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Title: Bar-20 Days

Author: Clarence E. Mulford

Release Date: January, 2004  [EBook #4922]
[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
[This file was first posted on March 31, 2002]

Edition: 10

Language: English

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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, BAR-20 DAYS ***




Etext prepared by Dagny, [email protected]
             and John Bickers, [email protected]



                            BAR-20 DAYS

                                 BY

                        CLARENCE E. MULFORD



                AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED TO "M. D."





                            BAR-20 DAYS



                             CHAPTER I

                         ON A STRANGE RANGE

Two tired but happy punchers rode into the coast town and dismounted
in front of the best hotel. Putting up their horses as quickly as
possible they made arrangements for sleeping quarters and then
hastened out to attend to business. Buck had been kind to delegate
this mission to them and they would feel free to enjoy what pleasures
the town might afford. While at that time the city was not what it is
now, nevertheless it was capable of satisfying what demands might be
made upon it by two very active and zealous cow-punchers. Their first
experience began as they left the hotel.

"Hey, you cow-wrastlers!" said a not unpleasant voice, and they turned
suspiciously as it continued: "You've shore got to hang up them guns
with the hotel clerk while you cavorts around on this range. This is
/fence/ country."

They regarded the speaker's smiling face and twinkling eyes and
laughed. "Well, yo're the foreman if you owns that badge," grinned
Hopalong, cheerfully. "We don't need no guns, nohow, in this town, we
don't. Plumb forgot we was toting them. But mebby you can tell us
where lawyer Jeremiah T. Jones grazes in daylight?"

"Right over yonder, second floor," replied the marshal. "An' come to
think of it, mebby you better leave most of yore cash with the guns--
somebody'll take it away from you if you don't. It'd be an awful
temptation, an' flesh is weak."

"Huh!" laughed Johnny, moving back into the hotel to leave his gun,
closely followed by Hopalong. "Anybody that can turn that little trick
on me an' Hoppy will shore earn every red cent; why, we've been to
Kansas City!"

As they emerged again Johnny slapped his pocket, from which sounded a
musical jingling. "If them weak people try anything on us, we may come
between them and /their/ money!" he boasted.

"From the bottom of my heart I pity you," called the marshal, watching
them depart, a broad smile illuminating his face. "In about twenty-
four hours they'll put up a holler for me to go git it back for 'em,"
he muttered. "An' I almost believe I'll do it, too. I ain't never seen
none of that breed what ever left a town without empty pockets an'
aching heads--an' the smarter they think they are the easier they
fall." A fleeting expression of discontent clouded the smile, for the
lure of the open range is hard to resist when once a man has ridden
free under its sky and watched its stars. "An' I wish I was one of 'em
again," he muttered, sauntering on.

Jeremiah T. Jones, Esq., was busy when his door opened, but he leaned
back in his chair and smiled pleasantly at their bow-legged entry,
waving them towards two chairs. Hopalong hung his sombrero on a letter
press and tipped his chair back against the wall; Johnny hung grimly
to his hat, sat stiffly upright until he noticed his companion's pose,
and then, deciding that everything was all right, and that Hopalong
was better up in etiquette than himself, pitched his sombrero
dexterously over the water pitcher and also leaned against the wall.
Nobody could lose him when it came to doing the right thing.

"Well, gentlemen, you look tired and thirsty. This is considered good
for all human ailments of whatsoever nature, degree, or wheresoever
located, in part or entirety, /ab initio/," Mr. Jones remarked,
filling glasses. There was no argument and when the glasses were
empty, he continued: "Now what can I do for you? From the Bar-20? Ah,
yes; I was expecting you. We'll get right at it," and they did. Half
an hour later they emerged on the street, free to take in the town, or
to have the town take them in,--which was usually the case.

"What was that he said for us to keep away from?" asked Johnny with
keen interest.

"Sh! Not so loud," chuckled Hopalong, winking prodigiously.

Johnny pulled tentatively at his upper lip but before he could reply
his companion had accosted a stranger.

"Friend, we're pilgrims in a strange land, an' we don’t know the
trails. Can you tell us where the docks are?"

"Certainly; glad to. You'll find them at the end of this street," and
he smilingly waved them towards the section of the town which Jeremiah
T. Jones had specifically and earnestly warned them to avoid.

"Wonder if you're as thirsty as me?" solicitously inquired Hopalong of
his companion.

"I was just wondering the same," replied Johnny. "Say," he confided in
a lower voice, "blamed if I don't feel sort of lost without that Colt.
Every time I lifts my right laig she goes too high--don't feel
natural, nohow."

"Same here; I'm allus feeling to see if I lost it," Hopalong
responded. "There ain't no rubbing, no weight, nor nothing."

"Wish I had something to put in its place, blamed if I don't."

"Why, now yo're talking--mebby we can buy something," grinned
Hopalong, happily. "Here's a hardware store--come on in."

The clerk looked up and laid aside his novel. "Good-morning,
gentlemen; what can I do for you? We've just got in some fine new
rifles," he suggested.

The customers exchanged looks and it was Hopalong who first found his
voice. "Nope, don't want no rifles," he replied, glancing around. "To
tell the truth, I don't know just what we do want, but we want
something, all right--got to have it. It's a funny thing, come to
think of it; I can't never pass a hardware store without going in an'
buying something. I've been told my father was the same way, so I must
inherit it. It's the same with my pardner, here, only he gets his
weakness from his whole family, and it's different from mine. He can't
pass a saloon without going in an' buying something."

"Yo're a cheerful liar, an' you know it," retorted Johnny. "You know
the reason why I goes in saloons so much--you'd never leave 'em if I
didn't drag you out. He inherits that weakness from his grandfather,
twice removed," he confided to the astonished clerk, whose expression
didn't know what to express.

"Let's see: a saw?" soliloquized Hopalong. "Nope; got lots of 'em, an'
they're all genuine Colts," he mused thoughtfully. "Axe? Nails?
Augurs? Corkscrews? Can we use a corkscrew, Johnny? Ah, thought I'd
wake you up. Now, what was it Cookie said for us to bring him? Bacon?
Got any bacon? Too bad--oh, don't apologize; it's all right. Cold
chisels--that's the thing if you ain't got no bacon. Let me see a
three-pound cold chisel about as big as that,"--extending a huge and
crooked forefinger,--"an' with a big bulge at one end. Straight in the
middle, circling off into a three-cornered wavy edge on the other
side. What? Look here! You can't tell us nothing about saloons that we
don't know. I want a three-pound cold chisel, any kind, so it's cold."

Johnny nudged him. "How about them wedges?"

"Twenty-five cents a pound," explained the clerk, groping for his
bearings.

"They might do," Hopalong muttered, forcing the article mentioned into
his holster. "Why, they're quite hocus-pocus. You take the brother to
mine, Johnny."

"Feels good, but I dunno," his companion muttered. "Little wide at the
sharp end. Hey, got any loose shot?" he suddenly asked, whereat
Hopalong beamed and the clerk gasped. It didn't seem to matter whether
they bought bacon, cold chisels, wedges, or shot; yet they looked
sober.

"Yes, sir; what size?"

"Three pounds of shot, I said!" Johnny rumbled in his throat. "Never
mind what size."

"We never care about size when we buy shot," Hopalong smiled. "But,
Johnny, wouldn't them little screws be better?" he asked, pointing
eagerly.

"Mebby; reckon we better get 'em mixed--half of each," Johnny gravely
replied. "Anyhow, there ain't much difference."

The clerk had been behind that counter for four years, and executing
and filling orders had become a habit with him; else he would have
given them six pounds of cold chisels and corkscrews, mixed. His mouth
was still open when he weighed out the screws.

"Mix 'em! Mix 'em!" roared Hopalong, and the stunned clerk complied,
and charged them for the whole purchase at the rate set down for
screws.

Hopalong started to pour his purchase into the holster which, being
open at the bottom, gayly passed the first instalment through to the
floor. He stopped and looked appealingly at Johnny, and Johnny, in
pain from holding back screams of laughter, looked at him indignantly.
Then a guileless smile crept over Hopalong's face and he stopped the
opening with a wad of wrapping paper and disposed of the shot and
screws, Johnny following his laudable example. After haggling a moment
over the bill they paid it and walked out, to the apparent joy of the
clerk.

"Don't laugh, Kid; you'll spoil it all," warned Hopalong, as he noted
signs of distress on his companion's face. "Now, then; what was it we
said about thirst? Come on; I see one already."

Having entered the saloon and ordered, Hopalong beamed upon the
bartender and shoved his glass back again. "One more, kind stranger;
it's good stuff."

"Yes, feels like a shore-enough gun," remarked Johnny, combining two
thoughts in one expression, which is brevity.

The bartender looked at him quickly and then stood quite still and
listened, a puzzled expression on his face.

/Tic--tickety-tick--tic-tic/, came strange sounds from the other side
of the bar. Hopalong was intently studying a chromo on the wall and
Johnny gazed vacantly out of the window.

"What's that? What in the deuce is that?" quickly demanded the man
with the apron, swiftly reaching for his bung-starter.

/Tickety-tic-tic-tic-tic-tic/, the noise went on, and Hopalong, slowly
rolling his eyes, looked at the floor. A screw rebounded and struck
his foot, while shot were rolling recklessly.

"Them's making the noise," Johnny explained after critical survey.

"Hang it! I knowed we ought to 'a' got them wedges!" Hopalong
exclaimed, petulantly, closing the bottom of the sheath. "Why, I won't
have no gun left soon 'less I holds it in." The complaint was
plaintive.

"Must be filtering through the stopper," Johnny remarked. "But don't
it sound nice, especially when it hits that brass cuspidor!"

The bartender, grasping the mallet even more firmly, arose on his toes
and peered over the bar, not quite sure of what he might discover. He
had read of infernal machines although he had never seen one. "What
the blazes!" he exclaimed in almost a whisper; and then his face went
hard. "You get out of here, quick! You've had too much already! I've
seen drunks, but-- G'wan! Get out!"

"But we ain't begun yet," Hopalong interposed hastily. "You see--"

"Never mind what I see! I'd hate to see what you'll be seeing before
long. God help you when you finish!" rather impolitely interrupted the
bartender. He waved the mallet and made for the end of the counter
with no hesitancy and lots of purpose in his stride. "G'wan, now! Get
out!"

"Come on, Johnny; I'd shoot him only we didn't put no powder with the
shot," Hopalong remarked sadly, leading the way out of the saloon and
towards the hardware store.

"You better get out!" shouted the man with the mallet, waving the
weapon defiantly. "An' don't you never come back again, neither," he
warned.

"Hey, it leaked," Hopalong said pleasantly as he closed the door of
the hardware store behind him, whereupon the clerk jumped and reached
for the sawed-off shotgun behind the counter. Sawed-off shotguns are
great institutions for arguing at short range, almost as effective as
dynamite in clearing away obstacles.

"Don't you come no nearer!" he cried, white of face. "You git out, or
I'll let /this/ leak, an' give you /all/ shot, an' more than you can
carry!"

"Easy! Easy there, pardner; we want them wedges," Hopalong replied,
somewhat hurriedly. "The others ain't no good; I choked on the very
first screw. Why, I wouldn't hurt you for the world," Hopalong assured
him, gazing interestedly down the twin tunnels.

Johnny leaned over a nail keg and loosed the shot and screws into it,
smiling with childlike simplicity as he listened to the
tintinnabulation of the metal shower among the nails. "It /does/ drop
when you let go of it," he observed.

"Didn't I tell you it would? I allus said so," replied Hopalong,
looking back to the clerk and the shotgun. "Didn't I, stranger?"

The clerk's reply was a guttural rumbling, ninety per cent profanity,
and Hopalong, nodding wisely, picked up two wedges. "Johnny, here's
yore gun. If this man will stop talking to hisself and drop that lead-
sprayer long enough to take our good money, we'll wear em."

He tossed a gold coin on the table, and the clerk, still holding
tightly to the shotgun, tossed the coin into the cash box and
cautiously slid the change across the counter. Hopalong picked up the
money and, emptying his holster into the nail keg, followed his
companion to the street, in turn followed slowly by the suspicious
clerk. The door slammed shut behind them, the bolt shot home, and the
clerk sat down on a box and cogitated.

Hopalong hooked his arm through Johnny's and started down the street.
"I wonder what that feller thinks about us, anyhow. I'm glad Buck sent
Red over to El Paso instead of us. Won't he be mad when we tell him
all the fun we've had?" he asked, grinning broadly.

They were to meet Red at Dent's store on the way back and ride home
together.



They were strangely clad for their surroundings, the chaps glaringly
out of place in the Seaman's Port, and winks were exchanged by the
regular /habitues/ when the two punchers entered the room and called
for drinks. They were very tired and a little under the weather, for
they had made the most of their time and spent almost all of their
money; but any one counting on robbing them would have found them
sober enough to look out for themselves. Night had found them ready to
go to the hotel, but on the way they felt that they must have one more
bracer, and finish their exploration of Jeremiah T. Jones' tabooed
section. The town had begun to grow wearisome and they were vastly
relieved when they realized that the rising sun would see them in the
saddle and homeward bound, headed for God's country, which was the
only place for cow-punchers after all.

"Long way from the home port, ain't you, mates?" queried a tar of
Hopalong. Another seaman went to the bar to hold a short, whispered
consultation with the bartender, who at first frowned and then finally
nodded assent.

"Too far from home, if that's what yo're driving at," Hopalong
replied. "Blast these hard trails--my feet are shore on the prod. Ever
meet my side pardner? Johnny, here's a friend of mine, a salt-water
puncher, an' he's welcome to the job, too."

Johnny turned his head ponderously and nodded. "Pleased to meet you,
stranger. An' what'll you all have?"

"Old Holland, mate," replied the other, joining them.

"All up!" invited Hopalong, waving them forward. "Might as well do
things right or not at all. Them's my sentiments, which I holds as
proper. Plain rye, general, if you means me," he replied to the
bartender's look of inquiry.

He drained the glass and then made a grimace. "Tastes a little off--
reckon it's my mouth; nothing tastes right in this cussed town. Now,
up on our--" He stopped and caught at the bar. "Holy smoke! That's
shore alcohol!"

Johnny was relaxing and vainly trying to command his will power.
"Something's wrong; what's the matter?" he muttered sleepily.

"Guess you meant beer; you ain't used to drinking whiskey," grinned
the bartender, derisively, and watching him closely.

"I can--drink as much whiskey as--" and, muttering, Johnny slipped to
the floor.

"That wasn't whiskey!" cried Hopalong, sleepily. "that liquor was
/fixed/!" he shouted, sudden anger bracing him. "An' I'm going to fix
/you/, too!" he added, reaching for his gun, and drawing forth a
wedge. His sailor friend leaped at him, to go down like a log, and
Hopalong, seething with rage, wheeled and threw the weapon at the man
behind the bar, who also went down. The wedge, glancing from his
skull, swept a row of bottles and glasses from the shelf and,
caroming, went through the window.

In an instant Hopalong was the vortex of a mass of struggling men and,
handicapped as he was, fought valiantly, his rage for the time
neutralizing the effects of the drug. But at last, too sleepy to stand
or think, he, too, went down.

"By the Lord, that man's a fighter!" enthusiastically remarked the
leader, gently touching his swollen eye. "George must 'a' put an awful
dose in that grog."

"Lucky for us he didn't have no gun--the wedge was bad enough,"
groaned a man on the floor, slowly sitting up. "Whoever swapped him
that wedge for his gun did us a good turn, all right."

A companion tentatively readjusted his lip. "I don't envy Wilkins his
job breaking in that man when he gets awake."

"Don't waste no time, mates," came the order. "Up with 'em an' aboard.
We've done our share; let the mate do his, an' be hanged. Hullo,
Portsmouth; coming around, eh?" he asked the man who had first felt
the wedge. "I was scared you was done for that time."

"No more shanghaiing hair pants for me, no more!" thickly replied
Portsmouth. "Oh, my head, it's bust open!"

"Never mind about the bartender--let him alone; we can't waste no time
with him now!" commanded the leader sharply. "Get these fellers on
board before we're caught with 'em. We want our money after that."

"All clear!" came a low call from the lookout at the door, and soon a
shadowy mass surged across the street and along a wharf. There was a
short pause as a boat emerged out of the gloom, some whispered orders,
and then the squeaking of oars grew steadily fainter in the direction
of a ship which lay indistinct in the darkness.



                             CHAPTER II

                            THE REBOUND

A man moaned and stirred restlessly in a bunk, muttering incoherently.
A stampeded herd was thundering over him, the grinding hoofs beating
him slowly to death. He saw one mad steer stop and lower its head to
gore him and just as the sharp horns touched his skin, he awakened.
Slowly opening his bloodshot eyes he squinted about him, sick, weak,
racking with pain where heavy shoes had struck him in the melee, his
head reverberating with roars which seemed almost to split it open.
Slowly he regained his full senses and began to make out his
surroundings. He was in a bunk which moved up and down, from side to
side, and was never still. There was a small, round window near his
feet--thank heaven it was open, for he was almost suffocated by the
foul air and the heat. Where was he? What had happened? Was there a
salty odor in the air, or was he still dreaming? Painfully raising
himself on one elbow he looked around and caught sight of a man in the
bunk across. It was Johnny Nelson! Then, bit by bit, the whole thing
came to him and he cursed heartily as he reviewed it and reached the
only possible conclusion. He was at sea! He, Hopalong Cassidy, the
best fighting unit of a good fighting outfit, shanghaied and at sea!
Drugged, beaten, and stolen to labor on a ship.

Johnny was muttering and moaning and Hopalong slowly climbed out of
the narrow bunk, unsteadily crossed the moving floor, and shook him.
"Reckon he's in a stampede, too!" he growled. "They shore raised h--l
with us. Oh, what a beating we got! But we'll pass it along with
trimmings."

Johnny's eyes opened and he looked around in confusion. "Wha',
Hopalong!"

"Yes; it's me, the prize idiot of a blamed good pair of 'em. How'd you
feel?"

"Sleepy an' sick. My eyes ache an' my head's splitting. Where's Buck
an' the rest?"

Hopalong sat down on the edge of the bunk and sore luridly,
eloquently, beautifully, with a fervor and polish which left nothing
to be desired in that line, and caused his companion to gaze at him in
astonishment.

"I had a mighty bad dream, but you must 'a' had one a whole lot worse,
to listen to you," Johnny remarked. "Gee, you're going some! What's
the matter with you. You sick, too?"

Thereupon Hopalong unfolded the tale of woe and when Johnny had
grasped its import and knew that his dream had been a stern reality,
he straightway loosed his vocabulary and earned a draw. "Well, I'm
going back again," he finished, with great decision, arising to make
good his assertion.

"Swim or walk?" asked Hopalong nonchalantly.

"Huh! Oh, Lord!"

"Well, I ain't going to either swim or walk," Hopalong soliloquized.
"I'm just going to stay right here in this one-by-nothing cellar an'
spoil the health an' good looks of any pirate that comes down that
ladder to get me out." He looked around, interested in life once more,
and his trained eye grasped the strategic worth of their position.
"Only one at a time, an' down that ladder," he mused, thoughtfully.
"Why, Johnny, we owns this range as long as we wants to. They can't
get us out. But, say, if only we had our guns!" he sighed,
regretfully.

"You're right as far as you go; but you don't go to the eating part.
We'll starve, an' we ain't got no water. I can drink about a bucketful
right now," moodily replied his companion.

"Well, yo're right; but mebby we can find food an' water."

"Don't see no signs of none. Hey!" Johnny exclaimed, smiling faintly
in his misery. "Let's get busy an' burn the cussed thing up! Got any
matches?"

"First you want to drown yoreself swimming, an' now you want to roast
the pair of us to death," Hopalong retorted, eyeing the rear wall of
the room. "Wonder what's on the other side of that partition?"

Johnny looked. "Why, water; an' lots of it, too."

"Naw; the water is on the other sides."

"Then how do I know?--sh! I hear somebody coming on the roof."

"Tumble back in yore bunk--quick!" Hopalong hurriedly whispered. "Be
asleep--if he comes down here it'll be our deal."

The steps overhead stopped at the companionway and a shadow appeared
across the small patch of sunlight on the floor of the forecastle.
"Tumble up here, you blasted loafers!" roared a deep voice.

No reply came from the forecastle--the silence was unbroken.

"If I have to come down there I'll--" the first mate made promises in
no uncertain tones and in very impolite language. He listened for a
moment, and having very good ears and hearing nothing, made more
promises and came down the ladder quickly and nimbly.

"/I'll/ bring you to," he muttered, reaching a brawny hand for
Hopalong's nose, and missing. But he made contact with his own face,
which stopped a short-arm blow from the owner of the aforesaid nose, a
jolt full of enthusiasm and purpose. Beautiful and dazzling flashes of
fire filled the air and just then something landed behind his ear and
prolonged the pyrotechnic display. When the skyrockets went up he lost
interest in the proceedings and dropped to the floor like a bag of
meal.

Hopalong cut another piece from the rope in his hand and watched his
companion's busy fingers. "Tie him good, Johnny; he's the only ace
we've drawn in this game so far, an' we mustn't lose him."

Johnny tied an extra knot for luck and leaned forward, his eyes
riveted on the bump under the victim's coat. His darting hand brought
into sight that which pleased him greatly. "Oh, joy! Here, Hoppy; you
take it."

Hopalong turned the weapon over in his hand, spun the cylinder and
gloated, the clicking sweet music to his ears. "Plumb full, too! I
never reckoned I'd ever be so tickled over a snub-nosed gun like this
--but I feel like singing!"

"An' I feel like dying," grunted Johnny, grabbing at his stomach. "If
the blamed shack would only stand still!" he groaned, gazing at the
floor with strong disgust. "I don't reckon I've ever been so blamed
sick in all my--" the sentence was unfinished, for the open porthole
caught his eye and he leaped forward to use it for a collar.

Hopalong gazed at him in astonishment and sudden pity took possession
of him as his pallid companion left the porthole and faced him.

"You ought to have something to eat, Kid--I'm purty hungry myself--
what the blazes!" he exclaimed, for Johnny's protesting wail was
finished outside the port. Then a light broke upon him and he wondered
how soon it would be his turn to pay tribute to Neptune.

"Mr. Wilkins!" shouted a voice from the deck, and Hopalong moved back
a step. "Mr. Wilkins!" After a short silence the voice soliloquized:
"Guess he changed his mind about it; I'll get 'em up for him," and
feet came into view. When halfway down the ladder the second mate
turned his head and looked blankly down a gun barrel while a quiet but
angry voice urged him further: "Keep a-coming, keep a-coming!" The
second mate complained, but complied.

"Stick 'em up higher--now, Johnny, wobble around behind the nice man
an' take /his/ gun--you shut yore yap! I'm bossing this trick, not
you. Got it, Kid? There's the rope--that's right. Nobody'd think you
sick to see you work. Well, that's a good draw; but it's only a pair
of aces against a full, at that. Wonder who'll be the next. Hope it's
the foreman."

Johnny, keeping up by sheer grit, pointed to the rear wall. "What
about that?"

For reply his companion walked over to it, put his shoulder to it and
pushed. He stepped back and hurled his weight against it, but it was
firm despite its squeaking protest. Then he examined it foot by foot
and found a large knot, which he drove in by a blow of the gun.
Bending, he squinted through the opening for a full minute and then
reported:

"Purty black in there at this end, but up at the other there's a light
from a hole in the roof, an' I could see boxes an' things like that. I
reckon it's the main cellar."

"If we could get out at the other end with that gun you've got we
could raise blazes for a while," suggested Johnny. "Anyhow, mebby they
can come at us that way when they find out what we've gone an' done."

"Yo're right," Hopalong replied, looking around. Seeing an iron bar he
procured it and, pushing it through the knot hole in the partition,
pulled. The board, splitting and cracking under the attack, finally
broke from its fastenings with a sharp report, and Hopalong, pulling
it aside, stepped out of sight of his companion. Johnny was grinning
at the success of his plan when he was interrupted.

"Ahoy, down there!" yelled a stentorian voice from above. "Mr.
Wilkins! What the devil are you doing so long?" and after a very short
wait other feet came into sight. Just then the second mate, having
managed to slip off the gag, shouted warning:

"Look out, Captain! They've got us and our guns! One of them has--"
but Johnny's knee thudded into his chest and ended the sentence as a
bullet sent a splinter flying from under the captain's foot.

"Hang these guns!" Johnny swore, and quickly turned to secure the gag
in the mouth of the offending second mate. "You make any more yaps
like that an' I'll wing you for keeps with yore own gun!" he snapped.
"We're caught in yore trap an' we'll fight to a finish. You'll be the
first to go under if you gets any smart."

"Ahoy, men!" roared the captain in a towering rage, dancing
frantically about on the deck and shouting for the crew to join him.
He filled the air with picturesque profanity and stamped and yelled in
passion at such rank mutiny.

"Hand grenades! Hand grenades!" he cried. Then he remembered that his
two mates were also below and would share in the mutineers' fate, and
his rage increased at his galling helplessness. When he had calmed
sufficiently to think clearly he realized that it was certain death
for any one to attempt going down the ladder, and that his must be a
waiting game. He glanced at his crew, thirteen good men, all armed
with windlass bars and belaying pins, and gave them orders. Two were
to watch the hatch and break the first head to appear, while the
others returned to work. Hunger and thirst would do the rest. And what
joy would be his when they were forced to surrender!

Hopalong groped his way slowly towards the patch of light, barking his
shins, stumbling and falling over the barrels and crates and finally,
losing his footing at a critical moment, tumbled down upon a box
marked "Cotton." There was a splintering crash and the very faint
clink of metal. Dazed and bruised, he sat up and felt of himself--and
found that he had lost his gun in the fall.

"Now, where in blazes did it fly to?" he muttered angrily, peering
about anxiously. His eyes suddenly opened their widest and he stared
in surprise at a field gun which covered him; and then he saw parts of
two more.

"Good Lord! Is this a gunboat?" he cried. "Are we up against
bluejackets an' Uncle Sam?" He glanced quickly back the way he had
come when he heard Johnny's shot, but he could see nothing. He figured
that Johnny had sense enough to call for help if he needed it, and put
that possibility out of his mind. "Naw, this ain't no gunboat--the
Government don't steal men; it enlists 'em. But it's a funny pile of
junk, all the same. Where in blazes is that toy gun? /Well/, I'll be
hanged!" and he plunged toward the "Cotton" box he had burst in his
descent, and worked at it frantically.

"Winchesters! Winchesters!" he cried, dragging out two of them.
"Whoop! Now for the cartridges--there shore must be some to go with
these guns!" He saw a keg marked "Nails," and managed to open it after
great labor--and found it full of army Colts. Forcing down the desire
to turn a handspring, he slipped one of the six-shooters in his empty
holster and patted it lovingly. "Old friend, I'm shore glad to see
you, all right. You've been used, but that don't make no difference."
Searching further, he opened a full box of /machetes/, and soon after
found cartridges of many kinds and calibres. It took him but a few
minutes to make his selection and cram his pockets with them. Then he
filled two Colts and two Winchesters--and executed a short jig to work
off the dangerous pressure of his exuberance.

"But what an unholy lot of weapons," he soliloquized on his way back
to Johnny. "An' they're all second-hand. Cannons, too--an'
/machetes/!" he exclaimed, suddenly understanding. "Jumping
Jerusalem!--a filibustering expedition bound for Cuba, or one of them
wildcat republics down south! Oh, ho, my friends; I see where you have
bit off more'n you can chew." In his haste to impart the joyous news
to his companion, he barked his shins shamefully.

"'Way down south in the land o' cotton, cinnamon seed an''--whoa,
blast you!" and Hopalong stuck his head through the opening in the
partition and grinned. "Heard you shoot, Kid; I reckoned you might
need me--an' these!" he finished, looking fondly upon the weapons as
he shoved them into the forecastle.

Johnny groaned and held his stomach, but his eyes lighted up when he
saw the guns, and he eagerly took one of each kind, a faint smile
wreathing his lips. "Now we'll show these water snakes what kind of
men they stole," he threatened.

Up on the deck the choleric captain still stamped and swore, and his
crew, with well-concealed mirth, went about their various duties as if
they were accustomed to have shanghaied men act this way. They
sympathized with the unfortunate pair, realizing how they themselves
would feel if shanghaied to break broncos.

Hogan, A. B., stated the feelings of his companions very well in his
remarks to the men who worked alongside: "In me hear-rt I'm dommed
glad av it, Yensen. I hope they bate the old man at his own game. 'T
is a shame in these days for honest men to be took in that unlawful
way. I've heard me father tell of the press gangs on the other side,
an' 't is small business."

Yensen looked up to reply, chanced to glance aft, and dropped his
calking iron in his astonishment. "Yumping Yimminy! Luk at dat
fallar!"

Hogan looked. "The deuce! That's a man after me own heat-rt! Kape yore
pagan mouth shut! If ye take a hand agin 'em I'll swab up the deck wid
yez. G'wan wor-rking like a sane man, ye ijit!"

"Ay ent ban fight wit dat fallar! Luk at the gun!"

A man had climbed out of the after hatch and was walking rapidly
towards them, a rifle in his hands, while at his thigh swung a Colt.
He watched the two seamen closely and caught sight of Hogan's
twinkling blue eyes, and a smile quivered about his mouth. Hogan shut
and opened one eye and went on working.

As soon as Hopalong caught sight of the captain, the rifle went up and
he announced his presence without loss of time. "Throw up yore hands,
you pole-cat! I'm running this ranch from now on!"

The captain wheeled with a jerk and his mouth opened, and then clicked
shut as he started forward, his rage acting galvanically. But he
stopped quickly enough when he looked down the barrel of the
Winchester and glared at the cool man behind it.

"What the blank are you doing?" he yelled.

"Well, I ain't kidnapping cow-punchers to steal my boat," replied
Hopalong. "An' you fellers stand still or I'll drop you cold!" he
ordered to the assembled and restless crew. "Johnny!" he shouted, and
his companion popped up through the hatch like a jack-in-the-box.
"Good boy, Johnny. Tie this coyote foreman like you did the others,"
he ordered. While Johnny obeyed, Hopalong looked around the circle,
and his eyes rested on Hogan's face, studying it, and found something
there which warmed his heart. "Friend, do you know the back trail? Can
you find that runt of a town we left?"

"Aye, aye."

"Shore, you; who'd you think I was talking to? Can you find the way
back, the way we came?"

"Shure an' I can that, if I'm made to."

"You'll swing for mutiny if you do, you bilge-wallering pirate!"
roared the trussed captain. "Take that gun away from him, d'ye hear!"
he yelled at the crew. "I'm captain of this ship, an' I'll hang every
last one of you if you don't obey orders! This is mutiny!"

"You won't do no hanging with that load of weapons below!" retorted
Hopalong. "Uncle Sam is looking for filibusters--this here gun is
'cotton,'" he said, grinning. He turned to the crew. "But you fellers
are due to get shot if you sees her through," he added.

"I'm captain of this ship--" began the helpless autocrat.

"You shore look like it, all right," Hopalong replied, smiling. "If
yo're the captain you order her turned around and headed over the back
trail, or I'll drop you overboard off yore own ship!" Then fierce
anger at the thought of the indignities and injuries he and his
companion had suffered swept over him and prompted a one-minute speech
which left no doubt as to what he would do if his demand was not
complied with. Johnny, now free to watch the crew, added a word or two
of endorsement, and he acted a little as if he rather hoped it would
not be complied with: he itched for an excuse.

The captain did some quick thinking; the true situation could not be
disguised, and with a final oath of rage he gave in. "'Bout ship,
Hogan; nor' by nor'west," he growled, and the seaman started away to
execute the command, but was quickly stopped by Hopalong.

"Hogan, is that right?" he demanded. "No funny business, or we'll
clean up the whole bunch, an' blamed quick, too!"

"That's the course, sor. That's the way back to town. I can navigate,
an' me orders are plain. Ye're Irish, by the way av ye, and 't is back
to town ye go, sor!" He turned to the crew: "Stand by, me boys." And
in a short time the course was nor' by nor'west.

The return journey was uneventful and at nightfall the ship lay at
anchor off the low Texas coast, and a boat loaded with men grounded on
the sandy beach. Four of them arose and leaped out into the mild surf
and dragged the boat as high up on the sand as it would go. Then the
two cow-punchers followed and one of them gave a low-spoken order to
the Irishman at his side.

"Yes, sor," replied Hogan, and hastened to help the captain out onto
the sand and to cut the ropes which bound him. "Do ye want the mates,
too, sor?" he asked, glancing at the trussed men in the boat.

"No; the foreman's enough," Hopalong responded, handing his weapons to
Johnny and turning to face the captain, who was looking into Johnny's
gun as he rubbed his arms to restore perfect circulation.

"Now, you flat-faced coyote, yo're going to get the beating of yore
life, an' I'm going to give it to you!" Hopalong cried, warily
advancing upon the man whom he held to be responsible for the miseries
of the past twenty-four hours. "You didn't give me a square deal, but
I'm man enough to give you one! When you drug an' steal any more cow-
punchers--" action stopped his words.

It was a great fight. A filibustering sea captain is no more peaceful
than a wild boar and about as dangerous; and while this one was not at
his best, neither was Hopalong. The latter luckily had acquired some
knowledge of the rudiments of the game and had the vigor of youth to
oppose to the captain's experience and his infuriated but well-timed
rushes. The seamen, for the honor of their calling and perhaps with a
mind to the future, cheered on the captain and danced up and down in
their delight and excitement. They had a lot of respect for the
prowess of their master, and for the man who could stand up against
him in a fair and square fist fight. To give assistance to either in a
fair fight was not to be thought of, and Johnny's gun was sufficient
after-excuse for non-interference.

The /sop! sop!/ of the punishing blows as they got home and the steady
circling of Hopalong in avoiding the dangerous attacks, went on minute
after minute. Slowly the captain's strength was giving out, and he
resorted to trickery as his last chance. Retreating, he half raised
his arms and lowered them as if weary, ready as a cat to strike with
all his weight if the other gave an opening. It ought to have worked--
it had worked before--but Hopalong was there to win, and without the
momentary hesitation of the suspicious fighter he followed the retreat
and his hard hand flashed in over the captain's guard a fraction of a
second sooner than that surprised gentleman anticipated. The ferocious
frown gave way to placid peace and the captain reclined at the feet of
the battered victor, who stood waiting for him to get up and fight.
The captain lay without a sign of movement and as Hopalong wondered,
Hogan was the first to speak.

"Fer the love av hiven, let him be! Ye needn't wait--he's done; I know
by the sound av it!" he exclaimed, stepping forward. "'T was a purty
blow, an' 't was a gr-rand foight ye put up, sor! A gr-rand foight,
but any more av that is murder! 'T is an Irishman's game, sor, an' ye
did yersilf proud. But now let him be--no man, least av all a
Dootchman, iver tuk more than that an' lived!"

Hopalong looked at him and slowly replied between swollen lips, "Yo're
right, Hogan; we're square now, I reckon."

"That's right, sor," Hogan replied, and turned to his companions. "Put
him in the boat; an' mind ye handle him gintly--we'll be sailing under
him soon. Now, sor, if it's yer pleasure, I'll be after saying good-
bye to ye, sor; an' to ye, too," he said, shaking hands with both
punches. "Fer a sick la-ad ye're a wonder, ye are that," he smiled at
Johnny, "but ye want to kape away from the water fronts. Good-bye to
ye both, an' a pleasant journey home. The town is tin miles to me
right, over beyant them hills."

"Good-bye, Hogan," mumbled Hopalong gratefully. "Yo're square all the
way through; an' if you ever get out of a job or in any kind of
trouble that I can help you out of, come up to the Bar-20 an' you
won't have to ask twice. Good luck!" And the two sore and aching
punchers, wiser in the ways of the world, plodded doggedly towards the
town, ten miles away.

The next morning found them in the saddle, bound for Dent's hotel and
store near the San Miguel Canyon. When they arrived at their
destination and Johnny found there was some hours to wait for Red, his
restlessness sent him roaming about the country, not so much "seeking
what he might devour" as hoping something might seek to devour him. He
was so sore over his recent kidnapping that he longed to find a salve.
He faithfully promised Hopalong that he would return at noon.



                            CHAPTER III

                    DICK MARTIN STARTS SOMETHING

Dick Martin slowly turned, leaned his back against the bar, and
languidly regarded a group of Mexicans at the other end of the room.
Singly, or in combinations of two or more, each was imparting all he
knew, or thought he knew about the ghost of San Miguel Canyon. Their
fellow-countryman, new to the locality, seemed properly impressed.
That it was the ghost of Carlos Martinez, murdered nearly one hundred
years before at the big bend in the canyon, was conceded by all; but
there was a dispute as to why it showed itself only on Friday nights,
and why it was never seen by any but a Mexican. Never had a Gringo
seen it. The Mexican stranger was appealed to: Did this not prove that
the murder had been committed by a Mexican? The stranger affected to
consider the question.

Martin surveyed them with outward impassiveness and inward contempt. A
realist, a cynic, and an absolute genius with a Colt .45, he was well
known along the border for his dare-devil exploits and reckless
courage. The brainiest men in the Secret Service, Lewis, Thomas,
Sayre, and even old Jim Lane, the local chief, whose fingers at El
Paso felt every vibration along the Rio Grande, were not as well known
--except to those who had seen the inside of Government penitentiaries
--and they were quite satisfied to be so eclipsed. But the Service
knew of the ghost, as it knew everything pertaining to the border, and
gave it no serious thought; if it took interest in all the ghosts and
superstitions peculiar to the Mexican temperament it would have no
time for serious work. Martin once, in a spirit of savage denial, had
wasted the better part of several successive Friday nights in the San
Miguel, but to no avail. When told that the ghost showed itself only
to Mexicans he had shrugged his shoulders eloquently and laughed, also
eloquently.

"A Greaser," he replied, "is one-half fear and superstition, an' the
other half imagination. There ain't no ghosts, but I know the
/Greasers/ have seen 'em, all right. A Greaser can see anything scary
if he makes up his mind to. If /I/ ever see one an' he keeps on being
one after I shoot, I'll either believe in ghosts, or quit drinking."
His eyes twinkled as he added: "An' of the two, I think I'd /prefer/
to see ghosts!"

He was flushed and restless with deviltry. His fifth glass always made
him so; and to-night there was an added stimulus. He believed the
strange Mexican to be Juan Alvarez, who was so clever that the
Government had never been able to convict him. Alvarez was fearless to
recklessness and Martin, eager to test him, addressed the group with
the blunt terseness for which he was famed, and hated.

"Greasers are cowards," he asserted quietly, and with a smile which
invited excitement. He took a keen delight in analyzing the
expressions on the faces of those hit. It was one of his favorite
pastimes when feeling coltish.

The group was shocked into silence, quickly followed by great unrest
and hot, muttered words. Martin did not move a muscle, the smile was
set, but between the half-closed eyelids crouched Combat, on its toes.
The Mexicans knew it was there without looking for it--the tone of his
voice, the caressing purr of his words, and his unnatural languor were
signs well known to them. Not a criminal sneaking back from voluntary
banishment in Mexico who had seen those signs ever forgot them, if he
lived. Martin watched the group cat-like, keenly scrutinizing each
face, reading the changing emotions in every shifting expression; he
had this art down so well that he could tell when a man was debating
the pull of a gun, and beat him on the draw by a fraction of a second.

"De senor ees meestak," came the reply, as quiet and caressing as the
words which provoked it. The strange Mexican was standing proudly and
looking into the squinting eyes with only a grayness of face and a
tigerish litheness to tell what he felt.

"None go through the canyon after dark on Fridays," purred Martin.

"/I/ go tro' de canyon nex' Friday night. Eef I do, then you mak
apology to me?"

"I'll limit my remark to all but one Greaser."

The Mexican stepped forward. "I tak' thees gloove an' leave eet at de
Beeg Ben', for you to fin' in daylight," he said, tapping one of
Martin's gauntlets which lay on the bar. "You geev' me eet befo' I
go?"

"Yes; at nine o'clock to-morrow night," Martin replied, hiding his
elation. He was sure that he knew the man now.

The Mexican, cool and smiling, bowed and left the room, his companions
hastening after him.

"Well, I'll bet twenty-five dollars he flunks!" breathed the
bartender, straightening up.

Martin turned languidly and smiled at him. "I'll take that, Charley,"
he replied.



Johnny Nelson was always late, and on this occasion he was later than
usual. He was to have joined Hopalong and Red, if Red had arrived, at
Dent's at noon the day before, and now it was after nine o'clock at
night as he rode through San Felippe without pausing and struck east
for the canyon. The dropping trail down the canyon was serious enough
in broad daylight, but at night to attempt its passage was foolhardy,
unless one knew every turn and slant by heart, which Johnny did not.
He was thirty-three hours late now, and he was determined to make up
what he could in the next three.

When Johnny left Hopalong at Dent's he had given his word to be back
on time and not to keep his companions waiting, for Red might be on
time and he would chafe if he were delayed. But, alas for Johnny's
good intentions, his course took him through a small Mexican hamlet in
which lived a senorita of remarkable beauty and rebellious eyes; and
Johnny tarried in the town most of the day, riding up and down the
streets, practising the nice things he would say if he met her. She
watched him from the heavily draped window, and sighed as she wondered
if her dashing Americano would storm the house and carry her off like
the knights of old. Finally he had to turn away with heavy and
reluctant heart, promising himself that he would return when no
petulant and sarcastic companions were waiting for him. Then--ah! what
dreams youth knows.

Half an hour ahead of him on another trail rode Juan, smiling with
satisfaction. He had come to San Felippe to get a look at the canyon
on Friday nights, and Martin had given him an excuse entirely
unexpected. For this he was truly grateful, even while he knew that
the American had tried to pick a quarrel with him and thus rid the
border of a man entirely too clever for the good of customs receipts;
and failing in that, had hoped the treacherous canyon trail would gain
that end in another manner. Old Jim Lane's fingers touched wires not
one whit more sensitive than those which had sent Juan Alvarez to look
over the San Miguel--and Lane's wires had been slow this time. When
Juan had left the saloon the night before and had seen Manuel slip
away from the group and ride off into the north, he had known that the
ghost would show itself the following night.

