to speak a word
-no more! Well, what d'ye think o' this scheme? Don't it look to you like
-Sandy was tryin' to catch us off balance and topple us over?"
-
-Coravel Tio showed his white teeth in a slow smile.
-
-"Senora, let us go slowly. Let us go slowly. I really do not think that
-Mackintavers intends that we should consider his offer seriously. I
-think he is tricky about it. Well, he is about to come to a very high
-precipice, and is about to fall over that precipice; you see, I know
-something. I have information of which he is not aware. I have
-information which will prove very dangerous to him.
-
-"About the mine. I have corresponded with the Williams Manufacturing
-Company of New Jersey, who are large manufacturers of chemical products.
-They will buy this location outright, should it prove up to the samples
-we sent. They are of the very highest standing and reputation; I have
-dealt with them for years. One of their men is due here any day; in
-fact, he is overdue. His name is James Z. Premble. He will be empowered
-to make full negotiations with us. Until he arrives, let us not worry
-about Mackintavers."
-
-"Mebbe that's how come Sandy learned about your stake in the game; he
-knew you'd been correspondin' with somebody," and Mrs. Crump frowned.
-"My land! He's in with a heap o' them mining sharps, Coravel. They know
-all about each other."
-
-Coravel Tio smiled gently. "Very likely, senora. However, this firm is
-entirely above suspicion. Now, we must find your friend Shea at once;
-that is imperative. The property is recorded in his name, you remember."
-
-"Sandy knows that, too," said Mrs. Crump, her eyes troubled. "He knows
-too damned much, if you ask _me_!"
-
-"Fear not, senora. He has been meddling with forbidden things, things
-which bring their own punishment. He has been meddling with things that
-I would not meddle with! By the way, I met a very interesting man the
-other day; one Thomas Twofork, an Indian from the Cochiti pueblo,
-recently returned from an Eastern college. You would enjoy meeting him.
-A very fine young man."
-
-Mrs. Crump grunted. "I'd admire to know just what's laying back in your
-mind, Coravel Tio! Now, why the devil would I want to know any Injun
-buck like him? What's he to me?"
-
-Coravel Tio laughed softly and puffed at his cigarette.
-
-"Ah! I cannot say, senora. I am a curio dealer, no more. I know nothing
-at all about such things as these. But I know that Thomas Twofork is a
-very interesting man."
-
-With the following morning Mrs. Crump took Mackintavers over the ground
-and the adjacent claims. Coravel Tio complained of the heat, and did not
-accompany them. Instead, he stood out in the sun, heedless of the heat,
-and watched Lewis and Gilbert at work. He talked with them at some
-length, and they seemed much interested in his discourse. By this time
-they knew a little more about Coravel Tio than they had known at their
-first meeting with him.
-
-"What do you figger is goin' to happen, then?" demanded Lewis, when he
-had finished.
-
-"I do not know." Coravel Tio shrugged his shoulders. "But it is well to
-know what might have to be done, eh? Ah, yes."
-
-The morning wore on. Mrs. Crump retired to her own shack to cook
-luncheon, with much grumbling about the way the country was getting
-crowded up, and if many more folks came in she'd have to seek other
-quarters, and so on. Secretly, she was much pleased to exhibit her
-culinary skill, which was considerable.
-
-At length she energetically hammered a pie pan, and the four men
-assembled. Gilbert was the last to come in from the mine over the flank
-of the hogback.
-
-"Looks like some puncher is headed this way," he announced, eagerly.
-"Feller comin' on hossback, looks like he's headin' down from that big
-canon north of here."
-
-"My land!" ejaculated Mrs. Crump in dismay. "Wait till I get another
-plate set."
-
-"No hurry," returned Gilbert. "I seen him top a rise four mile north.
-Ain't no rush, ma'am. He'll be quite a spell gettin' here. Lots o' bad
-land in between and no trail."
-
-They sat down to the meal.
-
-Outside, the sun was beating down in waves of heat. It was a pitiless,
-insufferable sun. Few things could stand that beating, merciless sun and
-still enjoy it. Out among the stones, what was left of the big
-diamond-back was withered and scorched. Some distance away, the head of
-the rattler lay among the rocks, dead jaws wide agape, white fangs
-gleaming like needles in the beating sunlight.
-
-Inside the shack, the heat was intense; it filled the canon as heat
-fills an oven, and here was no cool adobe walls to break its force. The
-heat had odd and curious effects upon the five people gathered there. It
-did not seem to touch Coravel Tio or the two miners in the least.
-Mackintavers it coarsened and reddened and thickened with pitiless
-breath. Mrs. Crump it softened; flushed and perspiring from cooking, she
-seemed to have become less harsh, more feminine, altogether transformed.
-
-Suddenly, while they were eating, Coravel Tio looked up sharply and
-appeared to be listening. Then, one after another, the others glanced
-up, surprise in their eyes. The sharp and staccato pulse of an
-approaching automobile was to be heard. Another car!
-
-Mrs. Crump led the exodus. Beside her own car and that of Coravel Tio, a
-third car was standing; a hired car from Magdalena, the same which had
-brought Mackintavers on the previous day. From this car alighted a man
-who carried a suitcase and bag, upon each of which were printed the
-letters J. Z. P. He was a man of citified aspect, and he approached the
-party clumped around the shack doorway with a stiff gaze and a
-businesslike air.
