Black Jack by Max Brand (top android ebook reader txt) 📕
His sister's voice cut into his musing. She had two tones. One might be called her social register. It was smooth, gentle--the low-pitched and controlled voice of a gentlewoman. The other voice was hard and sharp. It could drive hard and cold across a desk, and bring businessmen to an understanding that here was a mind, not a woman.
At present she used her latter tone. Vance Cornish came into a shivering consciousness that she was sitting beside him. He turned his head slowly. It was always a shock to come out of one of his pleasant dreams and see that worn, hollow-eyed, impatient face.
"Are you forty-nine, Vance?"
"I'm not fifty, at least," he countered.
She remained imperturbable, looking him over. He had come to notice that in the past half-dozen years his best smiles often failed to mellow her expression. He felt that something disagreeable was coming.
"Why did Cornwall run away this morning? I hoped to take him on a trip."
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dreaded as that deep-throated murmur of angry, honest men. That murmur
from half a dozen lawabiding citizens will put the fear of death in the
hearts of a hundred outlaws. The rumble grew, spread: “Foul play.” And
they began to look to one another, these men of action.
Only Elizabeth was silent. She rose to her feet, as tall as her brother,
without an emotion on her face. And her brother would never forget her.
“It seems that you’ve won, Vance. It seems that blood will out, after
all. The time is not quite up—and you win the bet!”
Vance shook his head as though in protest and struck his hand across his
face. He dared not let her see the joy that contorted his features.
Triumph here on the very verge of defeat! It misted his eyes. Joy gave
wings to his thoughts. He was the master of the valley.
“But—you’ll think before you do anything, Elizabeth?”
“I’ve done my thinking already—twenty-four years of it. I’m going to do
what I promised I’d do.”
“And that?”
“You’ll see and hear in time. What’s yonder?”
The men were rising, one after another, and bunching together. Before
Vance could answer, there was a confusion in the hall, running feet here
and there. They heard the hard, shrill voice of Wu Chi chattering
directions and the guttural murmurs of his fellow servants as they
answered. Someone ran out into the hall and came back to the huddling,
stirring crowd in the living room.
“He’s not dead—but close to it. Maybe die any minute—maybe live through
it!”
That was the report.
“We’ll get young Hollis and hold him to see how the sheriff comes out.”
“Aye, we’ll get him!”
All at once they boiled into action and the little crowd of men thrust
for the big doors that led into the hall. They cast the doors back and
came directly upon the tall, white-headed figure of Gainor.
Gainor’s dignity split the force of their rush. They recoiled as water
strikes on a rock and divides into two meager swirls. And when one or two
went past him on either side, he recalled them.
“Boys, there seems to be a little game on hand. What is it?”
Something repelling, coldly inquiring in his attitude and in his voice.
They would have gone on if they could, but they could not. He held them
with a force of knowledge of things that they did not know. They were
remembering that this man had gone out with the sheriff to meet,
apparently, his death. And yet Gainor, a well-tried friend of the
sheriff, seemed unexcited. They had to answer his question, and how could
they lie when he saw them rushing through a door with revolvers coming to
brown, skillful hands? It was someone from the rear who made the
confession.
“We’re going to get young Black Jack!”
That was it. The speech came out like the crack of a gun, clearing the
atmosphere. It told every man exactly what was in his own mind, felt but
not confessed. They had no grudge against Terry, really. But they were
determined to hang the son of Black Jack. Had it been a lesser deed, they
might have let him go. But his victim was too distinguished in their
society. He had struck down Joe Minter; the ghost of the great Black Jack
himself seemed to have stalked out among them.
“You’re going to get young Terry Hollis?” interpreted Gainor, and his
voice rose and rang over them. Those who had slipped past him on either
side came back and faced him. In the distance Elizabeth had not stirred.
Vance kept watching her face. It was cold as ice, unreadable. He could
not believe that she was allowing this lynching party to organize under
her own roof—a lynching party aimed at Terence. It began to grow in him
that he had gained a greater victory than he imagined.
“If you aim at Terry,” went on Gainor, his voice even louder, “you’ll
have to aim at me, too. There’s going to be no lynching bee, my friends!”
The women had crowded back in the room. They made a little bank of stir
and murmur around Elizabeth.
“Gentlemen,” said Gainor, shaking his white hair back again in his
imposing way, “there has been no murder. The sheriff is not going to die.
There has been a disagreement between two men of honor. The sheriff is
now badly wounded. I think that is all. Does anybody want to ask
questions about what has happened?”
There was a bustle in the group of men. They were putting
away the weapons, not quite sure what they could do next.
“I am going to tell you exactly what has happened,” said Gainor. “You
heard the unfortunate things that passed at the table today. What the
sheriff said was not said as an insult; but under the circumstances it
became necessary for Terence Hollis to resent what he had heard. As a man
of honor he could not do otherwise. You all agree with me in that?”
They grunted a grudging assent. There were ways and ways of looking at
such things. The way of Gainor was a generation old. But there was
something so imposing about the old fellow, something which breathed the
very spirit of honor and fair play, that they could not argue the point.
