Bar-20 by Clarence E. Mulford (i want to read a book .txt) đź“•
"Th' wall-eyed piruts," he muttered, and then scratched his head for a way to "play hunk." As he gazed sorrowfully at the saloon he heard a snicker from behind him. He, thinking it was one of his late tormentors, paid no attention to it. Then a cynical, biting laugh stung him. He wheeled, to see Shorty leaning against a tree, a sneering leer on his flushed face. Shorty's right hand was suspended above his holster, hooked to his belt by the thumb--a favorite position of his when expecting trouble.
"One of yore reg'lar habits?" he drawled.
Jimmy began to dust himself in silence, but his lips were compressed to a thin white line.
"Does they hurt yu?" pursued the onlooker.
Jimmy looked up. "I heard tell that they make glue outen cayuses, sometimes," he remarked.
Shorty's eyes flashed. The loss of the horse had been rankling in his heart all day.
"Does they git yu frequent?" he asked. His voice sounded ha
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he is th’ only man I knows of who’s capable of th’ plays that have been made. It’s hardly
necessary for me to tell yu to sleep with one eye open and never to get away from yore
guns. Now I’m goin’ to tell yu th’ hardest part: yu are goin’ to search th’ Staked Plain from
one end to th’ other, an’ that’s what no white man’s ever done to my knowledge.”
“Now, listen to this an’ don’t forget it. Twenty miles north from Last Stand Rock
is a spring; ten miles south of that bend in Hell Arroyo is another. If yu gets lost within
two days from th’ time yu enters th’ Plain, put yore left hand on a cactus sometime
between sun-up an’ noon, move around until yu are over its shadow an’ then ride straight
ahead-that’s south. If you goes loco beyond Last Stand Rock, follow th’ shadows made
before noon-that’s th’ quickest way to th’ Pecos. Yu all knows what to do in a sand-storm,
so I won’t bore you with that. Repeat all I’ve told yu,” he ordered and they complied.
“I’m tellin’ yu this,” continued the foreman, indicating the two auxiliaries,
“because yu might get separated from Frenchy. Now I suggests that yu look around near
the’ Devils Rocks: I’ve heard that there are several water holes among them, an’ besides,
they might be turned into fair corrals. Mind yu, I know what I’ve said sounds damned
idiotic for anybody that has had as much experience with th’ Staked Plain as I have, but
I’ve had every other place searched for miles around. Th’ men of all th’ ranches have been
scoutin’ an’ th’ Plain is th’ only place left. Them rustlers has got to be found if we have to
dig to hell for them. They’ve taken th’ pot so many times that they reckons they owns it,
an’ we’ve got to at least make a bluff at drawin’ cards. Mebby they’re at th’ bottom of th’
Pecos,” here he smiled faintly, “but wherever they are, we’ve got to find them. I want to
holler `Keno.”
“If you finds where they hangs out come away instanter,” here his face hardened
and his eyes narrowed, “for it’ll take more than yu three to deal with them th’ way I’m a-hankerin’ for. Come right back to th’ Double Arrow, send me word by one of their
punchers an’ get all the rest you can afore I gets there. It’ll take me a day to get th’ men
together an’ to reach yu. I’m goin’ to use smoke signals to call th’ other ranches, so there
won’t be no time lost. Carry all th’ water yu can pack when yu leaves th’ Double Arrow
an’ don’t depend none on cactus juice. Yu better take a pack horse to carry it, an’ yore
grub-yu can shoot it if yu have to hit th’ trail real hard.”
The three riders felt of their accouterments, said “So long,” and cantered off for
the pack horse and extra ammunition. Then they rode toward the Double Arrow,
stopping at Cowan’s long enough to spend some money, and reached the Double Arrow at
nightfall. Early the next morning they passed the last line-house and, with the profane
well-wishes of its occupants ringing in their ears, passed onto one of Nature’s worst
blunders-the Staked Plain.
THE SEARCH BEGINS
As the sun arose it revealed three punchers riding away from
civilization. On all sides, stretching to the evil-appearing horizon, lay
vast blotches of dirty-white and faded yellow alkali and sand.
Occasionally a dwarfed mesquite raised its prickly leaves and
rustled mournfully. With the exception of the riders and an occasional Gila monster, no
life was discernible. Cacti of all shapes and sizes reared aloft their forbidding spines or
spread out along the sand. All was dead, ghastly; all was oppressive, startlingly repellent
in its sinister promise; all was the vastness of desolation.
Hopalong knew this portion of the desert for ten miles inward-he had rescued
straying cattle along its southern rim-but once beyond that limit they would have to trust
to chance and their own abilities.
There were water holes on this skillet, but nine out of ten were death traps,
reeking with mineral poisons, colored and alkaline. The two mentioned by Buck could
not be depended on, for they came and went, and more than one luckless wanderer had
depended on them to allay his thirst, and had died for his trust.
So the scouts rode on in silence, noting the half-buried skeletons of cattle which
were strewn plentifully on all sides. Nearly three per cent, of the cattle belonging to the
Double Arrow yearly found death on this tableland, and the herds of that ranch numbered
many thousand heads. It was this which made the Double Arrow the poorest of the
ranches, and it was this which allowed insufficient sentries in its line-houses. The
skeletons were not all of cattle, for at rare intervals lay the sand-worn frames of men.
On the morning of the second day the oppression increased with the wind and Red
heaved a sigh of restlessness. The sand began to skip across the plain, in grains at first
and hardly noticeable. Hopalong turned in his saddle and regarded the desert with
apprehension. As he looked he saw that where grains had shifted handfuls were now
moving.