-
-"I am looking for a lady by the name of Crump, Mrs. Crump," said he,
-setting down his suitcase and doffing his hat to the lady in question.
-"I presume that you are the lady named; if so you may be expecting me.
-My name is James Z. Premble."
-
-Mrs. Crump recovered from her surprise and stepped forward.
-
-"I'm her," she announced. "Glad to meet ye, Premble. Here, let me heft
-them grips inside the shack."
-
-Gilbert, however, was ahead of her in the task. But James Z. Premble
-disregarded them both. He had come to a staring pause. Across his
-city-pale features swept an expression of amazement and gusty anger. His
-eyes were fastened upon Sandy Mackintavers, and back at him was staring
-Mackintavers, wearing a look of consternation. Mr. Premble lifted one
-arm and shook a milk-white fist in air.
-
-"You low-down hound!" he snapped at Sandy. "Didn't I warn you to keep
-away from me? What are you trying to----"
-
-"Shut your fool mouth!" roared Mackintavers. "No need of airing things
-here."
-
-"I'll say what I dashed please!" affirmed Premble, glaring. "I suppose
-you own this place, eh? I suppose you told some lying tale and these
-people swallowed it! Well, you can't shut me up. You can't gag _me_!
-You're about the worst swindler that ever kept out of State's prison,
-get that? You may be running this place, but you'll not run me."
-
-"Hush up, pilgrim!" Mrs. Crump stepped in front of Premble and assumed
-charge of the situation. "Hush up! Sandy don't own this place, and he
-ain't runnin' nothin'. You a friend of his?"
-
-"Friend? _Friend?_" Mr. Premble hoarsely gasped the word. "I wouldn't be
-his friend if he would give me a million dollars! I wouldn't be his
-friend if I was the last man and he was the last woman on earth! Why,
-that rogue played the worst low-down trick on me over in El Paso
-that----"
-
-"Well, repress the sentiments," urged Mrs. Crump, calmly. "I guess we
-coincide with your feelin's, more or less, but at the present moment
-Sandy is a guest on this here prop'ty, which same prop'ty belongs to me,
-more or less. You're a guest likewise and I don't aim to have no ruction
-start between two o' my guests. I don't know you, Mr. Premble, and I
-don't know as I want to know ye, having a mean and rollin' eye like you
-have; but you're here on business and that goes as it lays. No war talk!
-Savvy?"
-
-With a mighty effort Mr. Premble composed his features.
-
-"Very well, madam, very well," he returned, stiffly. "You may depend
-upon it, there will be no more trouble--unless I meet this man the other
-side of your property line."
-
-"You won't," said Mrs. Crump, grimly. "Come on in and set to dinner.
-Gilbert, you done? Then call that there driver to come up and have a
-bite, will ye? No words out'n you, neither, Sandy Mackintavers. Gents,
-come inside an' smoke up and entertain Mr. Premble. I'll get them
-'tatoes het up in a mite."
-
-First to enter the shack was James Z. Premble. He passed Mackintavers,
-standing at the door, and glared at him. Then, as he passed on into the
-shack, the features of Mr. Premble relaxed into the fleetest and most
-momentary shadow of a grin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--DORALES POSTS NOTICES
-
-
-The excitement caused by the arrival of James Z. Premble caused everyone
-to forget the horseman who had been seen approaching from the north. And
-Mr. Premble, somewhat against his inmost desire, continued for a time to
-fill the centre of the picture.
-
-The assemblage quite filled the shack--crowded it, in fact. Premble, the
-New Yorker, barely paused for introductions before diving into the food
-that Mrs. Crump set before him. Lewis sat and smoked in the lean-to, by
-the stove; Gilbert lounged beside the door. Mackintavers sat in the
-corner, chewing a cigar. Coravel Tio was rolling a cigarette with great
-care, and sighed a little as he licked it; leaning forward, he scratched
-a match upon the floor, and took advantage of a pause in the
-conversation to address James Z. Premble.
-
-"An odd name, senor," he said, softly. "A very odd name! I have never
-met any one whose initial was that of Z. May I ask what name it stands
-for, senor?"
-
-Mr. Premble looked at his questioner, and in his shrewd eyes there
-showed a swift and sudden hesitation; but Coravel Tio was lighting his
-cigarette with much absorption.
-
-"Zacariah," responded the New Yorker. "I don't like the name, myself.
-Never use it."
-
-"Ah, yes! Now that I remember, I have met others--there is a name
-Zebulon, I think, eh? Yes, Zebulon. So you are the gentleman of whom
-your firm wrote me, eh? I am glad to meet you, senor, very glad. You
-have letters and so forth? You see, I am part owner of this property,
-senor, and while I do not doubt you in the least, I desire to make quite
-sure of things before talking business."
-
-Laying down his knife and fork, Premble once again inspected Coravel
-Tio, who was now looking directly at him. Something in those gentle,
-mournful black eyes seemed to cause the city man uneasiness and
-disquiet. He reached into his pocket, nodding.
-
-"Eh? Sure, I have plenty of papers that will establish my identity and
-prove my authority to deal with you. A little bit hasty, aren't you? No
-trouble, though. Glad to have you assure yourself----"
-
-He produced a sheaf of papers and passed them intact, as though entirely
-certain of their contents, to Mrs. Crump. That lady, her keen blue eyes
-suddenly perplexed and watchful, handed on the papers to Coravel Tio.
