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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Jesse James' Bold Stroke, by William Ward
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Jesse James' Bold Stroke
- The Double Bank Robbery
-
-Author: William Ward
-
-Release Date: May 26, 2020 [EBook #62236]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JESSE JAMES' BOLD STROKE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Graeme Mackreth and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "He pushed out beyond the shadows of the trees."]
-
-
-
-
- JESSE JAMES' BOLD
- STROKE
-
- OR
-
- The Double Bank Robbery
-
- BY WILLIAM WARD
-
-
-Jesse and his band while passing through Colorado on their way east
-have many exciting adventures. The great desperado is captured by the
-Indians, after a battle with United States Cavalry and is rescued by an
-Indian maiden. He blows up an Indian village with dynamite and performs
-other of the daring feats for which he was so noted during his career.
-In a mining city in Colorado, he saves the life of a sheriff and robs
-two banks, from which he and his men carry away more than a hundred
-thousand dollars.
-
-
- ADVENTURE SERIES No. 31
-
- Copyright, 1909, by The Arthur Westbrook Company
-
-
- Published by
- THE ARTHUR WESTBROOK COMPANY,
- CLEVELAND, U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- Chapter Page
-
- I. Indians 7
-
- II. Tied to the Stake 13
-
- III. The Flight from the Cliff 29
-
- IV. The Strange Battle in the Witch's Cave 39
-
- V. A Desperate Charge 51
-
- VI. The Race for Life 59
-
- VII. Dew Drop Again to the Rescue 68
-
- VIII. In the Fatal Circle 76
-
- IX. When the Earth Fell Apart 85
-
- X. In a Living Tomb 94
-
- XI. Jesse James' Desperate Leap 103
-
- XII. In the Hands of the Redskins 111
-
- XIII. Under the Branding Iron 124
-
- XIV. Jesse Takes a Terrible Revenge 142
-
- XV. The Battle of the Blades 156
-
- XVI. The Fight in the Golden Arrow 175
-
- XVII. The Double Bank Robbery 181
-
- XVIII. Conclusion 188
-
-
-
-
-Jesse James' Bold Stroke
-
-OR
-
-The Double Bank Robbery.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-INDIANS!
-
-
-"Look! Look!"
-
-The cry was uttered by the foremost of a little band of horsemen riding
-slowly in single file over the rocky bed of what had once been a raging
-torrent.
-
-Darkness was descending over the canyon-traversed wilds of Southern
-Colorado and the air was hot and still.
-
-Towering high above them, sinister and awesome in the half light rose
-solid walls of rock.
-
-And as the leader of the little band had rounded a jutting crag, he
-beheld a sight that had brought the startled cry to his lips.
-
-Far down the canyon, two fires glowed, seeming, in the darkness, like
-the luminous eyes of some wild monster.
-
-Roused by the exclamation of their companion, the others drew rein,
-peering intently ahead of them.
-
-Footsore and weary, for they had travelled fast and far during the day
-that was just drawing to a close, the jaded horses stood, with heads
-hanging low, while their riders stared ahead of them.
-
-"Them's either signal fires or camp fires," grunted one of the men,
-after a careful study of the brilliant lights.
-
-"Ain't you the wise lad, though," snorted another. "You talk as though
-we were tenderfeet. Any fool knows they're camp or signal fires.
-
-"It's which of the two they are that counts. Tell us that and you'll be
-saying something."
-
-"Well, Comanche Tony's the laddy buck who can find out," snapped the
-man who had first espied the glaring fires, slipping from his saddle.
-
-And without heeding the protests of the others, he glided away, soon
-being lost to sight among the rocks.
-
-The little band of horsemen were none other than Jesse James' notorious
-gang of outlaws.
-
-After their sensational hold-ups of the Overland Stages in the Devil's
-Burying Ground, the last one of which had been done under the very
-noses of a troop of United States cavalrymen, the outlaws had headed
-for Arizona.
-
-Hiding in caves and riding by night they had eluded the troopers and,
-at last, in the belief that they had outdistanced their pursuers, they
-had relaxed their caution, continuing their flight by day instead of
-under cover of darkness.
-
-Consequently, when the member of the desperate gang of cut throats who
-was in the lead had caught sight of the fires, they were struck with
-consternation.
-
-"It doesn't seem possible them sojers could have ridden round us,"
-exclaimed Bob Moore, as Comanche Tony disappeared on his reconnaissance.
-
-And this statement voiced the opinion of the others.
-
-"No, it doesn't," returned the bandit-chieftain. "But you can't tell.
-Maybe they've sent word to one of the forts to the south of us and
-they've sent out a searching party."
-
-"Phew! That would be tough!" gasped Sam Dirks. "We'd be between two
-fires, sojers in front of us and sojers behind us. It would take some
-figurin' on your part, Jess, to get us out."
-
-The fact was so patent that the leader of the outlaws made no comment.
-
-Well he realized the danger such a contingency would mean, yet till his
-trusted pal had returned from his scouting expedition, he could make no
-plans.
-
-Finding that they could not draw their chief out, the others whispered
-among themselves for a while, finally lapsing into silence.
-
-Steadily the two fires, that had so startled them, burned.
-
-Once or twice, some of the bandits thought they beheld figures moving
-about them.
-
-But the fancied forms disappeared so suddenly that they could not be
-sure.
-
-"Seems as though it was taking Tony an all-fired long time," growled
-Wild Bill, glancing about him, uneasily.
-
-But scarcely had the words left his lips than a piercing shriek rent
-the air.
-
-"That's Tony!" "Suthin's happened to him!" "He's caught!" ejaculated
-the startled bandits.
-
-With a burst of sulphurous profanity, Jesse slid from his horse.
-
-"Whatever has happened, we must go to him," he snapped. "Frank, you and
-Sam stay here with the horses. The rest of you come with me. Be lively
-now!"
-
-Yet before the desperadoes were out of their saddles, they received
-still another surprise.
-
-The fires vanished.
-
-With a suddenness that savoured of the magician's art, the two balls of
-flame disappeared before their very eyes.
-
-"It's the Devil's work," gasped Bud Noble.
-
-"Devil nothing!" snarled the world-famous desperado. "Come on! _We must
-rescue Comanche!_"
-
-Little relishing the task of advancing down the canyon whose jagged
-sides seemed alive with men, so excited were the imaginations of the
-outlaws, they hastened on, stumbling and tripping over the rock-strewn
-trail.
-
-With Wild Bill beside him, Jesse led the way.
-
-Every few yards they stopped to listen.
-
-But all was as silent as the tomb.
-
-"I reckon we're purty close to whar the fires were," whispered Wild
-Bill, at last. "I can smell the smoke from 'em."
-
-"Guess you're right. Boys, get your shooting irons ready. We're liable
-to run into an ambush any time. Keep to the rocks as much as you can."
-
-But his warning was of no avail.
-
-Of a sudden, the still, hot air was rent with whoops and yells.
-
-"Injuns, or I'm a nigger!" gasped Wild Bill. "Poor Tony! He's in for
-it bad--unless we get to him!"
-
-Jesse, however, had made a more important discovery.
-
-The shouts of defiance had come from above.
-
-And as the last warwhoop rolled back and forth between the towering
-cliffs, he raised his pistols, pointing them at random.
-
-Crack! Crack!
-
-Sharp and loud their report rang out.
-
-Sounded a shriek of mingled pain and terror and the next instant a dark
-mass came hurtling down upon the little group of men standing huddled
-together on the rocky bottom of the canyon.
-
-The smell of powder broke the spell that had fallen upon Jesse's
-comrades.
-
-With rousing cheers, they greeted the falling form.
-
-Viciously their pistols barked as they emptied them at the towering
-cliff.
-
-But their exultation was short lived.
-
-Yells, hoarse with rage, broke from the Indians.
-
-High above them rang some commands in the native tongue.
-
-And the next instant a deluge of rocks and stones was launched from the
-cliff above.
-
-Fortunately for the little band of outlaws, the Indians had misjudged
-their position and the avalanche of missiles fell to the south of them.
-
-Some of the scattering stones, however, struck the bandits, inflicting
-flesh and scalp wounds.
-
-Walled in between the two sides of the canyon, the din was deafening.
-
-All at once, as there came a momentary lull while the redskins awaited
-the result of their broadside, a voice bellowed:
-
-"Back, boys! Run for your lives! The bucks have tons of rocks!"
-
-It was Comanche Tony, who, despite the danger he ran of having a knife
-jabbed into him as he spoke, had braved death to warn his pals.
-
-A moment Jesse hesitated.
-
-Loath was he to leave his intrepid pal in the hands of the Indians. But
-he realized that should they tarry longer where they were, in the face
-of Tony's warning, the lives of all of them might be crushed out in a
-death more horrible than by bullets or torture--their bodies mashed to
-a pulp between the boulders hurled from the cliff and the rocky bottom
-of the canyon.
-
-"Stop firing! Back to the horses!" he roared.
-
-Amazed at this desertion of their comrade, the outlaws, nevertheless,
-obeyed.
-
-And scarcely had they moved from where they had been standing before
-another broadside of boulders was launched.
-
-"That was a close call," gasped Bud Noble. "It's a good thing we
-started when we did. But it don't seem right to leave Tony."
-
-"We're not going to leave him," snapped the world-famous desperado.
-"When we get back to the horses, I'm going to take Wild Bill and Texas
-and go after him."
-
-Anxious and excited were the two desperadoes who had been left in
-charge of the horses as they heard the sounds of conflict down the
-canyon.
-
-Ignorant of how, what they supposed was a battle, might have gone,
-when they caught sight of the forms running toward them, Frank
-challenged:
-
-"Who's coming? Halt or we'll fire!"
-
-"It's all right! Don't shoot!" returned Jesse.
-
-Relieved at finding the approaching figures were their comrades
-returning, Sam cried:
-
-"Have you got Tony?"
-
-But the world-famous desperado made no answer.
-
-"The rest of you wait here. Post sentries and keep your eyes and ears
-open.
-
-"Don't move from here till I get back. Come Bill. Come Texas."
-
-And, his two pals at his heels, Jesse started up the canyon in the
-direction from which they were coming when they had first seen the
-fires, bound for a break in the wall of rock he had noticed as he
-passed.
-
-But though he found it, because of the darkness, he was unable to make
-any headway, ignorant of the lay of the land as he was and, at last, he
-was forced to abandon his attempts to rescue Comanche Tony, deciding to
-wait till daylight should come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-TIED TO THE STAKE.
-
-
-When Comanche Tony had glided from his companions at the bend of the
-canyon, little did he think what was in store for him.
-
-Stung to the quick by the unjustified slur of the brother of the
-bandit-chieftain, he was fiercely resentful, muttering to himself as
-he dodged from rock to rock.
-
-Silently, stealthily, the wily old bandit drew nearer and nearer to the
-fire.
-
-But he was labouring under a disadvantage that was to be his undoing.
-
-Constantly was he looking at the two fires as he advanced and their
-glare so blinded him that he was unable to see aught at either side of
-them.
-
-But the crouching forms that lurked in the shadows of the cliffs were
-not so handicapped because their backs were toward the flames.
-
-Warned by the echo of hoofbeats, as the outlaws rode down the canyon,
-the Indians had ample time to arrange their ambush.
-
-Who the travellers were, it mattered not to them.
-
-They were on the warpath and redskin or paleface was equally welcome.
-
-Yet so craftily did Comanche Tony approach that he was almost upon them
-ere the keen eyes of the expectant bucks had detected his stooping form
-as he glided from one rock to another with absolute noiselessness.
-
-Startled to think that any one could get so near to them and
-disappointed that they were to capture only one prisoner, the bucks
-watched the bandit steal nearer and nearer.
-
-Bodies crouched, muscles tense, the savages waited till their victim
-was close to the fire.
-
-Scenting a trick, since he had been allowed to approach unchallenged
-and could discern no sleeping forms about the fire, Comanche Tony had
-turned, determined to get back to his pals without delay.
-
-But he was too late.
-
-No sooner had he faced about than the air was full of leaping forms
-which the glare from the fires showed to be streaked with gaudy-hued
-paints.
-
-Instantly the outlaw realized that they were Indians.
-
-Yet so sudden had been their appearance that they were upon him,
-encircling him with their powerful arms, ere he could draw his six
-shooters.
-
-For the moment, it maddened him to think that he, old Indian fighter
-that he was, had walked unsuspectingly into the snare of the cunning
-redmen, but only for a moment.
-
-If he had been caught, his pals should not be.
-
-And, utterly heedless of what the consequences might be to himself, the
-intrepid old bandit let out a yell.
-
-Startled, the bucks gazed at their captive an instant, then their
-amazement gave way to snarls as a dozen hands sought Tony's throat, to
-choke off his outcry.
-
-And it was the terrific pressure exerted by the steel-like fingers that
-had given to the shout of warning, the peculiar half wail, half roar,
-which Jesse and his men had heard.
-
-Maddened by such defiance, the redskins uttered a few hoarse commands
-and the next instant Tony felt himself lifted from his feet and
-carried, in sturdy arms, up a path in the cliff.
-
-But even then, desperate as his predicament was, the fearless outlaw's
-thoughts were of his fellows rather than of himself and he muttered:
-
-"I've warned the boys, anyhow, no matter if I did get caught in
-springing the trap."
-
-Yet he was quickly recalled to his surroundings by feeling his feet set
-on a rock.
-
-Accustomed by this time to the darkness, Comanche Tony was able to make
-out that he and his captors were on a ledge in the cliff along the edge
-of which was a black, irregular mass.
-
-Forgetting, in his eagerness to discover what this was, that he was a
-prisoner, the intrepid bandit stepped forward.
-
-Uttering vicious grunts, two bucks grabbed him and threw him roughly
-against the wall of rock behind them.
-
-"Paleface heap fool," snarled one of his guards. "Get too fresh, fall
-over ledge, spoil Injun's fun!"
-
-"By my scalp, but I must have suthin' pleasant ahead of me if fallin'
-to my death will spoil these devil's fun!" thought Comanche Tony.
-
-But again the contemplation of the perilousness of his own plight was
-forgotten in the realization that his reckless attempt to warn his pals
-had been of no avail.
-
-For, in the brief interval that he had gazed on the edge of the ledge,
-he had seen several bucks frantically beating out the two fires with
-their blankets, and he knew that whatever their game, the world-famous
-desperado and his men would be in grave danger, forced, as they would
-be, to advance in the darkness.
-
-Yet had he been an instant later, he would have seen the same braves
-hurriedly scoop handfuls of dirt onto the glowing coals, after which
-they covered the piles with their blankets and bounded up the path to
-the ledge.
-
-On their arrival, a hasty pow-wow was held and the next minute Comanche
-Tony had learned the purpose of the irregular mass of black along the
-edge of the ledge.
-
-Lying flat on their bellies, the Indians braced their feet against the
-wall of rock and threw out their hands in front of them.
-
-A sickening fear gripped the heart of the bandit as he divined that the
-objects were stones to be hurled from the ledge.
-
-Wondering if he could warn his pals of the terrible fate awaiting them,
-Tony's eyes were drawn to the figure of an Indian standing clear of the
-others.
-
-Like a statue he loomed.
-
-All at once, he uttered an ear splitting yell.
-
-He had caught sight of a black line of objects moving in the canyon
-below.
-
-Immediately his braves joined in and as the strident warwhoops rent the
-air, the prostrate bucks exerted their strength and the first avalanche
-of stones was started on its mission of death.
-
-But that it was launched too soon, the reader already knows.
-
-The suspense to Tony, however, was awful as he strained his ears for
-the sound of his pals' voices.
-
-And as he heard their yells of defiance he heaved a mighty sigh of
-relief which ended in a grunt of delight as he saw the figure of the
-Indian lookout topple and pitch to the bottom even while the report of
-a pistol rang out.
-
-"That was Jesse's shot, I'll bet!" he chuckled.
-
-But his exultation vanished as he saw the bucks stretched out on the
-ledge move along to more stones.
-
-And then it was that, tempting Fate for the second time, he had
-shouted his warning to his pals to flee for their lives.
-
-Too late was it for the redskins to save their missiles as his cry rang
-out.
-
-But even as the boulders were hurtling to the bottom of the canyon, the
-braves leaped to their feet and charged him.
-
-So terrible was their anger, that they almost crushed the bandit as
-they pressed about him.
-
-"Have your fun if you want," grunted Comanche Tony. "I can't die but
-once. But it'll be the sorriest work you devils ever did if you do kill
-me!"
-
-The tone in which the fearless old Indian fighter uttered this defiance
-was as calm and cool as though he were talking to a group of children
-instead of to a pack of blood-thirsty savages.
-
-His gameness amazed his captors, though it only made them crush him
-against the rocks the more furiously.
-
-But as he closed his eyes to keep out the sight of the hideous,
-passion-distorted faces before him, a deep-lunged voice uttered some
-sharp commands.
-
-In a trice, the terrible pressure relaxed and the next moment the
-outlaw felt himself again raised from his feet and borne rapidly upward.
-
-Ere many minutes he could tell that he was again on a level and
-instantly his mind sought some scheme by which he could kill time.
-
-For he felt that the world-famous desperado would not leave him to the
-anything but tender mercies of the savages.
-
-Yet had he known that his beloved chief was even then returning to his
-pals, having failed to find a way to scale the wall of rock, he would
-have been sad, indeed.
-
-But he did not know and his ignorance was bliss, in truth.
-
-As Comanche Tony racked his brain for some manner to delay his captors,
-more commands rang out and the Indians who were carrying him set him
-down.
-
-The moon had just risen above the peaks of the mountains to the east
-and, in its light, the bandit saw that he was on a plateau sparsely
-covered with stunted trees.
-
-To one of these his captors guided him.
-
-As he reached it, a couple of the braves lopped off the lower branches.
-
-Whirling him roughly, his guards backed him against the tree trunk and
-while they held him, others deftly bound him to the improvised stake
-with lariats they had brought with them from the bottom of the canyon.
-
-Grave, indeed, was his situation.
-
-And it needed no one to tell the captive bandit that the redmen
-proposed to burn him at the stake when they should tire of their
-preliminary tortures.
-
-But as his plight became more desperate, Comanche Tony became the more
-determined to gain time.
-
-Only one expedient was there of which he could think that was adequate
-in his dire extremity.
-
-He must scare the painted bucks.
-
-And while he was considering whether he could do this the most readily
-by threatening them with vengeance at the hands of the world-famous
-desperado, or by telling them a squad of United States cavalry were on
-their trail, the Indians made what was, to them, a fatal move.
-
-They kindled a fire about two rods from where Comanche Tony stood tied
-to the stake.
-
-As the tongues of flame leaped in the air, their reflection was seen by
-Jesse James and his men in the canyon.
-
-"By thunder! Do you suppose that's from the Injuns or the sojers?"
-asked Wild Bill, as his chief sprang to his feet.
-
-"I don't know. _But I'm going to find out!_
-
-"There's no need of waiting till morning.
-
-"Come on, everybody. We'll go down to where the first fires were."
-
-Quickly the desperadoes started, for they had ill liked the thought of
-leaving their pal to his fate.
-
-With Texas Jack and Wild Bill at his side, the bandit chieftain
-advanced till he reached the heaps of broken boulders that had come so
-near to being their death a short time before.
-
-As the bandits gazed up at the top of the wall of rock, Texas remarked:
-
-"It's a cinch, Jess, those bucks have some trail up the cliff. We
-didn't find any place to scale it, back where we come from, and by the
-looks of the wall ahead, there isn't any break, so they couldn't have
-got to the end of the canyon and back on top in such a short time.
-
-"That being so, it means there's some path near here."
-
-"Then we'll look for it. Get busy, boys. Comanche Tony's life may
-depend on our haste."
-
-With a will, the outlaws set about examining the side of the canyon.
-
-And while they searched, their pal was sparring for time with his
-infuriated captives.
-
-"See here, my buckos," he said, his voice as cool as when he had
-addressed them before, "I reckon you're making a mistake. I haven't
-done you any harm.
-
-"_But if you touch a hair on my head thar's not one of you who won't be
-shot to pay for it!_"
-
-The redskin warriors, to the number of a score, had been standing about
-the fire, now and then turning toward their captive as they jabbered
-excitedly, evidently arguing over some part of their contemplated
-torture.
-
-But as the calm words fell on their ears, they all faced about, while
-one of them, whose peculiar head-dress proclaimed him to be a chief,
-grunted:
-
-"Paleface talk heap big. Navajos fool paleface frien's. How um know
-Navajos kill paleface. Heap Injun in country."
-
-"That may be. But my friends are not ordinary men. _They're smarter
-than any palefaces you ever saw._"
-
-"You got caught. Heap smart, huh," and the chieftain grunted in disgust.
-
-"True enough. I did. _But my pals didn't._ They were smart enough not
-to get under the cliff where you shoved the rocks over."
-
-Guttural grunts came from several of the Indians and quickly the chief
-demanded:
-
-"Who you?"
-
-"I don't know that it's any of your business."
-
-"Me know. Great Bear know. Paleface army scout."
-
-Instantly the bandit realized that the braves had decided he was
-connected with the soldiers of the Great Father in Washington.
-
-And quickly was he to see his advantage.
-
-"You're wrong there, Great Bear," he declared. "I told you you were
-making a mistake.
-
-"I don't belong to the sojers any more'n you do.
-
-"_My chief's greater'n any sojers!_ He's got two battalions chasin' him
-now!"
-
-This announcement produced a profound sensation among the braves and
-excitedly they jabbered.
-
-But whatever his warriors were urging, their chief refused, again
-turning toward his prisoner:
-
-"Paleface talk heap big. No fool Great Bear. Great Bear burn paleface
-at stake. Paleface frien's cum, Injun fight um, scalp um. Ugh! Ugh!"
-
-And he sucked in his breath, making a gruesome sound.
-
-But Comanche Tony refused to be frightened.
-
-He knew that the Navajos were a peaceful tribe, as Indian tribes went,
-and he wondered what had sent them on the warpath, till suddenly he
-remembered the attack on the cabin Jesse had repulsed just before he
-had made his race for life from the Vigilantes, and it occurred to him
-that perhaps these were some of the same bucks seeking revenge.
-
-If such should be the case, it would never do for him to disclose his
-identity.
-
-Their words had told him that they had no fear of the cavalrymen, so
-that reference to them would stand him in no stead, and as minute after
-minute went by without any sound or sign of Jesse, his hope began to
-fail him.
-
-Yet no trace was there in his face of what was passing in his mind.
-
-Indeed, his wonderful coolness puzzled the redskins.
-
-They had been accustomed to see white men cringe and tremble before
-them, and the words of Great Bear had doubtless been intended to strike
-terror to his heart.
-
-But the fact that he was cool and indifferent made them think they had
-captured a man who knew no fear.
-
-One more attempt they made, however, to break their captive's spirit.
-
-After a consultation with two or three of his warriors, Great Bear
-spoke a few words in a low voice.
-
-Immediately four bucks stepped from the circle about the fire, their
-scalping knives in their hands.
-
-Came a sharp command from the chief.
-
-As with one movement, the braves raised their arms and lowered them,
-sending the wicked blades straight at their helpless victim.
-
-Shrilly the knives whistled as they sailed through the air.
-
-Fascinated, Comanche Tony watched the flashes of steel as they sped
-toward him.
-
-Could any strain have been more nerve-destroying?
-
-Any one of the four blades, should it strike a vital spot, would kill
-him.
-
-But all four were speeding toward him together, so nicely had the bucks
-gauged their throws.
-
-Yet the bandit was too familiar with the nature of the redman not to
-know that instead of striking him where death would result, the blades
-would simply inflict painful flesh wounds, that the red devils might
-gloat in the sight of his blood and agony.
-
-Every nerve in his body was atingle as he waited for the impact.
-
-Of a sudden, however, he made a terrible discovery.
-
-The knives were coming for his head.
-
-Like a flash, it occurred to him that his eyes and ears were the
-targets.
-
-A trice he contemplated the possibility of dodging them, for his head
-was not bound.
-
-But the realization came to him that while he might avoid one of the
-whistling blades, he could not escape all four, and he decided to make
-no move.
-
-Fortunate, indeed, was it that he did so.
-
-Nearer and nearer came the knives.
-
-Yet it seemed to Comanche Tony that years had elapsed since they had
-left the hands of the savages.
-
-Of a sudden, he felt a cool draught against his cheeks, and then he
-could no longer see the awful blades.
-
-Scarce able to believe his senses, he could feel no pain.
-
-Then it dawned on him that the bucks had been testing his courage by
-aiming the scalping knives so they would just miss him, if he remained
-motionless--and he thanked his lucky stars that he had not tried to
-dodge them.
-
-It was the very refinement of torture to which he had been subjected.
-
-And well the redmen knew it.
-
-To see the wicked blades coming for his head and not to move it when he
-was free to do so was an ordeal such as only one man in a million could
-survive.
-
-But Comanche Tony was that one man.
-
-Eagerly the bucks had watched him.
-
-When they saw he had faced death unflinchingly, they grunted in
-grudging admiration.
-
-"Paleface heap brave," exclaimed Great Bear. "Me know um now. Only one
-paleface got nerve like that. Him Jess Jame. You Jess Jame.
-
-"Injun hate Jess Jame!
-
-"You got die!"
-
-The logic of the chief was crude. But it answered his purpose and again
-he repeated:
-
-"Injun hate Jess Jame! Um got die! Burn um at stake!"
-
-Turning to his warriors, Great Bear addressed them in the Navajos
-language earnestly.
-
-And so engrossed were the bucks in listening to the words of their
-chief that they failed to see three faces rise cautiously above the
-edge of the cliff and gaze at the strange scene.
-
-Jesse had found the trail and was soon to make his presence known.
-
-When the bandit-chieftain and his men had reached the ledge whence the
-rocks had been hurled at them, he had ordered all but Wild Bill and
-Texas Jack to wait there while he and his chosen pals climbed to the
-top, fearing that the approach of all might be heard by the redmen.
-
-Sweeping the top of the cliff with a hurried glance the world-famous
-desperado had seen, with joy, that he was in time to save the life of
-his chum.
-
-Yet because he was aware that to act too soon would be as bad as to act
-too late, he dropped back behind the cliff again.
-
-"Texas, go down and bring the others up," he whispered, putting his
-mouth close to his pal's ear. "Don't make a sound going down. But it
-won't matter coming back.
-
-"_I reckon the fun'll be on before you get here!_
-
-"But hurry. We'll have our hands full."
-
-Hastily the bandit descended and again Jesse straightened up and peered
-over the edge of the precipice.
-
-And what he saw made his face grow hard as he raised his six shooters.
-
-Bearing burning brands in their hands, two bucks were advancing toward
-their victim tied to the stake, while two more carried armsful of dried
-twigs and leaves.
-
-Less than ten feet were they from Comanche Tony.
-
-Squatting about the campfire, prepared to enjoy the writhings of their
-captive, sat the rest of the Indians.
-
-The distance from the edge of the cliff to the stake was too great for
-a pistol shot.
-
-Yet Jesse realized that he must act at once were he to spare his chum
-awful suffering.
-
-Bending toward Wild Bill, he breathed:
-
-"We've got to rush 'em! Come on! Nail the devil's with the firebrands
-first!"
-
-With a stillness marvelous in the rapidity of their actions, the two
-desperadoes gained the top of the precipice and dashed forward.
-
-So engrossed were the bucks in watching their fellows that they had not
-seen the bandits.
-
-"Give 'em a yell, then shoot!" whispered Jesse.
-
-With a will the two outlaws gave the old guerrilla battle cry that had
-made Quantrell's men known and feared.
-
-Panic-stricken, the redskins leaped to their feet.
-
-Crack! Crack! Crack! Crack went the four six-shooters in the
-desperadoes' hands.
-
-And with each bark of a pistol one of the Indians advancing toward
-Comanche Tony, pitched forward, a bullet hole in his heart.
-
-But only for a minute did the braves lose their heads.
-
-Thundering at his warriors, Great Bear commanded:
-
-"Charge them! They are only two, we are twenty! We can push them off
-the precipice!"
-
-Inspired by the words of their chief, which had been uttered in their
-native tongue, the braves drew their revolvers, opening fire on Jesse
-and Wild Bill as they advanced.
-
-Never had the guerrilla battle cry sounded so sweet as it did to the
-ears of Comanche Tony as he stood, bound fast to the stake, watching
-the bucks approach with the firebrands and twigs with which to kindle a
-blaze about his feet.
-
-But, when turning his head, he saw only Wild Bill and Jesse and a
-moment later beheld the warriors rally to the charge, he was filled
-with fear.
-
-Two men, no matter how brave, would have little chance against the
-overwhelming numbers of the redskins.
-
-Then he remembered that his six-shooters had not been taken from him
-and he bellowed:
-
-"Jess! Jess! Cut me loose! I've got my guns! I can help you!"
-
-"Keep pumping at the devils, Bill," commanded the world-famous
-desperado. "We've got to stand 'em off till the others get here!"
-
-And, discharging his own shooting irons the while, Jesse ran to
-Comanche Tony.
-
-But though the shots of the Indians had been wild at first, they were
-so close to the outlaws now that many a bullet ploughed through their
-flesh.
-
-Seeing Jesse's purpose, Great Bear ordered the fire to be trained on
-him.
-
-And so furiously did the bucks respond that the bandit-chieftain was
-forced to give ground.
-
-Delirious were the yells of the braves as they saw this move.
-
-But their rejoicing was short lived.
-
-Aware, from the shots and shouts, that the fight was on, Texas and the
-rest of the bandits hastened up the trail, reaching the top just as
-their leader and Wild Bill were retreating toward the edge of the cliff.
-
-"Hold your ground! We're coming!" yelled Frank.
-
-Never were words more welcome than these as they rang in the ears of
-the sorely pressed outlaws.
-
-And even as they heard them, a volley crashed from the guns of their
-fellows.
-
-Surprised at the unlooked for re-enforcements, the bucks, however, held
-their own.
-
-But only for a few minutes.
-
-The fusilade of lead poured into them was too galling.
-
-Though they outnumbered the bandits almost two to one, for death had
-thinned their ranks, Jesse and his men fired three times as rapidly.