But Juan was to be disappointed. He was still some distance from the
canyon when a snarling bulk landed on the haunches of his horse. He
jerked loose his gun and fired twice and then knew nothing. When he
opened his eyes he lay quietly, trying to figure it out with a head
throbbing with pain from his fall. The cougar must have been desperate
for food to attack a man. He moved his foot and struck something soft
and heavy. His shots had been lucky, but they had not saved him his
horse and a sprained arm and leg. There would be no gauntlet found at
the Big Bend at daylight.

When Johnny Nelson reached the twin boulders marking the beginning of
the sloping run where the trail pitched down, he grinned happily at
sight of the moon rising over the low hills and then grabbed at his
holster, while every hair in his head stood up curiously. A wild,
haunting, feminine scream arose to a quavering soprano and sobbed away
into silence. No words can adequately describe the unearthly wail in
that cry and it took a full half-minute for Johnny to become himself
again and to understand what it was. Once more it arose, nearer, and
Johnny peered into the shadows along a rough backbone of rock, his
Colt balanced in his half-raised hand.

"You come 'round me an' you'll get hurt," he muttered, straining his
eyes to peer into the blackness of the shadows. "Come on out, Soft-
foot; the moon's yore finish. You an' me will have it out right here
an' now--I don't want no cougar trailing me through that ink-black
canyon on a two-foot ledge--" he thought he saw a shadow glide across
a dim patch of moonlight, but when his smoke rifted he knew he had
missed. "Damn it! You've got a mate 'round here somewhere," he
complained. "Well, I'll have to chance it, anyhow. Come on, bronc!
Yo're shaking like a leaf--get out of this!"

When he began to descend into the canyon he allowed his horse to pick
its own way without any guidance from him, and gave all of his
attention to the trail behind him. The horse could get along better by
itself in the dark, and it was more than possible that one or two
lithe cougars might be slinking behind him on velvet paws. The horse
scraped along gingerly, feeling its way step by step, and sending
stones rattling and clattering down the precipice at his left to
tinkle into the stream at the bottom.

"Gee, but I wish I'd not wasted so much time," muttered the rider
uneasily. "This here canyon-cougar combination is the worst /I/ ever
butted up against. I'll never be late again, not never; not for all
the girls in the world. Easy, bronc," he cautioned, as he felt the
animal slip and quiver. "Won't this trail ever start going up again?"
he growled petulantly, taking his eyes off the black back trail, where
no amount of scrutiny showed him anything, and turned in the saddle to
peer ahead--and a yell of surprise and fear burst from him, while
chills ran up and down his spine. An unearthly, piercing shriek
suddenly rang out and filled the canyon with ear-splitting uproar and
a glowing, sheeted half-figure of a man floated and danced twenty feet
from him and over the chasm. He jerked his gun and fired, but only
once, for his mount had its own ideas about some things and this
particular one easily headed the list. The startled rider grabbed
reins and pommel, his blood congealed with fear of the precipice less
than a foot from his side, and he gave all his attention to the horse.
But scared as he was he heard, or thought that he heard, a peculiar
sound when he fired, and he would have sworn that he hit the mark--the
striking of the bullet was not drowned in the uproar and he would
never forget the sound of that impact. He rounded Big Bend as if he
were coming up to the judge's stand, and when he struck the upslant of
the emerging trail he had made a record. Cold sweat beaded his
forehead and he was trembling from head to foot when he again rode
into the moonlight on the level plain, where he tried to break another
record.



                             CHAPTER IV

                           JOHNNY ARRIVES

Meanwhile Hopalong and Red quarrelled petulantly and damned the erring
Johnny with enthusiastic abandon, while Dent smiled at them and joked;
but his efforts at levity made little impression on the irate pair.
Red, true to his word, had turned up at the time set, in fact, he was
half an hour ahead of time, for which miracle he endeavored to take
great and disproportionate credit. Dent was secretly glad about the
delay, for he found his place lonesome. He thoroughly enjoyed the
company of the two gentlemen from the Bar-20, whose actions seemed to
be governed by whims and who appeared to lack all regard for
consequences; and they squabbled so refreshingly, and spent their
money cheerfully. Now, if they would only wind up the day by fighting!
Such a finish would be joy indeed. And speaking of fights, Dent was
certain that Mr. Cassidy had been in one recently, for his face bore
marks that could only be acquired in that way.

After supper the two guests had relapsed into a silence which endured
only as long as the pleasing fulness. Then the squabbling began again,
growing worse until they fell silent from lack of adequate expression.
Finally Red once again spoke of their absent friend.

"We oughtn't get peevish, Hoppy--he's only thirty-six hours late,"
suggested Red. "An' he might be a week," he added thoughtfully, as his
mind ran back over a long list of Johnny's misdeeds.

"Yes, he might. An' won't he have a fine cock-an'-bull tale to explain
it," growled Hopalong, reminiscently. "His excuses are the worst part
of it generally."

"Eh, does he--make excuses?" asked Dent, mildly surprised.

"He does to /us/," retorted Red savagely. "He's worse than a woman;
take him all in all an' you've got the toughest proposition that ever
wore pants. But he's a good feller, at that."

"Well, you've got a lot of nerve, you have!" retorted Hopalong. "You
don't want to say anything about the Kid--if there's anybody that can
beat him in being late an' acting the fool generally, it's you. An'
what's more, you know it!"

Red wheeled to reply, but was interrupted by a sudden uproar outside,
fluent swearing coming towards the house. The door opened with a bang,
admitting a white-faced, big-eyed man with one leg jammed through the
box he had landed on in dismounting.

"Gimme a drink, quick!" he shouted wildly, dragging the box over to
the bar with a cheerful disregard for chairs and other temporary
obstructions. "Gimme a drink!" he reiterated.

"Give you six hops in the neck!" yelled Red, missing and almost
sitting down because of the enthusiasm he had put into his effort.
Johnny side-stepped and ducked, and as he straightened up to ask for
whys and wherefores, Red's eyes opened wide and he paused in his
further intentions to stare at the apparition.

"Sick?" queried Hopalong, who was frightened.

"Gimme that drink!" demanded Johnny feverishly, and when he had it he
leaned against the bar and mopped his face with a trembling hand.

"What's the matter with you, anyhow?" asked Red, with deep anxiety.

"Yes; for God's sake, what's happened to you?" demanded Hopalong.

Johnny breathed deeply and threw back his shoulders as if to shake off
a weight. "Fellers, I had a cougar soft-footing after me in that dark
canyon, my cayuse ran away on a two-foot ledge up the wall,/--an'--I--
saw--a--ghost/!"

There was a respectful silence. Johnny, waiting a reasonable length of
time for replies and exclamations, flushed a bit and repeated his
frank and candid statement, adding a few adjectives to it. "/A real,
screeching, flying ghost/! An' I'm going /home/, an' I'm going to
/stay/ there. I ain't never coming back no more, not for anything.
Damn this border country, /anyhow/!"

The silence continued, whereupon Johnny grew properly indignant. "You
act like I told you it was going to rain! Why don't you say something?
Didn't you hear what I said, you fools!" he asked pugnaciously. "Are
you in the habit of having a thing like that told you? Why don't you
show some interest, you dod-blasted, thick-skulled wooden-heads?"

Red looked at Hopalong, Hopalong looked at Red, and then they both
looked at Dent, whose eyes were fixed in a stare on Johnny.

"Huh!" snorted Hopalong, warily arising. "Was that all?" he asked,
nodding at Red, who also arose and began to move cautiously toward
their erring friend. "Didn't you see no more'n one ghost? Anybody that
can see one ghost, an' no more, is wrong somewhere. Now, stop, an'
think; didn't you see /two/?" He was advancing carefully while he
talked, and Red was now behind the man who saw one ghost.

"Why, you--" there was a sudden flurry and Johnny's words were cut
short in the melee.

"Good, Red! Ouch!" shouted Hopalong. "Look out! Got any rope, Dent?
Well, hurry up: there ain't no telling what he'll do if he's loose.
The mescal they sells down in this country ain't liquor--it's poison,"
he panted. "An' he can't even stand whiskey!"

Finding the rope was easier than finding a place to put it, and the
unequal battle raged across the room and into the next, where it
sounded as if the house were falling down. Johnny's voice was shrill
and full of vexation and his words were extremely impolite and lacked
censoring. His feet appeared to be numerous and growing rapidly,
judging from the amount of territory they covered and defended, and
Red joyfully kicked Hopalong in the melee, which in this instance also
stands for stomach; Red always took great pains to do more than his
share in a scrimmage. Dent hovered on the flanks, his hands full of
rope, and begged with great earnestness to be allowed to apply it to
parts of Johnny's thrashing anatomy. But as the flanks continued to
change with bewildering swiftness he begged in vain, and began to make
suggestions and give advice pleasing to the three combatants. Dent
knew just how it should be done, and was generous with the knowledge
until Johnny zealously planted five knuckles on his one good eye, when
the engagement became general.

The table skidded through the door on one leg and caromed off the bar
at a graceful angle, collecting three chairs and one sand-box cuspidor
on the way. The box on Johnny's leg had long since departed, as
Hopalong's shin could testify. One chair dissolved unity and
distributed itself lavishly over the room, while the bed shrunk
silently and folded itself on top of Dent, who bucked it up and down
with burning zeal and finally had sense enough to crawl from under it.
He immediately celebrated his liberation by getting a strangle hold on
two legs, one of which happened to be the personal property of
Hopalong Cassidy; and the battle raged on a lower plane. Red raised
one hand as he carefully traced a neck to its own proper head and then
his steel fingers opened and swooped down and shut off the dialect.
Hopalong pushed Dent off him and managed to catch Johnny's flaying arm
on the third attempt, while Dent made tentative sorties against
Johnny's spurred boots.

"Phew! Can he fight like that when he's sober?" reverently asked Dent,
seeing how close his fingers could come to his gaudy eye without
touching it. "I won't be able to see at all in an hour," he added,
gloomily.

Hopalong, seated on Johnny's chest, soberly made reply as he tenderly
flirted with a raw shin. "It's the mescal. I'm going to slip some of
that stuff into Pete's cayuse some of these days," he promised, happy
with a new idea. Pete Wilson had no sense of humor.

"That ghost was plumb lucky," grunted Red, "an' so was the sea-
captain," he finished as an afterthought, limping off toward the bar,
slowly and painfully followed by his disfigured companions. "One
drink; then to bed."

After Red had departed, Hopalong and Dent smoked a while and then,
knocking the ashes out of his pipe, Hopalong arose. "An' yet, Dent,
there are people that believe in ghosts," he remarked, with a vast and
settled contempt.

Dent gave critical scrutiny to the scratched bar for a moment. "Well,
the Greasers all say there /is/ a ghost in the San Miguel, though I
never saw it. But some of them have seen it, an' no Greasers ride that
trail no more."

"Huh!" snorted Hopalong. "Some Greasers must have filled the Kid up on
ghosts while he was filling hisself up on mescal. Ghosts? R-a-t-s!"

"It shows itself only to Greasers, an' then only on Friday nights,"
explained Dent, thoughtfully. This was Friday night. Others had seen
that ghost, but they were all Mexicans; now that a "white" man of
Johnny's undisputed calibre had been so honored Dent's skepticism
wavered and he had something to think about for days to come. True,
Johnny was not a Greaser; but even ghosts might make mistakes once in
a while.

Hopalong laughed, dismissing the subject from his mind as being
beneath further comment. "Well, we won't argue--I'm too tired. An' I'm
sorry you got that eye, Dent."

"Oh, that's all right," hastily assured the store-keeper, smiling
faintly. "I was just spoiling for a fight, an' now I've had it. Feels
sort of good. Yes, first thing in the morning--breakfast'll be ready
soon as you are. Good-night."

But the proprietor couldn't sleep. Finally he arose and tiptoed into
the room where Johnny lay wrapped in the sleep of the exhausted. After
cautious and critical inspection, which was made hard because of his
damaged eye, he tiptoed back to his bunk, shaking his head slowly. "He
wasn't drunk," he muttered. "He saw that ghost all right; an' I'll bet
everything I've got on it!"



At daybreak three quarrelling punchers rode homeward and after a
monotonous journey arrived at the bunk house and reported. It took
them two nights adequately to describe their experiences to an envious
audience. The morning after the telling of the ghost story things
began to happen. Red starting it by erecting a sign.


                      NOTISE--NO GHOSTS ALOWED


An exuberant handful of the outfit watched him drive the last nail and
step back to admire his work, and the running fire of comment covered
all degrees of humor, and promised much hilarity in the future at the
expense of the only man on the Bar-20 who had seen a ghost.

In a week Johnny and his acute vision had become a bye-word in that
part of the country and his friends had made it a practice to stop him
and gravely discuss spirit manifestations of all kinds. He had
thrashed Wood Wright and been thrashed by Sandy Lucas in two beautiful
and memorable fights and was only waiting to recover from the last
affair before having the matter out with Rich Finn. These facts were
beginning to have the effect he strove for; though Cowan still sold a
new concoction of gin, brandy, and whiskey which he called "Flying
Ghost," and which he proudly guaranteed would show more ghosts per
drink than any liquor south of the Rio Grande--and some of his patrons
were eager to back up his claims with real money.

This was the condition of affairs when Hopalong Cassidy strolled into
Cowan's and forgot his thirst in the story being told by a strange
Mexican. It was Johnny's ghost, without a doubt, and when he had
carelessly asked a few questions he was convinced that Johnny had
really seen something. On the way home he cogitated upon it and two
points challenged his intelligence with renewed insistence: the ghost
showed itself only on Friday, and then only to "Greasers." His
suspicious mind would not rest until he had reviewed the question from
all sides, and his opinion was that there was something more than
spiritual about the ghost of the San Miguel--and a cold, practical
reason for it.

When he rode into the corral at the ranch he saw that another sign had
been put on the corral wall. He had destroyed the first, speaking his
mind in full at the time. He swept his gloved hand upward with a rush,
tore the flimsy board from its fastenings, broke it to pieces across
his saddle, and tossed the fragments from him. He was angry, for he
had warned the outfit that they were carrying the joke too far, that
Johnny was giving way to hysterical rage more frequently, and might
easily do something that they all would regret. And he felt sorry for
the Kid; he knew what Johnny's feelings were and he made up his mind
to start a few fights himself if the persecution did not cease. When
he stepped into the bunk house and faced his friends they listened to
a three-minute speech that made them squirm, and as he finished
talking the deep voice of the foreman endorsed the promises he had
just heard made, for Buck had entered the gallery without being
noticed. The joke had come to an end.

When Johnny rode in that evening he was surprised to find Hopalong
waiting for him a short distance from the corral and he replied to his
friend's gesture by riding over to him. "What's up now?" he asked.

"Come along with me. I want to talk to you for a few minutes," and
Hopalong led the way toward the open, followed by Johnny, who was more
or less suspicious. Finally Hopalong stopped, turned, and looked his
companion squarely in the eyes. "Kid, I'm in dead earnest. This ain't
no fool joke--now you tell me what that ghost looked like, how he
acted, an' all about it. I mean what I say, because now I know that
you saw /something/. If it wasn't a ghost it was made to look like
one, anyhow. Now go ahead."

"I've told you a dozen times already," retorted Johnny, his face
flushing. "I've begged you to believe me an' told you that I wasn't
fooling. How do I know you ain't now? I'm not going to tell--"

"Hold on; yes, you are. Yo're going to tell it slow, an' just like you
saw it," Hopalong interrupted hastily. "I know I've doubted it, but
who wouldn't! Wait a minute--I've done a heap of thinking in the past
few days an' I know that you saw a ghost. Now, everybody knows that
there ain't no such thing as ghosts; then what was it you saw? There's
a game on, Kid, an' it's a dandy; an' you an' me are going to bust it
up an' get the laugh on the whole blasted crowd, from Buck to Cowan."

Johnny's suspicions left him with a rush, for his old Hoppy was one
man in a thousand, and when he spoke like that, with such sharp
decision, Johnny knew what it meant. Hopalong listened intently and
when the short account was finished he put out his hand and smiled.

"We're the fools, Kid; not you. There's something crooked going on in
that canyon, an' I know it! But keep mum about what we think."

Johnny lost his grouch so suddenly and beamed upon his friends with
such a superior air that they began to worry about what was in the
wind. The suspense wore on them, for with Hopalong's assistance,
Johnny might spring some game on them all that would more than pay up
for the fun they had enjoyed at his expense; and the longer the
suspense lasted the worse it became. They never lost sight of him
while he was around and Hopalong had to endure the same surveillance;
and it was no uncommon thing to see small groups of the anxious men
engaged in deep discussion. When they found that Buck must have been
told and noticed his smile was as fixed as Hopalong's or Johnny's,
they were certain that trouble of some nature was in store for them.

Several weeks later Buck Peters drew rein and waited for a stranger to
join him.

"Howdy. Is yore name Peters?" asked the newcomer, sizing him up in one
trained glance.

"Well, who are you, an' what do you want?"

"I want to see Peters, Buck Peters. That yore name?"

"Yes; what of it?"

"My name's Fox. Old Jim Lane gave me a message for you," and the
stranger spoke earnestly to some length. "There; that's the situation.
We've got to have shrewd men that they don't know an' won't suspect.
Lane wants to pay a couple of yore men their wages for a month or two.
He said he was shore he could count on you to help him out."

"He's right; he can. I don't forget favors. I've got a couple of men
that--there's one of 'em now. Hey, Hoppy! Whoop-e, Hoppy!"

Mr. Cassidy arrived quickly, listened eagerly, named Red and Johnny to
accompany him, overruled his companions by insisting that if Johnny
didn't go the whole thing was off, carried his point, and galloped off
to find the lucky two, his eyes gleaming with anticipation and joy.
Fox laughed, thanked the foreman, and rode on his way north; and that
night three cow-punchers rode south, all strangely elated. And the
friends who watched them go heaved signs of relief, for the reprisals
evidently were to be postponed for a while.



                             CHAPTER V

                    THE GHOST OF THE SAN MIGUEL

Juan Alvarez had not been in San Felippe since Dick Martin left, which
meant for over a month. Martin was down the river looking for a man
who did not wish to be found; and some said that Martin cared nothing
about international boundaries when he wanted any one real bad. And
there was that geologist who wore blue glasses and was always
puttering around in the canyon and hammering chips of rock off the
steep walls; he must have slipped one noon, because his body was found
on a flat boulder at the edge of the stream. Manuel had found it and
wanted to be paid for his trouble in bringing it to town--but Manuel
was a fool. Who, indeed, would pay good money for a dead Gringo,
especially after he was dead? And there were three cow-punchers
holding a herd of 6-X cattle up north, an hour or so from the town.
They wanted to buy steers from Senor Rodriguez, but said that he was a
robber and threatened to cut his ears off. Cannot a man name his own
price? These cow-punchers liked to get drunk and gallop through San
Felippe, shooting like crazy men. They got drunk one Friday night and
went shouting and singing to the Big Bend in the canyon to see the
flying ghost, and they called it names and fired off their pistols and
sang loudly; and for a week they insulted all the Mexicans in town by
calling them liars and cowards. Was it the fault of any one that the
ghost would show itself only to Mexicans? Oh, these Gringos--might the
good God punish them for their sins!

Thus the peons complained to the padre while they kept one eye open
for the advent of the rowdy cow-punchers, who always wanted to drink,
and then to fight with some one, either with fists or pistols. Why
should any one fight with them, especially with such things as fists?

"Let them fight among themselves. What have you to do with heretics?"
reproved the good padre, who ostracized himself from the pleasant
parts of the wide world that he might make easier the life and
struggles of his ignorant flock. "God is not hasty--He will punish in
His own way when it best suits Him. And perhaps you will profit much
if you are more regular to mass instead of wasting the cool hours of
the morning in bed. Think well of what I have said, my children."

But the cow-punchers were not punished and they swore they would not
leave the vicinity until they had all the steers they wanted, and at
their own price. And one night their herd stampeded and was checked
only in time to save it from going over the canyon's edge. And for
some reason Sanchez kept out of the padre's way and did not go to
confess when he should, for the padre spoke plainly and set hard
obligations for penance.

The cow-punchers swore that it had been done by some Mexican and said
that they would come to town some day soon and kill three Mexicans
unless the guilty one was found and brought to them. Then the padre
mounted his donkey and went out to them to argue and they finally told
him they would wait for two weeks. But the padre was too smart for
them--he sent a messenger to find Senor Dick Martin, and in one week
Senor Martin came to town. There was no fight. The Gringo rowdies were
cowards at heart and Martin could not shoot them down in cold blood,
and he could not arrest them, because he was not a policeman or even a
sheriff, but only a revenue officer, which was a most foolish law. But
he watched them all the time and wanted them to fight--there was no
more shooting or drunkenness in town. Nobody wanted to fight Senor
Martin, for he was a great man. He even went so far as to talk with
them about it and wave his arms, but they were as frightened at him as
little children might be.

So the Mexicans gossiped and exulted, some of the bolder of them even
swaggering out to the Gringo camp; but Martin drove them back again,
saying he would not allow them to bully men who could not retaliate,
which was right and fair. Then, afraid to go away and leave the mad
cow-punchers so close to town, he ordered them to drive their herd
farther east, nearer to Dent's store, and never to return to San
Felippe unless they needed the padre; and they obeyed him after a long
talk. After seeing them settled in their new camp, which was on Monday
morning, Martin returned to San Felippe and told the padre where he
could be found and then rode away again. San Felippe celebrated for a
whole day and two Mexican babies were christened after Senor Dick
Martin, which was honor all around.

Friday, when Manuel went over to spy upon the cow-punchers in their
new camp, he found them so drunk that they could not stand, and before
he crept away at dusk two of them were sleeping like gorged snakes and
the third was firing off his revolver at random, which diversion had
not a little to do with Manuel's departure.

When Manuel crept away he headed straight for a crevice near the wall
of the canyon at the Big Bend and, reaching it, looked all around and
then dropped into it. Not long thereafter another Mexican appeared,
this one from San Felippe, and also disappeared into the crevice. As
darkness fell Manuel reappeared with something under his jacket and a
moment later a light gleamed at the base of a slender sapling which
grew on the edge of the canyon wall and leaned out over the abyss. It
was cleverly placed, for only at one spot on the Mexican side of the
distant Rio Grande could it be seen--the high canyon walls farther
down screened it from any one who might be riding on the north bank of
the river. In a moment there came an answering twinkle and Manuel,
covering the lantern with a blanket, was swallowed up in the darkness
of the crevice.

Without a trace of emotion, Dick Martin, from his place of
concealment, caught the answering gleam, and he watched Manuel
disappear. "Cassidy was right in every point; Lewis or Sayre couldn't
'a' done this better. I hope he won't be late," he muttered, and
settled himself more comfortably to wait for the cue for action,
smiling as the moon poked its rim over the low hills to his right.
"This means promotion for me, or I've very much mistaken," he
chuckled.

Hopalong was not late and as soon as it was dark he and his companions
stole into the canyon on foot. They felt their way down the east end
of the trail, not far from Dent's, toward the Big Bend, which they
gained without a mishap. Johnny was sent up to a place they had
noticed and marked in their memories at the time they had rioted down
to defy the ghost. He was to stop any one trying to escape up the San
Felippe end of the canyon trail, and his confidence in his ability to
do this was exuberant. Hopalong and Red slowly and laboriously worked
their way down the perilous path leading to the bottom, forded the
stream, and crept up the other side, where they found cover not far
from a wide crack in the canyon wall. Upon the occasion of their
hilarious visit to the Big Bend they had observed that a faint trail
led to the crack and had cogitated deeply upon this fact.

Three hours passed before the watchers in and above the canyon were
rewarded by anything further; and then a light flickered far down the
canyon and close to the edge of the stream. Immediately strange noises
were heard and suddenly the ghost swung out of the opening in the rock
wall near Hopalong and Red and danced above their heads, while the
shrieking which had so frightened Johnny and his horse filled the
canyon with uproar and sent Martin wriggling nearer to the crevice
which he had watched so closely. The noise soon ceased, but the ghost
danced on, and the sound of men stumbling along the rocky ledge
bordering the stream became more and more audible. Four were in the
party and they all carried bulky loads on their backs and grunted with
pleasure and relief as they entered the entrance in the wall. When the
last man had disappeared and the noise of their passing had died out,
Johnny's rope sailed up and out, and the ghost swayed violently and
then began to sag in an unaccountable manner towards the trail as the
owner of the rope hitched its free end around a spur of rock and made
it fast. Then he feverishly scrambled down the steep path to join his
friends.

Hopalong and Red, wriggling on their stomachs towards the crack in the
wall, paused in amazement and stared across the canyon; and then the
former chuckled and whispered something in his companion's ear. "That
was why he lugged his rope along! He's just idiot enough to want a
souveneer an' plaything at the risk of losing the game. Come on!--
they'll tumble to what's up an' get away if we don't hustle."

When the two punchers cautiously and noiselessly entered the crack and
felt their way along its rock walls they heard fluent swearing in
Spanish by the man who worked the ghost, and who could not understand
its sudden ambition to take root. It was made painfully clear to him a
moment later when a pair of brawny hands reached out of the darkness
behind him and encircled his throat a hand's width below his gleaming
cigarette. Another pair used cords with deftness and despatch and he
was left by himself to browse upon the gag when all his senses
returned.

Hopalong, with Red inconsiderately stepping on his heels, felt his way
along the wall of the crevice, alert and silent, his Colt nestling
comfortably in his right hand, while the left was pushed out ahead
feeling for trouble. As they worked farther away from the canyon
distant voices could be heard and they forthwith proceeded even more
cautiously. When Hopalong came to the second bend in the narrow
passage he peered around it and stopped so abruptly that Red's nose
almost spread itself over the back of his head. Red's indignation was
all the harder to bear because it must bloom unheard.

In a huge, irregular room, whose roof could not be discerned in the
dim light of the few candles, five men were resting in various
attitudes of ease as they discussed the events of the night and tried
to compute their profits. They were secure, for Manuel, having by this
time put away the ghost and megaphone, was on duty at the mouth of the
crevice, and he was as sensitive to danger as a hound.

"The risk is not much and the profits are large," remarked Pedro, in
Spanish. "We must burn a candle for the repose of the soul of Carlos
Martinez. It is he that made our plans safe. And a candle is not much
when we--"

"Hands up!" said a quiet voice, followed by grim commands. The
Mexicans jumped as if stung by a scorpion, and could just discern two
of the rowdy gringo cow-punchers in the heavy shadows of the opposite
wall, but the candle light glinted in rings on the muzzles of their
six-shooters. Had Manuel betrayed them? But they had little time or
inclination for cogitation regarding Manuel.

"Easy there!" shouted Red, and Pedro's hand stopped when half way to
his chest. Pedro was a gambler by nature, but the odds were too heavy
and he sullenly obeyed the command.

"Stick 'em up! Stick 'em up! Higher yet, an' hold 'em there," purred a
soft voice from the other end of the room, where Dick Martin smiled
pleasantly upon them and wondered if there was anything on earth
harder to pound good common sense into than a "Greaser's" head. His
gun was blue, but it was, nevertheless, the most prominent part of his
make-up, even if the light was poor.

One of the Mexicans reached involuntarily for his gun, for he was a
gun-man by training; while his companions felt for their knives,
deadly weapons in a melee. Martin, crying, "Watch 'em, Cassidy!" side-
stepped and lunged forward with the speed and skill of a boxer, and
his hard left hand landed on the point of Juan Alvarez' jaw with a
force and precision not to be withstood. But to make more certain that
the Mexican would not take part in any possible demonstration of
resistance, Martin's right circled up in a short half-hook and stopped
against Juan's short ribs. Martin weighed one hundred and eighty
pounds and packed no fat on his well-knit frame.

At this moment a two-legged cyclone burst upon the scene in the person
of Johnny Nelson, whose rage had been worked up almost to the weeping
point because he had lost so much time hunting for the crevice where
it was not. Seeing Juan fall, and the glint of knives, he started in
to clean things up, yelling, "I'm a ghost! I'm a ghost! Take 'em
alive! Take 'em alive!"

Hopalong and Red felt that they were in his way, and taking care of
one Mexican between them, while Martin knocked out another, they
watched the exits,--for anything was possible in such a chaotic mix-
up,--and gave Johnny plenty of room. The latter paused, triumphant,
looked around to see if he had missed any, and then advanced upon his
friends and shoved his jaw up close to Hopalong's face. "Tried to lose
me, didn't you! Wouldn't wait for me! For seven cents an' a toothbrush
I'd give you what's left!"

Red grabbed him by trousers and collar and heaved him into the
passageway. "Go out an' play with yore souveneer or we'll step on
you!"

Johnny sat up, rubbed certain portions of his anatomy, and grinned.
"Oh, I've got it, all right! I'm shore going to take that ghost home
an' make some of them fools /eat/ it!"

Martin smiled as he finished tying the last prisoner. "That's right,
Nelson; you've got it on 'em this time. Make 'em chew it."



                             CHAPTER VI

                       HOPALONG LOSES A HORSE

For a month after their return from the San Miguel, Hopalong and his
companions worked with renewed zest, and told and retold the other
members of the outfit of their unusual experiences near the Mexican
border. Word had come up to them that Martin had secured the
conviction of the smugglers and was in line for immediate advancement.
No one on the range had the heart to meet Johnny Nelson, for Johnny
carried with him a piece of the ghost, and became pugnacious if his
once-jeering friends and acquaintances refused to nibble on it. Cowan
still sold his remarkable drink, but he had yielded to Johnny's
persuasive methods and now called it "Nelson's Pet."

One bright day the outfit started rounding up a small herd of three-
year-olds, which Buck had sold, and by the end of the week the herd
was complete and ready for the drive. This took two weeks and when
Hopalong led his drive outfit through Hoyt's Corners on its homeward
journey he felt the pull of the town of Grant, some miles distant, and
it was too strong to be resisted. Flinging a word of explanation to
the nearest puncher, he turned to lope away, when Red's voice checked
him. Red wanted to delay his home-coming for a day or two and attend
to a purely personal matter at a ranch lying to the west. Hopalong,
knowing the reason for Red's wish, grinned and told him to go, and not
to propose until he had thought the matter over very carefully. Red's
reply was characteristic, and after arranging a rendezvous and naming
the time, the two separated and rode toward their destinations, while
the rest of the outfit kept on towards their ranch.

"A man owes something to /all/ his friends," Hopalong mused. In this
case he owed a return game of draw poker to certain of Grant's leading
citizens, and he liked to pay his obligations when opportunity
offered.

It was mid-afternoon when he topped a rise and saw below him the
handful of shacks making up the town. A look of pleased interest
flickered across his face as he noticed a patched and dirty tent
pitched close up to the nearest shack. "Show!" he exclaimed. "Now,
ain't that luck! I'll shore take it in. If it's a circus, mebby it has
a trick mule to ride--I'll never forget that one up in Kansas City,"
he grinned. But almost instantly a doubt arose and tempered the grin.
"Huh! Mebby it's the branding chute of some gospel sharp." As he drew
near he focussed his eyes on the canvas and found that his fears were
justified.

"All Are Welcome," he spelled out slowly. "Shore they are!" he
muttered. "I never nowhere saw such hard-working, all-embracing
rustlers as them fellers. They'll stick their iron on anything from a
wobbly calf or dying dogie to a staggering-with-age mosshead, an'
shout 'tally one' with the same joy. Well, not for mine, /this/ trip.
I'm going to graze loose an' buck-jump all I wants. Anyhow, if I did
let him brand me I'd only backslide in a week," and Hopalong pressed
his pony to a more rapid gait as two men emerged from the tent.
"There's the sky-pilot now," he muttered--"an' there's Dave!" he
shouted, waving his arm. "Oh, Dave! Dave!"

Dave Wilkes looked up, and his grin of delight threatened to engulf
his ears. "Hullo, Cassidy! Glad to see you! Keep right on for the
store--I'll be with you in a minute." When David told his companion
the visitor's name the evangelist held up his hand eloquently and
spoke.

"I know all about him!" he exclaimed sorrowfully. "If I can lead him
out of his wickedness I will rest content though I save no more souls
this fortnight. Is it all true?"

"Huh! What true?"

"All that I have heard about him."

"Well, I dunno what you've heard," replied Dave, with grave caution,
"but I reckon it might be if it didn't cover lying, stealing,
cowardice, an' such coyote traits. He's shore a holy terror with a
short gun, all right, but lemme tell you something mebby you /ain't/
heard: There ain't a square man in this part of the country that won't
feel some honored an' proud to be called a friend of Hopalong Cassidy.
Them's the sentiments rampaging hereabouts. I ain't denying that he's
gone an' killed off a lot of men first an' last--but the only trouble
there is that he didn't get 'em soon enough. They all had lived too
blamed long when they went an' stacked up agin him an' that lightning
short gun of hissn. But, say, if yo're calculating to tackle him at
yore game, lead him gentle--don't push none. He comes to life real
sudden when he's shoved. So long; see you later, mebby."

The revivalist looked after him and mused, "I hope I was informed
wrong, but this much I have to be thankful for: The wickedness of most
of these men, these over-grown children, is manly, stalwart, and open;
few of them are vicious or contemptible. Their one great curse is
drink."

When Hopalong entered the store he was vociferously welcomed by two
men, and the proprietor joining them, the circle was complete. When
the conversation threatened to repeat itself cards were brought and
the next two hours passed very rapidly. They were expensive hours to
the Bar-20 puncher, who finally arose with an apologetic grin and
slapped his thigh significantly.

"Well, you've got it all; I'm busted wide open, except for a measly
dollar, an' I shore hopes you don't want that," he laughed. "You play
a whole lot better than you did the last time I was here. I've got to
move along. I'm going east an' see Wallace an' from there I've got to
meet Red an' ride home with him. But you come an' see us when you can
--it's /me/ that wants revenge this time."

"Huh; you'll be wanting it worse than ever if we do," smiled Dave.

"Say, Hoppy," advised Tom Lawrence, "better drop in an' hear the sky-
pilot's palaver before you go. It'll do you a whole lot of good, an'
it can't do you no harm, anyhow."

"You going?" asked Hopalong suspiciously.

"Can't--got too much work to do," quickly responded Tom, his brother
Art nodding happy confirmation.

"Huh; I reckoned so!" snorted Hopalong sarcastically, as he shook
hands all around. "You all know where to find us--drop in an' see us
when you get down our way," he invited.

"Sorry you can't stay longer, Cassidy," remarked Dave, as his friend
mounted. "But come up again soon--an' be shore to tell all the boys we
was asking for 'em," he called.

Considering the speed with which Hopalong started for Wallace's, he
might have been expecting a relay of "quarter" horses to keep it
going, but he pulled up short at the tent. Such inconsistency is
trying to the temper of the best-mannered horse, and this particular
animal was not in the least good-mannered, wherefore its rider was
obliged to soothe its resentment in his own peculiar way, listening
meanwhile to the loud and impassioned voice of the evangelist
haranguing his small audience.

"I wonder," said Hopalong, glancing through the door, "if them friends
of mine reckon I'm any ascared to go in that tent? Huh, I'll just show
'em anyhow!" whereupon he dismounted, flung the reins over his horse's
head, and strode through the doorway.

The nearest seat, a bench made by placing a bottom board of the
evangelist's wagon across two up-ended boxes, was close enough to the
exhorter and he dropped into it and glanced carelessly at his nearest
neighbor. The carelessness went out of his bearing as his eyes
fastened themselves in a stare on the man's neck-kerchief. Hopalong
was hardened to awful sights and at his best was not an artistic soul,
but the villainous riot of fiery crimson, gaudy yellow, and pugnacious
and domineering green which flaunted defiance and insolence from the
stranger's neck caused his breath to hang over one count and then come
double strong at the next exhalation. "Gee whiz!" he whispered.

The stranger slowly turned his head and looked coldly upon the
impudent disturber of his reverent reflections. "Meaning?" he
questioned, with an upward slant in his voice. The neck-kerchief
seemed to grow suddenly malignant and about to spring. "Meaning?"
repeated the other with great insolence, while his eyes looked a
challenge.

While Hopalong's eyes left the scrambled color-insult and tried to
banish the horrible after-image, his mind groped for the rules of
etiquette governing free fist fights in gospel tents, and while he
hesitated as to whether he should dent the classic profile of the
color-bearer or just twist his nose as a sign of displeasure, the
voice of the evangelist arose to a roar and thundered out. Hopalong
ducked instinctively.

"--Stop! Stop before it is too late, before death takes you in the
wallow of your sins! Repent and gain salvation--"

Hopalong felt relieved, but his face retained its expression of
childlike innocence even after he realized that he was not being
personally addressed; and he glanced around. It took him ninety-seven
seconds to see everything there was to be seen, and his eyes were
drawn irresistibly back to the stranger's kerchief. "Awful! Awful
thing for a drinking man to wear, or run up against unexpectedly!" he
muttered, blinking. "Worse than snakes," he added thoughtfully.

"Look ahere, you--" began the owner of the offensive decoration, if it
might be called such, but the evangelist drowned his voice in another
flight of eloquence.

"--/Peace/! /Peace/ is the message of the Lord to His children,"
roared the voice from the upturned soap box, and when the speaker
turned and looked in the direction of the two men-with-a-difference he
found them sitting up very straight and apparently drinking in his
words with great relish; whereupon he felt that he was making
gratifying progress toward the salvation of their spotted souls. He
was very glad, indeed, that he had been so grievously misinformed
about the personal attributes of one Hopalong Cassidy,--glad and
thankful.

"Death cometh as a thief in the night," the voice went on. "Think of
the friends who have gone before; who were well one minute and gone
the next! And it must come to all of us, to all of us, to me and to
you--"

The man with the afflicted neck started rocking the bench.

"Something is coming to somebody purty soon," murmured Hopalong. He
began to sidle over towards his neighbor, his near hand doubled up
into a huge knot of protuberant knuckles and white-streaked fingers;
but as he was about to deliver his hint that he was greatly displeased
at the antics of the bench, a sob came to his ears. Turning his head
swiftly, he caught sight of the stranger's face, and sorrow was marked
so strongly upon it that the sight made Hopalong gape. His hand opened
slowly and he cautiously sidled back again, disgruntled, puzzled, and
vexed at himself for having strayed into a game where he was so
hopelessly at sea. He thought it all over carefully and then gave it
up as being too deep for him to solve. But he determined one thing: He
was not going to leave before the other man did, anyhow.

"An' if I catch that howling kerchief outside," he muttered, smacking
his lips with satisfaction at what was in store for it. His visit to
Wallace was not very important, anyway, and it could wait on more
important events.

"There sits a sinner!" thundered out the exhorter, and Hopalong looked
stealthily around for a sight of a villain. "God only has the right to
punish. 'Vengeance is mine,' saith the Lord, and whosoever takes the
law into his own hands, whosoever takes human life, defies the
Creator. There sits a man who has killed his fellow-men, his brothers!
Are you not a sinner, /Cassidy/?"

Cassidy jumped clear of the bench as he jerked his head around and
stared over the suddenly outstretched arm and pointing finger of the
speaker and into his accusing eyes.

"Answer me! Are you not a sinner?"

Hopalong stood up, confused, bewildered, and then his suspended
thoughts stirred and formed. "Guilty, I reckon, an' in the first
degree. But they didn't get no more'n what was coming to 'em, no
more'n they earned. An' that's straight!"

"How do you know they didn't? How do you know they earned it? How do
you /know/?" demanded the evangelist, who was delighted with the
chance to argue with a sinner. He had great faith in "personal
contact," and his was the assurance of training, of the man well
rehearsed and fully prepared. And he knew that if he should be pinned
into a corner by logic and asked for /his/ proofs, that he could
squirm out easily and take the offensive again by appealing to faith,
the last word in sophistry, and a greater and more powerful weapon
than intelligence. /This/ was his game, and it was fixed; he could not
lose if he could arouse enough interest in a man to hold him to the
end of the argument. He continued to drive, to crowd. "What right have
you to think so? What right have you to judge them? Have you divine
insight? Are you inspired? 'Judge not lest ye be judged,' saith the
Lord, and you /dare/ to fly in the face of that great command!"

"You've got me picking the pea in /this/ game, all right," responded
Hopalong, dropping back on the bench. "But lemme tell you one thing;
Command or no command, devine or not devine, I know when a man has
lived too long, an' when he's going to try to get me. An' all the
gospel sharps south of heaven can't stop me from handing a thief what
he's earned. Go on with the show, but count me out."

While the evangelist warmed to the attack, vaguely realizing that he
had made a mistake in not heeding Dave Wilkes' tip, Hopalong became
conscious of a sense of relief stealing over him and he looked around
wonderingly for the cause. The man with the kerchief had "folded his
tents" and departed; and Hopalong, heaving a sigh of satisfaction,
settled himself more comfortably and gave real attention to the
discourse, although he did not reply to the warm and eloquent man on
the soap box. Suddenly he sat up with a start as he remembered that he
had a long and hard ride before him if he wished to see Wallace, and
arising, strode towards the exit, his chest up and his chin thrust
out. The only reply he made to the excited and personal remarks of the
revivalist was to stop at the door and drop his last dollar into the
yeast box before passing out.

For a moment he stood still and pondered, his head too full of what he
had heard to notice that anything out of the ordinary had happened.
Although the evangelist had adopted the wrong method he had gained
more than he knew and Hopalong had something to take home with him and
wrestle out for himself in spare moments; that is, he would have had
but for one thing: As he slowly looked around for his horse he came to
himself with a sharp jerk, and hot profanity routed the germ of
religion incubating in his soul. His horse was missing! Here was a
pretty mess, he thought savagely; and then his expression of anger and
perplexity gave way to a flickering grin as the probable solution came
to his mind.

"By the Lord, I never saw such a bunch to play jokes," he laughed.
"Won't they never grow up? They was watching me when I went inside an'
sneaked up and rustled my cayuse. Well, I'll get back again without
much trouble, all right. They ought to know me better by this time."

"Hey, stranger!" he called to a man who was riding past, "have you
seen anything of a skinny roan cayuse fifteen han's high, white
stocking on the near foreleg, an' a bandage on the off fetlock, Bar-20
being the brand?"