-The latter, in silence, began to unfold and look at them, one after
-another. Premble continued his meal, and fell to talking with the
-others.
-
-Presently Coravel Tio came to the end of his cigarette. He rose and
-tossed the butt through the open doorway, where Gilbert was lounging.
-His eyes snapped a message to those of Gilbert; in turn, Gilbert made a
-slight motion. Lewis rose and shoved aside the curtain from the window,
-as though desiring more air, and then stood watching.
-
-Coravel Tio returned to his stool. At another pause in the conversation,
-he tapped the refolded documents on his knee.
-
-"These are all correct, Mr. Premble," he said, gently. "Do you know--ah,
-there is something that puzzles me! Now, when I had the pleasure of
-meeting you in Las Vegas last month, your name was different; it was
-Zebulon and not Zacariah. And you looked different, senor. Then, if I
-remember rightly, you wore a moustache, and your eyes were another
-colour, and you had a stronger chin than you have at present."
-
-A sudden tense silence had come upon the room. James Z. Premble looked
-very red, then his features paled again. Imperceptibly, his right hand
-fluttered toward his left armpit.
-
-"Don't do it!" said Lewis, from the window, and Mr. Premble gazed into
-the muzzle of a revolver. And: "Go slow!" said Gilbert, from the
-doorway, carelessly fondling another revolver. Mr. James Z. Premble set
-both hands upon the table in front of him.
-
-The chauffeur, seeing the general trend of events, quietly slid from his
-stool and vanished beneath the table. Mrs. Crump sat motionless, looking
-from one person to another. Sandy Mackintavers swallowed hard and made
-as if to rise, but Lewis shifted eyes and weapon slightly, and Sandy
-changed his mind about moving.
-
-"I was afraid of something like this." The voice of Coravel Tio was
-gently apologetic. "You see, the real James Zebulon Premble always keeps
-his engagements to the minute--unless something has happened to him. He
-is now two days overdue here. Of course, it would be possible for
-another man to waylay him and to obtain his papers; it would be quite
-possible for that other man to come here under the name of Premble, and
-to carry out a slight business transaction."
-
-"Smooth guy, aren't you?" sneered Premble. "You'll have a hell of a time
-proving anything on me!"
-
-"My dear senor, _I_ don't want to prove anything on you!" said Coravel
-Tio in pained surprise. "No, no, far from it! But I suspect that a
-certain firm by the name of the Williams Manufacturing Company, a firm
-that is very jealous of its reputation, might like to know that you are
-in its employ. _Si!_ Of course, you'll not reveal to us for whom you are
-working?"
-
-"I've nothing to say," sullenly returned Premble. He looked much
-perturbed.
-
-"Very well. Gilbert, take the gun from the senor's left armpit and lead
-him to his automobile. Tie him in his automobile and allow him to repose
-in peaceful meditation. That is all. Young man, kindly come from beneath
-the table and resume your meal!"
-
-The chauffeur, looking sheepish, crawled into view again. Gilbert
-fulfilled the orders that had been given him, and departed with Mr.
-Premble.
-
-Sandy Mackintavers, although trying to appear impassive and unconcerned,
-signally failed in his endeavour. He was completely astounded, swept off
-his feet, by the falling of Coravel Tio's mask. He was suddenly aware of
-the fact that in Coravel Tio he had a damnably clever antagonist.
-
-Now, too late, Sandy began to suspect a thousand things that did not
-appear on the surface. Conjectures flitted through his brain. Suspicion
-that the hand of Coravel Tio was a very powerful hand, and that this
-hand was set against him, deepened into hard certainty. Yet--not even
-Coravel Tio could know the truth! No one could know that Mackintavers
-and the false Premble were friends, were working in concert! There was
-yet hope.
-
-"Aiblins, now, there's no tellin' about these mining sharks!" observed
-Sandy in righteous accents. "I've had experiences of my own in that
-line, aye! But if you're willing to talk over the proposition we
-discussed last night----"
-
-Coravel Tio looked at him. Coravel Tio laughed gently, softly, very
-acridly.
-
-"My dear senor!" he said. "You knew about the real Premble and his
-business here. Your friend met the real Premble and did his work very
-well. You planned things nicely. You came and made us your proposition,
-knowing that we would refuse it, knowing that we would be assured that
-you and Premble were at enmity; knowing that we would sell out to Senor
-Premble--eh? And Premble would buy the mine for you. Ah, yes!
-
-"It was very cleverly planned, and very well executed. But now, senor,
-you had better go and sit beside your friend, and be driven back to town
-with him. There I think that you will receive some interesting
-information. I would like to tell you about it myself, but----"
-
-At this point Mrs. Crump came to her feet. She understood the whole
-trick at last, she understood the deep cunning of Mackintavers, and she
-was white with fury.
-
-"Coravel Tio, this skunk sure makes me blush to see him! Now, I aim to
-give him a right good hidin', which same he deserves plenty. Get
-outside, ye coyote--hustle!"
-
-From the wall Mrs. Crump seized her trusty blacksnake. Thoroughly
-alarmed, Mackintavers attempted no protests but backed through the
-doorway. Before the lady, however, uprose Coravel Tio, and his hand
-restrained her from pursuit.
-
-"No," he said, softly, looking into her eyes. "I have reasons, senora;
-good reasons."
-
-Mrs. Crump flushed, then paled again. Restraint came hard to her.