-
-Fast and furious raged the battle.
-
-Then, of a sudden, Great Bear shouted a command.
-
-With one accord, the bucks whirled and ran for the farther side of the
-cliff.
-
-And, while some of his men pursued them, Jesse hurried to Comanche Tony
-and slashed the bonds with his bowie-knife.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE FLIGHT FROM THE CLIFF.
-
-
-As the severed cords of rawhide dropped about his feet, Comanche Tony
-leaped from the tree to which he had been tied, swinging his arms like
-a flail.
-
-"By my scalp! it feels good to be able to move 'em," he declared. "I
-begun to think I'd never git the chance to use 'em again. I ain't never
-been bound afore.
-
-"You come jest in the nick of time, Jess. An' perhaps the old battle
-cry didn't sound good to my ears."
-
-"I reckon it did," assented the bandit-chieftain.
-
-All the while the two outlaws had been walking toward where the rest of
-the notorious band were standing, making an examination of their wounds.
-
-"Any of the bucks' shots get you fellows bad?" asked the
-bandit-chieftain, anxiously, as he swept the little group with his eyes.
-
-"Sam's got it the worst," returned Frank.
-
-Muttering an imprecation, Jesse strode to where Dirks was standing.
-
-"Where'd they hit you, Sam?" he asked.
-
-"In the shoulder, the right one."
-
-With tender fingers, the world-famous desperado cut away the
-blood-soaked clothes, while his men gathered about to learn the extent
-of their pal's injuries.
-
-As the red, angry looking flesh was exposed to view, they uttered
-various exclamations.
-
-One and all of them had seen enough wounds to know that this was
-serious. But to learn just how bad it was they awaited their leader's
-announcement.
-
-"That sure is a nasty one," declared Jesse in a few moments. "The
-shoulder blade's shattered."
-
-"It's too much for me to attempt to fix up. I'll just put a bandage
-round it and then you'll have to go to some town where there's a
-sawbones.
-
-"He'll probably say you'll have to lose your arm."
-
-The words evoked groans from the others as Sam wailed:
-
-"And it's me best arm, too. What good'll I be with only one fin left? I
-wish the devils had a killed me."
-
-"Nonsense, man! Buck up! You can shoot with your left hand and when you
-get into a fight there won't be so much of you to hit."
-
-This lugubrious consolation did not reconcile Sam to the prospective
-loss of his good right arm, however, and all through the time his
-leader was dressing the injury he lamented his fate.
-
-The wounds of the others, though painful, were not serious.
-
-Bud, Bob and Frank had all been hit in their legs.
-
-"I reckon you three," said Jesse, addressing the last named, "had
-better be the ones to take Sam to the Sawbones.
-
-"He can't go alone, and if we should be obliged to make any hard rides,
-it wouldn't help the holes in your legs any."
-
-Loudly the trio protested.
-
-"But suppose we run into the soldiers?" queried Bob. "Four of us, with
-Sam worse than useless won't be able to do anything against 'em and
-we'll get pinched and run to the nearest fort. And you know what that
-means," he added significantly.
-
-"For my part I'd rather stay with you-all and take my chances on my
-legs mortifying."
-
-But the bandit-chieftain was not to be moved.
-
-"I know it's a chance," he replied. "You've got to take it, though.
-Sam's got to be taken to a sawbones and somebody's got to go with him.
-
-"If you do meet the cavalrymen, you can tell 'em you-all had a run in
-with a bunch of men.
-
-"That'll make 'em think it's me you met and they'll swallow the bait.
-
-"You can describe us exactly and give 'em a steer as to where you met
-us, only be sure you send them in the wrong direction.
-
-"If you only work it right, you'll be able to put the soldiers on the
-wrong track and get yourselves clear.
-
-"Why, it's a cinch."
-
-"If it's so mighty easy, why don't you go with the boys and let me
-stay?" demanded Frank.
-
-"Because they have my description too close," returned his brother.
-"It's dollars to a piece of hard tack they'd recognize me the minute
-they got their eyes on me.
-
-"And then it would be all up with little Willie."
-
-Jesse's argument was too cogent to admit of further dispute and, much
-against their will, the quartette of wounded outlaws accepted the
-decree of separation.
-
-But it was not ordained that the plan should be put into effect.
-
-The last of the wounds inflicted upon the bandits by the bullets of the
-redskins was being dressed when Comanche Tony came up to Jesse.
-
-The old Indian fighter who, alone of all, had not been injured for the
-reason that he had been tied to the stake and was therefore prevented
-from taking any part in the furious encounter, had taken advantage of
-the pre-occupation of his pals to make a little reconnaisance on his
-own account.
-
-Familiar with the habits of the redmen, he believed from the fact that
-he had seen no ponies in the canyon that the bucks were not far from
-some of the villages of their tribe.
-
-Convinced of this, the bandit reasoned that the braves would return for
-re-enforcements with which to avenge the slaughter, and it was to learn
-if there were any campfires to be seen below, over the farther side of
-the top of the cliff, that he had left his companions.
-
-To the east, as he peered through the bushes that lined the edge of the
-cliff, he caught sight of a flickering light that came and went like
-the spasmodic radiance of a fire-fly.
-
-For a few minutes he had stood staring at the curious sight, in
-bewilderment.
-
-Of a sudden, its meaning came to him.
-
-When it did, he turned on his heel and made his way to his chief,
-eager to tell him of his discovery.
-
-"What is it, Tony?" asked the world-famous desperado, as he caught
-sight of the excited countenance of his chum. "You look like a woman
-who's just heard a choice bit of scandal!
-
-"What did you discover? I saw you sneaking into the brush."
-
-The fact that his scouting expedition had been known to his master
-caused the old Indian fighter's face to fall, for he had thought that
-his going had been unnoticed.
-
-"Poke fun at me if you want to," he retorted. "You may not git the
-chance to laugh again for some time."
-
-The seriousness of their pal's tone hushed the hilarity on the outlaws'
-lips.
-
-Yet before he had the opportunity to explain his words, Wild Bill cried:
-
-"Look! Look! To the north! Quick!"
-
-Believing their fellow had caught sight of the redskins coming back,
-the desperadoes wheeled like a flash, whipping out their shooting irons
-at the same time.
-
-But it was not Indians they saw.
-
-Hastily raising their eyes, when they found that it was no skulking
-figures that had called forth Wild Bill's excited exclamation, they
-were just in time to see a shower of seeming stars dropping through the
-air.
-
-"It's a falling meteor!" ejaculated Bob Moore.
-
-Believing it was, indeed, some of those phenomena so common on the
-plains, the outlaws gazed at the spectacular sight.
-
-But the bandit-chieftain did not share their opinion.
-
-"Dropping meteor nothing," he exclaimed. "Have you fellows all gone
-nutty that you can't recognize a falling rocket?
-
-"You've seen enough of them, I should think."
-
-"That's just what I was goin' to say," declared the bandit who had been
-the one to call the attention of his fellows. "When I first saw it,
-them white stars was a green ball."
-
-"Then it's a signal," ejaculated Bud.
-
-"My eye! but you're the wise guys," grunted Jesse.
-
-"Of course it's a signal. You didn't think it was old Great Bear giving
-a fireworks display in our honour, did you?
-
-"It's a signal, all right, all right, and it's from those cavalry
-fellows, too.
-
-"Injuns don't go round carrying a stock of rockets in their belts.
-
-"Now the thing to do is to find out what point of the compass they're
-signalling to."
-
-With alacrity, the outlaws faced about, some gazing in one direction
-and some in another.
-
-Not long were they obliged to wait to learn the answer to their
-leader's question, however.
-
-Scarcely had the shower of sparks vanished than one of them sang out:
-"Here she comes, from the East, boys!"
-
-But the words had no more than left his lips than another shouted:
-
-"They're answering from the south, too!"
-
-Rapidly Jesse and his men whirled, viewing first the rocket to the east
-and then to the south.
-
-"Jumpin' snakes! They've got us surrounded!" gasped Texas Jack.
-
-"You're wrong, pard," interposed Bob. "They haven't quite surrounded us
-yet. There's been no rocket from the West."
-
-"And that's the side of the canyon where our horses are. Were sure in
-luck. I reckon it's a good thing we had this brush with the redskins.
-It's showed us where the sojers are," chimed in Homely Harry, not
-wishing to let the others get ahead of him.
-
-"After them rockets, we kin ride dead West an' git away. If it hadn't
-been for the Injuns we might a rid right into some of the sojers."
-
-"Come on! We'll go down and get the ponies while we have the chance,"
-cried Frank, moving toward the edge of the cliff.
-
-Ere he had taken more than a few strides in the carrying out of his
-purpose, Jesse's voice rang out:
-
-"Hold on; don't be in such a hurry!
-
-"_If any of you show yourself on the edge of the cliff, I'll drop you
-in your tracks!_"
-
-In amazement those of the outlaws who had started after Frank, stopped
-and turned toward their leader, their surprise evident in their faces.
-
-"What's the reason we can't get the horses?" snapped the elder of the
-James boys. "Speak lively! You're wasting valuable time!"
-
-"It's better to waste time than our lives, isn't it?" returned his
-brother, with a deliberation that was exasperating to the highly
-wrought bandits.
-
-"You ought to know better, Frank.
-
-"I reckon Texas hit it right when he said we were surrounded!"
-
-"Then why didn't the men in the West send up a rocket?" demanded the
-elder of the James boys.
-
-"_Because they're on our trail!_"
-
-This statement produced a profound sensation among the bandits and
-quickly they plied Jesse with questions as to his reasons for making
-it, that is, all but Frank, who, with a sneer started toward the edge
-of the cliff to find out for himself, though it was eloquent testimony
-for his secret regard for his brother's intuition that he dropped to
-his belly and approached the precipice with all the caution of which he
-was master.
-
-Smiling as he saw this indication of alarm, Jesse addressed the others:
-
-"It's an old trick among troopers, one that will be well for you to
-remember in the future, when they are on a search, for the squad that's
-hit the trail not to answer the rocket signals of the others.
-
-"If the men they're hunting happen to see the rockets in every
-direction but one, they'll naturally make the move Homely
-suggested--ride away in the direction from which there was no
-signal--and fall right into the trap!
-
-"I had a close call once--before I got wise. That's how I happen to
-know.
-
-"How near the troopers on the west are to us, of course I can't tell.
-
-"But they're not very far off. They've hit our trail in the canyon
-and--"
-
-"They're right down at the foot of the cliff examining the dead
-campfires the Injuns left," interrupted Frank.
-
-"You doped it right, Jess, I'll have to admit."
-
-So engrossed had the others been in listening to the bandit-chieftain
-that they had not seen Frank as he returned from his reconnaisance,
-and the effect of his words, melodramatic as was the manner in which
-they fitted in, struck consternation to their hearts.
-
-Enjoying the sensation he had caused, the elder of the James Boys
-continued:
-
-"They've corralled our ponies, I could see one of the sojers leading
-'em.
-
-"The moon against the walls of the cliff makes it pretty near as light
-as day down at the bottom."
-
-"We _are_ in a mess," grunted Bob. "Injuns on one side of us and sojers
-on all the others. Looks as though this top of the cliff was going to
-be our burying ground."
-
-"Between the two, the way things is, I reckon I'd ruther tackle the
-Injuns, eh, Jess?" interposed Comanche Tony, hurriedly, ere his chief
-could say another thing.
-
-"When I was peerin' through the bush on tother side of this table of
-rocks, I see'd a campfire with a lot of Injuns cuttin' up round it.
-
-"At fust, I couldn't git on to wot it meant, then I tumbled that it's a
-war dance.
-
-"I'll bet my scalp, them bucks wot got away from us ull hipper over to
-the pow-wow to bring 'em back here, thinkin' we'll either be on top, as
-we be, or down in the canyon, as we was."
-
-"But they'd see the rockets," protested Bud.
-
-"Wot of it? They ain't got no Jess James with 'em to put 'em next to
-the signal trick an' they'll think there ain't no one to the West."
-
-"Findin' we ain't on top, they'll start down into the canyon.
-
-"Then, if we has _any_ luck at all, the sojers ull jump 'em and
-they'll have a fine old set-to while we're doin' the sneak act."
-
-"Good boy, Tony. You've got the right dope. Come on, boys! It's time
-for us to be lighting out," cried the world-famous desperado.
-
-"Can you walk, Sam, or do you want us to make a sling for you?"
-
-"I cal'late I can walk, for awhile anyhow."
-
-"All right. If we stay here too long the soldiers may find the trail
-and climb up here.
-
-"They heard the shooting, of course, and I reckon they'll be curious to
-find out what it was about.
-
-"If they only do, and Tony has it right about the bucks going for
-re-enforcements, when they see the redskins coming from the brush,
-they'll start shooting. So we'll win out, which ever way it happens."
-
-Quickly and silently the outlaws entered the fringe of bushes along the
-top at the opposite side of the cliff, descending by the trail which
-Wild Bill and Texas Jack had found while the bandit-chieftain had been
-talking.
-
-With every sense alert, the outlaws proceeded, increasing their caution
-as they approached nearer and nearer to the bottom.
-
-To their delight, they beheld a heavy patch of fir trees at the foot.
-
-But just as they were within a rod of it, they were startled to hear a
-voice cry, faintly:
-
-"Jess Jame! Jess Jame!"
-
-In consternation, the desperadoes looked at one another.
-
-Whether the calling of the name was a lure of the Indians, who,
-returning, had seen the men filing down the cliff and planned another
-ambush or what it betoken they could not tell.
-
-"We're in for it now, for fair," growled Frank.
-
-And as though to give emphasis to his words, a shout of triumph sounded
-from above them, and looking up, they beheld the forms of a score of
-cavalrymen silhouetted against the sky.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE STRANGE BATTLE IN THE WITCH'S CAVE.
-
-
-"Quick! Into the woods, boys!" snapped the world-famous desperado.
-
-Instantly the bandits sprang to obey.
-
-Fully ten feet away were the evergreens.
-
-Desperately the men sought to gain their cover.
-
-But less than half the distance had they traversed when from above
-there rang out in stentorian command:
-
-"Fire!"
-
-R-r-rip! crashed the sharp, staccato volley of carbines.
-
-The aim of the cavalrymen was deadly.
-
-With shrieks of pain, three of the outlaws threw up their hands and
-pitched forward.
-
-Convulsively their bodies twitched for a few moments and then lay
-still, while their life blood oozed from wounds in their backs,
-saturating their clothes and making soggy the ground on which they lay.
-
-With a terrible oath, the world-famous desperado hissed:
-
-"Don't try to return the fire. Our pistols won't carry up the cliff.
-Into the woods! Leave the bodies!"
-
-As they saw the desperadoes continue their flight without stopping to
-take their dead pals with them, a mighty cheer broke from the soldiers.
-
-And, while it echoed, again the deep-lunged voice bellowed:
-
-"Fire!"
-
-Once more the rattle of the musketry rang out.
-
-But this time no men fell.
-
-The outlaws had gained the protection of the evergreens.
-
-"Who's here?" demanded Jesse, a strange tremor in his voice. "Answer to
-your names as I call them."
-
-So sudden had been their dash from the unprotected trail of the cliff
-to the woods that none of the outlaws knew who of their number had
-fallen victims to the terrible rain of lead that had been literally
-poured down on them from the edge of the precipice above.
-
-And it was with bated breath that they heard their leader say:
-
-"Comanche Tony!"
-
-"O.K."
-
-"Wild Bill?"
-
-"Here."
-
-"Texas Jack?"
-
-"Here."
-
-"Sam Dirks?"
-
-Heavily the others drew in their breath as no one answered.
-
-"Sam Dirks?" repeated Jesse, in hushed tone. "Poor Sam."
-
-"Frank?"
-
-"Here."
-
-"Homely Harry?"
-
-"O.K."
-
-"Bud Noble?"
-
-Again there was no answer.
-
-"Bob Moore?"
-
-Silence greeted this name also.
-
-A moment later the bandits stood.
-
-The calling of the roll in the sombre setting of the overhanging
-branches of the evergreen trees, through which, here and there, the
-moonlight filtered, amid the crash of the carbines and the whistle of
-the bullets, as they searched out the possible hiding place of the
-little band of fugitives, was dramatic in the extreme.
-
-And the outlaws, rough and desperate men as they were, were cowed
-as they realized that the same death they had visited upon so many
-helpless mortals, had thinned their own ranks.
-
-And the shock was all the greater for the reason that they had
-practised their nefarious pastime with such seeming immunity that they
-had come to look upon themselves as bearing charmed lives.
-
-Not long, however, were they left to their thoughts.
-
-Of a sudden, above the cheering of the troopers, above the rattle
-of the musketry, above the shrilling of the bullets rang the wild,
-blood-curdling war whoops of infuriated redskins.
-
-"Quick, on your bellies under the trees!" whispered Jesse. "We'll let
-the devils charge the soldiers and may they battle till every one,
-Injun and trooper, falls dead!"
-
-But just as the bandits were obeying their leader, there sounded from
-close beside them a plaintive:
-
-"Jess Jame! Jess Jame! Don' lie down. Injun see um dead paleface, hunt
-um wood. Injun no care sojer, want Jess Jame.
-
-"Come Dew Drop. Dew Drop show um place hide."
-
-As she uttered the last words, the amazed desperadoes saw a slender
-creature, clad in what seemed an old wrapper, part the branches of the
-tree near which they stood.
-
-An instant the world-famous desperado hesitated.
-
-"If the bucks see the corpses and don't find us in the woods won't they
-search the place you're going to take us?" he asked, anxiously.
-
-"No. Dew Drop take um cave Kaw-Kaw, Injun witch. Injun fraid go in
-Kaw-Kaw cave."
-
-"Well, we won't be any worse off than we will here, that's sure. But
-why you want to help us I don't see. However, we'll take the chance.
-Come on, boys."
-
-And, following the Indian maiden, the outlaws wound in and out among
-the evergreens till they reached a black hole, like a cavernous maw, in
-the cliff from which was exhaled a curiously intoxicating aroma.
-
-"Paleface no make noise. Kaw-Kaw deaf, no hear. Lie down, no see. Dew
-Drop lie nex' Jess Jame so can talk."
-
-Wondering what adventure was in store for them, the bandits quickly did
-as the Indian maiden told them, their chief choosing a place near the
-mouth of the cave with his chum at his side.
-
-Scarcely had the world-famous desperado squatted down, with Dew Drop
-on his left and Comanche Tony on his right, than howls and yells of
-exultation reached them, telling them that the savages had discovered
-the three dead bodies at the foot of the cliff.
-
-"By my scalp! we didn't git hyar any too soon, I reckon, jedgin' by
-them whoops," whispered the old Indian fighter.
-
-But his master paid him no heed.
-
-The action of the red-hued maiden in coming to him when he was in such
-sore need puzzled him, and he was racking his brain to remember whether
-or not he had ever seen her before.
-
-Unable to place her, his mind once more reverted to the thought that
-her opportune appearance might have been but a part of a plot conceived
-by Great Bear to lure him and his men to the cave of the witch that
-they might be slaughtered without chance of escape.
-
-If such were, in truth, the case, he and his companions were wasting
-precious moments.
-
-Determined to end his suspense, Jesse clutched the maiden in a
-vice-like grip with his left hand, raising his bowie knife in his
-right, ready to plunge it into her heart, as he whispered in a tense,
-hoarse voice:
-
-"Tell me why you brought me here! Was it at Great Bear's order? Tell
-the truth, as you hope to carry your scalp to the Happy Hunting Ground!"
-
-Startled by the suddenness of the move and frightened by the stern face
-peering into hers, her eyes rivetted on the keen edged blade, Dew Drop
-blinked.
-
-But a rough shake recalled her to the necessity of replying.
-
-"No, no!" she gasped. "Great Bear no know Dew Drop left tepee. He kill
-um if knew."
-
-"Then what made you?"
-
-"Dew Drop want save um Jess Jame."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Jess Jame save um Dew Drop."
-
-"_I_ save _you_?" repeated the bandit-chieftain, surprised in his turn.
-"When? What do you mean?"
-
-"Kaw-Kaw say Great Spirit want Dew Drop be squaw um son Dog Face. Dew
-Drop no want. No like Dog Face. Dog Face bad Injun. Kaw-Kaw say must.
-Have heap pow-wow.
-
-"Little Wolf come tepee say um hunting um see paleface burned
-Silverstock cabin, Jess Jame.
-
-"Great Bear ask where.
-
-"Little Wolf say canyon.
-
-"Dog Face say get um Jess Jame scalp give squaw.
-
-"Great Bear take Dog Face, Little Wolf twenty Injun leave um pow-wow go
-git Jess Jame.
-
-"Dew Drop no know what happen."
-
-"Great Bear five Injun come run tepee say Jess Jame on cliff, kill um
-Injun, kill um Dog Face.
-
-"Kaw-Kaw say must scalp um Jess Jame or cuss um Great Bear.
-
-"Great Bear make heap talk. Call um brave go back get Jess Jame.
-
-"Dew Drop no wait hear more.
-
-"Jess Jame save Dew Drop from Dog Face. Dew Drop save Jess Jame from
-Great Bear.
-
-"Dew Drop git cliff see um paleface come down. Dew Drop call. Sojer
-shoot.
-
-"Dew Drop 'fraid Jess Jame get um lead. When see no dead, hear um Great
-Bear.
-
-"Dew Drop think where hide.
-
-"Dew Drop think um cave Kaw-Kaw.
-
-"Jess Jame in Kaw-Kaw cave."
-
-Like a torrent the Indian maiden poured forth her story and as the
-world-famous desperado learned the strange reason for her friendship,
-he exclaimed:
-
-"Well, I'll be jiggered! So my men killed Dog Face, eh? I guess we can
-trust you, if that's the way things are.
-
-"I'm sure mighty glad we put an end to your prospective husband."
-
-"But she said Kaw-Kaw was in the cave when we got here, and just now
-she tells us she's at the pow-wow," breathed Comanche Tony, who had
-heard the remarkable tale.
-
-"How about that?" demanded Jess sharply, his suspicions rekindled by
-the seeming discrepancy in Dew Drop's statement.
-
-"Kaw-Kaw in um cave," returned the maiden with positiveness. "When um
-hear Great Bear say go back git um Jess Jame, Kaw-Kaw say go um cave
-get um cuss ready case Great Bear no get um Jess Jame."
-
-"So that smell's the old hag's curses, a brewin', eh?" chuckled Tony.
-"I'm glad they're for Great Bear and his bucks and not me, if they're
-that strong."
-
-But further speech was stopped by the sudden appearance of three tall
-forms, looming in the entrance of the cave.
-
-Crouching low, the bandit-chieftain watched them, stealthily drawing
-his shooting-irons.
-
-Yet before he could extract them from his holsters, he felt Dew Drop's
-hand on his arm, restrainingly.
-
-Turning toward her, wondering what she meant, he saw her shake her
-head vigorously, at the same time pressing upon his arm.
-
-"Evidently doesn't want me to shoot," reasoned Jesse. "I reckon she
-knows more about what's best in this witch-den than I do."
-
-And he silently dropped his guns back into their holsters.
-
-The old Indian fighter had been a spectator of the pantomime and as he
-saw his chief relinquish his weapons, he did likewise.
-
-All this had taken but a few seconds, and even while it was
-transpiring, one of the bucks was jabbering excitedly.
-
-What he was saying, the bandits did not know, for the redmen spoke in
-their own language.
-
-Yet from the jumble of guttural sounds, they occasionally distinguished
-the words "Jess Jame" and "Kaw-Kaw."
-
-But if they could not understand what was said they could see what was
-happening.
-
-The jabberings of the excited bucks had been carried on in loud tones.
-
-Scarcely had they begun than the outlaws beheld a bent and bowed figure
-hobble into the light at the mouth of the cave, leaning on a crooked
-staff.
-
-At her approach, the warriors drew back.
-
-In shrill tones the figure, whom they realized must be the witch,
-Kaw-Kaw, harangued them, waving her staff as her excitement got the
-better of her.
-
-Soon she paused and the bucks replied.
-
-Again the piping voice answered.
-
-And, as she heard the words, Jesse could feel Dew Drop tremble, so
-close was she to him.
-
-Deciding because of this that whatever the gibberish meant it spelled
-danger for himself and his men, the world-famous desperado again
-whipped his hands to his pistol holsters.
-
-And this time there was no objection from the Indian maiden by his side.
-
-Yet before he could draw them, Kaw-Kaw hobbled from the cave, joining
-the three braves and vanished from sight with them.
-
-As they disappeared, Dew Drop breathed a sigh of intense relief.
-
-Ere Jesse could utter the question that was on his lips, the
-red-skinned maiden whispered:
-
-"Quick! Quick! Get um paleface. Dew Drop take um back Kaw-Kaw cave
-while um 'way."
-
-Springing to her feet, the maid seized the hand of the bandit-chieftain
-and dragged him back into the pall of blackness that enveloped the
-witch's den.
-
-Seeing their leader rise, his pals had followed suit, even before he
-commanded in a low voice:
-
-"Get up, boys. Take hold of one another. Follow me quickly!"
-
-Had Kaw-Kaw returned to her den just then, she would have been filled
-with amazement at the file of men, who threaded their way through
-the maze of pots, tripods and implements dear to the heart of the
-sorceress, led by the lithe, slim maiden.
-
-But her amazement would have turned to alarm had she seen them enter
-a second cave, which led from the first, the existence of which she
-thought she herself alone knew.
-
-So low was the opening into the inner den that the bandits were forced
-to drop to their hands and knees.
-
-"This is a fool's stunt, getting in farther instead of--" began Frank.
-
-But his words were frozen in his mouth by a terrible, hair-raising
-growl that sounded from the recesses of the cave.
-
-"No 'fraid, no 'fraid!" gasped Dew Drop hurriedly. "Um Wa-Wa, Kaw-Kaw
-bear. Um no hurt."
-
-"Sure not, his growl doesn't sound fierce, I don't think!" ejaculated
-Wild Bill.
-
-But the Indian maiden, laughing softly, quickly allayed their fears by
-adding:
-
-"Wa-Wa no got claw, no got teeth.'"
-
-"Well, the growl's the real thing, all right, all right," exclaimed
-Jesse. "The old hag hasn't removed his hug, too, has she?"
-
-"No-o," replied the maiden, doubtfully. "But Dew Drop know Wa-Wa. Um
-play, Dew Drop an' Wa-Wa.
-
-"Dew Drop come cave any day. Kaw-Kaw deaf no hear.
-
-"Wa-Wa know Dew Drop. No hurt."
-
-"That may be all right for you," snarled Frank, "but Wa-Wa may not take
-so kindly to our coming."
-
-The series of growls, growing in intensity and volume with each
-successive outburst, that came from the monster, lent a force to the
-outlaw's words that even the Indian maiden could not disregard.
-
-"Wa-Wa!" she called, soothingly, adding something in her native tongue.
-
-But the pet of the witch, Kaw-Kaw, as though he recognized among the
-strangers, whose presence he scented, the man who had grievously
-wronged his mistress by killing her son, refused to be pacified.
-
-Each moment, his growls announced that he was getting nearer and nearer
-to the bandits.
-
-Of a sudden, two little balls of seeming phosphorous glowered at them,
-as the brute came from behind a boulder.
-
-"You can stand there like dummies, if you want to," snapped the elder
-of the James boys. "_I'm going to shoot him!_"
-
-"No! No! No shoot!" protested Dew Drop, in alarm.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Kaw-Kaw smell powder when um came back. Know some one in um cave. Make
-heap cuss. Fin' um paleface. Call um Injun. Devil to pay!"
-
-"I reckon the girl's right, Frank," declared his brother, smiling at
-the words of his saviour. "It wouldn't take long for the old hag to
-notice the odour of the saltpetre and when she called the bucks it
-would be all over but the shouting.
-
-"And I've no intention of adorning an Indian triumph."
-
-"All right," grudgingly acquiesced the elder of the James boys. "I
-won't shoot, but something's got to be done.
-
-"I don't propose to stay in here with a bear walking round loose, if it
-hasn't any teeth or claws."
-
-This announcement expressed the feelings of the rest of the bandits,
-yet what to do, they did not know.
-
-And as they stood, in helpless perplexity, the brute itself solved
-their dilemma.
-
-As its wicked little eyes beheld the figures of the intruders in
-its retreat, the monster reared on its hind legs, and with a roar,
-deafening because of the narrow confines of the cave, charged at them,
-laying about it viciously with its herculean paws.
-
-In panic, the outlaws fled before it.
-
-But the rock side of the den checked them.
-
-Came a mighty swish and Comanche Tony fell, dropped by the clawless
-paws of the monster.
-
-And, in a trice, the bear stood over its unconscious victim, snarling
-ominously.
-
-The peril of their pal broke the spell of terror in which the outlaws
-stood.
-
-"Stab the brute! Tackle him, boys!" snapped Jesse, leaping toward the
-monster as he spoke.
-
-Instantly his comrades obeyed.
-
-Drawing their keen-edged bowie-knives, they buried them to the hilts in
-any part of the bear's body they could reach.
-
-Stung by the sharp pains, the monster reared on its hind legs again,
-lashing about viciously with its paws, emitting savage growls, awful in
-their fury.
-
-But its raising up was the beast's doom.
-
-Crouching low, dodging the terrible lunges as a prize-fighter dodges
-the blows of his adversary in the ring, the world-famous desperado
-watched his chance.
-
-Suddenly he saw the monster's breast unprotected.
-
-With a lightning movement, the bandit-chieftain leaped forward.
-
-In his right hand he clasped his bowie-knife.
-
-His arm, bent close to his body, shot out.
-
-And the force of his spring drove the keen-egded blade to the hilt,
-straight through the bear's heart.
-
-But so great was the power of resistance of the monster that, despite
-the steel in its most vital organ, it seized Jesse in a mighty
-embrace, holding him helpless as it staggered.
-
-"T-trip it!" gasped the leader of the outlaws frantically, "I--I've
-st-tabbed it."
-
-Again his men sprang forward.
-
-Yet before they could carry out their master's instructions, the bear
-fell, its embrace unbroken.
