<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
<h3><i>Self-defense</i>.</h3>
<p>The wagons of the Double-Crank had stopped to tarry over the
Fourth at Fighting Wolf Spring, which bubbles from under a great
rock in a narrow "draw" that runs itself out to a cherry-masked
point halfway up the side of Fighting Wolf Butte. Billy, with
wisdom born of much experience in the ways of a round-up crew when
the Fourth of July draws near, started his riders at day-dawn to
rake all Fighting Wolf on its southern side. "Better catch up your
ridge-runners," he had cautioned, "because I'll set yuh plumb afoot
if yuh don't." The boys, knowing well his meaning and that the
circle that day would be a big one over rough country, saddled
their best horses and settled themselves to a hard day's work.</p>
<p>Till near noon they rode, and branded after dinner to the tune
of much scurrying and bawling and a great deal of dust and rank
smoke, urged by the ever-present fear that they would not finish in
time. But their leader was fully as anxious as they and had timed
the work so that by four o'clock the herd was turned loose, the
fires drenched with water and the branding irons put away.</p>
<p>At sundown the long slope from Fighting Wolf Spring was dotted
for a space with men, fresh-shaven, clean-shirted and otherwise
rehabilitated, galloping eagerly toward Hardup fifteen miles away.
That they had been practically in the saddle since dawn was a
trifle not to be considered; they would dance until another dawn to
make up for it.</p>
<p>Hardup, decked meagrely in the colors that spell patriotism, was
unwontedly alive and full of Fourth of July noises. But even with
the distraction of a holiday and a dance just about to start and
the surrounding country emptied of humans into the town, the
clatter of the Double-Crank outfit—fifteen wiry young fellows
hungry for play—brought men to the doors and into the
streets.</p>
<p>Charming Billy, because his eagerness was spiced with
expectancy, did not stop even for a drink, but made for the hotel.
At the hotel he learned that his "crowd" was over at the hall, and
there he hurried so soon as he had removed the dust and
straightened his tie and brushed his hair and sworn at his
upstanding scalp-lock, in the corner of the hotel office dedicated
to public cleanliness.</p>
<p>It was a pity that such single-hearted effort must go
unrewarded, but the fact remains that he reached the hall just as
the couples were promenading for the first waltz. He was permitted
the doubtful pleasure of a welcoming nod from Flora as she went by
with the Pilgrim. Dill was on the floor with Mama Joy, and at a
glance he saw how it was; the Pilgrim had "butted in" and come
along with them. He supposed Flora really could not help it, but it
was pretty hard lines, all the same. For even in the range-land are
certain rules of etiquette which must be observed when men and
women foregather in the pursuit of pleasure. Billy remembered
ruefully how a girl must dance first, last, and oftenest with her
partner of the evening, and must eat supper with him besides,
whether she likes or not; to tweak this rule means to insult the
man beyond forgiveness.</p>
<p>"Well, it wouldn't hurt me none if Flora <i>did</i> cut him off
short," Billy concluded, his eyes following them resentfully
whenever they whirled down to his end of the room. "The way I've
got it framed up, I'd spoke for her first—if Dilly told her
what I said."</p>
<p>Still, what he thought privately did not seem to have much
effect upon realities. Flora he afterward saw intermittently while
they danced a quadrille together, and she made it plain that she
had not considered Billy as her partner; how could she, when he was
trailing around over the country with the round-up, and nobody knew
whether he would come or not? No, Mr. Walland did not come to the
ranch so very often. She added naïvely that he was awfully
busy. He had ridden in with them—and why not? Was there any
reason—</p>
<p>Billy, though he could think of reasons in plenty, turned just
then to balance on the corner and swing, and to do many other
senseless things at the behest of the man on the platform, so that
when they stood together again for a brief space, both were
breathless and she was anxiously feeling her hair and taking out
side combs and putting them back again, and Billy felt diffident
about interrupting her and said no more about who was her
partner.</p>
<p>An hour or so later he was looking about for her, meaning to
dance with her again, when a man pushed him aside hurriedly and
went across the floor and spoke angrily to another. Billy, moving
aside so that he could see, discovered Flora standing up with the
Pilgrim for the dance in another "set" that was forming. The man
who had jostled him was speaking to them angrily, but Billy could
not catch the words.</p>
<p>"He's drunk," called the Pilgrim to the floor manager. "Put him
out!"</p>
<p>Several men left their places and rushed over to them. Because
Flora was there and likely to be involved, Billy reached them
first.</p>
<p>"This was <i>my</i> dance!" the fellow was expostulating. "She
promised it to me."</p>
<p>"Aw, he's drunk," repeated the Pilgrim, turning to Billy. "It's
Gus Svenstrom. He's got it in for me because I fired him last week.
Throw him out! Miss Bridger isn't going to dance with a drunken
stiff like him."</p>
<p>"Oh, I'll go—I ain't so drunk I've got to be carried!"
retorted the other, and pushed his way angrily through the
crowd.</p>
<p>Flora had kept her place. Though the color had gone from her
cheeks, she seemed to have no intention of quitting the quadrille,
so there was nothing for Billy to do but get off the floor and
leave her to her partner. He went out after the Swede, and, seeing
him headed for the saloon across from the hotel, followed
aimlessly. He was not quite comfortable in the hall, anyway, for he
had caught Mama Joy eying him strangely, and he thought she was
wondering why he had not asked her to dance.</p>
<p>Charming Billy was not by nature a diplomat; it never once
occurred to him that he would better treat Mama Joy as if that half
minute in the kitchen had never been. He had said good evening to
her when he first met her that evening, and he considered his duty
done. He did not want to dance with her, and that was, in his
opinion, an excellent reason for not doing so. He did not like to
have her watching him with those big, round, blue eyes of hers, so
he stayed in the saloon for a while and only left it to go to
supper when some one said that the dance crowd was over there.
