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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those four, he shrewdly guessed, was a practiced gunman. Cold reason came
to Terry’s assistance.
“I told you when I was broke,” he said gently. “I told you that I was
through. You told me to go on.”
“I figured you was kidding me,” said Pollard harshly. “I knew you still
had El Sangre back. Son, I’m a kind sort of a man, I am. I got a name for
it.”
In spite of himself a faint and cruel smile flickered at the corners of
his mouth as he spoke. He became grave again.
“But they’s some things I can’t stand. They’s some things that I hate
worse’n I hate poison. I won’t say what one of ‘em is. I leave it to you.
And I ask you to keep in the game. A thousand bucks ag’in’ a boss. Ain’t
that more’n fair?”
He no longer took pains to disguise his voice. It was hard and heavy and
rang into the ear of Terry. And the latter, feeling that his hour had
come, looked deliberately around the room and took note of every guarded
exit, the four men now openly on watch for any action on his part.
Pollard himself sat erect, on the edge of his chair, and his right hand
had disappeared beneath the table.
“Suppose I throw the coin this time?” he suggested.
“By God!” thundered Pollard, springing to his feet and throwing off the
mask completely. “You damned skunk, are you accusin’ me of crooking the
throw of the coin?”
Terry waited for the least moment—waited in a dull wonder to find
himself unafraid. But there was no fear in him. There was only a cold,
methodical calculation of chances. He told himself, deliberately, that no
matter how fast Pollard might be, he would prove the faster. He would
kill Pollard. And he would undoubtedly kill one of the others. And they,
beyond a shadow of a doubt, would kill him. He saw all this as in a
picture.
“Pollard,” he said, more gently than before, “you’ll have to eat that
talk!”
A flash of bewilderment crossed the face of Pollard—then rage—then that
slight contraction of the features which in some men precedes a violent
effort.
But the effort did not come. While Terry literally wavered on tiptoe, his
nerves straining for the pull of his gun and the leap to one side as he
sent his bullet home, a deep, unmusical voice cut in on them:
“Just hold yourself up a minute, will you, Joe?”
Terry looked up. On the balcony in front of the sleeping rooms of the
second story, his legs spread apart, his hands shoved deep into his
trouser pockets, his shapeless black hat crushed on the back of his head,
and a broad smile on his ugly face, stood his nemesis—Denver the yegg!
Pollard sprang back from the table and spoke with his face still turned
to Terry.
“Pete!” he called. “Come in!”
But Denver, alias Shorty, alias Pete, merely laughed.
“Come in nothing, you fool! Joe, you’re about half a second from hell,
and so’s a couple more of you. D’you know who the kid is? Eh? I’ll tell
you, boys. It’s the kid that dropped old Minter. It’s the kid that beat
foxy Joe Minter to the draw. It’s young Hollis. Why, you damned blind
men, look at his face! It’s the son of Black Jack. It’s Black Jack
himself come back to us!”
Joe Pollard had let his hand fall away from his gun. He gaped at Terry as
though he were seeing a ghost. He came a long pace nearer and let his
arms fall on the table, where they supported his weight.
“Black Jack,” he kept whispering. “Black Jack! God above, are you Black
Jack’s son?”
And the bewildered Terry answered:
“I’m his son. Whatever you think, and be damned to you all! I’m his son
and I’m proud of it. Now get your gun!”
But Joe Pollard became a great catapult that shot across the table and
landed beside Terry. Two vast hands swallowed the hands of the younger
man and crushed them to numbness.
“Proud of it? God a’mighty, boy, why wouldn’t you be? Black Jack’s son!
Pete, thank God you come in time!”
“In time to save your head for you, Joe.”
“I believe it,” said the big man humbly. “I b’lieve he would of cleaned
up on me. Maybe on all of us. Black Jack would of come close to doing it.
But you come in time, Pete. And I’ll never forget it.”
While he spoke, he was still wringing the hands of Terry. Now he dragged
the stunned Terry around the table and forced him down in his own huge,
padded armchair, his sign of power. But it was only to drag him up from
the chair again.
“Lemme look at you! Black Jack’s boy! As like Black Jack as ever I seen,
too. But a shade taller. Eh, Pete? A shade taller. And a shade heavier in
the shoulders. But you got the look. I might of knowed you by the look in
your eyes. Hey, Slim, damn your good-for-nothing hide, drag Johnny here
pronto by the back of the neck!”
Johnny, the Chinaman, appeared, blinking at the lights. Joe Pollard
clapped him on the shoulder with staggering force.
“Johnny, you see!” a broad gesture to Terry. “Old friend. Just find out.
Velly old friend. Like pretty much a whole damned lot. Get down in the
cellar, you yaller old sinner, and get out the oldest bourbon I got
there. You savvy? Pretty damned pronto—hurry up—quick—old keg. Git
out!”