-
-Not long did it take the bandits to extricate their chief from his
-uncomfortable position.
-
-But as they raised him to his feet, they heard the sound of hoarse,
-excited voices in the outer cave.
-
-"The bucks have come back!" hissed Texas Jack.
-
-"No, no Injun! Um paleface sojers!" gasped Dew Drop in consternation.
-"No Injun come Kaw-Kaw cave."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-A DESPERATE CHARGE.
-
-
-In dismay, the bandits gazed at one another, as they heard the
-portentous words of the Indian maiden.
-
-And in a moment more their own ears confirmed their truth.
-
-No mistaking the identity of the men in the outer cave was there, as a
-sharp command, in plain English, rang out:
-
-"Search every nook and cranny in the den, men. It's just the place for
-Jesse James and his pack of cutthroats to hide."
-
-"That pet name'll cost the life of many a soldier, young fellow, if I
-ever get out of here!" hissed Comanche Tony in a low, harsh voice.
-
-But his pals were too taken up with the peril of their position to make
-any comment on the blood-thirsty announcement.
-
-No need was there to tell them it was one thing to have the Indians
-search the cave and quite another to have the cavalrymen.
-
-The superstitious reverence and fear of the bent and bowed sorceress
-would not sway the troopers or cause them to consider the intrusion of
-the abode of the witch a sacrilege.
-
-Rather would their contempt for the customs and beliefs of the redmen
-incite them to unusual effort.
-
-Should they chance to espy the hole leading into the second cave, every
-one of the six men knew that they would lose no time in exploring it.
-
-And it was to what they should do, in such event, that each man devoted
-his thoughts.
-
-"Can't we block up the hole?" hazarded Texas Jack, grasping at the most
-obvious expedient.
-
-"No," returned Dew Drop. "Kaw-Kaw see, Kaw-Kaw get wise. Hole always
-open for Wa-Wa.
-
-"Dew Drop no see why Kaw-Kaw let sojers come um cave."
-
-"Probably they didn't ask her permission," returned the
-bandit-chieftain.
-
-But the explanation did not satisfy the Indian maiden.
-
-From her earliest memory, she had been taught reverence for the
-aged sorceress and she knew the fear her fellow-tribesmen held of
-the terrible curse that would be visited upon any Indian who dared
-penetrate the recesses of the cave.
-
-Indeed, not unless she had been invited to enter, as an honour that
-would influence her to accept Dog Face as her brave, would she ever
-have had the temerity to enter and as she thought of being discovered
-in the "holy of holies" with the men she was trying to save, she
-trembled like a leaf, silently rocking too and fro as she wrung her
-hands in an agony of despair.
-
-Plainly the outlaws heard the troopers draw nearer and nearer as they
-proceeded with their fruitless hunt.
-
-"I reckon there's nothing for it but to stab the first trooper who
-pokes his head through the opening," whispered the world-famous
-desperado.
-
-"I'll take that job for mine. The rest of you line up about me. As soon
-as I've knifed the first, some of you pull him out of the way and the
-others be ready for the next.
-
-"If we can kill 'em without an outcry, we may be able to get em all."
-
-The fiendish plan of slaying one man after another as fast as they
-appeared showed clearly how desperate Jesse believed their position to
-be.
-
-It proved that in order to save his own life he had no hesitancy in
-killing any number of men.
-
-And, as they heard the shocking proposition, even his pals, steeped
-in the gore of innocent men as their hands were, recoiled at the task
-imposed on them.
-
-Yet they dared not disobey and silently took their places, kneeling, at
-the entrance to the cave, opposite their inhuman chief who waited, with
-bowie-knife upraised to plunge it into the heart of the first soldier
-that appeared.
-
-But before the awful scheme could be put to the test, the old witch
-herself took a hand in the proceedings.
-
-As the bandits kneeled, the beats of their hearts alone breaking the
-silence of the den in which they were, their ears strained for the
-first sound that should announce the discovery of the hole, they
-suddenly heard a shrill snarl in good English:
-
-"Dogs of palefaces! What are you doing in my cave? How dare you profane
-the temple of a Navajo medicine? Curses on your palefaced heads! May
-you perish on the plains, riddled with wounds, mad for water! May the
-coyotes feed on your carcasses! May no grave hold your bones and may
-they be scattered to the winds! Curse you! Curse you! Curse you!"
-
-So furious, so terrible was the wrath of the aged sorceress that the
-troopers stopped in their search, staring at the wizened, bent figure,
-abashed.
-
-Not slow was the shrewd old hag to note the impression her bitter
-invective had made upon the cavalrymen and, without delay, she followed
-it up.
-
-"If the dogs of palefaces have wives, may they rot with child; if they
-have sweethearts, may they play with them and jilt them; if they have
-children, may they grow up deformed and idiotic! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha!"
-
-And she croaked in diabolical glee.
-
-Of a sudden her manner changed.
-
-"What do the palefaces want, more curses? Haven't they had enough?"
-she shrieked, angered that, though the soldiers trembled beneath her
-imprecations, they made no move to leave the cave.
-
-"May--"
-
-But before another word could leave her lips, the lieutenant commanding
-the troopers, having recovered from the first shock of surprise,
-bellowed:
-
-"Seize her! Bind her! Gag the old vixen!"
-
-Eagerly the cavalrymen sprang forward, their faces bespeaking with what
-relish they would obey the commands.
-
-Yet before they could lay hands on her, Kaw-Kaw began to back away,
-swinging her crooked staff in front of her to hold off the troopers,
-while she screamed in the language of her tribe.
-
-"Kaw-Kaw call um Great Bear an' um braves," gasped Dew Drop, excitedly,
-close to Jesse's ear. "Paleface dogs must fight for coming Kaw-Kaw
-cave."
-
-So unexpected and so startling had been the intervention of the old
-witch that Jesse forgot his own peril in his interest to learn the
-effect of the awful curses on the soldiers.
-
-But the words of the Indian maiden recalled him to himself.
-
-Whoops and yells resounded in the outer cave in answer to Kaw-Kaw's
-appeal to her tribesmen.
-
-Suddenly a flare of light shone through the hole leading into the
-cavern in which the outlaws were.
-
-"The bucks have thrown in lighted faggots," grunted Comanche Tony.
-"There'll be suthin' doin', now."
-
-Ere he had more than spoken, the barks of pistols rang out, like the
-explosion of gigantic fire-crackers.
-
-The deeper toned army revolvers answered.
-
-In a trice the din was deafening.
-
-"Here's our chance!" declared the world-famous desperado. "We'll crawl
-into the other cave and attack the troopers from the rear.
-
-"Judging by their guns, there are only a dozen or so.
-
-"Our charge'll rattle 'em so we can rush through 'em and get outside.
-
-"The Indians won't stop us.
-
-"When we get clear, we'll strike for the place the bucks are grazing
-their ponies, Dew Drop'll tell us where it is."
-
-"Jus' other side trees, straight from cave," responded the red-skinned
-maiden.
-
-"Good. All ready, boys! I'll go first. Don't begin shooting till we're
-all in the other cave.
-
-"Dew Drop, you stay here."
-
-Desperate was the scheme.
-
-If the braves or troopers recognized Jesse, they might forget their
-fight in the desire to capture their common enemy.
-
-And then the outlaws' shrift would be short.
-
-But no word of protest did the others offer.
-
-In deciding upon the sortie, the bandit-chieftain had counted on the
-cavalrymen mistaking him and his pals for Indians while he hoped the
-savages would think them troopers.
-
-Furiously was the battle raging as Jesse finished the announcement of
-his plans.
-
-From the yells and shouts, he decided that the soldiers were driving
-back the redskins.
-
-And, with hope high, he began to crawl through the hole onto the field
-of strife.
-
-Rapidly his five pals followed.
-
-As they gained the larger cave, they saw that the troopers had, indeed,
-forced the braves back.
-
-"Don't shoot till we get on top of 'em," breathed Jesse. "I'll give the
-word. Ready! Charge!"
-
-Like deers the outlaws sped toward the cavalrymen, their presence
-unsuspected.
-
-But as they got within twenty feet of them, a voice suddenly shrilled:
-
-"There he is! There's Jesse James!"
-
-In their reckoning, the desperadoes had forgotten the old witch whose
-son they had killed.
-
-The cause of the fight between soldiers and Indians, Kaw-Kaw, had
-ducked into a niche out of range of the bullets, from which she watched
-the conflict.
-
-And as the bandits rushed past, she recognized them.
-
-Yet before her warning had rung out, the bandit-chieftain thundered:
-
-"Fire! Rake 'em, boys! Drop 'em!"
-
-But while his men poured their murderous fire into the troopers, Jesse
-turned and sent a shot crashing into the brain of the old hag and she
-toppled from her hiding place, a blood-curdling shriek coming from her
-lips as she fell.
-
-Amazed at the warning which was followed on the instant by the fusilade
-from behind, the cavalrymen whirled to face their foes from the new
-quarter.
-
-But the rain of lead from the outlaws' guns was terrible.
-
-One after another, the troopers fell, mowed down like grass before the
-scythe.
-
-"We've cleaned 'em out! Come on! Charge the Injuns! We've got to shoot
-our way through!" bellowed the world-famous desperado.
-
-Howling, yelling, leaping like Dervishes, the six desperadoes dashed
-from the mouth of the cave.
-
-An instant the braves stood and faced them.
-
-But the fire from the outlaws' pistols was too galling and they gave
-way.
-
-Intoxicated by the smell of powder, wild with the sight of carnage on
-all sides of him, Jesse led his men through the evergreens, coming upon
-the Indians' ponies where Dew Drop had said they were.
-
-Quickly the desperadoes cut out six, leaped on their backs and dashed
-southward.
-
-Behind them, having recovered their nerve, swarmed every buck who could
-find a mount, rending the air with fiendish whoops of fury and chagrin.
-
-"We can get away from them, all right," declared the world-famous
-desperado. "What worries me is where the troopers are who signalled
-from the south."
-
-And scarcely had the words left his lips before he caught sight of a
-body of horsemen rising from a ravine less than a quarter of a mile in
-front of him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE RACE FOR LIFE.
-
-
-In the light from the moon, which bathed the brush-grown plain and
-towering cliff in a flood of silver sheen, the figures of the troopers
-stood out clearly.
-
-By common consent, without waiting for the command, the men with the
-world-famous desperado checked their ponies and watched the cavalrymen
-rise from the ravine.
-
-Whether or not, the soldiers had caught sight of them they did not
-know. But shouts of delirious glee from behind told them that the
-pursuing Indians had discovered the troopers.
-
-Of a verity, the little band of desperadoes were between two fires.
-
-Apparently the liberty they had achieved by such ruthless slaughter
-of soldiers and redmen in the cave of the old witch was to count for
-naught.
-
-And as this thought came to them, the companions of the notorious
-outlaw groaned inwardly.
-
-Not so the notorious Jesse, however.
-
-Save for the deepening of the lines about his mouth and the compression
-of his lips, he sat erect and rigid.
-
-But his mind was working as it never had worked before.
-
-Through many a desperate situation had he passed unscathed. Yet none
-of the ruses which had stood him in such good stead on those occasions
-could he use in his present predicament.
-
-The brilliancy of the moonlight, the presence of foes in front and
-back, the treeless waste all about him prevented.
-
-Should he make any move, it would be clearly discernable to troopers
-and Indians alike.
-
-And, aware of his seeming helplessness, the bucks were already yelling
-in anticipation of his capture.
-
-Their attention attracted by the howls of the savages, the cavalrymen
-quickly discovered the group of horsemen in the bracken.
-
-Hoarse commands, the sounds of which alone reached the bandits, were
-spoken and, in a twinkling, those of the troopers who had mounted the
-level from the ravine, set their horses toward them.
-
-Turning his head, the world-famous desperado looked toward the Indians.
-
-All of half a mile away were they, though each minute lessened the
-distance.
-
-"Its a chance, but we've got to take it," snapped Jesse, thinking
-aloud. "Quick, boys! Whirl your ponies. We'll ride back a way then make
-a dash for the ravine! Come on!"
-
-Even as the words fell from their leader's lips, his men had turned
-their mounts and, as he gave the word, buried the rowels of their spurs
-in the flanks of the fleet footed Indian ponies.
-
-Startled by the unwonted pain, the animals leaped away like stones from
-catapults.
-
-The race for life was on.
-
-Scarcely a minute had it been from the time the outlaws had caught
-sight of the cavalrymen till they were in full flight. Yet to them each
-second their chief had sat inactive had seemed an hour.
-
-In amazement, the savages beheld the men they had been pursuing rush
-toward them.
-
-"Kaw-Kaw's bewitched them! They've lost their minds! Her curses live
-to destroy the men who killed her!" shouted Great Bear in his native
-tongue, transported with joy. "At them! At them! Jesse James is the
-Navajos' prey. The paleface dogs must not get him first!"
-
-Goaded to frenzy by the words of their chief, the bucks fell to lashing
-their ponies, riding like fiends in their effort to prevent the
-troopers from snatching their quarry from their very grasp.
-
-But the cavalrymen viewed the course of the desperately pressed little
-band with different feelings.
-
-"Jesse's in the bunch, all right. That move shows it," growled one of
-them, the stars and chevrons on whose uniform proclaimed him a captain.
-"No one but that murdering daredevil would have chosen to ride back
-toward that pack of howling savages rather than toward us.
-
-"Curse the luck! Why couldn't we have struck the ravine half a mile
-farther east? Then we'd been right on top of him and could have shot
-him down."
-
-"But the bucks 'll drop him," asserted a lieutenant who rode at his
-side. "So long as he's shot, I don't see what difference it makes
-whether we get him or they."
-
-"_But they won't get him!_" bellowed the captain, his disappointment at
-losing his chance to capture the most famous desperado the world has
-ever known and anger at the ill-disguised rebuke of his subordinate
-getting the better of him.
-
-"Won't get him?" repeated the lieutenant, as though he seemed to doubt
-his ears.
-
-"_Yes, won't get him!_" returned the man in command of the troops.
-"You've got a lot to learn, young man, about hunting bad-men.
-
-"But if you never learn any thing else, remember this--Indians, when
-they're howling and whooping and all excited, are the worst shots in
-the world.
-
-"Jesse James knows it. And he'd rather take the chance of riding by the
-whole pack of 'em than to give the few of us a shot at him."
-
-Such, indeed, was the reason that the world-famous desperado had chosen
-the course he did. Yet his decision had been strengthened by the
-further knowledge that the redmen feared him and his marvelous prowess
-with his shooting-irons.
-
-All the while, the little group of outlaws and the two bodies of men
-bent on their death or capture, were drawing closer together.
-
-Never was there stranger chase.
-
-In full view of one another, each party was riding like mad to gain its
-own end.
-
-Yet never a shot was fired.
-
-The distance that separated them was too great.
-
-Nearer and nearer drew the bandits and the Indians and farther and
-farther were the cavalrymen getting from the ravine.
-
-Less than two hundred yards separated the former.
-
-With eyes now in front, now turned behind, Jesse watched the approach
-of his enemies.
-
-"Damme! I believe they're mad! Why don't they open fire?" snarled the
-captain.
-
-To which of the two groups the words referred, the lieutenant did not
-know and his recent, caustic reprimand prevented him from asking.
-
-His mind, however, was instantly diverted by his superior.
-
-"Ha! What's that mean?" cried the latter, then added instantly "Jesse's
-turning. I see. He's making for the ravine. I've been fooled!"
-
-Almost choking with rage at the thought that he had allowed himself to
-be out-generaled by the notorious cutthroat, the captain rose in his
-stirrups, jerked his sabre from its scabbard and, pointing toward the
-ravine, turned to his troopers, bellowing:
-
-"Fours oblique _and ride like Hell_!"
-
-Chuckling inwardly at the choler of their commander, the cavalrymen
-executed the orders.
-
-As Jesse and his pals heard the frantic command, they yelled in
-defiance, waving mocking goodbyes at the discomfited troopers as,
-leaning forward along the necks of their ponies, they raced past the
-head of the column of cavalrymen.
-
-Better than he had dared hope had the bandit-chieftain's ruse worked.
-
-But the end of the race for life was not yet.
-
-Though the world-famous desperado had held his course straight toward
-the whooping Indians, his mind and eyes had been almost entirely upon
-the troopers.
-
-When he had caught sight of the first troopers rising from the ravine
-and realized the desperateness of the position of himself and his
-companions, with that instinct which had made him so valuable an
-asset to the old guerilla chieftain, Quantrell, in the days of the
-Civil War, he had realized that the one chance of escape open, lay in
-reaching the ravine.
-
-Yet his eyes, calculating the distance nicely, told him that, should he
-make a dash for it, the troopers could head him off by riding along the
-edge of the gorge.
-
-A moment he had been puzzled as to what to do. Then, in a flash, it had
-come to him that by retracing his course and riding straight at the
-howling savages he might be able to entice the soldiers to follow him,
-abandoning their strategic advantages of the position along the ravine.
-
-With elation, he had seen the troopers fall into his snare.
-
-This accomplished, he had kept watch of their pursuit, waiting for the
-instant when they should be so far away from the ravine that he could
-beat them to it.
-
-At last the time came.
-
-With a whispered command, he had bidden his pals wheel and rush for the
-gorge.
-
-Skilled horsemen all, they had accomplished the turn which was so
-sudden that it would have unseated less expert riders.
-
-But so absorbed were they in watching the troopers that they had not
-noticed five bucks who had broken away from their fellows and were
-bearing down upon them with the speed of whirlwinds.
-
-Riding with marvelous ease and grace, the redmen closed upon them with
-incredible rapidity.
-
-No whoop or yell did they utter.
-
-Their success in getting near enough to the men who had killed their
-brother warriors and outraged their race by shooting their medicine
-woman lay in their silence.
-
-Breathlessly the rest of the braves watched them.
-
-As the echoes of the outlaws' derisive shouts, when they dashed past
-the head of the cavalry, died away, one of the bucks straightened and
-raised his arm.
-
-Bang! went the pistol in his hand.
-
-The report of the gun was the first intimation Jesse and his pals had
-of the proximity of the braves.
-
-And as the bullet whistled over their heads, they whirled on the backs
-of their ponies to see who it was that had been able to get within
-shooting distance of them, undiscovered.
-
-"Drop em! Drop 'em!" roared the world-famous desperado, adding a
-terrible oath.
-
-Crash! went the dozen six shooters.
-
-The six outlaws were firing with a gun in each hand.
-
-But only one Indian toppled from his pony.
-
-"Again!" bellowed Jesse. "Get 'em this time!"
-
-Once more the twelve pistols barked.
-
-And once more only one brave fell.
-
-"What's the matter with you?" snarled the notorious outlaw. "_If we
-don't get them, they'll get us!_"
-
-But the task imposed on the bandits was no easy one.
-
-Keeping their seats on the backs of their madly galloping mounts only
-by the grips of their knees, the desperadoes were obliged to shoot with
-their bodies twisted round to face behind them.
-
-And small wonder was it that their aim was bad.
-
-But on the three remaining redskins rushed, firing frantically and
-behind them thundered the rest of the savages and the troopers, yelling
-encouragement.
-
-No chance was there for the little band to throw off the pursuit when
-they reached the ravine unless the trio of braves was killed.
-
-Cursing furiously as he saw the second volley had accomplished no more
-than the first, Jesse forebore to call for another.
-
-Well he knew that it had been the bullets from the gun in his right
-hand that had toppled the two Indians from the horses and he made up
-his mind that upon him devolved the killing of the others.
-
-With the marvelous rapidity that had won him his reputation, he snapped
-his trusty "Colts" in quick succession.
-
-Two more of the savages pitched from their ponies.
-
-Again his guns spoke.
-
-Yet before he could see the result of his last attempt to drop the lone
-buck, Homely Harry shrieked:
-
-"Watch out, boys! We're right on to the ravine!"
-
-The warning came too late.
-
-Even as the cry rang out, the bandits felt their ponies sink beneath
-them as the animals rushed over the edge of the gorge.
-
-Never was such horsemanship as Jesse and his pals displayed.
-
-To the average man, the plunge taken at the whirl-wind speed of the
-ponies would have meant death.
-
-Turning the instant their pal's voice had sounded, the bandits steadied
-themselves by bracing their hands, still holding their revolvers,
-against the necks of their mounts, leaning back to offset the shock
-when the ponies should strike the brush-covered bottom of the ravine
-that yawned beneath them.
-
-To any one in the gorge, they would have seemed like huge, ungainly
-birds sailing through the air.
-
-For so terrific was the pace at which the animals had approached the
-ravine that their momentum carried them far out over the brush ere they
-began to drop.
-
-"Be ready to slide when the pintos strikes!" yelled Comanche Tony,
-quickly realizing the danger. "If you tries to set your horses it will
-mean your death!"
-
-Quickly his pals relaxed their muscles.
-
-And well was it that the old Indian fighter had given the advice.
-
-With feet braced stiff, the ponies struck the ground.
-
-There was a snapping and cracking and the poor beasts sank down, their
-legs broken by the awful force of the impact.
-
-Yet even as they fell, the outlaws, prepared by the warning of Comanche
-Tony, shot over their heads, landing in the bushes unscathed save for
-scratches and the jolting they received as they struck.
-
-And as they picked themselves up, they heard the captain of the
-troopers roar:
-
-"Find the horses! Jesse and the bunch'll be near 'em. No man could take
-that plunge and come out whole."
-
-"That's where your wrong, old top," grinned the world-world famous
-desperado. "Quick boys! drop on your hands and knees! We'll work up
-the ravine a couple of rods from the ponies and then strike for the
-side from which they jumped. Careful, now, we won the race. But if the
-troopers or Injuns get their peepers on one of us, its death to the
-whole bunch!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-DEW DROP AGAIN TO THE RESCUE.
-
-
-Hurriedly the outlaws dropped to all fours and resumed their hazardous
-attempt at escape.
-
-The bushes that grew in the ravine, fortunately for them, were of
-sufficient height to conceal their bodies as they advanced. Yet mere
-concealment, they knew, was not sufficient to insure their safety.
-
-Should the keen eyes of soldiers or savages detect a suspicious
-movement among the brushwood, the hue and cry would instantly be raised.
-
-And, aware of this full well, the six sorely pressed bandits crawled
-with infinite stealth.
-
-So near were the troopers that the creaking of their saddle leathers
-was audible, followed almost instantly by the snapping and cracking of
-twigs and bushes as the horses picked their way gingerly down the steep
-side of the ravine.
-
-Eagerly the eyes of the cavalrymen searched the bottom of the gorge,
-bent on discovering the forms of the horses, as their captain had
-commanded.
-
-So thick was the tangle of brushwood, however, that it was several
-minutes after the desperadoes had heard them crashing into the ravine
-ere their hearts were set a flutter by excited cries, breaking from
-several mouths at the same time:
-
-"There they are! On the farther side!"
-
-The announcement of the discovery was received with wild cheers.
-
-"Where? Which direction?" yelled those of the troopers whose sight
-was unable to discern the dark forms of the ponies writhing in their
-suffering.
-
-"To the East! To the East!" answered the ones who saw them. "Come on!
-Come on! We've got 'em."
-
-Wild with the excitement of the soldiers at the prospect of capturing
-the desperate cutthroats who had defied all efforts of an army
-of man-hunters either to kill or to take them into custody, so
-successfully.
-
-Yet scarce had the cries of the exuberant troopers rung out than their
-commander bellowed:
-
-"Give 'em a volley before you ride at 'em. They're tricky devils!"
-
-In the exigencies of the moment all thought of military discipline was
-forgotten.
-
-The captain knew his men and the men knew their captain. Many a
-punitive expedition had they ridden on before, against outlaws and
-renegade redskins alike and no need was there to waste time in giving
-book-rule commands.
-
-No sooner had the words of caution left the officer's lips than the
-troopers threw their carbines to their shoulders, sighted them on the
-dark, struggling forms in the brushwood and pulled the triggers.
-
-With deafening roar the guns spoke.
-
-Straight and true sped the bullets.
-
-But instead of stopping the heart beats of any of the James gang they
-simply put an end to the miseries of the maimed ponies.
-
-As the report of the broadside rang out over the plains, the cavalrymen
-urged their mounts forward, eager to be in at the death.
-
-In the stress of their emotions, they had not noticed that no shots had
-been fired at them.
-
-Had they been more calm, this fact alone would have told them the
-outlaws were not by the ponies.
-
-And it was not till they had reached the bodies of the beasts,
-dismounted and searched the nearby bushes that they found that Jesse
-and his band had again outwitted them.
-
-But when the fact dawned on them, loud and forceful were their curses.
-
-"Beat up and down the gorge!" shouted the lieutenant, believing that
-the mistake of his superior gave him a license to issue commands.
-
-"Shut up, you dunderhead!" roared the captain, his face livid with
-rage. "I was chasing men when you were in swaddling clothes. I know how
-they act.
-
-"_The bandits have crossed the ravine and struck into the brush beyond!
-After them!_"
-
-In a wild scramble, the troopers mounted the farther side of the
-ravine, gained the edge and were soon lost to view.
-
-And as the world-famous desperado, peering cautiously from the
-brushwood, saw they had vanished, he heaved a mighty sigh of relief.
-
-Terrible, indeed, had been the suspense of the six men crawling on
-hands and knees under cover of the bushes.
-
-On their ears alone had they been obliged to rely to tell them what was
-transpiring about them, for they dared not raise their heads to look,
-lest the eyes of the troopers decry them.
-
-When they had heard the crash of the volley, Jesse had turned toward
-the very bank from which it was fired.
-
-And as the soldiers descended to learn the result of their shots, the
-outlaws had crept up the steep incline.
-
-Of necessity, their progress was slow and not more than half way to the
-top were they when the words of the captain, expressing his belief that
-his quarry was on the farther plain, had reached them.
-
-Still crawling, the bandit-chieftain had waited till he thought
-sufficient time had elapsed for all to have gained the plains before he
-ventured to look to make sure.
-
-And when he found that the cavalrymen had, indeed, disappeared over the
-opposite bank, he quickly apprised his companions.
-
-"I'll bet my hair's turned white," ejaculated Wild Bill. "I ain't never
-been through no such tryout before an' I don't want to agin."
-
-"Don't crow too soon," admonished Comanche Tony. "We ain't clear
-yet--by a long shot."
-
-"Right you are, pard," declared Jesse, "And it doesn't look as though
-we'd get clear," he added. "Duck, boys, duck! Here comes the Injuns!
-Skirt the edge of the bank!"
-
-Luckily for themselves, none of the outlaws had risen from the
-brushwood so that their chief's exhortation was unnecessary and, with
-agility born of desperation, they struck westward along the crest of
-the gorge.
-
-When they had seen the troopers change their direction and rush madly
-after the fleeing bandits, the savages had checked their pursuit, all
-but the five whom Jesse had sent to the Happy Hunting Ground.
-
-No love did they bear for the soldiers and they were not eager to
-mingle with them, even though they were engaged in the chase of a
-common foe.
-
-Hurriedly Great Bear had passed the word for silence and, sitting on
-their ponies like statues, they had advanced at a walk.
-
-Not even the roar of the carbines had induced the chieftain to increase
-the pace.
-
-But when he saw the forms of the cavalrymen mounting the farther edge
-of the ravine, he became interested.
-
-"Jess Jame fool um paleface!" he grunted, his eyes twinkling with
-delight. "Sojers no get Jess. Injun got chance."
-
-If the bandits had, indeed, taken to the plains across the gorge,
-Great Bear knew that he and his braves were as likely to find them as
-the troopers. But because he was wise in his generation, the wily old
-warrior again enjoined his braves to silence that they might surprise
-the little band had they doubled on their tracks as he more than half
-suspected.
-
-The shoeless hoofs of their ponies making scarcely no sound because
-of the thunderous charge of the cavalry on the farther plains, the
-redskins bore down on the ravine.
-
-But, as the reader knows, Jesse had seen them and, with his pals, was
-scurrying from their path.
-
-The Indians slowed up as they reached the edge of the ravine, then
-descended, crossed, mounted the other side, and swept on in the trail
-of the soldiers.
-
-Pausing as he heard the bucks plunge into the gorge, Jesse parted the
-bushes at his side, peering at the dark, tossing forms.
-
-Cautiously his pals followed his example.
-
-Never had men seemed to move so slowly as did the Indians in crossing
-the gulch.
-
-But at last only a few stragglers had not mounted to the plains.
-
-"Quick, boys! Crawl to the top of the bank, only keep under cover!"
-whispered the world-famous desperado.
-
-With alacrity his companions obeyed.
-
-A rod he led them, still on their hands and knees, after they had
-gained the level.
-
-"There's no danger of our being seen now, I reckon," he declared,
-rising to his feet. "But we won't run any risk by showing too much of
-ourselves.
-
-"Come on! While the Injuns and troopers are searching the other side of
-the ravine, we'll get back to the cliffs on this."
-
-Overjoyed at their escape from the foes, which seemed little short
-of miraculous, the bandits broke into a swift, steady jog trot that
-carried them rapidly over the ground.
-
-Nearer and nearer they approached the rocks that towered majestically
-ahead of them.
-
-But just as safety seemed within their grasp, Frank gasped:
-
-"I'm all in! The--wo--wound--in--my--leg."
-
-And he sank to the ground, in collapse.
-
-Muttering an oath under his breath at this misfortune when all was
-going so well, Jesse hurried to the side of his brother and the others
-joined him.
-
-"Take an arm, Texas," snapped the bandit-chieftain, as he put his own
-hand under Frank's left shoulder and lifted him to his feet.
-
-Quickly the other obeyed and, supporting their exhausted comrade
-between them, they resumed their progress toward the cliffs.
-
-"I reckon we might as well go back into the canyon," asserted the
-world-famous desperado.
-
-"We'll climb up to the table land where we rescued Tony and rest for a
-few days. We can see all about us. No one can surprise us and the bucks
-and troopers would never think we'd go back.
-
-"We'll be able to find something we can eat."
-
-This suggestion met with the approval of the others and the little band
-bent their steps toward the black cleft that marked the entrance into
-the rocky defile.