The stranger, knowing the grinning inquisitor by sight, suspected that
a joke was being played: he also knew Dave Wilkes and that gentleman's
friends. He chuckled and determined to help it along a little. "Shore
did, pardner; saw a man leading him real cautious. Was he yourn?"

"Oh, no; not at all. He belonged to my great-great-grandfather, who
left him to my second cousin. You see, I borrowed it," he grinned,
making his way leisurely towards the general store, kept by his friend
Dave, the joker. "Funny how everybody likes a joke," he muttered,
opening the door of the store. "Hey, Dave," he called.

Mr. Wilkes wheeled suddenly and stared. "Why, I thought you was half-
way to Wallace's by now!" he exclaimed. "Did you come back to lose
that lone dollar?"

"Oh, I lost that too. But yo're a real smart cuss, now ain't you?"
queried Hopalong, his eyes twinkling and his face wreathed with good
humor. "An' how innocent you act, too. Thought you could scare me,
didn't you? Thought I'd go tearing 'round this fool town like a house
afire, hey? Well, I reckon you can guess again. Now, I'm owning up
that the joke's on me, so you hand over my cayuse, an' I'll make up
for lost time."

Dave Wilkes' face expressed several things, but surprise was dominant.
"Why, I ain't even seen yore ol' cayuse, you chump! Last time I saw it
you was on him, going like the devil. Did somebody pull you off it an'
take it away from you?" he demanded with great sarcasm. "Is somebody
abusing you?"

Hopalong bit into a generous handful of dried apricots, chewed
complacently for a moment, and replied: "'At's aw right; I want my
cayuse." Swallowing hastily, he continued: "I want it, an' I've come
to the right place for it, too. Hand it over, David."

"Dod blast it, I tell you I ain't got it!" retorted Dave, beginning to
suspect that something was radically wrong. "I ain't seen it, an' I
don't know nothing about it."

Hopalong wiped his mouth with his sleeve. "Well, then, Tom or Art
does, all right."

"No, they don't, neither; I watched 'em leave an' they rode straight
out of town, an' went the other way, same as they allus do." Dave was
getting irritated. "Look here, you; are you joking or drunk, or both,
or is that animule of yourn really missing?"

"Huh!" snorted Hopalong, trying some new prunes. "'Ese prunes er purty
good," he mumbled, in grave congratulation. "I don' get prunes like
'ese very of'n."

"I reckon you don't! They ought to be good! Cost me thirty cents a
half-pound," Dave retorted with asperity, anxiously shifting his feet.
It didn't take much of a loss to wipe out a day's profits with him.

"An' I don't reckon you paid none too much for 'em, at that," Mr.
Cassidy responded, nodding his head in comprehension. "Ain't no worms
in 'em, is there?"

"Shore there is!" exploded Dave. "Plumb full of 'em!"

"You don't say! Hardly know whether to take a chance with the worms or
try the apricots. Ain't no worms in them, anyhow. But when am I going
to get my cayuse? I've got a long way to go, an' delay is costly--how
much did you say these yaller fellers cost?" he asked significantly,
trying another handful of apricots.

"On the dead level, cross my heart an' hope to die, but I ain't seen
yore cayuse since you left here," earnestly replied Dave. "If you
don't know where it is, then somebody went an' lifted it. It looks
like it's up to you to do some hunting, 'stead of cultivating a belly-
ache at /my/ expense. /I/ ain't trying to keep you, God knows!"

Hopalong glanced out of the window as he considered, and saw, entering
the saloon, the same puncher who had confessed to seeing his horse.
"Hey Dave; wait a minute!" and he dashed out of the store and made
good time towards the liquid refreshment parlor. Dave promptly nailed
the covers on the boxes of prunes and apricots and leaned innocently
against the cracker box to await results, thinking hard all the while.
It looked like a plain case of horse-stealing to him.

"Stranger," cried Hopalong, bouncing into the bar-room, "where did you
see that cayuse of mine?"

"The ancient relic of yore family was aheading towards Hoyt's
Corners," the stranger replied, grinning broadly. "It's a long walk.
Have something before you starts?"

"Damn the walk! Who was riding him?"

"Nobody at all."

"What do you mean?"

"He wasn't being rid when I saw him."

"Hang it, man; that cayuse was stole from me!"

"Somewhat in the nature of a calamity, now ain't it?" smiled the
stranger, enjoying his contributions to the success of the joke.

"You bet yore life it is!" shouted Hopalong, growing red and then
pale. "You tell me who was leading him, understand?"

"Well, I couldn't see his face, honest I couldn't," replied the
stranger. "Every time I tried it I was shore blinded by the most awful
an' horrible neck-kerchief I've ever had the hard luck to lay my eyes
on. Of all the drunks I ever met, them there colors was-- Hey! Wait a
minute!" he shouted at Hopalong's back.

"Dave, gimme yore cayuse an' a rifle--quick!" cried Hopalong from the
middle of the street as he ran towards the store. "Hypocrite son-of-a-
hoss-thief went an' run mine off. Might 'a' knowed nobody but a thief
could wear such a kerchief!"

"I'm with you!" shouted Dave, leading the way on the run towards the
corral in the rear of his store.

"No, you ain't with me, neither!" replied Hopalong, deftly saddling.
"This ain't no plain hoss-thief case--it's a private grudge. See you
later, mebby," and he was pacing a cloud of dust towards the outskirts
of the town.

Dave looked after him. "Well, that feller has shore got a big start on
you, but he can't keep ahead of that Doll of mine for very long. She
can out-run anything in these parts. 'Sides, Cassidy's cayuse looked
sort of done up, while mine's as fresh as a bird. That thief will get
what's coming to him, all right."



                            CHAPTER VII

                       MR. CASSIDY COGITATES

While Hopalong tried to find his horse, Ben Ferris pushed forward,
circling steadily to the east and away from the direction of Hoyt's
corners, which was as much a menace to his health and happiness as the
town of Grant, twenty miles to his rear. If he could have been certain
that no danger was nearer to him than these two towns, he would have
felt vastly relieved, even if his horse was not fresh. During the last
hour he had not urged it as hard as he had in the beginning of his
flight and it had dropped to a walk for minutes at a stretch. This was
not because he felt that he had plenty of time, but for the reason
that he understood horses and could not afford to exhaust his mount so
early in the chase. He glanced back from time to time as if fearing
what might be on his trail, and well he might fear. According to all
the traditions and customs of the range, both of which he knew well,
somewhere between him and Grant was a posse of hard-riding cow-
punchers, all anxious and eager for a glance at him over their sights.
In his mind's eye he could see them, silent, grim, tenacious, reeling
off the miles on that distance-eating lope. He had stolen a horse, and
that meant death if they caught him. He loosened his gaudy kerchief
and gulped in fear, not of what pursued, but of what was miles before
him. His own saddle, strapped behind the one he sat in, bumped against
him with each reach of the horse and had already made his back sore--
but he must endure it for a time. Never in all his life had minutes
been so precious.

Another hour passed and the horse seemed to be doing well, much better
than he had hoped--he would rest it for a few minutes at the next
water while he drank his fill and changed the bumping saddle. As he
rounded a turn and entered a heavily grassed valley he saw a stream
close at hand and, leaping off, fixed the saddle first. As he knelt to
drink he caught a movement and jumped up to catch his mount. Time
after time he almost touched it, but it evaded him and kept up the
game, cropping a mouthful of grass during each respite.

"All right!" he muttered as he let it eat. "I'll get my drink while
you eat an' then I'll get you!"

He knelt by the stream again and drank long and deep. As he paused for
breath something made him leap up and to one side, reaching for his
Colt at the same instant. His fingers found only leather and he swore
fiercely as he remembered--he had sold the Colt for food and kept the
rifle for defence. As he faced the rear a horseman rounded the turn
and the fugitive, wheeling, dashed for the stolen horse forty yards
away, where his rifle lay in its saddle sheath. But an angry command
and the sharp hum of a bullet fired in front of him checked his flight
and he stopped short and swore.

"I reckon the jig's up," remarked Mr. Cassidy, balancing the up-raised
Colt with nicety and indifference.

"Yea; I reckon so," sullenly replied the other, tears running into his
eyes.

"Well, I'm damned!" snorted Hopalong with cutting contempt. "Crying
like a li'l baby! Got nerve enough to steal my cayuse, an' then go an'
beller like a lost calf when I catch you. Yo're a fine specimen of a
hoss-thief, I don't think!"

"Yo're a liar!" retorted the other, clenching his fists and growing
red.

Mr. Cassidy's mouth opened and then clicked shut as his Colt swung
down. But he did not shoot; something inside of him held his trigger
finger and he swore instead. The idea of a man stealing his horse,
being caught red-handed and unarmed, and still possessed of sufficient
courage to call his captor a name never tolerated or overlooked in
that country! And the idea that he, Hopalong Cassidy, of the Bar-20,
could not shoot such a thief! "Damn that sky pilot! He's shore gone
an' made me loco," he muttered, savagely, and then addressed his
prisoner. "Oh, you ain't crying? Wind got in yore eyes, I reckon, an'
sort of made 'em leak a little--that it? Or mebby them unholy green
roses an' yaller grass on that blasted fool neck-kerchief of yourn are
too much for /your/ eyes, too!"

"Look ahere!" snapped the man on the ground, stepping forward, one
fist upraised. "I came nigh onto licking you this noon in that gospel
sharp's tent for making fun of that scarf, an' I'll do it yet if you
get any smart about it! You mind yore own business an' close yore fool
eyes if you don't like my clothes!"

"Say! You ain't no cry-baby after all. Hanged if I even think yo're a
real genuine hoss-thief!" enthused Mr. Cassidy. "You act like a twin
brother; but what the devil ever made you steal that cayuse, anyhow?"

"An' that's none of yore business, neither; but I'll tell you, just
the same," replied the thief. "I had to have it; that's why. I'll
fight you rough-an'-tumble to see if I keep it, or if you take the
cayuse an' shoot me besides: is it a go?"

Hopalong stared at him and then a grin struggled for life, got it, and
spread slowly over his tanned countenance. "Yore gall is refreshing!
Damned if it ain't worse than the scarf. Here, you tell me what made
you take a chance like stealing a cayuse this noon--I'm getting to
like you, bad as you are, hanged if I ain't!"

"Oh, what's the use?" demanded the other, tears again coming into his
eyes. "You'll think I'm lying an' trying to crawl out--an' I won't do
neither."

"/I/ didn't say /you/ was a liar," replied Hopalong. "It was the other
way about. Reckon you can try me, anyhow; can't you?"

"Yes; I s'pose so," responded the other, slowly, and in a milder tone
of voice. "An' when I called you that I was mad and desperate. I was
hasty--you see, my wife's dying, or dead, over in Winchester. I was
riding hard to get to her before it was too late when my cayuse
stepped into a hole just the other side of Grant--you know what
happened. I shot the animal, stripped off my saddle an' hoofed it to
town, an' dropped into that gospel dealer's layout to see if he could
make me feel any better--which he could not. I just couldn't stand his
palaver about death an' slipped out. I was going to lay for you an'
lick you for the way you acted about this scarf--had to do something
or go loco. But when I got outside there was yore cayuse, all saddled
an' ready to go. I just up an' threw my saddle on it, followed suit
with myself an' was ten miles out of town before I realized just what
I'd done. But the realizing part of it didn't make no difference to me
--I'd 'a' done it just the same if I had stopped to think it over.
That's flat, an' straight. I've got to get to that li'l woman as quick
as I can, an' I'd steal all the cayuses in the whole damned country if
they'd do me any good. That's all of it--take it or leave it. I put it
up to you. That's yore cayuse, but you ain't going to get it without
fighting me for it! If you shoot me down without giving me a chance,
all right! I'll cut a throat for that wore-out bronc!"

Hopalong was buried in thought and came to himself just in time to
cover the other and stop him not six feet away. "Just a minute, before
you make me shoot you! I want to think about it."

"Damn that gun!" swore the fugitive, nervously shifting his feet and
preparing to spring. "We'd 'a' been fighting by this time if it wasn't
for that!"

"You stand still or I'll blow you apart," retorted Hopalong, grimly.
"A man's got a right to think, ain't he? An' if I had somebody here to
mind these guns so you couldn't sneak 'em on me I'd fight you so
blamed quick that you'd be licked before you knew you was at it. But
we ain't going to fight--/stand still/! You ain't got no show at all
when yo're dead!"

"Then you gimme that cayuse--my God, man! Do you know the hell I've
been through for the last two days? Got the word up at Daly's Crossing
an' ain't slept since. I'll go loco if the strain lasts much longer!
She asking for me, begging to see me: an' me, like a damned idiot,
wasting time out here talking to another. Ride with me, behind me--
it's only forty miles more--tie me to the saddle an' blow me to pieces
if you find I'm lying--do anything you wants; but let me get to
Winchester before dark!"

Hopalong was watching him closely and at the end of the other's
outburst threw back his head. "I reckon I'm a plain fool, a jackass;
but I don't care. I'll rope that cayuse for you. You come along to
save time," Hopalong ordered, spurring forward. His borrowed rope
sailed out, tightened, and in a moment he was working at the saddle.
"Here, you; I'm going to swamp mounts with you--this one is fresher
an' faster." He had his own saddle off and the other on in record
time, and stepped back. "There; don't stand there like a fool--wake up
an' hustle! I might change my mind--that's the way to move! Gimme that
neck-kerchief for a souveneer, an' get out. Send that cayuse back to
Dave Wilkes, at Grant--it's hissn. Don't thank me; just gimme that
scarf an' ride like the devil."

The other, already mounted, tore the kerchief from his throat and
handed it quickly to his benefactor. "If you ever want a man to take
you out of hell, send to Winchester for Ben Ferris--that's me. So
long!"

Mr. Cassidy sat on his saddle where he had dropped it after making the
exchange and looked after the galloping horseman, and when a distant
rise had shut him from sight, turned his eyes on the scarf in his hand
and cogitated. Finally, with a long-drawn sigh he arose, and, placing
the scarf on the ground, caught and saddled his horse. Riding gloomily
back to where the riot of color fluttered on the grass he drew his
Colt and sent six bullets through it with a great amount of
satisfaction. Not content with the damage he had inflicted, he leaned
over and swooped it up. Riding further he also swooped up a stone and
tied the kerchief around it, and then stood up in his stirrups and
drew back his arm with critical judgment. He sat quietly for a time
after the gaudy missile had disappeared into the stream and then,
wheeling, cantered away. But he did not return to the town of Grant--
he lacked the nerve to face Dave Wilkes and tell his childish and
improbable story. He would ride on and meet Red as they had agreed; a
letter would do for Mr. Wilkes, and after he had broken the shock in
that manner he could pay him a personal visit sometime soon. Dave
would never believe the story and when it was told Hopalong wanted to
have the value of the horse in his trousers pocket. Of course, Ben
Ferris /might/ have told the truth and he might return the horse
according to directions. Hopalong emerged from his reverie long enough
to appeal to his mount:

"Bronc, I've been thinking: am I or am I not a jackass?"



                            CHAPTER VIII

                         RED BRINGS TROUBLE

After a night spent on the plain and a cigarette for his breakfast,
Hopalong, grouchy and hungry, rode slowly to the place appointed for
his meeting with Red, but Mr. Connors was over two hours late. It was
now mid-forenoon and Hopalong occupied his time for a while by riding
out fancy designs on the sand; but he soon tired of this makeshift
diversion and grew petulant. Red's tardiness was all the worse because
the erring party to the agreement had turned in his saddle at Hoyt's
Corners and loosed a flippant and entirely uncalled-for remark about
his friend's ideas regarding appointments.

"Well, that red-headed Romeo is shore late this time," Hopalong
muttered. "Why don't he find a girl closer to home, anyhow? Thank the
Lord I ain't got no use for shell games of any kind. Here I am,
without anything to eat an' no prospects of anything, sitting up on
this locoed layout like a sore thumb, an' can't move without hitting
myself! An' it'll be late to-day before I can get any grub, too. Oh,
well," he sighed, "I ain't in love, so things might be a whole lot
worse with me. An' he ain't in love, neither, only he won't listen to
reason. He gets mad an' calls me a sage hen an' says I'm stuck on
myself because some fool told me I had brains."

He laughed as he pictured the object of his friend's affections. "Huh;
anybody that got one good, square look at her wouldn't ever accuse him
of having brains. But he'll forget her in a month. That was the life
of his last hobbling fit an' it was the worst he ever had."

Grinning at his friend's peculiarly human characteristics he leaned
back in the saddle and felt for tobacco and papers. As he finished
pouring the chopped alfalfa into the paper he glanced up and saw a
mounted man top the sky-line of the distant hills and shoot down the
slope at full speed.

"I knowed it: started three hours late an' now he's trying to make it
up in the last mile," Hopalong muttered, dexterously spreading the
tobacco along the groove and quickly rolling the cigarette. Lighting
it he looked up again and saw that the horseman was wildly waving a
sombrero.

"Huh! Wigwagging for forgiveness," laughed the man who waited. "Old
son-of-a-gun, I'd wait a week if I had some grub, an' he knows it.
Couldn't get mad at him if I tried."

Mr. Connors' antics now became frantic and he shouted something at the
top of his voice. His friend spurred his mount. "Come on, bronc; wake
up. His girl said 'yes' an' now he wants me to get him out of his
trouble." Whereupon he jogged forward. "What's that?" he shouted,
sitting up very straight. "What's that?"

Red energetically swept the sombrero behind him and pointed to the
rear. "War-whoops! W-a-r w-h-o-o-p-s! Injuns, you chump!" Mr. Connors
appeared to be mildly exasperated.

"Yes?" sarcastically rejoined Mr. Cassidy in his throat, and then
shouted in reply: "Love an' liquor don't mix very well in you. Wake
up! Come out of it!"

"That's straight--I mean it!" cried Mr. Connors, close enough now to
save the remainder of his lungs. "It's a bunch of young bucks on their
first war-trail, I reckon. 'T ain't Geronimo, all right; I wouldn't be
here now if it was. Three of 'em chased me an' the two that are left
are coming hot-foot somewhere the other side of them hills. They act
sort of mad, too."

"Mebby they ain't acting at all," cheerily replied his companion. "An'
then that's the way you got that graze?" pointing to a bloody furrow
on Mr. Connors' cheek. "But just the same it looks like the trail left
by a woman's finger nail."

"Finger nail nothing," retorted Mr. Connors, flushing a little. "But,
for God's sake, are you going to sit here like a wart on a dead dog
an' wait for 'em?" he demanded with a rising inflection. "Do you
reckon yo're running a dance, or a party, or something like that?"

"How many?" placidly inquired Mr. Cassidy, gazing intently towards the
high sky-line of the distant hills.

"Two--an' I won't tell you again, neither!" snapped the owner of the
furrowed cheek. "The others are 'way behind now--but we're standing
/still/!"

"Why didn't you say there was others?" reproved Hopalong. "Naturally I
didn't see no use of getting all het up just because two sprouted
papooses feel like crowding us a bit; it wouldn't be none of /our/
funeral, would it?" and the indignant Mr. Cassidy hurriedly dismounted
and hid his horse in a nearby chaparral and returned to his companion
at a run.

"Red, gimme yore Winchester an' then hustle on for a ways, have an
accident, fall off yore cayuse, an' act scared to death, if you know
how. It's that little trick Buck told us about, an' it shore ought to
work fine here. We'll see if two infant feather-dusters can lick the
Bar-20. Get a-going!"

They traded rifles, Hopalong taking the repeater in place of the
single-shot gun he carried, and Red departed as bidden, his face
gradually breaking into an enthusiastic grin as he ruminated upon the
plan. "Level-headed old cuss; he's a wonder when it comes to planning
or fighting. An' lucky,--well, I reckon!"

Hopalong ran forward for a short distance and slid down the steep bank
of a narrow arroyo and waited, the repeater thrust out through the
dense fringe of grass and shrubs which bordered the edge. When settled
to his complete satisfaction and certain that he was effectually
screened from the sight of any one in front of him, he arose on his
toes and looked around for his companion, and laughed. Mr. Connors was
bending very dejectedly apparently over his prostrate horse, but in
reality was swearing heartily at the ignorant quadruped because it
strove with might and main to get its master's foot off its head so it
could arise. The man in the arroyo turned again and watched the hills
and it was not long before he saw two Indians burst into view over the
crest and gallop towards his friend. They were not to be blamed
because they did not know the pursued had joined a friend, for the
second trail was yet some distance in front of them.

"Pair of budding warriors, all right; an' awful important. Somebody
must 'a' told /them/ they had brains," Mr. Cassidy muttered. "They're
just at the age when they knows it all an' have to go 'round raising
hell all the time. Wonder when they jumped the reservation."

The Indians, seeing Mr. Connors arguing with his prostrate horse, and
taking it for granted that he was not stopping for pleasure or to view
the scenery, let out a yell and dashed ahead at grater speed, at the
same time separating so as to encircle him and attack him front and
rear at the same time. They had a great amount of respect for cowboys.

This manoeuvre was entirely unexpected and clashed violently with Mr.
Cassidy's plan of procedure, so two irate punchers swore heartily at
their rank stupidity in not counting on it. Of course everybody that
knew anything at all about such warfare knew that they would do just
such a thing, which made it all the more bitter. But Red had
cultivated the habit of thinking quickly and he saw at once that the
remedy lay with him; he astonished the exultant savages by straddling
his disgruntled horse as it scrambled to its feet and galloping away
from them, bearing slightly to the south, because he wished to lure
his pursuers to ride closer to his anxious and eager friend.

This action was a success, for the yelling warriors, slowing
perceptibly because of their natural astonishment at the resurrection
and speed of an animal regarded as dead or useless, spurred on again,
drawing closer together, and along the chord of the arc made by Mr.
Connors' trail. Evidently the fool white man was either crazy or had
original and startling ideas about the way to rest a horse when hard
pressed, which pleased them much, since he had lost so much time. The
pleasures of the war-trail would be vastly greater if all white men
had similar ideas.

Hopalong, the light of fighting burning strong in his eyes, watched
them sweep nearer and nearer, splendid examples of their type and
seeming to be a part of their mounts. Then two shots rang out in quick
succession and a cloud of pungent smoke arose lazily from the edge of
the arroyo as the warriors fell from their mounts not sixty yards from
the hidden marksman.

Mr. Connors' rifle spat fire once to make assurance doubly sure and he
hastily rejoined his friend as that person climbed out of the arroyo.

"Huh! They must have been half-breeds!" snorted Red in great disgust,
watching his friend shed sand from his clothes. "I allus opined that
'Paches was too blamed slick to bite on a game like that."

"Well, they are purty 'lusive animals, 'Paches; but there are
exceptions," replied Hopalong, smiling at the success of their scheme.
"Them two ain't 'Paches--they're the exceptions. But let me tell you
that's a good game, just the same. It is as long as they don't see the
second trail in time. Didn't Buck and Skinny get two that way?"

"Yes, I reckon so. But what'll we do now? What's the next play?" asked
Red, hurriedly, his eyes searching the sky-line of the hills. "The
rest of the coyotes will be here purty soon, an' they'll be madder
than ever now. An' you better gimme back that gun, too."

"Take yore old gun--who wants the blamed thing, anyhow?" Hopalong
demanded, throwing the weapon at his friend as he ran to bring up the
hidden horse. When he returned he grinned pleasantly. "Why, we'll go
on like we was greased for calamity, that's what we'll do. Did you
reckon we was going to play leap-frog around here an' wait for the
rest of them paint-shops, like a blamed fool pair of idiots?"

"I didn't know what /you/ might do, remembering how you acted when I
met you," retorted Red, shifting his cartridge belt so the empty loops
were behind and out of the way. "But I shore knowed what we ought to
do, all right."

"Well, mebby you also know how many's headed this way; do you?"

"You've got me stumped there; but there's a round dozen, anyway," Red
replied. "You see, the three that chased me were out scouting ahead of
the main bunch; an' I didn't have no time to take no blasted census."

"Then we've got to hit the home trail, an' hit it hard. Wind up that
four-laigged excuse of yourn, an' take my dust," Hopalong responded,
leading the way. "If we can get home there'll be a lot of disgusted
braves hitting the high spots on the back trail trying to find a way
out. Buck an' the rest of the boys will be a whole lot pleased, too.
We can muster thirty men in two hours if we gets to Buckskin, an'
that's twenty more than we'll need."

"Tell you one thing, Hoppy; we can get as far as Powers' old ranch
house, an' that's shore," replied Red, thoughtfully.

"Yes!" exploded his companion in scorn and pity. "That old sieve of a
shack ain't good enough for /me/ to die in, no matter what you think
about it. Why, it's as full of holes as a stiff hat in a melee. Yo're
on the wrong trail; think again."

Mr. Cassidy objected not because he believed that Powers' old ranch
house was unworthy of serious consideration as a place of refuge and
defence, but for the reason that he wished to reach Buckskin so his
friends might all get in on the treat. Times were very dull on the
ranch, and this was an occasion far too precious to let slip by.
Besides, he then would have the pleasure of leading his friends
against the enemy and battling on even terms. If he sought shelter he
and Red would have to fight on the defensive, which was a game he
hated cordially because it put him in a relatively subordinate
position and thereby hurt his pride.

"Let me tell you that it's a whole lot better than thin air with a
hard-working circle around us--an' you know what that means," retorted
Mr. Connors. "But if you don't want to take a chance in the shack, why
mebby we can make Wallace's, or the Cross-O-Cross. That is, if we
don't get turned out of our way."

"We don't head for no Cross-O-Cross or Wallace's," rejoined his friend
with emphasis, "an' we won't waste no time in Powers' shack, neither;
we'll push right through as hard as we can go for Buckskin. Let them
fellers find their own hunting--our outfit comes first. An' besides
that'll mean a detour in a country fine for ambushes. We'd never get
through."

"Well, have it yore own way, then!" snapped Red. "You allus was a
hard-headed old mule, anyhow." In his heart Red knew that Hopalong was
right about Wallace's and the Cross-O-Cross.

Some time after the two punchers had quitted the scene of their trap,
several Apaches loped up, read the story of the tragedy at a glance,
and galloped on in pursuit. They had left the reservation a fortnight
before under the able leadership of that veteran of many war-trails--
Black Bear. Their leader, chafing at inaction and sick of the monotony
of reservation life, had yielded to the entreaties of a score of
restless young men and slipped away at their head, eager for the joys
of raiding and plundering. But instead of stealing horses and
murdering isolated whites as they had expected, they met with heavy
repulses and were now without the mind of their leader. They had fled
from one defeat to another and twice had barely eluded the cavalry
which pursued them. Now two more of their dwindling force were dead
and another had been found but an hour before. Rage and ferocity
seethed in each savage heart and they determined to get the puncher
they had chased, and that other whose trail they now saw for the first
time. They would place at least one victory against the string of
their defeats, and at any cost. Whips rose and fell and the war-party
shot forward in a compact group, two scouts thrown ahead to feel the
way.

Red and Hopalong rode on rejoicing, for there were three less Apaches
loose in the Southwest for the inhabitants to swear about and fear,
and there was an excellent chance of more to follow. The Southwest had
no toleration for the Government's policy of dealing with Indians and
derived a great amount of satisfaction every time an Apache was
killed. It still clung to the time-honored belief that the only good
Indian was a dead one. Mr. Cassidy voiced his elation and then rubbed
an empty stomach in vain regret,--when a bullet shrilled past his
head, so unexpectedly as to cause him to duck instinctively and then
glance apologetically at his red-haired friend; and both spurred their
mounts to greater speed. Next Mr. Connors grabbed frantically at his
perforated sombrero and grew petulant and loquacious.

"Both them shots was lucky, Hoppy; the feller that fired at me did it
on the dead run; but that won't help us none if one of 'em connects
with us. You gimme that Sharps--got to show 'em that they're taking
big chances crowding us this way." He took the heavy rifle and turned
in the saddle. "It's an even thousand, if it's a yard. He don't look
very big, can't hardly tell him from his cayuse; an' the wind's puffy.
Why don't you dirty or rust this gun? The sun glitters all along the
barrel. Well, here goes."

"Missed by a mile," reproved Hopalong, who would have been stunned by
such a thing as a hit under the circumstances, even if his good-
shooting friend had made it.

"Yes! Missed the coyote I aimed for, but I got the cayuse of his off
pardner; see it?"

"Talk about luck!"

"That's all right: it takes blamed good shooting to miss that close in
this case. Look! It's slowed 'em up a bit, an' that's about all I
hoped to do. Bet they think I'm a real, shore-'nuff medicine-man. Now
gimme another cartridge."

"I will not; no use wasting lead at this range. We'll need all the
cartridges we got before we get out of this hole. You can't do nothing
without stopping--an' that takes time."

"Then I'll stop! The blazes with the time! Gimme another, d'ye hear?"

Mr. Cassidy heard, complied, and stopped beside his companion, who was
very intent upon the matter at hand. It took some figuring to make a
hit when the range was so great and the sun so blinding and the wind
so capricious. He lowered the rifle and peered through the smoke at
the confusion he had caused by dropping the nearest warrior. He was
said to be the best rifle shot in the Southwest, which means a great
deal, and his enemies did not deny it. But since the Sharps shot a
special cartridge and was reliable up to the limit of its sight gauge,
a matter of eighteen hundred yards, he did not regard the hit as
anything worthy of especial mention. Not so his friend, who grinned
joyously and loosed his admiration.

"Yo're a shore wonder with that gun, Red! Why don't you lose that
repeater an' get a gun like mine? Lord, if I could use a rifle like
you, I wouldn't have that gun of yourn for a gift. Just look at what
you did with it! Please get one like it."

"I'm plumb satisfied with the repeater," replied Red. "I don't miss
very often at eight hundred with it, an' that's long enough range for
most anybody. An' if I do miss, I can send another that won't, an'
right on the tail of the first, too."

"Ah, the devil! You make me disgusted with yore fool talk about that
carbine!" snapped his companion, and the subject was dropped.

The merits of their respective rifles had always been a bone of
contention between them and one well chewed, at that. Red was very
well satisfied with his Winchester, and he was a good judge.

"You did stop 'em a little," asserted Mr. Cassidy some time later when
he looked back. "You stopped 'em coming straight, but they're
spreading out to work up around us. Now, if we had good cayuses
instead of these wooden wonders, we could run away from 'em dead easy,
draw their best mounted warriors to the front an' then close with 'em.
Good thing their cayuses are well tired out, for as it is we've got to
make a stand purty soon. Gee! They don't like you, Red; they're
calling you names in the sign language. Just look at 'em cuss you!"

"How much water have you got?" inquired his friend with anxiety.

"Canteen plumb full. How're you fixed?"

"I got the same, less one drink. That gives us enough for a couple of
days with some to spare, if we're careful," Mr. Connors replied. New
Mexican canteens are built on generous lines and are known as life-
preservers.

"Look at that glory-hunter go!" exclaimed Red, watching a brave who
was riding half a mile to their right and rapidly coming abreast of
them. "Wonder how he got over there without us seeing him."

"Here; stop him!" suggested Hopalong, holding out his Sharps. "We
can't let him get ahead of us and lay in ambush--that's what he's
playing to do."

"My gun's good, and better, for me, at this range; but you know, I
can't hit a jack-rabbit going over rough country as fast as that
feller is," replied his companion, standing up in his stirrups and
firing.

"Huh! Never touched him! But he's edging off a-plenty. See him cuss
you. What's he calling you, anyhow?"

"Aw, shut up! How the devil do /I/ know? I don't talk with my arms."

"Are you superstitious, Red?"

"No! Shut up!"

"Well, I am. See that feller over there? If he gets in front of us
it's a shore sign that somebody's going to get hurt. He'll have plenty
of time to get cover an' pick us off as we come up."

"Don't you worry--his cayuse is deader'n ours. They must 'a' been
pushing on purty hard the last few days. See it stumble?--what'd I
tell you!"

"Yes; but they're gaining on us slow but shore. We've got to make a
stand purty soon--how much further do you reckon that infernal shack
is, anyhow?" Hopalong asked sharply.

"'T ain't fur off--see it any minute now."

"Here," remarked Hopalong, holding out his rifle, "stencil yore mark
on his hide; catch him just as he strikes the top of that little
rise."

"Ain't got time--that shack can't be much further."

And it wasn't, for as they galloped over a rise they saw, half a mile
ahead of them, an adobe building in poor state of preservation. It was
Powers' old ranch house, and as they neared it, they saw that there
was no doubt about the holes.

"Told you it was a sieve," grunted Hopalong, swinging in on the tail
of his companion. "Not worth a hang for anything," he added bitterly.

"It'll answer, all right," retorted Red grimly.



                             CHAPTER IX

                        MR. HOLDEN DROPS IN

Mr. Cassidy dismounted and viewed the building with open disgust,
walking around it to see what held it up, and when he finally realized
that it was self-supporting his astonishment was profound. Undoubtedly
there were shacks in the United States in worse condition, but he
hoped their number was small. Of course he knew that the building was
small. Of course he knew that the building would make a very good
place of defence, but for the sake of argument he called to his
companion and urged that they be satisfied with what defence they
could extemporize in the open. Mr. Connors hotly and hastily dissented
as he led the horses into the building, and straightway the subject
was arbitrated with much feeling and snappy eloquence. Finally
Hopalong thought that Red was a chump, and said so out loud, whereat
Red said unpleasant things about his good friend's pedigree,
attributes, intelligence, et al., even going so far as to
prognosticate his friend's place of eternal abode. The remarks were
fast getting to be somewhat personal in tenor when a whine in the air
swept up the scale to a vicious shriek as it passed between them,
dropped rapidly to a whine again and quickly died out in the distance,
a flat report coming to their ears a few seconds later. Invisible bees
seemed to be winging through the air, the angry and venomous droning
becoming more pronounced each passing moment, and the irregular
cracking of rifles grew louder rapidly. An angry /s-p-a-t!/ told of
where a stone behind them had launched the ricochet which hurled
skyward with a wheezing scream. A handful of 'dobe dust sprang from
the corner of the building and sifted down upon them, causing Red to
cough.

"That ricochet was a Sharps!" exclaimed Hopalong, and they lost no
time in getting into the building, where the discussion was renewed as
they prepared for the final struggle. Red grunted his cheerful
approval, for now he was out of the blazing sun and where he could
better appreciate the musical tones of the flying bullets; but his
companion, slamming shut the door and propping it with a fallen roof-
beam, grumbled and finally gave rein to his rancor by sneering at the
Winchester.

"It shore gets me that after all I have said about that gun you will
tote it around with you and force yoreself into a suicide's grave,"
quoth Mr. Cassidy, with exuberant pugnacity. "I ain't in no way
objecting to the suicide part of it, but I can't see that it's at all
fair to drag /me/ onto the edge of everlasting eternity with you. If
you ain't got no regard for yore own life you shore ought to think a
little about yore friend's. Now you'll waste all yore cartridges an'
then come snooping around me to borrow my gun. Why don't you lose the
damned thing?"

"What I pack ain't none of yore business, which same I'll uphold,"
retorted Mr. Connors, at last able to make himself heard. "You get
over on yore own side an' use yore Colt; I've wondered a whole lot
where you ever got the sense to use a Colt--/I/ wouldn't be a heap
surprised to see you toting a pearl-handled .22, like the kids use.
Now you 'tend to yore grave-yard aspirants, an' lemme do the same with
mine."

"The Lord knows I've stood a whole lot from you because you just can't
help being foolish, but I've got plumb weary and sick of it. It stops
right here or you won't get no 'Paches," snorted Hopalong, peering
intently through a hole in the shack. The more they squabbled the
better they liked it,--controversies had become so common that they
were merely a habit; and they served to take the grimness out of
desperate situations.

"Aw, you can't lick one side of me," averred Red loftily. "You never
did stop anybody that was anything," he jeered as he fired from his
window. "Why, you couldn't even hit the bottom of the Grand Canyon if
you leaned over the edge."

"You could, if you leaned too far, you red-headed wart of a half-
breed," snapped Hopalong. "But how about the Joneses, Tarantula
Charley, Slim Travennes, an' all the rest? How about them, hey?"

"Huh! You couldn't 'a' got any of 'em if they had been sober," and Mr.
Connors shook so with mirth that the Indian at whom he had fired got
away with a whole skin and cheerfully derided the marksman. "That
'Pache shore reckons it was you shooting at him, I missed him so far.
Now, you shut up--I want to get some so we can go home. I don't want
to stay out here all night an' the next day as well," Red grumbled,
his words dying slowly in his throat as he voiced other thoughts.

Hopalong caught sight of an Apache who moved cautiously through a
chaparral lying about nine hundred yards away. As long as the distant
enemy lay quietly he could not be discerned, but he was not content
with assured safety and took a chance. Hopalong raised his rifle to
his shoulder as the Indian fired and the latter's bullet, striking the
edge of the hole through which Mr. Cassidy peered, kicked up a
generous handful of dust, some of which found lodgment in that
individual's eyes.

"Oh! Oh! Oh! Wow!" yelled the unfortunate, dancing blindly around the
room in rage and pain, and dropping his rifle to grab at his eyes.
"Oh! Oh! Oh!"

His companion wheeled like a flash and grabbed him as he stumbled
past. "Are you plugged bad, Hoppy? Where did they get you? Are you hit
bad?" and Red's heart was in his voice.

"No, I ain't plugged bad!" mimicked Hopalong. "I ain't plugged at
all!" he blazed, kicking enthusiastically at his solicitous friend.
"Get me some water, you jackass! Don't stand there like a fool! I
ain't going to fall down. Don't you know my eyes are full of 'dobe?"

Red, avoiding another kick, hastily complied, and as hastily left Mr.
Cassidy to wash out the dirt while he returned to his post by the
window. "Anybody'd think you was full of red-eye, the way you act,"
muttered Red peevishly.

Hopalong, rubbing his eyes of the dirt, went back to the hole in the
wall and looked out. "Hey, Red! Come over here an' spill that brave's
conceit. I can't keep my eyes open long enough to aim, an' it's a nice
shot, too. It'd serve him right if you got him!"

Mr. Connors obeyed the summons and peered out cautiously. "I can't see
him, nohow; where is the coyote?"

"Over there in that little chaparral; see him now? /There!/ See him
moving. Do you mean to tell me--"

"Yep; I see him, all right. You watch," was the reply. "He's just over
nine hundred--where's yore Sharps?" He took the weapon, glanced at the
Buffington sight, which he found to be set right, and aimed carefully.

Hopalong blinked through another hole as his friend fired and saw the
Indian flop down and crawl aimlessly about on hands and knees. "What's
he doing now, Red?"

"Playing marbles, you chump; an' here goes for his agate," replied the
man with the Sharps, firing again. "There! Gee!" he exclaimed, as a
bullet hummed in through the window he had quitted for the moment, and
thudded into the wall, making the dry adobe fly. It had missed him by
only a few inches and he now crept along the floor to the rear of the
room and shoved his rifle out among the branches of a stunted mesquite
which grew before a fissure in the wall. "You keep away from that
windy for a minute, Hoppy," he warned as he waited.

A terror-stricken lizard flashed out of the fissure and along the wall
where the roof had fallen in and flitted into a hole, while a fly
buzzed loudly and hovered persistently around Red's head, to the rage
of that individual. "Ah, ha!" he grunted, lowering the rifle and
peering through the smoke. A yell reached his ears and he forthwith
returned to his window, whistling softly.

Evidently Mr. Cassidy's eyes were better and his temper sweeter, for
he hummed "Dixie" and then jumped to "Yankee Doodle," mixing the two
airs with careless impartiality, which was a sign that he was thinking
deeply. "Wonder what ever became of Powers, Red. Peculiar feller, he
was."

"In jail, I reckon, if drink hasn't killed him."

"Yes; I reckon so," and Mr. Cassidy continued his medley, which
prompted his friend quickly to announce his unqualified disapproval.

"You can make more of a mess of them two songs than anybody I ever
heard murder 'em! /Shut up!/"--and the concert stopped, the vocalist
venting his feelings at an Indian, and killing the horse instead.

"Did you get him?" queried Red.

"Nope; but I got his cayuse," Hopalong replied, shoving a fresh
cartridge into the foul, greasy breech of the Sharps. "An' here's
where I get him--got to square up for my eyes some way," he muttered,
firing. "Missed! Now what do you think of that!" he exclaimed.

"Better take my Winchester," suggested Red, in a matter-of-fact way,
but he chuckled softly and listened for the reply.

"Aw, you go to the devil!" snapped Mr. Cassidy, firing again. "Whoop!
Got him that time!"

"Where?" asked his companion, with strong suspicion.

"None of yore business!"

"Aw, darn it! Who spilled the water?" yelled Red, staring blankly at
the overturned canteen.

"Pshaw! Reckon I did, Red," apologized his friend ruefully. "Now of
all the cussed luck!"

"Oh, well; we've got another, an' you had to wash out yore eyes. Lucky
we each had one--/Holy smoke!/ It's most all gone! The top is loose!"

Heartfelt profanity filled the room and the two disgusted punchers
went sullenly back to their posts. It was a calamity of no small
magnitude, for, while food could be dispensed with for a long time if
necessary, going without water was another question. It was as
necessary as cartridges.

Then Hopalong laughed at the ludicrous side of the whole affair,
thereby revealing one of the characteristics which endeared him to his
friends. No matter how desperate a situation might be, he could always
find in it something at which to laugh. He laughed going into danger
and coming out of it, with a joke or a pleasantry always trembling on
the end of his tongue.

"Red, did it ever strike you how cussed thirsty a feller gets just as
soon as he knows he can't have no drink? But it don't make much
difference, nohow. We'll get out of this little scrape just as we've
allus got out of trouble. There's some mad war-whoops outside that are
worse off than we are, because they are at the wrong end of yore gun.
I feel sort of sorry for 'em."

"Yo're shore a happy idiot," grinned Red. "Hey! Listen!"

Galloping was heard and Hopalong, running to the door, looked out
through a crack as sudden firing broke out around the rear of the
shack, and fell to pulling away the props, crying, "It's a puncher,
Red; he's riding this way! Come on an' help him in!"

"He's a blamed fool to ride this way! I'm with you!" replied Red,
running to his side.

Half a mile from the house, coming across the open space as fast as he
could urge his horse, rode a cowboy, and not far behind him raced
about a dozen Apaches, yelling and firing.