-
-"I aim to punish him," she rasped.
-
-"That is already arranged." Coravel Tio smiled at her. "That has been
-arranged--by the gods of the San Marcos. You will, please, leave
-everything in my hands, senora. Everything! I wish to handle everything
-here to-day. Everything!"
-
-Mrs. Crump stared at him, puzzled. Then she tossed away the whip.
-
-"All right," she assented, sullenly, angrily. "I won't say another
-damned word."
-
-By this time, Mackintavers was somewhere outside. Lewis still stood by
-the window. Gilbert was presumably down at the automobiles with his
-prisoner.
-
-But now the voice of Gilbert came to them. It was lifted in a shout of
-surprise, a shout of aggrieved anger and amazement.
-
-"Hey! Hey, you feller! What the hell you doin' there? Hey, Mis' Crump!
-Hustle out here!"
-
-Those in the shack hastened outside--all except the chauffeur. Scenting
-further trouble, that gentleman grabbed his plate and again retired
-beneath the table, to finish his meal in security.
-
-As Mrs. Crump, standing out in the sunlight, surveyed the situation, she
-became aware that the previously discerned horseback rider had arrived.
-He had evidently ridden right over the long flank of the hogback, past
-the mine workings, into the canon. Fifty yards up the canon, fifty yards
-above the two shacks, lay a horse that was weary unto death, a horse
-that had been ridden hard and furiously, without mercy.
-
-Not far from the horse was something white. This was a piece of new,
-white paper that had been fastened to Mrs. Crump's original location
-notice.
-
-Down below the shacks, between them and the automobiles, was another
-scrap of white; another piece of white paper fastened over another
-location notice. Standing only a few yards from the shack, and hurriedly
-talking to Mackintavers, stood the rider who had just arrived. The man
-was Abel Dorales. He had just put up those two notices, and he paid no
-attention whatever to the threatening approach of Gilbert.
-
-"Dorales!" gasped Mrs. Crump, and whirled. "Lewis! Here! Gi'me that
-gun!"
-
-"Stop!" Coravel Tio grasped her arm. "Stop, senora! Force does nothing.
-Leave things in my hands, _si servase!_ Lewis, go and tell Gilbert to be
-quiet--_pronto!_"
-
-The potently gentle voice of Coravel Tio held firm command. He was
-obeyed. Gilbert stood motionless, scowling; Mrs. Crump stayed her hand.
-
-Mackintavers walked quickly toward Mrs. Crump and Coravel Tio; eagerness
-shone in his eyes, and exultation. Behind him strode Abel Dorales,
-fixedly regarding Mrs. Crump. The half-breed's features were thinly
-cruel; his nostrils quivered slightly; a shadowy smile curved his lips
-into sneering lines.
-
-Gilbert turned and walked toward the new notice posted by Dorales.
-
-"Just got some news," said Mackintavers, jerkily. "Abel is goin' to stay
-and tell ye bout it. I don't s'pose ye got any objection if I light out
-for Magdalena, aiblins, now?"
-
-Coravel Tio was rolling a cigarette, quite unconcernedly. He flashed
-Sandy a smile.
-
-"Object? Why should we object, senor? By all means, go! And take your
-friend with you, your friend whose name is Zacariah and not Zebulon.
-_Vaya con Dios, senor!_"
-
-Mackintavers was plainly in haste to be off. He called to the chauffeur,
-who came from the shack and joined him. Together the two walked rapidly
-toward the car wherein was reposing the bogus James Z. Premble.
-
-"Y'ain't goin' to let them varmints go?" Mrs. Crump surveyed Coravel Tio
-with pleading indignation. "After them tryin'----"
-
-Gracefully, Coravel Tio waved his cigarette. "Si, _senora_! Let them go.
-Let them both go. There are larger things, much larger things, awaiting
-us."
-
-"But that feller Premble!"
-
-"Let them both go, senora. We have larger things ahead."
-
-Mrs. Crump sniffed in uncomprehending disgust; but she gave tacit
-assent.
-
-The engine of the car began to whir; the whir became a roaring hum, then
-a deep vibrant thrumming that lifted through the canon. The car, with
-its three men, moved away and leaped into speed.
-
-"Hey!" The voice of Gilbert, who had been reading the new location
-notice, drifted up to them. "Hey! This guy is jumpin' our claim! He's
-posted notices in the name o' Mackintavers. What the hell!"
-
-"Come up here, Gilbert," said Coravel Tio, "and keep quiet. We are to
-hear some news. Ah, Senor Dorales, have you lunched? We are glad to
-welcome you."
-
-Dorales did not reply. He did not move, but upon his lips lingered that
-thin, shadowy smile that was like the stamp of a cruel jeer. Gilbert
-heavily came up and rejoined the others.
-
-They stood there at the doorway of the shack--Mrs. Crump, Coravel Tio,
-Gilbert, and Lewis. Facing them stood Abel Dorales; he seemed to be
-waiting until the automobile should have gotten away beyond pursuit.
-Already it was a dot, lessening amid a trail of dust. In the bearing of
-Abel Dorales was a commanding air, a deep significance, a sneering sense
-of power. He was in no hurry to explain.
-
-The sun beat down in vertical, sickening waves; the heat was
-suffocating, insufferable. It filled the canon like an oven. To the left
-lay the spent horse, panting, loose-tongued, exhausted, unable even to
-reach the trickle of water below. No other thing moved within sight.