-
-Occasional glances behind them told them that none of the pursuers had
-returned from the chase.
-
-Indeed, no moving object could they discover in any direction and, with
-hearts beating light at their successful escape from the blood-thirsty,
-revenge-craving savages and the cavalrymen whose ire had been roused by
-their strategic errors, they were just about to enter the canyon when a
-lithe figure darted toward them from behind a boulder.
-
-"It's more of the red devils," snarled Wild Bill, whipping out his
-guns. "We _are_ smart--I don't think. While we've been patting
-ourselves on the back, they've been lying here, waiting for us."
-
-Yet the alarm of the outlaws was short-lived.
-
-Ere any of them could draw their weapons, a voice cooed, softly:
-
-"Don' shoot! Don' shoot! Me Dew Drop!"
-
-The relief the words brought to the bandits, who feared the fruits of
-their desperate escape and retreat were to be snatched from them, was
-inexpressible and it was turned to outright joy as the Indian maiden
-continued:
-
-"Dew Drop take um Jess Jame to safe cave. Heap food. Heap water in
-pool. Then Dew Drop leave. Injun move camp, Dew Drop got go."
-
-"Then if they're going to take you along, they haven't got wise to your
-hiding us in Kaw-Kaw's cave, I judge," exclaimed the bandit-chieftain,
-glad to know the assistance which had been so opportune to his little
-band had brought no trouble to the girl.
-
-"Squaws no know. Bucks forget 'fore get back. Um go on raid. Sojers no
-be in forts now," returned Dew Drop.
-
-"Sorry I didn't pot more of 'em if that's what they're up to," grunted
-the world-famous desperado.
-
-But his good fairy did not understand what he meant and prattled
-artlessly.
-
-Skirting the base of the precipice, Dew Drop passed the mouth of the
-canyon and led them more than a mile beyond, stopping when she reached
-a fissure that ran from top to base.
-
-Squeezing into it, the bandits were plunged in darkness.
-
-Putting his hand on his guide's shoulder, Jesse bade his men hold onto
-the one in front of him and in single file they advanced till they
-could feel from the change in the air that they had reached the cave.
-
-"Dew Drop no stay," declared the maid, slipping from the
-bandit-chieftain's hand. "Mus' join um squaw. Paleface fin' grub,
-water. So long."
-
-And, ere any of the outlaws had the time to protest, the Indian maiden
-sped from them, leaving them in the unknown cave in pitch darkness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-IN THE FATAL CIRCLE.
-
-
-But Jesse had plans other than to permit the soft-voiced Indian maiden
-to desert them thus suddenly.
-
-Without a word, with the quickness of a panther he sprang after her
-leaving the others helpless and surprised at the unexpected action of
-their chief.
-
-"Has Jess gone plumb bug house?" breathed Tony, scarcely daring to
-trust his voice.
-
-"Everybody's got wheels in this devil's neighborhood," averred Texas.
-
-"And if he ain't he will have in the hole we're in now," added Homely
-Harry.
-
-Frank groaned weakly.
-
-"Hey, pard," interrupted Tony, suddenly bethinking himself of their
-wounded companion, "How you comin' along?"
-
-"Give me a drink," returned the elder James brother in a voice scarcely
-above a whisper. "I feel as if I was dying."
-
-"Bosh," retorted Tony. "I know them symptoms. You're been loosin' some
-red juice. Here, take a pull at the flask. It'll put you right in a
-jiffy."
-
-Frank James gulped down the liquor greedily, so much so that for the
-instant it nearly strangled him.
-
-"How's that," grinned Tony in the darkness, fetching the flask away and
-restoring it to his ample hip pocket.
-
-"B--b--better," coughed Frank. "But I'll be bad again in a minute.
-Where's Jess?"
-
-"Dunno. He vamoosed like a lightning bug. Sloped after the Indian
-maiden I guess."
-
-"Call him back quick," demanded Frank. "You, Texas. Hurry or I'll bleed
-to death. I'm bad hurt, I tell you fellows."
-
-Without an instant's hesitation Texas sprang away to do the wounded
-man's bidding, regardless of any personal danger to himself.
-
-But Texas did not have far to go.
-
-Just without the cave he was grasped in a grip of iron. His hand flew
-to his belt.
-
-"Stop, you fool! Where are you going!" hissed Jesse in his ear.
-
-"Gad, what a fright you gave me," gasped Texas. "I was going for you.
-Frank's bad and said you'd got to come right away. Oh there's the girl,
-eh."
-
-"Bad? Come along Dew Drop," and without further parley Jesse led the
-way into the cave, keeping tight hold on the Indian girl, who though
-reluctant, made no protest at being dragged back by the man she had
-just saved.
-
-"Somebody strike a light," demanded the great bandit.
-
-"No, no," protested Dew Drop with a quick pressure on the outlaw's arm.
-"Injun smell smoke. Stop um hole up an catch pale face. Jess Jame and
-other pale faces come with Dew Drop."
-
-"All right go ahead and we'll follow," decided Jesse. "Frank can you
-walk?"
-
-Frank groaned.
-
-"Pick him up, two of you and follow. Be careful."
-
-Not a word was spoken as the strange procession moved silently on,
-deeper and deeper into the bowels of the mountain.
-
-The silence was, after what had seemed an age to the men whose nerves
-were tensed by the strangeness of the cave, broken by the voice of the
-Indian girl.
-
-"Pale faces git down um bellies," she directed tersely. "Me go first."
-
-Suiting the action to the word Dew Drop threw herself down and crawled
-through a hole in the rock. But Jesse, who followed, did not succeed in
-passing the narrow opening with the same ease that Dew Drop had, but
-he finally accomplished the feat with sundry exclamations of disgust
-beneath his breath.
-
-Texas, more ample of girth, got stuck in the hole, which he had
-attempted to get through feet first, and he could not move either way.
-Jesse solved the difficulty quickly by grabbing the unfortunate outlaw
-by the feet and jerking him in beside him.
-
-But with Frank the task was still more difficult.
-
-"Easy there," commanded the bandit-chieftain. "Put him through head
-first and I will draw him in."
-
-This they did, and though Frank groaned and begged piteously the move
-was quickly executed.
-
-Dew Drop now led the way again, which Jesse observed led slowly upward
-and that the air was freshening as they proceeded.
-
-At last the Indian maiden came to a quick stop.
-
-"Light um fire," she directed tersely.
-
-It was the work of a moment for Jesse to strike a match and to his
-intense satisfaction he discovered a pile of dry limbs in one corner
-of the chamber where they had halted, and a blazing fire was burning
-quickly.
-
-The men uttered an exclamation of surprise.
-
-What they saw challenged the admiration of every man present.
-
-Millions of brilliant stalactites hung suspended from the domed arch
-above them, and gave back scintillating flashes from the light of the
-flames. For the moment they forgot the real purpose of their presence
-there.
-
-"Diamonds, by Judas," exclaimed Homely Harry in open mouthed wonder.
-
-"Diamonds, your eye," returned Texas. "Them ain't no diamonds. I know
-the kind, I've seen them before."
-
-But Jesse had given no heed to their expressions of admiration.
-
-Instantly the fire was started, he dropped down by the side of his
-wounded brother, making a hurried examination of his wounds.
-
-"Give me a piece of lariat," he commanded.
-
-Tony passed over a strip of tough leather. With this the
-outlaw-chieftain bound the leg just above the wound, administering a
-drink from his own flask, and turned to Dew Drop.
-
-"Got any saw bones around here?" he demanded sharply. "That's what I
-brought you back for."
-
-The Indian girl looked at him blankly.
-
-"Pale face medicine man," he explained.
-
-Dew Drop smiled understandingly, but shook her head.
-
-"Two suns journey," she explained, pointing to the north.
-
-"Got a medicine man in your village, then? We've got to have some one
-here quick and I guess a medicine man of one color is about as good as
-another."
-
-"Great Bear him got medicine man," explained the girl. "No get medicine
-man. Great Bear kill white man; Great Bear kill me."
-
-"We'll kill Great Bear; so, that'll be a toss up. You go get the
-medicine man. Tell him your Indian beau is down in the canyon so badly
-wounded that he will die and fetch him here."
-
-"Dew Drop fraid," she protested.
-
-"Don't worry, we'll fix him so he won't hurt you. I will follow along
-behind you to see that no harm comes to you. Two of you men go outside
-the cave after a while and hide there and when Dew Drop brings the man
-you jump on him, and carry him in--"
-
-"No, no," answered the maiden hurriedly, "me put out um medicine man
-eyes."
-
-"Put out his eyes?" demanded Jesse in surprise.
-
-"So," drawing her hand across her eyes and to the back of her head.
-
-"Oh, I see: you mean to blindfold him? But how are you going to do it?"
-
-"Me tell um take um cave of Great Spirit and must not see."
-
-The others gazed at the girl blankly. Jesse haw-hawed loudly.
-
-"Well, you are a wise little savage. I guess Jesse James and his band
-had better hang around here a while and take some lessons from you.
-What do you say, boys? Dew Drop ain't near so soft as her name, is she
-now?"
-
-"She ain't that," they chorused.
-
-"Oh hurry up," urged Frank.
-
-With that, Jesse and the girl quickly made their way out of the cave.
-Once outside he gave the girl explicit directions, and without further
-delay she sped away, quickly disappearing amid the foliage without so
-much as betraying her movements by the snapping of a dry twig.
-
-"A snake couldn't get away any quieter than that," nodded Jesse
-approvingly, and after a keen survey of rock and wood he too slipped
-away in the direction that Dew Drop had taken.
-
-Not quite sure of his way, Jesse cautiously mounted a rock and, shading
-his eyes from the setting sun, peered off to the north.
-
-He found what he was looking for, and, dropping from his perch once
-more took up his cautious way toward the Indian village. That he was
-going toward what would prove certain death, should any watchful,
-sneaking redskin chance to discover him or even come upon his trail,
-did not trouble the great bandit in the least.
-
-His brother's life was at stake and that there might be no slip up he
-would follow clear to the Indian village, if necessary.
-
-"I'll bring back the medicine man dead or alive," he swore under his
-breath.
-
-Twilight was deepening and Jesse went more boldly on. But he had made
-a fatal move. He had done a thing that he would not have done had
-his band of hardy outlaws been with him, for then Jesse's sense of
-responsibility would have been doubly heavy.
-
-He might expose his own life to peril unnecessarily. But for his
-companions, no. He took no more chances than was necessary where they
-were concerned.
-
-During the brief moment that he had stood poised on the rock, however,
-the field glass of a United States Cavalry officer chanced to be
-trained on that very spot. More than that the pair of eyes behind the
-glass, also chanced to belong to the very officer with whom the band
-had mixed it up earlier.
-
-The Captain uttered an exclamation of surprise.
-
-"Quick! mount!" he commanded. "Not a word as you value your lives."
-
-Trained to instant obedience, the troopers sprang into their saddles.
-They did not know what the order portended, nor did they care. The
-Captains manner meant that there was excitement ahead and that a brush
-with the red skins was more than likely at no distant moment.
-
-"Red skins?" asked the young Lieutenant, in a low voice, riding up
-beside his superior officer.
-
-"Worse," was his laconic reply. "James, and he was alone when I saw
-him. I think he is out reconnoitering. We'll bag him this time I hope."
-
-"That ought to be easy if he is alone," returned the Lieutenant.
-
-"Humph," snorted the Captain. "You'll learn more as you grow older.
-I'd rather hunt savages than those Missouri outlaws, for when it
-comes to devilish tricks, the Missourians can give the Indians points
-blindfolded.
-
-"Halt! Dismount!
-
-"Tether your ponies."
-
-"Where away?" asked the Lieutenant softly.
-
-"To the north. He should be near us providing he has not changed his
-course and I don't think he has, for very good reasons too."
-
-"Why, Captain."
-
-"Because, young man, on one side is an Indian village full of savages
-thirsting for his blood, and on the other a sheer precipice dropping
-down a few hundred feet only. We are on the third side, and, unless he
-turns back there is only one course open for him--to run into us.
-
-"Throw your men out into a circle. Conceal them behind boulders. We
-should get him in the circle that way, and once there I don't think he
-will get away.
-
-"Catch him alive if you can. Kill him if you have to."
-
-Silence again fell over the night.
-
-The troopers trained to tread on velvet feet, slipped along like so
-many silent shadows.
-
-But every first right finger trembled on a trigger.
-
-They knew the man they had to deal with, and the mere click of a
-gunlock on their part might mean instant death at the hand of the great
-bandit.
-
-They lay down.
-
-Each tree and rock beyond seemed to hold a lurking shadow, so tensely
-strained were their nerves and vivid their imaginations.
-
-A twig snapped among the trees in the dense shadows. But not a man
-stirred. For long minutes they waited there, scarcely drawing a free
-breath.
-
-The men needed no orders from their captain, no imposition for silent
-caution. They were trained too finely in Indian warfare to need such
-injunctions.
-
-If indeed it were the great outlaw himself who stood under the
-spreading trees whence had come the warning sound, they knew he would
-not move for some time. Not until he had waited the effect of his
-incautious step would he move a muscle of his body, and perhaps he
-would be standing with one foot poised in the air, every sense keenly
-alert, his eyes piercing the shadows with almost superhuman vision.
-
-To such extremes are men's senses trained, who live in momentary
-expectation of the blinding crash and the bullet between the eyes.
-
-The troopers heard no further sound.
-
-Their eyes suddenly began to blink. They could scarcely credit what
-they saw.
-
-Right in the middle of the moonlit space, as if he had risen from the
-ground, stood the great outlaw himself.
-
-How he had come there without their observing him, was beyond their
-understanding.
-
-He was standing behind a large boulder, hat tipped back, his features
-plainly outlined in the brilliant moonlight, nose and face tipped
-upward as if scenting danger in the air.
-
-Twenty trigger fingers twitched nervously, and as many Winchesters
-swung silently until they focused on the figure no more than twenty
-paces distant.
-
-The great desperado poised there like a statue, hands and arms hanging
-listlessly at his sides, guns in their holsters as if there was no
-expectation of their being needed for instant use.
-
-But this did not deceive Uncle Sam's Indian fighters. They were too
-familiar with Jesse James' reputation for quickness on the trigger not
-to understand that the mere glint of a moonbeam along a rifle barrel
-would mean death to the soldier behind it almost before he could pull
-his own trigger.
-
-Like a blow in the face came the sudden command:
-
-"Put up your hands, Jesse James!"
-
-"Crash!"
-
-Both the desperadoe's "Colts" spoke in a single explosion, and the
-Captain yelled with pain as a bullet tore through one arm.
-
-"Give it to him!" he roared.
-
-"Fire in a volley."
-
-The roar of the heavy Winchesters sent the leaves of the trees a
-rustling and even the rocks and earth catching up the note, responded
-with a tremor.
-
-Dimly they could see the figure of the outlaw stretched out on the
-ground in the shadow of the boulder after the smoke had drifted away.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-WHEN THE EARTH FELL APART.
-
-
-Just before leaving the cave the great desperado had whispered a word
-of command to Tony and Texas.
-
-But the nature of the orders so secretly conveyed the others did not
-know, and none save Frank felt licensed to make inquiry, for Jesse was
-apt to administer a sharp rebuke that the inquisitive one would not
-soon forget.
-
-Being the interested party the elder James brother glared suspiciously
-at the two bandits.
-
-"See here, you mutts," he exploded with all his remaining strength, "I
-know what you are up to. You think my leg has got to come off and Jess
-didn't want me to know about it cause I'd make a ruction.
-
-"Take it from me, you've got another guess coming. The leg is mine
-and it's on to stay. Time enough to plant it when I'm put away. Nice
-looking chump I'd be hopping around on one peg, eh?" he laughed
-maliciously.
-
-"You're wrong, Frank," corrected Texas. "You ain't so bad off either.
-I'll gamble my spurs on it, that it's only a flesh wound and there
-ain't no bullet in there at all. But them gunshot wounds is nasty
-things, and what the chief wants is for that redskin sawbones to put on
-a lotion that will draw out the poison and--"
-
-"Then what did he want to be so danged secret like with you duffers
-for? That's what gets me. You tell me right now or I'll give you a dose
-of the same medicine I got!" he growled menacingly.
-
-Tony laughed good-naturedly.
-
-"Jest a little job Jess had put up to save the girl's skin. What do you
-s'pose would have happened to her if she brought the medicine man here.
-Sure as you're alive, she'd a been in a bad way if the redskins got
-wise to what she's doin' with the medicine man. Do you get it?"
-
-Frank nodded and emitted a sigh of relief.
-
-"I just wanted to give you all a tip that I've got a gun or two in my
-belt, and what's more, they are liable to go off if any of you dubs
-monkey with this peg of mine. See?"
-
-But Tony and Texas, grinning broadly, had slipped away, their
-moccasined feet giving no intimation of their departure on the mission
-of the chief.
-
-The time seemed interminable to Frank and the wounded leg gave him
-much pain, as he twisted and swore at intervals over the long delay in
-bringing help.
-
-Night had fallen by the time the two bandits reached the opening of the
-cave. They had proceeded only a short distance beyond when their keen
-ears caught the sound of approaching footsteps.
-
-Quickly secreting themselves and crouching low the men awaited the
-nearer approach of the strangers, eyes keenly bent in the direction of
-the faint sound they had heard beyond.
-
-They had only a moment to wait.
-
-Tony nudged his companion and nodded his head.
-
-"Them's them," he ejaculated sententiously.
-
-"And by my spurs he's a giant," added Texas.
-
-"Yes, and there the gal behind him, Tex. She's a wonder."
-
-"There's some things worse'n some squaws," replied Texas.
-
-"S--h--h--h," cautioned Tony.
-
-"I'll take the big one and you get the girl, but don't hurt her. Give
-her a hunch as to what we're up to as soon as you get your clamps on
-her. Now."
-
-Silently and with bated breaths, the two desperadoes waited until the
-medicine man, who indeed did loom up a veritable giant in stature, had
-passed Texas.
-
-He was right beside Tony now, and so close that the bandit could easily
-have reached out and touched him. But Tony did not propose to adopt the
-ordinary methods of catching an Indian and for the very good reason
-that he had no ordinary man to deal with.
-
-His plans had been quickly matured. And what he did was successful from
-the very novelty of the proceeding.
-
-What Tony did was to shove a stout stick squarely between the medicine
-man's shins, at the same time giving a quick, sharp twist.
-
-The effect was magical.
-
-The Indian plunged head foremost to the ground, his feet waving wildly
-in the air for a moment. But before he could gain equilibrium or cry
-out, the same stout stick came down on his head with crushing force.
-
-The copper-hued sawbones lay still.
-
-"Holy snakes!" exclaimed Texas with genuine admiration. "Ef that ain't
-the all-firedest way to catch a doctor that I ever seen. Here, my
-pretty squaw, you're my prisoner too. Now come along like a good little
-papoose."
-
-Dew Drop, with a surprised look in her eyes, turned to flee. Texas
-caught her.
-
-"Keep yer head plumb. We're just makin' believe capturin' you and when
-old sawbones wakes up we'll have you tied so he don't get wise to your
-little game. See?"
-
-A smile slowly rippled over the face of the little red girl.
-
-"Pale face smart like Indian," she answered, nodding her head
-vigorously. "Um hurry. Big Bear and braves up yonder. Come for Jess
-Jame pretty soon."
-
-"Jess?" questioned Tony rising from the medicine man whose arms and
-hands he had been pinioning. "By the way, where's the chief. He went
-with you, didn't he?"
-
-Dew Drop shook her head.
-
-"Dew Drop no see um."
-
-"That's funny. Lend a hand here, Texas and let's get this red devil
-into the cave. No need to blindfold him now--"
-
-"Didn't put out his light, did you Tony?" asked Texas a bit anxiously.
-
-"Kill him? N--a--w. Head's too thick to break if a log fell on it."
-
-It was no easy task to get the inanimate form of the giant to the cave.
-At first they essayed to carry him, one at the head, the other at the
-feet.
-
-Tony dropped his burden in disgust.
-
-"Say, Texas, come here. This is too much like work. Jest get hold of
-his feet with me and we'll drag him the rest of the way--"
-
-"But it will hurt him," protested Texas.
-
-"What, hurt a redskin? G'wan. It'll wake him up, that's all, and he'll
-be fit as a fiddle when we git him into the cave. Come along."
-
-The way was rough and the sacred medicine man got the roughest voyage
-of his life for the next few moments. And as Tony had predicted, by the
-time they had reached the entrance to the cave, his eyes were open
-and he was glaring at his captors with malignant eyes. He could speak
-no word because Tony with rare forethought had twisted a gag into his
-mouth, fearing that should the man come to he might give the alarm and
-bring down some lurking savages on them.
-
-Just before reaching the mouth of the cave Texas, at his companion's
-bidding, bound a handkerchief over the prisoner's eyes. Then with great
-caution, they hauled him into the hole in the rocks.
-
-Being a large man the savage went through the smaller hole opening into
-the large chamber, with much less ease than had the bandits. In fact
-they had pulled him only half way through when he stuck there fast.
-
-"Can't make it. He's too fat," decided Texas.
-
-"Can't? Wait. I know the breed. He's making himself fat--swelling
-himself out. Here you savage," roared Tony, "we're going to give a good
-long pull and if you don't come through we'll fix you so you do."
-
-The medicine man grunted.
-
-"That's right, grunt. But you'll grunt harder when I get through with
-you. And understand me, and if you don't get through this time, Harry
-here will slice off a few slabs of flesh so you'll fit. Harry'll do a
-good job too, and don't you forget it, for he used to slaughter cattle
-on a range out in Missouri. Now draw in your belly unless you want to
-lose some skin. Heave away boys."
-
-The bandits counting, "one, two, three," gave a mighty pull.
-
-This time the medicine man came through, but little rivulets of blood
-trickled down his sides as they pulled him into the brilliantly lighted
-room. There they removed his blindfold and released his arms, after
-first taking possession of his knife.
-
-The redskin's glance swept the room, then rested on Dew Drop.
-
-But the little Indian maiden was acting her part to perfection. Tied
-hand and foot, she had been stood against one side of the chamber,
-where she rested, her eyes blazing with well-assumed hate at her
-captors.
-
-"Big Bear kill um pale faces," she gritted.
-
-"Never you mind about Big Bear," retorted Tony. "If there's any killing
-going on we will take a hand in it ourselves. We shall not hurt you if
-you keep quiet--"
-
-"Indian girl no fraid white man. She stick um knife some day, maybe."
-
-"Ho, ho," roared Texas.
-
-"Our little pussey has sharp claws," interjected Homely Harry.
-
-Frank had been taken into the next chamber, an apartment somewhat
-smaller than the one they were in, and there they carried the Indian
-medicine man after having instructed him as to what was expected of him.
-
-They planked him down beside the wounded man.
-
-Frank's right hand slipped down to his trusty "Colt."
-
-But the Indian made no move.
-
-Tony's face grew stony.
-
-"You red devil," he cried, "don't get stubborn. Do as we demand and no
-harm will come to you, but if you don't fix this man up inside of ten
-minutes--by the watch, remember--you're a dead Indian. Get busy!"
-
-The Indian bent a keen glance on Tony, then looked sharply from one to
-the other of the assemblage as if to satisfy himself that he was not
-being tricked.
-
-But there was no trickery lurking at the corners of the stern mouths of
-the desperate men.
-
-"Kill um pale face," urged Dew Drop with a vicious snap of the jaws.
-
-"Ugh," grunted the medicine man with a shake of his head, as he slowly
-began drawing a variety of herbs from his belt. These he quickly meshed
-together with a stone, and, forming them into a poultice applied it to
-the wounds of Frank James.
-
-The latter let out a yell and tugged at his gun.
-
-But Tony anticipating just such a move, closed over his wrist in a
-vice-like grip.
-
-"Easy pard," he cautioned. "The poultice is drawing out the pizen. It
-won't hurt but a minute, will it old sawbones?" peering up into the
-savage face before him for confirmation of his words.
-
-"White man cry out, then hurt go way," grunted the savage.
-
-"There, what did I tell you," chortled Tony. "Poultice goes on, you
-yell like--like--like you did, and pain goes away. That's it."
-
-"Oh, shut up," snarled Frank, the lines of his face drawing sharply
-under the excruciating pain he was enduring.
-
-"How--how long is this going to keep up?" he demanded.
-
-"Yes, when can the captain get out again?" chimed in Homely Harry.
-
-"White man walk byemby," returned the man of herbs. "Before sun up he
-go out. Then mebbe Indian kill um."
-
-"That's alright, Reddy; we'll be there for the killing. But we don't
-'low we've got any hard feelings again you. Hey, boys?"
-
-"Sure not," chorused the others.
-
-Crossing the medicine man's palm with a gold piece, to his intense
-surprise and satisfaction, they again led him into the vaulted chamber
-and releasing Dew Drop bade her bind the cloth about his eyes once more.
-
-Tony seeing that his orders were being obeyed, had stepped back to
-speak to Frank as to the best means of disposing of their prisoners. As
-he turned he observed that the Indian girl was feeding embers to the
-fire the better to light their way out.
-
-But the desperado had no more than turned his back on the savage and
-the girl ere the rocks beneath him were shaken by a mighty tremor.
-
-A sudden and awful roar smote his ears.
-
-A fearful blow seemed to have been struck across his eyes.
-
-The air was full of hurling rocks and debris.
-
-Tony and his companions were tumbled together in a confused heap,
-yelling in terror at the awful thing that had happened, though they
-knew not what it meant.
-
-Rocks and particles rained down upon their bodies with sickening force.
-
-But the desperate men neither heard nor felt now.
-
-A sudden darkness had settled over them and they lay motionless and
-lifeless.
-
-A mighty explosion had rent the cave from end to end.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-IN A LIVING TOMB.
-
-
-It might have been hours for aught they knew that they had lain there.
-
-Frank was the first to regain consciousness. He heard someone groan and
-called out demanding whose voice it was.
-
-"It's Tony, or what little is left of him," was the answer.
-
-"Are you hurt?"
-
-"Donno. Feel as if the roof had caved in on me. Where's the rest of the
-gang?"
-
-"If they only have got out of it as easily as we have we can count
-ourselves the luckiest men on earth," returned the elder James boy with
-emphasis.
-
-Forgetting his recent wound, which the herbs of the medicine man had
-most miraculously put to sleep so that he felt no pain at all, Frank
-struggled to his feet and struck a match. Texas and Harry he espied
-lying in a heap in one corner half hidden by the debris which had
-fallen upon them.
-
-Out of the wreck he gathered some sticks and rekindled the fire which
-in a moment brightly illuminated the chamber. The scene that met his
-gaze was one of wreck and ruin.
-
-But to this the bandit gave no heed. His first care was for the other
-members of the band.
-
-"They're alive, Tony," he cried, "every man of them. Come help me get
-them out--"
-
-"You'll have to get Tony out first, I'm thinkin'. I'm wedged in here
-under this heap of stuff tighter'n a sardine in a box."
-
-It was but the work of a moment for Frank to release the imprisoned
-desperado, and after taking careful inventory of his anatomy and
-learning to his delight that no bones had been broken, both men turned
-to with a will and began digging out their companions.
-
-"Thank Providence, or whatever or whoever did it, that my flask was not
-broken," exclaimed Frank.
-
-"Here, hold Texas's head while I pour a few fingers down his throat.
-That'll bring him around if anything will."
-
-And it did. Texas gasped, strangled, sat up and swore roundly.
-
-The others were quickly restored to consciousness and the men were
-overjoyed that all had escaped.
-
-"Say," spoke up Tony suddenly. "That explosion come from that other
-room there. What do you s'pose did it--"
-
-"And the medicine man and the squaw were in there alone, weren't they?"
-asked Frank.
-
-"By the gods you're right," exclaimed Texas.
-
-With one accord each man grabbed up a burning brand and climbing over
-the obstructions that the explosion had placed in their way, dashed
-into the adjoining chamber.
-
-If anything the disaster had been greater here than in the other room.
-
-"There's the redskin all shot to pieces," cried Harry.
-
-"Yes, deader'n a tick," agreed Texas. "But where is the gal?"
-
-"Yes, where is the girl?" demanded Frank suddenly aroused to action.
-
-"Blown into little pieces. She's too tender to stand a racket that
-would put out a giant like the medicine man," opined Tony. "But where
-the devil is she? There ain't no pieces of her layin' about here as I
-sees. It makes a feller shivery--like--kinder weak under the belt."
-
-"Dig! Dig like hell every man of you!" roared Frank in a frenzy of
-haste at thought that the girl who had proved such a friend in need
-might be dying within a few feet of them for want of a willing hand to
-give her succor.
-
-They set to with a will.
-
-"Dew Drop here," piped a voice that seemed to come out of the air, but
-from just what direction none could say.
-
-They looked about; peered into every corner and crevice, then faced
-each other questioningly.
-
-"Hello!" shouted Frank, but only the echoes of his own voice came back
-to him.
-
-"Mebby it's the Great Spirit she was tellin' us about," suggested Texas
-with a hoarseness in his throat that he tried vainly to down. "She's a
-dead one that's sure--"
-
-"Dew Drop no go Happy Hunting Ground; Medicine man he go Happy Hunting
-Ground. Mebby Jesse Jame he happy Hunting Ground," came in the
-plaintive tone of the Indian maiden.
-
-It was maddening.
-
-In a moment these hardy desperadoes who had faced death in a thousand
-forms, would feel their courage oozing from their finger tips and would
-make a run for the outer air.
-
-"Where are you?" roared Frank. "Are you dead or alive?"
-
-"Me here; me no with Great Spirit."
-
-"Where?" bellowed Tony. "Where in the humping pizen snakes be you
-anyhow? You sound as if you was over my head, but if you be you're a
-dead one, and that goes."
-
-Frank with a sudden thought in his mind was shading his eyes from the
-flaming torches and peering up into the shadows. There, more than ten
-feet above their heads, he saw the form of the little Indian maiden
-wedged in a crevice of rocks where she had evidently been hurled by the
-sudden explosion.
-
-The men shouted for pure joy.
-
-"Jump, you little devil," shouted Texas, "we'll catch you."