His mount evinced signs of uneasiness and was hard to control.
A gust of wind, stronger than the others, pricked his face and grains of sand rolled
down his neck. The leather of his saddle emitted strange noises as if a fairy tattoo was
being beaten upon it and he raised his hand and pointed off toward the east. The others
looked and saw what had appeared to be a fog rise out of the desert and intervene
between them and the sun. As far as eye could reach small whirlwinds formed and broke
and one swept down and covered them with stinging sand. The day became darkened and
their horses whinnied in terror and the clumps of mesquite twisted and turned to the
gusts.
Each man knew what was to come upon them and they dismounted, hobbled their
horses and threw them bodily to the earth, wrapping a blanket around the head of each. A
rustling as of paper rubbing together became noticeable and they threw themselves flat
upon the earth, their heads wrapped in their coats and buried in the necks of their mounts.
For an hour they endured the tortures of hell and then, when the storm had passed, raised
their heads and cursed Creation.
Their bodies burned as though they had been shot with fine needles and their
clothes were meshes where once was tough cloth. Even their shoes were perforated and
the throat of each ached with thirst.
Hopalong fumbled at the canteen resting on his hip and gargled his mouth and
throat, washing down the sand which wouldn’t come up. His friends did likewise and
then looked around. After some time had elapsed the loss of their pack horse was noticed
and they swore again.
Hopalong took the lead in getting his horse ready for service and then rode around
in a circle half a mile in diameter, but returned empty handed. The horse was gone and
with it went their main supply of food and drink.
Frenchy scowled at the shadow of a cactus and slowly rode toward the northeast,
followed closely by his friends. His hand reached for his depleted canteen, but refrained-water was to be saved until the last minute.
“I’m goin’ to build a shack out here an’ live in it, I am!” exploded Hopalong in
withering irony as he dug the sand out of his ears and also from his six shooter. “I just
nachurally dotes on this, I do!”
The others were too miserable to even grunt and he neatly severed the head of a
Gila monster from its scaly body as it opened it venomous jaws in rage at this invasion of
its territory. “Lovely place!” he sneered.
“You better save them cartridges, Hoppy,” interposed Red as his companion fired
again, feeling that he must say something.
“An’ what for?” blazed his friend. “To plug sand storms? Anybody what we find
on this God-forsaken lay-out won’t have to be shot—they will commit suicide an’ think it’s
fun! Tell yu what, if them rustlers hangs out on this sand range they’re better men than I
reckons they are. Anybody what hides up here shore earns all he steals.”
Hopalong grumbled from force of habit and because no one else would. His
companions understood this and paid no attention to him, which increased his disgust.
“What are we up here for?” he asked, belligerently. “Why, because them Double
Arrow idiots can’t even watch a desert! We have to do their work for them an’ they hangs
around home an’ gets slaughtered!
Yes, sir!” he shouted, “they can’t even take care of themselves when they’re in
line-houses what are forts. Why, that time we cleaned out them an’ th’ C-80 over at
Buckskin they couldn’t help runnin’ into singin’ lead!”
“Yes,” drawled Red, whose recollection of that fight was vivid.
“Yas, an’ why?” he asked, and then replied to his own question.
“Because yu sat up in a barn behind them, Buck played his gun on th’ side
window, Pete an’ Skinny lay behind a rock to one side of Buck, me an’ Lanky was across
th’ Street in front of them, an’ Billy an’ Johnny was in th’ arroyo on th’ other side. Cowan
laid on his stummick on th’ roof of his place with a buffalo gun, an’ the whole blamed
town was agin them. There wasn’t five seconds passed that lead wasn’t rippin’ through th’
walls of their shack. Th’ Houston House wasn’t made for no fort, an’ besides, they wasn’t
like th’ gang that’s punchin’ now. That’s why.”
Hopalong became cheerful again, for here was a chance to differ from his friend.
The two loved each other the better the more they squabbled.
“Yas!” responded Hopalong with sarcasm.
“Yas!” he reiterated, drawling it out. “Yu was in front of them, an’ with what?
Why, an’ old, white-haired, interfering Winchester, that’s what! Me an’ my Sharp’s-”
“Yu and yore Sharp’s!” exploded Red, whose dislike for that rifle was very
pronounced. “Yu and yore Sharp’s.”
“Me an’ my Sharp’s, as I was palaverin’ before bein’ interrupted,” continued
Hopalong, “did more damage in five min-”
“Says yu!” snapped Red with heat. “All yu an yore Sharp’s could do was to cut
yore initials in th’ back door of their shack, an’ -”
“Did more damage in five minutes,” continued Hopalong, “than all th’ blasted
Winchesters in th’ whole damned town. Why-”
“An’ then they was cut blamed poor. Every time that cannon of yourn exploded I
shore thought th’-”
“Why, Cowan an’ his buffalo did more damage (Cowan was reputed to be a very
poor shot) than yu an-”
“I thought th’ artillery was comin’ into th’ disturbance. I could see yore red head-”
“MY red head!” exclaimed Hopalong, sizing up the crimson warlock of his
companion.
“MY red head!” he repeated, and then turned to Frenchy “Hey, Frenchy, who’s got
th’ reddest hair, me or Red?”
Frenchy slowly turned in his saddle and gravely scrutinized them.
Being strictly impartial and truthful, he gave up the effort of differentiating and
smiled.
“Why, if the tops of yore heads were poked through two holes in a board an’ I
didn’t know which was which, I’d shore make a mistake if I tried to name `em”
But Red had the last word.
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