<p>Bancroft rose and looked at his watch. “If there’s anything of
particular interest or importance in this, Mr. Jenkins, I’ll be very
glad to listen to it some other time; but I can’t stay any longer this
morning. I ought to have been at my desk half an hour ago.”</p>
<p>Jenkins sat still and waved him back with insistent politeness. “One
moment more, Mr. Bancroft, if you please. I’m coming to the point right
away. This story is of some consequence to me, and I’d like to know if
you can verify it. Have another drink.”</p>
<p>Bancroft swallowed the whiskey at a gulp and Jenkins noticed that his
fingers trembled as he took the glass. He was thinking, “I’d better stay
and find out exactly how much he knows.” Jenkins smiled under his hand
as he smoothed his straggling moustache and watched Bancroft wipe the
sweat from his forehead.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“This man Smith,” Jenkins continued, “John was his name, too—John Smith
and John Mason Hardy were partners in a mining enterprise down in
Mexico. One of them died down there—died, you know, in a quiet, private
sort of way, and the one that came up to the States again was named
Hardy, but it wasn’t the same Hardy that had gone down there. You might
guess, if you wanted to, that Smith killed Hardy and took his name—”</p>
<p>He stopped and drew back suddenly, for Bancroft had sprung forward with
a white, angry face and was shaking a trembling fist under his nose.</p>
<p>“Stop there, you liar!” he exclaimed in low, tense tones. “I didn’t do
that. He died a natural death—of fever—and I took care of him and did
my best to save his life.”</p>
<p>Jenkins recovered his self-possession first. “Oh; then you know all
about it!” he said dryly, with a malicious smile.</p>
<p>Bancroft sank back in his chair drawing his hand across his eyes and
wondering why his self-control had so suddenly gone to pieces. He had
thought himself proof against any surprise, but this man’s sudden blow
and persistent baiting had screwed his nerve tension to <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</SPAN></span>the snapping
point. But he told himself that it probably did not matter anyway, as
Jenkins evidently knew the whole story. With a desperate, defiant look
he turned upon his tormentor.</p>
<p>“Well, what do you want?” he demanded sharply. “Why have you raked up
this old story?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I found it interesting,” Jenkins responded in a leisurely way, “as
an instance of the way things are done on the frontier and, as I told
you at first, I thought you might be able to verify it. For I was
inclined not to believe it, especially as it was about one of the most
prominent and respected citizens of New Mexico. But since you’ve
confessed its truth yourself—well, I’ve got to believe it now. It has
been a very blind trail I’ve followed, crooked and well
hidden—wonderfully well hidden, Mr. Bancroft—and the number of names
you’ve hoisted along its course has been bewildering. But I’ve managed
to track you through ’em all, and to discover in Alexander Bancroft, the
upright, honored, public-spirited citizen of New Mexico, the identical
person of Sumner L. Delafield, the defaulting and absconding financier
of Boston.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Bancroft looked Jenkins sullenly in the eye. “Well, now that you have it
all, what are you going to do about it?”</p>
<p>“Pardon me, Mr. Bancroft,” said Jenkins with exaggerated suavity, “ah,
excuse me, I mean Mr. Delafield—that is for you to say.”</p>
<p>The banker considered for a moment only. Evidently this man knew exactly
what he was about and exactly what he wanted, so that it would be of no
use to beat around the bush. “Will you please say precisely what you
mean?” was his answer.</p>
<p>“That is just what I have been doing, Mr. Delafield.”</p>
<p>“Excuse me, Jenkins, but my name is Bancroft, not Delafield. I have a
legal right to the name of Bancroft, given me by the legislature of
Arizona. You will oblige me by addressing me in that way.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes; I know that; and a lot of trouble I had with this chase until
I found it out! But I thought you might like to hear yourself called
Delafield once more—sort of like meeting an old friend, you know. Won’t
you have another cigar, Mr. Bancroft? No? Well, then, let’s have another
drink.” He poured out two glasses of whiskey. Bancroft <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</SPAN></span>drank his
without demur, but Jenkins barely touched his glass to his lips.</p>
<p>“Well, now, Mr. Bancroft,” Jenkins went on affably, smiling and rubbing
his hands together, “let’s get down to the practical side of this
romantic story from real life. You are getting on so well here under
your present name, and you have a young daughter—” he saw his listener
wince at this, and then carefully repeated his words—“and you have such
a beautiful and charming young daughter, who, as the heiress of a father
who is making a fortune with clean hands and no cloud on his past, can