-
-"Paleface say well. Dew Drop no jump."
-
-"Not jump? Don't be afraid," reassured Frank.
-
-"Dew Drop um no jump. Um fast," she wailed.
-
-"She's wedged in between the rocks," yelled Tony. "Git a ladder
-somebody quick."
-
-Everybody laughed but it was evident that Tony in his excitement was in
-dead earnest.
-
-"Yes, how we going to git the gal down?" demanded Texas.
-
-"Can't one of you take a running jump and reach her?" cried Frank. "If
-my leg wasn't game I'd do it myself."
-
-"Yes, you would," sneered Tony. "You ain't no bird and neither be I.
-That's twelve feet if its one up there."
-
-"I've got an idee," interrupted Homely Harry. "I'll stand agin the wall
-and you fellers climb up on top of me, one top of tother. I've seen 'em
-do that in a circus once. We kin git her down that way."
-
-Frank shot an approving glance at him.
-
-"You're the only one in the bunch that's got a head on his shoulders
-about now I reckon. I ain't much on the climb, but try it and if you
-don't get her, I'll go to the top of the pile myself."
-
-The agile mountaineers formed a human pyramid in a moment with Texas as
-the top-mounter, Tony groaning beneath his weight and threatening every
-moment to give way sending the pyramid a bruised and broken wreck to
-the hard stone floor of the cave.
-
-It was with no little effort that they finally accomplished the feat of
-releasing the girl from her rocky prison.
-
-But once free she slid down the pyramid with the grace of a lofty
-tumbler.
-
-Tony and Texas came down rather less easily.
-
-"Now I want to know what this is all about?" demanded Frank when they
-once more had recovered themselves.
-
-"Yes, what devil's prank put this joint on the blink?" added Tony.
-"I've had some jars in my time, but I never did have such an all-fired
-bump as this one."
-
-"Me not know," answered Dew Drop hanging her head.
-
-"What were you and the bones doing when it happened?" urged Frank,
-pointing to the mangled remains of the medicine man.
-
-Dew Drop gazed at the horrid sight with emotionless eyes, then turned
-toward them.
-
-"Me make fire burn one--two times--"
-
-"Yes, yes," they chorused.
-
-"You put wood on the fire to make it bright," added Frank.
-
-The Indian girl nodded.
-
-"What then?"
-
-"Make fire more.
-
-"Then heap fire like sun. Dew Drop go sleep. Great Spirit get um. Dew
-Drop open eyes--see pale faces and um want see Dew Drop."
-
-Harry scratched his head.
-
-"Clear as the big Muddy in a spring freshet," agreed Tony.
-
-"Wait a minute," commanded Frank, raising a restraining hand.
-
-"You put one, two, three sticks on fire, then you put another?"
-
-Dew Drop nodded vigorously.
-
-"But when you put on the fourth one, hey?"
-
-"Um pale face he know."
-
-"Then the whole business went up?"
-
-Dew Drop puffed out her cheeks and said "Pouf! So."
-
-"Well I'll be damned!" exclaimed Frank.
-
-"What is it?" demanded Texas.
-
-"What was it?" urged Tony.
-
-"Dynamite!" snapped the desperado holding the girl with a wondering
-gaze. "And you near put us all out of business at the same time.
-
-"Yes, dynamite. I understand it all now. _Jess must have left those
-sticks here and the girl used one of them to build the fire with._
-It's a wonder it didn't blow us all to kingdom come."
-
-A loud guffaw greeted Frank's explanation.
-
-All danger past they could afford to look on the humorous side of the
-disaster now.
-
-"Well, we got rid of old saw bones quicker'n we thought," chuckled
-Tony. "Good thing Jesse wasn't here. It might have got him too, for
-he'd a been right on top of it likely as not."
-
-"Jess. I had forgotten," cried Frank. "What has become of him? He's got
-into trouble, I'll bet my spurs on it. It must have been hours since he
-went away.
-
-"Say Dew Drop, did he go with you?"
-
-The girl shook her head.
-
-The men looked into each other's faces in dismay.
-
-"Come, we must find him," cried Frank, his face narrowing down until
-the lines of it laid up in projecting, stern wrinkles.
-
-"Mebbe Big Bear git um Jess Jame," vouchsafed the girl stoically.
-
-"What's that?" demanded Frank suddenly turning on her.
-
-"Mebbe sojers git um Jess Jame."
-
-"Soldiers. No, they're miles away to the north of us by now. We headed
-them toward the fort hours ago."
-
-"Sojers come back," averred the girl.
-
-"Came back? How do you know?"
-
-"Me see um, Me see injuns. Injuns he look for Jess Jame."
-
-"The girl is right," roared Frank. "Out of this devilish hole. They've
-got him. What can one man do against a company of infantry and a whole
-village of redskins. Come!"
-
-The bandit strode toward the opening whence they had first entered,
-then stopped short.
-
-"Trapped!" he cried hoarsely.
-
-"The explosion has blocked our entrance. We're caught like rats in a
-trap."
-
-The outlaws groaned.
-
-Hoarse curses and muttered imprecations were passed from lip to lip as
-the enraged desperadoes ran from point to point seeking in vain for
-some means of egress from their rocky tomb.
-
-"We're done for," snarled Tony, his hand slipping instinctively to his
-pistol holster.
-
-"Jess will get us out somehow," soothed Harry.
-
-"No. Jess is probably in a worse fix than we are at this very minute,"
-exploded Frank, "and--"
-
-A timid pressure on his arm caused him to look suddenly down.
-
-"Well, what is it?" he demanded shortly. "Haven't you got us into
-enough trouble already? What do you want now? Say it and say it quick."
-
-"Pale face um want go way?"
-
-"Want to? Holy snakes, hear the girl," laughed Tony harshly. "I
-calkerlate it don't make a mighty sight of difference whether we want
-to or not. We don't."
-
-"Silence!" commanded Frank.
-
-"Well, what is it, girl?"
-
-"Pale face want go--Dew Drop want go. Um show pale face."
-
-So astounded were the outlaws at her amazing confidence in her ability
-to pilot them to freedom, that for a moment no one answered, and by
-the time they had gathered their wits again, Dew Drop was tripping on
-velvet feet to the chamber they had just left.
-
-They sprang after her eagerly, but just in time to see the girl
-disappear behind a pyramid of rock and which they now discovered for
-the first time, led into another passage.
-
-"Hold on," called Tony, "you're taking us further into this infernal
-hole."
-
-But Dew Drop made no reply.
-
-Her confident manner brought hope to the bandit's hearts almost in
-spite of their determination not to be trapped at any cost.
-
-"Bring lights," commanded Frank.
-
-They did so.
-
-As they progressed they noticed that their course was leading them up
-and up, further and further, and with each rise of the trail their
-spirits ascended proportionately.
-
-"Hooray! I see moonlight," cried Texas. "By gad we're getting out as
-sure as you're alive."
-
-Dew Drop turned and laid a warning finger on her lips, and bent her
-head in a listening attitude.
-
-"What is it?" they demanded in bated breaths.
-
-"Injuns," breathed the Indian maiden.
-
-Each right slipped to pistol holster.
-
-"Indians," muttered the desperadoes, and "Colts" were quickly
-unsheathed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-JESSE JAMES' DESPERATE LEAP.
-
-
-Not a man moved.
-
-Every rifle was turned on the prostrate man.
-
-The captain peered suspiciously at the form of the great desperado for
-a moment, then nodded his satisfaction.
-
-"Cease firing!" he commanded.
-
-Placing a whistle to his lips the officer blew a short, shrill blast.
-Two troopers in response, came dashing up on their ponies, saluted and
-sat at attention awaiting their leader's commands.
-
-"Boys, we have got him at last," he said, addressing the two troopers.
-"That's Jesse James over there on his back. Sorry we had to kill him.
-But it's my opinion he's safer that way. I knew we should get him
-in time. Outlaws may fool posses indefinitely, but when it comes to
-beating the United States Cavalry, that's different. Young man," he
-continued, "let this be an object lesson to you in persistance. Four
-times within the past twenty-four hours I am free to confess we have
-been outwitted by the world's greatest desperado, but each time we came
-back stronger than ever and as full of fight. You see the result. We
-have done our full duty."
-
-"Yes, but what shall we do with the body, bury it or roll it into the
-gully somewhere hereabouts?" asked the Lieutenant, stepping over toward
-the body of the outlaw, then turning back.
-
-"Neither. Have some saplings cut and make a litter between two ponies.
-We must get him to the fort immediately before it is too late. No one
-would ever believe we had killed the world's greatest bandit unless we
-had something better to show for it than our mere word. It is not that
-they would doubt our word, but the rub is they know Jesse James," he
-grinned. "And so do we," he added grimly.
-
-"Make haste now. We'll surely have the redskins down on us after all
-this racket, and we've made a lot of it, I reckon."
-
-"I'll attend to it at once, sir," responded the Lieutenant.
-
-"Throw out pickets!" ordered the commander. "We are in a dangerous
-strategical position here."
-
-"But what about the rest of the gang--do we go after them?" asked the
-Lieutenant after executing his superior officer's commands.
-
-"Yes, we might as well clean house thoroughly while we are about it.
-Let two men ride in with the body. They should reach the fort by
-daybreak. We will remain here with the rest of the troop and finish
-up the job. It should be easy to at least disperse the gang, now that
-their leader has turned up his toes for the last time. It has been a
-good job, Lieutenant, eh?"
-
-The young officer nodded and smiled, for his share in the great
-achievement had been no small one and in all probability would bring
-him much nearer to having a command of his own at no distant day.
-
-With the others, the army officer's words were accepted as final.
-Meantime the troopers had constructed a litter and were now engaged
-in dragging it to the spot where Jesse lay face up on the rocks, the
-moonbeams lighting up his face with a ghastly pallor, to the strained
-imagination of the soldiers.
-
-At a motion from the Lieutenant, the two mounted men rode their ponies
-to the scene and sprang from their saddles to lift the inanimate form
-of the fallen desperado to the litter to be conveyed to the fort some
-thirty miles away.
-
-The men's Winchesters reposed safely in their saddle holsters, and
-the ponies, unmindful of the tragic scene before them, calmly began
-browsing on the tender underbrush.
-
-The two troopers bent over to lift the body to the litter that the
-others were bringing up.
-
-At that instant a strange and unexpected thing happened.
-
-The supposed dead man moved.
-
-Both arms shot out and the moon beams caught and reflected a steely
-glint in each hand.
-
-With lightning-like quickness the bandit's hands shot into the shadows
-formed by the bodies of the two troopers. The movement was so slight as
-to have been almost indistinguishable two paces away.
-
-The soldiers with a groan settled down in a heap.
-
-Yet nothing of the tragedy being enacted before their very eyes,
-conveyed itself to the troopers just beyond, and the Captain was
-calling out some order to the men that the bandit had laid low. They
-did not know that two of their companions lay dying there, their life
-blood staining the virgin rocks.
-
-"Hey, what is going on over there?" shouted the Captain, his keen eyes
-noting something unusual in the attitude of his men.
-
-There was no response.
-
-"Lieutenant, you had better straighten out those men."
-
-With one movement, the great bandit had driven his bowies straight into
-the hearts of the unsuspecting soldiers. In bending over him to raise
-his body to the litter, they had presented a mark that the veriest
-novice at man-killing, could not have missed by any chance.
-
-Their blood in crimson stream spurted into the face and eyes of the
-blood-thirsty desperado, but the only emotion it stirred in him was to
-arouse him to deepest anger.
-
-Not a bullet of the death-dealing volley had reached Jesse. With that
-marvelous instinct that had saved his life on so many occasions in the
-past, the outlaw had sensed the danger that confronted him, he knew
-that the eyes of enemies were upon him, but whether of white men or
-redskins, he did not know.
-
-Instantly his quick mind evolved a plan. He knew that death yawned in
-the shadows there, which one false move would precipitate upon him.
-With Jesse James, to think was to act.
-
-He dropped at the instant when twenty Winchesters hurled their death
-missiles at him. But the leaden pellets sped harmlessly over his head.
-
-Instead of leaping to his feet and making a desperate dash for liberty,
-as a less experienced man in the art of guerilla warfare might have
-done, the great bandit stiffened out and lay motionless in well-feigned
-emulation of death.
-
-His ruse was successful.
-
-But now the moment for action had arrived. Yet he did not move a
-muscle and respiration seemed to have ceased utterly.
-
-One of the ponies moved a step forward, having sighted a fresh bit of
-tender verdure. Its body was thus projected between the main arm of the
-troop and the prostrate outlaw, hiding his movements from them.
-
-With a blood-curdling yell that sent terror to the hearts of the
-soldiers for an instant, Jesse leaped to the startled pony's back. He
-seemed to spring from the ground as if impelled by some giant spring.
-
-So unexpected had been the move that the troops stood paralyzed--unable
-to move hand or foot. In fact, no comprehension of the real meaning of
-the scene--of the terrible tragedy that had taken place before their
-very eyes--had forced itself into their minds.
-
-The outlaw's yell of defiance had accomplished the exact result that he
-had intended it should.
-
-"It's James!" roared the Captain in a fearful rage.
-
-"Take aim!
-
-"Fire!"
-
-Twenty Winchesters crashed, a dull flash of flame lighted up the
-scene and was instantly lost in a pall of suffocating smoke, the
-reverberations from the explosion, thundering from peak to peak of the
-surrounding mountains.
-
-The command was repeated and again the guns of the troopers spoke
-hoarsely.
-
-Coincident with the first volley the outlaw had thrown himself down on
-the horse's side, away from the attacking force, Indian fashion. He was
-a master of every trick known to savage warfare, learned in the school
-of Quantrell years before.
-
-So suddenly had he gone down that at first they thought he had fallen.
-But the world's greatest outlaw was not thus easily to be disposed of.
-
-"It's a trick," yelled the Captain.
-
-He was goaded to desperation.
-
-"Fire at will!" he commanded.
-
-"Give it to him! Shoot low and fast!"
-
-Still another heavy volley broke the stillness.
-
-"Mount and pursue!" came the stern command.
-
-Jesse rose in his saddle and swung the Winchester that he had drawn
-from the saddle holster, on his enemies.
-
-Two soldiers bit the dust.
-
-The troopers sprang to saddle. The death of their companions had filled
-them with mad lust for the blood of the desperado. Now they were
-yelling like a band of Indians who had discovered that their coveted
-prey was almost within their grasp.
-
-The fleeing bandit made a sudden discovery. The opposite side of the
-circle of troops was drawing in on him. But instead of taking alarm,
-Jesse was quick to note the advantage that their manoeuvre gave him.
-The newcomers fired a volley into the air to warn the Captain of their
-location that he might not fire into the ranks of his own men.
-
-Jesse shouted a jeer, and rising in his saddle again, pumped his
-Winchester first into the ranks of one body of troops and then into the
-other side, continuing to yell like a Comanche Indian on the warpath.
-
-It was maddening. Not a shot was fired in answer by the enemy.
-
-A blast of the bugle had commanded the troops to "cease firing."
-
-"Charge!"
-
-The notes of the command rippled musically from the bugler's horn and
-the troops, swinging to saddle as one man, swept down in pursuit.
-
-They were moving in a half circle formation, now.
-
-"We've got him this time, sure," exulted the Captain.
-
-"Depends on whether our horses are faster than his, which I very much
-doubt," objected the Lieutenant.
-
-"You've still got a few things to learn, young man," retorted his
-superior officer. "When you have been in the service longer you'll find
-out an officer has to use his eyes and every other sense that nature
-has given him, if he expects to save his hide, letting alone catching
-the enemy."
-
-"I don't catch you," shouted the Lieutenant above the sound of the
-fleet-footed rushing ponies.
-
-"He is headed for the canyon. That's what I mean."
-
-"The canyon! Good God!" gasped the young officer.
-
-"Surrender!" roared the Captain.
-
-"It's sure death to go on."
-
-The desperado rose in his stirrups. He again emptied his Winchester
-into the ranks of the pounding troop on his flanks.
-
-The feel of the swift-moving little Indian pony beneath him, filled
-him with unholy joy. On a fleet-footed animal the great outlaw feared
-neither man nor beast, and in very truth, few of the wild men or
-savages of the turbulent west, were his equals in the saddle any more
-than they were when it came to quickness on the trigger.
-
-Three ponies fell as the result of his deadly fire, and as many riders
-were hurled into the air, an instant later to fall with a sickening
-thud as they struck the hard ground.
-
-But the outlaw did not turn to note the result of his fusilade. He had
-other momentous things to occupy his mind at that moment.
-
-Casting his Winchester aside he threw his full weight on his toes in
-the stirrups and sat crouching like some wild animal about to spring
-upon its unsuspecting prey.
-
-The desperado's eyes were fixed and staring.
-
-Ahead of him yawned the black and awful abyss.
-
-Driving in the rowels of his spurs until the pinto snorted with pain,
-Jesse fairly threw the hardy little Indian pony at the rocky canyon.
-
-"My God, he is going over!" cried the Lieutenant, aghast at the awful
-leap the great bandit was about to take.
-
-"He don't see it! He don't see it!
-
-"Halt! The canyon!" roared the young officer in the stress of his
-excitement. For the moment he had forgotten that the man he was warning
-was he for whose death half a continent was clamoring.
-
-"He knows it, you fool!" snarled the Captain. "Don't you see he's going
-to jump it?"
-
-"But its certain death."
-
-"So is this," gritted the commander of the troop. "It's death either
-way he takes it, back or front.
-
-"Call the halt or we'll be going over with him, the whole pack and
-parcel of us."
-
-The bugle sounded its warning short and sharp.
-
-On the very brink of the precipice stood a giant spreading oak, and
-into it's broad shadow the world-famous desperado drove his mount, a
-veritable living projectile in its undeviating flight.
-
-The notes of the bugle trilled again and the horses of the troopers
-slid to their haunches perilously near the brink.
-
-"Fire!" rang the stern command.
-
-Once more the heavy Winchesters crashed.
-
-A wild yell greeted the volley.
-
-But whether of pain or triumph they did not know.
-
-With a scream of awful fright, the pony leaped high in the air and
-plunged far out and over the terrible precipice. They heard his body
-buffeted from rock to rock in its descent. And finally as they listened
-they caught the sound of the impact when it struck for the last time on
-the rocks far below.
-
-Not a man spoke. They were too full of wonder and horror for speech.
-
-A heavy silence had fallen over the scene of death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-IN THE HANDS OF THE REDSKINS.
-
-
-"Well, I guess that will be about all--that settles the career of the
-world's greatest bandit," averred the Captain.
-
-Both officers and men stood on the brink of the black chasm, gazing
-down fearsomely into the apparently bottomless pit. The thought of the
-fearful plunge that they had just witnessed, had a sobering effect on
-all of them. It had stirred within the men an emotion almost akin to
-fear, and each trooper as he turned away, felt a little chill trickle
-up and down his spinal column, all in spite of his stern effort to
-repress it. Hated as was the great outlaw, the soldiers rated him as a
-brave man, a quality that touches a responsive chord in every soldier's
-breast.
-
-The Captain broke the silence, his words falling on them almost like a
-blow.
-
-"No living man could come out of that fall alive," he continued. "It is
-a sheer drop of more than two hundred feet to the bottom of the gulch,
-and there isn't a ghost of a show for anything human or inhuman that
-goes over it.
-
-"Lieutenant, take a squad of men and ride north until you strike the
-entrance to the gorge. The water is low at this time of the year and
-you can easily get up to the point where the bandit and the pinto
-struck. This time there won't be any question about it. He won't look
-very pretty, but we've got to get him to the fort as soon as possible,
-for the weather is warm."
-
-"Right, sir; but I should like to know how he played that scurvy trick
-on us?" demanded the Lieutenant. "I can't get it through my head how
-our men ever missed him."
-
-"That is elemental. He lay down before the volley was fired!"
-
-"That's all right, Captain, but I still don't understand how he knew
-we were going to shoot," persisted the Lieutenant.
-
-"Because he was Jesse James. That's the only answer I can give you. I
-made my mistake when I failed to order a volley fired into him after
-he was down. That's the trouble when troops are opposed to savages and
-outlaws. We fight according to the rules of civilized warfare while
-they--well, they are just common murderers. Warfare to them is only
-assassination.
-
-"Have the recall sounded, then start for the gulch. Jesse James is dead
-for the last time."
-
-But once more the army officer had been tricked.
-
-In a pure game of wits, he with all his military training and his
-experience in fighting savages, had been outwitted. When it came to
-pitting one man in a battle of wits against another, Jesse James had no
-known peer. He never seemed to come to the end of his resources, and
-the most desperate situations, the moments of the gravest peril, gave
-him not the slightest apprehension as to the ultimate outcome. He was
-able to cope with them all, come when and how they might.
-
-As he lay, back down, on the rocks, after the first volley had been
-fired by the troops, the great desperado formed his plans concisely
-and definitely, and these plans, as it proved, he followed without the
-slightest deviation.
-
-Jesse had heard the command of the Captain to prepare a litter and it
-brought a sardonic grin to his hardy face.
-
-"They sure will need that litter themselves before I get through with
-them," he muttered.
-
-The outlaw reasoned with marvelous precision, just what the soldiers
-would do, and, therefore, his quickly laid plans worked out without the
-slightest slip or miscarriage.
-
-The great oak tree on the brink of the precipice proved Jesse's
-salvation, as he proposed that it should. Had it not been there,
-another and different ending to his escapade, might have resulted.
-
-But the officers did not attach any special significance to the
-fact that the outlaw had driven his pony straight for the tree in
-his mad flight from them, seeing only in the act a desire to put an
-end to himself rather than fall into the hands of the United States
-Government. Still the tree was the key note to the situation--the
-one factor that enabled him to elude his pursuers, and at the same
-time save himself from being dashed to certain death on the rocks two
-hundred feet below.
-
-As his pony shot into the shadow, Jesse raised himself in his stirrups
-and caught a low-lying limb. With the agility of a trapeeze performer
-he drew his body up and free of the horse just at the instant when the
-bullets of the troops sang by beneath him and the screaming pinto went
-dashing to its death.
-
-Like a squirrel, Jesse ran up the trunk of the tree, and there he
-perched, his body convulsed with fiendish glee at the neat trick he had
-turned on the cavalry troop for the second time that night. And it was
-with intense interest that he listened to the comments of the officers
-down below.
-
-"So, Jesse James is dead, eh?" he chuckled.
-
-Yet at that moment the supposed dead man held with steady hand, a heavy
-"Colt," trained on the redoubtable captain. The officer was nearer to
-death than he ever knew, and Jesse himself, was not so far from it as
-he thought.
-
-It was a relief, however, that he noted the final departure of the
-troops. Jesse was anxious to get back to the cave. He wondered that
-none of the band had been out in search of him. This augured trouble
-of some sort. And he wondered too, how successful Dew Drop had been
-in corralling Great Bear's medicine man, for he felt that the need of
-the herb doctor's services, was urgent. Perhaps that was where the rub
-lay--perhaps his whole outfit had been picked up by the redskins.
-
-It suddenly occurred to the desperado too, that no redskin had shown
-himself during the melee. Certainly they had not been so deaf as not to
-have heard the bombardment of the cavalrymen.
-
-"There's sure something doing," he muttered. "Things look kinder
-ticklish."
-
-Jesse decided that it would be wise to get away while the coast was
-clear. The troops were now well out of the way.
-
-But his cogitations were rudely interrupted by a guttural grunt at the
-foot of the tree.
-
-Jesse started.
-
-He recognized the sound. No other than a redskin could give vent to an
-exclamation like that.
-
-The desperado's gun came out in a flash. He peered down through the
-foliage, dimly making out the figure of a savage. Perhaps the Indian
-was alone, but more than likely there were others nearby.
-
-The outlaw, adopting the policy of the savages, waited patiently for
-further developments. But all hope of the redskin not being aware of
-his presence in the tree, was shattered a moment later.
-
-"Ugh," said the Indian.
-
-"Great snakes," muttered Jesse.
-
-"Jesse James, um up tree," announced the Indian stoically.
-
-"That I am for certain," growled the great bandit chieftain, under his
-breath.
-
-"Jesse James um in a fix."
-
-"Great Bear, as I'm alive," whispered Jesse, slipping down the tree
-trunk a few feet.
-
-"Pale face um fool sojers. Um no fool Great Bear. Great Bear um see
-many things. Um see sojers shoot Jess Jame. Great Bear know um not
-shoot Jess Jame. Jess Jame he play possum. Ugh. Great Bear um wait. Um
-want pale face for umself. Huh."
-
-"Well, you've got another guess coming," retorted the outlaw.
-
-Jesse began parleying to gain time. He first wanted to know if the
-chief was alone, which fact was all-important to him in his present
-predicament.
-
-"Great Bear go away," he called down gently. "Great Spirit up here in
-tree," he crooned with subtle cunning.
-
-"No, no!" protested the chief, "Great Spirit not for pale face. Great
-Spirit stay Indian."
-
-The great desperado fingered his guns nervously. It required all the
-self control he could impose upon himself to refrain from shooting the
-redskin, where he stood in plain view of the man up the tree. It was a
-terrible temptation, but the bandit-chieftain resented it manfully.
-
-"All right, old moccasin foot, we'll see about that later!"
-
-Great Bear, he realized had been a witness to his brush with the
-cavalry troops; but with a cunning characteristic of the savage that he
-was, had viewed it with keener eyes than had the officers of the troop.
-
-"Um Jess Jame come down," grunted the chief.
-
-"Jesse James will come down when he gets good and ready, you greasy
-old cutthroat," he jeered. "Great Bear had better look out or my men
-will shoot him in the back. Do you think I'd let you stand there making
-threats at me all this time without killing you, if I hadn't known my
-men had you covered. You are not half so smart as you think you are,
-eh?"
-
-The old chief did not change his position in the least.
-
-But meanwhile Jesse was cautiously making his way down the trunk of the
-tree, yet in doing so not so much as displacing the smallest particle
-of dry bark whose falling would warn the savage of his approach.
-
-"Ugh," grunted the chief.
-
-"Ugh it yourself," threw back the desperado.
-
-"Um lie. Great Bear um know Jess Jame. No paleface get Great Bear.
-Paleface all gone. Indians here--Great Spirit here. Indian in
-bush--many Indian in bush there," indicating a half circle by a sweep
-of his hand.
-
-"Ah," exclaimed the desperado.
-
-Jesse had drawn from the big chief the very information he was seeking.
-He knew now that the savage was alone. "When an Indian tells you a
-thing is so, you know it isn't," was Jesse's motto and it was the one
-he applied to the present case.
-
-Still, he dared not use his guns.
-
-Great Bear, perhaps, following the same process of reasoning, stood
-confidently awaiting the moment when the desperado should find it
-convenient to move.
-
-"Pale face no jump. Um fall down big hole like pinto," he warned.
-
-"Don't worry, my sweet papoose," jeered the outlaw. "Jesse James don't
-jump down holes, nor does he run away. But he's going to kill an Indian
-bye and bye, when he gets down. But paleface going to stay up here
-till Big chief gets sore feet waiting for him. Good night, you old
-dog-eater."
-
-The great desperado laughed and chuckled, all with a purpose, but not
-so loudly at any time that his voice could easily be heard beyond the
-circle of shadow thrown by the great tree.
-
-"Ugh. Pale face, dog--" retorted the savage.
-
-But he got no further.
-
-Like a flying projectile, a dark object was hurled from the tree.
-Straight did it speed at the copper-hued savage below, and as true as
-if it had been from a mountain battery.
-
-The projectile was none other, however, than the great desperado
-himself. With rare cunning, Jesse had step by step, drawn the chief's
-attention from his real purpose, the while occupying the time in
-getting into the most advantageous position for the carrying out of his
-plans.
-
-The outlaw's flying body with unerring aim, hit the savage fair and
-square and both men went down in a heap.
-
-Great Bear uttered a grunt of terrible rage, but could not speak. The
-terrific impact of Jesse's heavy body striking him, knocked all the
-wind out of his savage body.
-
-But the Indian's arms suddenly closed over the desperado in a crushing
-grip. Jesse, tough and muscular as he was, felt that his ribs were
-being slowly, but relentlessly crushed in.
-
-Neither man spoke a word at first, each playing for an advantage that
-would enable him to reach his knife.
-
-One of Jesse's bowies that he held in his teeth, when he jumped, was
-lost at the moment his body struck that of Great Bear.
-
-The desperado now discovered that his antagonist was working slowly
-toward the precipice. But whether he thought to frighten the outlaw or
-whatever his motive, Jesse checkmated it.
-
-"S-s-o--that's y-o-u-r g-g-a-m-e is it?" he gritted, "you black hearted
-savage. All right, if you want to go over, come on."
-
-Great Bear changed his mind instantly.
-
-"Jess Jame um brave man. But Injun kill um," he hissed between breaths.
-
-Over and over the combatants rolled, first one gaining a slight
-advantage which would be quickly lost to the other. Great Bear on his
-side possessed one advantage that Jesse did not--he was stripped to
-the waist while the outlaw was fully clothed. This gave the Indian
-something to hold to, while Jesse's grip on the perspiring skin of his
-antagonist was an uncertain thing.
-
-But the bandit king was working his hands upward as frequently and as
-rapidly as he dared. Once when he had succeeded in forcing Great Bear
-to his side, with the left hand pinioned under him, Jesse's right shot
-up and his fingers closed over the savage's right ear. With a grunt of
-rage Jesse's hand came away covered with blood.
-
-The hand held the ear of his savage antagonist. But the stoical Indian
-gave no sign that he had been injured. If anything the terrible wound
-gave him added strength.
-
-A sudden upward expansion of his muscles, chest and abdomen, fairly
-lifted Jesse into the air.
-
-When the two came down, Jesse was underneath. In a moment more their
-positions were reversed.
-
-Great Bear's fingers closed over the outlaw's throat, while the
-desperado's knee forced itself into his adversary's abdomen with
-terrible force.
-
-The Indian emitted a grunt, which was followed by another as the
-desperate outlaw bored in and in with the bony knee until it seemed as
-if the flesh of the other's body must give way and let the knee find an
-easy path.