-Behind and above rose the long hogback that formed the north wall of the
-canon. It shut out from view all that lay beyond, all that lay over
-toward the mountains and the larger canon that drew out from the
-mountains to the north.
-
-The ground seemed to radiate heat in shimmering waves. To one side lay
-the dry and withered body of the rattler Mrs. Crump had killed--what was
-left by the preying tiny things of the earth. Somewhere among the rocks
-lay that reptilian head, what was left of it. Inconspicuous it was,
-unseen, dead jaws agape and long fangs glimmering like needles in the
-hot, sickening sunlight.
-
-"Yes," said Abel Dorales at last. "Yes. I have some news for you."
-
-He ignored that offer of luncheon. He ignored the lowering, menacing
-looks of Lewis and Gilbert. He ignored the suave Coravel Tio. He fixedly
-regarded Mrs. Crump, hatred flaming in his dark eyes and quivering at
-his nostrils. He had hated her from the depths of his soul ever since
-that day he had jumped her claim over in the Mogollons, that day when
-she had shot him down like a dog.
-
-There was nothing melodramatic in his bearing. He was grimed with dust
-and dirt. He was perspiring profusely; his lined and evil face was
-streaming with sweat against its sleek bronze. He had ridden hard, and
-he was tired.
-
-Suddenly he shifted his gaze and looked around, to right and left, at
-the shimmering and empty canon. He looked at the farther hill on the
-other side. He looked up at the long hogback which closed in those five
-persons, shutting out all the rest of the world like a vast door of
-rock. He looked up toward the mountain peaks that showed above the head
-of the canon. Some inward sense seemed to whisper to him a warning
-against eavesdroppers; but all the visible world was glowing with
-insufferable heat, and was deserted. His eyes gleamed with satisfaction.
-
-"What for ye postin' notices on my lands?" demanded Mrs. Crump. "Huh?
-How come ye sent Mackintavers off to file the claims at the recordin'
-office, huh? What ye expect to gain by all that fool play, huh? Speak
-up, ye mangy dog!"
-
-Abel Dorales looked at her, and smiled thinly. "One moment," he said.
-
-Turning, Abel Dorales strode up the canon to where lay his exhausted
-horse. The poor brute made a painful struggle as if to rise; forefeet,
-neck, and shoulders heaved convulsively, then collapsed again. Abel
-Dorales kicked the horse with contempt. From the saddle he took a
-battered little yellow suitcase which had been tied there and he started
-back.
-
-At a word from Coravel Tio, the others moved into the slender shadow
-cast by the north side of the shack, the side that faced uphill to the
-hogback. There Abel Dorales rejoined them. There he set the battered
-little suitcase on the ground.
-
-"I should have given this to Sandy," he said, "but I forgot it. Now,
-Mrs. Crump, your friend Shea stole this from the ranch of Mackintavers.
-Here is what he stole."
-
-With a swift movement he opened the suitcase and dumped out the seven
-stone gods. They strewed the ground in grotesque attitudes. One fell
-upright, grinning stonily as if delighted by the feat. Dorales tossed
-the little suitcase away.
-
-"Ah, yes!" It was Coravel Tio who spoke, unexpectedly. He spoke as
-though in recognition. "The gods of the San Marcos! But you are wrong,
-senor. Our friend Shea did not steal these things. They were stolen by a
-Navaho, a buck who was hired to steal them because he knew the ranch
-house of Mackintavers very well. He was hired by Thomas Twofork, who
-comes from the Cochiti pueblo. These gods were the gods of the San
-Marcos, you understand, and they were the gods of Thomas Twofork's
-fathers. That Navaho buck was killed in an accident. How Senor Shea
-obtained these gods, I do not know."
-
-Dorales laughed.
-
-"It doesn't matter particularly now. Anyway, we'll concede that Shea
-didn't steal them, eh? All right. Sandy wanted these gods back, so I
-fetched them along. In my hurry to get this property located, I forgot
-to give them----"
-
-"Where's Thady Shea?" cried out Mrs. Crump, suddenly. "Where is he?"
-
-Abel Dorales looked at her, his lips curving in cruel enjoyment.
-
-"Dead. This location was in his name. I believe that he is without
-heirs; since he is dead, I believe that his location reverts to the
-government. Whoever is first to file upon it, gets it. You see? The
-notices have been posted. Sandy has gone to file the location--now do
-you understand?"
-
-"Liar!" Mrs. Crump flung the word at him in blind, gasping incredulity.
-"He ain't dead! Thady Shea ain't dead!"
-
-"Oh, you need not blame me!" said Dorales, and laughed again. "I
-followed him, yes; but I came too late. I found him in a canon over on
-the divide--Beaver Canon."
-
-"There was a Mexican refugee camped there with his family; a
-sheep-herder. Shea had come and had drunk mescal. He had become drunk,
-beastly drunk. I am not certain of what took place, because
-unfortunately I arrived too late--but the woman was dead, and Shea had
-fallen over the edge of a gully, breaking his neck. He had been shot,
-also. I think the woman must have shot him--first."
-
-Under the lash of these slow words, delivered with a frightful
-appearance of truth, Mrs. Crump had gone quite livid. A hoarse,
-inarticulate growl came from her throat. The mortal pallor of a fury
-beyond all control came upon her; she trembled with sheer passion.