Johnny was literally hurled out of the room toward the kitchen, trailing
a crackle of strange-sounding but unmistakable profanity behind him. And
Joe Pollard, perching his bulk on the edge of the table, introduced Terry
to the boys again, for Oregon had come back with word that Kate would be
out soon.
“Here’s Denver Pete. You know him already, and he’s worth his weight in
any man’s company. Here’s Slim Dugan, that could scent a big coin
shipment a thousand miles away. Phil Marvin ain’t any slouch at stalling
a gent with a fat wallet and leading him up to be plucked. Marty Cardiff
ain’t half so tame as he looks, and he’s the best trailer that ever
squinted at a buzzard in the sky; he knows this whole country like a
book. And Oregon Charlie is the best all-around man you ever seen, from
railroads to stages. And me—I’m sort of a handyman. Well, Black Jack,
your old man himself never got a finer crew together than this, eh?”
Denver Pete had waited until his big friend finished. Then he remarked
quietly: “All very pretty, partner, but Terry figures he walks the
straight and narrow path. Savvy?”
“Just a kid’s fool hunch!” snorted Joe Pollard. “Didn’t your dad show me
the ropes? Wasn’t it him that taught me all I ever knew? Sure it was, and
I’m going to do the same for you, Terry. Damn my eyes if I ain’t! And
here I been sitting, trimming you! Son, take back the coin. I was sure
playing a cheap game—and I apologize, man to man.”
But Terry shook his head.
“You won it,” he said quietly. “And you’ll keep it.”
“Won nothing. I can call every coin I throw. I was stealing, not
gambling. I was gold-digging! Take back the stuff!”
“If I was fool enough to lose it that way, it’ll stay lost,” answered
Terry.
“But I won’t keep it, son.”
“Then give it away. But not to me.”
“Black Jack—” began Pollard.
But he received a signal from Denver Pete and abruptly changed the
subject.
“Let it go, then. They’s plenty of loose coin rolling about this day. If
you got a thin purse today, I’ll make it fat for you in a week. But think
of me stumbling on to you!”
It was the first time that Terry had a fair opportunity to speak, and he
made the best of it.
“It’s very pleasant to meet you—on this basis,” he said. “But as for
taking up—er—road life—”
The lifted hand of Joe Pollard made it impossible for him to complete his
sentence.
“I know. You got scruples, son. Sure you got ‘em. I used to have ‘em,
too, till your old man got ‘em out of my head.”
Terry winced. But Joe Pollard rambled on, ignorant that he had struck a
blow in the dark: “When I met up with the original Black Jack, I was
slavin’ my life away with a pick trying to turn ordinary quartz into pay
dirt. Making a fool of myself, that’s what I was doing. Along comes Black
Jack. He needed a man. He picks me up and takes me along with him. I
tried to talk Bible talk. He showed me where I was a fool.
“‘All you got to do,’ he says to me, ‘is to make sure that you ain’t
stealing from an honest man. And they’s about one gent in three with
money that’s come by it honest, in this part of the world. The rest is
just plain thieves, but they been clever enough to cover it up. Pick on
that crew, Pollard, and squeeze ‘em till they run money into your hand.
I’ll show you how to do it!’
“Well, it come pretty hard to me at first. I didn’t see how it was done.
But he showed me. He’d send a scout around to a mining camp. If they was
a crooked wheel in the gambling house that was making a lot of coin,
Black Jack would slide in some night, stick up the works, and clean out
with the loot. If they was some dirty dog that had jumped a claim and was
making a pile of coin out of it, Black Jack would drop out of the sky
onto him and take the gold.”
Terry listened, fascinated. He was having the workings of his father’s
mind re-created for him and spread plainly before his eyes. And there was
a certain terror and also a certain attractiveness about what he
discovered.
“It sounds, maybe, like an easy thing to do, to just stick on the trail
of them that you know are worse crooks than you. But it ain’t. I’ve tried
it. I’ve seen Black Jack pass up ten thousand like it was nothing,
because the gent that had it come by it honest. But I can’t do it,
speaking in general. But I’ll tell you more about the old man.”
“Thank you,” said Terry, “but—”
“And when you’re with us—”
“You see,” said Terry firmly, “I plan to do the work you asked me to do—
kill what you wanted killed on the range. And when I’ve worked off the
money I owe you—”
Before he could complete his sentence, a door opened on the far side of
the room, and Kate Pollard entered again. She had risen from her bed in
some haste to answer the summons of her father. Her bright hair poured
across her shoulders, a heavy, greenish-blue dressing gown was drawn
about her and held close with one hand at her breast. She came slowly
toward them. And she seemed to Terry to have changed. There was less of
the masculine about her than there had been earlier in the evening. Her
walk was slow, her eyes were wide as though she had no idea what might
await her, and the light glinted white on the untanned portion of her
throat,
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