-
-The Indian's grasp slackened and Jesse's terrible fist smote him
-squarely in the face until the blood of the savage spurted into his own
-eyes.
-
-Again and again the outlaw rained sledge hammer blows on his opponent's
-face until it was reduced to a bloody pulp. But still the desperate
-battle waged.
-
-Now and then both men would lay still for a moment, clasped in a
-desperate embrace, gasping for breath, but speaking no word.
-
-The time for vituperation had passed.
-
-It was now a battle to the death.
-
-They were wonderfully matched. And though Jesse's hands and face were
-smeared with red blood that showed ghastly in the moonlight, he had
-sustained no wounds.
-
-In a moment of relaxation he jabbed a thumb with all his force into the
-savage's eye.
-
-The pain must have been excruciating. But the redskin gave no sign that
-he sensed its pain.
-
-Great Bear had succeeded in unsheathing his knife, but his hand
-instantly was pinioned to the ground where the great outlaw held it in
-a vice-like grip.
-
-All at once Jesse released his hold on the knife hand. The hand with
-lightning-like quickness shot up to make the fatal thrust.
-
-It got no further.
-
-With a movement equally quick, the desperado caught the hand and with
-an unexpected movement bent it backward.
-
-"Snap!"
-
-Great Bear cried out, and the hand hung limp.
-
-"Ha, ha! Reached you, did I?" gasped Jesse in triumphant tones.
-
-Great Bear snarled like a wounded animal.
-
-The hand though useless, slipped about the outlaw's neck and the
-savage's arm pinioned it in a grip of iron, while with his free hand he
-showered blows on the bandit's side.
-
-Jesse fastened his teeth in the redskin's cheek and when he pulled away
-there was left a great gaping wound, and the bandit spat out his toll
-of human flesh.
-
-The Indian's grip on Jesse's neck was released and Great Bear with his
-free hand dealt his antagonist a frightful blow on the side of his head.
-
-Jesse sunk down and all grew black about him.
-
-With a muffled yell of fiendish joy Great Bear sprang free of his
-antagonist, throwing Jesse with crushing force to the ground where he
-lay for a brief moment on his back.
-
-The redskin scrambled for his knife.
-
-It was but the work of an instant for him to secure it.
-
-He made a mighty leap for his desperate, fallen antagonist, his face
-contorted with the awful passion that was raging within him.
-
-But the brief respite had given Jesse's wonderful recuperative powers,
-time to act. Yet he lay perfectly still calmly awaiting the onslaught.
-
-The Indian sprang clear of the ground, projecting his body at his
-fallen antagonist and with gleaming knife held aloft for the fatal
-blow, was descending upon him with crushing force.
-
-In his rage he did not pause to think or to consider. The lust for
-human blood overcame all other emotions and blinded the savage's
-judgment.
-
-The outlaw's eyes were upon him, but this, Great Bear did not know, nor
-would he have heeded had he seen.
-
-Quicker than the human eye could follow, the desperado's knees doubled
-up, his legs were drawn back.
-
-The feet shot out with terrific force, catching the savage redskin full
-in the abdomen.
-
-Great Bear doubled up like a jack knife and catapulted in the air,
-turning a complete somersault, ending up by landing on his head on the
-hard rocks some distance away.
-
-The Indian toppled over and lay still.
-
-It was now Jesse's moment to act.
-
-He too sprang into the air.
-
-His heavy boots landed full on the Indian's face, mangling and
-mutilating it almost beyond human semblance.
-
-But the uncertain footing threw the outlaw from his feet and he fell
-sprawling over the body of his antagonist.
-
-In an instant he had whirled over.
-
-Again the combatants were locked in a deadly embrace.
-
-It seemed as if human flesh and blood could not stand the terrible
-gruelling that each desperate man had sustained.
-
-Still the battle waged on as sanguinary as before.
-
-Never had such a desperate fight to the death been known in all that
-wild, barbarous country, and the story of it has been handed down--told
-in tepee and at firesides to this day. You can hear it any day should
-you chance to come across some old trapper or Indian chief when either
-is in a communicative mood.
-
-But neither man of iron could conquer the other.
-
-Jesse while holding his antagonist down, had pinioned both arms to
-the ground and with hands in the redskin's hair, was beating his head
-against the rocks, with an impact that might have been heard for many
-rods around.
-
-He hoped to wear out his antagonist in this way. Both men's knives had
-now been lost beyond recovery, and nothing but pure muscular prowess
-could decide the equal battle.
-
-All at once Jesse sensed that some one was approaching him from the
-rear, but whether friend or foe, he could not tell, for all behind him
-was in a deep shadow now.
-
-His guns were still in their holsters, but the sudden strain that the
-desperado put upon himself to draw them, was futile. The Indian's grasp
-of iron could not be broken for the infinitesimal space of time that
-was necessary to give Jesse an opportunity to jerk his "Colts" from
-their resting place.
-
-With a mighty effort he twisted his antagonist about so that he could
-partially look behind him.
-
-The discovery that he made was enough to shake the stoutest nerves.
-
-Over him towered the savage, malignant face of a giant Indian.
-
-He held in his hands a club which was descending on Jesse's head with
-fearful force.
-
-Like a flash the outlaw dodged and the blow fell upon Great Bear's arm,
-crushing it, and bringing from the warrior a groan of agony.
-
-Jesse sought to free himself from the killing embrace.
-
-He was a second too late.
-
-Again the mighty club was swung on high.
-
-It landed fair on the bandit's head.
-
-The world's greatest desperado toppled over the form of his antagonist,
-with a subdued moan.
-
-Jesse did not move.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-UNDER THE BRANDING IRON.
-
-
-"Take that rock off my head," Jesse caught himself mumbling as he
-slowly returned to consciousness.
-
-Two factors had served to save the outlaw's life: One that the Indian
-behind him had struck him a glancing blow, and the other that Jesse
-James' skull was too thick to break by any ordinary means.
-
-But the blow had been a terrific one and the outlaw's head throbbed
-like a locomotive under full headway.
-
-He emitted a subdued groan and tried to move. To his surprise he found
-he could not.
-
-He was now conscious of shooting pains through his whole body. His arms
-were stretched above his head, and when he sought to draw them down by
-his side, he found he could not move them.
-
-Jesse cautiously tried to move his feet, but like the arms, these also
-refused to respond to his will.
-
-"That's queer," he thought. "I wonder if I'm dead."
-
-He tried to recall the incidents that had preceded his present
-condition, but his mind was sluggish and just as he would almost come
-upon a solution of his strange condition, memory would elude him again.
-
-He tried to open his eyes, but the eyelids seemed held down by some
-irresistible weight.
-
-For a time the desperado sought to gratify the sensation of drowsiness
-that seemed to steal over him. Then he would suddenly awake with a
-start, the pain in his body more intense than before.
-
-At last with a mighty effort of will he dragged his heavy eyelids open.
-At first he could see nothing for the darkness, then little by little
-he made out his surroundings.
-
-He was in an Indian tepee.
-
-"How did I get here?" he wondered.
-
-He tried and tried to think.
-
-Suddenly memory returned like a blow.
-
-He remembered it all. The desperate battle on the ground--the club that
-finally had laid him low. But beyond that all was dark.
-
-For a moment he could not make up his mind whether it was night or day,
-but glancing up he noted that the flap that covered the entrance to the
-wigwam showed a tiny ray of light through a fine slit that its owner
-had made for secret observations when within. Jesse wished he might be
-able to pull himself together sufficiently to get up and peek out.
-
-But the effort to raise only gave him pain.
-
-He sensed that his holsters were still at his sides and by their weight
-against his leg he judged that his guns must be in their places.
-
-The thought gave him comfort. The outlaw's guns had become as much a
-part of himself as were his hands or his feet.
-
-As his mind by slow process began to clear, he set about finding out
-why it was that he could not move--whether he had been seriously
-wounded or what mysterious force was holding him down.
-
-The discovery came as a distinct shock and roused all the rage that his
-savage nature was capable of.
-
-He was bound hand and foot.
-
-Jesse's inclination was to give voice to his passions--to hurl
-invective at his unseen captors, to taunt them, to goad them, but not
-to plead. Jesse James had pleaded with no man in his eventful life. It
-was not in his nature to do so, nor would he begin now.
-
-Yet he did not quite understand what manner of torture they had
-inflicted upon him to put him in such pain. But it was a matter of only
-a moment or so before he was made acquainted with his exact situation.
-
-The great desperado had been subjected to the humiliation of being
-bound hand and foot. And more than that, his manacled hands had been
-triced up to a stake protruding from the ground some eighteen inches,
-and the feet had been treated similarly. His position was such that the
-weight of his body was a constant strain upon the thongs that bound
-him, a strain that extended through his entire body.
-
-Jesse swore a terrible oath.
-
-"I hope I killed the cursed savage," he gritted.
-
-But his fond hopes were dashed almost at the moment of the utterance of
-them.
-
-The flap was slowly pulled aside and an evil, ghastly face peered in--a
-face so torn and mutilated that Jesse observed nothing familiar in it.
-
-He stared at it without speaking.
-
-All at once he noticed that an ear was missing from the place where it
-should have been.
-
-Then Jesse understood.
-
-The face was that of his late antagonist, Great Bear.
-
-The desperado laughed mockingly.
-
-Great Bear jerked aside the flap so viciously that he tore it from its
-fastenings, allowing it to drop slowly from his lingering grasp as he
-surveyed his captive with malignant eyes.
-
-"Welcome to our home, old scarred-face," jeered Jesse.
-
-Great Bear made no reply, standing with head erect, searching keenly
-for some sign of fear or weakening in the face of his captive.
-
-After a time, the redskin squatted on the turf and with chin in hands
-sat holding the outlaw with a steady gaze. For an hour he sat thus,
-Jesse glaring back at him with menacing, challenging eyes.
-
-"Ugh! Paleface brave man," he grunted.
-
-"Ugh! Big Chief a dirty cutthroat," retorted Jesse.
-
-"Huh!" said Great Bear.
-
-"I can lick you with one arm tied behind my back, old pizen snake,"
-leered the desperado. "Let me up and I'll show you."
-
-Great Bear rose, and stepping to the door gave a terse, guttural
-command to some one without. Returning to the wigwam, he squatted down
-at the great bandit's feet again and resumed his intent gaze into the
-other's face.
-
-"Well," questioned Jesse, "Am I so purty that you can't keep your eyes
-off'n me? Think you'll know me when you see me again? I'd know you
-among a million with that face. I certainly did lam it to you, didn't
-I? I ought to have killed you when I had the chance up the tree there,
-but I hated to take an unfair advantage, even of such an old murderer
-as you are."
-
-While the outlaw was now suffering terrible tortures from his strained
-position, he gave no sign to the waiting Indian chief.
-
-A silent-footed savage appeared in the doorway, placing before the
-chief an earthen jar from which a thin curl of smoke ascended.
-
-But even then Jesse did not catch the full significance of the chief's
-intentions.
-
-From the receptacle the Indian removed a short iron rod. It's end was
-at white heat.
-
-Great Bear moistened a finger at his lips and touched it. The rod
-hissed angrily.
-
-Jesse understood now.
-
-It was a branding iron. But still he did not quail, though his passions
-rose in a perfect storm.
-
-"Paleface like um?" grinned Great Bear once more causing the hot iron
-to hiss.
-
-"Never ate any," retorted the desperado with a grin that was even more
-expansive than that of the chief. "Going to brand some stock that you
-have stolen, eh?"
-
-"Huh! Indian no brand cows. Um brand men. Um burn you."
-
-"Oh, so that's the game is it? You're going to brand me like you would
-a critter on the range? Well, what do you think my men will do to you
-if I don't get away from here before you do it? Think they will do
-anything to you, you black-hearted cur?"
-
-"Paleface no hurt Indian. Paleface all dead."
-
-"That's a lie. One of them is here now watching you. He'll carry the
-word to the men and if there is not enough of them left he'll go to the
-fort for help. Guess the soldiers wouldn't do much to you."
-
-Great Bear cast a glance that was almost apprehensive, out through the
-opening. With an expression that was half snarl, half grunt he drew the
-branding iron from the pot and squatted down beside the great outlaw,
-leering down into his face, gloating over the joy that was to be his.
-
-Roughly he tore apart his prisoner's shirt and drove the blunt, white
-hot iron against his chest.
-
-The iron hissed again. But this time a little thin line of blue smoke
-curled upward.
-
-Great Bear inhaled a deep breath of heavenly satisfaction as the odour
-of burning flesh permeated his nostrils.
-
-Jesse steeling himself, glared back at his tormentor. He gave no sign
-that he sensed the excruciating torture. But the lines of his mouth
-drew tense and hard.
-
-The redskin replaced the iron in its heating pot and sat gloating over
-his victim as it burned again to a white heat.
-
-Next he bared the left side of the outlaw and carefully selected his
-spot with the eyes of an expert, he applied the torture rod, holding it
-in place with steady, resistless pressure.
-
-The agony that the victim suffered was almost more than human being
-could endure.
-
-But still the man of iron there at the stake made no outcry, gave no
-sign, still smiling up at his tormentor. But the eyes were not in
-sympathy with the smile on the lips. They were cold and steely--they
-were the eyes of the gun-expert at the moment when he is about to take
-the life of a human being.
-
-"Great Bear," began Jesse in an even, emotionless voice. "I shall be
-going away from here pretty soon. You will be dead then. I shall kill
-you. But before I go I am going to cut out your tongue and feed it to
-the dogs. Then I shall cut off your other ear and give it to the first
-drove of hogs that I meet. You'll be up in the Happy Hunting grounds
-then and you can't help yourself."
-
-Once more the fiendish redskin tuned his branding iron to a sizzling
-white heat.
-
-Great Bear felt the outlaw's cheek apparently with the intention of
-applying the iron there next. But for some reason, he evidently changed
-his mind. Carefully slitting the shoulders of Jesse's shirt, he burned
-a deep, livid impression on each, holding the iron for what, to the
-tortured bandit, seemed ages.
-
-The great desperado was faint and dizzy, and tepee and savage danced
-before his eyes in a most outlandish fashion. Jesse wondered vaguely
-if all had gone suddenly crazy. But he had borne the ordeal without so
-much as a groan.
-
-Great Bear scrutinized the outlaw's face keenly, and what he saw filled
-his soul with savage glee.
-
-The Indian grunted a long-drawn grunt of satisfaction and laid aside
-his instrument of torture.
-
-"Injun come again," he informed as Jesse opened his eyes once more.
-"Come tomorrow sun up. Take eyes out. Jesse Jame no fool Injun this
-time. No fool sojer. Byemby Jesse Jame Indian kill um. Injun get heap
-money for kill um Jesse Jame. Sojers no get um paleface. No get um
-money. Huh!"
-
-"Jesse James will beat you yet," gasped the desperado weakly, mastering
-his faintness by a supreme effort. "He'll kill you!"
-
-"Ugh!" breathed the savage, picking up his fire pot and departing from
-the wigwam without another word, nor once looking back at his miserable
-victim.
-
-His fiendish torture had only just begun, and the anticipation in the
-mind of the savage was the keenest of all his inhuman emotions. He
-could afford to wait and he would yet see his victim writhe in agony
-and scream out as the awful pain was inflicted upon him.
-
-Jesse emitted a long-drawn pent up sigh of relief, and a slight moan of
-agony escaped him as he closed his eyes wearily.
-
-Great Bear had been gone but a moment when an Indian whom Jesse had
-never seen before, stalked in and made a careful examination of the
-tortured captive and his wounds.
-
-From the savage's actions Jesse judged that he must be a medicine man.
-The outlaw grinned sardonically.
-
-"Want to find out how much more I can stand, eh?" he jeered. "I'll take
-all you blood-thirsty devils can give me, don't you forget that."
-
-His suspicions were confirmed when shortly after the medicine man had
-departed, three other Indians accompanied by Great Bear entered the
-wigwam, the chief giving them some terse directions in his own tongue
-that Jesse could not understand.
-
-He did, however, understand the purport of it when the thongs that
-bound him to the stake, were severed by the strike of a keen-edged
-knife.
-
-The desperado was roughly turned over on his face, and while two
-stalwart savages sat on him to hold him down, his arms were brought
-down to their normal position, then securely tied behind his back.
-
-It was not much to be thankful for, but the change brought to Jesse the
-most heavenly sensation he ever had known.
-
-His inclination was to draw a deep, long breath, but he resisted and
-shut his lips tight.
-
-He would not give them that satisfaction.
-
-The thongs that held his feet were now made doubly secure, so that in
-reality he was more helpless than before. But he was not inclined to
-complain, though the desperado never had been in such sore straits
-before.
-
-His tormentors left him.
-
-Jesse had been left lying on his face, the Indians not taking the
-trouble to turn him over. But after satisfying himself that he was
-alone, the outlaw cautiously rolled over on his back and rested for a
-few minutes. But his new position enabled him to see out through the
-opening, only the upper part of the flap having been put back in place
-by the savages when they left him.
-
-He discovered that two stolid Indians had been left on guard. They
-were squatting on the ground in front of the wigwam. And now the
-desperado's mind began to work like a piece of well-oiled machinery,
-planning an escape. But just how he expected to accomplish this, was
-not clear to himself. Yet to his resourceful mind, no situation was
-impossible. Therefore the outlaw took cheer and set about the task in
-hand, regardless of the stinging pain from his burns, that he was now
-beginning to sense more keenly.
-
-The desperado pricked up his ears at the sound of voices outside. He
-recognized the tones of Dew Drop, the Indian maiden. She was speaking
-loudly in her broken English, and Jesse understood instantly that she
-intended he should hear what she was saying.
-
-Somewhere within her words there lay a message for him.
-
-Dew Drop had launched into a perfect tirade of invective against the
-helpless desperado there in the wigwam, and with straining ears he
-listened for the words that would give him a clue to her motives. He
-observed too, that the shadows of night were falling. Between these two
-incidents the desperado believed there was a connection that augured
-well for his plans.
-
-Once during her conversation with the Indians, he caught the words,
-"fire-water." Then Dew Drop's voice was heard no more, and he
-understood that she had gone away.
-
-His heart sank. Perhaps he was wrong in his surmise, after all.
-
-But Jesse's spirits revived a moment later when he heard her returning.
-He was at a loss at first to account for her movements. That something
-of interest to himself was occurring, Jesse was firmly convinced. But
-wriggle about as he would, he could not get a glimpse of the group
-outside.
-
-However, the desperado's curiosity was soon rewarded.
-
-"Firewater. That's it," he exclaimed. "By the great humping snakes.
-Sure as I am alive, the little savage is filling them up. I wonder what
-she's got up her sleeve now? If I only was able to get hold of my guns.
-I'd help her clean 'em out."
-
-The sky was heavily overcast and black night had settled down over the
-scene, when finally labored breathing and guttural snores from without
-told the desperado that little Dew Drop's medicine had done its work
-well. Heap big Injun had gone to the happy hunting ground of dreamland.
-
-But the bandit's thoughts were suddenly interrupted by a voice beside
-him.
-
-"Jesse Jame," breathed the soft, purring voice of the Indian maid.
-
-"Right you are, my little Dew Drop--"
-
-"S-h-h-h!" cautioned the girl laying a soft, warm palm over his lips.
-
-The sensation was peculiarly pleasant to the great bandit.
-
-"Me cut um lariats. Um Jesse Jame go back by paleface brothers--"
-
-"Where are they?" interrupted Jesse. "Do you know where they are now?"
-
-"Dew Drop know. Dew Drop um know too bad chief kill um Jesse Jame
-morning."
-
-"Hurry, little one," he begged, "let me get my guns. I must get out of
-here now."
-
-He heard the girl utter a little startled exclamation as if she had
-been suddenly surprised by some one from without, then she sped away as
-silently as she had come, much to Jesse's surprise.
-
-"Well, that gets me."
-
-He could not understand her peculiar actions.
-
-At least the desperado did not propose to remain quiescent when the way
-to freedom had been laid open to him. Dew Drop too, must have ere this,
-told the members of his band of his predicament, but by the time they
-were able to reach him, it might and probably would be too late.
-
-Seconds were precious.
-
-"I'd be a fool to stay here any longer," muttered Jesse. "The kid
-fluttered away like a frightened bird. Guess I'll go to."
-
-Going, for the great desperado, however, was a far different matter. He
-could not walk nor could he crawl, and there seemed only one way left
-open to him, and this he adopted. He rolled.
-
-It was not a dignified exit that he made from the wigwam, but it was
-better than being bound and guarded there with the prospect of further
-tortures in the morning.
-
-He found his first difficulty was in getting out of the wigwam without
-pulling it down about him. This might attract attention and defeat his
-plan of escape. But Jesse finally accomplished it by going out head
-first, wriggling along like a clumsy snake on a frosty morning. His
-burns tortured him excruciatingly, but the great desperado shut his
-teeth together savagely and began to roll.
-
-His two Indian guards lay directly in his path. Jesse with some
-misgivings and a greater effort, rolled over them as the quickest way
-to get on.
-
-The Indians grunted but did not wake up, which he was positive would be
-the case in their condition. But the feel of their bodies against his
-had stirred the blood lust within him and suggested a new idea to the
-great desperado.
-
-"If my hands only were free," he growled. "Ah, I have it. I'll try it,"
-he gritted, with blazing eyes.
-
-Quickly the outlaw rolled back to them. Now he was bent on a terrible
-revenge. And he forgot for the moment his own deadly peril in his
-ferocious desire to be revenged on Great Bear.
-
-With as much speed as his manacled condition would permit, the great
-outlaw worked his head along the body of the Indian nearest to him.
-Not finding what he sought at first, he braced his feet with great
-difficulty and putting forth an almost superhuman effort, pushed and
-pushed against the redskin with his head, until the savage had been
-rolled over. The deed, however, had required a supreme effort.
-
-The Indian squirmed and muttered surlily, but to the desperado's
-intense relief, did not awake.
-
-Jesse searched at the side he had just turned up, and with a savage
-exclamation of delight, bit hard at the Indian's waist.
-
-The desperado's face came away with the redskin's bowie between his
-teeth.
-
-The outlaw could have shouted, so great was his joy. After laborious
-effort he succeeded in setting the keen-edged blade more firmly between
-his teeth, so that only the hilt was held by them.
-
-Cautiously he squirmed and wriggled until his head and shoulders were
-over the body of the redskin whom he had again rolled over on his back.
-
-The great desperado, still holding the knife in a vice-like grip
-between his teeth, twisted his head at right angles to his body and set
-the needle-like point of the blade, on the Indian's abdomen.
-
-The cruel blood-thirstiness of what he was about to do made no
-impression on him, for Jesse was bent on a terrible vengeance. And it
-was a moment of supreme ecstasy for the bandit-chieftain, bound and
-manacled and helpless as he was.
-
-Suddenly throwing the weight of his body on his toes and neck, the
-deadly bowie, by the sheer force of the outlaw's own weight, was driven
-into the Indian's bowels while the blood in a sudden red sheet, spurted
-into his mouth and eyes.
-
-The redskin sprang almost clear of the ground, then settled back with
-a heavy groan, his stupor too heavy to resist the work of the vengeful
-blade.
-
-With a fiendish light in his eyes the desperado gloated over the death
-throes of the unconscious savage, whose writhings, whose agonized
-twistings and muscular contractions, sent the outlaw into an ecstasy of
-delirious joy.
-
-After a little, the Indian stiffened out and lay still.
-
-"One!" snarled the desperado.
-
-Once more the avenging outlaw crawled laboriously to his victim. And
-that despite the fact that every moment's delay placed his own life
-more and more in jeopardy.
-
-Now came the most difficult part of his task. The bowie, driven in to
-its keen-edged limit, was tightly wedged in the body of the dead savage.
-
-With feverish haste, the world's greatest desperado again buried his
-face in the awful pool of blood.
-
-His teeth closed over the slippery hilt of the blade.
-
-But it stubbornly resisted all his efforts.
-
-The knife was too firmly embedded in its human sheath, to come away at
-his command.
-
-The cords of the outlaw's neck swelled to enormous proportions from the
-fearful strain he was subjecting them to.
-
-He sought to accomplish his ends, in another way. Biting the hilt as if
-he would sever it in twain, Jesse pushed against it with all the weight
-of his body. The keen edge, under his irresistable pressure, cut its
-way into the Indian's flesh at right angles to his body, thus widening
-the wound and making its sheath less binding.
-
-Back and forth did the blood-thirsty outlaw work the blade.
-
-He pushed and he pulled like a dog wrestling with a bone. He shook it
-like a rat. Then he gave it a long, vicious tug.
-
-The bloody blade came away with a sickening sound.
-
-And the desperado fell backward with a terrible curse. Yet, withal, his
-grip on the bloody hilt did not relax.
-
-Now came the most arduous task of all, that of crawling over the body
-of his victim and rolling to the remaining savage, without losing the
-knife from his teeth. The feat was not so easy as it would seem, and he
-could accomplish it only by keeping his head from touching the ground
-over every inch of the way.
-
-He struggled desperately.
-
-Minutes elapsed.
-
-But the second redskin died more speedily than had the first, Jesse
-having given him a terrible thrust with the deadly blade. And with
-eager, fascinated eyes he watched the death agonies of his victim. In a
-moment all movement ceased. The man was dead.
-
-Jesse's work of vengeance, for the time, was ended. And now to roll for
-safety, if that were possible. Should he be caught, he knew that this
-time his punishment would be swift and sure. Great Bear would take no
-chances with him after this.
-
-But just as the outlaw was about to start on his unequal journey, he
-suddenly espied the figure of an Indian standing a few paces away, in
-the gloom, gazing intently in his direction.
-
-The desperado fairly held his breath. He wished now that he had
-brought away the bowie from his second victim. But it was too late to
-rectify his mistake.
-
-Still, defenceless as he was, the great bandit devoutly hoped the
-savage redskin would throw himself upon him. Jesse believed that, with
-a well directed kick he could silence the fellow and put an end to him
-afterwards, for his thirst for blood had not yet been satisfied.
-
-Though it would be a desperate chance he was willing and anxious to
-take it. But he was not given a chance to put his foolhardy plan into
-operation. The redskin emitted a sudden grunt, and dropping into a long
-lope, sped noiselessly toward the main part of the village, that lay
-some twenty rods to the west.
-
-Jesse was off like a flash.
-
-His one supreme object now was to put as much distance as possible
-between himself and his savage enemies.
-
-But the laborious rolling process was too slow for him.
-
-He had rolled himself clear of the bodies of his victims, when all at
-once, acting upon sudden impulse, he adopted a new and unique method of
-facilitating his progress. With a tremendous effort he raised himself
-on his manacled feet.
-
-Despite the fact that his hands were tied behind him, the desperate man
-threw himself head first to the ground. None but the toughest skull
-could have survived the impact when his head struck the hard ground.
-
-Jesse's object was now obvious.
-
-The instant he sensed the feel of the ground under his head, by a
-sudden twist of the body, using his head as a pivot, the desperado
-threw himself to his feet again, thus finishing as pretty a head spring
-as ever a trained performer in a circus had done.
-
-With movements so lightning-like that the eye, in the uncertain light,
-would scarcely have been able to follow them, the great bandit hurled
-himself into a mad whirl of somersaults that carried him away from the
-scene of his recent exploits almost as fast as his legs could have done
-had they been free.
-
-He heard a loud commotion in the Indian village behind him. But whether
-the savages had learned of the death of the two men or that they simply
-had been told by the Indian who came upon him so suddenly, that the
-sentinels were asleep, he neither knew nor cared.
-
-Jesse reasoned shrewdly that in any event the Indians would be delayed
-a few moments in their surprise at finding their companions murdered,
-and then the search for him in the wigwam and its immediate vicinity
-following, all of which would give him a fair start.
-
-Still he knew his trail was as plainly marked as if it had been made
-by a log-rolling gang, a trail which they would have no difficulty in
-following at top speed. Therefore haste was all imperative if he hoped
-to keep his scalp fitted in its proper place. And the world's greatest
-bandit was not ready to part with that portion of his anatomy just yet.
-
-On dashed the desperado, his movements resembling the evolutions of a
-cart wheel down a mountain road. And so rapid was his flight that he
-was unable to take note of either direction or location.
-
-The savages were now hot on his trail.
-
-He could hear their shouts as they discovered it. Like the bay of the
-hounds when close upon their prey they came rushing down upon him.
-
-Jesse redoubled his efforts. Bending every nerve to the tremendous task
-before him, the terrible outlaw sprang far up into the air to increase
-the reach of his next leap.
-
-He stiffened his nerves to meet the impact when his feet should next
-touch the ground.
-
-But to his intense surprise, the feet did not touch at all. They were
-kicking wildly in empty space.
-
-All at once the great desperado realized that he was falling through
-space.
-
-Like a rock, hurled with terrific force, he had thrown himself over a
-sheer precipice whose rocky bottom lay two hundred feet below him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-JESSE TAKES A TERRIBLE REVENGE.
-
-
-"Danged queer about Jess," declared Comanche Tony.
-
-"Something sure has happened to him and I for one am going to look for
-him," returned Frank.
-
-The bandits were gathered on a broad, shelving rock looking down into
-the canyon, where they had remained when Dew Drop left them after
-conveying them to safety after the explosion in the cave.
-
-Acting upon her advice they had remained there until she should have
-gone to the village to learn if Jesse had been taken prisoner or
-killed, perhaps, by the savages. She had promised them a speedy return,
-but hours had elapsed since her departure and the men were getting
-restive. Little had been said by them, they being too full of the
-thoughts of the lively incidents that had happened since they first set
-foot in the mountains of Southern Colorado.
-
-"Better not try it till the moon comes up," advised Wild Bill who knew
-the treacherous nature of the country where they were. "I calkerlate
-you'd break yer danged neck tryin' to git out of here in the dark
-without a guide. When it gits lighter we'd better all vamoose. We'll
-find Jesse if we can, and if not we'll mosey over to tother side of the
-gulch and make camp in a place I know of. From there we kin scout for
-him. The gal said we was to stay here--"
-
-"Sure, she did," added Texas. "I reckon she knew what she was doing.