be taken about the world and can make a good marriage some of these
days; considering all this, I take it for granted that you would prefer
to have this story buried too deep for resurrection. And it is for you
to say whether it shall be buried or not.”</p>
<p>Bancroft sat in silence for a full minute, glaring at the man opposite,
his lips set in a livid line. Jenkins grew nervous in the dead stillness
of the room, and began to fidget. He cautiously rested his right hand on
the bed close by his pistol pocket, and kept his eyes on the banker,
watchful for the first hostile movement. There was need of <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</SPAN></span>wariness,
for Bancroft was debating with himself whether it would be better to go
on to the dreary end of this business and leave the room with a
blackmailer’s noose around his neck, or to whip out his gun, put a
bullet through this man’s brain, and another through his own.</p>
<p>But the fragrance of life rose sweet to his nostrils, and his innate
virility spurred him on to keep up the fight. Apparently he had brought
up against a stone wall, but he had fought too long and too desperately
to be willing to confess himself beaten until he could struggle no
longer. He felt sure that money would keep Jenkins quiet, and after a
while he might find some other means of stopping the man’s mouth for
good. The fellow was always in some dirty job or other, and before long
doubtless some hold on him would become possible. There was Conrad still
to be reckoned with—but that could wait, at least until this man was
silenced.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said quietly, “what do you want? For God’s sake, come to the
point!”</p>
<p>Jenkins drew a breath of relief. “Well, Mr. Bancroft, I’m interested
this year in the success of Johnny Martinez. It’s a matter of the first
importance to me for him to be <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</SPAN></span>elected. But I’m afraid he hasn’t got
much chance if Silverside County and the rest of the South should go
against him. Now, you’ve got more influence down here than anybody else,
and you can swing it for him if you want to. That’s what I want you to
do.”</p>
<p>Bancroft looked up in sudden dismay. He had not expected anything of
this sort. “You know I’m committed to Baxter,” he said.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes; I know. But that’s nothing. In New Mexico it’s not difficult
to change your politics. Why, I thought of coming out for Baxter myself
at first; but I’m solid for Martinez now.”</p>
<p>Bancroft rose and began pacing the half-dozen steps to and fro that the
room afforded, seeking some loophole of escape from his obligations to
Baxter. There were mortgages the Congressman could foreclose that would
balk some of the banker’s most promising plans should he attempt
political treachery. He could, and undoubtedly would, reveal his
associate’s connection with the loan and mortgage operations in the Rio
Grande valley; and Bancroft winced as he thought of this coming to
Lucy’s ears. And in that <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</SPAN></span>matter of Curtis Conrad and José Gonzalez—had
he not put himself at Baxter’s mercy? In this moment of supreme
necessity the naked truth came before him; and he knew it to be true
that he was primarily responsible for any harm that might come to the
young cattleman through Gonzalez. If he did not keep faith with Baxter
the Congressman would tell Curtis who it was that desired his death; and
then Conrad would know where to find Delafield. In short, he knew that
Baxter would stop at nothing to compel his loyalty or punish his
treason. Having contemplated no course except that of fidelity in his
business and political relations with Baxter, the closeness of their
alliance had heretofore given him little uneasiness; and now, in this
crisis, he found himself wholly in the other’s power. He flung himself
into his chair, his face pallid and the perspiration standing in great
drops on his forehead. His breath came hard and his voice was thick as
he asked:</p>
<p>“Is there no alternative?”</p>
<p>“Well, no; none that I can accept,” Jenkins replied meditatively. “You
see, it’s a very important matter for me to be able to make this present
to Johnny. If he wins this fight there’ll be something big in it for me.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span>No; I’ll have to insist upon this as the first condition.”</p>
<p>Bancroft’s lips moved soundlessly as he stared at the man sitting on the
edge of the bed, nursing his knee and showing his white teeth in a
triumphant smile. Then, suddenly, without a word of warning, the banker
leaped forward and seized his companion around the throat. Jenkins,
taken entirely off his guard, succeeded only in grasping his assailant’s
coat as they went down on the bed together in a noiseless scuffle.
Bancroft’s hands closed around his tormentor’s throat, and a savage,
elemental satisfaction thrilled in him and goaded him on. More and more
tightly his fingers clutched as Jenkins struggled under his grip.
