A Texan Rides the Trouble Trail by Harrington Strong (best short books to read .TXT) 📕
"Not so busy," the gambler replied. "Have a chair and try your luck. My name's Gadley, commonly known as 'Silky' because once I owned a silk shirt. That wasn't in Vista. That was in a town where men risked a dollar now and then."
"Deal a little two-handed stud," Houston said "I'm bringing forth some money. My name's Houston, just got in from Texas. Got a little business to 'tend to here."
They began playing stud in a listless manner. Houston glanced at the Three S men frequently as they stood at the bar in whispered conversation, and "Silky" Gadley watched Houston. The gambler was a tall, thin, middle-aged man fastidiously dressed, and had the icy manner peculiar to his kind.
"Somebody shot at me before I'd been in town fifteen minutes," Houston said, so the others in the room could hear. "I can't guess at the meanin' of it. I'm a stranger here, and never had a ruckus with any of the citizens, far as I know."
"Mebbe it was a mistake," Gadley s
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“Yes. His name is Sam Finch. Brandell fired him for stealin’. Sid Jarles plans to set him up in a new store and put Brandell out of business.”
‘So I’ve heard. Nervous cuss, ain’t he? He couldn’t have shot at me, for instance, ‘cause of me buyin’ an interest in the tradin’ post? He couldn’t have known of it.”
“Sam Finch is always nervous,” Silky Gadley said. “He’s been around Vista about a year, and he’s been nervous all that time. When a man watches his back trail and shows a lot of interest in every stranger —”
“Yeah,” Houston broke in, nodding. “When he does that, he’s afraid that his past might catch up with him.”
A waddling fat woman came from the rear of the room with a big tray of food, put it upon one of the tables, looked toward Houston and grunted. Houston settled with Gadley and strolled over to the other table to eat.
He glanced toward Sam Finch, who still stood at the bar, and found Finch watching him. The man downed his drink at a gulp and left the saloon. Houston devoured the meal which had been put on the table.
Silky Gadley meandered to the front door and looked out, and as he returned he stopped beside the table where Houston was sitting.
“If you’ve really bought an interest in the tradin’ post —” Gadley said, his voice low.
“I have. I wasn’t foolin’.”
“You may be in for serious trouble, then. Sid Jarles has been running things with a high hand in this part of the country for some time. He’s got plenty of enemies, but his enemies haven’t had anybody to lead ‘em.” Gadley added, thoughtfully, “They may be on hand, however, if trouble starts.” He raised his voice. “Well, Mr. Houston, come in and try your luck at poker when you’ve got some time. Maybe we can get a game goin’…”
“Thanks,” Houston replied. “I may do that.”
Gadley went back to his table, sat down and lit a cigar. Houston finished his meal, went to the bar and paid for it. The bartender eyed him as he made change, and spoke from the corner of his mouth so nobody else could hear:
“If yuh get into a brawl with Jake Walters, remember that he always squints his eyes quick-like when he’s goin’ for his gun.”
“Thanks,” Houston replied, picking up his change.
“This town has been under Sid Jarles’ thumb so long that some folks are gettin’ tired of it. Yuh’ll have friends.”
“Know who shot at me?” Houston whispered, as he got out materials to make a cigarette. “No. Got no idea. May have been a mistake.”
Leaving the saloon, Houston looked up and down the street. Nobody was in sight. He went across to the trading post, to find Clara Brandell behind the counter.
“I put a ladder at the corner of the buildin’, and we’ve got the paint and brush ready,” Brandell said. “But mebbe yuh’d better top and think about it.”
“I’ve already told some of the men in the saloon that I’ve bought an interest here. Now, I’ll do a little sign paintin’.”
He went outside and put the ladder into place, then took brush and can of paint and went up the ladder. An expert sign painter would have sneered at the result, but anybody could read it. When the work was done, the sign read:
BRANDELL & HOUSTON
TRADING POST
He replaced the ladder and took brush and can into the store.
“Bein’ some tired, I’ll go to the stable and get me some sleep,” he said. “See yuh in the mornin’. G’night!”