“Accordingly Mr. Hollis sent for the sheriff. Not to bring him outdoors
and shoot him down in a sudden gunplay, nor to take advantage of him
through a surprise—as a good many men would have been tempted to do, my
friends, for the sheriff has a wide reputation as a handler of guns of
all sorts. No, sir, he sent for me also, and he told us frankly that the
bad blood between him and the sheriff must be spent. You understand? By
the Lord, my friends, I admired the fine spirit of the lad. He expected
to be shot rather than to drop the sheriff. I could tell that by his
expression. But his eye did not falter. It carried me back to the old
days—to old days, sirs!”
There was not a murmur in the entire room. The eye of Elizabeth Cornish
was fire. Whether with anger or pride, Vance could not tell. But he began
to worry.
“We went over to the group of silver spruce near the house. I gave them
the directions. They came and stood together, back to back, with their
revolvers not drawn. They began to walk away in opposite directions at my
command.
“When I called ‘Turn,’ they wheeled. My gun was ready to shoot down the
first man guilty of foul play—but there was no attempt to turn too soon,
before the signal. They whirled, snatching out their guns—and the
revolver of the sheriff hung in his clothes!”
A groan from the little crowd.
“Although, upon my word,” said Gainor, “I do not think that the sheriff
could have possibly brought out his gun as swiftly as Terence Hollis did.
His whirl was like the spin of a top, or the snap of a whiplash, and as
he snapped about, the revolver was in his hand, not raised to draw a
bead, but at his hip. The sheriff set his teeth—but Terry did not fire!”
A bewildered murmur from the crowd.
“No, my friends,” cried Gainor, his voice quivering, “he did not fire. He
dropped the muzzle of his gun—and waited. By heaven, my heart went out
to him. It was magnificent.”
The thin, strong hand of Elizabeth closed on the arm of Vance. “That was
a Colby who did that!” she whispered.
“The sheriff gritted his teeth,” went on Gainor, “and tore out his gun.
All this pause had been such a space as is needed for an eyelash to
flicker twice. Out shot the sheriff’s Colt. And then, and not until then,
did the muzzle of Terry’s revolver jerk up. Even after that delay he beat
the sheriff to the trigger. The two shots came almost together, but the
sheriff was already falling when he pulled his trigger, and his aim was
wild.
“He dropped on one side, the revolver flying out of his hand. I started
forward, and then I stopped. By heaven, the sheriff had stretched out his
arm and picked up his gun again. He was not through fighting.
“A bulldog spirit, you say? Yes! And what could I do? It was the
sheriff’s right to keep on fighting as long as he wished. And it was the
right of Terence to shoot the man full of holes the minute his hand
touched the revolver again.
“I could only stand still. I saw the sheriff raise his revolver. It was
an effort of agony. But he was still trying to kill. And I nerved myself
and waited for the explosion of the gun of Terence. I say I nerved myself
for that shock, but the gun did not explode. I looked at him in wonder.
My friends, he was putting up his gun and quietly looking the sheriff in
the eye!
“At that I shouted to him, I don’t know what. I shouted to the sheriff
not to fire. Too late. The muzzle of the gun was already tilting up, the
barrel was straightening. And then the gun fell from Minter’s hand and he
dropped on his side. His strength had failed him at the last moment.
“But I say, sirs, that what Terence Hollis did was the finest thing I
have ever seen in my life, and I have seen fine things done by gentlemen
before. There may be unpleasant associations with the name of Terry’s
father. I, for one, shall never carry over those associations to the son.
Never! He has my hand, my respect, my esteem in every detail. He is a
gentleman, my friends! There is nothing for us to do. If the sheriff is
unfortunate and the wound should prove fatal, Terence will give himself
up to the law. If he lives, he will be the first to tell you to keep your
hands off the boy!”
He ended in a little silence. But there was no appreciative burst of
applause from those who heard him. The fine courage of Terence was, to
them, merely the iron nerve of the mankiller, the keen eye and the
judicious mind which knew that the sheriff would collapse before he fired
his second shot. And his courtesy before the first shot was simply the
surety of the man who knew that no matter what advantage he gave to his
enemy, his own speed of hand would more than make up for it.
Gainor, reading their minds, paid no more heed to them. He went straight
across the room and took the hand of Elizabeth.
“Dear Miss Cornish,” he said so that all could hear, “I congratulate you
for the man you have given us in Terence Hollis.”
Vance, watching, saw the tears of pleasure brighten the eyes of his
sister.
“You are very kind,” she said. “But now I must see Sheriff Minter and be
sure that everything is done for him.”
It seemed that the party took this as a signal for dismissal. As she went
across the room, there were a dozen hasty adieus, and soon the guests
were streaming towards the doors.
Vance and Elizabeth and Gainor went to the sheriff. He had been installed
in a guest room. His eyes were closed, his arms outstretched. A thick,
telltale bandage was wrapped about his breast. And Wu Chi, skillful in
such matters from a long experience,
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