<p><SPAN name="22"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>XXII</h3>
<h3>THE LONESOME ROAD<br/> </h3>
<p>Brown as a coffee-berry, rugged, pistoled, spurred, wary,
indefeasible, I saw my old friend, Deputy-Marshal Buck
Caperton, stumble, with jingling rowels, into a chair in the
marshal's outer office.</p>
<p>And because the court-house was almost deserted at that hour,
and because Buck would sometimes relate to me things that were
out of print, I followed him in and tricked him into talk
through knowledge of a weakness he had. For, cigarettes rolled
with sweet corn husk were as honey to Buck's palate; and though
he could finger the trigger of a forty-five with skill and
suddenness, he never could learn to roll a cigarette.</p>
<p>It was through no fault of mine (for I rolled the cigarettes
tight and smooth), but the upshot of some whim of his own, that
instead of to an Odyssey of the chaparral, I listened to—a
dissertation upon matrimony! This from Buck Caperton! But I
maintain that the cigarettes were impeccable, and crave
absolution for myself.</p>
<p>"We just brought in Jim and Bud Granberry," said Buck. "Train
robbing, you know. Held up the Aransas Pass last month. We
caught 'em in the Twenty-Mile pear flat, south of the Nueces."</p>
<p>"Have much trouble corralling them?" I asked, for here was the
meat that my hunger for epics craved.</p>
<p>"Some," said Buck; and then, during a little pause, his
thoughts stampeded off the trail. "It's kind of queer about
women," he went on, "and the place they're supposed to occupy
in botany. If I was asked to classify them I'd say they was a
human loco weed. Ever see a bronc that had been chewing loco?
Ride him up to a puddle of water two feet wide, and he'll give
a snort and fall back on you. It looks as big as the
Mississippi River to him. Next trip he'd walk into a cañon
a thousand feet deep thinking it was a prairie-dog hole. Same way
with a married man.</p>
<p>"I was thinking of Perry Rountree, that used to be my
sidekicker before he committed matrimony. In them days me and
Perry hated indisturbances of any kind. We roamed around
considerable, stirring up the echoes and making 'em attend to
business. Why, when me and Perry wanted to have some fun in a
town it was a picnic for the census takers. They just counted
the marshal's posse that it took to subdue us, and there was
your population. But then there came along this Mariana
Goodnight girl and looked at Perry sideways, and he was all
bridle-wise and saddle-broke before you could skin a yearling.</p>
<p>"I wasn't even asked to the wedding. I reckon the bride had my
pedigree and the front elevation of my habits all mapped out,
and she decided that Perry would trot better in double harness
without any unconverted mustang like Buck Caperton whickering
around on the matrimonial range. So it was six months before I
saw Perry again.</p>
<p>"One day I was passing on the edge of town, and I see something
like a man in a little yard by a little house with a
sprinkling-pot squirting water on a rose-bush. Seemed to me,
I'd seen something like it before, and I stopped at the gate,
trying to figure out its brands. 'Twas not Perry Rountree, but
'twas the kind of a curdled jellyfish matrimony had made out of
him.</p>
<p>"Homicide was what that Mariana had perpetrated. He was looking
well enough, but he had on a white collar and shoes, and you
could tell in a minute that he'd speak polite and pay taxes and
stick his little finger out while drinking, just like a sheep
man or a citizen. Great skyrockets! but I hated to see Perry
all corrupted and Willie-ized like that.</p>
<p>"He came out to the gate, and shook hands; and I says, with
scorn, and speaking like a paroquet with the pip: 'Beg
pardon—Mr. Rountree, I believe. Seems to me I sagatiated in
your associations once, if I am not mistaken.'</p>
<p>"'Oh, go to the devil, Buck,' says Perry, polite, as I was
afraid he'd be.</p>
<p>"'Well, then,' says I, 'you poor, contaminated adjunct of a
sprinkling-pot and degraded household pet, what did you go and
do it for? Look at you, all decent and unriotous, and only fit
to sit on juries and mend the wood-house door. You was a man
once. I have hostility for all such acts. Why don't you go in
the house and count the tidies or set the clock, and not stand
out here in the atmosphere? A jack-rabbit might come along and
bite you.'</p>
<p>"'Now, Buck,' says Perry, speaking mild, and some sorrowful,
'you don't understand. A married man has got to be different.