Neither of them uttered a sound, and the silence of the room was broken
only by the creaking of the bed or the occasional knocking of a foot
against the chair.</p>
<p>Bancroft’s face was snarled like that of a wild beast as he watched
Jenkins’s visage grow livid and his struggles weaken. Of a sudden reason
returned to him. If this man were to die under his hand there would be
grewsome consequences—and he had enough to deal with already. He stood
up, trembling, and looked anxiously at the still form on the bed.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“You—you’re not dead, Jenkins, are you?” he stammered awkwardly.</p>
<p>Jenkins stirred a little, opened his eyes, put his hand to his throat,
and got up, looking warily at his assailant. “It’s no thanks to you that
I’m not,” he responded sullenly.</p>
<p>“I didn’t mean to kill you—but you—you struck me too hard—it drove me
wild—and for a minute I didn’t know what I was doing.” Jenkins scowled,
rubbed his throat again, and drank a glass of whiskey. Bancroft helped
himself likewise, following it with a copious draught of water. As they
faced each other again Jenkins edged away suspiciously toward the door;
but Bancroft went back at once to the unsettled question.</p>
<p>“It would ruin me, financially and in every other way, to go back on
Baxter. You might just as well kill me outright as insist upon that.”</p>
<p>“But I’m going to insist upon it,” was Jenkins’s sullen answer.</p>
<p>Bancroft made a despairing gesture. “But I tell you, Jenkins, the
thing’s impossible! It would ruin me just as surely as for you to tell
all you know. You’ll have to be satisfied with something else.”</p>
<p>Jenkins leaned against the bed and stared <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span>angrily at Bancroft. Physical
pain had made him obstinate and determined him to press his point, more
to return injury for injury than because he wanted that particular
thing.</p>
<p>“I tell you now,” Bancroft went on, “that I’d rather take the last way
out than try to go back on Baxter. It wouldn’t be the healthiest thing
in the world for you if I should kill myself shut up in this room with
you, would it?”</p>
<p>“Well, I’ll waive that for the present,” Jenkins replied unwillingly;
“but, mind you, it’s only for the present. We’ll talk about it again,
later in the season. For the present I want a good, big sum before you
leave this room, and hereafter I’ve got to have a regular monthly
payment, a check on the first of every month when I don’t come after the
cash myself.”</p>
<p>Bancroft considered for only a moment. His dilemma was clear: he must
either buy this haltered freedom from Jenkins or kill him in his tracks.
This latter alternative was not to be considered; and doubtless before
long it would be possible to turn the tables on the creature and escape
from his clutches.</p>
<p>Jenkins folded away in his pocket-book a check and a roll of bills and
smiled as he <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span>looked at Bancroft’s haggard face. “I hope, Mr. Dela—ah,
pardon me,—Mr. Bancroft, that I have not kept you too long from your
affairs at the bank.” As his eyes followed the banker’s disappearing
figure with a gleam of satisfaction, he patted his breast pocket and
whispered:</p>
<p>“Now for the other score!”</p>
<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX</h2>
<h3>PERILS IN THE NIGHT</h3>
<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">R</span>ed Jack and José Gonzalez joined the forces of the Socorro Springs
ranch while the cattle of the morning’s round-up were being driven to
the watering-place near the ranch house. Across the road from the house
stood a large grove of cottonwoods; a little beyond that, in the valley,
a deep pond had been dug, into which flowed the outlets from the several
springs. The cattle from a score of miles roundabout were accustomed to
come to this pond, with its circling belt of trees, for water and for
midday rest in the shade.</p>
<p>Here the round-up was in progress, and Conrad galloped out to meet the
new hand and give him instructions. As he rode off toward the hills
after a bunch of straggling cattle Curtis looked after him with an
approving eye. “He knows how to fork a horse, at least,” he thought. In
the afternoon José was set to work cutting out and bunching the <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</SPAN></span>two-
and three-year-old steers and later at helping with the branding. Conrad
watched his handling of the branding irons, and he and all the rest
stopped their work to follow his movements with critical eyes as he
roped and brought to the ground a belligerent steer. The superintendent
was well satisfied. “At last I’ve got a man who knows the business and
has some <i>sabe</i>,” he thought. “If he goes on as well as he begins I’ll
keep him after the shipping is done.”</p>
<p>The next day the round-up crept slowly southward, accompanied by the
chuck-wagon and a drove of fresh horses. At noon the cattle gathered
during the morning were bunched at Adobe Springs, the next
watering-place toward the Mexican border. Gonzalez was the only Mexican
among the cowboys, the rest being Americans of one sort or another—from
Texas, Colorado, the Northwest, and the Middle West. All felt toward him
the contemptuous scorn born of difference in race and consequent
conviction of superior merit. They had no scruples about making known
their prejudice, and more than once his face flushed and his hand darted
toward the knife hidden in his bosom. Yet, as the day wore on and they
saw that he excelled the <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</SPAN></span>best of them in handling the lasso and in the
cunning of his movements when cutting out the steers from the herd, they
began to show him the respect that skill of any sort inspires in those
who know with what effort it is acquired.</p>
<p>After supper, when they gathered about the campfire, smoking, and
scoffing good-naturedly at one another’s tales of wondrous experiences,
and talking over the events of the day just gone, they received him upon
an equality with themselves which was only slightly grudged. He told
them, in English more precise than any of them could speak, of Conrad’s
encounter with Rutherford Jenkins in the Blue Front, and their
appreciation of the tale completed the work which his skill as a cowboy
had begun. Thereafter they looked upon José as a comrade and a good
fellow.</p>
<p>Three small adobe houses, of one room each, with flat roofs and earthen
floors, had been built here, as the large and never-failing springs made
the spot a sure rendezvous for every round-up. The locality was infested
by skunks, and the cowboys, who greatly feared midnight bites from the
prowling animals, believing hydrophobia a sure consequence, <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</SPAN></span>usually
preferred to sleep inside the houses, on bunks filled with alfalfa hay.
