'Drag' Harlan by Charles Alden Seltzer (easy to read books for adults list .txt) đ
And now, convinced that the men had cornered an animal of some kind, and that they feared it too greatly to face it openly, the rider laughed loudly and called to the men, his voice freighted with sarcasm.
"Scared?" he said. "Oh, don't be. If you'll back off a little an' give him room, he'll just naturally slope, an' give you a chance to get to your cayuses."
Both men wheeled almost at the same instant. The man at the base of the rock snarled--after the first gasp of astonishment, baring his teeth in hideous mirth and embarrassment; the other man, startled and caught off ba
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âFrame-up!â he repeated, laughing hoarsely between his teeth. âHellâs fire! Do you think it takes two men to âgetâ youâyou miserable whelp?
âIâve been waitinâ for this dayâwaitinâ for it, waitinâ to get you aloneâwaitinâ for the boys to go soâs I could tell you somethinâ.
âYou know what it is. You ainât guessinâ, eh? Listen while I tell you somethinâ. The day âDragâ Harlan got in Lamo he brought news that Lane Morgan had been killed out in the desert. I heard the boys sayinâ you had a hand in it. But I thought that was just talk. I didnât believe you was that kind of a skunk. I waited.
âThen you sent me over to the edge of the level, near the Rancho Secoâwhere Harlan found that flattened grass when he rode over here. You told me to watch Harlan and Barbara Morgan. You said you thought Harlan would try some sneak game with her.
âYou can gamble I watched. I saw Harlan standinâ guard over her; I saw him follow that sneak Lawson. I heard the shot that killed Lawson, anâ I saw Harlan tote him downstairs, anâ then set on the door-sill all night, guardinâ Barbara Morgan.
âThe sneakinâ game was played by you, Haydon. When I saw Harlan headinâ toward the valley the day he come here, I lit out ahead of him. And when he got to the timber over there I brought him in.
âAnâ I heard you talk that day. I heard him sayinâ that you killed Lane Morgan. He said my dad told him you fired the shot that killed him.â
Harlan started and leaned forward, amazed. But Haydon swayed, and then steadied himself with an effort, and stared at Woodward with bulging, incredulous eyes.
âYour dad?â he almost shrieked; âLane Morgan was your father?â
Woodwardâs grin was wolfish. He took two or three steps toward Haydonâpanther-like steps that betrayed the lust that was upon him.
âIâm Billy Morgan,â he said, his teeth showing in a merciless grin; âBarbaraâs brother. Flash your gun, Haydon; Iâm goinâ to kill you!â
Haydon clawed for his pistol, missing the butt in his eagerness, and striving wildly to draw it. It snagged on a rawhide thong that supported the holster and his fingers were loosening in the partial grip when Billy Morgan shot him.
He flattened against the wall of the ranchhouse for an instant, staring wildly around him; then his head sagged forward and he slid down the wall of the ranchhouse into the deep dust that was mounded near it.
Harlan had paid strict attention to Lane Morganâs words at Sentinel Rock, and he remembered that Morgan had told him that his son, whom he had called âBill,â had left the Rancho Seco on some mission for the governor. Evidently it had not occurred to Morgan that his sonâs mission had taken him only to the valley in which reigned those outlaws Morgan had reviled.
But it was plain to Harlan that âBillyâ was hereâhe had said so himself, and he had given proof that he had been watchful and alert to Barbaraâs interests. And now was explained young Morganâs interest in himself. The thought that during all the days he had spent at the Rancho Seco, his movements had been watched by the man who had just killed Haydon, brought a glow of ironic humor to Harlanâs eyes.
During a long interval, through which Billy Morgan stood over Haydon, watching him with a cold savagery, Harlan kept at a respectable distance, also watching.
He saw that for Haydon the incident had been fatal. The manâs body did not move after it slipped to the ground beside the ranchhouse wall. Yet Morgan watched until he was certain; then he slowly wheeled and looked at Harlan.
âThat settles himâdamn him!â he said, with a breathlessness that told of the intense strain he had been laboring under.
Still Harlan did not speak; and his guns were in their holsters when Morgan walked close to him, grinning wanly.
âI had to do it. Thereâs no use tryinâ to depend on the law in this country. Youâve seen that, yourself.â
âIâve noticed it,â grinned Harlan. âYouâre feelinâ bad over it. I wouldnât. If it had been my dad he killed I couldnât have done any different. I reckon any man with blood in him would feel that way about a coyote like that killinâ his father. If men donât feel that way, why do they drag murderers to courtsâwhere they have courtsâanâ ask the law to kill them. Thatâs just shovinâ the responsibility onto some other guy.
âIâve handed several guys their pass-out checks, anâ I ainât regrettinâ one of them. There wasnât one of them that didnât have it cominâ to him. They was lookinâ for it, mostly, anâ had to have it. Iâve heard of guys that had killed a man feelinâ squeamish over itâwith ghosts visitinâ them at night; anâ sufferinâ a lot of mental torture. I reckon any man would feel that way if heâd killed an inoffensive manâor a good man, or one that hadnât been tryinâ to murder him.â He grinned again. âWhy, Iâm preachinâ!â
And now into his gaze as he looked at Morgan, came cold reproach.
âYou wasnât figurinâ to let Barbara play it a lone hand?â he said.
