<h2 id="id02284">CHAPTER XXXVII</h2><h5 id="id02285">SHORTY ASKS A QUESTION</h5>
<p id="id02286" style="margin-top: 2em">When Shorty separated from Doble in Frio Cañon he rode inconspicuously to
a tendejon where he could be snugly hidden from the public gaze and yet
meet a few "pals" whom he could trust at least as long as he could keep
his eyes on them. His intention was to have a good time in the only way
he knew how. Another purpose was coupled with this; he was not going to
drink enough to interfere with reasonable caution.</p>
<p id="id02287">Shorty's dissipated pleasures were interfered with shortly after
midnight. A Mexican came in to the drinking-place with news. The world
was on fire, at least that part of it which interested the cattlemen of
the Malapi district. The blaze had started back of Bear Cañon and had
been swept by the wind across to Cattle and San Jacinto. The oil field
adjacent had been licked up and every reservoir and sump was in flames.
The whole range would probably be wiped out before the fire spent itself
for lack of fuel. Crawford had posted a rider to town calling for more
man power to build trails and wield flails. This was the sum of the news.
It was not strictly accurate, but it served to rouse Shorty at once.</p>
<p id="id02288">He rose and touched the Mexican on the arm. "Where you say that fire
started, Pedro?"</p>
<p id="id02289">"Bear Cañon, señor."</p>
<p id="id02290">"And it's crossed San Jacinto?"</p>
<p id="id02291">"Like wildfire." The slim vaquero made a gesture all-inclusive. "It runs,
señor, like a frightened jackrabbit. Nothing will stop it—nothing. It
iss sent by heaven for a punishment."</p>
<p id="id02292">"Hmp!" Shorty grunted.</p>
<p id="id02293">The rustler fell into a somber silence. He drank no more. The dark-lashed
eyes of the Mexican girls slanted his way in vain. He stared sullenly at
the table in front of him. A problem had pushed itself into his
consciousness, one he could not brush aside or ignore.</p>
<p id="id02294">If the fire had started back of Bear Cañon, what agency had set it going?
He and Doble had camped last night at that very spot. If there had been a
fire there during the night he must have known it. Then when had the fire
started? And how? They had seen the faint smoke of it as they rode away,
the filmy smoke of a young fire not yet under much headway. Was it
reasonable to suppose that some one else had been camping close to them?
This was possible, but not likely. For they would probably have seen
signs of the other evening camp-fire.</p>
<p id="id02295">Eliminating this possibility, there remained—Dug Doble. Had Dug fired
the brush while his companion was saddling for the start? The more Shorty
considered this possibility, the greater force it acquired in his mind.
Dug's hatred of Crawford, Hart, and especially Sanders would be satiated
in part at least if he could wipe their oil bonanza from the map. The
wind had been right. Doble was no fool. He knew that if the fire ran wild
in the chaparral only a miracle could save the Jackpot reservoirs and
plant from destruction.</p>
<p id="id02296">Other evidence accumulated. Cryptic remarks of Doble made during the
day. His anxiety to see Steelman immediately. A certain manner of
ill-repressed triumph whenever he mentioned Sanders or Crawford. These
bolstered Shorty's growing opinion that the man had deliberately fired
the chaparral from a spirit of revenge.</p>
<p id="id02297">Shorty was an outlaw and a bad man. He had killed, and might at any time
kill again. To save the Jackpot from destruction he would not have made a
turn of the hand. But Shorty was a cattleman. He had been brought up in
the saddle and had known the whine of the lariat and the dust of the drag
drive all his days. Every man has his code. Three things stood out in
that of Shorty. He was loyal to the hand that paid him, he stood by his
pals, and he believed in and after his own fashion loved cattle and the
life of which they were the central fact. To destroy the range feed
wantonly was a crime so nefarious that he could not believe Doble guilty
of it. And yet—</p>
<p id="id02298">He could not let the matter lie in doubt. He left the tendejon and rode
to Steelman's house. Before entering he examined carefully both of his
long-barreled forty-fives. He made sure that the six-shooters were in
perfect order and that they rested free in the holsters. That sixth sense
acquired by "bad men," by means of which they sniff danger when it is