-
-Then she started forward--but the hand of Coravel Tio gripped into her
-wrist.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--DORALES RUNS AWAY
-
-
-"Look!" said the soft voice of Coravel Tio. "Look up at the skyline!"
-Mrs. Crump tore herself free from that restraining hand--but she looked.
-She looked up, beyond Abel Dorales, above Abel Dorales, at the line of
-the hogback that cleaved across the hot blue sky. She stood thus,
-looking, wonder upon her.
-
-There, clear-cut and sharp against the quivering blue sky, appeared
-three figures. They were the figures of a horse and two men; one of the
-men carried a bundle in his arms. This last figure sank again from sight
-almost instantly, as did that of the horse. The figure of the other man
-came down the steep slope, came down swiftly and eagerly.
-
-Abel Dorales saw Mrs. Crump look upward. He saw the others follow her
-gaze, saw the startled and wondering surmise that filled their eyes. He
-turned, catlike, and looked. He stared at that tall figure, whose
-clothes were torn and dishevelled, whose forehead was streaked by the
-raw, red brand of a hot bullet. He stared at that figure, which was
-coming down the hillside rapidly toward him.
-
-"_Dios!_" he whispered, throatily. "_Jesus Maria!_"
-
-He crossed himself; the gesture was made in terrible, spasmodic haste.
-His arms flung out wide, palms backward as though in search of some
-support. He took a retreating step, and another, as that tall figure
-strode down at him; he backed against a bowlder and stood thus, staring.
-His brown face became ghastly pale, his mouth opened in slavering
-horror.
-
-In his madness there was reason. He had come here quickly, very quickly,
-after shooting Thady Shea and seeing him topple into that gully; he knew
-that no other man could walk here and arrive so soon after he had
-arrived himself. He knew that this tall figure with the raw, red brand
-across the brow could be no living man.
-
-"_Que quiere?_" he cried, huskily, with a great effort forcing his vocal
-chords to do their work. "_Que quiere?_ What do you want, hell dweller?"
-
-Mrs. Crump, who did not believe in ghosts, and who was not easily shaken
-off her balance, satisfied herself that it was really Thady Shea who
-approached. Then she slipped to the doorway of the shack and picked up
-the blacksnake whip which she had tossed away. She stood at the corner
-of the shack, waiting, watching Abel Dorales, her lips grimly clenched
-into a thin line. She was quite content to let Thady Shea settle his own
-score with the man.
-
-Thady came forward, wordless, his gaze fastened upon Dorales, deep anger
-gleaming in those intensely black eyes. Abel Dorales, ashen white, edged
-around the side of the bowlder. His hand drifted to his pocket; it
-flashed up again with a revolver.
-
-But as Abel Dorales swung down that revolver, as he drew down on Thady
-Shea for a desperate ghost-quelling shot, something snaked out through
-the air--something that seemed to leap from the expert arm of Mehitabel
-Crump. It curled about the wrist of Abel Dorales, it curled and clung
-with vicious snap about his hand and fingers; as the head of a
-rattlesnake is snapped and tugged from his body with one whipcrack, so
-the revolver was torn from the hand of Dorales and sent flying out upon
-the stones.
-
-Thady Shea flung himself upon Dorales.
-
-As has been previously seen, Thady Shea knew nothing about the science
-and art of fighting. His was a blind, primitive, untutored lust for
-vengeance. He had heard that resonant voice telling the story of his
-death; he had heard, lifting to him above the crest of the hogback, that
-false tale designed to blacken his memory, and now he plunged headlong
-at Abel Dorales, angered as he had never been angered in his life.
-
-Stricken and all unstrung by what he had taken to be an apparition, Abel
-Dorales tried to stumble away, cowering. But in a moment the furious,
-clumsy blows of Thady Shea proved that here was real flesh and blood;
-Shea landed one smash that all but stove in the ribs of his enemy. In
-his arms was terrific strength, had he but known how to use it. Perhaps
-it was as well that the knowledge was lacking, else Dorales had died
-very brutally and quickly.
-
-Still retreating, Dorales gathered himself together and faced the storm.
-He saw that this was no ghost, but a man of flesh and blood--a man very
-weary, very terrible, a man whose consuming anger swept away all sense
-of bodily hurt and weariness. Dorales blocked the furious blows, then,
-most incautiously, allowed Thady Shea to clinch.
-
-That was near to being the death of Dorales, for now the terrific
-strength of Thady Shea poured forth like a flood. The two men locked,
-reeled back and forth, went plunging down to the stones. They rolled
-down the hillside; they fought with utter madness--yet ever the steel
-arms were tightening about the body of Dorales, ever the ribs of Dorales
-were cracking and giving inward.
-
-In that primitive and sickening struggle, neither man saw or gave heed
-to anything else than the face of his foe. Neither man observed that, as
-they upheaved and rolled again, they had come upon something that
-gleamed like needles in the sunlight; something wide and gaping that lay
-there unseen and inconspicuous among the stones.
-
-Desperate, feeling the very life wrenching out of him, Abel Dorales
-flung loose one arm and attempted to clutch a stone, wherewith to batter
-at the deadly face above him. The two men writhed again, heaved upward,
-fell heavily in a twisted mass. Something thin and piercing, something
-that gleamed like white needles in the sunlight, ripped the skin of
-Dorales' outflung arm. Upon that arm fell all the plunging weight of
-Thady Shea, grinding it down upon the stones, grinding with it the
-gaping jaws of that rattler's head, grinding arm and jaws until the
-skin, from wrist to elbow, was burst and ripped asunder as cloth is
-ripped before a knife.