If they ventured to sleep out-of-doors, they kept small cans of coal oil
ready and, whenever a wakeful man saw one of the small creatures near, a
quick turn of the wrist drenched its fur with the fluid and a brand from
the smouldering campfire tossed after it sent a squealing pillar of
flame flying up the hill and saved them from further disturbance that
night.</p>
<p>A board nailed across a corner of the largest house served Conrad as a
desk. He kept there a lamp, writing materials, and a few books. While
the men sprawled around the campfire and the last gleams of dusky red
faded from the west and the moon bounded up from behind the eastern
hills, he made his memoranda, wrote a letter to be sent to the
post-office by the first chance comer, and lost himself for an hour in a
volume of Shakespeare. When he went outside the men were walking about,
yawning and stretching, ready for sleep. Curtis’s imagination was still
astir from his reading, and the presence of any other human being seemed
an impertinence. But he said, genially:</p>
<p>“Well, boys, you begin to look as if you wanted to turn in. Take
whatever bunks you <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</SPAN></span>like, if you want to go inside. I’m going to sleep
out here.”</p>
<p>“Better have a tin of ile handy,” said Red Jack. “The polecats are sure
likely to nibble your toes if you don’t. The night I slept here last
week I never saw the cusses so bad; durned if one of the critters didn’t
get inside and wake me up smellin’ of my ear. I was some skeered of him
stinkin’ up the place so it couldn’t be slept in for a year, so I jest
had to lay low and wait for him to go outside, and then I doused him
good with ile and throwed the candle at him. I sure reckon he’s holed up
somewhere now, waitin’ till he can afford a new sealskin sacque before
he shows hisself in good sassiety ag’in.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think they’ll bother me to-night,” Curtis responded. At that
moment he felt that nothing could disturb him, if only he could be left
alone with the moonlight and the plain. “I’ll sleep with my boots on,
and my cheeks are not as fat as yours, Jack, so there’ll be no
temptation. Where do you want to bunk, José? You can sleep outside or
in, just as you like.”</p>
<p>Gonzalez replied respectfully that he would rather go in. But presently
he came out again with his blanket and chose a spot against the <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</SPAN></span>wall of
one of the houses. Conrad had gone out to the herd to speak with the man
on patrol and to make sure that all was well. When he returned the men
had disappeared. “Good!” he said to himself. “They’ve all gone inside
and I’ve got the universe to myself.” He did not see the still form in
its gray blanket close against the wall.</p>
<p>Curtis took the red bandanna from his neck and tied it over his ears, to
keep out the tiny things that crawl o’ nights, and couched himself in
his blanket on the gently rising ground with his saddle for a pillow. He
lay down with his face to the east, where the dim and mellow sky,
flooded with moonlight, seemed to recede far back, to the very limits of
space, and leave the huge white globe suspended there in brooding
majesty just above the plain. With long legs outstretched and muscles
relaxed, he lay as still as if asleep, his eyes on its glowing disk. He
knew all that science had discovered or guessed about the moon’s
character and history. But it had companioned him on so many a silent
ride across long miles of dimly gleaming plain, and on so many nights
like this as he lay upon the earth it had gathered his thoughts into its
great white bosom, that he could not image <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</SPAN></span>it to himself as a mere dead
and barren satellite of the earth. More easily could he understand how
the living Cynthia had once leaped earthward and been welcomed with
belief and love.</p>
<p>Conrad’s mind busied itself at first with the play he had just been
reading, but presently wandered to his own affairs and the purpose that
had been the dominant influence of half his life. He chuckled softly as
he remembered the check he had recently received. “I’ve got him on the
run,” he thought, “and I’m bound to lay him out sooner or later. Lord,
but it will be a satisfaction to face him finally! And he’ll not get the
drop on me first, either, unless Providence takes as good care of
rascals as they say it does of fools.” He recalled himself now and then
to listen to the sounds from the sleeping herd, to the hoof-beats of the
horse as the cowboy on watch rode round and round the bunch, and to his
voice singing in a lulling monotone. But gradually thought and will and
sense sank back toward the verge of that great gulf out of which they
spring.</p>
<p>When next he opened his eyes the moon was dropping toward the western
horizon, but he had turned in his sleep and its light <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</SPAN></span>was still upon