There might be some chance that would permit him to eat with
Flora.</p>
<p>There are moments in a town when, even with many people coming
and going, one may look and see none. When Billy closed the door of
the saloon behind him and started across to the hotel, not a man
did he see, though there was sound in plenty from the saloons and
the hotel and the hall. He was nearly half across the street when
two men came into sight and met suddenly just outside a window of
the hotel. Billy, in the gloom of starlight and no moon, could not
tell who they were; he heard a sharp sentence or two, saw them
close together, heard a blow. Then they broke apart and there was
the flash of a shot. One man fell and the other whirled about as if
he would run, but Billy was then almost upon them and the man
turned back and stood looking down at the fallen figure.</p>
<p>"Damn him, he pulled a knife on me!" he cried defensively. Billy
saw that it was the Pilgrim.</p>
<p>"Who is he?" he asked, and knelt beside the form. The man was
lying just where the lamp-light streamed out from the window, but
his face was in shadow. "Oh, it's that Swede," he added, and rose.
"I'll get somebody; I believe he's dead." He left the Pilgrim
standing there and hurried to the door of the hotel office.</p>
<p>In any other locality a shot would have brought on the run every
man who heard it; but in a "cow-town," especially on a dance night,
shots are as common as shouts. In Hardup that night there had been
periodical outbursts which no one, not even the women, minded in
the least.</p>
<p>So it was not until Billy opened the door, put his head in, and
cried: "Come alive! A fellow's been shot, right out here," that
there was a stampede for the door.</p>
<p>The Pilgrim still stood beside the other, waiting. Three or four
stooped over the man on the ground. Billy was one of them.</p>
<p>"He pulled a gun on me," explained the Pilgrim. "I was trying to
take it away from him, and it went off."</p>
<p>Billy stood up, and, as he did so, his foot struck against a
revolver lying beside the Swede. He looked at the Pilgrim queerly,
but he did not say anything. They were lifting the Swede to carry
him into the office; they knew that he was dead, even before they
got him into the light.</p>
<p>"Somebody better get word to the coroner," said the Pilgrim,
fighting for self-control. "It was self-defense. My God, boys, I
couldn't help it! He pulled a gun on me. Yuh saw it on the ground
there, right where he dropped it."</p>
<p>Billy turned clear around and looked again at the Pilgrim, and
the Pilgrim met his eyes defiantly before he turned away.</p>
<p>"I understood yuh to say it was a knife," he remarked
slowly.</p>
<p>The Pilgrim swung back again. "I didn't—or, if I did, I
was rattled. It was a gun—that gun on the ground. He met me
there and started a row and said he'd fix me. He pulled his gun,
and I made a grab for it and it went off. That's all there is to
it." He stared hard at Billy.</p>
<p>There was much talk among the men, and several told how they had
heard the Swede "cussing" Walland in the saloon that evening. Some
remembered threats—the threats which a man will foolishly
make when he is pouring whisky down his throat by the glassful. No
one seemed to blame Walland in the least, and Billy felt that the
Pilgrim was in a fair way to become something of a hero. It is not
every man who has the nerve to grab a gun with which he is
threatened.</p>
<p>They made a cursory search of the Pilgrim and found that he was
not armed, and he was given to understand that he would be expected
to stay around town until the coroner came and "sat" on the case.
But he was treated to drinks right and left, and when Billy went to
find Flora the Pilgrim was leaning heavily upon the bar with a
glass in his hand and his hat far back on his head, declaiming to
the crowd that he was perfectly harmless so long as he was left
alone. But he wasn't safe to monkey with, and any man who came at
him hunting trouble would sure get all he wanted and then some. He
said he didn't kill people if he could help it—but a man was
plumb obliged to, sometimes.</p>
<p>"I'm sure surprised to think I got off with m' life, last
winter, when I hazed him away from line-camp; I guess I must uh had
a close call, all right!" Billy snorted contemptuously and shut the
door upon the wordy revelation of the Pilgrim's deep inner nature
which had been until that night carefully hidden from an admiring
world.</p>
<p>The dance stopped abruptly with the killing; people were already
going home. Billy, with the excuse that he would be wanted at the
inquest, hunted up Jim Bleeker, gave him charge of the round-up for
a few days, and told him what route to take. For himself, he meant
to ride home with Flora or know the reason why.</p>
<p>"Come along, Dilly, and let's get out uh town," he urged, when
he had found him. "It's a kinda small burg, and at the rate the
Pilgrim is swelling up over what he done, there won't be room for
nobody but him in another hour. He's making me plumb nervous and
afraid to be around him, he's so fatal."</p>
<p>"We'll go at once, William. Walland is drinking a great deal
more than he should, but I don't think he means to be boastful over
so unfortunate an affair. Do you think you are taking an altogether
unprejudiced view of the matter? Our judgment," he added
deprecatingly, "is so apt to be warped by our likes and
dislikes."</p>
<p>"Well, if that was the case here," Billy told him shortly, "I've
got dislike enough for him to wind my judgment up like a clock
spring. I'll go see if Flora and her mother are ready." In that way
he avoided discussing the Pilgrim, for Dill was not so dull that he
failed to take the hint.</p>
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