-
-The pain of this unseen, blind hurt fired Dorales into frantic efforts.
-He flung Shea backward; he hammered in one blow and another, rocking
-back Shea's head and blinding him. Dorales gained his feet once more,
-writhing free, panting. He was freed of Shea's grip. His arm was
-dripping blood. Dorales looked down at Thady Shea, who was weakly rising
-to throw himself forward anew--then Abel Dorales turned. He turned and
-ran, bounding and sliding to the canon floor in great leaps, running
-wildly and blindly past the two automobiles, running from the vengeance
-of the man whom he had tried to murder, the man who now seemed to be
-more than man. But Thady Shea did not pursue, for now weakness and
-dizziness had come upon him, and after two steps Shea fell forward.
-
-From the doorway of the shack came a sharp report; a fleck of dust
-lifted, slightly to one side of the running figure of Dorales. There
-came a second report, and a fleck of dust lifted from between the
-running feet of Dorales. Mrs. Crump was throwing down for the third and
-final shot when Coravel Tio wrenched her arm aside.
-
-"For the love of Heaven, stop!" cried Coravel Tio. "No murder, senora!
-Go and look after Shea--quick!"
-
-He tore the revolver away from her; then he watched Abel Dorales until
-the half-breed turned a bend in the canon and was lost to sight.
-
-Gilbert and Lewis had run to lift Thady Shea, and Mrs. Crump joined
-them. Tears shone upon her cheeks as Thady Shea came to his feet and
-faintly smiled at her. His lips moved, and a panting whisper reached her
-ears.
-
-"The baby--look after--her! I--knew--you wouldn't mind----"
-
-"Carry him into the shack, ye galoots!" snapped Mrs. Crump, crisply, one
-hand dabbing the tears from her eyes. "Can't you see his mind's
-wanderin'? Hurry up, now!"
-
-Despite Shea's protest, they obeyed her mandate. She followed them as
-far as the shack doorway, then paused. Another man had come down from
-the hogback, had suddenly appeared from nowhere, and was talking with
-Coravel Tio; another man, tall and swarthy of face, behind whom followed
-a saddled pony. The pony was very weary.
-
-It was not the man at whom Mrs. Crump looked, however. It was the bundle
-in his arms which drew her startled attention--that bundle was
-unmistakably a baby! She realized that Thady Shea had not been wandering
-in his mind after all. It was a baby, a little brown baby who was cooing
-and laughing in the face of Coravel Tio.
-
-Hastily, Mrs. Crump stepped forward, Coravel Tio turned to meet her.
-
-"Senora, this is my friend Thomas Twofork, of whom I told you. He has
-been following those gods of the San Marcos, and now he has found them."
-
-Coravel Tio gestured toward the earth, where lay the seven stone gods
-sprawled in grotesque attitudes, one alone being upright, grinning
-stonily. But Mrs. Crump paid no heed to him or to the smiling Thomas
-Twofork. From the latter's infolding arms she seized the baby with a
-sudden and fierce gesture.
-
-"Where'd ye get it? Where'd Thady Shea get it?" she demanded, sharply.
-
-Thomas Twofork, standing there in the sunlight, told his story, while
-Mrs. Crump fondled the baby with admiration and kindliness growing in
-her keen blue eyes.
-
-Thomas Twofork had located that battered yellow suitcase at the Hotel
-Aragon, had seen Thady Shea depart with it--and had found the fan belt
-on his own car broken. While repairing it, he had become aware that
-Dorales was also on the trail of Shea. Dorales had started westward, and
-after him, Twofork.
-
-Dorales had not gone on to St. Johns, but had followed the tracks of
-Murray's car when it turned off on the trail to Old Fort Tularosa and
-Aragon. He had met Murray's car returning without Thady Shea, and had
-hastened on into Aragon; by the time he discovered that Shea had not
-been here, and had exchanged his car for a horse, much time was lost.
-
-Dorales had gone back along the trail, had picked up Shea's track at
-daybreak, and had followed; after Dorales had gone Thomas Twofork,
-patiently unhurrying. Both men had met the ranger returning to town with
-the murderer, Garcia, and had learned Shea's route.
-
-When Dorales had fired that shot in the night, Twofork had been waiting,
-had seen the act too late to prevent it. Dorales had at once taken the
-yellow suitcase, pushing forward without delay. Thomas Twofork had found
-Thady Shea in the gully, creased by the bullet, but unwounded, battered
-by the fall but sound of wind and limb. With Shea in the saddle, holding
-the baby, Thomas Twofork had followed the trail of Dorales quickly and
-unerringly.
-
-The remainder was briefly told. Knowing that the hogback hid all the
-country beyond the view of those in the canon, Thady Shea had waited
-until Dorales had ridden down into the canon, then had come on with
-Thomas Twofork. Unseen, the two men had arrived, had waited; at the
-right moment, Thady Shea had made his appearance. As Thomas Twofork told
-it, the whole story was very simple, all very prosaic. But to those who
-had waited by the shack in the canon, it had not been simple or prosaic.
-It had been very tragic and very terrible.