his face. Lying motionless, Curtis listened to the sounds from the herd,
his first thought being that something unusual there must have awakened
him. The coyotes were yelping at one another from hill and plain, but
through their barking he could hear the snorting sigh of a steer turning
in its sleep, the tramp of the horse, and the cowboy’s lullaby. He
recognized the voice as that of Peters, who was to have the third watch,
and so knew that it must be well on toward morning. He was about to sink
into slumber again when his gaze fell upon a small black and white
animal nosing among some rocks near by. “Poor little devil! If it wakens
any of the boys it will get a taste of hell out of proportion to its
sins,” he thought, and decided that he would drive it away before any
one else discovered it. But the languor of sleep still held him and not
a muscle moved as his eyelids began to droop. Then, through his
half-shut eyes, he became conscious that something was moving, over
against one of the houses, among the shadows. His eyelids lifted again
and he saw the Mexican rise out of his blanket, look about, and in a
crouching posture move stealthily toward him. Something in his hand
glittered in the moonlight.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“It’s José,” thought Conrad. “He’s coming for the skunk with a can of
oil. Quick, or I’ll be too late!” He sprang to a sitting posture and
flung out one arm. As he did so he noticed with sleepy surprise that
José was not facing toward the animal but was coming toward him. Then,
before he had time to speak, the Mexican turned, a flying something
shone in the moonlight like an electric flash, and Conrad’s eyes,
following the gleam, saw the little creature pinned to the ground with a
long knife through its neck and the gray sand darkening with its blood.</p>
<p>“Why, José, that was a wonderful throw!” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Yes, señor,” the man replied quietly, as he stooped to draw out the
knife and wipe it on the sand, “I am rather good at that sort of thing.”</p>
<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X</h2>
<h3>BY A HAIR’S BREADTH</h3>
<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">C</span>urtis Conrad rode to the farther side of a hill sloping gently
northeast of the houses as the outfit was getting under way the next
morning. He remembered having seen there a rather uncommon species of
cactus, and he thought to make sure of it in order to secure a specimen
for Lucy Bancroft’s collection when next he should pass that way on a
homeward trip. José Gonzalez noted his action and presently, when a
steer broke wildly from the herd and ran back, it was José who dashed
after it. But, instead of heading it off and driving it back, he so
manœuvred that he contrived to get it around the hill behind which he
had seen Conrad disappear. The superintendent was digging busily in the
ground with his pocket-knife, having decided to take up the plant and
leave it in the house in readiness for his return journey.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Assured that the rest of the outfit was out of sight beyond the hill,
Gonzalez left the steer to its own devices and galloped straight toward
and behind the kneeling figure, his long knife drawn but concealed
against his leg. Conrad’s attention was engrossed in what he was doing
and his thoughts were all of Lucy Bancroft, of how pleased she would be
to get this rare specimen, and of how necessary it would be for him to
help her plant it. José checked his horse into a walk and leaned
forward, his eyes fastened on the other’s back, his knife lying half
hidden in his palm. On the soft ground the hoof-beats of the horse made
little sound and their faint, unresounding thud was masked by the noises
from the moving herd.</p>
<p>Gonzalez drew rein within a few yards of his object and lifted his arm,
with the knife balanced in his hand. At that instant the steer bellowed,
and Curtis leaped to his feet, on the alert at once lest something had
gone wrong with the herd. He saw the single steer and, wheeling around
to look for others, his glance took in the Mexican, swerving his horse
down the hill and deftly returning the knife to his belt. “Are you after
the steer, José?” he called. “Is that the only one loose?”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Yes, señor. The rest are all right. This one has given me a chase, but
I’ll have him back right away.”</p>
<p>“Stop a minute, José. Would you mind letting me use your knife? Mine’s
too short and I haven’t anything else.”</p>
<p>Gonzalez rode up, dismounted, and held out the knife with a courteous
smile. As he stood back with one leg forward, arms folded, and head held
high, Curtis thought him an image of dashing, picturesque, masculine
comeliness. “José,” he said, “how did you get such skill in throwing the
knife? I never saw anybody do the trick better than you did it last
night. I shouldn’t like to have you,” and he smiled as he returned the
weapon, “aim this thing at me as you did at that polecat.”</p>