Red picked up his companion's rifle, and steadying it against the jamb
of the door, fired, dropping one of the foremost of the pursuers.
Quickly reloading again, he fired and missed. The third shot struck
another horse, and then taking up his own gun he began to fire
rapidly, as rapidly as he could work the lever and yet make his shots
tell. Hopalong drew his Colt and ran back to watch the rear of the
house, and it was well that he did so, for an Apache in that
direction, believing that the trapped punchers were so busily engaged
with the new developments as to forget for the moment, sprinted
towards the back window; and he had gotten within twenty paces of the
goal when Hopalong's Colt cracked a protest. Seeing that the warrior
was no longer a combatant, Mr. Cassidy ran back to the door just as
the stranger fell from his horse and crawled past Red. The door
slammed shut, the props fell against it, and the two friends turned to
the work of driving back the second band, which, however, had given up
all hope of rushing the house in the face of Red's telling fire, and
had sought cover instead.

The stranger dragged himself to the canteens and drank what little
water remained, and then turned to watch the two men moving from place
to place, firing coolly and methodically. He thought he recognized one
of them from the descriptions he had heard, but he was not sure.

"My name's Holden," he whispered hoarsely, but the cracking of the
rifles drowned his voice. During a lull he tried again. "My name's
Holden," he repeated weakly. "I'm from the Cross-O-Cross, an' can't
get back there again."

"Mine's Cassidy, an' that's Connors, of the Bar-20. Are you hurt very
bad?"

"No; not very bad," lied Holden, trying to smile. "Gee, but I'm glad I
fell in with you two fellers," he exclaimed. He was but little more
than a boy, and to him Hopalong Cassidy and Red Connors were names
with which to conjure. "But I'm plumb sorry I went an' brought you
more trouble," he added regretfully.

"Oh, pshaw! We had it before you came--you needn't do no worrying
about that, Holden; besides, I reckon you couldn't help it," Hopalong
grinned facetiously. "But tell us how you came to mix up with that
bunch," he continued.

Holden shuddered and hesitated a moment, his companions alertly
shifting from crack to crack, window to window, their rifles cracking
at intervals. They appeared to him to act as if they had done nothing
else all their lives but fight Indians from that shack, and he braced
up a little at their example of coolness.

"It's an awful story, awful!" he began. "I was riding towards Hoyt's
Corners an' when I got about half way there I topped a rise an' saw a
nester's house about half a mile away. It wasn't there the last time I
rode that way, an' it looked so peaceful an' home-like that I stopped
an' looked at it a few minutes. I was just going to start again when
that war-party rode out of a barranca close to the house an' went
straight for it at top speed. It seemed like a dream, 'cause I thought
Apaches never got so far east. They don't, do they? I thought not--
these must 'a' got turned out of their way an' had to hustle for
safety. Well, it was all over purty quick. I saw 'em drag out two
women an'--an'--purty soon a man. He was fighting like fury, but he
didn't last long. Then they set fire to the house an' threw the man's
body up on the roof. I couldn't seem to move till the flames shot up,
but then I must 'a' went sort of loco, because I emptied my gun at
'em, which was plumb foolish at that distance, for me. The next thing
I knowed was that half of 'em was coming my way as hard as they could
ride, an' I lit out instanter; an' here I am. I can't get that sight
outen my head nohow--it'll drive me loco!" he screamed, sobbing like a
child from the horror of it all.

His auditors still moved around the room, growing more and more
vindictive all the while and more zealously endeavoring to create a
still greater deficit in one Apache war-party. They knew what he had
looked upon, for they themselves had become familiar with the work of
Apaches in Arizona. They could picture it vividly in all its devilish
horror. Neither of them paid any apparent attention to their
companion, for they could not spare the time, and, also, they believed
it best to let him fight out his own battles unassisted.

Holden sobbed and muttered as the minutes dragged along, at times
acting so strangely as to draw a covert side-glance from one or both
of the Bar-20 punchers. Then Mr. Connors saw his boon companion
suddenly lean out of a window and immediately become the target for
the hard-working enemy. He swore angrily at the criminal recklessness
of it. "Hey, you! Come in out of that! Ain't you got no brains at all,
you blasted idiot! Don't you know that we need every gun?"

"Yes; that's right. I sort of forgot," grinned the reckless one,
obeying with alacrity and looking sheepish. "But you know there's two
thundering big tarantulas out there fighting like blazes. You ought to
see 'em jump! It's a sort of a leap-frog fight, Red."

"Fool!" snorted Mr. Connors belligerently. "/You'd/ 'a' jumped if one
of them slugs had 'a' got you! Yo're the damnedest fool that ever
walked on two laigs, you blasted sage-hen!" Mr. Connors was beginning
to lose his temper and talk in his throat.

"Well, they didn't get me, did they? What you yelling about, anyhow?"
growled Hopalong, trying to brazen it out.

"An' /you/ talking about suicide to me!" snapped Mr. Connors,
determined to rub it in and have the last word.

Mr. Holden stared, open-mouthed, at the man who could enjoy a
miserable spider fight under such distressing circumstances, and his
shaken nerves became steadier as he gave thought to the fact that he
was a companion of the two men about whose exploits he had heard so
much. Evidently the stories had not been exaggerated. What must they
think of him for giving way as he had? He rose to his feet in time to
see a horse blunder into the open on Red's side of the house, and
after it blundered its owner, who immediately lost all need of earthly
conveyances. Holden laughed from the joy of being with a man who could
shoot like that, and he took up his rifle and turned to a crack in the
wall, filled with the determination to let his companions know that he
was built of the right kind of timber after all, wounded as he was.

Red's only comment, as he pumped a fresh cartridge into the barrel,
was, "He must 'a' thought he saw a spider fight, too."

"Hey, Red," called Hopalong. "The big one is dead."

"What big one?"

"Why, don't you remember? That big tarantula I was watching. One was
bigger than the other, but the little feller shore waded into him
an'--"

"Go to the devil!" shouted Red, who had to grin, despite his anger.

"Presently, presently," replied Hopalong, laughing.

So the day passed, and when darkness came upon them all of the
defenders were wounded, Holden desperately so.

"Red, one of us has got to try to make the ranch," Hopalong suddenly
announced, and his friend knew he was right. Since Holden had appeared
upon the scene they had known that they could not try a dash; one of
them had to stay.

"We'll toss for it; heads, I go," Red suggested, flipping a coin.

"Tails!" cried Hopalong. "It's only thirty miles to Buckskin, an' if I
can get away from here I'm good to make it by eleven to-night. I'll
stop at Cowan's an' have him send word to Lucas an' Bartlett, so
there'll be enough in case any of our boys are out on the range in
some line house. We can pick 'em up on the way back, so there won't be
no time lost. If I get through you can expect excitement on the
outside of this sieve by daylight. You an' Holden can hold her till
then, because they never attack at night. It's the only way out of
this for us--we ain't got cartridges or water enough to last another
day."

Red, knowing that Hopalong was taking a desperate chance in working
through the cordon of Indians which surrounded them, and that the
house was safe when compared to running such a gantlet, offered to go
through the danger line with him. For several minutes a wordy war
raged and finally Red accepted a compromise; he was to help, but not
to work through the line.

"But what's the use of all this argument?" feebly demanded Holden.
"Why don't you both go? I ain't a-going to live nohow, so there ain't
no use of anybody staying here with me, to die with me. Put a bullet
through me so them devils can't play with me like they do with others,
an' then get away while you've got a chance. Two men can get through
as easy as one." He sank back, exhausted by the effort.

"No more of that!" cried Red, trying to be stern. "I'm going to stay
with you an' see things through. I'd be a fine sort of a coyote to
sneak off an' leave you for them fiends. An', besides, I can't get
away; my cayuse is hit too hard an' yourn is dead," he lied
cheerfully. "An' yo're going to get well, all right. I've seen fellers
hit harder than you are pull through."

Hopalong walked over to the prostrate man and shook hands with him.
"I'm awful glad I met you, Holden. Yo're pure grit all the way
through, an' I like to tie to that kind of a man. Don't you worry
about nothing; Red can handle this proposition, an' we'll have you in
Buckskin by to-morrow night; you'll be riding again in two weeks. So
long."

He turned to Red and shook hands silently, led his horse out of the
building and mounted, glad that the moon had not yet come up, for in
the darkness he had a chance.

"Good luck, Hoppy!" cried Red, running to the door. "Good luck!"

"You bet--an' lots of it, too," groaned Holden, but he was gone. Then
Red wheeled. "Holden, keep yore eyes an' ears open. I'm going out to
see that he gets off. He may run into a--" and he, too, was gone.

Holden watched the doors and windows, striving to resist the weak,
giddy feeling in his head, and ten minutes later he heard a shot and
then several more in quick succession. Shortly afterward Red called
out, and almost immediately the Bar-20 puncher crawled in through a
window.

"Well?" anxiously cried the man on the floor. "Did he make it?"

"I reckon so. He got away from the first crowd, anyhow. I wasn't very
far behind him, an' by the time they woke up to what was going on he
was through an' riding like blazes. I heard him call 'em half-breeds a
moment later an' it sounded far off. They hit me,--fired at my flash,
like I drilled one of them. But it ain't much, anyhow. How are you
feeling now?"

"Fine!" lied the other. "That Cassidy is shore a wonder--he's all
right, an' so are you. I'll never see him again, but I shore hope he
gets through!"

"Don't be foolish. Here, you finish the water in yore canteen--I
picked it up outside by yore cayuse. Then go to sleep," ordered Red.
"I'll do all the watching that's necessary."

"I will if you'll call me when you get sleepy."

"Why, shore I will. But don't you want the rest of the water? I ain't
a bit thirsty--I had all I could hold just before you came," Red
remarked as his companion pushed the canteen against him in the dark.
He was choking with thirst. "Well, then; all right," and Red pretended
to drink. "Now, then, you go to sleep; a good snooze will do you a
world of good--it's just what you need."



                             CHAPTER X

                         BUCK TAKES A HAND

Cowan's saloon, club, and place of general assembly for the town of
Buckskin and the nearby ranches, held a merry crowd, for it was pay-
day on the range and laughter and liquor ran a close race. Buck
Peters, his hands full of cigars, passed through the happy-go-lucky,
do-as-you-please crowd and invited everybody to smoke, which nobody
refused to do. Wood Wright, of the C-80, tuned his fiddle anew and
swung into a rousing quick-step. Partners were chosen, the "women"
wearing handkerchiefs on their arms to indicate the fact, and the room
shook and quivered as the scraping of heavy boots filled the air with
a cloud of dust. "Allaman left!" cried the prompter, and then the
dance stopped as if by magic. The door had crashed open and a blood-
stained man staggered in and towards the bar, crying, "Buck! Red's
hemmed in by 'Paches!"

"Good God!" roared the foreman of the Bar-20, leaping forward, the
cigars falling to the floor to be crushed and ground into powder by
careless feet. He grasped his puncher and steadied him while Cowan
slid an extra generous glassful of brandy across the bar for the
wounded man. The room was in an uproar, men grabbing rifles and
running out to get their horses, for it was plain to be seen that
there was hard work to be done, and quickly. Questions, threats,
curses filled the air, those who remained inside to get the story
listening intently to the jerky narrative; those outside, caring less
for the facts of an action past than for the action to come, shouted
impatiently for a start to be made, even threatening to go on and
tackle the proposition by themselves if there were not more haste.
Hopalong told in a graphic, terse manner all that was necessary, while
Buck and Cowan hurriedly bandaged his wounds.

"Come on! Come on!" shouted the mounted crowd outside, angry, and
impatient for a start, the prancing of horses and the clinking of
metal adding to the noise. "Get a move on! /Will/ you hurry up!"

"Listen, Hoppy!" pleaded Buck, in a furore. "Shut up, you outside!" he
yelled. "You say they know that you got away, Hoppy?" he asked. "All
right--/Lanky!/" he shouted. "/Lanky!/"

"All right, Buck!" and Lanky Smith roughly pushed his way through the
crowd to his foreman's side. "Here I am."

"Take Skinny and Pete with you, an' a lead horse apiece. Strike
straight for Powers' old ranch house. Them Injuns'll have pickets out
looking for Hoppy's friends. You three get the pickets nearest the old
trail through that arroyo to the southeast, an' then wait for us.
We'll come along the high bank on the left. Don't make no noise doing
it, neither, if you can help it. Understand? Good! Now ride like the
devil!"

Lanky grabbed Pete and Skinny on his way out and disappeared into the
corral; and very soon thereafter hoof-beats thudded softly in the
sandy street and pounded into the darkness of the north, soon lost to
the ear. An uproar of advice and good wishes crashed after them, for
the game had begun.

"It's Powers' old shack, boys!" shouted a man in the door to the
restless force outside, which immediately became more restless. "Hey!
Don't go yet!" he begged. "Wait for me an' the rest. Don't be a lot of
idiots!"

Excited and impatient voices replied from the darkness, vexed,
grouchy, and querulous. "Then get a move on--/whoa!/--it'll be light
before we get there if you don't hustle!" roared one voice above the
confusion. "You know what /that/ means!"

"Come on! Come on! For God's sake, are you tied to the bar?"

"Yo're a lot of old grandmothers! Come on!"

Hopalong appeared in the door. "I'll show you the way, boys!" he
shouted. "Cowan, put my saddle on yore cayuse--/pronto/!"

"Good for you, Hoppy!" came from the street. "We'll wait!"

"You stay here; yo're hurt too much!" cried Buck to his puncher, as he
grabbed up a box of cartridges from a shelf behind the bar. "Ain't you
got no sense? There's enough of us to take care of this without you!"

Hopalong wheeled and looked his foreman squarely in the eyes. "Red's
out there, waiting for me--I'm going! I'd be a fine sort of a coyote
to leave him in that hell hole an' not go back, wouldn't I!" he said,
with quiet determination.

"Good for you, Cassidy!" cried a man who hastened out to mount.

"Well, then, come on," replied Buck. "There's blamed few like you," he
muttered, following Hopalong outside.

"Here's the cayuse, Cassidy," cried Cowan, turning the animal over to
him. "/Wait/, Buck!" and he leaped into the building and ran out
again, shoving a bottle of brandy and a package of food into the
impatient foreman's hand. "Mebby Red or Hoppy'll need it--so long, an'
good luck!" and he was alone in a choking cloud of dust, peering
through the darkness along the river trail after a black mass that was
swallowed up almost instantly. Then, as he watched, the moon pushed
its rim up over the hills and he laughed joyously as he realized what
its light would mean to the crowd. "There'll be great doings when
/that/ gang cuts loose," he muttered with savage elation. "Wish I was
with 'em. Damn Injuns, anyhow!"

Far ahead of the main fighting force rode the three special-duty men,
reeling off the miles at top speed and constantly distancing their
friends, for they changed mounts at need, thanks to the lead horses
provided by Mr. Peters' cool-headed foresight. It was a race against
dawn, and every effort was made to win--the life of Red Connors hung
in the balance and a minute might turn the scale.



In Powers' old ranch house the night dragged along slowly to the grim
watcher, and the man huddled in the corner stirred uneasily and
babbled, ofttimes crying out in horror at the vivid dreams of his
disordered mind. Pacing ceaselessly from window to window, crack to
crack, when the moon came up, Mr. Connors scanned the bare, level
plain with anxious eyes, searching out the few covers and looking for
dark spots on the dull gray sand. They never attacked at night, but
still--. Through the void came the quavering call of a coyote, and he
listened for the reply, which soon came from the black chaparral
across the clearing. He knew where two of them were hiding, anyhow.
Holden was muttering and tried to answer the calls, and Red looked at
him for the hundredth time that night. He glanced out of the window
again and noticed that there was a glow in the eastern sky, and
shortly afterwards dawn swiftly developed.

Pouring the last few drops of the precious water between the wounded
man's parched and swollen lips, he tossed the empty canteen from him
and stood erect.

"Pore devil," he muttered, shaking his head sorrowfully, as he
realized that Holden's delirium was getting worse all the time. "If
you was all right we could give them wolves hell to dance to. Well,
you won't know nothing about it if we go under, an' that's some
consolation." He examined his rifle and saw that the Colt at his thigh
was fully loaded and in good working order. "An' they'll pay us for
their victory, by God! They'll pay for it!" He stepped closer to the
window, throwing the rifle into the hollow of his arm. "It's about
time for the rush; about time for the game--"

There was movement by that small chaparral to the south! To the east
something stirred into bounding life and action; a coyote called twice
--and then they came, on foot and silently as fleeting shadows,
leaning forward to bring into play every ounce of energy in the slim,
red legs. Smoke filled the room with its acrid sting. The crashing of
the Winchester, worked with wonderful speed and deadly accuracy by the
best rifle shot in the Southwest, brought the prostrate man to his
feet in an instinctive response to the call to action, the necessity
of defence. He grasped his Colt and stumbled blindly to a window to
help the man who had stayed with him.

On Red's side of the house one warrior threw up his arms and fell
forward, sprawling with arms and legs extended; another pitched to one
side and rolled over twice before he lay still; the legs of the third
collapsed and threw him headlong, bunched up in a grotesque pile of
lifeless flesh; the fourth leaped high into the air and turned a
somersault before he struck the sand, badly wounded, and out of the
fight. Holden, steadying himself against the wall, leaned in a window
on the other side of the shack and emptied his Colt in a dazed manner
--doing his very best. Then the man with the rifle staggered back with
a muttered curse, his right arm useless, and dropped the weapon to
draw his Colt with the other hand.

Holden shrieked once and sank down, wagging his head slowly from side
to side, blood oozing from his mouth and nostrils; and his companion,
goaded into a frenzy of blood-lust and insane rage at the sight, threw
himself against the door and out into the open, to die under the clear
sky, to go like the man he was if he must die. "Damn you! It'll cost
you more yet!" he screamed, wheeling to place his back against the
wall.

The triumphant yells of the exultant savages were cut short and turned
to howls of dismay by a fusillade which thundered from the south where
a crowd of hard-riding, hard-shooting cow-punchers tore out of the
thicket like an avalanche and swept over the open sand, yelling and
cursing, and then separated to go in hot pursuit of the sprinting
Apaches. Some stood up in their stirrups and fired down at a slant,
making a short, chopping motion with their heavy Colts; others leaned
forward, far over the necks of their horses, and shot with stationary
guns; while yet others, with reins dangling free, worked the levers of
blue Winchesters so rapidly that the flashes seemed to merge into a
continuous flame.

"Thank God! Thank God--an' Hoppy!" groaned the man at the door of the
shack, staggering forward to meet the two men who had lost no time in
pursuit of the enemy, but had ridden straight to him.

"I was scared stiff you was done fer!" cried Hopalong, leaping off his
horse and shaking hands with his friend, whose hand-clasp was not as
strong as usual. "How's Holden?" he demanded, anxiously.

"He passed. It was a close--" began Red, weakly, but his foreman
interposed.

"Shut up, an' drink this!" ordered Buck, kindly but sternly. "We'll do
the talking for a while; you can tell us all about it later on. Why,
/hullo/!" he cried as Lanky Smith and his two happy companions rode
up. "Reckon you must 'a' got them pickets."

"Shore we did! Stalked 'em on our bellies, didn't we, Skinny?"
modestly replied Mr. Smith, the roping expert of the Bar-20. "Ropes
an' clubbed guns did the rest. Anyhow, there was only two anywhere
near the trail."

"We didn't see you," responded the foreman, tying the knot of a
bandage on Mr. Connors' arm. "An' we looked sharp, too."

"Reckon we was hunting for more; we sort of forgot what you said about
waiting for you," Mr. Smith replied, grinning broadly.

"An' you've got a good memory now," smiled Mr. Peters.

"We didn't find no more, though," offered Mr. Pete Wilson, with grave
regret. "An' we looked good, too. But we got Red, an' that's the whole
game. Red, you old son-of-a-gun, you can lick yore weight in powder!"

"It's too bad about Holden," muttered Red, sullenly.



                             CHAPTER XI

                      HOPALONG NURSES A GROUCH

After the excitement incident to the affair at Powers' shack had died
down and the Bar-20 outfit worked over its range in the old, placid
way, there began to be heard low mutterings, and an air of peevish
discontent began to be manifested in various childish ways. And it was
all caused by the fact that Hopalong Cassidy had a grouch, and a big
one. It was two months old and growing worse daily, and the signs
threatened contagion. His foreman, tired and sick of the snarling,
fidgety, petulant atmosphere that Hopalong had created on the ranch,
and driven to desperation, eagerly sought some chance to get rid of
the "sore-thumb" temporarily and give him an opportunity to shed his
generous mantle of the blues. And at last it came.

No one knew the cause for Hoppy's unusual state of mind, although
there were many conjectures, and they covered the field rather
thoroughly; but they did not strike on the cause. Even Red Connors,
now well over all ill effects of the wounds acquired in the old ranch
house, was forced to guess; and when Red had to do that about anything
concerning Hopalong he was well warranted in believing the matter to
be very serious.

Johnny Nelson made no secret of his opinion and derived from it a
great amount of satisfaction, which he admitted with a grin to his
foreman.

"Buck," he said, "Hoppy told me he went broke playing poker over in
Grant with Dave Wilkes and them two Lawrence boys, an' that shore
explains it all. He's got pack sores from carrying his unholy licking.
It was due to come for him, an' Dave Wilkes is just the boy to deliver
it. That's the whole trouble, an' I know it, an' I'm damned glad they
trimmed him. But he ain't got no right of making /us/ miserable
because he lost a few measly dollars."

"Yo're wrong, son; dead, dead wrong," Buck replied. "He takes his
beatings with a grin, an' money never did bother him. No poker game
that ever was played could leave a welt on him like the one we all
mourn, an' cuss. He's been doing something that he don't want us to
know--made a fool of hisself some way, most likely, an' feels so
ashamed that he's sore. I've knowed him too long an' well to believe
that gambling had anything to do with it. But this little trip he's
taking will fix him up all right, an' I couldn't 'a' picked a better
man--or one that I'd rather get rid of just now."

"Well, lemme tell you it's blamed lucky for him that you picked him to
go," rejoined Johnny, who thought more of the woeful absentee than he
did of his own skin. "I was going to lick him, shore, if it went on
much longer. Me an' Red an' Billy was going to beat him up good till
he forgot his dead injuries an' took more interest in his friends."

Buck laughed heartily. "Well, the three of you might 'a' done it if
you worked hard an' didn't get careless, but I have my doubts. Now
look here--you've been hanging around the bunk house too blamed much
lately. Henceforth an' hereafter you've got to earn your grub. Get out
on that west line an' hustle."

"You know I've had a toothache!" snorted Johnny with a show of
indignation, his face as sober as that of a judge.

"An' you'll have a stomach ache from lack of grub if you don't earn
yore right to eat purty soon," retorted Buck. "You ain't had a
toothache in yore whole life, an' you don't know what one is. G'wan,
now, or I'll give you a backache that'll ache!"

"Huh! Devil of a way to treat a sick man!" Johnny retorted, but he
departed exultantly, whistling with much noise and no music. But he
was sorry for one thing: he sincerely regretted that he had not been
present when Hopalong met his Waterloo. It would have been pleasing to
look upon.

While the outfit blessed the proposed lease of range that took him out
of their small circle for a time, Hopalong rode farther and farther
into the northwest, frequently lost in abstraction which, judging by
its effect upon him, must have been caused by something serious. He
had not heard from Dave Wilkes about that individual's good horse
which had been loaned to Ben Ferris, of Winchester. Did Dave think he
had been killed or was still pursuing the man whose neck-kerchief had
aroused such animosity in Hopalong's heart? Or had the horse actually
been returned? The animal was a good one, a successful contender in
all distances from one to five miles, and had earned its owner and
backers much money--and Hopalong had parted with it as easily as he
would have borrowed five dollars from Red. The story, as he had often
reflected since, was as old as lying--a broken-legged horse, a wife
dying forty miles away, and a horse all saddled which needed only to
be mounted and ridden.

These thoughts kept him company for a day and when he dismounted
before Stevenson's "Hotel" in Hoyt's Corners he summed up his feelings
for the enlightenment of his horse.

"Damn it, bronc! I'd give ten dollars right now to know if I was a
jackass or not," he growled. "But he was an awful slick talker if he
lied. An' I've got to go up an' face Dave Wilkes to find out about
it!"

Mr. Cassidy was not known by sight to the citizens of Hoyt's Corners,
however well versed they might be in his numerous exploits of wisdom
and folly. Therefore the habitues of Stevenson's Hotel did not
recognize him in the gloomy and morose individual who dropped his
saddle on the floor with a crash and stamped over to the three-legged
table at dusk and surlily demanded shelter for the night.

"Gimme a bed an' something to eat," he demanded, eyeing the three men
seated with their chairs tilted against the wall. "Do I get 'em?" he
asked, impatiently.

"You do," replied a one-eyed man, lazily arising and approaching him.
"One dollar, now."

"An' take the rocks outen that bed--I want to sleep."

"A dollar per for every rock you find," grinned Stevenson, pleasantly.
"There ain't no rocks in /my/ beds," he added.

"Some folks likes to be rocked to sleep," facetiously remarked one of
the pair by the wall, laughing contentedly at his own pun. He bore all
the ear-marks of being regarded as the wit of the locality--every
hamlet has one; I have seen some myself.

"Hee, hee, hee! Yo're a droll feller, Charley," chuckled Old John
Ferris, rubbing his ear with unconcealed delight. "That's a good un."

"One drink, now," growled Hopalong, mimicking the proprietor, and
glaring savagely at the "droll feller" and his companion. "An' mind
that it's a good one," he admonished the host.

"It's better," smiled Stevenson, whereat Old John crossed his legs and
chuckled again. Stevenson winked.

"Riding long?" he asked.

"Since I started."

"Going fur?"

"Till I stop."

"Where do you belong?" Stevenson's pique was urging him against the
ethics of the range, which forbade personal questions.

Hopalong looked at him with a light in his eye that told the host he
had gone too far. "Under my sombrero!" he snapped.

"Hee, hee, hee!" chortled Old John, rubbing his ear again and nudging
Charley. "He ain't no fool, hey?"

"Why, I don't know, John; he won't tell," replied Charley.

Hopalong wheeled and glared at him, and Charley, smiling uneasily,
made an appeal: "Ain't mad, are you?"

"Not yet," and Hopalong turned to the bar again, took up his liquor
and tossed it off. Considering a moment he shoved the glass back
again, while Old John tongued his lips in anticipation of a treat. "It
is good--fill it again."

The third was even better and by the time the fourth and fifth had
joined their predecessors Hopalong began to feel a little more
cheerful. But even the liquor and an exceptionally well-cooked supper
could not separate him from his persistent and set grouch. And of
liquor he had already taken more than his limit. He had always
boasted, with truth, that he had never been drunk, although there had
been two occasions when he was not far from it. That was one doubtful
luxury which he could not afford for the reason that there were men
who would have been glad to see him, if only for a few seconds, when
liquor had dulled his brain and slowed his speed of hand. He could
never tell when and where he might meet one of these.

He dropped into a chair by a card table and, baffling all attempts to
engage him in conversation, reviewed his troubles in a mumbled
soliloquy, the liquor gradually making him careless. But of all the
jumbled words his companions' diligent ears heard they recognized and
retained only the bare term "Winchester"; and their conjectures were
limited only by their imaginations.

Hopalong stirred and looked up, shaking off the hand which had aroused
him. "Better go to bed, stranger," the proprietor was saying. "You an'
me are the last two up. It's after twelve, an' you look tired and
sleepy."

"Said his wife was sick," muttered the puncher. "Oh, what you saying?"

"You'll find a bed better'n this table, stranger--it's after twelve
an' I want to close up an' get some sleep. I'm tired myself."

"Oh, that all? Shore I'll go to bed--like to see anybody stop me!
Ain't no rocks in it, hey?"

"Nary a rock," laughingly reassured the host, picking up Hopalong's
saddle and leading the way to a small room off the "office," his guest
stumbling after him and growling about the rocks that lived in
Winchester. When Stevenson had dropped the saddle by the window and
departed, Hopalong sat on the edge of the bed to close his eyes for
just a moment before tackling the labor of removing his clothes. A
crash and a jar awakened him and he found himself on the floor with
his back to the bed. He was hot and his head ached, and his back was
skinned a little--and how hot and stuffy and choking the room had
become! He thought he had blown out the light, but it still burned,
and three-quarters of the chimney was thickly covered with soot. He
was stifling and could not endure it any longer. After three attempts
he put out the light, stumbled against his saddle and, opening the
window, leaned out to breathe the pure air. As his lungs filled he
chuckled wisely and, picking up the saddle, managed to get it and
himself through the window and on the ground without serious mishap.
He would ride for an hour, give the room time to freshen and cool off,
and come back feeling much better. Not a star could be seen as he
groped his way unsteadily towards the rear of the building, where he
vaguely remembered having seen the corral as he rode up.

"Huh! Said he lived in Winchester an' his name was Bill--no, Ben
Ferris," he muttered, stumbling towards a noise he knew was made by a
horse rubbing against the corral fence. Then his feet got tangled up
in the cinch of his saddle, which he had kicked before him, and after
great labor he arose, muttering savagely, and continued on his wobbly
way. "Goo' Lord, it's darker'n cats in--/oof/!" he grunted, recoiling
from forcible contact with the fence he sought. Growling words unholy
he felt his way along it and finally his arm slipped through an
opening and he bumped his head solidly against the top bar of the
gate. As he righted himself his hand struck the nose of a horse and
closed mechanically over it. Cow-ponies look alike in the dark and he
grinned jubilantly as he complimented himself upon finding his own so
unerringly.

"Anything is easy, when you know how. Can't fool me, ol' cayuse," he
beamed, fumbling at the bars with his free hand and getting them down
with a fool's luck. "You can't do it--I got you firs', las', an'
always; an' I got you good. Yessir, I got you good. Quit that rearing,
you ol' fool! Stan' still, can't you?" The pony sidled as the saddle
hit its back and evoked profane abuse from the indignant puncher as he
risked his balance in picking it up to try again, this time
successfully. He began to fasten the girth, and then paused in wonder
and thought deeply, for the pin in the buckle would slide to no hole
but the first. "Huh! Getting fat, ain't you, piebald?" he demanded
with withering sarcasm. "You blow yoreself up any more'n I'll bust you
wide open!" heaving up with all his might on the free end of the
strap, one knee pushing against the animal's side. The "fat"
disappeared and Hopalong laughed. "Been learnin' new tricks, ain't
you? Got smart since you been travellin', hey?" He fumbled with the
bars again and got two of them back in place and then, throwing
himself across the saddle as the horse started forward as hard as it
could go, slipped off, but managed to save himself by hopping along
the ground. As soon as he had secured the grip he wished he mounted
with the ease of habit and felt for the reins. "G'wan now, an' easy--
it's plumb dark an' my head's bustin'."

When he saddled his mount at the corral he was not aware that two of
the three remaining horses had taken advantage of their opportunity
and had walked out and made off in the darkness before he replaced the
bars, and he was too drunk to care if he had known it.

The night air felt so good that it moved him to song, but it was not
long before the words faltered more and more and soon ceased
altogether and a subdued snore rasped from him. He awakened from time
to time, but only for a moment, for he was tired and sleepy.

His mount very quickly learned that something was wrong and that it
was being given its head. As long as it could go where it pleased it
could do nothing better than head for home, and it quickened its pace
towards Winchester. Some time after daylight it pricked up its ears
and broke into a canter, which soon developed signs of irritation in
its rider. Finally Hopalong opened his heavy eyes and looked around
for his bearings. Not knowing where he was and too tired and miserable
to give much thought to a matter of such slight importance, he glanced
around for a place to finish his sleep. A tree some distance ahead of
him looked inviting and towards it he rode. Habit made him picket the
horse before he lay down and as he fell asleep he had vague
recollections of handling a strange picket rope some time recently.
The horse slowly turned and stared at the already snoring figure,
glanced over the landscape, back the to queerest man it had ever met,
and then fell to grazing in quiet content. A slinking coyote topped a
rise a short distance away and stopped instantly, regarding the
sleeping man with grave curiosity and strong suspicion. Deciding that
there was nothing good to eat in that vicinity and that the man was
carrying out a fell plot for the death of coyotes, it backed away out
of sight and loped on to other hunting grounds.



                            CHAPTER XII

                          A FRIEND IN NEED

Stevenson, having started the fire for breakfast, took a pail and
departed towards the spring; but he got no farther than the corral
gate, where he dropped the pail and stared. There was only one horse
in the enclosure where the night before there had been four. He wasted
no time in surmises, but wheeled and dashed back towards the hotel,
and his vigorous shouts brought Old John to the door, sleepy and
peevish. Old John's mouth dropped open as he beheld his habitually
indolent host marking off long distances on the sand with each falling
foot.

"What's got inter you?" demanded Old John.

"Our broncs are gone! Our broncs are gone!" yelled Stevenson, shoving
Old John roughly to one side as he dashed through the doorway and on
into the room he had assigned to the sullen and bibulous stranger. "I
knowed it! I knowed it!" he wailed, popping out again as if on
springs. "He's gone, an' he's took our broncs with him, the measly,
low-down dog! I knowed he wasn't no good! I could see it in his eye;
an' he wasn't drunk, not by a darn sight. Go out an' see for yoreself
if they ain't gone!" he snapped in reply to Old John's look. "Go on
out, while I throw some cold grub on the table--won't have no time
this morning to do no cooking. He's got five hours' start on us, an'
it'll take some right smart riding to get him before dark; but we'll
do it, an' hang him, too!"

"What's all this here rumpus?" demanded a sleepy voice from upstairs.
"Who's hanged?" and Charley entered the room, very much interested.
His interest increased remarkably when the calamity was made known and
he lost no time in joining Old John in the corral to verify the news.

Old John waved his hands over the scene and carefully explained what
he had read in the tracks, to his companion's great irritation, for
Charley's keen eyes and good training had already told him all there
was to learn; and his reading did not exactly agree with that of his
companion.

"Charley, he's gone and took our cayuses; an' that's the very way he
came--'round the corner of the hotel. He got all tangled up an' fell
over there, an' here he bumped inter the palisade, an' dropped his
saddle. When he opened the bars he took my roan gelding because it was
the best an' fastest, an' then he let out the others to mix us up on
the tracks. See how he went? Had to hop four times on one foot afore
he could get inter the saddle. An' that proves he was sober, for no
drunk could hop four times like that without falling down an' being
drug to death. An' he left his own critter behind because he knowed it
wasn't no good. It's all as plain as the nose on your face, Charley,"
and Old John proudly rubbed his ear. "Hee, hee, hee! You can't fool
Old John, even if he is getting old. No, sir, b' gum."

Charley had just returned from inside the corral, where he had looked
at the brand on the far side of the one horse left, and he waited
impatiently for his companion to cease talking. He took quick
advantage of the first pause Old John made and spoke crisply.

"I don't care what corner he came 'round, or what he bumped inter; an'
any fool can see that. An' if he left that cayuse behind because he
thought it wasn't no good, he /was/ drunk. That's a Bar-20 cayuse, an'
no hoss-thief ever worked for that ranch. He left it behind because he
stole it; that's why. An' he didn't let them others out because he
wanted to mix us up, neither. How'd he know if we couldn't tell the
tracks of our own animals? He did that to make us lose time; that's
what he did it for. An' he couldn't tell what bronc he took last
night--it was too dark. He must 'a' struck a match an' seen where that
Bar-20 cayuse was an' then took the first one nearest that wasn't it.
An' now you tell me how the devil he knowed yourn was the fastest,
which it ain't," he finished, sarcastically, gloating over a chance to
rub it into the man he had always regarded as a windy old nuisance.

"Well, mebby what you said is--"

"Mebby nothing!" snapped Charley. "If he wanted to mix the tracks
would he 'a' hopped like that so we couldn't help telling what cayuse
he rode? He knowed we'd pick his trail quick, an' he knowed that every
minute counted; that's why he hopped--why, yore roan was going like
the wind afore he got in the saddle. If you don't believe it, look at
them toe-prints!"

"H'm; reckon yo're right, Charley. My eyes ain't nigh as good as they
once was. But I heard him say something 'bout Winchester," replied Old
John, glad to change the subject. "Bet he's going over there, too. He
won't get through that town on no critter wearing my brand. Everybody
knows that roan, an'--"

"Quit guessing!" snapped Charley, beginning to lose some of the
tattered remnant of his respect for old age. "He's a whole lot likely
to head for a town on a stolen cayuse, now ain't he! But we don't care
where he's heading; we'll foller the trail."

"Grub pile!" shouted Stevenson, and the two made haste to obey.

"Charley, gimme a chaw of yore tobacker," and Old John, biting off a
generous chunk, quietly slipped it into his pocket, there to lay until
after he had eaten his breakfast.

All talk was tabled while the three men gulped down a cold and
uninviting meal. Ten minutes later they had finished and separated to
find horses and spread the news; in fifteen more they had them and
were riding along the plain trail at top speed, with three other men
close at their heels. Three hundred yards from the corral they pounded
out of an arroyo, and Charley, who was leading, stood up in his
stirrups and looked keenly ahead. Another trail joined the one they
were following and ran with and on top of it. This, he reasoned, had
been made by one of the strays and would turn away soon. He kept his
eyes looking well ahead and soon saw that he was right in his surmise,
and without checking the speed of his horse in the slightest degree he
went ahead on the trail of the smaller hoof-prints. In a moment Old
John spurred forward and gained his side and began to argue hot-
headedly.

"Hey! Charley!" he cried. "Why are you follering this track?" he
demanded.

"Because it's his; that's why."

"Well, here, wait a minute!" and Old John was getting red from
excitement. "How do you know it is? Mebby he took the other!"

"He started out on the cayuse that made these little tracks," retorted
Charley, "an' I don't see no reason to think he swapped animules.
Don't you know the prints of yore own cayuse?"

"Lawd, no!" answered Old John. "Why, I don't hardly ride the same
cayuse the second day, straight hand-running. I tell you we ought to
foller that other trail. He's just cute enough to play some trick on
us."

"Well, you better do that for us," Charley replied, hoping against
hope that the old man would chase off on the other and give his
companions a rest.

"He ain't got sand enough to tackle a thing like that single-handed,"
laughed Jed White, winking to the others.

Old John wheeled. "Ain't, hey! I am going to do that same thing an'
prove that you are a pack of fools. I'm too old to be fooled by a
common trick like that. An' I don't need no help--I'll ketch him all
by myself, an' hang him, too!" And he wheeled to follow the other
trail, angry and outraged. "Young fools," he muttered. "Why, I was
fighting all around these parts afore any of 'em knowed the difference
between day an' night!"

"Hard-headed old fool," remarked Charley, frowning, as he led the way
again.

"He's gittin' old an' childish," excused Stevenson. "They say warn't
nobody in these parts could hold a candle to him in his prime."



Hopalong muttered and stirred and opened his eyes to gaze blankly into
those of one of the men who were tugging at his hands, and as he
stared he started his stupefied brain sluggishly to work in an
endeavor to explain the unusual experience. There were five men around
him and the two who hauled at his hands stepped back and kicked him. A
look of pained indignation slowly spread over his countenance as he
realized beyond doubt that they were really kicking him, and with
sturdy vigor. He considered a moment and then decided that such
treatment was most unwarranted and outrageous and, furthermore, that
he must defend himself and chastise the perpetrators.

"Hey!" he snorted, "what do you reckon yo're doing, anyhow? If you
want to do any kicking, why kick each other, an' I'll help you! But
I'll lick the whole bunch of you if you don't quite mauling me. Ain't
you got no manners? Don't you know anything? Come 'round waking a
feller up an' man-handling--"

"Get up!" snapped Stevenson, angrily.

"Why, ain't I seen you before? Somewhere? Sometime?" queried Hopalong,
his brow wrinkling from intense concentration of thought. "I ain't
dreaming; I've seen a one-eyed coyote som'ers, lately, ain't I?" he
appealed, anxiously, to the others.

"Get up!" ordered Charley, shortly.

"An' I've seen you, too. Funny, all right."

"You've seen me, all right," retorted Stevenson. "Get up, damn you!
Get up!"

"Why, I can't--my han's are tied!" exclaimed Hopalong in great wonder,
pausing in his exertions to cogitate deeply upon this most remarkable
phenomenon. "Tied up! Now what the devil do you think--"

"Use yore feet, you thief!" rejoined Stevenson roughly, stepping
forward and delivering another kick. "Use yore feet!" he reiterated.

"Thief! Me a thief! Shore I'll use my feet, you yaller dog!" yelled
the prostrate man, and his boot heel sank into the stomach of the
offending Mr. Stevenson with sickening force and laudable precision.
He drew it back slowly, as if debating shoving it farther. "Call me a
thief, hey! Come poking 'round kicking honest punchers an' calling 'em
names! Anybody want the other boot?" he inquired with grave
solicitation.

Stevenson sat down forcibly and rocked to and fro, doubled up and
gasping for breath, and Hopalong squinted at him and grinned with
happiness. "Hear him sing! Reg'lar ol' brass band. Sounds like a cow
pulling its hoofs outen the mud. Called me a thief, he did, just now.
An' I won't let nobody kick me an' call me names. He's a liar, just a
plain, squaw's dog liar, he--"

Two men grabbed him and raised him up, holding him tightly, and they
were not over careful to handle him gently, which he naturally
resented. Charley stepped in front of him to go to the aid of
Stevenson and caught the other boot in his groin, dropping as if he
had been shot. The man on the prisoner's left emitted a yell and
loosed his hold to sympathize with a bruised shinbone, and his
companion promptly knocked the bound and still intoxicated man down.
Bill Thomas swore and eyed the prostrate figure with resentment and
regret. "Hate to hit a man who can fight like that when he's loaded
an' tied. I'm glad, all the same, that he ain't sober an' loose."

"An' you ain't going to hit him no more!" snapped Jed White, reddening
with anger. "I'm ready to hang him, 'cause that's what he deserves,
an' what we're here for, but I'm damned if I'll stand for any more
mauling. I don't blame him for fighting, an' they didn't have no right
to kick him in the beginning."

"Didn't kick him in the beginning," grinned Bill. "Kicked him in the
ending. Anyhow," he continued seriously, "I didn't hit him hard--
didn't have to. Just let him go an' shoved him quick."