-We'd better bide here a bit I reckon."
-
-Under their urging, Frank gave a reluctant consent, for he knew that
-Jesse would expect him--would expect every one of them to come to him
-at once, had they reason to believe he was in trouble.
-
-So they waited. One hour, two hours, and three passed, and the men had
-finally decided to make an investigation, provided they could discover
-the trail that led up the mountain side. They had only a general idea
-of where the Indian village lay, but reasoned that they could easily
-locate it by the camp fires that surely would be burning. They decided
-that it would be safest to start in single file, the leader holding to
-the hand of the next to him, and so on, making a human chain, the last
-man to at all times make sure that he had firm hold of a tree or rock.
-
-"Hark," warned Frank after they had decided upon the direction in which
-they would make their first attempt.
-
-"What is it?" asked Tony.
-
-"I didn't hear anything," returned Texas.
-
-"Keep still," commanded the elder of the James boys, listening
-intently. "I am sure I heard a yell."
-
-"Mebby 'twas a cat," suggested Bill. "There's a lot of them in these
-hills, and they're a danged tough proposition to run into when a
-fellow's afoot."
-
-"There it is again," cried Frank in a suppressed voice.
-
-They all heard the cry this time and it seemed to be drawing near them.
-
-"Indians agin," breathed Tony.
-
-"By the great jumpin' cats," exclaimed Texas. "What do you suppose
-they're up to?"
-
-"They are chasing somebody," declared Wild Bill confidently, knowing
-the ways of the savages thereabouts as he did. "The question is, who or
-what is it."
-
-"Dew Drop, mebby," suggested Harry.
-
-"Yes, mebby the skunks have got wise to her," added Texas. "But if the
-cutthroats do her dirt they'll have to reckon with me. She's been the
-squarest little pard that a bunch ever come up with. She's got some
-white blood in her, I'll bet my spurs on that."
-
-The outlaws listened in awed silence as the yells grew louder,
-increasing steadily in volume.
-
-"More of 'em joined in the chase," nodded Bill. "Guess the whole
-village is out on the warpath."
-
-"And they're coming this way," asserted Frank.
-
-"Mebby we'd a better git back in the cave," urged Texas. "We can watch
-out from there."
-
-"No, we'll stay right here," returned Frank, savagely. "We may have to
-take a hand in this. Perhaps they are after Jess."
-
-"After Jess?" replied Comanche Tony laughing sardonically. "You haven't
-heard any shooting going on, have you? You don't suppose Jesse James
-would let a lot of dirty Indians chase him out of their village without
-potting a few of them in the meantime, do you?" he demanded.
-
-His reasoning appealed to them.
-
-"I guess you are right," agreed Frank. "But squeeze up closer to the
-rocks. They may take it into their heads to roll a few more boulders
-down on us. Bowling with hard-heads seems to be a favorite occupation
-with these copper-colored curs."
-
-"Yes, it's a heap o' fun for the chap on top, but it's hell for the
-feller down below," agreed Homely Harry humorously. "Excuse me from the
-job of settin' up the pins in this alley."
-
-"Silence," commanded their leader. "We may have to do some shooting
-pretty soon."
-
-Not a word was spoken and for several minutes they waited with bated
-breaths.
-
-Every man sensed danger and every man felt instinctively that they were
-on the verge of a sudden and unexpected explosion.
-
-And, indeed, it did come, but in a manner totally unexpected by them.
-
-There occurred a sudden rattle of fine stone from above that pelted
-down on the rocks like a volley from a gatling gun.
-
-"Crash!"
-
-A heavy body landed in a broad-topped tree that grew out of a deep
-fissure in the rocks some twenty paces to the south of them. Then
-sudden silence in the tree.
-
-Up above them they could hear the Indians chattering volubly, but so
-far away were they that the outlaws could make nothing of what they
-were saying, nor could any of the men have understood them if they had
-heard them.
-
-"What the--" began Texas.
-
-Frank pushed his elbow viciously into the outlaw's ribs, to silence him.
-
-"What do you make of that?" whispered Tony.
-
-"Somebody's gone over the cliff. Or something has--I don't know."
-
-"In that tree?"
-
-"Yes. Wait till they go away up there."
-
-For several minutes the savages continued their talking, then their
-receding voices told the anxious outlaws on the ledge far below, that
-they were retracing their steps.
-
-"We must find out what's in that tree," spoke up Frank with emphasis,
-after assuring himself that all the savages had left.
-
-"Hadn't we better wait till daylight," suggested Comanche. "We'll break
-our necks or worse in this blackness."
-
-"No. That's what the redskins are going to do. At the first touch of
-dawn the whole pack and parcel of them will be up on the edge of the
-cliff there peering down. We've got to act now and quickly for it's
-near morning."
-
-"Yes, the dawn breaks all of a sudden up here," added Wild Bill.
-
-But how to reach the tree was another matter. A wall of smooth
-perpendicular rock lay between them and the tree whose outlines they
-could only faintly make out in the darkness.
-
-"A fly couldn't walk that," averred Harry with his usual facetiousness.
-
-"No, we must find another way," agreed Frank.
-
-"Anybody got any suggestions to make?"
-
-"Not bein' a bird I don't know how I'd git over there," replied Harry.
-
-"We might cast a lariat and the lightest of us go over," suggested
-Texas.
-
-"No, it is too far, and besides no lariat would hold us that way.
-You've got to think of something better. Perhaps we can--"
-
-"I say, I've got an idee," interrupted Wild Bill. "I remember that when
-we first came out, it being lighter, I seen a shelf of rock right above
-that tree. It was twenty feet wide I opine. Now if we can manage to git
-up on the rock we can turn the trick."
-
-"Now you are talking," commented their leader. "Bill supposing you make
-the try for it. Be careful, and don't send any rocks rolling down or
-you'll have the Indians back on us. Give the owl call if you make it
-and then we'll try to follow you. Or better still, come back here and
-show us the way. It will be safer."
-
-Anxious to be off, Bill threw off his coat, tightened his belt and
-disappeared in the shadows silently. With cat-like movements he
-scaled the jagged side of the mountain without a sound or so much
-as disturbing a particle of shale from the rocks over which he was
-creeping.
-
-To the waiting bandits down below him it seemed an age, as they stood
-with strained ears to catch the signal agreed upon.
-
-Suddenly Wild Bill appeared before them. So quietly had he approached
-that not a man of them had heard or seen him. They clutched their guns
-instinctively.
-
-"It goes," was Bill's succinct summing up of the result of his trip.
-"You've got to crawl. A snake couldn't get over that trail without
-falling off," he concluded.
-
-"Could you make out anything in the tree?" demanded Frank impatiently.
-
-"Nary a thing. Blacker'n an Alabamy coon down there. And about as
-slippery along the trail," he added.
-
-"How we going to work it, Cap'n?" asked Comanche as the outlaws, with
-Wild Bill in the lead, began their perilous climb over the side of the
-mountain, a single misstep in which would precipitate them to the rocks
-more than a hundred feet below.
-
-"We will see when we get there. Be careful there Harry. Do you want
-to pull the whole bunch of us down? Your feet are as clumsy as an
-elephant's."
-
-At last the hardy outlaws stood upon the shelving rock peering down
-curiously into the dark abyss below them. It was not an inviting
-outlook, but Frank was determined to learn who or what it was down
-there in the tree top. After looking over the ground with a critical
-eye, he told the men to braid their lariats into one single rope. This
-done he tested its length by letting it down over the edge of the
-cliff. It reached the tree as nearly as he could make out, then he made
-an end fast around a projecting arm of rock on the ledge where they
-were standing.
-
-"Well," he demanded, "who is going down? I am not going to ask any of
-you to take the risk. I would do it myself only I am afraid I shouldn't
-be much good with my game leg."
-
-"Let me take a chance at this game, Captain," urged Comanche Tony.
-
-"No, you're too heavy," objected Frank.
-
-"I'll try it," said Texas.
-
-"Very well, you will do."
-
-They bound the rope tightly about his waist. All hands took strong hold
-of it and Texas sitting down on the edge of the cliff, boldly slipped
-off into space.
-
-The end of the rope had nearly been reached when a short sharp whistle
-from below and a slacking off of the weight told them that he had
-gained the goal and found for himself a foothold.
-
-"Hey, up there," he called softly after several minutes of aggravating
-silence.
-
-"Yes," answered Frank quickly, lying down on his stomach and peering
-over the edge. "What is it?"
-
-"I've made the lariat fast around his waist. Pull him up then send the
-rope down for me. He can't help himself--"
-
-"Who can't--who is it--do you know him?"
-
-"It's Jess," came the answer faintly from the dark pit below.
-
-"Pull boys, it is Jesse," exclaimed Frank springing up more excited
-than they ever had seen him before.
-
-"Is--is he dead?" asked Comanche apprehensively.
-
-"I don't know. Don't stop to ask questions now, but pull."
-
-Their new burden was a dead weight and it was all the outlaws could do
-to get him up to the edge, where the body awkwardly caught under the
-shelf of the ledge.
-
-"Make it fast around the rock!" commanded Frank, sharply. "Bill, you
-get your arm around the rock and all join hands. All lie down."
-
-Quickly was the human chain forged, and with Harry holding him by the
-feet, Frank leaned far out over the dizzy height and exerting every
-ounce of strength that he possessed pulled the body of the great bandit
-over onto the rock.
-
-"He's bound!" hissed Frank.
-
-It was but the work of a moment to sever the thongs that held him.
-The elder brother already had slipped his hand over Jesse's heart and
-learned that he still lived.
-
-"Bill where's that flask?" he demanded.
-
-Wild Bill passed it over and a large draught was quickly forced down
-the throat of the great bandit.
-
-The result was gratifying. He began to choke and at a signal from Frank
-they picked him up and carried him just within the mouth of the cave.
-
-"Hey," hailed a voice from below. "Going to leave me down here all
-night? This tree's liable to give way and send me to kingdom come."
-
-"Pull him up," directed Frank, redoubling his efforts to bring his
-brother back to consciousness.
-
-In this he was aided by the wonderful recuperative power of his outlaw
-brother. And in a few moments Jesse sat up and rubbed his eyes,
-blinking in the light of the fire they had started in the cave.
-
-"Hello, boys," he greeted. "What's happened?"
-
-"That is what we want to know," responded Frank without the suspicion
-of a smile, though the others were grinning broadly. "You fell off the
-mountain, that's all we know about it. We heard the redskins hitting
-the trail of some one, and the next thing you did a high dive and
-landed in the tree."
-
-At the mention of the word "redskin" Jesse's face suddenly was filled
-with an expression of terrible, malignant rage. He swore a fearful
-oath, and rising, rather unsteadily paced back and forth in the narrow
-cave while he related all that had befallen him. Black were the faces
-of the hardy band and many were the curses that the men uttered under
-their breaths as they listened in strained silence.
-
-"And I'm going back there and wipe the curs off the face of the
-mountain," concluded Jesse.
-
-Frank objected emphatically, to any such proceeding. He argued that
-they all were worn out with the hardships they had been subjected to,
-and to such good purpose that Jesse began to lean toward the point of
-view of his men.
-
-"Well," he began when a sudden thud outside the entrance caused him to
-wheel sharply, whipping out both his "Colts" as he turned. "What in--"
-
-The desperado chieftain sprang out and was down on his knees in a
-flash. And the others followed just in time to hear him swear a
-blood-thirsty oath of revenge.
-
-Without another word he picked up the object that had fallen in front
-of their hiding place and carried it into the cave. There he laid it
-down, kneeling beside it with his head bent low.
-
-"Who--," began Texas drawing near.
-
-"Why it's--" interrupted Harry.
-
-"By the great pizen snakes, it is."
-
-"It's a girl," marveled Frank, bending over the inanimate body.
-
-"Dew Drop," answered Jesse, in a strange voice of constraint.
-
-He opened the child's mouth gently and peered within.
-
-"The little Indian maiden's tongue has been cut out. She was then
-thrown over the precipice after me," announced Jesse in a voice that
-brought a chill to every human being within hearing of it.
-
-All the great outlaw's bodily ills were forgotten now, and in the
-stress of the moment his strength had come back. He was the man of iron
-once more and vengeance was written in the stern lines of his face.
-
-"What are you going to do?" demanded Frank.
-
-Jesse pointed to the body of the child.
-
-"There is your answer," he retorted.
-
-"But," began his elder brother.
-
-"Am I the master here or are you?" he demanded, an ugly glitter
-flashing into his eyes.
-
-"I'll take it back; you are right, Jess," apologized Frank.
-
-"Any of you got any dynamite? I left some in the cave, where is it?"
-
-"I reckon we can't git that now," grinned Tony sheepishly, "But I 'low
-we can scare up a few sticks."
-
-From various receptacles in their clothing, the desperadoes drew little
-white sticks of the harmless-looking, but deadly explosive, all of
-which they handed over to their chief. Next came a coil of fine copper
-wire and a small compact battery.
-
-Jesse took the collection and examined it closely.
-
-"Good," he exclaimed.
-
-"Are we with you in this?" asked Wild Bill. "I allow the boys would
-like to pay off a little of your score," pointing to the livid marks on
-his shoulders, discernible through the bandit chieftain's torn shirt.
-
-"I reckon we would," added Comanche Tony.
-
-Jesse looked at them steadily for a moment, the lines of his face
-softening almost imperceptibly.
-
-"No boys. This is my kettle of fish. And I'm going to fry them alone.
-If I should fail to get back in an hour and you don't hear anything
-doing, send Bill up to the Indian village to size things up. You will
-know what to do after he gets back."
-
-"Be careful, Jess."
-
-"Put the little one in a hole in the rocks some where hereabouts and
-block it up with stone so she can rest easy. We don't want any buzzards
-nosing around her tender little body," was the great desperado's
-parting injunction as he passed out from the circle of light and strode
-away on his mission of death.
-
-Very tenderly they bore the body of Dew Drop, deeper into the cave.
-Finding a suitable place they laid her away, blocking the opening
-as directed by their chief. Then these hardy men--these men to whom
-murder was merely an incident in following their vocation of rapine and
-plunder, with one accord clutched their hats from their heads and stood
-bowed before the shrine of the child who had given her life to save
-them.
-
-"I reckon she war no less'n twenty-four carat fine," opined Tony,
-turning away slowly.
-
-"She war that," chorused the others solemnly, nervously crushing their
-sombreros in their awkward hands, and following slowly after him.
-
-Just within the entrance they paused and with one accord squatted down
-on the hard rocks where they lighted their pipes.
-
-Few words, were spoken, for the thought that was in the minds of all
-was not one to be lightly discussed, nor could they form the sentences
-to frame the thought itself.
-
-"I reckon it's about time we heard something from Jess," suggested Tony
-after a long silence.
-
-Frank consulted his watch anxiously.
-
-The men relapsed into silence again. But somehow the deadly stillness
-seemed to get on their nerves and one by one they rose and began pacing
-back and forth on the narrow platform of rock that hung over the great
-canyon.
-
-Suddenly the earth began to tremble beneath their feet.
-
-They grasped the projecting rocks fearful that they would be thrown
-over the precipice.
-
-A great sheet of flame lighted up the sky. And a report that seemed
-as if earth and sky had suddenly been rent asunder crashed on their
-expectant ears, and went thundering off from mountain peak to mountain
-peak.
-
-"Get inside!" commanded Frank sharply.
-
-They obeyed the summons in the nick of time, for in a few seconds more
-a rain of rocks and debris began to shower down on the ledge in front
-of them.
-
-Comanche stepped out again, once the shower had ceased and curiously
-picked up an object that had caught his eye.
-
-He brought it within the circle of light, holding it at arm's length
-and gazed at it with fascinated eyes.
-
-What he held was a battered human head. The cruel, blood-thirsty,
-malignant eyes of a savage redskin were gazing out at him from the
-tangle of hair and lacerated flesh that he held in his hand.
-
-"Bah!" exclaimed Tony in a tone of disgust as he threw the horrible
-object far from him over the precipice.
-
-Tony wiped his hand gingerly on his trousers, holding the hand up to
-the light to see that no traces of his recent burden remained.
-
-"Ugh! It makes me feel hollow under the belt," averred Harry, turning
-away and knocking the ashes from his pipe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE BLADES.
-
-
-"Well, boys," greeted Jesse suddenly appearing among them.
-
-"That was a clean up for sartin," answered Texas, grinning. "One of 'em
-come down here and Tony here picked him up. He was going to kiss the
-fellow, but we wouldn't let him. Ha, ha."
-
-Tony went outside for a breath of fresh air.
-
-"Tell us about it, Jess," urged Frank.
-
-"There isn't much to tell," informed Jesse.
-
-"The fools didn't even have pickets out. I managed to shove a stick of
-the stuff under the chief's wigwam--"
-
-"Who, Great Bear?" interrupted Wild Bill.
-
-"Yes. The rest of the stuff I distributed around where it would do the
-most good and crawling under a rock back of the village I let 'er rip."
-
-"I should say you did," interjected Frank. "How many of them do you
-think you blew up?"
-
-"I'll gamble my pistols that there isn't enough of that community left,
-if patched together, to make six whole men--maybe even less than that.
-It rained Indians and pieces of Indians for ten minutes steady. And you
-know a lot of redskins could rain down in ten minutes. What's left of
-them will never trouble Jesse James again. Eh, boys?"
-
-The gang nodded their approval of the sentiment.
-
-"What are your plans now?" asked Frank.
-
-"That's what I was coming to," answered Jesse. "First of all I want to
-corral a side of beef or a leg of mutton. It has been so long since I
-had anything to eat that my pipes have nearly growed shut. How is your
-appetite, Harry?"
-
-"Me?" replied the homely one. "I could eat a sheep, from hoof to wool.
-I've drawed my belt so tight already that the end of it trips me up
-every time I try to walk. I'--I'm ready to be one of them fellers--what
-do they call them fellers that eat men?"
-
-"Cannibals?" suggested Jesse.
-
-"That's the breed. That's what I'd be if I had half a chance."
-
-Jesse laughed good-naturedly.
-
-"I move we get out of this place as soon as possible. We shall probably
-not be able to get a meal before morning, but as soon as we decide
-on what direction we shall take, we can be on our way and out of the
-canyon before morning. The first thing for us to do, it seems to me, is
-to get some horses. Ours have gone. Either the soldiers or the Indians
-got them. Most of the Indian ponies went up in my little explosion, and
-those that did not, ran away.
-
-"I know where there was some ponies yesterday," spoke up Comanche. "I
-saw a whole bunch of them grazing on the mountain on the other side of
-the canyon over there."
-
-"We'll see about that later," replied Jesse. "The question is, what
-direction shall we take? It won't do to go north, for we are liable to
-run into more of the troops. The fort is off in that direction, and
-they would be glad to see us.
-
-"How about it, Bill? You know this country. Is there any place near
-here where we can lay up for a while and not get sold out--a good safe
-hang-out where the grub is plenty and not too many babblers around?"
-
-Wild Bill considered the question carefully for a moment.
-
-"I opine I could find such a shack," he answered with a grin. "I know a
-fellow who would take us in and be danged glad of the chance--"
-
-"Is he all right?" demanded the desperado.
-
-"Well, they'll all bear watchin', I reckon. He makes his living out
-of a stage coach now and then. When business is poor he catches a
-prospector or something of the sort. Guess he'll do though."
-
-After long and laborious effort the outlaws succeeded in picking their
-way down the steep mountain side. Instead, however, of following on
-down the canyon toward its foot, they turned abruptly south, and the
-dawn was appearing in the eastern sky, when, foot-sore and weary, as
-well as ill-tempered, they finally ascended to the broad plateau to the
-west of the canyon, but as they looked across, nothing was to be seen
-of the Indian village where the stirring incidents of the previous day
-had occurred.
-
-"Any almost-food places hereabouts, that you know of?" demanded Jesse
-of Wild Bill.
-
-"No, but there's a ranch about two miles west of here. And the fellow
-used to have a fine bunch of Kentucky thoroughbreds. Probably stole
-them at that, but they were dandies--"
-
-"Good. Me for the ranch," exclaimed the great desperado as the men
-settled down in a long lope with anticipations of a steaming breakfast
-at the end of their journey.
-
-It was just sun-up when the bandits finally approached the ranch, and
-Jesse announced his intention of going to the rancher's cabin alone,
-while the others remained in the background. But upon second thought,
-he told Wild Bill to accompany him.
-
-No sign of life was observable about the place, and the outlaws were of
-the opinion that the household had not yet awakened.
-
-The great desperado struck the door of the cabin, several thunderous
-blows with the butt of his revolver. But there was no response to his
-noisy summons. Stepping back a few paces he gave vent to a roar that
-should have awakened the soundest sleeper.
-
-"Hullo the house!" he shouted several times, but without result.
-
-Having failed to bring any response at all, the outlaw adopted a more
-drastic method of arousing the inmates of the place. He heaved a rock
-through an upper window, then set to with a will kicking the door with
-his heavy boots.
-
-Then a most surprising thing happened.
-
-The door suddenly flew open. A brawny hand grasped the outlaw by the
-collar and jerked him violently inside. Then the door was slammed to
-behind him.
-
-At the instant of the occurrence, Bill's attention was directed in
-another direction. He had observed a bunch of likely looking horses
-grazing in a large corral on beyond the cabin. He was watching them
-with envious eyes. And his surprise was therefore great, when, upon
-turning he found that Jesse had suddenly disappeared. Not twenty
-seconds had elapsed since he first turned his attention to the horses,
-and he had heard no sound of voices nor the opening and closing of
-doors.
-
-Bill did not like the look of things, and dodged behind a tree to wait
-further developments, though just what he expected might occur, he was
-unable to define to himself. There had been no commotion within the
-cabin so far as he had been able to observe. He could not relieve his
-mind of the feeling, however, that his chief was inside and that he
-was in difficulty of some sort. But what to do under the circumstance,
-he did not know. Perhaps the bandit-chieftain was working out some
-suddenly laid plan of his own, and to interfere with which would be
-fully as serious for Bill as would be the leaving of his chief in
-danger.
-
-Wild Bill finally made up his mind to hurry back for consultation with
-his companions. Acting upon this impulse he turned and ran swiftly
-back, dodging in among the trees to screen his movements as much as
-possible, from any prying eyes that might be about. Seeking out the men
-he quickly made known to them the strange situation.
-
-Frank's keen perception reached a solution of the problem instantly.
-
-"Of course Jess is inside. They opened the door and pulled him in.
-That's what there is to it. You heard no shots?"
-
-"Nary a shot."
-
-"Then there is a bunch of them in there," he emphasized conclusively.
-"Can we get near the place without being seen from the cabin?"
-
-"Yes, the trees run down pretty close to it on one side. At the back
-they are further away. The corral is in back and there is a bunch of
-fine nags there too."
-
-"Ah," exclaimed Frank, his eyes gleaming with satisfaction. "Come on
-boys, we have got some more work on hand."
-
-"And danged little grub," added Homely Harry ruefully.
-
-"I calkerlate we'll corral some of that too," grinned Comanche Tony.
-
-"Yes, but we will be lucky if we don't get a belly full of lead,"
-warned Frank with his customary pessimism.
-
-By this time they had come within sight of the cabin, but still, no
-sign of life was discoverable to their keen eyes. The place might have
-been deserted for aught they could observe.
-
-The leader decided to wait, and, placing a man on either side of the
-clearing so that no one could leave the place without being seen by one
-of them, the bandits settled down as patiently as their empty stomachs
-would permit. They were well supplied with rifles and ammunition,
-provided for them by Dew Drop, and so far as fire arms were concerned
-were in position to do effective work.
-
-"Why not give 'em a volley?" suggested Comanche Tony.
-
-"Yes, and probably kill Jess," growled Frank. "That would be a fool
-thing to do for sure."
-
-"I've got a plan," suggested Wild Bill. "If there's any duffers inside,
-it'll smoke 'em out sure enough, I reckon."
-
-"Quick, out with it," commanded their leader. "We must do something."
-
-"It's this. Supposing one of us goes over to the corral there and cuts
-out a hoss. Let him bring the critter along and tether him out here
-somewhere in the bushes. I reckon they'll show their hand about that
-time if there's anybody there," grinned Bill.
-
-Frank appreciated the force of the argument.
-
-"I should imagine they would," he agreed. "Better leave your rifle
-here, but see to it that your side arms are in working order. We will
-support you from the bushes with our rifles if necessary."
-
-Wild Bill, skirting the clearing, kept well within the line of trees
-until he had arrived opposite the corral. The latter now being between
-him and the cabin, effectually screened his approach to the horses.
-
-There still was no movement about the place, and the bandit, crouching
-low, roped a fine, rangy thorough-bred and led it out through the rear
-of the corral where saddles and bridles were hanging in a row on the
-fence.
-
-"This is like gittin' money from home," muttered Bill as he saddled and
-bridled the supple-limbed animal.
-
-All being in readiness, the hardy desperado swung himself into the
-saddle. But instead of adopting the safer course and cutting into the
-forest at his right, Bill dug the rowels of his spurs into the sleek
-sides of his mount, and with a wild whoop dashed straight across the
-clearing to where his companions were waiting with guns trained on the
-cabin.
-
-To their surprise and mystification, however, not a word nor protest
-was raised from the mysterious cabin.
-
-"Well, I'll be--" began Bill, pulling up and surveying the clearing in
-perplexity.
-
-"Try it again," suggested Frank.
-
-"We have got a good horse, anyhow. Go back the way you went before,
-don't hurry. If they see the performance is not to be repeated they
-will turn their attention this way."
-
-The desperado's plans had been laid with savage cunning, but the
-fruition of them seemed as far away as when they began.
-
-Again had the clever outlaw reached the corral without being detected.
-And as before, he made a choice of the best animal in it, which he
-quickly roped, led out and mounted. But before setting out on his
-journey to the other side of the clearing, he drew one of his trusty
-"Colts," grasped the reins firmly and dug in the spurs.
-
-This time, however, the outlaw rough rider adopted a different plan
-acting on his own initiative. He drove the animal first straight over
-the course previously followed, but when almost opposite the cabin,
-suddenly whirled toward it, passing within a rod of it at express train
-speed.
-
-As the desperado swept by a rifle crashed from an upper window, but
-Wild Bill's sudden and unexpected change of course had destroyed the
-marksman's aim and his bullet flew harmlessly over the rider's head.
-
-Like a flash, Bill threw down his gun on his assailant who stood in
-plain view up there in the window, with rifle poised for another shot.
-
-Rising in his stirrups the outlaw took a quick pot shot back at his
-adversary, uttering a savage yell of triumph and challenge as the man
-lunged head first from the window with a bullet through his heart.
-
-Still, the outlaws off under the trees, divining his purpose, held
-their fire, and Wild Bill made safe cover with his second capture.
-
-A shout of triumph from the assembled outlaws was quickly suppressed by
-Frank's stern command.
-
-It was his purpose to leave those in the cabin, if persons there were
-there, in ignorance of their presence until the moment for action
-should have arrived.
-
-It came too, unexpectedly. Two men, who somehow had managed to leave
-the place unobserved, were driving toward them on fleet horses that
-they had quickly taken from the corral.
-
-"Well, of all the tarnation fools," exclaimed Wild Bill as he observed
-them coming.
-
-"This simplifies matters," breathed Frank.
-
-"Halt!" he commanded stepping to the edge of the clearing.
-
-A fusilade of revolver shots greeted his order.
-
-"Then take your medicine," he snarled.
-
-The desperado's Winchester crashed twice. The two foolhardy horsemen
-toppled from their mounts dead. And to complete the coup, Wild Bill
-dashed from cover and skillfully roped the two animals, leading them in
-triumph to the outlaws' hiding place.
-
-"If we wait long enough things will come right to us," he laughed
-tethering the horses in the bushes.
-
-"Know that bunch?" demanded the leader.
-
-"Never sot eyes on 'em before. They don't belong in these parts. I
-shouldn't be surprised if they was in here on a raid of some sort. And
-I'll gamble too that the fellow what own's the place ain't there. If
-he is he ain't takin' any part in this ruction."
-
-"Well, what do we do next? Want some more nags?"
-
-"Yes, better go back. We'll draw the rest of them out, if there are
-any more in the place. I would charge it, but it would be sure death
-to Jess and suicide for the rest of us. We must draw them out without
-showing our hand if possible. Failing in that we shall have to wait
-until night. Jesse is a captive and--"
-
-"But what's the game?" asked Texas. "I never see such a queer one in my
-time."
-
-"We will find that out later. Mebby the answer won't please us and
-mebby it will," was Frank's enigmatic reply.
-
-Suddenly Wild Bill held up his hand for silence, his head extended
-forward in front of his body in an intense listening attitude.
-
-"By heavens they're shooting!" he cried.
-
-"To horse, all that have them!" roared the leader. "The rest jump on
-behind. Unsling your rifles as you go.
-
-"Half go to the rear and the other half to the front. Smash the door in
-and shoot quick and fast."
-
-By this time they were half way down the clearing. But those within
-were too busily engaged with their own affairs now to notice the
-bandits sweeping down upon them.
-
-"You fellows in the rear duck and look out for our bullets if we get
-in first. If you break in before we do, we'll lay low!" was Frank's
-parting injunction to his men as they separated.
-
-Leaping from their saddles the outlaws rushed on the door which went
-crashing in under their combined weight.
-
-The room was so full of powder smoke that at first they were unable to
-distinguish a single object.
-
-"Here I am over in this corner," roared Jesse. "Shoot the other way!"
-
-And they did.
-
-A volley of rifle shots rang out from both sides, but the bandits had
-dropped to their knees and fired up at their adversaries, whose bullets
-had whistled over the newcomers' heads and buried themselves in the
-logs of the cabin.
-
-"Once more!" thundered Jesse.
-
-Again the outlaws poured their deadly fire into the ranks of their
-enemy. And just then the door of the cabin at the rear crashed in and
-Wild Bill and the rest of the bandits rushed in.
-
-With them came the sunshine and the gentle morning breeze that swept
-away the smoke.
-
-Seven men lay dead and groaning on the floor.
-
-"Jess, where are you?" cried Frank, peering over the ghastly array of
-faces.