<p>An answering smile flashed over José’s dark face, lighting up his eyes
and showing a row of white teeth beneath his moustache. “I have
practised it much, señor. It is not easy.”</p>
<p>The next day, Conrad, Gonzalez, and several others were getting together
some cattle in the foot-hills when three of the largest steers broke
away and raced wildly back toward their grazing grounds. The
superintendent <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</SPAN></span>called the Mexican to help him, and told the others to
take the remainder of the cattle, with all they might find on the way,
back to the day herd.</p>
<p>Two gallant figures they made as they galloped across the plain, the
wind blowing up the wide brims of their hats, the grace and freedom of
strength and skill in every movement of body and limb. Lariats were at
their saddle horns, and Curtis carried a six-shooter in his belt, but
Gonzalez had only his knife, thrust into his boot leg. They circled and
headed off the steers, which eluded and dashed past them again and
again, until presently Conrad noticed that the largest of the three
acted as a sort of leader. “Rope him, José,” he called, “and then we can
manage the others.”</p>
<p>As Gonzalez in response came galloping toward the animal from one side,
Curtis rushed past it on the other to prevent it from getting away and
giving another chase. He glanced at the loop that came whirring through
the air and his heart gave a bound of vexation. “The fool greaser is
throwing too far,” he muttered. With an instinct of sudden peril he dug
in his spurs and his horse made a quick, long leap. He whirled about <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</SPAN></span>in
time to see the snakey noose fall on the spot whence they had jumped.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter with you, José?” he shouted. “You nearly roped me
instead of the steer! Try it again.” Gonzalez coiled his rope and
galloped after the steer and half an hour later the two men rode into
the round-up, driving the panting and humbled animals.</p>
<p>One of the younger and less experienced men, Billy Black, generally
known as “Billy Kid,” happened to lame his horse and bruise himself that
day, and was ordered to stay in camp to nurse his knee. At Rock Springs,
where they made camp next day, a man who gave his name as Andy Miller
rode up and asked for a job. He explained that he had been working on a
little ranch over toward Randall but had got tired of the place and was
pushing for the railroad. Hampered by Billy Black’s accident, Conrad was
glad of the opportunity and tested his skill with horse and rope.</p>
<p>“You’ll do,” he said. “I’m short of hands, and you can stay with us
until we get to the railroad if you like.”</p>
<p>The new man was stockily built, and looked strong and agile. Around the
campfire that <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</SPAN></span>night he won his way at once into the good graces of the
other men, cracking jokes, telling stories, and roaring out cowboy songs
until bedtime. They were so hilarious that Conrad joined their circle,
smoked his after-supper pipe with them, and laughed at Miller’s jokes
and yarns.</p>
<p>The Rock Springs watering-hole was in a hilly region, broken here and
there by stony gulches. The outflow from the springs ran through a
ravine which furrowed the hillside to its foot, turned abruptly
westward, and widened out into a goodly pool, where the cattle waded and
drank. The camp lay on the hillside above the springs, and the cattle
were bunched over its brow on the other side.</p>
<p>Conrad wakened early and an inviting image came to him of that pool,
lying still and clear in the dim gray light, untroubled by the miring
hoofs of the cattle. No one else, except the Chinese cook, busy with his
breakfast fire, seemed to be awake, and no one stirred as Curtis moved
down the hill, past the springs, and over the rise beyond. But Gonzalez,
motionless in his blanket, watched his departure. And presently, when
the cook had disappeared in the chuck-wagon, José rose, cast a cautious
glance over the sleeping camp, <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</SPAN></span>and followed Conrad, taking advantage of
occasional boulders, clumps of mesquite, greasewood, and yucca to
conceal his movements. At the springs he turned down the gulch,
following its course to the basin of the drinking hole, where he hid
behind a great boulder, barely ten feet from the bank where lay the
other’s clothing.</p>
<p>With wary eyes he watched while the superintendent waded out to the
deepest part of the pool, ducked and splashed, swam a little, and
presently returned to the shore. Through the brightening air the lean
and sinewy body with its swelling muscles gleamed like rose-tinted
marble below the tanned face and neck. Behind the boulder José crouched
closer and drew the knife from his belt, while his body grew tense as he
watched Conrad rub himself down and put on his clothes.</p>
<p>“Will he never keep still a second?” Gonzalez asked himself impatiently,