"I'm just naturally going to clean house," muttered the prisoner,
sitting up and glaring around. "Untie my han's an' gimme a gun or a
club or anything, an' watch yoreselves get licked. Called me a thief!
What are you fellers, then?--sticking me up an' busting me for a few
measly dollars. Why didn't you take my money an' lemme sleep, 'stead
of waking me up an' kicking me? I wouldn't 'a' cared then."

"Come on, now; get up. We ain't through with you yet, not by a whole
lot," growled Bill, helping him to his feet and steadying him. "I'm
plumb glad you kicked 'em; it was coming to 'em."

"No, you ain't; you can't fool me," gravely assured Hopalong. "Yo're
lying, an' you know it. What you going to do now? Ain't I got money
enough? Wish I had an even break with you fellers! Wish my outfit was
here!"

Stevenson, on his feet again, walked painfully up and shook his fist
at the captive, from the side. "You'll find out what we want of you,
you damned hoss-thief!" he cried. "We're going to tie you to that
there limb so yore feet'll swing above the grass, that's what we're
going to do."

Bill and Jed had their hands full for a moment and as they finally
mastered the puncher, Charley came up with a rope. "Hurry up--no use
dragging it out this way. I want to get back to the ranch some time
before next week."

"Why /I/ ain't no hoss-thief, you liar!" Hopalong yelled. "My name's
Hopalong Cassidy of the Bar-20, an' when I tell my friends about what
you've gone an' done they'll make you hard to find! You gimme any kind
of a chance an' I'll do it all by myself, sick as I am, you yaller
dogs!"

"Is that yore cayuse?" demanded Charley, pointing.

Hopalong squinted towards the animal indicated. "Which one?"

"There's only one there, you fool!"

"That so?" replied Hopalong, surprised. "Well, I never seen it afore.
My cayuse is--is--where the devil /is/ it?" he asked, looking around
anxiously.

"How'd you get that one, then, if it ain't yours?"

"Never had it--'t ain't mine, nohow," replied Hopalong, with strong
conviction. "Mine was a /hoss/."

"You stole that cayuse last night outen Stevenson's corral," continued
Charley, merely as a matter of form. Charley believed that a man had
the right to be heard before he died--it wouldn't change the result
and so could not do any harm.

"Did I? Why--" his forehead became furrowed again, but the events of
the night before were vague in his memory and he only stumbled in his
soliloquy. "But /I/ wouldn't swap my cayuse for that spavined, saddle-
galled, ring-boned bone-yard! Why, it interferes, an' it's got the
heaves something awful!" he finished triumphantly, as if an appeal to
common sense would clinch things. But he made no headway against them,
for the rope went around his neck almost before he had finished
talking and a flurry of excitement ensued. When the dust settled he
was on his back again and the rope was being tossed over the limb.

The crowd had been too busily occupied to notice anything away from
the scene of their strife and were greatly surprised when they heard a
hail and saw a stranger sliding to a stand not twenty feet from them.
"What's this?" demanded the newcomer, angrily.

Charley's gun glinted as it swung up and the stranger swore again.
"What you doing?" he shouted. "Take that gun off'n me or I'll blow you
apart!"

"Mind yore business an' sit still!" Charley snapped. "You ain't in no
position to blow anything apart. We've got a hoss-thief an' we're
shore going to hang him regardless."

"An' if there's any trouble about it we can hang two as well as we can
one," suggested Stevenson, placidly. "You sit tight an' mind yore own
affairs, stranger," he warned.

Hopalong turned his head slowly. "He's a liar, stranger; just a plain,
squaw's dog of a liar. An' I'll be much obliged if you'll lick hell
outen 'em an' let--/why, hullo, hoss-thief/!" he shouted, at once
recognizing the other. It was the man he had met in the gospel tent,
the man he had chased for a horse-thief and then swapped mounts with.
"Stole any more cayuses?" he asked, grinning, believing that
everything was all right now. "Did you take that cayuse back to
Grant?" he finished.

"Han's up!" roared Stevenson, also covering the stranger. "So yo're
another one of 'em, hey? We're in luck to-day. Watch him, boys, till I
get his gun. If he moves, drop him quick."

"You damned fool!" cried Ferris, white with rage. "He ain't no thief,
an' neither am I! My name's Ben Ferris an' I live in Winchester. Why,
that man you've got is Hopalong Cassidy--Cassidy, of the Bar-20!"

"Sit still--you can talk later, mebby," replied Stevenson, warily
approaching him. "Watch him, boys!"

"Hold on!" shouted Ferris, murder in his eyes. "Don't you try that on
me! I'll get one of you before I go; I'll shore get one! You can
listen a minute, an' I can't get away."

"All right; talk quick."

Ferris pleaded as hard as he knew how and called attention to the
condition of the prisoner. "If he did take the wrong cayuse he was too
blind drunk to know it! Can't you /see/ he was!" he cried.

"Yep; through yet?" asked Stevenson, quietly.

"No! I ain't started yet!" Ferris yelled. "He did me a good turn once,
one that I can't never repay, an' I'm going to stop this murder or go
with him. If I go I'll take one of you with me, an' my friends an'
outfit'll get the rest."

"Wait till Old John gets here," suggested Jed to Charley. "He ought to
know this feller."

"For the Lord's sake!" snorted Charley. "He won't show up for a week.
Did you hear that, fellers?" he laughed, turning to the others.

"Stranger," began Stevenson, moving slowly ahead again. "You give us
yore guns an' sit quiet till we gets this feller out of the way. We'll
wait till Old John Ferris comes before doing anything with you. He
ought to know you."

"He knows me all right; an' he'd like to see me hung," replied the
stranger. "I won't give up my guns, an' you won't lynch Hopalong
Cassidy while I can pull a trigger. That's flat!" He began to talk
feverishly to gain time and his eyes lighted suddenly. Seeing that Jed
White was wavering, Stevenson ordered them to go on with the work they
had come to perform, and he watched Ferris as a cat watches a mouse,
knowing that he would be the first man hit if the stranger got a
chance to shoot. But Ferris stood up very slowly in his stirrups so as
not to alarm the five with any quick movement, and shouted at the top
of his voice, grabbing off his sombrero and waving it frantically. A
faint cheer reached his ears and made the lynchers turn quickly and
look behind them. Nine men were tearing towards them at a dead gallop
and had already begun to forsake their bunched-up formation in favor
of an extended line. They were due to arrive in a very few minutes and
caused Mr. Ferris' heart to overflow with joy.

"Me an' my outfit," he said, laughing softly and waving his hand
towards the newcomers, "started out this morning to round up a bunch
of cows, an' we got jackasses instead. Now lynch him, damn you!"

The nine swept up in skirmish order, guns out and ready for anything
in the nature of trouble that might zephyr up. "What's the matter,
Ben?" asked Tom Murphy ominously. As under-foreman of the ranch he
regarded himself as spokesman. And at that instant catching sight of
the rope, he swore savagely under his breath.

"Nothing, Tom; nothing now," responded Mr. Ferris. "They was going to
hang my friend there, Mr. Hopalong Cassidy, of the Bar-20. He's the
feller that lent me his cayuse to get home on when Molly was sick. I'm
going to take him back to the ranch when he gets sober an' introduce
him to some very good friends of hissn that he ain't never seen. Ain't
I, Cassidy?" he demanded with a laugh.

But Mr. Cassidy made no reply. He was sound asleep, as he had been
since the advent of his very good and capable friend, Mr. Ben Ferris,
of Winchester.



                            CHAPTER XIII

                       MR. TOWNSEND, MARSHAL

Mr. Cassidy went to the ranch and lived like a lord until shame drove
him away. He had no business to live on cake and pie and wonderful
dishes that Mrs. Ferris and her sister literally forced on him, and
let Buck's mission wait on his convenience. So he tore himself away
and made up for lost time as he continued his journey on his own
horse, for which Tom Murphy and three men had faced down the scowling
population of Hoyt's Corners. The rest of his journey was without
incident until, on his return home along another route, he rode into
Rawhide and heard about the marshal, Mr. Townsend.

This individual was unanimously regarded as an affliction upon society
and there had been objections to his continued existence, which had
been overruled by the object himself. Then word had gone forth that a
substantial reward and the undying gratitude of a considerable number
of people awaited the man who would rid the community of the pest who
seemed to be ubiquitous. Several had come in response to the call, one
had returned in a wagon, and the others were now looked upon as
martyrs, and as examples of asinine foolhardiness. Then it had been
decided to elect a marshal, or perhaps two or three, to preserve the
peace of the town; but this was a flat failure. In the first place,
Mr. Townsend had dispersed the meeting with no date set for a new one;
in the second, no man wanted the office; and as a finish to the
comedy, Mr. Townsend cheerfully announced that hereafter and
henceforth he was the marshal, self-appointed and self-sustained.
Those who did not like it could easily move to other localities.

With this touch of office-holding came ambition, and of stern stuff.
The marshal asked himself why he could not be more officers than one
and found no reason. Thereupon he announced that he was marshal, town
council, mayor, justice, and pound-keeper. He did not go to the
trouble of incorporating himself as the Town of Rawhide, because he
knew nothing of such immaterial things; but he was the town, and that
sufficed.

He had been grievously troubled about finances in the past, and he
firmly believed that genius such as his should be above such petty
annoyances as being "broke." That was why he constituted himself the
keeper of the public pound, which contented him for a short time, but
later, feeling that he needed more money than the pound was giving
him, he decided that the spirit of the times demanded public
improvements, and therefore, as the executive head of the town, he
levied taxes and improved the town by improving his wardrobe and the
manner of his living. Each saloon must pay into the town treasury the
sum of one hundred dollars per year, which entitled it to police
protection and assured it that no new competitors would be allowed to
do business in Rawhide.

Needless to say he was not furiously popular, and the crowds
congregated where he was not. His tyranny was based upon his uncanny
faculty of anticipating the other man's draw. The citizens were not
unaccustomed to seeing swift death result to the slower man from
misplaced confidence in his speed of hand--that was in the game--an
even break; but to oppose an individual who /always/ knew what you
were going to do before you knew it yourself--this was very
discouraging. Therefore, he flourished and waxed fat.

Of late, however, he had been very low in finances and could expect no
taxes to be paid for three months. Even the pound had yielded him
nothing for over a week, the old patrons of Rawhide's stores and
saloons preferring to ride twenty miles farther in another direction
than to redeem impounded horses. Perhaps his prices had been too high,
he thought; so he assembled the town council, the mayor, the marshal,
and the keeper of the public pound to consult upon the matter. He
decided that the prices were too high and at once posted a new notice
announcing the cut. It was hard to fall from a dollar to "two bits,"
but the treasury was low--the times were panicky.

As soon as he had changed the notice he strolled up to the Paradise to
inform the bartender that impounding fines had been cut to bargain
prices and to ask him to make the fact generally known through his
patrons. As he came within sight of the building he jumped with
pleasure, for a horse was standing dejectedly before the door. Joy of
joys, trade was picking up--a stranger had come to town! Hastening
back to the corral, he added a cipher to the posted figure, added a
decimal point, and changed the cents sign to that of a dollar. Two
dollars and fifty cents was now the price prescribed by law. Returning
hastily to the Paradise, he led the animal away, impounded it, and
then sat down in front of the corral gate with his Winchester across
his knees. Two dollars and fifty cents! Prosperity had indeed
returned!

"Where the CG ranch is I dunno, but I do know where one of their
cayuses is," he mused, glancing between two of the corral posts at the
sleepy animal. "If I has to auction it off to pay for its keep and the
fine, the saddle will bring a good, round sum. I allus knowed that a
dollar wasn't enough, nohow."

Nat Fisher, punching cows for the CG and tired of his job, leaned
comfortably back in his chair in the Paradise and swapped lies with
the all-wise bartender. After a while he realized that he was
hopelessly outclassed at this diversion and he dug down into his
pocket and brought to light some loose silver and regarded it
thoughtfully. It was all the money he had and was beginning to grow
interesting.

"Say, was you ever broke?" he asked suddenly, a trace of sadness in
his voice.

The bartender glanced at him quickly, but remained judiciously silent,
smelling the preamble of an attempt to "touch."

"Well, I have been, am now, an' allus will be, more or less,"
continued Fisher, in soliloquy, not waiting for an answer to his
question. "Money an' me don't ride the same range, not any. Here I am
fifty miles away from my ranch, with four dollars and ninety-five
cents between me an' starvation an' thirst, an' me not going home for
three days yet. I was going to quit the CG this month, but now I gotta
go on working for it till another pay-day. I don't even own a cayuse.
Now, just to show you what kind of a prickly pear I am, I'll cut the
cards with you to see who owns this," he suggested, smiling brightly
at his companion.

The bartender laughed, treated on the house, and shuffled out from
behind the bar with a pack of greasy playing cards. "All at once, or a
dollar a shot?" he asked, shuffling deftly.

"Any way it suits you," responded Fisher, nonchalantly. He knew how a
sport should talk; and once he had cut the cards to see who should own
his full month's pay. He hoped he would be more successful this time.

"Don't make no difference to me," rejoined the bartender.

"All right; all at once, an' have it over with. It's a kid's game, at
that."

"High wins, of course?"

"High wins."

The bartender pushed the cards across the table for his companion to
cut. Nat did so, and turned up a deuce. "Oh, don't bother," he said,
sliding the four dollars and ninety-five cents across the table.

"Wait," grinned the bartender, who was a stickler for rules. He
reached over and turned up a card, and then laughed. "Matched, by
George!"

"Try again," grinned Fisher, his face clearing with hope.

The bartender shuffled, and Fisher turned a five, which proved to be
just one point shy when his companion had shown his card.

"Now," remarked Fisher, watching his money disappear into the
bartender's pocket, "I'll put up my gun agin ten of yore dollars if
yo're game. How about it?"

"Done--that's a good weapon."

"None better. Ah, a jack!"

"I say queen--nope, /king/!" exulted the dispenser of liquids. "Say,
mebby you can get a job around here when you quit the CG," he
suggested.

"That's a good idea," replied Fisher. "But let's finish this while
we're at it. I got a good saddle outside on my cayuse--go look it over
an' tell me how much you'll put up agin it. If you win it an' can't
use it, you can sell it. It's first class."

The bartender walked to the door, looked carefully around for a
moment, his eyes fastening upon a trail in the sandy street. Then he
laughed. "There ain't no saddle out here," he reported, well knowing
where it could be found.

"What! Has that ornery piebald--well, what do you think of that!"
exclaimed Fisher, looking up and down the street. "This is the first
time that ever happened to me. Why, some coyote stole it! Look at the
tracks!"

"No; it ain't stolen," the bartender responded. He considered a moment
and then made a suggestion. "Mebby the marshal can tell you where it
is--he knows everything like that. Nobody can take a cayuse out of
this town while the marshal is up an' well."

"Lucky town, all right," chirped Fisher. "An' where is the marshal?"

"You'll find him down the back way a couple of hundred yards; can't
miss him. He allus hangs out there when there are cayuses in town."

"Good for him! I'll chase right down an' see him; an' when I get that
piebald----!"

The bartender watched him go around the corner and shook his head
sadly. "Yes; hell of a lucky town," he snorted bitterly, listening for
the riot to begin.

The marshal still sat against the corral gate and stroked the
Winchester in beatific contemplation. He had a fine job and he was
happy. Suddenly leaning forward to look up the road, he smiled
derisively and shifted the gun. A cow-puncher was coming his way
rapidly, and on foot.

"Are you the marshal of this flea of a town?" politely inquired the
newcomer.

"I am the same," replied the man with the rifle. "Anything I kin do
for you?"

"Yes; have you seen a piebald cayuse straying around loose-like, or
anybody leading one--CG being the brand?"

"I did; it was straying."

"An' which way did it go?"

"Into the town pound."

"What! Pond! What'n blazes is it doing with a pond? Couldn't it drink
without getting in? Where's the pond?"

"Right here. It's eating its fool head off. I said pound, not pond.
P-o-u-n-d; which means that it's pawned, in hock, for destroying the
vegetation of Rawhide, an' disturbing the public peace."

"Good joke on the piebald, all right; it was never locked up before,"
laughed Fisher, trying to read a sign that faced away from him at a
slight angle. "Get it out for me an' I'll disturb /its/ peace. Sorry
it put you to all that trouble," he sympathized.

"Two dollars an' four bits, an' a dollar initiation fee--it wasn't
never in the pound before. That makes three an' a half. Got the money
with you?"

"What!" yelled Fisher, emerging from his trance. "What!" he yelled
again.

"I ain't none deaf," placidly replied the marshal. "Got the money, the
three an' a half?"

"If you think yo're going to skin me outen three-fifty, one-fifty, or
one measly cent, you need some medicine, an' I'll give it to you in
pill form! You'd make a bum-looking angel, so get up an' hand over
that cayuse, /an' do it damned quick/!"

"Three-fifty, an' two bits extry for feed. It'll cost you 'bout a
dollar a day for feed. At the end of the week I'll sell that cayuse at
auction to pay its bills if you don't cough up. Got the money?"

"I've got a lead slug for you if I can borrow my gun for five
minutes!" retorted Fisher, seething double from anger.

"Five dollars more for contempt of court," pleasantly responded Mr.
Townsend. "As Justice of the Peace of this community I must allow no
disrespect, no contempt of the sovereign law of this town to go
unpunished. That makes it eight-seventy-five."

"An' to think I lost my gun!" shouted Fisher, dancing with rage. "I'll
get that cayuse out an' I won't pay a cent, not a damned cent! An'
I'll get you at the same time!"

"Now you dust around for fifteen dollars even an' stop yore contempt
of court an' threats or I'll drill you just for luck!" rejoined Mr.
Townsend, angrily. "If you keep on working yore mouth like that there
won't be nothing coming to you when I sell that cayuse of yourn. Turn
around an' strike out or I'll put you with yore ancestors!"



                            CHAPTER XIV

                        THE STRANGER'S PLAN

Fisher, wild with rage, returned to the Paradise and profanely
unfolded the tale of his burning wrongs to the bartender and demanded
the loan of his gun, which the bartender promptly refused. The present
owner of the gun liked Fisher very much for being such a sport and
sympathized with him deeply, but he did not want to have such a
pleasing acquaintance killed.

"Now, see here: you cool down an' I'll lend you fifteen dollars on
that saddle of yourn. You go up an' get that cayuse out before the
price goes up any higher--you don't know that man like I do," remarked
the man behind the bar earnestly. "That feller Townsend can shoot the
eyes out of a small dog at ten miles, purty nigh. Do you savvy my
drift?"

"I won't pay him a cussed cent, an' when he goes to sell that piebald
at auction, I'll be on hand with a gun; I'll get one somewhere, all
right, even if I have to steal it. Then I'll shoot out /his/ eyes at
ten paces. Why, he's a two-laigged hold-up! That man would--" he
stopped as a stranger entered the room. "Hey, stranger! Don't you
leave that cayuse of yourn outside all alone or that coyote of a
marshal will steal it, shore. He's the biggest thief I ever knowed.
He'll lift yore animal quick as a wink!" Fisher warned, excitedly.

The stranger looked at him in surprise and then smiled. "Is it usual
for a marshal to steal cayuses? Somewhat out of line, ain't it?" he
asked Fisher, glancing at the bartender for light.

"I don't care what's the rule--that marshal just stole my cayuse; an'
he'll take yourn, too, if you ain't careful," Fisher replied.

"Well," drawled the stranger, smiling still more, "I reckon I ain't
going to stay out there an' watch it, an' I can't bring it in here.
But I reckon it'll be all right. You see, I carry 'big medicine' agin
hoss-thieves," he replied, tapping his holster and smiling as he
remembered the time, not long past, when he himself had been accused
of being one. "I'll take a chance if he will--what'll you all have?"

"Little whiskey," replied Fisher, uneasily, worrying because he could
not stand for a return treat. "But, say; you keep yore eye on that
animal, just the same," he added, and then hurriedly gave his reasons.
"An' the worst part of the whole thing is that I ain't got no gun, an'
can't seem to borrow none, neither," he added, wistfully eyeing the
stranger's Colt. "I gambled mine away to the bartender here an' he
won't lemme borrow it for five minutes!"

"Why, I never heard tell of such a thing before!" exclaimed the
stranger, hardly believing his ears, and aghast at the thought that
such conditions could exist. "Friend," he said, addressing the
bartender, "how is it that this sort of thing can go on in this town?"
When the bartender had explained at some length, his interested
listener smote the bar with a heavy fist and voiced his outraged
feelings. "I'll shore be plumb happy to spread that coyote marshal all
over his cussed pound! Say, come with me; I'm going down there right
now an' get that cayuse, an' if the marshal opens his mouth to peep
I'll get him, too. I'm itching for a chance to tunnel a man like him.
Come on an' see the show!"

"Not much!" retorted Fisher. "While I am some pleased to meet a white
man, an' have a deep an' abiding gratitude for yore noble offer, I
can't let you do it. He put it over on me, an' I'm the one that's got
to shoot him up. He's mine, my pudding; an' I'm hogging him all to
myself. That is one luxury I can indulge in even if I am broke; an'
I'm sorry, but I can't give you cards. Seeing, however, as you are so
friendly to the cause of liberty an' justice, suppose you lend me yore
gun for about three minutes by the watch. From what I've been told
about this town such an act will win for you the eternal love an'
gratitude of a down-trodden people; yore gun will blaze the way to
liberty an' light, freedom an' the right to own yore own property, an'
keep it. All I ask is that I be the undeserving medium."

"A-men," sighed the bartender. "Deacon Jones will now pass down the
aisle an' collect the buttons an' tin money."

"Stranger," continued Fisher, warming up, when he saw that his words
had not produced the desired result, "King James the Twelfth, on the
memorable an' blood-soaked field of Trafalgar, gave men their rights.
On that great day he signed the Magnet Charter, and proved himself as
great a liberator as the sainted Lincoln. You, on this most auspicious
occasion, hold in yore strong hand the destiny of this town--the women
an' children in this cursed community will rise up an' bless you
forever an' pass yore name down to their ancestors as a man of deeds
an' honor! Let us pause to consider this--"

"Hold that pause!" interrupted the astounded bartender hurriedly, and
with shaking voice. "String it out till I get untangled! I ain't up
much on history, so I won't take no chance with that; but I want to
tell our eloquent guest that there ain't no women /or/ children in
this town. An' if there was, I sort of reckon their ancestors would be
born first. What do you think about it--"

"Let us pause to consider the shameful an' burning /indignity/
perpetrated upon us to-day!" continued Fisher, unheeding the
bartender's words. "I, a peaceful, law-abiding /citizen/ of this
/glorious/ Commonwealth, a free an' /equal/ member of a liberty-loving
nation, a nation whose standard is, /now/ and forever, 'Gimme liberty
or gimme det', a /nation that stands for all the conceivable benefits
that mankind may enjoy, a /nation/ that scintillates pyrotechnically
over the prostitution of power--"

/Bang!/ went the bartender's fist on the counter. "Hey! Pause again!
Wait a minute! Go back to 'shameful an' burning,' and gimme a chance!"

"--that stands for an even break, I, Nathaniel G. Fisher, have been
deprived of one of my inalienable rights, the right of locomotion to
distant an' other parts. /An'/ I say, right here an' now, that I won't
allow no spavined individual with thieving prehensils to--"

"Has that pound-keeper got a rifle?" calmly interrupted the stranger,
without a pang of remorse.

"He has. Thus has it allus been with tyrants--well armed, fortified by
habit an' tradition--"

"Then you won't get my gun, savvy? We'll find another way to get that
cayuse as long as you feel that the marshal is yore hunting. Besides,
this man's gall deserves some respect; it is genius, an' to pump
genius full of cold lead is to act rash. Now, suppose you tell me when
this auction is due to come off."

"Oh, not for a week; he wants to run up the board an' keep expenses.
Tyrants, such as him--"

"Shore," interposed the bartender, "he'll make the expenses equal what
he gets for the cayuse, no matter what it comes to. An' he's the whole
town, an' the justice of the peace, besides. What he says goes."

"Well, I'm the Governor of the State an' I've got the Supreme Court
right here in my holster, so I reckon I can reverse his official acts
an' fill his legal opinions full of holes," the stranger replied,
laughing heartily. "Bartender, will you help me play a little joke on
His Honore, the Town,--just a little harmless joke?"

"Well, that all depends whether the joke is harmless on /me/. You see,
he can shoot like the devil--he allus knows when a man is going to
draw, an' gets his gun out first. I ain't got no respect for him, but
I take off my hat to his gunplay, all right."

The stranger smiled. "Well, I can shoot a bit myself. But I shore wish
he'd hold that auction quick--I've got to go on home without losing
any more time. Fisher, suppose you go down to the pound and dare that
tumble-bug to hold the auction this afternoon. Tell him that you'll
shoot him full of holes if he goes pulling off any auction to-day, an'
dare him to try it. I want it to come off before night, an' I reckon
that'll hustle it along."

"I'll do anything to get the edge on that thief," replied Fisher,
quickly, "but don't you reckon I'd better tote a gun, going down an'
bearding such a thief in his own den? You know I allus like to shoot
when I'm being shot at."

"Well, I don't blame you; it's only a petty weakness," grinned the
stranger, hanging onto his Colt as if fearing that the other would
snatch it and run. "But you'll do better without any gun--me an' the
bartender don't want to have to go down there an' bring you back on a
plank."

"All right, then," sighed Fisher, reluctantly, "but he'll jump the
price again. He'll fine me for contempt of court an' make me pay money
I ain't got for disturbing him. But I'm game--so long."

When he had gained the street, the stranger turned to the bartender.
"Now, friend, you tell me if this man of gall, this Mr. Townsend, has
got many friends in town--anybody that'll be likely to pot shoot from
the back when things get warm. I can't watch both ends unless I know
what I'm up against."

"/No!/ Every man in town hates him," answered the bartender, hastily,
and with emphasis.

"Ah, that's good. Now, I wonder if you could see 'most everybody
that's in town now an' get 'em to promise to help me by letting me run
this all by myself. All I want them to do is not to say a word. It
ain't hard to keep still when you want to."

"Why, I reckon I might see 'em--there ain't many here this time of
day," responded the bartender. "But what's yore game, anyhow?" he
asked, suddenly growing suspicious.

"It's just a little scheme I figgered out," the stranger replied, and
then he confided in the bartender, who jigged a few fancy steps to
show his appreciation of the other's genius. His suspicions left him
at once, and he hastened out to tell the inhabitants of the town to
follow his instructions to the letter, and he knew they would obey,
and be glad, hilariously glad, to do so. While he was hurrying around
giving his instructions, the CG puncher returned to the hotel and
reported.

"Well, it worked, all right," Fisher growled. "I told him what I'd do
to him if he tried to auction that cayuse off an' he retorted that if
I didn't shut up an' mind my own business, that he'd sell the horse
this noon, at twelve o'clock, in the public square, wherever that is.
I told him he was a coyote and dared him to do it. Told him I'd pump
him full of air ducts if he didn't wait till next week. Said I had the
promise of a gun an' that it'd give me great pleasure to use it on him
if he tried any auctioneering at my expense this noon. Then he fined
me five dollars more, swore that he'd show me what it meant to dare
the marshal of Rawhide an' insult the dignity of the court an' town
council, an' also that he'd shoot my liver all through my system if I
didn't leave him to his reflections. Now, look here, stranger; noon is
only two hours away an' I'm due to lose my outfit: what are /you/
going to do to get me out of this mess?" he finished anxiously, hands
on hips.

"You did real well, very fine, indeed," replied the stranger, smiling
with content. "An' don't you worry about that outfit--I'm going to get
it back for you an' a little bit more. So, as long as you don't lose
nothing, you ain't got no kick coming, have you? An' you ain't got no
interest in what I'm going to do. Just sit tight an' keep yore eyes
an' ears open at noon. Meantime, if you want something to do to keep
you busy, practise making speeches--you ought to be ashamed to be
punching cows an' working for a living when you could use yore talents
an' get a lot of graft besides. Any man who can say as much on nothing
as you can ought to be in the Senate representing some railroad
company or waterpower steal--you don't have to work there, just loaf
an' take easy money for cheating the people what put you there. Now,
don't get mad--I'm only stringing you: I wouldn't be mean enough to
call you a senator. To tell the truth, I think yo're too honest to
even think of such a thing. But go ahead an' practise--/I/ don't mind
it a bit."

"Huh! I couldn't go to Congress," laughed Fisher. "I'd have to
practise by getting elected mayor of some town an' then go to the
Legislature for the finishing touches."

"Mr. Townsend would beat you out," murmured the stranger, looking out
of the window and wishing for noon. He sauntered over to a chair,
placed it where he could see his horse, and took things easy. The
bartender returned with several men at his heels, and all were
grinning and joking. They took up their places against the bar and
indulged in frequent fits of chuckling, not letting their eyes stray
from the man in the chair and the open street through the door, where
the auction was to be held. They regarded the stranger in the light of
a would-be public benefactor, a martyr, who was to provide the town
with a little excitement before he followed his predecessors into the
grave. Perhaps he would /not/ be killed, perhaps he would shoot the
pound-keeper and general public nuisance--but ah, this was the stuff
of which dreams were made: the marshal would never be killed, he would
thrive and outlive his fellow-townsmen, and die in bed at a ripe old
age.

One of the citizens, dangling his legs from the card table, again
looked closely at the man with the plan, and then turned to a
companion beside him. "I've seen that there feller som'ers, sometime,"
he whispered. "I /know/ I have. But I'll be teetotally dod-blasted if
I can place him."

"Well, Jim; I never saw him afore, an' I don't know who he is,"
replied the other, refilling his pipe with elaborate care, "but if he
can kill Townsend to-day, I'll be so plumb joyous I won't know what to
do with m'self."

"I'm afraid he won't, though," remarked another, lolling back against
the bar. "The marshal was born to hang--nobody can beat him on the
draw. But, anyhow, we're going to see some fun."

The first speaker, still straining his memory for a clue to the
stranger's identity, pulled out a handful of silver and placed it on
the table. "I'll bet that he makes good," he offered, but there were
no takers.

The stranger now lazily arose and stepped into the doorway, leaning
against the jamb and shaking his holster sharply to loosen the gun for
action. He glanced quickly behind him and spoke curtly: "Remember, now
--/I/ am to do all the talking at this auction; you fellers just look
on."

A mumble of assent replied to him, and the townsmen craned their necks
to look out. A procession slowly wended its way up the street, led by
the marshal, astride a piebald horse bearing the crude brand of the
CG. Three men followed him and numerous dogs of several colors, sizes,
and ages roamed at will, in a listless, bored way, between the horse
and the men. The dust arose sluggishly and slowly dissipated in the
hot, shimmering air, and a fly buzzed with wearying persistence
against the dirty glass in the front window.

The marshal, peering out from under the pulled-down brim of his
Stetson, looked critically at the sleepy horse standing near the open
door of the Paradise and sought its brand, but in vain, for it was
standing with the wrong side towards him. Then he glanced at the man
in the door, a puzzled expression stealing over his face. He had known
that man once, but time and events had wiped him nearly out of his
memory and he could not place him. He decided that the other horse
could wait until he had sold the one he was on, and, stopping before
the door of the Paradise, he raised his left arm, his right arm lying
close to his side, not far from the holster on his thigh.

"Gentlemen an' feller-citizens," he began: "As marshal of this booming
city, I am about to offer for sale to the highest bidder this A Number
1 piebald, pursooant to the decree of the local court an' with the
sanction of the town council an' the mayor. This same sale is for to
pay the town for the board an' keep of this animal, an' to square the
fine in such cases made an' provided. It's sound in wind an' limb,
fourteen han's high, an' in all ways a beautiful piece of hoss-flesh.
Now, gentlemen, how much am I bid for this cayuse? Remember, before
you make me any offer, that this animal is broke to punching cows an'
is a first-class cayuse."

The crowd in the Paradise had flocked out into the street and oozed
along the front of the building, while the stranger now leaned
carelessly against his own horse, critically looking over the one on
sale. Fisher, uneasy and worried, squirmed close at hand and glanced
covertly from his horse and saddle to the guns in the belts on the
members of the crowd.

It was the stranger who broke the silence: "Two bits I bid--two bits,"
he said, very quietly, whereat the crowd indulged in a faint snicker
and a few nudges.

The marshal looked at him and then ignored him. "How much, gentlemen?"
he asked, facing the crowd again.

"Two bits," repeated the stranger, as the crowd remained silent.

"Two bits!" yelled the marshal, glaring at him angrily: "/Two bits!/
Why, the /look/ in this cayuse's eyes is worth four! Look at the
spirit in them eyes, look at the intelligence! The saddle alone is
worth a clean forty dollars of any man's money. I am out here to sell
this animal to the highest bidder; the sale's begun, an' I want bids,
not jokes. Now, who'll start it off?" he demanded, glancing around;
but no one had anything to say except the terse stranger, who appeared
to be getting irritated.

"You've got a starter--I've given you a bid. I bid two bits--t-w-o
b-i-t-s, twenty-five cents. Now go ahead with yore auction."

The marshal thought he saw an attempt at humor, and since he was
feeling quite happy, and since he knew that good humor is conducive to
good bidding, he smiled, all the time, however, racking his memory for
the name of the humorist. So he accepted the bid: "All right, this
gentleman bids two bits. Two bits I am bid--two bits. Twenty-five
cents. Who'll make it twenty-five dollars? Two bits--who says twenty-
five dollars? Ah, did /you/ say twenty-five dollars?" he snapped,
leveling an accusing and threatening fore-finger at the man nearest
him, who squirmed restlessly and glanced at the stranger. "/Did you
say twenty-five dollars?/" he shouted.

The stranger came to the rescue. "He did not. He hasn't opened his
mouth. But /I/ said twenty-five /cents/," quietly observed the
humorist.

"Who'll gimme thirty? Who'll gimme thirty dollars? Did I hear thirty
dollars? Did I hear twenty-five dollars bid? Who said thirty dollars?
Did /you/ say twenty-five dollars?"

"How could he when he was talking politics to the man behind him?"
asked the stranger. "I said two bits," he added complacently, as he
watched the auctioneer closely.

"I want twenty-five dollars--an' you shut yore blasted mouth!" snapped
the marshal at the persistent twenty-five-cent man. He did not see the
fire smouldering in the squinting eyes so alertly watching him.
"Twenty-five dollars--not a cent less takes the cayuse. Why,
gentlemen, he's worth twenty in /cans/! Gimme twenty-five dollars,
somebody. /I/ bid twenty-five. I want thirty. I want thirty,
gentlemen; you must gimme thirty. /I/ bid twenty-five dollars--who's
going to make it thirty?"

"Show us yore twenty-five an' she's yourn," remarked the stranger,
with exasperating assurance, while Fisher grew pale with excitement.
The stranger was standing clear of his horse now, and alert readiness
was stamped all over him. "You accepted my bid--show yore twenty-five
dollars or take my two bits."

"You close that face of yourn!" exploded the marshal, angrily. "I
don't mind a little fun, but you've got altogether too damned much to
say. You've queered the bidding, an' now you shut up!"

"I said two bits an' I mean just that. You show yore twenty-five or
gimme that cayuse on my bid," retorted the stranger.

"By the pans of Julius Caesar!" shouted the marshal. "I'll put you to
sleep so you'll never wake up if I hears any more about you an' yore
two bits!"

"Show me, Rednose," snapped the other, his gun out in a flash. "I want
that cayuse, an' I want it quick. You show me twenty-five dollars or
I'll take it out from under you on my bid, you yaller dog! /Stop it!/
Shut up! That's suicide, that is. Others have tried it an' failed, an'
yo're no sleight-of-hand gun-man. This is the first time I ever paid a
hoss-thief in /silver/, or bought stolen goods, but everything has to
have a beginning. You get nervous with that hand of yourn an' I'll
cure you of it! Git off that piebald, an' quick!"

The marshal felt stunned and groped for a way out, but the gun under
his nose was as steady as a rock. He sat there stupidly, not knowing
enough to obey orders.

"Come, get off that cayuse," sharply commanded the stranger. "An' I'll
take yore Winchester as a fine for this high-handed business you've
been carrying on. You may be the local court an' all the town
officials, but I'm the Governor, an' here's my Supreme Court, as I was
saying to the boys a little while ago. Yo're overruled. Get off that
cayuse, an' don't waste no more time about it, neither!"

The marshal glared into the muzzle of the weapon and felt a sinking in
the pit of his stomach. Never before had he failed to anticipate the
pull of a gun. As the stranger said, there must always be a beginning,
a first time. He was thinking quickly now; he was master of himself
again, but he realized that he was in a tight place unless he obeyed
the man with the drop. Not a man in town would help him; on the other
hand, they were all against him, and hugely enjoying his discomfiture.
With some men he could afford to take chances and jerk at his gun even
when at such a disadvantage, but--

"Stranger," he said slowly, "what's yore name?"

The crowd listened eagerly.

"My /friends/ call me Hopalong Cassidy; other people, other things--
you gimme that cayuse an' that Winchester. Here! Hand the gun to
Fisher, so there won't be no lamentable accidents: I don't want to
shoot you, 'less I have to."

"They're both yourn," sighed Mr. Townsend, remembering a certain day
over near Alameda, when he had seen Mr. Cassidy at gun-play. He
dismounted slowly and sorrowfully. "Do I--do I get my two bits?" he
asked.

"You shore do--yore gall is worth it," said Mr. Cassidy, turning the
piebald over to its overjoyed owner, who was already arranging further
gambling with his friend, the bartender.

Mr. Townsend pocketed the one bid, surveyed glumly the hilarious crowd
flocking in to the bar to drink to their joy in his defeat, and
wandered disconsolately back to the pound. He was never again seen in
that locality, or by any of the citizens of Rawhide, for between dark
and dawn he resumed his travels, bound for some locality far removed
from limping, red-headed drawbacks.



                             CHAPTER XV

                      JOHNNY LEARNS SOMETHING

For several weeks after Hopalong got back to the ranch, full of
interesting stories and minus the grouch, things went on in a way
placid enough for the most peacefully inclined individual that ever
sat a saddle. And then trouble drifted down from the north and caused
a look of anxiety to spoil Buck Peters' pleasant expression, and began
to show on the faces of his men. When one finds the carcasses of two
cows on the same day, and both are skinned, there can be only one
conclusion. The killing and skinning of two cows out of herds that are
numbered by thousands need not, in themselves, bring lines of worry to
any foreman's brow; but there is the sting of being cheated, the
possibility of the losses going higher unless a sharp lesson be given
upon the folly of fooling with a very keen and active buzz-saw,--and
it was the determination of the outfit of the Bar-20 to teach that
lesson, and as quickly as circumstances would permit.

It was common knowledge that there was a more or less organized band
of shiftless malcontents making its headquarters in and near Perry's
Bend, some distance up the river, and the deduction in this case was
easy. The Bar-20 cared very little about what went on at Perry's Bend
--that was a matter which concerned only the ranches near that town--
as long as no vexatious happenings sifted too far south. But they had
so sifted, and Perry's Bend, or rather the undesirable class hanging
out there, was due to receive a shock before long.

About a week after the finding of the first skinned cows, Pete Wilson
tornadoed up to the bunk house with a perforated arm. Pete was on
foot, having lost his horse at the first exchange of shots, which
accounts for the expression describing his arrival. Pete hated to
walk, he hated still more to get shot, and most of all he hated to
have to admit that his rifle-shooting was so far below par. He had
seen the thief at work and, too eager to work up close to the cattle
skinner before announcing his displeasure, had missed the first shot.
When he dragged himself out from under his deceased horse the scenery
was undisturbed save for a small cloud of dust hovering over a distant
rise to the north of him. After delivering a short and bitter
monologue he struck out for the ranch and arrived in a very hot and
wrathful condition. It was contagious, that condition, and before long
the entire outfit was in the saddle and pounding north, Pete overjoyed
because his wound was so slight as not to bar him from the chase. The
shock was on the way, and as events proved, was to be one long to
linger in the minds of the inhabitants of Perry's Bend and the
surrounding range.



The patrons of the Oasis liked their tobacco strong. The pungent smoke
drifted in sluggish clouds along the low, black ceiling, following its
upward slant toward the east wall and away from the high bar at the
other end. This bar, rough and strong, ran from the north wall to
within a scant two feet of the south wall, the opening bridged by a
hinged board which served as an extension to the counter. Behind the
bar was a rear door, low and double, the upper part barred securely--
the lower part was used most. In front of and near the bar was a large
round table, at which four men played cards silently, while two
smaller tables were located along the north wall. Besides dilapidated
chairs there were half a dozen low wooden boxes partly filled with
sand, and attention was directed to the existence and purpose of these
by a roughly lettered sign on the wall, reading: "Gents will look for
a box first," which the "gents" sometimes did. The majority of the
"gents" preferred to aim at various knotholes in the floor and bet on
the result, chancing the outpouring of the proprietor's wrath if they
missed.

On the wall behind the bar was a smaller and neater request: "Leave
your guns with the bartender.--Edwards." This, although a month old,
still called forth caustic and profane remarks from the regular
frequenters of the saloon, for hitherto restraint in the matter of
carrying weapons had been unknown. They forthwith evaded the order in
a manner consistent with their characteristics--by carrying smaller
guns where they could not be seen. The majority had simply sawed off a
generous part of the long barrels of their Colts and Remingtons, which
did not improve their accuracy.

Edwards, the new marshal of Perry's Bend, had come direct from Kansas
and his reputation as a fighter had preceded him. When he took up his
first day's work he was kept busy proving that he was the rightful
owner of it and that it had not been exaggerated in any manner or
degree. With the exception of one instance the proof had been
bloodless, for he reasoned that gun-play should give way, whenever
possible, to a crushing "right" or "left" to the point of the jaw or
the pit of the stomach. His proficiency in the manly art was polished
and thorough and bespoke earnest application. The last doubting Thomas
to be convinced came to five minutes after his diaphragm had been
rudely and suddenly raised several inches by a low right hook, and as
he groped for his bearings and got his wind back again he asked, very
feebly, where "Kansas" was; and the name stuck.

