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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back from it.
“Kate,” said her father, “I had to get you up to tell you the big news—
biggest news you ever heard of! Girl, who’ve I always told you was the
greatest gent that ever come into my life?”
“Jack Hollis—Black Jack,” she said, without hesitation. “According to
your way of thinking, Dad!”
Plainly her own conclusions might be very different.
“According to anybody’s way of thinking, as long as they was thinking
right. And d’you know who we’ve got here with us now? Could you guess it
in a thousand years? Why, the kid that come tonight. Black Jack as sure
as if he was a picture out of a book, and me a blind fool that didn’t
know him. Kate, here’s the second Black Jack. Terry Hollis. Give him your
hand agin and say you’re glad to have him for his dad’s sake and for his
own! Kate, he’s done a man’s job already. It’s him that dropped old foxy
Minter!”
The last of these words faded out of the hearing of Terry. He felt the
lowered eyes of the girl rise and fall gravely on his face, and her
glance rested there a long moment with a new and solemn questioning. Then
her hand went slowly out to him, a cold hand that barely touched his with
its fingertips and then dropped away.
But what Terry felt was that it was the same glance she had turned to him
when she stood leaning against the post earlier that evening. There was a
pity in it, and a sort of despair which he could not understand.
And without saying a word she turned her back on them and went out of the
room as slowly as she had come into it.
“It don’t mean nothing,” Pollard hastened to assure Terry. “It don’t mean
a thing in the world except that she’s a fool girl. The queerest,
orneriest, kindest, strangest, wildest thing in the shape of calico that
ever come into these parts since her mother died before her. But the more
you see of her, the more you’ll value her. She can ride like a man—no
wear out to her—and she’s got the courage of a man. Besides which she
can sling a gun like it would do your heart good to see her! Don’t take
nothing she does to heart. She don’t mean no harm. But she sure does
tangle up a gent’s ideas. Here I been living with her nigh onto twenty
years and I don’t savvy her none yet. Eh, boys?”
“I’m not offended in the least,” said Terry quietly.
And he was not, but he was more interested than he had ever been before
by man, woman, or child. And for the past few seconds his mind had been
following her through the door behind which she had disappeared.
“And if I were to see more of her, no doubt—” He broke off with: “But
I’m not apt to see much more of any of you, Mr. Pollard. If I can’t stay
here and work off that three-hundred-dollar debt—”
“Work, hell! No son of Black Jack Hollis can work for me. But he can live
with me as a partner, son, and he can have everything I got, half and
half, and the bigger half to him if he asks for it. That’s straight!”
Terry raised a protesting hand. Yet he was touched—intimately touched.
He had tried hard to fit in his place among the honest people of the
mountains by hard and patient work. They would have none of him. His own
kind turned him out. And among these men—men who had no law, as he had
every reason to believe—he was instantly taken in and made one of them.
“But no more talk tonight,” said Pollard. “I can see you’re played out.
I’ll show you the room.”
He caught a lantern from the wall as he spoke and began to lead the way
up the stairs to the balcony. He pointed out the advantages of the house
as he spoke.
“Not half bad—this house, eh?” he said proudly. “And who d’you think
planned it? Your old man, kid. It was Black Jack Hollis himself that done
it! He was took off sudden before he’d had a chance to work it out and
build it. But I used his ideas in this the same’s I’ve done in other
things. His idea was a house like a ship.
“They build a ship in compartments, eh? Ship hits a rock, water comes in.
But it only fills one compartment, and the old ship still floats. Same
with this house. You seen them walls. And the walls on the outside ain’t
the only thing. Every partition is the same thing, pretty near; and a
gent could stand behind these doors safe as if he was a mile away from a
gun. Why? Because they’s a nice little lining of the best steel you ever
seen in the middle of ‘em.
“Cost a lot. Sure. But look at us now. Suppose a posse was to rush the
house. They bust into the kitchen side. Where are they? Just the same as
if they hadn’t got in at all. I bolt the doors from the inside of the big
room, and they’re shut out agin. Or suppose they take the big room? Then
a couple of us slide out on this balcony and spray ‘em with lead. This
house ain’t going to be took till the last room is filled full of the
sheriff’s men!”
He paused on the balcony and looked proudly over the big, baronial room
below them. It seemed huger than ever from this viewpoint, and the men
below them were dwarfed. The light of the lanterns did not extend all the
way across it, but fell in pools here and there, gleaming faintly on the
men below.
“But doesn’t it make people suspicious to have a fort like this built on
the hill?” asked Terry.
“Of course. If they knew. But they don’t know, son, and they ain’t going
to find out the lining of this house till they try it out with lead.”