-
-"So work the gods!" Coravel Tio tossed away his cigarette. "Thomas
-Twofork, here are the gods of your fathers; they are yours to take back
-to Cochiti. They have brought disaster upon Mackintavers and Dorales;
-they have brought us good blessings. And presently will come the real
-Premble, senora, to buy this mine of ours."
-
-"What was that ye threatened Sandy about?" demanded Mrs. Crump, looking
-up from the baby for the first time. "That information ye mentioned?"
-
-"Oh, that!" Coravel Tio laughed gently. "The grand jury is sitting at
-Santa Fe. I arranged a few things; a few affidavits, chief among them
-that of Senor Cota, one of our native legislators. I am confident that
-by this time Sandy Mackintavers has been indicted for bribery and other
-things. When he reaches Magdalena, he will find officers waiting for
-him. That is all. He paid too much attention to the gods of the San
-Marcos, and not enough attention to business. Ah, yes! Now, I am very
-curious to find what made so much blood upon the arm of Abel Dorales. I
-wonder, now!"
-
-He beckoned to Thomas Twofork. The two men walked away, their eyes
-intent upon the stony ground of the hillside.
-
-Mrs. Crump went into the cabin, bearing the baby. Somewhat to her
-surprise, she found Thady Shea sitting at the table, enjoying a hearty
-meal by the aid of Gilbert and Lewis.
-
-"My land, Thady. I thought ye was plumb laid out. So ye've come back at
-last, huh? Well, set steady a while till I get some water on the
-stove--got to fix this here baby up a bit. Pore little critter! Don't
-know when I've seen a baby chortle like this here one."
-
-Presently she had disposed the baby upon her own bunk, and found that
-the two men had gone. She was alone in the shack with Thady Shea and the
-baby. She went to the table and extended her hand.
-
-"Thady," she said, her blue eyes moist, "have--have ye forgiven me that
-blow?"
-
-He stood awkwardly, gripping her hand, a glow spreading over his face as
-he read the message in her eyes. Seldom had he seen her eyes look so
-tender, so womanly.
-
-"What blow? I don't--oh! Why, I had really forgotten it."
-
-"I ain't. It's sore mem'ry," said Mrs. Crump, bluntly. "Thady, when that
-varmint told that yarn about you bein' dead and so on, I was fixin' to
-kill him--yes, I was! In another minute I'd ha' done it, too. And now,"
-suddenly her voice became crisp and harsh, defiantly harsh, "what ye
-mean bringin' that baby around here? D'you reckon I got time and room to
-take care o' babies?"
-
-A look of pained astonishment came to the man's eye.
-
-"Why--why, I intended to take care of that baby myself! She seemed to
-like me----"
-
-"Who wouldn't, ye blunderin' big heart of a man!" she returned, softly.
-"Yes, I reckon that baby is goin' to stay right here, Thady Shea. I just
-wanted to see the idea in your mind, and now I reckon I know. Yes, sir!
-I reckon I know."
-
-"You don't know--at least not all of it." Thady Shea was smiling now,
-smiling down into her eyes. "That baby is dependent on me; I'm going to
-make her happy! And she isn't all, either. I'm an old man and pretty
-useless, but--but I found a big purpose that has drawn me back
-here--and--and I want to tell you----"
-
-Out upon the stony hillside, out in the blinding white sunlight, Coravel
-Tio and Thomas Twofork were standing together. In his hand the Indian
-held something--something fragmentary and crushed, something that
-glittered like broken needles in the sunlight.
-
-"It was the head of a rattlesnake," said Thomas Twofork, meditatively,
-"and not long dead. You see? The fangs caught in his arm. The two men
-fell and ground into the stones the arm and fang together; the fangs
-were ripped along his arm----"
-
-"Ah, yes! It is very wonderful." Coravel Tio began to roll a cigarette.
-He gazed down the canon where the running figure of Abel Dorales had
-disappeared, and speculation filled his dreamy dark eyes.
-
-"Was there any poison in the fangs? Very likely, Thomas Twofork. Perhaps
-it had been there in the moment of death; beyond doubt, it had been
-there. Was it dried up, too dried up to take effect? Well, we do not
-know. Soon, in a day or two, we shall know. One thing I do know,
-however--I know that _I_ would never meddle with the gods of the San
-Marcos. Eh?"
-
-Thomas Twofork was a college graduate, but he was first an Indian. To
-this last word of his companion he nodded solemn affirmation. The two
-men turned and started toward the shack; but a few yards from the
-doorway, they halted and glanced at each other. From the building had
-come a sudden low sound of a woman softly sobbing. Into the eyes of
-Thomas Twofork leaped a mute question. Coravel Tio answered with a
-gesture, and the two men changed their course and came to a halt near
-the automobiles.
-
-"Well?" asked the Indian a moment later. "Why does she cry, Coravel Tio?
-Has that man Shea harmed her?"
-
-Coravel Tio struck a match, lighted his cigarette, broke the match in
-two, and gracefully tossed away the fragments.
-
-"No, he has not harmed her," he said, gently. "Yet she is sobbing; so,
-perhaps, is he. You do not understand these things, Thomas Twofork, but
-I am a philosopher. I understand everything! I have expected to hear the
-senora sob, thus, for some time past. Now it has happened. All is well."
-
-"Eh?" The Indian scrutinized him in perplexity. "But what does it mean?"
-
-"It means," and Coravel Tio smiled, "that the senora is very happy! She
-has found both a husband and a child. _Adios!_"
-
-THE END
-
-THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
-GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
-
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