When Harlan heard the nickname for the first time he stopped pulling
the cork out of a whiskey bottle long enough to remark, casually, "I
allus reckoned Kansas was purty close to hell," and said no more about
it. Harlan was the proprietor and bartender of the Oasis and catered
to the excessive and uncritical thirsts of the ruck of range society,
and he had objected vigorously to the placing of the second sign in
his place of business; but at the close of an incisive if inelegant
reply from the marshal, the sign went up, and stayed up. Edwards'
language and delivery were as convincing as his fists.

The marshal did not like the Oasis; indeed, he went further and
cordially hated it. Harlan's saloon was a thorn in his side and he was
only waiting for a good excuse to wipe it off the local map. He was
the Law, and behind him were the range riders, who would be only too
glad to have the nest of rustlers wiped out and its gang of ne'er-do-
wells scattered to the four winds. Indeed, he had been given to
understand in a most polite and diplomatic way that if this were not
done lawfully they would try to do it themselves, and they had great
faith in their ability to handle the situation in a thorough and
workmanlike manner. This would not do in a law-abiding community, as
he called the town, and so he had replied that the work was his, and
that it would be performed as soon as he believed himself justified to
act. Harlan and his friends were fully conversant with the feeling
against them and had become a little more cautious, alertly watching
out for trouble.

On the evening of the day which saw Pete Wilson's discomfiture most of
the habitues had assembled in the Oasis where, besides the card-
players already mentioned, eight men lounged against the bar. There
was some laughter, much subdued talking, and a little whispering. More
whispering went on under that roof than in all the other places in
town put together; for here rustling was planned, wayfaring strangers
were "trimmed" in "frame-ups" at cards, and a hunted man was certain
to find assistance. Harlan had once boasted that no fugitive had ever
been taken from his saloon, and he was behind the bar and standing on
the trap door which led to the six-by-six cellar when he made the
assertion. It was true, for only those in his confidence knew of the
place of refuge under the floor; it had been dug at night and the dirt
carefully disposed of.

It had not been dark very long before talking ceased and card-playing
was suspended while all looked up as the front door crashed open and
two punchers entered, looking the crowd over with critical care.

"Stay here, Johnny," Hopalong told his youthful companion, and then
walked forward, scrutinizing each scowling face in turn, while Johnny
stood with his back to the door, keenly alert, his right hand resting
lightly on his belt not far from the holster.

Harlan's thick neck grew crimson and his eyes hard. "Looking fer
something?" he asked with bitter sarcasm, his hands under the bar.
Johnny grinned hopefully and a sudden tenseness took possession of him
as he watched for the first hostile move.

"Yes," Hopalong replied coolly, appraising Harlan's attitude and look
in one swift glance, "but it ain't here, now. Johnny, get out," he
ordered, backing after his companion, and safely outside, the two
walked towards Jackson's store, Johnny complaining about the little
time spent in the Oasis.

As they entered the store they saw Edwards, whose eye asked a
question.

"No; he ain't in there yet," Hopalong replied.

"Did you look all over? Behind the bar?" Edwards asked, slowly. "He
can't get out of town through that cordon you've got strung around it,
an' he ain't nowhere else. Leastwise, I couldn't find him."

"Come on back!" excitedly exclaimed Johnny, turning towards the door.
"You didn't look behind the bar! Come on--bet you ten dollars that's
where he is!"

"Mebby yo're right, Kid," replied Hopalong, and the marshal's nodding
head decided it.

In the saloon there was strong language, and Jack Quinn, expert
skinner of other men's cows, looked inquiringly at the proprietor.
"What's up now, Harlan?"

The proprietor laughed harshly but said nothing--taciturnity was his
one redeeming trait. "Did you say cigars?" he asked, pushing a box
across the bar to an impatient customer. Another beckoned to him and
he leaned over to hear the whispered request, a frown struggling to
show itself on his face. "Nix; you know my rule. No trust in here."

But the man at the far end of the line was unlike the proprietor and
he prefaced his remarks with a curse. "/I/ know what's up! They want
Jerry Brown, that's what! An' I hopes they don't get him, the
bullies!"

"What did he do? Why do they want him?" asked the man who had wanted
trust.

"Skinning. He was careless or crazy, working so close to their ranch
houses. Nobody that had any sense would take a chance like that,"
replied Boston, adept at sleight-of-hand with cards and very much in
demand when a frame-up was to be rung in on some unsuspecting
stranger. His one great fault in the eyes of his partners was that he
hated to divvy his winnings and at times had to be coerced into
sharing equally.

"Aw, them big ranches make me mad," announced the first speaker. "Ten
years ago there was a lot of little ranchers, an' every one of 'em had
his own herd, an' plenty of free grass an' water for it. Where are the
little herds now? Where are the cows that /we/ used to own?" he cried,
hotly. "What happens to a maverick-hunter now-a-days? By God, if a man
helps hisself to a pore, sick dogie he's hunted down! It can't go on
much longer, an' that's shore."

Cries of approbation arose on all sides, for his auditors ignored the
fact that their kind, by avarice and thievery, had forever killed the
occupation of maverick-hunting. That belonged to the old days, before
the demand for cows and their easy and cheap transportation had
boosted the prices and made them valuable.

Slivers Lowe leaped up from his chair. "Yo're right, Harper! Dead
right! /I/ was a little cattle owner once, so was you, an' Jerry, an'
most of us!" Slivers found it convenient to forget that fully half of
his small herd had perished in the bitter and long winter of five
years before, and that the remainder had either flowed down his
parched throat or been lost across the big round table near the bar.
Not a few of his cows were banked in the east under Harlan's name.

The rear door opened slightly and one of the loungers looked up and
nodded. "It's all right, Jerry. But get a move on!"

"Here, /you/!" called Harlan, quickly bending over the trap door,
"/Lively!/"

Jerry was half way to the proprietor when the front door swung open
and Hopalong, closely followed by the marshal, leaped into the room,
and immediately thereafter the back door banged open and admitted
Johnny. Jerry's right hand was in his side coat pocket and Johnny,
young and self-confident, and with a lot to learn, was certain that he
could beat the fugitive on the draw.

"I reckon you won't blot no more brands!" he cried, triumphantly,
watching both Jerry and Harlan.

The card-players had leaped to their feet and at a signal from Harlan
they surged forward to the bar and formed a barrier between Johnny and
his friends; and as they did so that puncher jerked at his gun,
twisting to half face the crowd. At that instant fire and smoke
spurted from Jerry's side coat pocket and the odor of burning cloth
arose. As Johnny fell, the rustler ducked low and sprang for the door.
A gun roared twice in the front of the room and Jerry staggered a
little and cursed as he gained the opening, but he plunged into the
darkness and threw himself into the saddle on the first horse he found
in the small corral.

When the crowd massed, Hopalong leaped at it and strove to tear his
way to the opening at the end of the bar, while the marshal covered
Harlan and the others. Finding that he could not get through. Hopalong
sprang on the shoulder of the nearest man and succeeded in winging the
fugitive at the first shot, the other going wild. Then, frantic with
rage and anxiety, he beat his way through the crowd, hammering
mercilessly at heads with the butt of his Colt, and knelt at his
friend's side.

Edwards, angered almost to the point of killing, ordered the crowd to
stand against the wall, and laughed viciously when he saw two men
senseless on the floor. "Hope he beat in yore heads!" he gritted,
savagely. "Harlan, put yore paws up in sight or I'll drill you clean!
Now climb over an' get in line--quick!"

Johnny moaned and opened his eyes. "Did--did I--get him?"

"No; but he gimleted you, all right," Hopalong replied. "You'll come
'round if you keep quiet." He arose, his face hard with the desire to
kill. "I'm coming back for /you/, Harlan, after I get yore friend! An'
all the rest of you pups, too!"

"Get me out of here," whispered Johnny.

"Shore enough, Kid; but keep quiet," replied Hopalong, picking him up
in his arms and moving carefully towards the door. "We'll get him,
Johnny; an' all the rest, too, when----" The voice died out in the
direction of Jackson's and the marshal, backing to the front door,
slipped out and to one side, running backward, his eyes on the saloon.

"Yore day's about over, Harlan," he muttered. "There's going to be
some few funerals around here before many hours pass."

When he reached the store he found the owner and two Double-Arrow
punchers taking care of Johnny. "Where's Hopalong?" he asked.

"Gone to tell his foreman," replied Jackson. "Hey, youngster, you let
them bandages alone! Hear me?"

"Hullo, Kansas," remarked John Bartlett, foreman of the Double-Arrow.
"I come nigh getting yore man; somebody rode past me like a streak in
the dark, so I just ups an' lets drive for luck, an' so did he. I
heard him cuss an' I emptied my gun after him."

"The rest was a-passing the word along to ride in when I left the
line," remarked one of the other punchers. "How you feeling now,
Johnny?"



                            CHAPTER XVI

                        THE END OF THE TRAIL

The rain slanted down in sheets and the broken plain, thoroughly
saturated, held the water in pools or sent it down the steep sides of
the arroyo, to feed the turbulent flood which swept along the bottom,
foam-flecked and covered with swiftly moving driftwood. Around a bend
in the arroyo, where the angry water flung itself against the ragged
bulwark of rock and flashed away in a gleaming line of foam, a
horseman appeared bending low in the saddle for better protection
against the storm. He rode along the edge of the stream on the farther
bank, opposite the steep bluff on the northern side, forcing his
wounded and jaded horse to keep fetlock deep in the water which
swirled and sucked about its legs. He was trying his hardest to hide
his trail. Lower down the hard, rocky ground extended to the water's
edge, and if he could delay his pursuers for an hour or so, he felt
that, even with his tired horse, he would have more than an even
chance.

But they had gained more than he knew. Suddenly above him on the top
of the steep bluff across the torrent a man loomed up against the
clouds, peered intently into the arroyo, and then waved his sombrero
to an unseen companion. A puff of smoke flashed from his shoulder and
streaked away, the report of the shot lost in the gale. The fugitive's
horse reared and plunged into the deep water and with its rider was
swept rapidly towards the bend, the way they had come.

"That makes the fourth time I've missed that coyote!" angrily
exclaimed Hopalong as Red Connors joined him.

The other quickly raised his rifle and fired; and the horse, spilling
its rider out of the saddle, floated away tail first. The fugitive,
gripping his rifle, bobbed and whirled at the whim of the greedy water
as shots struck near him. Making a desperate effort, he staggered up
the bank and fell exhausted behind a boulder.

"Well, the coyote is afoot, anyhow," said Red, with great
satisfaction.

"Yes; but how are we going to get to him?" asked Hopalong. "We can't
get the cayuses down here, an' we can't swim /that/ water without
them. An' if we could, he'd pot us easy."

"There's a way out of it somewhere," Red replied, disappearing over
the edge of the bluff to gamble with Fate.

"Hey! Come back here, you chump!" cried Hopalong, running forward.
"He'll get you, shore!"

"That's a chance I've got to take if I get him," was the reply.

A puff of smoke sailed from behind the boulder on the other bank and
Hopalong, kneeling for steadier aim, fired and then followed his
friend. Red was downstream casting at a rock across the torrent but
the wind toyed with the heavy, water-soaked /reata/ as though it were
a string. As Hopalong reached his side a piece of driftwood ducked
under the water and an angry humming sound died away downstream. As
the report reached their ears a jet of water spurted up into Red's
face and he stepped back involuntarily.

"He's so shaky," Hopalong remarked, looking back at the wreath of
smoke above the boulder. "I reckon I must have hit him harder than I
thought in Harlan's. Gee! He's wild as blazes!" he yelled as a bullet
hummed high above his head and struck sharply against the rock wall.

"Yes," Red replied, coiling the rope. "I was trying to rope that rock
over there. If I could anchor to that, the current would push us over
quick. But it's too far with this wind blowing."

"We can't do nothing here 'cept get plugged. He'll be getting steadier
as he rests from his fight with the water," Hopalong remarked, and
added quickly, "Say, remember that meadow back there a ways? We can
make her from there, all right."

"Yo're right; that's what we've got to do. He's sending 'em nearer
every shot--Gee! I could 'most feel the wind of that one. An' blamed
if it ain't stopped raining. Come on."

They clambered up the slippery, muddy bank to where they had left
their horses, and cantered back over their trail. Minute after minute
passed before the cautious skulker among the rocks across the stream
could believe in his good fortune. When he at last decided that he was
alone again he left his shelter and started away, with slowly
weakening stride, over cleanly washed rock where he left no trail.

It was late in the afternoon before the two irate punchers appeared
upon the scene, and their comments, as they hunted slowly over the
hard ground, were numerous and bitter. Deciding that it was hopeless
in that vicinity, they began casting in great circles on the chance of
crossing the trail further back from the river. But they had little
faith in their success. As Red remarked, snorting like a horse in his
disgust, "I'll bet four dollars an' a match he's swum down the river
clean to hell just to have the laugh on us." Red had long since given
it up as a bad job, though continuing to search, when a shout from the
distant Hopalong sent him forward on a run.

"Hey, Red!" cried Hopalong, pointing ahead of them. "Look there! Ain't
that a house?"

"Naw; course not! It's a--it's a ship!" Red snorted sarcastically.
"What did you think it might be?"

"G'wan!" retorted his companion. "It's a mission."

"Ah, g'wan yoreself! What's a mission doing up here?" Red snapped.

"What do you think they do? What do they do anywhere?" hotly rejoined
Hopalong, thinking about Johnny. "There! See the cross?"

"Shore enough!"

"An' there's tracks at last--mighty wobbly, but tracks just the same.
Them rocks couldn't go on forever. Red, I'll bet he's cashed in by
this time."

"Cashed nothing! Them fellers don't."

"Well, if he's in that joint we might as well go back home. We won't
get him, not nohow," declared Hopalong.

"Huh! You wait an' see!" replied Red, pugnaciously.

"Reckon you never run up agin a mission real hard," Hopalong
responded, his memory harking back to the time he had disagreed with a
convent, and they both meant about the same to him as far as winning
out was concerned.

"Think I'm a fool kid?" snapped Red, aggressively.

"Well, you ain't no /kid/."

"You let /me/ do the talking; /I'll/ get him."

"All right; an' I'll do the laughing," snickered Hopalong, at the
door. "Sic 'em, Red!"

The other boldly stepped into a small vestibule, Hopalong close at his
heels. Red hitched his holster and walked heavily into a room at his
left. With the exception of a bench, a table, and a small altar, the
room was devoid of furnishings, and the effect of these was lost in
the dim light from the narrow windows. The peculiar, not unpleasant
odor of burning incense and the dim light awakened a latent reverence
and awe in Hopalong, and he sneaked off his sombrero, an inexplicable
feeling of guilt stealing over him. There were three doors in the
walls, deeply shrouded in the dusk of the room, and it was very hard
to watch all three at once.

Red was peering into the dark corners, his hand on the butt of his
Colt, and hardly knew what he was looking for. "This joint must 'a'
looked plumb good to that coyote, all right. He had a hell of a lot of
luck, but he won't keep it for long, damn him!" he remarked.

"Quit cussing!" tersely ordered Hopalong. "An' for God's sake, throw
out that damned cigarette! Ain't you got no manners?"

Red listened intently and then grinned. "Hear that? They're playing
dominoes in there--come on!"

"Aw, you chump! 'Dominee' means 'mother' in Latin, which is what they
speaks."

"How do you know?"

"Hanged if I can tell--I've heard it somewhere, that's all."

"Well, I don't care what it means. This is a frame-up so that coyote
can get away. I'll bet they gave him a cayuse an' started him off
while we've been losing time in here. I'm going inside an' ask some
questions."

Before he could put his plan into execution, Hopalong nudged him and
he turned to see his friend staring at one of the doors. There had
been no sound, but he would swear that a monk stood gravely regarding
them, and he rubbed his eyes. He stepped back suspiciously and then
started forward again.

"Look here, stranger," he remarked, with quiet emphasis, "we're after
that cow-lifter, an' we mean to get him. Savvy?"

The monk did not appear to hear him, so he tried another tack. "/Habla
Espanola?/" he asked, experimentally.

"You have ridden far?" replied the monk in perfect English.

"All the way from the Bend," Red replied, relieved. "We're after Jerry
Brown. He tried to kill Johnny, an' near made good. An' I reckon we've
treed him, judging from the tracks."

"And if you capture him?"

"He won't have no more use for no side pocket shooting."

"I see; you will kill him."

"Shore's it's wet outside."

"I'm afraid you are doomed to disappointment."

"Ya-as?" asked Red with a rising inflection.

"You will not want him now," replied the monk.

Red laughed sarcastically and Hopalong smiled.

"There ain't a-going to be no argument about it. Trot him out,"
ordered Red, grimly.

The monk turned to Hopalong. "Do you, too, want him?"

Hopalong nodded.

"My friends, he is safe from your punishment."

Red wheeled instantly and ran outside, returning in a few moments,
smiling triumphantly. "There are tracks coming in, but there ain't
none going away. He's here. If you don't lead us to him we'll shore
have to rummage around an' poke him out for ourselves: which is it?"

"You are right--he is here, and he is not here."

"We're waiting," Red replied, grinning.

"When I tell you that you will not want him, do you still insist on
seeing him?"

"We'll see him, an' we'll want him, too."

As the rain poured down again the sound of approaching horses was
heard, and Hopalong ran to the door in time to see Buck Peters swing
off his mount and step forward to enter the building. Hopalong stopped
him and briefly outlined the situation, begging him to keep the men
outside. The monk met his return with a grateful smile and, stepping
forward, opened the chapel door, saying, "Follow me."

The unpretentious chapel was small and nearly dark, for the usual
dimness was increased by the lowering clouds outside. The deep, narrow
window openings, fitted with stained glass, ran almost to the rough-
hewn rafters supporting the steep-pitched roof, upon which the heavy
rain beat again with a sound like that of distant drums. Gusts of rain
and the water from the roof beat against the south windows, while the
wailing wind played its mournful cadences about the eaves, and the
stanch timbers added their creaking notes to swell the dirge-like
chorus.

At the farther end of the room two figures knelt and moved before the
white altar, the soft light of flickering candles playing fitfully
upon them and glinting from the altar ornaments, while before a rough
coffin, which rested upon two pedestals, stood a third, whose rich,
sonorous Latin filled the chapel with impressive sadness. "Give
eternal rest to them, O Lord,"--the words seeming to become a part of
the room. The ineffably sad, haunting melody of the mass whispered
back from the room between the assaults of the enraged wind, while
from the altar came the responses in a low, Gregorian chant, and
through it all the clinking of the censer chains added intermittent
notes. Aloft streamed the vapor of the incense, wavering with the air
currents, now lost in the deep twilight of the sanctuary, and now
faintly revealed by the glow of the candles, perfuming the air with
its aromatic odor.

As the last deep-toned words died away the celebrant moved slowly
around the coffin, swinging the censer over it and then, sprinkling
the body and making the sign of the cross above its head, solemnly
withdrew.

From the shadows along the side walls other figures silently emerged
and grouped around the coffin. Raising it they turned it slowly around
and carried it down the dim aisle in measured tread, moving silently
as ghosts.

"He is with God, Who will punish according to his sins," said a low
voice, and Hopalong started, for he had forgotten the presence of the
guide. "God be with you, and may you die as he died--repentant and in
peace."

Buck chafed impatiently before the chapel door leading to a small,
well-kept graveyard, wondering what it was that kept quiet for so long
a time his two most assertive men, when he had momentarily expected to
hear more or less turmoil and confusion.

/C-r-e-a-k!/ He glanced up, gun in hand and raised as the door swung
slowly open. His hand dropped suddenly and he took a short step
forward; six black-robed figures shouldering a long box stepped slowly
past him, and his nostrils were assailed by the pungent odor of the
incense. Behind them came his fighting punchers, humble, awed,
reverent, their sombreros in their hands, and their heads bowed.

"What in blazes!" exclaimed Buck, wonder and surprise struggling for
the mastery as the others cantered up.

"He's cashed," Red replied, putting on his sombrero and nodding toward
the procession.

Buck turned like a flash and spoke sharply: "Skinny! Lanky! Follow
that glory-outfit, an' see what's in that box!"

Billy Williams grinned at Red. "Yo're shore pious, Red."

"Shut up!" snapped Red, anger glinting in his eyes, and Billy
subsided.

Lanky and Skinny soon returned from accompanying the procession.

"I had to look twice to be shore it was him. His face was plumb happy,
like a baby. But he's gone, all right," Lanky reported.

"Deader'n hell," remarked Skinny, looking around curiously. "This here
is some shack, ain't it?" he finished.

"All right--he knowed how he'd finish when he began. Now for that dear
Mr. Harlan," Buck replied, vaulting into the saddle. He turned and
looked at Hopalong, and his wonder grew. "Hey, /you/! Yes, /you/! Come
out of that an' put on yore lid! Straddle leather--we can't stay here
all night."

Hopalong started, looked at his sombrero and silently obeyed. As they
rode down the trail and around a corner he turned in his saddle and
looked back; and then rode on, buried in thought.

Billy, grinning, turned and playfully punched him in the ribs.
"Getting glory, Hoppy?"

Hopalong raised his head and looked him steadily in the eyes; and
Billy, losing his curiosity and the grin at the same instant, looked
ahead, whistling softly.



                            CHAPTER XVII

                         EDWARDS' ULTIMATUM

Edwards slid off the counter in Jackson's store and glowered at the
pelting rain outside, perturbed and grouchy. The wounded man in the
corner stirred and looked at him without interest and forthwith
renewed his profane monologue, while the proprietor, finishing his
task, leaned back against the shelves and swore softly. It was a
lovely atmosphere.

"Seems to me they've been gone a long time," grumbled the wounded man.
"Reckon he led 'em a long chase--had six hours' start, the toad." He
paused and then as an afterthought said with conviction: "But they'll
get him--they allus do when they make up their minds to it."

Edwards nodded moodily and Jackson replied with a monosyllable.

"Wish I could 'a' gone with 'em," Johnny growled. "I like to square my
own accounts. It's allus that way. I get plugged an' my friends clean
the slate. There was that time Bye-an'-Bye went an' ambushed me--ah,
the devil! But I tell you one thing: when I get well I'm going down to
Harlan's an' clean house proper."

"Yo're in hard luck again: that'll be done as soon as yore friends get
back," Jackson replied, carefully selecting a dried apricot from a box
on the counter and glancing at the marshal to see how he took the
remark.

"That'll be done before then," Edwards said crisply, with the air of a
man who has just settled a doubt. "They won't be back much before
to-morrow if he headed for the country I think he did. I'm going down
to the Oasis an' tell that gang to clear out of this town. They've
been here too long now. I never had 'em dead to rights before, but
I've got it on 'em this time. I'd 'a' sent 'em packing yesterday only
I sort of hated to take a man's business away from him an' make him
lose his belongings. But I've wrastled it all out an' they've got to
go." He buttoned his coat about him and pulled his sombrero more
firmly on his head, starting for the door. "I'll be back soon," he
said over his shoulder as he grasped the handle.

"You better wait till you get help--there's too many down there for
one man to watch an' handle," Jackson hastily remarked. "Here, I'll go
with you," he offered, looking for his hat.

Edwards laughed shortly. "You stay here. I do my own work by myself
when I can--that's what I'm here for, an' I can do this, all right. If
I took any help they'd reckon I was scared," and the door slammed shut
behind him.

"He's got sand a plenty," Jackson remarked. "He'd try to push back a
stampede by main strength if he reckoned it was his duty. It's his
good luck that he wasn't killed long ago--/I'd/ 'a' been."

"They're a bunch of cowards," replied Johnny. "As long as you ain't
afraid of 'em, none of 'em wants to start anything. Bunch of sheep!"
he snorted. "Didn't Jerry shoot me through his pocket?"

"Yes; an' yo're another lucky dog," Jackson responded, having in mind
that at first Johnny had been thought to be desperately wounded. "Why,
yore friends have got the worst of this game; they're worse off than
you are--out all day an' night in this cussed storm."

While they talked Edwards made his way through the cold downpour to
Harlan's saloon, alone and unafraid, and greatly pleased by the order
he would give. At last he had proof enough to work on, to satisfy his
conscience, for the inevitable had come as the culmination of
continued and clever defiance of law and order.

He deliberately approached the front door of the Oasis and, opening
it, stepped inside, his hands resting on his guns--he had packed two
Colts for the last twenty-four hours. His appearance caused a ripple
of excitement to run around the room. After what had taken place, a
visit from him could mean only one thing--trouble. And it was entirely
possible that he had others within call to help him out if necessary.

Harlan knew that he would be the one held responsible and he ceased
wiping a glass and held the cloth suspended in one hand and the glass
in the other. "Well?" he snapped, angrily, his eyes smouldering with
fixed hatred.

"Mebby you think it's well, but it's going to be a blamed sight better
before sundown to-morrow night," evenly replied the marshal. "I just
dropped in sort of free-like to tell you to pack up an' get out of
town before dark--load yore wagon an' vamoose; an' take yore friends
with you, too. If you don't--" he did not finish in words, for his
tightening lips made them unnecessary.

"/What!/" yelled Harlan, red with anger. He placed his hands on the
bar and leaned over it as if to give emphasis to his words. "/Me/ pack
up an' git! /Me/ leave this shack! Who's going to pay me for it, hey?
/Me/ leave town! You drop out again an' go back to Kansas where you
come from--they're easier back there!"

"Well, so far I ain't found nothing very craggy 'round here," retorted
Edwards, closely watching the muttering crowd by the bar. "Takes more
than a loud voice an' a pack of sneaking coyotes to send me looking
for something easier. An' let me tell you this: /You/ stay away from
Kansas--they hangs people like you back there. That's whatever. You
pack up an' git out of this town or I'll start a burying plot with you
on yore own land."

The low, angry buzz of Harlan's friends and their savage, scowling
faces would have deterred a less determined man; but Edwards knew they
were afraid of him, and the men on whom he could call to back him up.
And he knew that there must always be a start, there must be one man
to show the way; and each of the men he faced was waiting for some one
else to lead.

"You all slip over the horizon before dark to-night, an' it's dark
early these days," he continued. "/Don't get restless with yore
hands!/" he snapped ominously at the crowd. "I means what I say--you
shake the mud from this town off yore boots before dark--before that
Bar-20 outfit gets back," he finished meaningly.

Questions, imprecations, and threats filled the room, and the crowd
began to spread out slowly. His guns came out like a flash and he
laughed with the elation that comes with impending battle. "The first
man to start it'll drop," he said evenly. "Who's going to be the
martyr?"

"I /won't/ leave town!" shouted Harlan. "I'll stay here if I'm killed
for it!"

"I admire yore loyalty to principle, but you've got damned little
sense," retorted the marshal. "You ain't no practical man. /Keep yore
hands where they are!/"--his vibrant voice turned the shifting crowd
to stone-like rigidity and he backed slowly toward the door, the poor
light gleaming dully from the polished blue steel of his Colts.
Rugged, lion-like, charged to the finger tips with reckless courage
and dare-devil self-confidence, his personality overflowed and
dominated the room, almost hypnotic in its effect. He was but one
against many, but he was the master, and they knew it; they had known
it long enough to accept it without question, and the training now
stood him in good stead.

For a moment he stood in the open doorway, keenly scrutinizing them
for signs of danger, his unwavering guns charged with certain death
and his strong face made stronger by the shadows in its hollows.
"Before dark!"--and he was gone.

He left behind him deep silence, which endured for several moments.

"By the Lord, I /won't/!" cried Harlan, still staring at the door.

The spell was broken and a babel of voices filled the room, threats
mingling with excuses, hot, vibrant, profane. These men were not
cowards all the way through, but only when face to face with the
master. They had flourished in a way by their wits alone on the same
range with the outfits of the C-80 and the Double-Arrow, for
individually they were "bad," and collectively they made a force of no
mean strength. Edwards had landed among them like a thunderbolt and
had proved his prowess, and they still held him in awesome respect.
His reckless audacity and grim singleness of purpose had saved him on
more than one occasion, for had he wavered once he would have been
shot down without mercy. But gradually his enforcement of hampering
laws became more and more intolerable, and their subordinated spirits
were nearly on the point of revolt. When he faced them they resumed
their former positions in relation to him--but once out of his sight
they plotted to destroy him. Here was the crisis: it was now or never.
They could not evade his ultimatum--it was obey or fight.

Submission was not to be thought of, for to flee would be to lose
caste, and the story of such an act would follow them wherever they
went, and brand them as cowards. Here they had lived, and here they
would stay if possible, and to this end they discussed ways and means.

"Harlan's right!" emphatically announced Laramie Joe. "We can't pull
out and have this foller us."

"We should have started it with a rush when he was in here," remarked
Boston, regretfully.

Harlan stopped his pacing and faced them, shoving out a bottle of
whiskey as an aid to his logic.

"That chance is past, an' I don't know but what it is a good thing,"
he began. "He was primed an' looking fer trouble, an' he'd shore got a
few of us afore he went under. What we want is strategy--that's the
game. You fellers have got as much brains as him, an' if we thrash
this thing out we can find a way to call his play--an' get him! No use
of any of us getting plugged 'less we have to. But whatever we do
we've got to start it right quick an' have it over before that Bar-20
gang comes back. Harper, you an' Quinn go scouting--an' don't take no
guns with you, neither. Act like you was hitting the long trail out,
an' work back here on a circle. See how many of his friends are in
town. While you are gone the rest of us will hold a pow-wow an' take
the kinks out of this game. Chase along, an' don't waste no time."

"Good!" cried Slivers Lowe emphatically. "There's blamed few fellers
in town now that have any use for him, for most of them are off on the
ranges. Bet we won't have more than six to fight, an' there's that
many of us here."

The scouts departed at once and the remaining four drew close in
consultation.

"One more drink around and then no more till this trouble is over,"
Harlan said, passing the bottle. The drinks, in view of the coming
drought and the thirsty work ahead, were long and deep, and new
courage and vindictiveness crept through their veins.

"Now here's the way it looks to me," Harlan continued, placing the
bottle, untasted by himself, on the floor behind him. "We've got to
work a surprise an' take Edwards an' his friends off their guard.
That'll be easy if we're careful, because they think we ain't looking
for fight. When we get them out of the way we can take Jackson's store
an' use one of the other shacks and wait for the Bar-20 to ride in.
They'll canter right in, like they allus do, an' when they get close
enough we'll open the game with a volley an' make every shot tell. 'T
won't last long, 'cause every one of us will have his man named before
they get here. Then the few straddlers in town, seeing how easy we've
gone an' handled it'll join us. We've got four men to come in yet, an'
by the time the C-80 an' Double-Arrow hears about it we'll be fixed to
drive 'em back home. We ought to be over a dozen strong by dark."

"That sounds good, all right," remarked Slivers, thoughtfully, "but
can we do it that easy?"

"Course we can! We ain't fools, an' we all can shoot as well as them,"
snapped Laramie Joe, the most courageous of the lot. Laramie had taken
only one drink, and that a small one, for he was wise enough to
realize that he needed his wits as keen as he could have them.

"We can do it easy, if Edwards goes under first," hastily replied
Harlan. "An' me an' Laramie will see to that part of it. If we don't
get him, you all can hit the trail an' we won't be sore about it. That
is, unless you are made of the stuff that stands up an' fights 'stead
of running away. I reckon I ain't none mistaken in any of you. You'll
all be there when things get hot."

"You can bet the shack /I/ won't do no trail-hitting," growled Boston,
glancing at Slivers, who squirmed a little under the hint.

"Well, I'm glued to the crowd; you can't lose me, fellers," Slivers
remarked, re-crossing his legs uneasily. "Are we going to begin it
from here?"

"We ought to spread out cautions and surround Jackson's, or wherever
Edwards is," Laramie Joe suggested. "That's my--"

"Yo're right! Now you've hit it plumb on the head!" interrupted
Harlan, slapping Laramie heartily across the back. "What did I tell
you about our brains?" he cried, enthusiastically. He had been on the
point of suggesting that plan of operations when Laramie took the
words out of his mouth. "I'd never thought of that, Laramie," he lied,
his face beaming. "Why, we've got 'em licked to a finish right now!"

"This /is/ a hummer of a game," laughed Slivers. "But how about the
Bar-20 crowd?"

"I've told you that already," replied the proprietor.

"You bet it's a hummer," cried Boston, reaching for the whiskey bottle
under cover of the excitement and enthusiasm.

Harlan pushed it away with his foot and raised his clenched fist. "Do
you wonder I didn't think of that plan?" he demanded. "Ain't I been
too mad to think at all? Hain't I seen my friends treated like dogs,
an' made to swaller insults when I couldn't raise my hand to stop it?
Didn't I see Jerry Brown chased out of my place like a wild beast? If
we are what we've been called, then we'll sneak out of town with our
tails atween our laigs; but if we're men we'll stay right here an'
cram the insults down the throats of them that made 'em! If we're
/men/ let's prove it an' make them liars swaller our lead."

"My sentiments an' allus was!" roared Slivers, slapping Harlan's
shoulder.

"We're men, all right, an' we'll show 'em it, too!"

At that instant the door opened and four guns covered it before it had
swung a foot.

"Put 'em down--it's Quinn!" exclaimed the man in the doorway,
flinching a bit. "All right, Jed," he called over his shoulder to the
man who crowded him. After Quinn came Big Jed and Harper brought up
the rear. They had no more than shaken the water from their sombreros
when the back door let in Charley Rich and his two companions, Frank
and Tom Nolan. While greetings were being exchanged and the existing
conditions explained to the newcomers, Harper and Quinn led Harlan to
one side and reported, the proprietor smiling and nodding his head
wisely. And while he listened, Slivers surreptitiously corralled the
whiskey bottle and when the last man finished with it there was
nothing in it but air.

"Well, boys," exclaimed Harlan, "things are our way. Quinn, here, met
Joe Barr, of the C-80, who said Converse an' four other fellers, all
friends of Edwards, stopped at the ranch an' won't be back home till
the storm stops. Harper saw Fred Neil going back to his ranch, so all
we've got to figger on is the marshal, Barr, an' Jackson, an' they're
all in Jackson's store. Lacey might cut in, since he'd sell more
liquor if I went under, but he can't do very much if he does take a
hand. Now we'll get right at it." The whole thing was gone over
thoroughly and in detail, positions assigned and a signal agreed upon.
Seeing that weapons were in good condition after their long storage in
the cellar, and that cartridge belts were full, the ten men left the
room one at a time or in pairs, Harlan and Laramie Joe being the last.
And both Harlan and Laramie delayed long enough to take the precaution
of placing horses where they would be handy in case of need.



                           CHAPTER XVIII

                           HARLAN STRIKES

Joe Barr laughingly replied to Johnny Nelson's growled remarks about
the condition of things in general and tried to soothe him, but Johnny
was unsoothable.

"An' I've been telling him right along that he's got the best of it,"
complained Jackson in a weary voice. "Got a measly hole through his
shoulder--good Lord! if it had gone a little lower!" he finished with
a show of exasperation.

"An' ain't I been telling you all along that it ain't the measly hole
in my shoulder that's got me on the prod?" retorted Johnny, with more
earnestness than politeness. "But why couldn't I go with my friends
after Jerry an' get shot later if I had to get it at all? Look what
I'm missing, roped an' throwed in this cussed ten-by-ten shack while
they're having a little excitement."

"Yo're missing some blamed nasty weather, Kid," replied the marshal.
"You ain't got no kick coming at all. Why, I got soaked clean through
just going down to the Oasis."

"Well, I'm kicking, just the same," snapped Johnny. "An' furthermore,
I don't see nobody big enough to stop me, neither--did you all get
that?"

The rear door opened and Fred Neal looked in. "Hey, Barr; come out an'
gimme a hand in the corral. Busted my cinch all to pieces half a mile
out--an' how the devil it ever busted like that is--" the door slammed
shut and softened his monologue.

"Would you listen to that!" snorted Barr in an injured tone. "Didn't I
go an' tell him near a month ago that his cussed cinch wouldn't hold
no better'n a piece of wet paper?" His complaint added materially to
the atmosphere of sullen discontent pervading the room. "An' now I
gotter go out in this rain an'--" the slam of the door surpassed
anything yet attempted in that line of endeavor. Jackson grabbed a can
of corn as it jarred off the shelf behind him and directed a pleasing
phrase after the peevish Barr.

"Say, won't somebody please smile?" gravely asked Edwards. "I never
saw such a happy, cheerful bunch before."

"I might smile if I wasn't so blamed hungry," retorted Johnny.
"Doesn't anybody ever eat in this town?" he asked in great sarcasm.
"Mebby a good feed won't do me no good, but I'm going to fill myself
regardless. An' after that, if the grub don't shock me to death, I'm
shore going to trim somebody at Ol' Sledge--for two bits a hand."

"If I could play you enough hands at that price I could sell out an'
live high without working," grinned Jackson, preparing to give the
reckless invalid all he could eat. "That's purty high, Kid; but I just
feel real devilish, an' I'm coming in."

"An' I'll go over to my shack, get some money, an' bust the pair of
you," laughed Edwards, again buttoning his coat and going towards the
door. "Holy Cats! A log must 'a' got jammed in the sluice-gate up
there," he muttered, scowling at the black sky. "It's coming down
harder'n ever, but here goes," and he stepped quickly into the storm.

Jackson paused with a frying pan in his hands and looked through the
window after the departing marshal, and saw him stagger, stumble
forward, then jerk out his guns and begin firing. Hard firing now
burst out in front and Jackson, cursing angrily, dropped the pan and
reached for his rifle--to drop it also and sink down, struck by the
bullet which drilled through the window. Johnny let out a yell of
rage, grabbed his Colt, and ran to the door in time to see Edwards
slowly raise up on one elbow, fire his last shot, and fall back
riddled by bullets.

Jackson crawled to his rifle and then to the side window, where he
propped his back against a box and prepared to do his best. "It was
shore a surprise," he swore. "An' they went an' got Edwards before he
could do anything."

"They did not!" retorted Johnny. "He--" the glass in the door vibrated
sharply and the speaker, stepping to one side out of sight, with a new
and superficial wound, opened fire on the building down the street.
Two men were lying on the ground across the street--these Edwards had
shot--and another was trying to drag himself to the shelter of a
building. A man sprinted from an old corral close by in a brave and
foolhardy attempt to save his friend, and Johnny swore because he had
to fire twice at the same mark.

The rear door crashed open and shut as Barr, closely followed by Neal,
ran in. They had been caught in the corral but, thanks to Harlan's
whiskey, had managed to hold their own until they had a chance to make
a rush for the store.

"Where's the marshal?" cried Barr, catching sight of Jackson. "Are you
plugged bad?" he asked, anxiously.

"Well, I ain't plugged a whole lot /good/!" snapped Jackson. "An'
Edwards is dead. They shot him down without warning. We're going to
get ours, too--these walls don't stop them bullets. How many out
there?"

"Must be a dozen," hastily replied Neal, who had not remained idle.
Both he and Barr were working like mad men moving boxes and barrels
against the walls to make a breastwork capable of stopping the bullets
which came through the boards.

"I reckon--I'm bleeding inside," Jackson muttered, wearily and without
hope. "Wonder how--long we--can hold out?"

"We'll hold out till we're good an' dead!" replied Johnny, hotly.
"They ain't got us yet an' they'll pay for it before they do. If we
can hold 'em off till Buck an' the rest come back we'll have the
pleasure of seeing 'em buried."

"Oh, I'll get you next time!" assured Barr to an enemy, slipping a
fresh cartridge into the Sharps and peering intently at a slight rise
on the muddy plain. "You shoot like yo're drunk," he mumbled.

"But what is it all about, anyhow?" asked Neal, finding time for an
immaterial question. "Who are they?--can't see nothing but blurs
through this rain!"

"Yes; what's the game?" asked Barr, mildly surprised that he had not
thought of it before.

"It's that Oasis gang," Johnny responded. He fired, and growled with
disappointment. "Harlan's at the head of it," he added.

"Edwards--told Harlan to--get out of--town," Jackson began.

"An' to take his gang with him," Johnny interposed quickly to save
Jackson from the strain. "They had till dark. Guess the rest. Oh, you
/coyote/!" he shouted, staggering back. There was a report farther
down the barricade and Neal called out, "I got him, Nelson; he's done.
How are you?"

"Mad! Mad!" yelled Johnny, touching his twice-wounded shoulder and
dancing with rage and pain. "Right in the same place! Oh, wait!
/Wait!/ Hey, gimme a rifle--I can't do nothing with a Colt at this
range; my name ain't Hopalong," and he went slamming around the room
in hot search of what he wanted.

"There ain't--no more--Johnny," feebly called Jackson, raising
slightly to ease himself. "You can have--my gun purty--soon. I won't
be able--to use it--much longer."

"Why don't Buck an' Hoppy hurry up!" snarled Johnny.

"Be a long time--mebby," mumbled Jackson, his trembling hands trying
to steady the rifle. "They're all--around us. /Ah/, missed!" he
intoned hoarsely, trying to pump the lever with unobeying hands. "I
can't last--much--" the words ceased abruptly and the clatter of the
rifle on the floor told the story.

Johnny stumbled over to him and dragged him aside, covering the
upturned face with his own sombrero, and picked up the rifle. Rolling
a barrel of flour against the wall below the window he fixed himself
as comfortably as possible and threw a shell into the chamber.

"Now, you coyotes; you pay /me/ for /that/!" he gritted, resting the
gun on the window sill and holding it so he could work it with one
hand and shoulder.

"Wonder how them pups ever pumped up enough courage to cut loose like
this?" queried Neal from behind his flour barrel.

"Whiskey," hazarded Barr. "Harlan must 'a' got 'em drunk. An' that's
three times I've missed that snake. Wish it would stop raining so I
could see better."

"Why don't you wish they'd all drop dead? Wish good when you wish at
all: got as much chance of having it come true," responded Neal,
sarcastically. He smothered a curse and looked curiously at his left
arm, and from it to the new, yellow-splintered hole in the wall, which
was already turning dark from the water soaking into it. "Hey, Joe; we
need some more boxes!" he exclaimed, again looking at his arm.

"Yes," came Johnny's voice. "Three of 'em--five of 'em, an' about six
feet long an' a foot deep. But if my outfit gets here in time we'll
want more'n a dozen."

"Say! Lacey's firing now!" suddenly cried Barr. "He's shooting out of
his windy. That'll stop 'em from rushing us! Good boy, Lacey!" he
shouted, but Lacey did not hear him in the uproar.