close, was telling him that smoke would rise before he left the house.</p>
<p id="id02299">He stepped to the porch and knocked. There came a moment's silence, a
low-pitched murmur of whispering voices carried through an open window,
the shuffling of feet. The door was opened by Brad Steelman. He was alone
in the room.</p>
<p id="id02300">"Where's Dug?" asked Shorty bluntly.</p>
<p id="id02301">"Why, Dug—why, he's here, Shorty. Didn't know it was you. 'Lowed it
might be some one else. So he stepped into another room."</p>
<p id="id02302">The short cowpuncher walked in and closed the door behind him. He stood
with his back to it, facing the other door of the room.</p>
<p id="id02303">"Did you hire Dug to fire the chaparral?" he asked, his voice ominously
quiet.</p>
<p id="id02304">A flicker of fear shot to the eyes of the oil promoter. He recognized
signs of peril and his heart was drenched with an icy chill. Shorty was
going to turn on him, had become a menace.</p>
<p id="id02305">"I—I dunno what you mean," he quavered. "I'll call Dug if you wanta see
him." He began to shuffle toward the inner room.</p>
<p id="id02306">"Hold yore hawsses, Brad. I asked you a question." The cold eyes of the
gunman bored into those of the other man. "Howcome you to hire Dug to
burn the range?"</p>
<p id="id02307">"You know I wouldn't do that," the older man whined. "I got sheep, ain't
I? Wouldn't be reasonable I'd destroy their feed. No, you got a wrong
notion about—"</p>
<p id="id02308">"Yore sheep ain't on the south slope range." Shorty's mind had moved
forward one notch toward certainty. Steelman's manner was that of a man
dodging the issue. It carried no conviction of innocence. "How much you
payin' him?"</p>
<p id="id02309">The door of the inner room opened. Dug Doble's big frame filled the
entrance. The eyes of the two gunmen searched each other. Those of Doble
asked a question. Had it come to a showdown? Steelman sidled over to
the desk where he worked and sat down in front of it. His right hand
dropped into an open drawer, apparently carelessly and without intent.</p>
<p id="id02310">Shorty knew at once that Doble had been drinking heavily. The man was
morose and sullen. His color was high. Plainly he was primed for a
killing if trouble came.</p>
<p id="id02311">"Lookin' for me, Shorty?" he asked.</p>
<p id="id02312">"You fired Bear Cañon," charged the cowpuncher.</p>
<p id="id02313">"So?"</p>
<p id="id02314">"When I went to saddle."</p>
<p id="id02315">Doble's eyes narrowed. "You aimin' to run my business, Shorty?"</p>
<p id="id02316">Neither man lifted his gaze from the other. Each knew that the test had
come once more. They were both men who had "gone bad," in the current
phrase of the community. Both had killed. Both searched now for an
advantage in that steady duel of the eyes. Neither had any fear. The
emotions that dominated were cold rage and caution. Every sense and nerve
in each focalized to one purpose—to kill without being killed.</p>
<p id="id02317">"When yore's is mine, Dug."</p>
<p id="id02318">"Is this yore's?"</p>
<p id="id02319">"Sure is. I've stood for a heap from you. I've let yore ugly temper ride
me. When you killed Tim Harrigan you got me in bad. Not the first time
either. But I'm damned if I'll ride with a coyote low-down enough to burn
the range."</p>
<p id="id02320">"No?"</p>
<p id="id02321">"No."</p>
<p id="id02322">From the desk came the sharp angry bark of a revolver. Shorty felt his
hat lift as a bullet tore through the rim. His eyes swept to Steelman,
who had been a negligible factor in his calculations. The man fired again
and blew out the light. In the darkness Shorty swept out both guns and
fired. His first two shots were directed toward the man behind the desk,
the next two at the spot where Doble had been standing. Another gun was
booming in the room, perhaps two. Yellow fire flashes ripped the
blackness.</p>
<p id="id02323">Shorty whipped open the door at his back, slid through it, and kicked it
shut with his foot as he leaped from the porch. At the same moment he
thought he heard a groan.</p>
<p id="id02324">Swiftly he ran to the cottonwood where he had left his horse tied. He
jerked loose the knot, swung to the saddle, and galloped out of town.</p>
<p id="id02325">The drumming of hoofs came down the wind to a young fellow returning from
a late call on his sweetheart. He wondered who was in such a hurry.</p>
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