He brought Terry into one of the bedrooms and lighted a lamp. As the
flare steadied in the big circular oil burner and the light spread, Terry
made out a surprisingly comfortable apartment. There was not a bunk, but
a civilized bed, beside which was a huge, tawny mountain-lion skin
softening the floor. The window was curtained in some pleasant blue
stuff, and there were a few spots of color on the wall—only calendars,
some of them, but helping to give a livable impression for the place.
“Kate’s work,” grinned Pollard proudly. “She’s been fixing these rooms up
all out of her own head. Never got no ideas out of me. Anything you might
lack, son?”
Terry told him he would be very comfortable, and the big man wrung his
hand again as he bade him good night.
“The best work that Denver ever done was bringing you to me,” he
declared. “Which you’ll find it out before I’m through. I’m going to give
you a home!” And he strode away before Terry could answer.
The rather rare consciousness of having done a good deed swelled in the
heart of Joe Pollard on his way down from the balcony. When he reached
the floor below, he found that the four men had gone to bed and left
Denver alone, drawn back from the light into a shadowy corner, where he
was flanked by the gleam of a bottle of whisky on the one side and a
shimmering glass on the other. Although Pollard was the nominal leader,
he was in secret awe of the yegg. For Denver was an “in-and-outer.”
Sometimes he joined them in the West; sometimes he “worked” an Eastern
territory. He came and went as he pleased, and was more or less a law to
himself. Moreover, he had certain qualities of silence and brooding that
usually disturbed the leader. They troubled him now as he approached the
squat, shapeless figure in the corner chair.
“What you think of him?” said Denver.
“A good kid and a clean-cut kid,” decided Joe Pollard judicially. “Maybe
he ain’t another Black Jack, but he’s tolerable cool for a youngster.
Stood up and looked me in the eye like a man when I had him cornered a
while back. Good thing for him you come out when you did!”
“A good thing for you, Joe,” replied Denver Pete. “He’d of turned you
into fertilizer, bo!”
“Maybe; maybe not. Maybe they’s some things I could teach him about gun-slinging, Pete.”
“Maybe; maybe not,” parodied Denver. “You’ve learned a good deal about
guns, Joe—quite a bit. But there’s some things about gun fighting that
nobody can learn. It’s got to be born into ‘em. Remember how Black Jack
used to slide out his gat?”
“Yep. There was a man!”
“And Minter, too. There’s a born gunman.”
“Sure. We all know Uncle Joe—damn his soul!”
“But the kid beat Uncle Joe fair and square from an even break—and beat
him bad. Made his draw, held it so’s Joe could partway catch up with him,
and then drilled him clean!”
Pollard scratched his chin.
“I’d believe that if I seen it,” he declared.
“Pal, it wasn’t Terry that done the talking; it was Gainor. He’s seen a
good deal of gunplay, and said that Terry’s was the coolest he ever
watched.”
“All right for that part of it,” said Joe Pollard. “Suppose he’s fast—
but can I use him? I like him well enough; I’ll give him a good deal; but
is he going to mean charity all the time he hangs out with me?”
“Maybe; maybe not,” chuckled Denver again. “Use him the way he can be
used, and he’ll be the best bargain you ever turned. Black Jack started
you in business; Black Jack the Second will make you rich if you handle
him right—and ruin you if you make a slip.”
“How come? He talks this ‘honesty’ talk pretty strong.”
“Gimme a chance to talk,” said Denver contemptuously. “Takes a gent
that’s used to reading the secrets of a safe to read the secrets of a
gent’s head. And I’ve read the secret of young Black Jack Hollis. He’s a
pile of dry powder, Joe. Throw in the spark and he’ll explode so damned
loud they’ll hear him go off all over the country.”
“How?”
“First, you got to keep him here.”
“How?”
Joe Pollard sat back with the air of one who will be convinced through no
mental effort of his own. But Denver was equal to the demand.
“I’m going to show you. He thinks he owes you three hundred.”
“That’s foolish. I cheated the kid out of it. I’ll give it back to him
and all the rest I won.”
Denver paused and studied the other as one amazed by such stupidity.
“Pal, did you ever try, in the old days, to give anything to the old
Black Jack?”
“H’m. Well, he sure hated charity. But this ain’t charity.”
“It ain’t in your eyes. It is in Terry’s. If you insist, he’ll get sore.
No, Joe. Let him think he owes you that money. Let him start in working
it off for you—honest work. You ain’t got any ranch work. Well, set him
to cutting down trees, or anything. That’ll help to hold him. If he makes
some gambling play—and he’s got the born gambler in
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