as he poised his knife. Curtis sat down on a flat stone and reached for
his shoes and stockings, whistling a gay little melody from the last
comic opera he had heard in San Francisco.</p>
<p>A sound of shouting and the muffled noise of rushing cattle broke
through the morning air, which had been as still and untroubled <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</SPAN></span>as the
surface of the pool. Conrad, his music silenced and nerves alert, faced
quickly toward the camp, turning his body from the waist upward and
giving Gonzalez a fair three-quarters view of his torso.</p>
<p>The Mexican, ready and waiting, seized an instant of arrested motion,
and sent the poised weapon straight for his heart. As it left José’s
hand, the stone on which Curtis sat, yielding to the twisting motion of
his body, slipped under him, and he threw out his left arm to preserve
his balance. He was aware of something bright cleaving the air, of a
sudden pain in his arm, and a stinging point in his side. But before his
brain could realize what had happened, he saw José Gonzalez leap from
behind the boulder and rush toward him, befouling the air with a string
of Spanish oaths.</p>
<p>Conrad sprang to his feet and wheeled, with right fist ready to meet the
attack, before José could reach him. The Mexican flew at him with both
arms outstretched, meaning to seize his throat and throttle him before
he could comprehend his danger. Curtis saw the open guard and landed a
blow on his chest which sent him staggering backward. But he returned at
once, with left arm raised <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</SPAN></span>in defence and right hand ready to seize the
other’s shirt collar and choke him senseless.</p>
<p>For a moment only was Conrad at a disadvantage by reason of the
suddenness of the assault. But with the knife still bedded in his
bleeding and helpless left arm, his only weapon was his right fist,
which he must use for both defence and attack. The Mexican’s eyes were
fired with the passion of combat, and the other, ignorant of why they
were fighting, knew only, by his blanched face and set jaws, that his
purpose was deadly.</p>
<p>Gonzalez, after that first blow upon his chest, was wary. He danced
around Conrad, making feints and trying to get inside his guard. But
Curtis, whose brain was working in lightning-like flashes, did not waste
his strength pounding the air. He kept his assailant eluding his feints
and jumping to escape pretended charges, thinking to wear him out in
that way. He soon saw that he was the superior in boxing skill, as well
as being both taller and heavier than his foe, and he began to feel
assured of final victory, notwithstanding his useless hand and disabled
arm.</p>
<p>José’s effort was constantly toward Conrad’s left side, and Curtis
guessed that he was <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</SPAN></span>trying to get possession of the knife still
sticking in his arm. He knew that if Gonzalez recovered that weapon his
chance of life would be small indeed. His bare feet were bleeding from
the sharp little stones on the bank of the pool, but he was conscious
neither of that nor of pain in arm or side, though the blood from his
wound was making a red streak down his shirt and trousers. But he
continued to hear, with a kind of divided consciousness, the sound of
shouts, the rushing of cattle, and the hoofs of galloping horses. In the
back of his brain he knew that there had been a stampede of the herd,
and with attention absorbed in his fight for life, the thought that he
was needed at the camp spurred him on to more desperate effort.</p>
<p>José made a dash for his left side, but Curtis turned and with all his
force sent a blow which caught the Mexican, intent on the knife, with
shoulder unguarded. Gonzalez spun half round and reeled backward. Conrad
had planted one foot on a rounding stone, and as he delivered the blow
it slipped and sent him headlong. He was up again in an instant, barely
in time to save himself from José’s fingers, which clutched at his
throat. But Gonzalez had got inside his guard and <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</SPAN></span>they gripped, the one
with one arm and the other with two, for what each felt must be the
final struggle. The American caught José’s left arm between their two
bodies and, reaching around him, grasped the other wrist in his right
hand. They swayed back and forth, José exerting all the strength of his
muscles to free his arms, while Conrad, gripping him close, used all the
remnant of his strength to throw him down.</p>
<p>By this time the Mexican’s eyes were gleaming with an ugly light and his
olive cheeks were flushed with anger. Whatever the purpose that had
moved him at first, Curtis saw that he was fighting now with the
aboriginal rage of conflict, with the fierce hate born of the blows he
had received. He kicked wildly at the superintendent’s shins and
accidentally planted the heel of his boot squarely upon the other’s bare
foot. Conrad’s face twitched with the hurt, and with a snarling grin