He feels different from a tough old cloudburst like you. It's
sinful to waste time pulling up towns just to look at their
roots, and playing faro and looking upon red liquor, and such
restless policies as them.'</p>
<p>"'There was a time,' I says, and I expect I sighed when I
mentioned it, 'when a certain domesticated little Mary's lamb I
could name was some instructed himself in the line of
pernicious sprightliness. I never expected, Perry, to see you
reduced down from a full-grown pestilence to such a frivolous
fraction of a man. Why,' says I, 'you've got a necktie on; and
you speak a senseless kind of indoor drivel that reminds me of
a storekeeper or a lady. You look to me like you might tote an
umbrella and wear suspenders, and go home of nights.'</p>
<p>"'The little woman,' says Perry, 'has made some improvements, I
believe. You can't understand, Buck. I haven't been away from
the house at night since we was married.'</p>
<p>"We talked on a while, me and Perry, and, as sure as I live,
that man interrupted me in the middle of my talk to tell me
about six tomato plants he had growing in his garden. Shoved
his agricultural degradation right up under my nose while I was
telling him about the fun we had tarring and feathering that
faro dealer at California Pete's layout! But by and by Perry
shows a flicker of sense.</p>
<p>"'Buck,' says he, 'I'll have to admit that it is a little dull
at times. Not that I'm not perfectly happy with the little
woman, but a man seems to require some excitement now and then.
Now, I'll tell you: Mariana's gone visiting this afternoon, and
she won't be home till seven o'clock. That's the limit for both
of us—seven o'clock. Neither of us ever stays
out a minute after that time unless we are together. Now, I'm
glad you came along, Buck,' says Perry, 'for I'm feeling just
like having one more rip-roaring razoo with you for the sake of
old times. What you say to us putting in the afternoon having
fun—I'd like it fine,' says Perry.</p>
<p>"I slapped that old captive range-rider half across his little
garden.</p>
<p>"'Get your hat, you old dried-up alligator,' I shouts, 'you
ain't dead yet. You're part human, anyhow, if you did get all
bogged up in matrimony. We'll take this town to pieces and see
what makes it tick. We'll make all kinds of profligate demands
upon the science of cork pulling. You'll grow horns yet, old
muley cow,' says I, punching Perry in the ribs, 'if you trot
around on the trail of vice with your Uncle Buck.'</p>
<p>"'I'll have to be home by seven, you know,' says Perry again.</p>
<p>"'Oh, yes,' says I, winking to myself, for I knew the kind of
seven o'clocks Perry Rountree got back by after he once got to
passing repartee with the bartenders.</p>
<p>"We goes down to the Gray Mule saloon—that old 'dobe building
by the depot.</p>
<p>"'Give it a name,' says I, as soon as we got one hoof on the
foot-rest.</p>
<p>"'Sarsaparilla,' says Perry.</p>
<p>"You could have knocked me down with a lemon peeling.</p>
<p>"'Insult me as much as you want to,' I says to Perry, 'but
don't startle the bartender. He may have heart-disease. Come
on, now; your tongue got twisted. The tall glasses,' I orders,
'and the bottle in the left-hand corner of the ice-chest.'</p>
<p>"'Sarsaparilla,' repeats Perry, and then his eyes get animated,
and I see he's got some great scheme in his mind he wants to
emit.</p>
<p>"'Buck,' says he, all interested, 'I'll tell you what! I want
to make this a red-letter day. I've been keeping close at home,
and I want to turn myself a-loose. We'll have the highest old
time you ever saw. We'll go in the back room here and play
checkers till half-past six.'</p>
<p>"I leaned against the bar, and I says to Gotch-eared Mike, who
was on watch:</p>
<p>"'For God's sake don't mention this. You know what Perry used
to be. He's had the fever, and the doctor says we must humour
him.'</p>
<p>"'Give us the checker-board and the men, Mike,' says Perry.
'Come on, Buck, I'm just wild to have some excitement.'</p>
<p>"I went in the back room with Perry. Before we closed the door,
I says to Mike:</p>
<p>"'Don't ever let it straggle out from under your hat that you
seen Buck Caperton fraternal with sarsaparilla or <i>persona
grata</i> with a checker-board, or I'll make a swallow-fork in
your other ear.'</p>
<p>"I locked the door and me and Perry played checkers. To see
that poor old humiliated piece of household bric-a-brac sitting
there and sniggering out loud whenever he jumped a man, and all
obnoxious with animation when he got into my king row, would
have made a sheep-dog sick with mortification. Him that was
once satisfied only when he was pegging six boards at keno or
giving the faro dealers nervous prostration—to see him pushing
them checkers about like Sally Louisa at a school-children's
party—why, I was all smothered up with mortification.</p>
<p>"And I sits there playing the black men, all sweating for fear
somebody I knew would find it out. And I thinks to myself some
about this marrying business, and how it seems to be the same
kind of a game as that Mrs. Delilah played. She give her old
man a hair cut, and everybody knows what a man's head looks
like after a woman cuts his hair. And then when the Pharisees
came around to guy him he was so 'shamed that he went to work
and kicked the whole house down on top of the whole outfit.