"An' he's worse off than we are, being alone," commented Neal. "Hey!
One of us better make a break for help--my ranch's the nearest. What
d'ye say?"

"It's suicide; they'll get you before you get ten feet," Barr replied
with conviction.

"No; they won't--the corral hides the back door, an' all the firing is
on this side. I can sneak along the back wall an' by keeping the
buildings atween me an' them, get a long ways off before they know
anything about it. Then it's a dash--an' they can't catch me. But can
you fellers hold out if I do?"

"Two can hold out as good as three--go ahead," Johnny replied. "Leave
me some of yore Colt cartridges, though. You can't use 'em all before
you get home."

"Don't stop fer that; there's a shelfful of all kinds behind the
counter," Barr interposed.

"Well, so long an' good luck," and the rear door closed, and softly
this time.

"Two hours is some wait under the present circumstances," Barr
muttered, shifting his position behind his barricade. "He can't do it
in less, nohow."

Johnny ducked and looked foolish. "Missed me by a foot," he explained.
"He can't do it in two--not there an' back," he replied. "The trail is
mud over the fetlocks. Give him three at the least."

"They ain't shooting as much as they was before."

"Waiting till they gets sober, I reckon," Johnny replied.

"If we don't hear no ruction in a few minutes we'll know he got away
all right," Barr soliloquized. "An' he's got a fine cayuse for mud,
too."

"Hey, why can't you do the same thing if he makes it?" Johnny suddenly
asked. "I can hold her alone, all right."

"Yo're a cheerful liar, you are," laughed Barr. "But can /you/ ride?"

"Reckon so, but I ain't a-going to."

"Why, we /both/ can go--it's a cinch!" Barr cried. "Come on!"

"Lord!--an' I never even thought of that! Reckon I was too mad,"
Johnny replied. "But I sort of hates to leave Jackson an' Edwards," he
added, sullenly.

"But they're gone! You can't do them no good by staying."

"Yes; I know. An' how about Lacey chipping in on our fight?" demanded
Johnny. "I ain't a-going to leave him to take it all. You go, Barr; it
wasn't yore fight, nohow. You didn't even know what you was fighting
for!"

"Huh! When anybody shoots at me it's my fight, all right," replied
Barr, seating himself on the floor behind the breastwork. "I forgot
all about Lacey," he apologized. At that instant a tomato can went
/spang!/ and fell off the shelf. "An' it's too late, anyhow; they
ain't a-going to let nobody else get away on that side."

"An' they're tuning up again, too," Johnny replied, preparing for
trouble. "Look out for a rush, Barr."



                            CHAPTER XIX

                        THE BAR-20 RETURNS.

Hopalong Cassidy stopped swearing at the weather and looked up and
along the trail in front of him, seeing a hard-riding man approach. He
turned his head and spoke to Buck Peters, who rode close behind him.
"Somebody's shore in a hurry--why, it's Fred Neal."

It was. Mr. Neal was making his arms move and was also shouting
something at the top of his voice. The noise of the rain and of the
horses' hoofs splashing in the mud and water at first made his words
unintelligible, but it was not long before Hopalong heard something
which made him sit up even straighter. In a moment Neal was near
enough to be heard distinctly and the outfit shook itself out of its
weariness and physical misery and followed its leader at reckless
speed. As they rode, bunched close together, Neal briefly and
graphically outlined the relative positions of the combatants, and
while Buck's more cautious mind was debating the best way to proceed
against the enemy, Hopalong cried out the plan to be followed. There
would be no strategy--Johnny, wounded and desperate, was fighting for
his life. The simplest way was the best--a dash regardless of
consequences to those making it, for time was a big factor to the two
men in Jackson's store.

"Ride right at 'em!" Hopalong cried. "I know that bunch. They'll be
too scared to shoot straight. Paralyze 'em! Three or four are gone now
--an' the whole crowd wasn't worth one of the men they went out to
get. The quicker it's over the better."

"Right you are," came from the rear.

"Ride up the arroyo as close as we can get, an' then over the edge an'
straight at 'em," Buck ordered. "Their shooting an' the rain will
cover what noise we make on the soft ground. An' boys, /no quarter/!"

"Reckon /not/!" gritted Red, savagely. "Not with Edwards an' Jackson
dead, an' the Kid fighting for his life!"

"They're still at it!" cried Lanky Smith, as the faint and
intermittent sound of firing was heard; the driving wind was blowing
from the town, and this, also, would deaden the noise of their
approach.

"Thank the Lord! That means that there's somebody left to fight 'em,"
exclaimed Red. "Hope it's the Kid," he muttered.

"They can't rush the store till they get Lacey, an' they can't rush
him till they get the store," shouted Neal over his shoulder. "They'd
be in a cross fire if they tried either--an' that's what licks 'em."

"They'll be in a cross fire purty soon," promised Pete, grimly.

Hopalong and Red reached the edge of the arroyo first and plunged over
the bank into the yellow storm-water swirling along the bottom like a
miniature flood. After them came Buck, Neal, and the others, the water
shooting up in sheets as each successive horse plunged in. Out again
on the farther side they strung out into single file along the narrow
foot-hold between water and bank and raced towards the sharp bend some
hundreds of yards ahead, the point in the arroyo's course nearest the
town. The dripping horses scrambled up the slippery incline and then,
under the goading of spurs and quirts, leaped forward as fast as they
could go across the level, soggy plain.

A quarter of a mile ahead of them lay the scattered shacks of the
town, and as they drew nearer to it the riders could see the flashes
of guns and the smoke-fog lying close to the ground. Fire spat from
Jackson's store and a cloud of smoke still lingered around a window in
Lacey's saloon. Then a yell reached their ears, a yell of rage,
consternation and warning. Figures scurried to seek cover and the
firing from Jackson's and Lacey's grew more rapid.

A mounted man emerged from a corral and tore away, others following
his example, and the outfit separated to take up the chase
individually. Harlan, wounded hard, was trying to run to where he had
left his horse, and after him fled Slivers Lowe. Hopalong was gaining
on them when he saw Slivers raise his arm and fire deliberately into
the back of the proprietor of the Oasis, leap over the falling body,
vault into the saddle of Harlan's horse and gallop for safety.
Hopalong's shots went wide and the last view any one had of Slivers in
that part of the country was when he dropped into an arroyo to follow
it for safety. Laramie Joe fled before Red Connors and Red's rage was
so great that it spoiled his accuracy, and he had the sorrow of seeing
the pursued grow faint in the mist and fog. Pursuit was tried until
the pursuers realized that their mounts were too worn out to stand a
show against the fresh animals ridden by the survivors of the Oasis
crowd.

Red circled and joined Hopalong. "Blasted coyotes," he growled.
"Killed Jackson an' Edwards, an' wanted the Kid! He's shore showed 'em
what fighting is, all right. But I wonder what got into 'em all at
once to give 'em nerve enough to start things?"

"Edwards paid his way, all right," replied Hopalong. "If I do as well
when my time comes I won't do no kicking."

"Yore time ain't coming that way," responded Red, grinning. "You'll
die a natural death in bed, unless you gets to cussing me."

"Shore there ain't no more, Buck?" Hopalong called.

"Yes. There was only five, I reckon, an' they was purty well shot up
when we took a hand. You know, Johnny was in it all the time," replied
the foreman, smiling. "This town's had the cleaning up it's needed for
some time," he added.

They were at Jackson's store now, and hurriedly dismounted and ran in
to see Johnny. They found him lying across some boxes, which brought
him almost to the level of a window sill. He was too weak to stand,
while near him in similar condition lay Barr, too weak from loss of
blood to do more than look his welcome.

"How are you, Kid?" cried Buck anxiously, bending over him, while
others looked to Barr's injuries.

"Tired, Buck, awful tired; an' all shot up," Johnny slowly replied.
"When I saw you fellers--streak past this windy--I sort of went flat--
something seemed to break inside me," he said, faintly and with an
effort, and the foreman ordered him not to talk. Deft fingers,
schooled by practice in rough and ready surgery, were busy over him
and in half an hour he lay on Jackson's cot, covered with bandages.

"Why, hullo, Lacey!" exclaimed Hopalong, leaping forward to shake
hands with the man Red and Billy had gone to help. "Purty well
scratched up, but lively yet, hey?"

"I'm able to hobble over here an' shake han's with these scrappers--
they're shore wonders," Lacey replied. "Fought like a whole regiment!
Hullo, Johnny!" and his hand-clasp told much.

"Yore cross fire did it, Lacey; that was the whole thing," Johnny
smiled. "Yo're all right!"

Red turned and looked out of the window toward the Oasis and then
glanced at Buck. "Reckon we better burn Harlan's place--it's all
that's left of that gang now," he suggested.

"Why, yes; I reckon so," replied the foreman. "That's as--"

"No, we won't!" Hopalong interposed quickly. "That stands till Johnny
sets it off. It's the Kid's celebration--he was shot in it."

Johnny smiled.



                             CHAPTER XX

                             BARB WIRE

After the flurry at Perry's Bend the Bar-20 settled down to the calm
routine work and sent several drive herds to their destination without
any unusual incidents. Buck thought that the last herd had been driven
when, late in the summer, he received an order that he made haste to
fill. The outfit was told to get busy and soon rounded up the
necessary number of three-year-olds. Then came the road branding, the
final step except inspection, and this was done not far from the ranch
house, where the facilities were best for speedy work.

Entirely recovered from all ill effects of his afternoon in Jackson's
store up in Perry's bend, Johnny Nelson waited with Red Connors on the
platform of the branding chute and growled petulantly at the sun, the
dust, but most of all at the choking, smarting odor of burned hair
which filled their throats and caused them to rub the backs of grimy
hands across their eyes. Chute-branding robbed them of the excitement,
the leaven of fun and frolic, which they always took from open or
corral branding--and the work of a day in the corral or open was
condensed into an hour or two by the chute. This was one cow wide,
narrow at the bottom and flared out as it went up, so the animal could
not turn, and when filled was, to use Johnny's graphic phrase, "like a
chain of cows in a ditch." Eight of the wondering and crowded animals,
guided into the pen by men who knew their work to the smallest detail
and lost no time in its performance, filed into the pen after those
branded had filed out. As the first to enter reached the farther end a
stout bar dropped into place, just missing the animal's nose; and as
the last cow discovered that it could go no farther and made up its
mind to back out, it was stopped by another bar, which fell behind it.
The iron heaters tossed a hot iron each to Red and Johnny and the
eight were marked in short order, making about two hundred and fifty
they had branded in three hours. This number compared very favorably
with that of the second chute where Lanky Smith and Frenchy McAlister
waved cold irons and sarcastically asked their iron men if the sun was
supposed to provide the heat; whereat the down-trodden heaters
provided heat with great generosity in their caustic retorts.

"Oh, Susanna, don't you cry for me," sang Billy Williams, one of the
feeders. "But why in Jericho don't you fellers get a move on you? You
ain't no good on the platform--you ought to be mixing biscuits for
Cookie. Frenchy and Lanky are the boys to turn 'em out," he offered,
gratis.

Red's weary air bespoke a vast and settled contempt for such inanities
and his iron descended against the side of the victim below him--he
would not deign to reply. Not so with Johnny, who could not refrain
from hot retort.

"Don't be a fool /all/ the time," snapped Johnny. "Mind yore own
business, you shorthorn. Big-mouthed old woman, that's what--" his
tone dropped and the words sank into vague mutterings which a
strangling cough cut short. "Blasted idiot," he whispered, tears
coming into his eyes at the effort. Burning hair is bad for throat and
temper alike.

Red deftly knocked his companion's iron up and spoke sharply. "You
mind yourn better--that makes the third you've tried to brand twice.
Why don't you look what yo're doing? Hot iron! Hot iron! What're you
fellers doing?" he shouted down at the heaters. "This ain't no time to
go to sleep. How d'ye expect us to do any work when you ain't doing
any yoreselves!" Red's temper was also on the ragged edge.

"You've got one in yore other hand, you sheep!" snorted one of the
iron heaters with restless pugnacity. "Go tearing into us when you--"
he growled the rest and kicked viciously at the fire.

"Lovely bunch," grinned Billy who, followed by Pete Wilson, mounted
the platform to relieve the branders. "Chase yoreselves--me an' Pete
are shore going to show you cranky bugs how to do a hundred an hour.
Ain't we, Pete? An' look here, you," he remarked to the heaters,
"don't you fellers keep /us/ waiting for hot irons!"

"That's right! Make a fool out of yoreself first thing!" snapped one
of the pair on the ground.

"Billy, I never loved you as much as I do this minute," grinned Johnny
wearily. "Wish you'd 'a' come along to show us how to do it an hour
ago."

"I would, only--"

"Quit chinning an' get busy," remarked Red, climbing down. "The
chute's full; an' it's all yourn."

Billy caught the iron, gave it a preliminary flourish, and started to
work with a speed that would not endure for long. He branded five out
of the eight and jeered at his companion for being so slow.

"Have yore fun now, Billy," Pete replied with placid good nature.
"Before we're through with this job you'll be lucky if you can do two
of the string, if you keep up that pace."

"He'll be missing every other one," growled his heater with
overflowing malice. "That iron ain't cold, you Chinaman!"

"Too cold for me--don't miss none," chuckled Billy sweetly. "Fill the
chute! Fill the chute! Don't keep us waiting!" he cried to the
guiders, hopping around with feigned eagerness and impatience.

Hopalong Cassidy rode up and stopped as Red returned to take the place
of one of the iron heaters. "How they coming, Red?" he inquired.

"Fast. You can sic that inspector on 'em the first thing to-morrow
morning, if he gets here on time. Bet he's off som'ers getting full of
redeye. Who're going with you on this drive?"

"The inspector is all right--he's here now an' is going to spend the
night with us so as to be on hand the first thing to-morrow," replied
Hopalong, grinning at the hard-working pair on the platform. "Why, I
reckon I'll take you, Johnny, Lanky, Billy, Pete, an' Skinny, an'
we'll have two hoss-wranglers an' a cook, of course. We'll drive up
the right-hand trail through West Valley this time. It's longer, but
there'll be more water that way at this time of the year. Besides, I
don't want no more foot-sore cattle to nurse along. Even the West
Valley trail will be dry enough before we strike Bennett's Creek."

"Yes; we'll have to drive 'em purty hard till we reach the creek,"
replied Red, thoughtfully. "Say; we're going to have three thousand of
the finest three-year-old steers ever sent north out of these parts.
An' we ought to do it in a month an' deliver 'em fat an' frisky. We
can feed 'em good for the last week."

"I just sent some of the boys out to drive in the cayuses," Hopalong
remarked, "an' when they get here you fellers match for choice an'
pick yore remuda. No use taking too few. About eight apiece'll do us
nice. I shore like a good cavvieyeh."

"Hullo, Hoppy!" came from the platform as Billy grinned his welcome
through the dust on his face. "Want a job?"

"Hullo yoreself," growled Pete. "Stick yore iron on that fourth steer
before he gets out, an' talk less with yore mouth."

"Pete's still rabid," called Billy, performing the duty Pete
suggested.

"That may be the polite name for it," snorted one of the iron heaters,
testing an iron, "but that ain't what I'd say. Might as well cover the
subject thoroughly while yo're on it."

"Yes, verily," endorsed his companion.

"Here comes the last of 'em," smiled Pete, watching several cattle
being driven towards the chute. "We'll have to brand 'em on the move,
Billy; there ain't enough to fill the chute."

"All right; hot iron, you!"

Early the next morning the inspector looked them over and made his
count, the herd was started north and at nightfall had covered twelve
miles. For the next week everything went smoothly, but after that,
water began to be scarce and the herd was pushed harder, and became
harder to handle.

On the night of the twelfth day out four men sat around the fire in
West Valley at a point a dozen miles south of Bennett's Creek, and ate
heartily. The night was black--not a star could be seen and the south
wind hardly stirred the trampled and burned grass. They were
thoroughly tired out and their tempers were not in the sweetest state
imaginable, for the heat during the last four days had been almost
unbearable even to them and they had had their hands full with the
cranky herd. They ate silently, hungrily--there would be time enough
for the few words they had to say when the pipes were going for a
short smoke before turning in.

"I feel like hell," growled Red, reaching for another cup of coffee,
but there was no reply; he had voiced the feelings of all.

Hopalong listened intently and looked up, staring into the darkness,
and soon a horseman was seen approaching the fire. Hopalong nodded
welcome and waved his hand towards the food, and the stranger,
dismounting, picketed his horse and joined the circle. When the pipes
were lighted he sighed with satisfaction and looked around the group.
"Driving north, I see."

"Yes; an' blamed glad to get off this dry range," Hopalong replied.
"The herd's getting cranky an' hard to hold--but when we pass the
creek everything'll be all right again. An' ain't it hot! When you
hear us kick about the heat it means something."

"I'm going yore way," remarked the stranger. "I came down this trail
about two weeks ago. Reckon I was the last to ride through before the
fence went up. Damned outrage, says I, an' I told 'em so, too. They
couldn't see it that way an' we had a little disagreement about it.
They said as how they was going to patrol it."

"Fence! What fence?" exclaimed Red.

"Where's there any fence?" demanded Hopalong sharply.

"Twenty mile north of the creek," replied the stranger, carefully
packing his pipe.

"What? Twenty miles north of the creek?" cried Hopalong. "What creek?"

"Bennett's. The 4X has strung three strands of barb wire from Coyote
Pass to the North Arm. Thirty mile long, without a gate, so they
says."

"But it don't close this trail!" cried Hopalong in blank astonishment.

"It shore does. They say they owns that range an' can fence it in all
they wants. I told 'em different, but naturally they didn't listen to
me. An' they'll fight about it, too."

"But they /can't/ shut off this trail!" exclaimed Billy, with angry
emphasis. "They don't own it no more'n we do!"

"I know all about that--you heard me tell you what they said."

"But how can we get past it?" demanded Hopalong.

"Around it, over the hills. You'll lose about three days doing it,
too."

"I can't take no sand-range herd over them rocks, an' I ain't going to
drive 'round no North Arm or Coyote Pass if I could," Hopalong replied
with quiet emphasis. "There's poison springs on the east an' nothing
but rocks on the west. We go straight through."

"I'm afraid that you'll have to fight if you do," remarked the
stranger.

"Then we'll fight!" cried Johnny, leaning forward. "Blasted coyotes!
What right have they got to block a drive trail that's as old as
cattle-raising in these parts! That trail was here before I was born,
it's allus been open, an' it's going to stay open! You watch us go
through!"

"Yo're dead right, Kid; we'll cut that fence an' stick to this trail,
an' fight if we has to," endorsed Red. "The Bar-20 ain't crawling out
of no hole that it can walk out of. They're bluffing; that's all."

"I don't think they are; an' there's twelve men in that outfit,"
suggested the stranger, offhand.

"We ain't got time to count odds; we never do down our way when we
know we're right. An' we're right enough in this game," retorted
Hopalong, quickly. "For the last twelve days we've had good luck,
barring the few on this dry range; an' now we're in for the other
kind. By the Lord, I wish we was here without the cows to take care of
--we'd show 'em something about blocking drive trails that ain't in
their little book!"

"Blast it all! Wire fences coming down this way now," mused Johnny,
sullenly. He hated them by training as much as he hated horse-thieves
and sheep; and his companions had been brought up in the same school.
Barb wire, the death-knell to the old-time punching, the bar to riding
at will, a steel insult to fire the blood--it had come at last.

"We've shore got to cut it, Red,--" began Hopalong, but the cook had
to rid himself of some of his indignation and interrupted with heat.

"Shore we have!" came explosively from the tail board of the chuck
wagon. "Got to lay it agin my li'l axe an' swat it with my big ol'
monkey wrench! An' won't them posts save me a lot of trouble hunting
chips an' firewood!"

"We've shore got to cut it, Red," Hopalong repeated slowly. "You an'
Johnny an' me'll ride ahead after we cross the creek to-morrow an' do
it. I don't hanker after no fight with all these cows on my han's, but
we've got to risk one."

"Shore!" cried Johnny, hotly. "I can't get over the gall of them
fellers closing up the West Valley drive trail. Why, I never heard
tell of such a thing afore!"

"We're short-handed; we ought to have more'n we have to guard the herd
if there's a fight. If it stampedes--oh, well, that'll work out
to-morrow. The creek's only about twelve miles away an' we'll start at
daylight, so tumble in," Hopalong said as he arose. "Red, I'm going
out to take my shift--I'll send Pete in. Stranger," he added, turning,
"I'm much obliged to you for the warning. They might 'a' caught us
with our hands tied."

"Oh, that's all right," hastily replied the stranger, who was in
hearty accord with the plans, such as they were. "My name's Hawkins,
an' I don't like range fences no more'n you do. I used to hunt buffalo
all over this part of the country before they was all killed off, an'
I allus rode where I pleased. I'm purty old, but I can still see an'
shoot; an' I'm going to stick right along with you fellers an' see it
through. Every man counts in this game."

"Well, that's blamed white of you," Hopalong replied, greatly pleased
by the other's offer. "But I can't let you do it. I don't want to drag
you into no trouble, an'--"

"You ain't dragging me none; I'm doing it myself. I'm about as mad as
you are over it. I ain't good for much no more, an' if I shuffles off
fighting barb wire I'll be doing my duty. First it was nesters, then
railroads an' more nesters, then sheep, an' now it's wire--won't it
never stop? By the Lord, it's got to stop, or this country will go to
the devil an' won't be fit to live in. Besides, I've heard of your
fellers before--I'll tie to the Bar-20 any day."

"Well, I reckon you must if you must; yo're welcome enough," laughed
Hopalong, and he strode off to his picketed horse, leaving the others
to discuss the fence, with the assistance of the cook, until Pete rode
in.



                            CHAPTER XXI

                             THE FENCE

When Hopalong rode in at midnight to arouse the others and send them
out to relieve Skinny and his two companions, the cattle were quieter
than he had expected to leave them, and he could see no change of
weather threatening. He was asleep when the others turned in, or he
would have been further assured in that direction.

Out on the plain where the herd was being held, Red and the three
other guards had been optimistic until half of their shift was over
and it was only then that they began to worry. The knowledge that
running water was only twelve miles away had the opposite effect than
the one expected, for instead of making them cheerful, it caused them
to be beset with worry and fear. Water was all right, and they could
not have got along without it for another day; but it was, in this
case, filled with the possibility of grave danger.

Johnny was thinking hard about it as he rode around the now restless
herd, and then pulled up suddenly, peered into the darkness and went
on again. "Damn that disreputable li'l rounder! Why the devil can't he
behave, 'stead of stirring things up when they're ticklish?" he
muttered, but he had to grin despite himself. A lumbering form had
blundered past him from the direction of the camp and was swallowed up
by the night as it sought the herd, annoying and arousing the thirsty
and irritable cattle along its trail, throwing challenges right and
left and stirring up trouble as it passed. The fact that the
challenges were bluffs made no difference to the pawing steers, for
they were anxious to have things out with the rounder.

This frisky disturber of bovine peace was a yearling that had slipped
into the herd before it left the ranch and had kept quiet and
respectable and out of sight in the middle of the mass for the first
few days and nights. But keeping quiet and respectable had been an
awful strain, and his mischievous deviltry grew constantly harder to
hold in check. Finally he could stand the repression no longer, and
when he gave way to his accumulated energy it had the snap and ginger
of a tightly stretched rubber band recoiling on itself. On the fourth
night out he had thrown off his mask and announced his presence in his
true light by butting a sleepy steer out of its bed, which bed he
straightway proceeded to appropriate for himself. This was folly, for
the ground was not cold and he had no excuse for stealing a body-
warmed place to lie down; it was pure cussedness, and retribution
followed hard upon the act. In about half a minute he had discovered
the great difference between bullying poor, miserable, defenceless
dogies and trying to bully a healthy, fully developed, and pugnacious
steer. After assimilating the preliminary punishment of what promised
to be the most thorough and workmanlike thrashing he had ever known,
the indignant and frightened bummer wheeled and fled incontinently
with the aroused steer in angry pursuit. The best way out was the most
puzzling to the vengeful steer, so the bummer cavorted recklessly
through the herd, turning and twisting and doubling, stepping on any
steer that happened to be lying down in his path, butting others, and
leavening things with great success. Under other conditions he would
have relished the effect of his efforts, for the herd had arisen as
one animal and seemed to be debating the advisability of stampeding;
but he was in no mood to relish anything and thought only of getting
away. Finally escaping from his pursuer, that had paused to fight with
a belligerent brother, he rambled off into the darkness to figure it
all out and to maintain a sullen and chastened demeanor for the rest
of the night. This was the first time a brick had been under the hat.

But the spirits of youth recover quickly--his recovered so quickly
that he was banished from the herd the very next night, which
banishment, not being at all to his liking, was enforced only by rigid
watchfulness and hard riding; and he was roundly cursed from dark to
dawn by the worried men, most of whom disliked the bumming youngster
less than they pretended. He was only a cub, a wild youth having his
fling, and there was something irresistibly likable and comical in his
awkward antics and eternal persistence, even though he was a pest.
Johnny saw more in him than his companions could find, and had quite a
little sport with him: he made fine practice for roping, for he was
about as elusive as a grasshopper and uncertain as a flea. Johnny was
in the same general class and he could sympathize with the
irrepressible nuisance in its efforts to stir up a little life and
excitement in so dull a crowd; Johnny hoped to be as successful in his
mischievous deviltry when he reached the town at the end of the drive.

But to-night it was dark, and the bummer gained his coveted goal with
ridiculous ease, after which he started right in to work off the high
pressure of the energy he had accumulated during the last two nights.
He had desisted in his efforts to gain the herd early in the evening
and had rambled off and rested during the first part of the night, and
the herders breathed softly lest they should stir him to renewed
trials. But now he had succeeded, and although only Johnny had seen
him lumber past, the other three guards were aware of it immediately
by the results and swore in their throats, for the cattle were now on
their feet, snorting and moving about restlessly, and the rattling of
horns grew slowly louder.

"Ain't he having a devil of a good time!" grinned Johnny. But it was
not long before he realized the possibilities of the bummer's efforts
and he lost his grin. "If we get through the night without trouble
I'll see that you are picketed if it takes me all day to get you," he
muttered. "Fun is fun, but it's getting a little too serious for
comfort."

Sometime after the middle of the second shift the herd, already
irritable, nervous, and cranky because of the thirst they were
enduring, and worked up to the fever pitch by the devilish manoeuvres
of the exuberant and hard-working bummer, wanted only the flimsiest
kind of an excuse to stampede, and they might go without an excuse. A
flash of lightning, a crash of thunder, a wind-blown paper, a flapping
wagon cover, the sudden and unheralded approach of a careless rider,
the cracking and flare of a match, or the scent of a wolf or coyote--
or water, would send an avalanche of three thousand crazed steers
crashing its irresistible way over a pitch-black plain.

Red had warned Pete and Billy, and now he rode to find Johnny and send
him to camp for the others. As he got halfway around the circle he
heard Johnny singing a mournful lay, and soon a black bulk loomed up
in the dark ahead of him. "That you, Kid?" he asked. "That you,
Johnny?" he repeated, a little louder.

The song stopped abruptly. "Shore," replied Johnny. "We're going to
have trouble aplenty to-night. Glad daylight ain't so very far off.
That cussed li'l rake of a bummer got by me an' into the herd. He's
shore raising Ned to-night, the li'l monkey: it's getting serious,
Red."

"I'll shoot that yearling at daylight, damn him!" retorted Red. "I
should 'a' done it a week ago. He's picked the worst time for his
cussed devilment! You ride right in an' get the boys, an' get 'em out
here quick. The whole herd's on its toes waiting for the signal; an'
the wink of an eye'll send 'em off. God only knows what'll happen
between now and daylight! If the wind should change an' blow down from
the north, they'll be off as shore as shooting. One whiff of Bennett's
Creek is all that's needed, Kid; an'--"

"Oh, pshaw!" interposed Johnny. "There ain't no wind at all now. It's
been quiet for an hour."

"Yes; an' that's one of the things that's worrying me. It means a
change, shore."

"Not always; we'll come out of this all right," assured Johnny, but he
spoke without his usual confidence. "There ain't no use--" he paused
as he felt the air stir, and he was conscious of Red's heavy
breathing. There was a peculiar hush in the air that he did not like,
a closeness that sent his heart up in his throat, and as he was about
to continue a sudden gust snapped his neck-kerchief out straight. He
felt that refreshing coolness which so often precedes a storm and as
he weighed it in his mind a low rumble of thunder rolled in the north
and sent a chill down his back.

"Good God! Get the boys!" cried Red, wheeling. "It's /changed/! An'
Pete an' Billy out there in front of--/there they go/!" he shouted as
a sudden tremor shook the earth and a roaring sound filled the air. He
was instantly lost to ear and eye, swallowed by the oppressive
darkness as he spurred and quirted into a great, choking cloud of dust
which swept down from the north, unseen in the night. The deep thunder
of hoofs and the faint and occasional flash of a six-shooter told him
the direction, and he hurled his mount after the uproar with no
thought of the death which lurked in every hole and rock and gully on
the uneven and unseen plain beneath him. His mouth and nose were lined
with dust, his throat choked with it, and he opened his burning eyes
only at intervals, and then only to a slit, to catch a fleeting glance
of--nothing. He realized vaguely that he was riding north, because the
cattle would head for water, but that was all, save that he was
animated by a desperate eagerness to gain the firing line, to join
Pete and Billy, the two men who rode before that crazed mass of horns
and hoofs and who were pleading and swearing and yelling in vain only
a few feet ahead of annihilation--if they were still alive. A stumble,
a moment's indecision, and the avalanche would roll over them as if
they were straws and trample them flat beneath the pounding hoofs, a
modern Juggernaut. If he, or they, managed to escape with life, it
would make a good tale for the bunk house some night; if they were
killed it was in doing their duty--it was all in a day's work.

Johnny shouted after him and then wheeled and raced towards the camp,
emptying his Colt in the air as a warning. He saw figures scurrying
across the lighted place, and before he had gained it his friends
raced past him and gave him hard work catching up to them. And just
behind him rode the stranger, to do what he could for his new friends,
and as reckless of consequences as they.

It seemed an age before they caught up to the stragglers, and when
they realized how true they had ridden in the dark they believed that
at last their luck was turning for the better, and pushed on with
renewed hope. Hopalong shouted to those nearest him that Bennett's
Creek could not be far away and hazarded the belief that the steers
would slow up and stop when they found the water they craved; but his
words were lost to all but himself.

Suddenly the punchers were almost trapped and their escape made
miraculous, for without warning the herd swerved and turned sharply to
the right, crossing the path of the riders and forcing them to the
east, showing Hopalong their silhouettes against the streak of pale
gray low down in the eastern sky. When free from the sudden press of
cattle they slowed perceptibly, and Hopalong did likewise to avoid
running them down. At that instant the uproar took on a new note and
increased threefold. He could hear the shock of impact, whip-like
reports, the bellowing of cattle in pain, and he arose in his stirrups
to peer ahead for the reason, seeing, as he did so, the silhouettes of
his friends arise and then drop from his sight. Without additional
warning his horse pitched forward and crashed to the earth, sending
him over its head. Slight as was the warning it served to ease his
fall, for instinct freed his feet from the stirrups, and when he
struck the ground it was feet first, and although he fell flat at the
next instant, the shock had been broken. Even as it was, he was partly
stunned, and groped as he arose on his hands and knees. Arising
painfully he took a short step forward, tripped and fell again; and
felt a sharp pain shoot through his hand as it went first to break the
fall. Perhaps it was ten seconds before he knew what it was that had
thrown him, and when he learned that he also learned the reason for
the whole calamity--in his torn and bleeding hand he held a piece of
barb wire.

"Barb wire!" he muttered, amazed. "Barb wire! Why, what the-- /Damn
that ranch/!" he shouted, sudden rage sweeping over him as the
situation flashed through his mind and banished all the mental effects
of the fall. "They've gone an' strung it south of the creek as well!
Red! Johnny! Lanky!" he shouted at the top of his voice, hoping to be
heard over the groaning of injured cattle and the general confusion.
"Good Lord! /are they killed/!"

They were not, thanks to the forced slowing up, and to the pool of
water and mud which formed an arm of the creek, a back-water away from
the pull of the current. They had pitched into the mud and water up to
their waists, some head first, some feet first, and others as they
would go into a chair. Those who had been fortunate enough to strike
feet first pulled out the divers, and the others gained their feet as
best they might and with varying degrees of haste, but all mixed
profanity and thankfulness equally well; and were equally and
effectually disguised.

Hopalong, expecting the silence of death or at least the groaning of
injured and dying, was taken aback by the fluent stream of profanity
which greeted his ears. But all efforts in that line were eclipsed
when the drive foreman tersely explained about the wire, and the
providential mud bath was forgotten in the new idea. They forthwith
clamored for war, and the sooner it came the better they would like
it.

"Not now, boys; we've got work to do first," replied Hopalong, who,
nevertheless, was troubled grievously by the same itching trigger
finger. They subsided--as a steel spring subsides when held down by a
weight--and went off in search of their mounts. Daylight had won the
skirmish in the east and was now attacking in force, and revealed a
sight which, stilling the profanity for the moment, caused it to flow
again with renewed energy. The plain was a shambles near the creek,
and dead and dying steers showed where the fence had stood. The rest
of the herd had passed over these. The wounded cattle and three horses
were put out of their misery as the first duty. The horse that
Hopalong had ridden had a broken back; the other two, broken legs.
When this work was out of the way the bruised and shaken men gave
their attention to the scattered cattle on the other side of the
creek, and when Hawkins rode up after wasting time in hunting for the
trail in the dark, he saw four men with the herd, which was still
scattered; four others near the creek, of whom only Johnny was
mounted, and a group of six strangers riding towards them from the
west and along the fence, or what was left of that portion of it.

"That's awful!" he cried, stopping his limping horse near Hopalong.
"An' here come the fools that done it."

"Yes," replied Johnny, his voice breaking from rage, "but they won't
go back again! I don't care if I'm killed if I can get one or two of
that crowd--"

"Shut up, Kid!" snapped Hopalong as the 4X outfit drew near. "I know
just how you feel about it; feel that way myself. But there ain't a-
going to be no fighting while I've got these cows on my han's. That
gang'll be here when we come back, all right."

"Mebby one or two of 'em won't," remarked Hawkins, as he looked again
over the carnage along the fence. "I never did much pot-shooting,
'cept agin Injuns; but I dunno--" He did not finish, for the strangers
were almost at his elbow.

Cranky Joe led the 4X contingent and he did the talking for it without
waste of time. "Who the hell busted that fence?" he demanded,
belligerently, looking around savagely. Johnny's hand twitched at the
words and the way they were spoken.

"I did; did you think somebody leaned agin it?" replied Hopalong, very
calmly,--so calmly that it was about one step short of an explosion.

"Well, why didn't you go around?"

"Three thousand stampeding cattle don't go 'round wire fences in the
dark."

"Well, that's not our fault. Reckon you better dig down an' settle up
for the damages, an' half a cent a head for water; an' then go 'round.
You can't stampede through the other fence."

"That so?" asked Hopalong.

"Reckon it is."

"Yo're real shore it is?"

"Well there's only six of us here, but there's six more that we can
get blamed quick if we need 'em. It's so, all right."

"Well, coming down to figures, there's eight here, with two hoss-
wranglers an' a cook to come," retorted Hopalong, kicking the
belligerent Johnny on the shins. "We're just about mad enough to
tackle anything: ever feel that way?"

"Oh, no use getting all het up," rejoined Cranky Joe. "We ain't a-
going to fight 'less we has to. Better pay up."

"Send yore bills to the ranch--if they're O. K., Buck'll pay 'em."

"Nix; I take it when I can get it."

"I ain't got no money with me that I can spare."

"Then you can leave enough cows to buy back again."

"I'm not going to pay you one damned cent, an' the only cows I'll
leave are the dead ones--an' if I could take them with me I'd do it.
An' I'm not going around the fence, neither."

"Oh, yes; you are. An' yo're going to pay," snapped Cranky Joe.

"Take it out of the price of two hundred dead cows an' gimme what's
left," Hopalong retorted. "It'll cost you nine of them twelve men to
pry it out'n me."

"You won't pay?" demanded the other, coldly.

"Not a plugged peso."

"Well, as I said before, I don't want to fight nobody 'less I has to,"
replied Cranky Joe. "I'll give you a chance to change yore mind. We'll
be out here after it to-morrow, cash or cows. That'll give you twenty-
four hours to rest yore herd an' get ready to drive. Then you pay, an'
go back, 'round the fence."

"All right; to-morrow suits me," responded Hopalong, who was boiling
with rage and felt constrained to hold it back. If it wasn't for the
cows--!

Red and three companions swept up and stopped in a swirl of dust and
asked questions until Hopalong shut them up. Their arrival and the
manner of their speech riled Cranky Joe, who turned around and loosed
one more remark; and he never knew how near to death he was at that
moment.

"You fellers must own the earth, the way you act," he said to Red and
his three companions.

"We ain't fencing it in to prove it," rejoined Hopalong, his hand on
Red's arm.

Cranky Joe wheeled to rejoin his friends. "To-morrow," he said,
significantly.

Hopalong and his men watched the six ride away, too enraged to speak
for a moment. Then the drive foreman mastered himself and turned to
Hawkins. "Where's their ranch house?" he demanded, sharply. "There
must be some way out of this, an' we've got to find it; an' before
to-morrow."

"West; three hours' ride along the fence. I could find 'em the darkest
night what ever happened; I was out there once," Hawkins replied.

"Describe 'em as exact as you can," demanded Hopalong, and when
Hawkins had done so the Bar-20 drive foreman slapped his thigh and
laughed nastily. "One house with one door an' only two windows--are
you shore? Good! Where's the corrals? Good again! So they'll take pay
for their blasted fence, eh? Cash or cows, hey! Don't want no fight
'less it's necessary, but they're going to make us pay for the fence
that killed two hundred head, an' blamed nigh got us, too. An' half a
cent a head for drinking water! I've paid that more'n once--some of
the poor devils squatting on the range ain't got nothing to sell but
water, but I don't buy none out of Bennett's Creek! Pete, you mounted
fellers round up a little--bunch the herd a little closer, an' drive
straight along the trail towards that other fence. We'll all help you
as soon as the wranglers bring us up something to ride. Push 'em hard,
limp or no limp, till dark. They'll be too tired to go crow-hopping
'round any in the dark to-night. An' say! When you see that bummer, if
he wasn't got by the fence, drop him clean. So they've got twelve men,
hey! Huh!"

"What you going to do?" asked Red, beginning to cool down, and very
curious.

"Yes; tell us," urged Johnny.

"Why, I'm going to cut that fence, an' cut it all to hell. Then I'm
going to push the herd through it as far out of danger as I can. When
they're all right Cookie an' the hoss-wranglers will have to hold 'em
during the night while we do the rest."

"What's the rest?" demanded Johnny.

"Oh, I'll tell you that later; it can wait," replied Hopalong.
"Meanwhile, you get out there with Pete an' help get the herd in
shape. We'll be with you soon--here comes the wranglers an' the
cavvieyeh. 'Bout time, too."



                            CHAPTER XXII

                       MR. BOGGS IS DISGUSTED

The herd gained twelve miles by dark and would pass through the
northern fence by noon of the next day, for Cook's axe and monkey
wrench had been put to good use. For quite a distance there was no
fence: about a mile of barb wire had been pulled loose and was tangled
up into several large piles, while rings of burned grass and ashes
surrounded what was left of the posts. The cook had embraced this
opportunity to lay in a good supply of firewood and was the happiest
man in the outfit.

At ten o'clock that night eight figures loped westward along the
southern fence and three hours later dismounted near the first corral
of the 4X ranch. They put their horses in a depression on the plain
and then hastened to seek cover, being careful to make no noise.

At dawn the door of the bunk house opened quickly and as quickly
slammed shut again, three bullets in it being the reason. An uproar
ensued and guns spat from the two windows in the general direction of
the unseen besiegers, who did not bother about replying; they had
given notification of their presence and until it was necessary to
shoot there was no earthly use of wasting ammunition. Besides, the
drive outfit had cooled down rapidly when it found that its herd was
in no immediate danger and was not anxious to kill any one unless
there was need. The situation was conducive to humor rather than
anger. But every time the door moved it collected more lead, and it
finally remained shut.

The noise in the bunk house continued and finally a sombrero was waved
frantically at the south window and a moment later Nat Boggs, foreman
of the incarcerated 4X outfit, stuck his head out very cautiously and
yelled questions which bore directly on the situation and were to the
point. He appeared to be excited and unduly heated, if one might judge
from his words and voice. There was no reply, which still further
added to his heat and excitement. Becoming bolder and a little angrier
he allowed his impetuous nature to get the upper hand and forthwith
attempted the feat of getting through that same window; but a sharp
/pat!/ sounded on a board not a foot from him, and he reconsidered
hastily. His sombrero again waved to insist on a truce, and collected
two holes, causing him much mental anguish and threatening the loss of
his worthy soul. He danced up and down with great agility and no grace
and made remarks, thereby leading a full-voiced chorus.

"Ain't that a hell of a note?" he demanded plaintively as he paused
for breath. "Stick /yore/ hat out, Cranky, an' see what /you/ can do,"
he suggested, irritably.

Cranky Joe regarded him with pity and reproach, and moved back towards
the other end of the room, muttering softly to himself. "I know it
ain't much of a bonnet, but he needn't rub it in," he growled,
peevishly.

"Try again; mebby they didn't see you," suggested Jim Larkin, who had
a reputation for never making a joke. He escaped with his life and
checked himself at the side of Cranky Joe, with whom he conferred on
the harshness of the world towards unfortunates.

The rest of the morning was spent in snipe-shooting at random,
trusting to luck to hit some one, and trusting in vain. At noon Cranky
Joe could stand the strain no longer and opened the door just a little
to relive the monotony. He succeeded, being blessed with a smashed
shoulder, and immediately became a general nuisance, adding greatly to
the prevailing atmosphere. Boggs called him a few kinds of fools and
hastened to nail the door shut; he hit his thumb and his heart became
filled with venom.

"/Now/ look at what they went an' done!" he yelled, running around in
a circle. "Damned outrage!"