Gonzalez lifted the other for similar purpose, forgetting shrewd tactics
of battle in the lust of giving pain to his opponent. But Curtis caught
the momentary advantage of unstable balance and with a twist and a lunge
they came down together, Conrad’s left shoulder striking against a stone
beside which <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</SPAN></span>the Mexican fell. Thrilling with the surety of triumph,
his enemy pinned to the ground, Curtis was barely conscious of a
snapping in his shoulder and a sharp pain in his collar bone. With one
knee on Gonzalez’s chest, he pulled the knife from his left arm, broke
it across the boulder, and threw the bloodstained pieces far out into
the pond. His assailant was at his mercy now and the heat and anger of
combat ebbed from his veins as he looked down at the Mexican’s
unresisting figure.</p>
<p>“You have bested me this time, Don Curtis,” said Gonzalez quietly.</p>
<p>“Get up, José,” replied Conrad rising, and the two men, panting from
their conflict, faced each other. José stood with his arms folded and
head erect and looked at his employer with unafraid eyes, in which
smouldered only the traces of his recent rage. Conrad surveyed him
thoughtfully for a moment before he spoke.</p>
<p>“José, what did you do it for?”</p>
<p>The Mexican smiled but made no reply.</p>
<p>“Have you got anything against me?” Conrad persisted. “Do you think I’ve
mistreated you or injured you in any way?”</p>
<p>“No, señor, I have nothing against you.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Then what—by God, are you one of Dell Baxter’s thugs? Has he sent you
down here to stick me in the back?” Impelled by the flash of sudden
conviction, Conrad thrust his face close to the other’s and glared into
his eyes. Gonzalez stepped back a pace and looked gravely across the
hill at the reddening sky. His composed face and closely shut lips
showed that he did not intend to answer.</p>
<p>“Oh, all right!” Curtis exclaimed. “I don’t expect you to peach on your
pal. But I reckon I’ve sure struck the right trail this time. And look
here, José! Was it me you were after when you stuck your knife in that
skunk?”</p>
<p>The Mexican’s eyes fell and his black brows met in a frown. He was
thinking how much trouble this man had given him by springing up so
unexpectedly that night. But for that it would all have been so easy and
simple!</p>
<p>“I reckon it was!” Conrad went on hotly. “And I reckon it was me instead
of the steer you rode after the next morning, with your knife ready when
I looked up. And I reckon it was me instead of the steer you tried to
rope when you made that remarkable miss. I’ve been a fool to trust a
damned greaser, even when he was in plain sight. But look <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</SPAN></span>here, José
Gonzalez!” Conrad stopped and glared into the Mexican’s sombre and
inscrutable eyes. Holding his bleeding left arm in his right hand he
leaned forward, head thrust out and eyes blazing.</p>
<p>“Just you look here, José Gonzalez!” he repeated. “I’m onto your little
game now, and if I can’t be a match for any greaser that ever tried to
stick a man in the back, I’ll deserve all I’ll get! Just come on and try
it again whenever you like! Keep at work with the round-up if you want
to—I’m not going to give you your time for this. But I am going to
write to Dell Baxter that I’m onto his scheme and that the minute you
make another crack at me there’ll be a bullet in your brain—and another
in his as soon as I can get to Santa Fe to put it there, and that he’d
better call you off if he wants to save his own skin. But if you can get
me without my catching on first you’re welcome, that’s all!”</p>
<p>The rush of running cattle swept across their preoccupied ears, and both
men turned to see a dozen steers sweep past the other end of the pond
and up the hill.</p>
<p>“Quick, José! Help me head them off and turn them into the pond!” Conrad
exclaimed <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</SPAN></span>as he started off in his bare feet. His long strides covered
the distance quickly, and with hoots and yells and waving arm he soon
turned their course down the hillside toward the water. Gonzalez was
close behind, and together they manœuvred the frightened beasts to
the pond, where the animals forgot their panic, waded in quietly, and
began to drink.</p>
<p>“José,” said the superintendent, as he sat down at the water’s edge and
began to bathe his muddy, bleeding feet, “I shall not mention this
affair to any one here. I’ll say that a steer horned me just now. I’ve
broken my collar bone, I think, and I’ve got this cut in my arm, and
I’ll have to go to Golden at once to get patched up. When I come back I
want you to remember what I just told you about getting daylight through
your skull if you try any of your tricks on me again. There comes Red
Jack after these cattle. Go and help drive them back to camp.”</p>
<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</SPAN></span></p>
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