'Them married men,' thinks I, 'lose all their spirit and
instinct for riot and foolishness. They won't drink, they won't
buck the tiger, they won't even fight. What do they want to go
and stay married for?' I asks myself.</p>
<p>"But Perry seems to be having hilarity in considerable
quantities.</p>
<p>"'Buck old hoss,' says he, 'isn't this just the hell-roaringest
time we ever had in our lives? I don't know when I've been
stirred up so. You see, I've been sticking pretty close to home
since I married, and I haven't been on a spree in a long time.'</p>
<p>"'Spree!' Yes, that's what he called it. Playing checkers in
the back room of the Gray Mule! I suppose it did seem to him a
little immoral and nearer to a prolonged debauch than
standing over six tomato plants with a sprinkling-pot.</p>
<p>"Every little bit Perry looks at his watch and says:</p>
<p>"'I got to be home, you know, Buck, at seven.'</p>
<p>"'All right,' I'd say. 'Romp along and move. This here
excitement's killing me. If I don't reform some, and loosen up
the strain of this checkered dissipation I won't have a nerve
left.'</p>
<p>"It might have been half-past six when commotions began to go
on outside in the street. We heard a yelling and a
six-shootering, and a lot of galloping and manœuvres.</p>
<p>"'What's that?' I wonders.</p>
<p>"'Oh, some nonsense outside,' says Perry. 'It's your move. We
just got time to play this game.'</p>
<p>"'I'll just take a peep through the window,' says I, 'and see.
You can't expect a mere mortal to stand the excitement of
having a king jumped and listen to an unidentified conflict
going on at the same time.'</p>
<p>"The Gray Mule saloon was one of them old Spanish 'dobe
buildings, and the back room only had two little windows a foot
wide, with iron bars in 'em. I looked out one, and I see the
cause of the rucus.</p>
<p>"There was the Trimble gang—ten of 'em—the worst outfit of
desperadoes and horse-thieves in Texas, coming up the street
shooting right and left. They was coming right straight for the
Gray Mule. Then they got past the range of my sight, but we
heard 'em ride up to the front door, and then they socked the
place full of lead. We heard the big looking-glass behind the
bar knocked all to pieces and the bottles crashing. We could
see Gotch-eared Mike in his apron running across the plaza like
a coyote, with the bullets puffing up dust all around him. Then
the gang went to work in the saloon, drinking what they wanted
and smashing what they didn't.</p>
<p>"Me and Petty both knew that gang, and they knew us. The year
before Perry married, him and me was in the same ranger
company—and we fought that outfit down on the San Miguel, and
brought back Ben Trimble and two others for murder.</p>
<p>"'We can't get out,' says I. 'We'll have to stay in here till
they leave.'</p>
<p>"Perry looked at his watch.</p>
<p>"'Twenty-five to seven,' says he. 'We can finish that game. I
got two men on you. It's your move, Buck. I got to be home at
seven, you know.'</p>
<p>"We sat down and went on playing. The Trimble gang had a
roughhouse for sure. They were getting good and drunk. They'd
drink a while and holler a while, and then they'd shoot up a
few bottles and glasses. Two or three times they came and tried
to open our door. Then there was some more shooting outside,
and I looked out the window again. Ham Gossett, the town
marshal, had a posse in the houses and stores across the
street, and was trying to bag a Trimble or two through the
windows.</p>
<p>"I lost that game of checkers. I'm free in saying that I lost
three kings that I might have saved if I had been corralled in
a more peaceful pasture. But that drivelling married man sat
there and cackled when he won a man like an unintelligent hen
picking up a grain of corn.</p>
<p>"When the game was over Perry gets up and looks at his watch.</p>
<p>"'I've had a glorious time, Buck,' says he, 'but I'll have to
be going now. It's a quarter to seven, and I got to be home by
seven, you know.'</p>
<p>"I thought he was joking.</p>
<p>"'They'll clear out or be dead drunk in half an hour or an
hour,' says I. 'You ain't that tired of being married that you
want to commit any more sudden suicide, are you?' says I,
giving him the laugh.</p>
<p>"'One time,' says Perry, 'I was half an hour late getting home.