-
-"Here," answered Jesse. "Come and release me." And sure enough the
-notorious outlaw lay over in one corner. His hands were free, but his
-feet were securely bound, and in this condition he had been holding his
-desperate adversaries at bay, after surreptitiously freeing his hands.
-
-Wild Bill's revolver cracked spitefully, and one of the fellows who had
-scrambled to his feet and sought to sneak away, went down with a bullet
-in his leg.
-
-"Get him Bill!" roared the desperado chief. "He's the leader of this
-gang. But don't kill him."
-
-And while Frank was releasing his brother, the others turned their
-attention to the men on the floor, all of whom were dead save two,
-besides the fellow Bill had winged in his attempt to escape.
-
-Jesse's face was stern and those of his followers who chanced to
-observe the expression knew that the blood lust was once more strong
-upon their leader.
-
-"Bring that fellow here! He seems to be the leader of this gang."
-
-Tony jerked the cowering wretch to his feet and turned his face so the
-full morning light shone upon it.
-
-"Hello, Sam," greeted Wild Bill with a grin.
-
-"Know him, do you?" questioned Jesse.
-
-"Know him? I should say yes. He's Sagebrush Sam, one of the orneriest
-coyotes that ever pulled a trigger."
-
-"He is the fellow that laid me out with an iron bar when they jerked me
-into this place," announced Jesse grimly. "Now Mr. Sam, I reckon you'll
-answer a few questions."
-
-"I ain't answerin' questions for the likes of you," snarled the captive.
-
-"There is a ring up there in the joist boys, trice him up by his
-thumbs."
-
-They did so, so that only the fellow's toes touched the floor. In a few
-moments he was writhing in agony.
-
-"Did you know me when you saw me coming up to the cabin?" demanded
-Jesse.
-
-No answer.
-
-"Trice him up higher!" commanded the great desperado. "He'll come
-around in a minute or two."
-
-Great beads of perspiration were rolling from the victim's face and
-signs of weakening were already noticeable in his agonized features.
-Jesse grinned appreciatively.
-
-"Let me down! Kill me! I can't stand this!" groaned the unhappy wretch,
-his head dropping forward listlessly.
-
-"Let him down. He's fainted," announced Jesse.
-
-They forced a draught of whiskey down the man's throat after having
-laid him on the floor.
-
-"Now get up!" commanded Jesse administering a vicious kick as Sam came
-back to consciousness. "Where is the man who owns this joint?" was his
-first question.
-
-Sam pointed to the floor. "Down cellar."
-
-"Dead?"
-
-"No. We tied him up and left him there yesterday."
-
-"What for?"
-
-"We allowed we'd take his money and his horses. He sorter didn't take
-to the notion, so we put him away--"
-
-"Wait a minute. Texas, go down cellar. Now go on. What next?"
-
-"That's all."
-
-"You lie!" roared Jesse striding forward and pressing his bowie against
-the fellow's throat. "You wanted those horses--what did you want them
-for? Quick!"
-
-Jesse's keen mind had instinctively divined that the fellow had
-possessed some motive that he did not want to make known to them, and
-therefore, the desperado reasoned that this self-same information
-might prove useful to Jesse James.
-
-"For to go to Silver City."
-
-"Silver City? What for?"
-
-"We 'lowed we'd stake out a claim thereabouts."
-
-"String him up again boys," commanded the bandit chieftain. "He can't
-tell the truth any other way."
-
-"I'll tell, I'll tell," cried Sam. "Kill me, for God's sake don't do
-that again."
-
-"I am waiting. Go on."
-
-"It was this way," began the captive hesitatingly. "They's been some
-big strikes in the mountains there and the bank we'd heard was keeping
-a lot of the dust and like, for a big shipment east in about a week."
-
-"So, you were going to soar high--you were planning to rob a bank, eh?"
-sneered Jesse.
-
-Sam nodded wearily.
-
-"Where is this bank?"
-
-"It's in the half of the building where they has the postoffice. It's
-an easy job if a fellow's got the nerve to go in in the daytime when
-the safe is open--"
-
-"So you got a gang of cutthroats together and were going to steal the
-horses to go down there and try it, hey?"
-
-"I could do it as well as Jesse James--"
-
-"That will do," warned the notorious outlaw. "How many banks are there
-in Silver City?"
-
-"Two. But I reckon the other one don't amount to much. It's in the back
-of a store about two streets down."
-
-"What is the name of the first one?"
-
-"The Silver City National. It's run by a man named Kemp from the east.
-But they do say he's stole more money by giving the miners underweight,
-than the whole pack of 'em has got out of it. I reckon it wouldn't do
-no harm to trim up that kind of a skunk."
-
-"No, one skunk is as bad as another," returned Jesse significantly.
-"How much money or how much gold did you figure old man Kemp would have
-in his money bags?"
-
-"We figured there'd be close onto fifty thousand," was the startling
-reply.
-
-The bandits pricked up their ears and evinced a sudden interest in the
-conversation, but Jesse continued with his examination as carelessly as
-if the matter were of no moment to him at all.
-
-"How do you happen to know all about this, Sagebrush Sam?"
-
-"I wuz over there last week--"
-
-"And of course you blabbed your plans to your cronies. Oh, you make me
-sick."
-
-"No, no, honest to God, I didn't. I never told a living soul
-except--except a fellow that helps around the post office. He was to
-meet us when we got there and tell us how the wind blew--"
-
-"And he was to get--how much?"
-
-"We 'lowed we'd give him ten per cent of the rake off."
-
-"H'm," mused Jesse. "What is the fellow's name?"
-
-"Jake Fowler."
-
-"Well, what next?"
-
-"There ain't no next. I've told you all there is."
-
-"I'll tend to you in a minute. Where's that rancher?"
-
-"Here," answered Texas, leading in a very much bedraggled and sullen
-individual.
-
-The notorious desperado related to him what Sam had just told them in
-so far as it concerned the rancher himself and asked the man if it were
-true. The latter said that it was.
-
-"Then you haven't got any particular love for Sam here, eh?" chortled
-the desperado.
-
-His men knew that their leader had some scheme in mind, but what it was
-they could not imagine.
-
-The rancher's face suddenly filled with murderous hate.
-
-"I'd like the chance to show you--and him," replied the other, turning
-a malignant look on their prisoner.
-
-"Mebby we'll give you the chance. But first I want to make a little
-bargain with you. We want some horses. We're prospecting through here,
-and the Indians attacked us on the other side of the gulch, stampeding
-our ponies, and we barely got away with our lives."
-
-The rancher nodded.
-
-"I hearn them tell there was doings across the gulch."
-
-"We will give you a thousand dollars for six, our own pick."
-
-The owner started to protest.
-
-"And here's your money," continued Jesse, without giving the fellow
-an opportunity to object. "Not a cent more. You've had one experience
-today and you'd better take the offer."
-
-The rancher looked from one to the other of the stern faces about him.
-
-"And besides we have saved your life, eh?"
-
-"I'll take it," was the terse reply, as he reached for the roll of
-bills that the desperado extended in his open palm. "What about the pup
-over there?"
-
-"Got a gun?" asked Jesse.
-
-"They took 'em away from me."
-
-"Here's mine. Use it if you want to," replied the outlaw carelessly.
-
-"You, you mean--"
-
-"Oh hurry up, or give me back the gun," retorted Jesse.
-
-"You ain't goin' ter kill me be yer?" begged the miserable captive.
-
-The rancher was fingering the gun at his side with convulsive fingers,
-his face growing more malignant with deadly hate from moment to moment.
-
-"Bang!"
-
-Sagebrush Sam wavered and plunged forward on his face, dead.
-
-"Good job," commented the desperado.
-
-The rancher had fired the fatal shot without so much as raising the
-revolver from his hip.
-
-"You ain't no slouch on the trigger," commended the bandit chieftain.
-"There are two more fellows over there who haven't had enough medicine
-yet. I observe they are trying to crawl away now. Wait, don't shoot.
-Bill, straighten them up. Can they stand?"
-
-"I reckon they can," grinned Wild Bill.
-
-Jesse strode over to them and handed each a keen-edged bowie.
-
-"Fight," he commanded tersely.
-
-The horror of it sent a shiver down the spine of every man in the room.
-
-The men were friends, and the hands bearing the knives settled slowly
-to their sides as they looked into each other's eyes.
-
-Two guns in the notorious outlaw's hands barked viciously at the same
-instant and each of the unwilling combatants lost a portion of one ear.
-
-"By Judas that was a shot," exulted the rancher. "Mine ain't in it with
-that. Fight, you measly spalpeens!" he roared and Jesse smiled as he
-noted that the blood lust had taken supreme possession of the man.
-
-"Yes, fight," added Jesse, notching the ends of the arses of both men
-with another of his wonderful shots as if to emphasize his command.
-
-In blind despair the unhappy wretches raised their knives and with
-tightly closed eyes struck blindly out into the air.
-
-"Close in," commanded Jesse sternly, sending a bullet ploughing through
-the upper lip of either man.
-
-And now in blind consuming rage the victims began to strike. Their eyes
-were wide and in the desperateness of the moment, friendship turned to
-un-dying hate.
-
-Each proved an expert with the knife. Their blades flashed in the
-sunlight whose rays slanted down through window and door.
-
-It was thrust and parry as they leaped from side to side, forgetful of
-the wounds that the bandits had inflicted on them in the earlier battle.
-
-Now and then a bowie would come away stained half way to its hilt.
-
-Not a word was spoken.
-
-The labored breathing of the combatants and the chilling clash of
-blades, were the only sounds that broke in upon the sweet-scented
-stillness of the mountain morning.
-
-The scene held the spectators breathless. Even the great outlaw found
-himself interested in the desperate battle.
-
-Blood was over everything, but the desperadoes heeded it not. The
-rancher's eyes were strained and the eyelids, drawn far up against the
-forehead, never once closed in a wink.
-
-The blade of one antagonist went through the other's scalp, and a
-crimson stream spurted half way across the room. The faces of each were
-scarred with crimson rivulets that were constantly fed from the blood
-springs above.
-
-The blade of the other sheathed itself in the shoulder of his
-antagonist, and in the next second each was tugging at the hilt of a
-knife in his opponent's shoulder.
-
-The shirts of the desperate combatants were hanging in ribbons where
-the keen blades had been drawn in hopes of finding a human path and
-through the rents livid streaks showed in strong relief against the
-white flesh.
-
-Weak from exertion and loss of blood, the fighters staggered together
-and with arms thrown about each other's necks, hung resting each upon
-the other.
-
-"Break away!" thundered Jesse.
-
-His voice seemed to rouse them suddenly--to renew the hate that for the
-moment had been allowed to slip like a mantle from the hearts of the
-two friends.
-
-Their movements were slower now and less certain.
-
-Finally each with a hand upon the other's shoulder began swinging the
-free arm to give it momentum and even then their blades did not reach.
-
-"Thrust!" roared the blood-thirsty bandit chieftain.
-
-Exerting a supreme effort a hand swung away from each body and
-returning empty hung listlessly at its owner's side.
-
-Each had buried his blade in the abdomen of the other.
-
-For a full moment the antagonists stood with hand on each other's
-shoulders.
-
-At last their bodies began to sway.
-
-They toppled and fell.
-
-The body of one lay sprawling upon that of his friend.
-
-And neither man moved again.
-
-"I guess that will be about all," said the notorious outlaw in a harsh
-rasping tone that chilled them through and through.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE FIGHT IN THE "GOLDEN ARROW."
-
-
-Silver City lay at the base of two great mountain ranges.
-
-It was, like most mining towns of that time, filled with a floating
-population of gamblers, prospectors, miners and bad men. However, a
-semblance of law and order had been established by the new sheriff,
-Ben Teall, whose courage and quickness on the trigger had gained for
-him no little respect among the gun-toters of that rough country. Some
-who had doubted both these qualities, were now occupying six-foot
-claims in Silver City's graveyard.
-
-Ben never pulled a trigger unless convinced that his own life was
-in danger, and then he shot to kill. The fact that he still lived
-was evidence that he had never yet failed of accomplishing that much
-desired result.
-
-Bill was standing back to the bar in the Golden Arrow saloon one
-evening two days after Jesse and his companions had departed from the
-cabin of the rancher, headed for Silver City.
-
-The green baize door that was the pride of the Golden Arrow, swung in
-and two strangers entered, who attracted Ben's attention instantly.
-They were well set up, sharp-featured and clear-eyed fellows, and
-though there was nothing about their dress to distinguish them from
-the other habitues of the place, Ben mentally put them down as secret
-service men; but what mission they could possibly be bent on there, he
-could not understand.
-
-The two sat down at a table and ordered whiskey with "rain water" on
-the side, and the keen-eyed sheriff noted that while they only took one
-sip of the fire-water, they took down the "rain water" with evident
-satisfaction. The rest of the whisky was dumped onto the floor. All
-this he noted under half-closed eyelids.
-
-"If they ain't service men, they'll bear watching," was his comment.
-
-After a little the newcomers and the sheriff's eyes met, and each saw
-in the other something of interest.
-
-"That's the sheriff over there sizing us up, or I'm a goat," mumbled
-Jesse to his companion, who was none other than his elder brother.
-
-"Is he next, do you think?" asked Frank.
-
-"No, he don't know us. He's looking for somebody and he ain't sure
-whether we are the ones or not."
-
-"Hadn't we better make believe we have finished and walk out? I don't
-like the idea of hanging around and letting the whole town spot us,
-anyway," growled Frank.
-
-"You can go. You ain't tied," sneered Jesse. "But come on, let's be
-good-natured. There ain't no call for you and I being sore on each
-other."
-
-"No, that's so," agreed Frank swallowing his resentment toward his
-brother for the time being. But try as he honestly did, not to hate
-his brother, at times the old feeling would come out. Yet on the other
-hand, between the two was a strong bond, perhaps due more to the
-strenuous scenes through which they had passed together, than to any
-tie of brotherly love.
-
-"That man and I are going to mix it up some day," mused the sheriff.
-
-"Say," said Jesse to his companion, "if that fellow don't quit boring
-into me with his eyes I'm going over and hand him something hotter than
-the fire-water he gits over the bar of the Golden Arrow. It's beginning
-to get on my nerves.
-
-"But watch out. He's got something else on his mind now I reckon,"
-warned Jesse suddenly.
-
-The green baize door had swung in and the man who was entering let
-it close to behind him with a snap, as he quickly stepped inside.
-His hands fell to his holsters as he swept the room in one quick
-comprehensive glance.
-
-"One of Silver City's bullies," decided Jesse under his breath.
-
-"I know the breed. I believe the pup is going to shoot."
-
-At that moment Jesse's glance alighted appreciatively on the sheriff.
-He was standing with folded arms gazing at the bad man with a challenge
-in his eyes.
-
-"Steve," said the sheriff in a quiet voice, "I've told you to get out
-of town before sun-up tomorrow; I've told you to keep out of the gin
-mills tonight. If you're here five minutes from now I'll kill you."
-
-With that the sheriff turned away.
-
-"Jim," he said to the bartender, "give me a cigar."
-
-But the move came near to being a fatal one for the little officer of
-the law.
-
-The instant his back was turned, one of the bad man's guns came out
-with a flash and his eyes blazing with terrible rage he was throwing it
-down on the man who had given him his final notice to quit.
-
-But he was not quick enough.
-
-"Bang!"
-
-The notorious outlaw's trusty "Colt" had spoken first, and the bad
-man's gun fell to the floor, as its owner uttered a howl of mingled
-rage and pain.
-
-He reached for his other gun with the left.
-
-"Hands up!" commanded the desperado in an even voice. "I reckon we
-don't 'low curs like you to shoot men in the back."
-
-Instantly the room was in an uproar. There were those present who,
-though they had not deemed it wise to express their sentiments in the
-presence of the sheriff, were Steve's cronies on the side.
-
-Their hands flew to their guns.
-
-"Hands up, every mother's son of you!" roared the desperado in a
-terrible voice that thrilled every man in the room. "Come over here,"
-he said jerking his head to one side for the sheriff to join them, and
-while Jesse's eyes swept the evil faces about them the sheriff calmly
-walked over to where the two outlaws were standing, and took his place
-beside them.
-
-"Thanks, pard," he breathed. "You winged him. He won't use that hand
-again right away."
-
-A gun flashed at the far end of the room.
-
-Jesse's 44 barked viciously and the other's bullet buried itself in the
-wall behind him. But his assailant fared not so well. He sank to the
-floor with a dull red mark placed fairly between his eyes.
-
-Now guns crashed everywhere. The sheriff worked his weapons with the
-rapidity of a gatling gun. But Jesse and Frank fired now slowly. They
-were at a disadvantage. They were unable to distinguish friend from
-foe, while the sheriff knew every man there. So the two outlaws kept
-their sharp eyes dancing from face to face and at the least sign of
-treachery, the man went down with a bullet well placed somewhere in his
-anatomy.
-
-By now the battle was getting too hot for most of the miners and bad
-men and they took to the windows like a flock of frightened sheep. The
-temptation was too great for the notorious outlaw to resist. He was in
-a devil-may-care mood this night, and his recent exploits had whetted
-his appetite for more desperate deeds.
-
-He discharged a quick volley after the fleeing men, and though not
-once shooting to kill, inflicted wounds from which many an unfortunate
-fellow never recovered.
-
-The firing ceased.
-
-Jesse laughed harshly.
-
-The bar tender poked his head above the bar cautiously.
-
-"Gentlemen all finished?" he asked, peering suspiciously at the three
-men on the other side of the room.
-
-"That depends," answered the desperado easily, "upon whether there are
-any other gentlemen in need of pills around here. If you know of any
-more would-be bad men go out and get them. We might as well clean out
-the whole danged town while we are at it, eh, sheriff?"
-
-Suddenly Jesse wheeled and sent a bullet crashing through the green
-baize door.
-
-This was followed instantly by a yell of pain and one of the bad man's
-friends, plunged headlong into the room dead. He had been taking
-careful aim at the great desperado, who suddenly sensing that danger
-lurked beyond the door, had fired.
-
-"Say pard," glowed the sheriff, "I've seen some pretty tall shooting in
-my time and I'm something on the trigger myself, but you fellows have
-got anything in Silver City backed clear off into the gulch. Shake."
-
-Jesse extended his hand and bowed with mock gentility.
-
-"There's only one man that I ever heard of who could handle a gun like
-you do," continued the officer of the law.
-
-"And he?" smiled the outlaw.
-
-"And he is Jesse James."
-
-"_And it is Jesse James who stands before you_," was the outlaw's
-startling and unexpected reply, one of those devil-may-care impulses
-that now and then stirred him on to acts that from their very daring,
-overcame all obstacles and brought him out victorious.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE DOUBLE BANK ROBBERY.
-
-
-For a moment the sheriff stood like a man stricken suddenly dumb. Jesse
-faced him with a mocking smile on his face.
-
-"You--you are--Get out of here! Vamoose quicker'n a streak of greased
-lightning. Don't you know I'm an officer of the law?" exclaimed the
-gamey little sheriff suddenly turning his back on Jesse and Frank.
-And the latter two with a laugh walked from the scene of carnage and
-disappeared in the night.
-
-"Well," snarled Frank, "you have put your foot in it this time
-everlastingly."
-
-"Oh, I don't know. We'll see," was his laconic answer.
-
-The two men walked across a vacant lot, picked up their horses,
-mounted and rode out to a mountain gulch nearby, where they joined
-their fellows. It was no unusual thing for horsemen to be seen on the
-streets of Silver City, and therefore it excited no comment when seven
-men rode in from different directions on the following morning. The
-uniform quality of their horseflesh, however, did attract the attention
-of the mountaineers, but though each carried a Winchester in his saddle
-holster, the men excited no more than ordinary interest.
-
-So changed in appearance were the notorious outlaw and his brother
-that it would have been a keen eye indeed, that would have been able
-to discover, under their disguises, the men whose guns had done such
-deadly work in the Golden Arrow on the previous evening.
-
-None of the newcomers appeared to be traveling together. Now and then
-one would drop from his horse and visit a saloon, two visited the
-postoffice and others took in a general store below in which was the
-second bank.
-
-But had one been suspicious he might have noted a certain method in the
-actions of these newcomers who seemed to be everywhere at once, and yet
-acting without any apparent motive.
-
-After a time the band seemed to have formed in two sections--one at the
-north end of the main street and the other at the south, the latter
-section consisting of fewer men than the northern group.
-
-On the north might have been found the great outlaw, his brother having
-cast his lot with the band to the south.
-
-Jesse sauntered carelessly into the postoffice and asked if there was
-any mail for Jim Howard.
-
-While the postmaster was looking over his letters Wild Bill slipped
-behind the case and dealt the postmaster a terrific blow with the butt
-of his revolver.
-
-While the act was in plain view of the street through the large front
-window, there chanced to be no one passing at the moment, and neither
-was the brutal assault observable to those in the bank on the other
-side of the partition.
-
-"Who are you?" demanded Jesse as a fellow, hideous in his hunchbacked
-deformity leered up into his face.
-
-"I reckon I don't know you either?" was the enigmatical reply.
-
-"You're Jake Fowler. I know you."
-
-"But you ain't Sagebrush Sam. What do you want here?"
-
-"S-h-h," whispered Jesse. "He sent me here. How many men are over there
-behind the counter of the bank?"
-
-"Two, the owner and the cashier," informed the other, his eye twinkling
-with intelligence.
-
-"Call them over here. Tell them the postmaster has been hurt. They
-won't see me, but my pard here will cover them the minute they get
-behind the case, and we'll hold you in here till we get through. No
-tricks or I'll shoot you full of holes," hissed the desperado, dropping
-behind a barrel and motioning to Bill to make himself scarce, as Jake
-ran to the bank counter in great excitement.
-
-"Come quick!" cried Jake. "The postmaster has been hurt or else he's
-fallen in a fit."
-
-"What--where?" cried the two bankers excitedly.
-
-"Over here. Hurry."
-
-Jake was playing his part as if he had been studying it for months and
-Jesse grinned approvingly.
-
-The three had stooped to raise the body of the prostrate man when they
-were startled by the sudden command:
-
-"Move an inch and you're both dead men."
-
-The owner of the bank started to utter an exclamation, but the words
-froze in his mouth as looking sideways he found himself gazing along
-the black, menacing barrel of a heavy "Colt's."
-
-Jesse, not wasting the time to go around into the enclosure, had leaped
-the counter and was down on his knees in front of the large open safe
-whose doors were swung wide, displaying their glittering contents to
-his avaricious gaze.
-
-Gold, bills, little sacks of precious dust were swept with ruthless
-hand into the yawning gunny sack like meal from a miller's hopper.
-
-Meanwhile two mounted men in front had dismounted and were busily
-engaged in tightening their saddle girths, apparently oblivious to
-anything that was going on around them.
-
-Not a soul save those directly connected with the daring robbery had
-been disturbed.
-
-With a sweeping glance around him, Jesse, observed with a grin that the
-coast was clear, and came around the counter with the bag of precious
-loot in his hand.
-
-Not a word was spoken as he passed around to the rear of the Postoffice
-case.
-
-Raising his gun by the barrel he brought it down with terrific force,
-first on the head of one and then on the other of the bankers. They
-fell forward groaning.
-
-"Follow me and guard the rear," announced Jesse to Wild Bill. "Here's
-a drunk for you baby," he added, tossing a thousand dollar bill to the
-hunch-back. "Better mosey or they'll be stringing you up before the sun
-is over the gulch. You'll get drunk and that'll be the end of you."
-
-"Can't I go with you?" leered the outlaw. "I ain't no tenderfoot."
-
-"Not unless you are ready to die," retorted Jesse
-
-"Then I'll peach," was the sudden and unexpected reply.
-
-A sudden rage leaped into the eyes of the outlaw.
-
-Throwing his gun down on the horrible dwarf he pulled the trigger. "I
-guess that'll hold him a while," decided the outlaw with a cruel smile,
-as the dwarf fell over dead.
-
-"Shall I get the money you gave 'im?" asked Bill
-
-"No," snapped the desperado. "Jesse James does not rob dead men's
-pockets. It's his. Let him have it."
-
-Strangely enough to the outlaws the shot had attracted no attention.
-And mounting they rode leisurely up the street toward the store where
-the second bank was located. He could see the remaining members of the
-band lounging recklessly about in the street in front of the place, and
-wondering at the delay.
-
-"Something must have gone wrong," he muttered, urging his horse along a
-little faster.
-
-Just then the ground under them was shaken by a dull heavy explosion.
-People came flocking from shop and saloon and curious scared faces
-appeared at the open windows of upper stories.
-
-"Dynamite," he growled.
-
-"It's the bank!" was the startling cry, taken up from mouth to mouth
-and passed along down the village street, as a shouting, gesticulating,
-yelling mob rushed to the store where the second bank was located.
-
-The desperado saw his men coolly swing themselves into their saddles
-and face the mob with leveled Winchesters.
-
-A rain of scattered shots began to patter about those in front of the
-bank. But the men held their fire, ordering the people back on the pain
-of instant death.
-
-A thirty-two stung Comanche Tony in the cheek.
-
-Throwing his Winchester to his shoulder he shot the man who had wounded
-him, dead.
-
-The citizens answered with a volley. At that the desperadoes pumped
-their magazines, into the crowd, until they were emptied and then
-released their revolvers from their holsters began fanning the mad mob
-with deadly effect.
-
-Jesse, having secured the gunny sack firmly to his saddle, and so that
-it might not impede his movements, rode still leisurely along.
-
-Suddenly he espied Frank running down the steps of the store. Like
-his younger brother, Frank also bore a gunny sack and from the manner
-in which Frank was carrying it, Jesse understood that his brother had
-succeeded in his mission of plunder.
-
-Frank swung into his saddle under a perfect storm of bullets.
-
-With a wild whoop and a savage yell the great desperado and his
-immediate companions dug the rowels of their spurs into their horses
-and charged down on the crowd.
-
-The mob taken suddenly by surprise at this attack on their flank,
-ceased firing and fell swiftly back.
-
-"Forward!" roared the great desperado.
-
-Frank and his men heard and understood.
-
-Their horses sprang away under the pressure of the cruel spurs.
-
-Now Jesse and his companions thundered down on the crowd in the wake of
-the first line of fleeing desperadoes.
-
-All at once a slight, wiry figure sprang out into the middle of the
-street.
-
-"Halt! I know you, Jesse James."
-
-But the desperado threw himself suddenly forward on the neck of his
-horse as the sheriff's bullets sang over him so close to his head that
-he could feel the hair on the top of his head, slightly pulled back by
-the sudden suction of air from the leaden pellets.
-
-Both his revolvers flashed up on either side of the horse's neck. They
-barked in unison and the sheriff fell dead.
-
-The outlaw's horse leaping over the body of the fallen officer of the
-law, sped away.
-
-Jesse rose in his saddle and sent a volley of shots from his Winchester
-into the crowd in his rear. Then he was obliged to cease firing because
-of the fear of hitting one of his own men, whose bodies were now
-between him and the mob. The men had swung half way round in their
-saddles, reins on their horses' necks, and were pumping lead into the
-mad mob with deadly effect.
-
-Jesse fired a signal shot high into the air.
-
-Their fusilade suddenly ceased.
-
-With a wild, blood-curdling yell, the desperadoes dug their spurs deep
-into the sleek sides of the sensitive thoroughbreds and sped off like
-the wind headed for the protection of the mountain fastness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-
-Not until the shadows of night were falling did the desperate band halt
-to make camp.
-
-So far as they had been able to observe there had been no organized
-pursuit of them attempted. But they knew full well that they would not
-be permitted to escape without some effort being made to apprehend them.
-
-But instead of following on south as they had started, Jesse after an
-hour or so changed his course and turned due east, thus carrying them
-away at right angles to the scene of their late operations. This, he
-reasoned shrewdly would send any posse that might follow them, off on a
-blind trail for a long distance before they discovered their mistake.
-To accomplish this the men had to dismount and lead their horses up a
-steep mountain side where the least misstep would have precipitated
-them to certain death on the rocks below.
-
-But the hard rocky sides of the mountain left no trail for the
-mountaineers to follow.
-
-It was with intense relief that the men dismounted after their trying
-ride, and their appetites, whetted by the day's strenuous doings, were
-soon satisfied with a hearty meal of bacon and potatoes, sizzling hot
-from their improvised stone stove.
-
-And by the light of the camp fire, Jesse and Frank spread out their
-ill-gotten gains on a slab of rock.
-
-The eyes of the bandits glowed avariciously as package after package of
-bills was thrown out, to be followed by many bags of rich, yellow gold
-dust.
-
-A careful count of the money and a rough estimate of the gold dust was
-made, Jesse figuring the total by marking on the slab of rock with a
-sharp stone.
-
-"How much?" asked Frank.
-
-"It'll run better than a hundred thousand, I reckon," answered Jesse,
-calmly.
-
-The desperadoes gave a long, low whistle of surprise.
-
-"I calkerlate I'd be willing to go hungry for three days any time
-for such a bunch of the long green as that," averred Homely Harry
-facetiously.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-Be sure to read the next story, JESSE JAMES MIDNIGHT ATTACK, or THE
-BANDIT'S REVENGE ON THE VIGILANTES. In this story will be chronicled
-a series of startling adventures in which the noted outlaw turns the
-tables on the man-hunters who are on his trail, to their complete
-undoing. It is No. 32 in the Adventure Series.
-
-_TO THE READER._
-
-
-Only in the _Adventure Series_ can you get the absolutely true and
-authentic history of the lives and exploits of the
-
- JAMES BOYS,
- YOUNGER BROTHERS,
- HARRY TRACY,
- THE DALTON GANG,
- RUBE BURROW,
-
-and the other Notorious Outlaws of the Far West.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We are the authorized and exclusive publishers for Jesse James' only
-son,
-
- JESSE JAMES, JR.
-
- and are the publishers of his great book,
-
- JESSE JAMES, MY FATHER,
-
-which is for sale everywhere. Buy it where you bought this book, and
-read the inside history of the life of Jesse James.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Jesse James' Bold Stroke, by William Ward
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