âHellâs fireâno!â denied Morgan, his eyes blazing. âIâve been watchinâ the Rancho Secoâas I told Haydon. I saw Barbara set out for Lamo. There was no one followinâ her, anâ so I thought sheâd be all right. That mixup at Lamo slipped me. But I seen you anâ Barbara come back, anâ I heard the boys talkinâ about what happened at Lamo. Iâd heard of you, too; anâ when I seen you come back with Barbara I watched you. Anâ I seen you was square, so I trusted you a heap.
âAnâ I had a talk with Sheriff Gage about you, anâ he told me my dad had sent to Pardo for you, through Dave Hallowell, the marshal of Pardo. Gage said you was out to clean up Deveny anâ Haydon, anâ so I knowed I could depend on you.â
âBarbara donât know youâre hanginâ around hereâshe ainât known it?â
âShucks, I reckon not,â grinned Morgan. âI didnât come here for six months after I left the Rancho Secoâuntil I growed a beard. Barbaraâs been within a dozen feet of me, anâ never knowed me. Iâve been thinkinâ of telling her, but I seen Haydon was sweet on her, anâ I didnât dare tell her. Women ainât reliable. Sheâd have showed it some way, anâ then thereâd have been hell to pay.â
âAnâ Iâve been pridinâ myself on takinâ care of Barbara,â said Harlan. âI feel a heap embarrassed anâ uselessâjust like Iâd been fooled.â
âYouâve done a thing I couldnât do,â confessed Morgan; âyouâve busted Haydonâs gang wide open. If you hadnât showed up thereâd have been nothinâ done. Thereâs some of the boys that ainât outlawsâboys that are with me, havinâ sneaked into the gang to help me out. But we wanât makinâ no headway to speak of.â
Harlan looked at Haydon. âThat guy was educated,â he said. âWhat was his game? Iâve felt all along that there was somethinâ big back of himâthat he wasnât here just to steal cattle anâ rob folks, anâ such.â
âYou ainât heard,â smiled Morgan. âOf course you wouldnâtâunless Gage had gassed to you.
âThereâs a gang of big men in Frisco, anâ in the East, figurinâ to run a railroad through the basin. A year or so ago there was secret talk of it in the capital. It leaked out that the railroad guys was intendinâ to run their road through the basin. They was goinâ to build a town right where the Rancho Seco lays; anâ they was planninâ to irrigate a lot of the land around there. The governor says it was to be bigâanâ likely itâll be big, when they get around to it.
âBut them things go slow, anâ a gang of cheap crooks got wise to it. They sent Haydon down here, to scare the folks in the basin into sellinâ out for a song. Theyâve scared one man outâa Pole from the west end. But the others have stuck. Looks like they was figurinâ on grabbinâ the Rancho Seco without payinâ anything for itâHaydon intendinâ, I reckon, to put dad anâ me out of the way anâ marry Barbara. Then he could have cut the ranch up into town lots anâ made a mint of coin.â
âAnâ Deveny?â
âDevenyâs a wolf. Haydon brought him here from Arizonaâwhere heâd terrorized a whole county, runninâ it regardless. He figured to cash in, I reckon, but heâs been grabbinâ up everything he could lay his hands on, on the way.â
âYouâll be tellinâ Barbara, now?â suggested Harlan.
âYouâre shoutinâ!â said Morgan, his eyes glowing. âIâm hittinâ the breeze to the Rancho Seco for fair.â He looked at Haydon, and his eyes took on a new expression. âI was almost forgettinâ what the governor sent me here for,â he added. âThe governor was wantinâ to know who is behind Haydon anâ Deveny, anâ Iâm rummaginâ around in Haydonâs office to find out. Goinâ?â he invited.
Both looked down at Haydon as they passed him, and an instant later they were entering a door of the ranchhouse.
They had hardly disappeared when Haydonâs head moved slightly.
His eyes were open; he glanced at the door of the ranchhouse through which Harlan and Morgan had entered. Then he raised his head, dragged himself to an elbowâupon which he rested momentarily, his face betraying the bitter malignance and triumph that had seized him.
He had realized that Morgan had meant to kill him, even before Morgan had revealed his identity, and his backward movement, which had brought him against the wall of the ranchhouse had been made with design. He had felt that even if he should succeed in beating Morgan, Harlan would have taken up the quarrel, for he knew that Harlan also had designs on his life. And with a cupidity aroused over the desperate predicament in which he found himself, he had decided to take a forlorn chance.
Morganâs bullet had struck him, but by a convulsive side movement at the instant Morganâs gun roared Haydon had escaped a fatal wound, and the bullet had entered his left side above the heart, paralyzing one of the big muscles of the shoulder.
His left arm was limp and useless, and dragged in the dust as he squirmed around and gained his feet. There was no window in the wall of the ranchhouse on that side; and he backed away, staggering a little, for he had lost much blood. He kept the blank wall before him as he backed away from the house; and when he reached his horse he was a long time getting into the saddle. But he accomplished it at last; and sent the horse slowly up the slope and into the timber out of which Harlan had ridden with the black-bearded man on the day of his first visit to the Star.
Back where the trail converged with the main trail that ran directly up the valley, Haydon, reeling in the saddle, sent his horse at a faster pace, heading it toward the Cache where he was certain he would find Deveny. And as he rode the triumph in his eyes grew. For he had heard every word of the conversation between Harlan and Morgan, and he hoped to get to the Cache before the two men discovered the trick he had played upon themâbefore they could escape.
Since the day he had heard that Harlan had appeared at the Star and had been taken into the outlaw band by Haydon, Deveny had exhibited fits of a
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