I met Mariana on the street looking for me. If you could have
seen her, Buck—but you don't understand. She knows what a wild
kind of a snoozer I've been, and she's afraid something will
happen. I'll never be late getting home again. I'll say
good-bye to you now, Buck.'</p>
<p>"I got between him and the door.</p>
<p>"'Married man,' says I, 'I know you was christened a fool the
minute the preacher tangled you up, but don't you never
sometimes think one little think on a human basis? There's ten
of that gang in there, and they're pizen with whisky and desire
for murder. They'll drink you up like a bottle of booze before
you get half-way to the door. Be intelligent, now, and use at
least wild-hog sense. Sit down and wait till we have some
chance to get out without being carried in baskets.'</p>
<p>"'I got to be home by seven, Buck,' repeats this hen-pecked
thing of little wisdom, like an unthinking poll parrot.
'Mariana,' says he, 'will be out looking for me.' And he
reaches down and pulls a leg out of the checker table. 'I'll go
through this Trimble outfit,' says he, 'like a cottontail
through a brush corral. I'm not pestered any more with a desire
to engage in rucuses, but I got to be home by seven. You lock
the door after me, Buck. And don't you forget—I won three out
of them five games. I'd play longer, but Mariana—'</p>
<p>"'Hush up, you old locoed road runner,' I interrupts. 'Did you
ever notice your Uncle Buck locking doors against trouble? I'm
not married,' says I, 'but I'm as big a
d––––n fool as any
Mormon. One from four leaves three,' says I, and I gathers out
another leg of the table. 'We'll get home by seven,' says I,
'whether it's the heavenly one or the other. May I see you
home?' says I, 'you sarsaparilla-drinking, checker-playing
glutton for death and destruction.'</p>
<p>"We opened the door easy, and then stampeded for the front.
Part of the gang was lined up at the bar; part of 'em was
passing over the drinks, and two or three was peeping out the
door and window and taking shots at the marshal's crowd. The
room was so full of smoke we got half-way to the front door
before they noticed us. Then I heard Berry Trimble's voice
somewhere yell out:</p>
<p>"'How'd that Buck Caperton get in here?' and he skinned the
side of my neck with a bullet. I reckon he felt bad over that
miss, for Berry's the best shot south of the Southern Pacific
Railroad. But the smoke in the saloon was some too thick for
good shooting.</p>
<p>"Me and Perry smashed over two of the gang with our table legs,
which didn't miss like the guns did, and as we run out the door
I grabbed a Winchester from a fellow who was watching the
outside, and I turned and regulated the account of Mr. Berry.</p>
<p>"Me and Perry got out and around the corner all right. I never
much expected to get out, but I wasn't going to be intimidated
by that married man. According to Perry's idea, checkers was
the event of the day, but if I am any judge of gentle
recreations that little table-leg parade through the Gray Mule
saloon deserved the head-lines in the bill of particulars.</p>
<p>"'Walk fast,' says Perry, 'it's two minutes to seven, and I got
to be home by—'</p>
<p>"'Oh, shut up,' says I. 'I had an appointment as chief
performer at an inquest at seven, and I'm not kicking about not
keeping it.'</p>
<p>"I had to pass by Perry's little house. His Mariana was
standing at the gate. We got there at five minutes past seven.
She had on a blue wrapper, and her hair was pulled back smooth
like little girls do when they want to look grown-folksy. She
didn't see us till we got close, for she was gazing up the
other way. Then she backed around, and saw Perry, and a kind of
a look scooted around over her face—danged if I can describe
it. I heard her breathe long, just like a cow when you turn her
calf in the lot, and she says: 'You're late, Perry.'</p>
<p>"'Five minutes,' says Perry, cheerful. 'Me and old Buck was
having a game of checkers.'</p>
<p>"Perry introduces me to Mariana, and they ask me to come in.
No, sir-ee. I'd had enough truck with married folks for that
day. I says I'll be going along, and that I've spent a very
pleasant afternoon with my old partner—'especially,' says I,
just to jostle Perry, 'during that game when the table legs
came all loose.' But I'd promised him not to let her know
anything.</p>
<p>"I've been worrying over that business ever since it happened,"
continued Buck. "There's one thing about it that's got me all
twisted up, and I can't figure it out."</p>
<p>"What was that?" I asked, as I rolled and handed Buck the last
cigarette.</p>
<p>"Why, I'll tell you: When I saw the look that little woman gave
Perry when she turned round and saw him coming back to the
ranch safe—why was it I got the idea all in a minute that that
look of hers was worth more than the whole caboodle of
us—sarsaparilla, checkers, and all, and that the
d––––n fool
in the game wasn't named Perry Rountree at all?"</p>
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