"Huh!" snorted Cranky Joe with maddening superiority. "That ain't
nothing--just look at me!"

Boggs looked, very fixedly, and showed signs of apoplexy, and Cranky
Joe returned to his end of the room to resume his soliloquy.

"Why don't you come out an' take them cows!" inquired an unkind voice
from without. "Ain't changed yore mind, have you?"

"We'll give you a drink for half a cent a head--that's the regular
price for watering cows," called another.

The faint ripple of mirth which ran around the plain was lost in
opinions loudly expressed within the room; and Boggs, tears of rage in
his eyes, flung himself down on a chair and invented new terms for
describing human beings.

John Terry was observing. He had been fluttering around the north
window, constantly getting bolder, and had not been disturbed. When he
withdrew his sombrero and found that it was intact he smiled to
himself and leaned his elbows on the sill, looking carefully around
the plain. The discovery that there was no cover on the north side
cheered him greatly and he called to Boggs, outlining a plan of
action.

Boggs listened intently and then smiled for the first time since dawn.
"Bully for you, Terry!" he enthused. "Wait till dark--we'll fool 'em."

A bullet chipped the 'dobe at Terry's side and he ducked as he leaped
back. "From an angle--what did I tell you?" he laughed. "We'll drop
out here an' sneak behind the house after dark. They'll be watching
the door--an' they won't be able to see us, anyhow."

Boggs sucked his thumb tenderly and grinned. "After which--," he
elated.

"After which--," gravely repeated Terry, the others echoing it with
unrestrained joy.

"Then, mebby, I can get a drink," chuckled Larkin, brightening under
the thought.

"The moon comes up at ten," warned a voice. "It'll be full to-night--
an' there ain't many clouds in sight."

"/Ol' King Cole was a merry ol' soul/," hummed McQuade, lightly.

"An'--a--merry--ol'--soul--was--he!--was--he!" thundered the chorus,
deep-toned and strong. "/He had a wife for every toe, an' some toes
counted three!/"

"Listen!" cried Meade, holding up his hand.

"/An' every wife had sixteen dogs, an' every dog a flea!/" shouted a
voice from the besiegers, followed by a roar of laughter.

The hilarity continued until dark, only stopping when John Terry
slipped out of the window, dropped to all-fours and stuck his head
around the corner of the rear wall. He saw many stars and was silently
handed to Pete Wilson.

"What was that noise?" exclaimed Boggs in a low tone. "Are you all
right, Terry?" he asked, anxiously.

Three knocks on the wall replied to his question and then McQuade went
out, and three more knocks were heard.

"Wonder why they make that funny noise," muttered Boggs.

"Bumped inter something, I reckon," replied Jim Larkin. "Get out of my
way--I'm next."

Boggs listened intently and then pushed Duke Lane back. "Don't like
that--sounds like a crack on the head. Hey, Jim! /Say/ something!" he
called softly. The three knocks were repeated, but Boggs was
suspicious and he shook his head decisively. "To 'ell with the
knocking--/say/ something!"

"Still got them twelve men?" asked a strange voice, pleasantly.

"/An' every dog a flea/," hummed another around the corner.

"Hell!" shouted Boggs. "To the door, fellers! To the door--quick!"

A whistle shrilled from behind the house and a leaden tattoo began on
the door. "Other window!" whispered O'Neill. The foreman got there
before him and, shoving his Colt out first to clear the way, yelled
with rage and pain as a pole hit his wrist and knocked the weapon out
of his hand. He was still commenting when Duke Lane pried open the
door and, dropping quickly on his stomach, wriggled out, followed
closely by Charley Beal and Tim. At that instant the tattoo drummed
with greater vigor and such a hail of lead poured in through the
opening that the door was promptly closed, leaving the three men
outside to shift for themselves with the darkness their only cover.

Duke and his companions whispered together as they lay flat and agreed
upon a plan of action. Going around the ends of the house was suicide
and no better than waiting for the rising moon to show them to the
enemy; but there was no reason why the roof could not be utilized. Tim
and Charley boosted Duke up, then Tim followed, and the pair on the
roof pulled Charley to their side. Flat roofs were great institutions
they decided as they crawled cautiously towards the other side. This
roof was of hard, sun-baked adobe, over two feet thick, and they did
not care if their friends shot up on a gamble.

"Fine place, all right," thought Charley, grinning broadly. Then he
turned an agonized face to Tim, his chest rising. "/Hitch! Hitch!/" he
choked, fighting with all his will to master it. "/Hitch-chew! Hitch-
chew! Hitch-chew!/" he sneezed, loudly. There was a scramble below and
a ripple of mirth floated up to them.

"/Hitch-chew/?" jeered a voice. "What do we want to hit you for?"

"Look us over, children," invited another.

"Wait until the moon comes up," chuckled the third. "Be like knocking
the nigger baby down for Red an' the others. Ladies and gents: We'll
now have a little sketch entitled 'Shooting snipe by moonlight.'"

"Jack-snipe, too," laughed Pete. "Will somebody please hold the bag?"

The silence on the roof was profound and the three on the ground tried
again.

"Let me call yore attention to the trained coyotes, ladies an' gents,"
remarked Johnny in a deep, solemn voice. "Coyotes are not birds; they
do not roost on roofs as a general thing; but they are some
intelligent an' can be trained to do lots of foolish tricks. These
ani-mules were--"

"Step this way, people; on-ly ten cents, two nickels," interrupted
Pete. "They bark like dogs, an' howl like hell."

"Shut up!" snapped Tim, angrily.

"After the moon comes up," said Hopalong, "when you fellers get tired
dodging, you can chuck us yore guns an' come down. An' don't forget
that this side of the house is much the safest," he warned.

"Go to hell!" snarled Duke, bitterly.

"Won't; they're laying for me down there."

Johnny crawled to the north end of the wall and, looking cautiously
around the corner, funnelled his hands: "On the roof, Red! On the
roof!"

"Yes, dear," was the reply, followed by gun-shots.

"Hey! Move over!" snapped Tim, working towards the edge furthest from
the cheerful Red, whose bullets were not as accurate in the dark as
they promised to become in a few minutes when the moon should come up.

"Want to shove me off?" snarled Charley, angrily. "For heaven's sake,
Duke, do you want the whole earth?" he demanded of his second
companion.

"You just bet yore shirt I do! An' I want a hole in it, too!"

"Ain't you got no sense?"

"Would I be up here if I had?"

"It's going to be hot as blazes up here when the sun gets high,"
cheerfully prophesied Tim: "an' dry, too," he added for a finishing
touch.

"We'll be lucky if we're live enough to worry about the sun's heat--
/say/, that was a /close/ one!" exclaimed Duke, frantically trying to
flatten a little more. "Ah, thought so--there's that blamed moon!"

"Wish I'd gone out the window instead," growled Charley, worming
behind Duke, to the latter's prompt displeasure.

"You fellers better come down, one at a time," came from below. "Send
yore guns down first, too. Red's a blamed good shot."

"Hope he croaks," muttered Duke. "/That's/ closer yet!"

Tim's hand raised and a flash of fire singed Charley's hair. "Got to
do something, anyhow," he explained, lowering the Colt and peering
across the plain.

"You damned near succeeded!" shouted Charley, grabbing at his head.
"Why, they're three hundred, an' you trying for 'em with a--/oh!/" he
moaned, writhing.

"Locoed fool!" swore Duke, "showing 'em where we are! They're doing
good enough as it is! You ought--got /you/, too!"

"/I'm/ going down--that blamed fool out there ain't caring what he
hits," mumbled Charley, clenching his hands from pain. He slid over
the edge and Pete grabbed him.

"Next," suggested Pete, expectantly.

Tim tossed his Colt over the edge. "Here's another," he swore,
following the weapon. He was grabbed and bound in a trice.

"When may we expect you, Mr. Duke?" asked Johnny, looking up.

"Presently, friend, presently. I want to--/wow/!" he finished, and
lost no time in his descent, which was meteoric. "That feller'll
/kill/ somebody if he ain't careful!" he complained as Pete tied his
hands behind his back.

"You wait till daylight an' see," cheerily replied Pete as the three
were led off to join their friends in the corral.

There was no further action until the sun arose and then Hopalong
hailed the house and demanded a parley, and soon he and Boggs met
midway between the shack and the line.

"What d'you want?" asked Boggs, sullenly.

"Want you to stop this farce so I can go on with my drive."

"Well, I ain't holding you!" exploded the 4X foreman.

"Oh, yes; but you are. I can't let you an' yore men out to hang on our
flanks an' worry us; an' I don't want to hold you in that shack till
you all die of thirst, or come out to be all shot up. Besides, I can't
fool around here for a week; I got business to look after."

"Don't you worry about us dying with thirst; that ain't worrying us
none."

"I heard different," replied Hopalong, smiling. "Them fellers in the
corral drank a quart apiece. See here, Boggs; you can't win, an' you
know it. Yo're not bucking me, but the whole range, the whole country.
It's a fight between conditions--the fence idea agin the open range
idea, an' open trails. The fence will lose. You closed a drive trail
that's 'most as old as cow-raising. Will the punchers of this part of
the country stand for it? Suppose you lick us,--which you won't--can
you lick all the rest of us, the JD, Wallace's, Double-Arrow, C-80,
Cross-O-Cross, an' the others! That's just what it amounts to, an' you
better stop right now, before somebody gets killed. You know what that
means in this section. Yo're six to our eight, you ain't got a drink
in that shack, an' you dasn't try to get one. You can't do a thing
agin us, an' you know it."

Boggs rested his hands on his hips and considered, Hopalong waiting
for him to reply. He knew that the Bar-20 man was right but he hated
to admit it, he hated to say he was whipped.

"Are any of them six hurt?" he finally asked.

"Only scratches an' sore heads," responded Hopalong, smiling. "We
ain't tried to kill anybody, yet. I'm putting that up to you."

Boggs made no reply and Hopalong continued: "I got six of yore twelve
men prisoners, an' all yore cayuses are in my han's. I'll shoot every
animal before I'll leave 'em for you to use against me, an' I'll take
enough of yore cows to make up for what I lost by that fence. You've
got to pay for them dead cows, anyhow. If I do let you out you'll have
to road-brand me two hundred, or pay cash. My herd ain't worrying me--
it's moving all the time. It's through that other fence by now. An' if
I have to keep my outfit here to pen you in or shoot you off I can
send to the JD for a gang to push the herd. Don't make no mistake:
yo're getting off easy. Suppose one of my men had been killed at the
fence--what then?"

"Well, what do you want me to do?"

"Stop this foolishness an' take down them fences for a mile each side
of the trail. If Buck has to come up here the whole thing'll go down.
Road-brand me two hundred of yore three-year-olds. Now as soon as you
agree, an' say that the fight's over, it will be. You can't win out;
an' what's the use of having yore men killed off?"

"I hate to quit," replied the other, gloomily.

"I know how that is; but yo're wrong on this question, dead wrong. You
don't own this range or the trail. You ain't got no right to close
that old drive trail. Honest, now; have you?"

"You say them six ain't hurt?"

"No more'n I said."

"An' if I give in will you treat my men right?"

"Shore."

"When will you leave."

"Just as soon as I get them two hundred three-year-olds."

"Well, I hate a quitter; but I can't do nothing, nohow," mused the 4X
foreman. He cleared his throat and turned to look at the house. "All
right; when you get them cows you get out of here, an' don't never
come back!"

Hopalong flung his arm with a shout to his men and the other kicked
savagely at an inoffensive stick and slouched back to his bunk house,
a beaten man.



                           CHAPTER XXIII

                      TEX EWALT HUNTS TROUBLE

Not more than a few weeks after the Bar-20 drive outfit returned to
the ranch a solitary horseman pushed on towards the trail they had
followed, bound for Buckskin and the Bar-20 range. His name was Tex
Ewalt and he cordially hated all of the Bar-20 outfit and Hopalong in
particular. He had nursed a grudge for several years and now, as he
rode south to rid himself of it and to pay a long-standing debt, it
grew stronger until he thrilled with anticipation and the sauce of
danger. This grudge had been acquired when he and Slim Travennes had
enjoyed a duel with Hopalong Cassidy up in Santa Fe, and had been
worsted; it had increased when he learned of Slim's death at Cactus
Springs at the hands of Hopalong; and, some time later, hearing that
two friends of his, "Slippery" Trendley and "Deacon" Rankin, with
their gang, had "gone out" in the Panhandle with the same man and his
friends responsible for it, Tex hastened to Muddy Wells to even the
score and clean his slate. Even now his face burned when he remembered
his experiences on that never-to-be-forgotten occasion. He had been
played with, ridiculed, and shamed, until he fled from the town as a
place accursed, hating everything and everybody. It galled him to
think that he had allowed Buck Peters' momentary sympathy to turn him
from his purpose, even though he was convinced that the foreman's
action had saved his life. And now Tex was returning, not to Muddy
Wells, but to the range where the Bar-20 outfit held sway.

Several years of clean living had improved Tex, morally and
physically. The liquor he had once been in the habit of consuming had
been reduced to a negligible quantity; he spent the money on
cartridges instead, and his pistol work showed the results of careful
and dogged practice, particularly in the quickness of the draw.
Punching cows on a remote northern range had repaid him in health far
more than his old game of living on his wits and other people's lack
of them, as proved by his clear eye and the pink showing through the
tan above his beard; while his somber, steady gaze, due to long-held
fixity of purpose, indicated the resourcefulness of a perfectly
reliable set of nerves. His low-hung holster tied securely to his
trousers leg to assure smoothness in drawing, the restrained swing of
his right hand, never far from the well-worn scabbard which sheathed a
triggerless Colt's "Frontier"--these showed the confident and ready
gun-man, the man who seldom missed. "Frontiers" left the factory with
triggers attached, but the absence of that part did not always
incapacitate a weapon. Some men found that the regular method was too
slow, and painstakingly cultivated the art of thumbing the hammer.
"Thumbing" was believed to save the split second so valuable to a man
in argument with his peers. Tex was riding with the set purpose of
picking a fair fight with the best six-shooter expert it had ever been
his misfortune to meet, and he needed that split second. He knew that
he needed it and the knowledge thrilled him with a peculiar elation;
he had changed greatly in the past year and now he wanted an "even
break" where once he would have called all his wits into play to avoid
it. He had found himself and now he acknowledged no superior in
anything.

On his way south he met and talked with men who had known him, the old
Tex, in the days when he had made his living precariously. They did
not recognize him behind his beard, and he was content to let the
oversight pass. But from these few he learned what he wished to know,
and he was glad that Hopalong Cassidy was where he had always been,
and that his gun-work had improved rather than depreciated with the
passing of time. He wished to prove himself master of The Master, and
to be hailed as such by those who had jeered and laughed at his
ignominy several years before. So he rode on day after day, smiling
and content, neither under-rating nor over-rating his enemy's ability
with one weapon, but trying to think of him as he really was. He knew
that if there was any difference between Hopalong Cassidy and himself
that it must be very slight--perhaps so slight as to result fatally to
both; but if that were so then it would have to work out as it saw fit
--he at least would have accomplished what many, many others had
failed in.



In the little town of Buckskin, known hardly more than locally, and
never thought of by outsiders except as the place where the Bar-20
spent their spare time and money, and neutral ground for the
surrounding ranches, was Cowan's saloon, in the dozen years of its
existence the scene of good stories, boisterous fun, and quick deaths.
Put together roughly, of crude materials, sticking up in inartistic
prominence on the dusty edge of a dustier street; warped, bleached by
the sun, and patched with boards ripped from packing cases and with
the flattened sides of tin cans; low of ceiling, the floor one huge
brown discoloration of spring, creaking boards, knotted and split and
worn into hollows, the unpretentious building offered its hospitality
to all who might be tempted by the scrawled, sprawled lettering of its
sign. The walls were smoke-blackened, pitted with numerous small and
clear-cut holes, and decorated with initials carelessly cut by men who
had come and gone.

Such was Cowan's, the best patronized place in many hot and dusty
miles and the Mecca of the cowboys from the surrounding ranches. Often
at night these riders of the range gathered in the humble building and
told tales of exceeding interest; and on these occasions one might see
a row of ponies standing before the building, heads down and quiet. It
is strange how alike cow-ponies look in the dim light of the stars. On
the south side of the saloon, weak, yellow lamp light filtered through
the dirt on the window panes and fell in distorted patches on the
plain, blotched in places by the shadows of the wooden substitutes for
glass.

It was a moonlight night late in the fall, after the last beef round-
up was over and the last drive outfit home again, that two cow-ponies
stood in front of Cowan's while their owners lolled against the bar
and talked over the latest sensation--the fencing in of the West
Valley range, and the way Hopalong Cassidy and his trail outfit had
opened up the old drive trail across it. The news was a month old, but
it was the last event of any importance and was still good to laugh
over.

"Boys," remarked the proprietor, "I want you to meet Mr. Elkins. He
came down that trail last week, an' he didn't see no fence across it."
The man at the table arose slowly. "Mr. Elkins, this is Sandy Lucas,
an' Wood Wright, of the C-80. Mr. Elkins here has been a-looking over
the country, sizing up what the beef prospects will be for next year;
an' he knows all about wire fences. Here's how," he smiled, treating
on the house.

Mr. Elkins touched the glass to his bearded lips and set it down
untasted while he joked over the sharp rebuff so lately administered
to wire fences in that part of the country. While he was an ex-cow-
puncher he believed that he was above allowing prejudice to sway his
judgment, and it was his opinion, after careful thought, that barb
wire was harmful to the best interests of the range. He had ridden
over a great part of the cattle country in the last few yeas, and
after reviewing the existing conditions as he understood them, his
verdict must go as stated, and emphatically. He launched gracefully
into a slowly delivered and lengthy discourse upon the subject, which
proved to be so entertaining that his companions were content to
listen and nod with comprehension. They had never met any one who was
so well qualified to discuss the pros and cons of the barb-wire fence
question, and they learned many things which they had never heard
before. This was very gratifying to Mr. Elkins, who drew largely upon
hearsay, his own vivid imagination, and a healthy logic. He was very
glad to talk to men who had the welfare of the range at heart, and he
hoped soon to meet the man who had taken the initiative in giving barb
wire its first serious setback on that rich and magnificent southern
range.

"You shore ought to meet Cassidy--he's a fine man," remarked Lucas
with enthusiasm. "You'll not find any better, no matter where you
look. But you ain't touched yore liquor," he finished with surprise.

"You'll have to excuse me, gentlemen," replied Mr. Elkins, smiling
deprecatingly. "When a man likes it as much as I do it ain't very easy
to foller instructions an' let it alone. Sometimes I almost break
loose an' indulge, regardless of whether it kills me or not. I reckon
it'll get me yet." He struck the bar a resounding blow with his
clenched hand. "But I ain't going to cave in till I has to!"

"That's purty tough," sympathized Wood Wright, reflectively. "I ain't
so very much taken with it, but I know I would be if I knowed I
couldn't have any."

"Yes, that's human nature, all right," laughed Lucas. "That reminds me
of a little thing that happened to me once--"

"Listen!" exclaimed Cowan, holding up his hand for silence. "I reckon
that's the Bar-20 now, or some of it--sounds like them when they're
feeling frisky. There's allus something happening when them fellers
are around."

The proprietor was right, as proved a moment later when Johnny Nelson,
continuing his argument, pushed open the door and entered the room. "I
didn't neither; an' you know it!" he flung over his shoulder.

"Then who did?" demanded Hopalong, chuckling. "Why, hullo, boys," he
said, nodding to his friends at the bar. "Nobody else would do a fool
thing like that; nobody but you, Kid," he added, turning to Johnny.

"I don't care a hang what you think; I say I didn't an'--"

"He shore did, all right; I seen him just afterward," laughed Billy
Williams, pressing close upon Hopalong's heels. "Howdy, Lucas; an'
there's that ol' coyote, Wood Wright. How's everybody feeling?"

"Where's the rest of you fellers?" inquired Cowan.

"Stayed home to-night," replied Hopalong.

"Got any loose money, you two?" asked Billy, grinning at Lucas and
Wright.

"I reckon we have--an' our credit's good if we ain't. We're good for a
dollar or two, ain't we, Cowan?" replied Lucas.

"Two dollars an' four bits," corrected Cowan. "I'll raise it to three
dollars even when you pay me that 'leven cents you owe me."

"'Leven cents? What 'leven cents?"

"Postage stamps an' envelope for that love letter you writ."

"Go to blazes; that wasn't no love letter!" snorted Lucas,
indignantly. "That was my quarterly report. I never did write no love
letters, nohow."

"We'll trim you fellers to-night, if you've got the nerve to play us,"
grinned Johnny, expectantly.

"Yes; an' we've got that, too. Give us the cards, Cowan," requested
Wood Wright, turning. "They won't give us no peace till we take all
their money away from 'em."

"Open game," prompted Cowan, glancing meaningly at Elkins, who stood
by idly looking on, and without showing much interest in the scene.

"Shore! Everybody can come in what wants to," replied Lucas, heartily,
leading the others to the table. "I allus did like a six-handed game
best--all the cards are out an' there's some excitement in it."

When the deal began Elkins was seated across the table from Hopalong,
facing him for the first time since that day over in Muddy Wells, and
studying him closely. He found no changes, for the few years had left
no trace of their passing on the Bar-20 puncher. The sensation of
facing the man he had come south expressly to kill did not interfere
with Elkins' card-playing ability for he played a good game; and as if
the Fates were with him it was Hopalong's night off as far as poker
was concerned, for his customary good luck was not in evidence. That
instinctive feeling which singles out two duellists in a card game was
soon experienced by the others, who were careful, as became good
players, to avoid being caught between them; in consequence, when the
game broke up, Elkins had most of Hopalong's money. At one period of
his life Elkins had lived on poker for five years, and lived well. But
he gained more than money in this game, for he had made friends with
the players and placed the first wire of his trap. Of those in the
room Hopalong alone treated him with reserve, and this was cleverly
swung so that it appeared to be caused by a temporary grouch due to
the sting of defeat. As the Bar-20 man was known to be given to moods
at times this was accepted as the true explanation and gave promise of
hotly contested games for revenge later on. The banter which the
defeated puncher had to endure stirred him and strengthened the
reserve, although he was careful not to show it.

When the last man rode off, Elkins and the proprietor sought their
bunks without delay, the former to lie awake a long time, thinking
deeply. He was vexed at himself for failing to work out an acceptable
plan of action, one that would show him to be in the right. He would
gain nothing more than glory, and pay too dearly for it, if he killed
Hopalong and was in turn killed by the dead man's friends--and he
believed that he had become acquainted with the quality of the
friendship which bound the units of the Bar-20 outfit into a smooth,
firm whole. They were like brothers, like one man. Cassidy must do the
forcing as far as appearances went, and be clearly in the wrong before
the matter could be settled.

The next week was a busy one for Elkins, every day finding him in the
saddle and riding over some one of the surrounding ranches with one or
more of its punchers for company. In this way he became acquainted
with the men who might be called on to act as his jury when the
showdown came, and he proceeded to make friends of them in a manner
that promised success. And some of his suggestions for the improvement
of certain conditions on the range, while they might not work out
right in the long run, compelled thought and showed his interest. His
remarks on the condition and numbers of cattle were the same in
substance in all cases and showed that he knew what he was talking
about, for the punchers were all very optimistic about the next year's
showing in cattle.

"If you fellers don't break all records for drive herds of quality
next year I don't know nothing about cows; an' I shore don't know
nothing else," he told the foreman of the Bar-20, as they rode
homeward after an inspection of that ranch. "There'll be more dust
hanging over the drive trails leading from this section next year when
spring drops the barriers than ever before. You needn't fear for the
market, neither--prices will stand. The north an' central ranges ain't
doing what they ought to this year--it'll be up to you fellers down
south, here, to make that up; an' you can do it." This was not a
guess, but the result of thought and study based on the observations
he had made on his ride south, and from what he had learned from
others along the way. It paralleled Buck's own private opinion,
especially in regard to the southern range; and the vague suspicions
in the foreman's mind disappeared for good and all.

Needless to say Elkins was a welcome visitor at the ranch houses and
was regarded as a good fellow. At the Bar-20 he found only two men who
would not thaw to him, and he was possessed of too much tact to try
any persuasive measures. One was Hopalong, whose original cold reserve
seemed to be growing steadily, the Bar-20 puncher finding in Elkins a
personality that charged the atmosphere with hostility and quietly
rubbed him the wrong way. Whenever he was in the presence of the
newcomer he felt the tugging of an irritating and insistent antagonism
and he did not always fully conceal it. John Bartlett, Lucas, and one
or two of the more observing had noticed it and they began to prophesy
future trouble between the two. The other man who disliked Elkins was
Red Connors; but what was more natural? Red, being Hopalong's closest
companion, would be very apt to share his friend's antipathy. On the
other hand, as if to prove Hopalong's dislike to be unwarranted,
Johnny Nelson swung far to the other extreme and was frankly
enthusiastic in his liking for the cattle scout. And Johnny did not
pour oil on the waters when he laughingly twitted Hopalong for
allowing "a licking at cards to make him sore." This was the idea that
Elkins was quietly striving to have generally accepted.

The affair thus hung fire, Elkins chafing at the delay and cautiously
working for an opening, which at last presented itself, to be promptly
seized. By a sort of mutual, unspoken agreement, the men in Cowan's
that night passed up the cards and sat swapping stories. Cowan,
swearing at a smoking lamp, looked up with a grin and burned his
fingers as a roar of laughter marked the point of a droll reminiscence
told by Bartlett.

"That's a good story, Bartlett," Elkins remarked, slowing refilling
his pipe. "Reminds me of the lame Greaser, Hippy Joe, an' the canned
oysters. They was both bad, an' neither of 'em knew it till they came
together. It was like this. . . ." The malicious side glance went
unseen by all but Hopalong, who stiffened with the raging suspicion of
being twitted on his own deformity. The humor of the tale failed to
appeal to him, and when his full senses returned Lucas was in the
midst of the story of the deadly game of tag played in a ten-acre lot
of dense underbrush by two of his old-time friends. It was a tale of
gripping interest and his auditors were leaning forward in their
eagerness not to miss a word. "An' Pierce won," finished Lucas; "some
shot up, but able to get about. He was all right in a couple of weeks.
But he was bound to win; he could shoot all around Sam Hopkins."

"But the best shot won't allus win in that game," commented Elkins.
"That's one of the minor factors."

"Yes, sir! It's /luck/ that counts there," endorsed Bartlett, quickly.
"Luck, nine times out of ten."

"Best shot ought to win," declared Skinny Thompson. "It ain't all
luck, nohow. Where'd I be against Hoppy, there?"

"Won't neither!" cried Johnny, excitedly. "The man who sees the other
first wins out. That's wood-craft, an' brains."

"Aw! What do you know about it, anyhow?" demanded Lucas. "If he can't
shoot so good what chance has he got--if he misses the first try, what
then?"

"What chance has he got! First chance, miss or no miss. If he can't
see the other first, where the devil does his good shooting come in?"

"Huh!" snorted Wood Wright, belligerently. "Any fool can /see/, but he
can't /shoot/! An' it's as much luck as wood-craft, too, an' don't you
forget it!"

"The first shot don't win, Johnny; not in a game like that, with all
the dodging an' ducking," remarked Red. "You can't put one where you
want it when a feller's slipping around in the brush. It's the most
that counts, an' the best shot gets in the most. I wouldn't want to
have to stand up against Hoppy an' a short gun, not in that game; no,
sir!" and Red shook his head with decision.

The argument waxed hot. With the exception of Hopalong, who sat
silently watchful, every one spoke his opinion and repeated it without
regard to the others. It appeared that in this game, the man with the
strongest lungs would eventually win out, and each man tried to show
his superiority in that line. Finally, above the uproar, Cowan's
bellow was herd, and he kept it up until some notice was taken of it.
"Shut up! /Shut up/! For God's sake, /quit/! Never saw such a bunch of
tinder--let somebody drop a cold, burned-out match in this gang, an'
hell's to pay. Here, /all/ of you, play cards an' forget about cross-
tag in the scrub. You'll be arguing about playing marbles in the dark
purty soon!"

"All right," muttered Johnny, "but just the same, the man who--"

"Never mind about the man who! Did you hear /me/?" yelled Cowan,
swiftly reaching for a bucket of water. "/This/ is a game where /I/
gets the most in, an' don't forget it!"

"Come on; play cards," growled Lucas, who did not relish having his
decision questioned on his own story. Undoubtedly somewhere in the
wide, wide world there was such a thing as common courtesy, but none
of it had ever strayed onto that range.

The chairs scraped on the rough floor as the men pulled up to a table.
"I don't care a hang," came Elkins' final comment as he shuffled the
cards with careful attention. "I'm not any fancy Colt expert, but I'm
damned if I won't take a chance in that game with any man as totes a
gun. Leastawise, of /course/, I wouldn't take no such advantage of a
lame man."

The effect would have been ludicrous but for its deadly significance.
Cowan, stooping to go under the bar, remained in that hunched-up
attitude, his every faculty concentrated in his ears; the match on its
way to the cigarette between Red's lips was held until it burned his
fingers, when it was dropped from mere reflex action, the hand still
stiffly aloft; Lucas, half in and half out of his chair, seemed to
have got just where he intended, making no effort to seat himself.
Skinny Thompson, his hand on his gun, seemed paralyzed; his mouth was
open to frame a reply that never was uttered and he stared through
narrowed eyelids at the blunderer. The sole movement in the room was
the slow rising of Hopalong and the markedly innocent shuffling of the
cards by Elkins, who appeared to be entirely ignorant of the weight
and effect of his words. He dropped the pack for the cut and then
looked up and around as if surprised by the silence and the
expressions he saw.

Hopalong stood facing him, leaning over with both hands on the table.
His voice, when he spoke, rumbled up from his chest in a low growl.
"You won't /have/ no advantage, Elkins. Take it from me, you've had
yore last fling. I'm glad you made it plain, this time, so it's
something I can take hold of." He straightened slowly and walked to
the door, and an audible sigh sounded through the room as it was
realized that trouble was not immediately imminent. At the door he
paused and turned back around, looking back over his shoulder. "At
noon to-morrow I'm going to hoof it north through the brush between
the river an' the river trail, starting at the old ford a mile down
the river." He waited expectantly.

"Me too--only the other way," was the instant rejoinder. "Have it yore
own way."

Hopalong nodded and the closing door shut him out into the night.
Without a word the Bar-20 men arose and followed him, the only
hesitant being Johnny, who was torn between loyalty and new-found
friendship; but with a sorrowful shake of the head, he turned away and
passed out, not far behind the others.

"Clannish, ain't they?" remarked Elkins, gravely.

Those remaining were regarding him sternly, questioningly, Cowan with
a deep frown darkening his face. "You hadn't ought to 'a' said that,
Elkins." The reproof was almost an accusation.

Elkins looked steadily at the speaker. "You hadn't ought to 'a' let me
say it," he replied. "How did I know he was so touchy?" His gaze left
Cowan and lingered in turn on each of the others. "Some of you ought
to 'a' told me. I wouldn't 'a' said it only for what I said just
before, an' I didn't want him to think I was challenging him to no
duel in the brush. So I says so, an' then he goes an' takes it up that
I /am/ challenging him. I ain't got no call to fight with nobody.
Ain't I tried to keep out of trouble with him ever since I've been
here? Ain't I kept out of the poker games on his account? Ain't I?"
The grave, even tones were dispassionate, without a trace of animus
and serenely sure of justice.

The faces around him cleared gradually and heads began to nod in
comprehending consent.

"Yes, I reckon you have," agreed Cowan, slowly, but the frown was not
entirely gone. "Yes, I reckon--mebby--you have."



                            CHAPTER XXIV

                             THE MASTER

It was noon by the sun when Hopalong and Red shook hands south of the
old ford and the former turned to enter the brush. Hopalong was cool
and ominously calm while his companion was the opposite. Red was
frankly suspicious of the whole affair and nursed the private opinion
that Mr. Elkins would lay in ambush and shoot his enemy down like a
dog. And Red had promised himself a dozen times that he would study
the signs around the scene of action if Hopalong should not come back,
and take a keen delight, if warranted, in shooting Mr. Elkins full of
holes with no regard for an even break. He was thinking the matter
over as his friend breasted the first line of brush and could not
refrain from giving a slight warning. "Get him, Hoppy," he called,
earnestly; "get him good. Let /him/ do some of the moving about. I'll
be here waiting for you."

Hopalong smiled in reply and sprang forward, the leaves and branches
quickly shutting him from Red's sight. He had worked out his plan of
action the night before when he was alone and the world was still, and
as soon as he had it to his satisfaction he had dropped off to sleep
as easily as a child--it took more than gun-play to disturb his
nerves. He glanced about him to make sure of his bearings and then
struck on a curving line for the river. The first hundred yards were
covered with speed and then he began to move more slowly and with
greater regard for caution, keeping close to the earth and showing a
marked preference for low ground. Sky-lines were all right in times of
peace, but under the present conditions they promised to become
unhealthy. His eyes and ears told him nothing for a quarter of an
hour, and then he suddenly stopped short and crouched as he saw the
plain trail of a man crossing his own direction at a right angle. From
the bottom of one of the heel prints a crushed leaf was slowly rising
back towards its original position, telling him how new the trail was;
and as if this were not enough for his trained mind he heard a twig
snap sharply as he glanced along the line of prints. It sounded very
close, and he dropped instantly to one knee and thought quickly. Why
had the other left so plain a trail, why had he reached up and broken
twigs that projected above his head as he passed? Why had he kicked
aside a small stone, leaving a patch of moist, bleached grass to tell
where it had lain? Elkins had stumbled here, but there were no toe
marks to tell of it. Hopalong would not track, for he was no assassin;
but he knew that he would do if he were, and careless. The answer
leaped to his suspicious mind like a flash, and he did not care to
waste any time in trying to determine whether or not Elkins was
capable of such a trick. He acted on the presumption that the trail
had been made plain for a good reason, and that not far ahead at some
suitable place,--and there were any number of such within a hundred
yards,--the maker of the plain trail lay in wait. Smiling savagely he
worked backward and turning, struck off in a circle. He had no
compunctions whatever now about shooting the other player of the game.
It was not long before he came upon the same trail again and he
started another circle. A bullet /zipped/ past his ear and cut a twig
not two inches from his head. He fired at the smoke as he dropped, and
then wriggled rapidly backward, keeping as flat to the earth as he
could. Elkins had taken up his position in a thicket which stood in
the centre of a level patch of sand in the old bed of the river,--the
bed it had used five years before and forsaken at the time of the big
flood when it cut itself a new channel and made the U-bend which now
surrounded this piece of land on three sides. Even now, during the
rainy season, the thicket which sheltered Mr. Elkins was frequently an
island in a sluggish, shallow overflow.

"Hole up, blast you!" jeered Hopalong, hugging the ground. The second
bullet from Mr. Elkins' gun cut another twig, this one just over his
head, and he laughed insolently. "I ain't ascared to do the moving,
even if you are. Judging from the way you keep out o' sight the canned
oysters are in the can again. /I/ never did no ambushing, you coyote."

"You can't make remarks like that an' get away with 'em--I've knowed
you too long," retorted Elkins, shifting quickly, and none too soon.
"You went an' got Slim afore he was wide awake. I know /you/, all
right."

Hopalong's surprise was but momentary, and his mind raced back over
the years. Who was this man Elkins, that he knew Slim Travennes?
"Yo're a liar, Elkins, an' so was the man who told you that!"

"Call me Ewalt," jeered the other, nastily. "Nobody'll hear it, an'
you'll not live to tell it. Ewalt, Tex Ewalt; call me that."

"So you've come back after all this time to make me get you, have you?
Well, I ain't a-going to shoot no buttons off you /this/ time. I allus
reckoned you learned something at Muddy Wells--but you'll learn it
here," Hopalong rejoined, sliding into a depression, and working with
great caution towards the dry river bed, where fallen trees and
hillocks of sand provided good cover in plenty. Everything was clear
now and despite the seriousness of the situation he could not repress
a smile as he remembered vividly that day at the carnival when Tex
Ewalt came to town with the determination to kill him and show him up
as an imitation. His grievance against Elkins was petty when compared
to that against Ewalt, and he began to force the issue. As he peered
over a stranded log he caught sight of his enemy disappearing into
another part of the thicket, and two of his three shots went home.
Elkins groaned with pain and fear as he realized that his right knee-
cap was broken and would make him slow in his movements. He was lamed
for life, even if he did come out of the duel alive; lamed in the same
way that Hopalong was--the affliction he had made cruel sport of had
come to him. But he had plenty of courage and he returned the fire
with remarkable quickness, his two shots sounding almost as one.

Hopalong wiped the blood from his cheek and wormed his way to a new
place; when half way there he called out again, "How's yore health--
Tex?" in mock sympathy.

Elkins lied manfully and when he looked to get in another shot his
enemy was on the farther bank, moving up to get behind him. He did not
know Hopalong's new position until he raised his head to glance down
over the dried river bed, and was informed by a bullet that nicked his
ear. As he ducked, another grazed his head, the third going wild. He
hazarded a return shot, and heard Hopalong's laugh ring out again.

"Like the story Lucas told, the best shot is going to win out this
time, too," the Bar-20 man remarked, grimly. "You thought a game like
this would give you some chance against a better shot, didn't you? You
are a fool."

"It ain't over yet, not by a damned sight!" came the retort.

"An' you thought you had a little the best of it if you stayed still
an' let me do the moving, didn't you? You'll learn something before I
get through with you: but it'll be too late to do you any good,"
Hopalong called, crouched below a hillock of sand so the other could
not take advantage of the words and single him out for a shot.

"You can't learn me nothing, you assassin; I've got my eyes open, this
time." He knew that he had had them open before, and that Hopalong was
in no way an assassin; but if he could enrage his enemy and sting him
into some reflex carelessness he might have the last laugh.

Elkins' retort was wasted, for the sudden and unusual, although a
familiar sound, had caught Hopalong's ear and he was giving all his
attention to it. While he weighed it, his incredulity holding back the
decision his common sense was striving to give him, the noise grew
louder rapidly and common sense won out in a cry of warning an instant
before a five-foot wall of brown water burst upon his sight, sweeping
swiftly down the old, dry river bed; and behind it towered another and
greater wall. Tree trunks were dancing end over end in it as if they
were straws.

"Cloud-burst!" he yelled. "Run, Tex! Run for yore life! Cloud-burst up
the valley! Run, you fool; /Run/!"

Tex's sarcastic retort was cut short as he instinctively glanced
north, and his agonized curse lashed Hopalong forward. "Can't run--
knee cap's busted! Can't swim, can't do--ah, hell--!"

Hopalong saw him torn from his shelter and whisked down the raging
torrent like an arrow from a bow. The Bar-20 puncher leaped from the
bank, shot under the yellow flood and arose, gasping and choking many
yards downstream, fighting madly to get the muddy water out of his
throat and eyes. As he struck out with all his strength down the
current, he caught sight of Tex being torn from a jutting tree limb,
and he shouted encouragement and swam all the harder, if such a thing
were possible. Tex's course was checked for a moment by a boiling
back-current and as he again felt the pull of the rushing stream
Hopalong's hand gripped his collar and the fight for safety began.
Whirled against logs and stumps, drawn down by the weight of his
clothes and the frantic efforts of Tex to grasp him--fighting the
water and the man he was trying to save at the same time, his head
under water as often as it was out of it, and Tex's vise-like fingers
threatening him--he headed for the west shore against powerful cross-
currents that made his efforts seem useless. He seemed to get the
worst of every break. Once, when caught by a friendly current, they
were swung under an overhanging branch, but as Hopalong's hand shot up
to grasp it a submerged bush caught his feet and pulled him under, and
Tex's steel-like arms around his throat almost suffocated him before
he managed to beat the other into insensibility and break the hold.

"I'll let you go!" he threatened; but his hand grasped the other's
collar all the tighter and his fighting jaw was set with greater
determination than ever.

They shot out into the main stream, where the U-bend channel joined
the short-cut, and it looked miles wide to the exhausted puncher. He
was fighting only on his will now. He would not give up, though he
scarce could lift an arm, and his lungs seemed on fire. He did not
know whether Tex was dead or alive, but he would get the body ashore
with him, or go down trying. He bumped into a log and instinctively
grasped it. It turned, and when he came up again it was bobbing five
feet ahead of him. Ages seemed to pass before he flung his numb arm
over it and floated with it. He was not alone in the flood; a coyote
was pushing steadily across his path towards the nearer bank, and on a
gliding tree trunk crouched a frightened cougar, its ears flattened
and its sharp claws dug solidly through the bark. Here and there were
cattle and a snake wriggled smoothly past him, apparently as much at
home in the water as out of it. The log turned again and he just
managed to catch hold of it as he came up for the second time.

Things were growing black before his eyes and strange, weird ideas and
images floated through his brain. When he regained some part of his
senses he saw ahead of him a long, curling crest of yellow water and
foam, and he knew, vaguely, that it was pouring over a bar. The next
instant his feet struck bottom and he fought his way blindly and
slowly, with the stubborn determination of his kind, towards the
brush-covered point twenty feet away.

When he opened his eyes and looked around he became conscious of
excruciating pains and he closed them again to rest. His outflung hand
struck something that made him look around again, and he saw Tex
Ewalt, face down at his side. He released his grasp on the other's
collar and slowly the whole thing came to him, and then the necessity
for action, unless he wished to lose what he had fought so hard to
save.

Anything short of the iron man Tex had become would have been dead
before this or have been finished by the mauling he now got from
Hopalong. But Tex groaned, gurgled a curse, and finally opened his
eyes upon his rescuer, who sank back with a grunt of satisfaction.
Slowly his intelligence returned as he looked steadily into Hopalong's
eyes, and with it came the realization of a strange truth: he did not
hate this man at all. Months of right living, days and nights of
honest labor shoulder to shoulder with men who respected him for his
ability and accepted him as one of themselves, had made a new man of
him, although the legacy of hatred from the old Tex had disguised him
from himself until now; but the new Tex, battered, shot-up, nearly
drowned, looked at his old enemy and saw him for the man he really
was. He smiled faintly and reached out his hand.

"Cassidy, yo're the boss," he said. "Shake."

They shook.




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