He left the trading post and strode up the street to the stable, to find Lew Dawes sitting in front of it, smoking a pipe. Dawes knocked the dottle out of his pipe as Houston appeared. “I fixed up that pile of hay outside the stall and tossed yore blanket roll on it,” Dawes reported. “Reckon I’ll turn in myself. I sleep in the little room in the back.”
Dawes barred the door, yawned, and went back through the stable. Houston talked to his pony, then unrolled his blankets and made his bed. He got off his boots and half undressed, then rolled up in the blankets and fell asleep….
His pony’s, squeal awakened him. Houston was out of his blankets and on his feet with gun held ready almost as soon as he opened his eyes. But it was not a gun he needed with which to confront this peril.
Dense smoke was swirling through the old stable. Tongues of flame licked through the smoke in three places.
“Dawes!” he shouted. “Wake up!”
He got his boots on and ran to the rear of the building to the little room. A flash of flame showed him Dawes stretched on the bunk. Houston shook him and got him awake. Dawes was half choking because of the smoke.
“Stable’s afire!” Houston shouted at him. “Let’s get the hosses out!”
The smoke was so dense in the big long room that they scarcely could see. Dawes ran to the wide front door while Houston got his own pony out of the stall.
“Houston!” Dawes’ shout reached him. “The door’s stuck! I can’t get it open!”
Houston led his pony through the smoke to the door and tried to help.
“Stuck, yore eye!” Houston said. “It’s been fastened outside. We’re in a trap.”
“The rear door-”
They ran to that, stumbling through the smoke, gasping as it swirled around them. The rear door was fastened on the outside, too.
Dawes shouted again, and came through the smoke with a crowbar. Houston tore it from him, ran to the wide front door again, and attacked the heavy planks with the crowbar. The flames were spreading now and shooting from two of the windows. Houston thought he could hear men shouting outside.
He smashed one of the planks and began prying at the others with the crowbar. The men outside were calling to one another in alarm. Houston got off one of the planks and tore away at another. He howled at the men outside, and two came running from the blacksmith shop with tools.
“Get yore hosses!” Houston shouted to Dawes.
The door was smashed in. But had the building been frame instead of adobe, they never would have gotten out. Houston took his pony through the door and handed the halter to the nearest man, then plunged back inside to help Dawes, calling for the others to come and help. Dawes was down and unconscious because of the smoke.
They got Dawes outside, and finally got the four horses outside which had been stabled. Black smoke was rolling through the windows and door. Hay and straw were burning. The rafters and window frames were afire. There was nothing to do except let the fire burn itself out.
Houston examined his pony and found him unharmed. As the smoke thinned, he managed to get his bridle and saddle and some of Dawes’ stuff outside the barn, with the men helping.
Dawn came to show a smoking, gutted stable. The rear door had not burned, and they found it had been barricaded as the front door had been.
“Plain enough!” Houston said. “Somebody wanted us to be burned to death, or killed by smoke. Wanted it for me, I mean, and didn’t care if Dawes went along with me.”
Dawes, still half sick and with his eyes flaming with rage, stood beside him.
“This is enough!” the stableman howled. “I’m bucklin’ on a gun soon as I can find one! I ain’t had any hand in the ruckus around here, but now I’ve been dragged into it. When my stable is set afire and ruined, and me almost killed, it’s time for me to get in the fightin’! Time for men in Vista to run their own business and not be dictated to by anybody.”
He mentioned no names. But everybody knew he meant Sid Jarles and the Three S bunch.
Houston ate breakfast at the trading post, and praised Clara Brandell’s cooking until the girl’s eyes glowed. Houston’s pony was tied to the hitch-rail out in front. He had his gun-belt and gun, but had lost his blankets, coat and hat in the fire.
Dawes had calmed down some after turning his rescued horses into the town’s makeshift corral. He and some of his friends were cleaning up the debris at the stable and burning it. The stable was nothing now but fire-scorched adobe walls.
Men of the town were walking around and talking to one another in low tones. They glanced often at the mouth of the south trail, from which direction Sid Jarles and his men would come if they rode into town.
“Somebody shore tried to burn me to death,” Houston told Brandell and Clara. “I like to do my fightin’ out in the open.”
“There’ll be trouble when Sid Jarles comes to town — and he’ll come,” Clara said. “I’m hopin’ so,” Houston declared. “I want to see that hombre.”
“He’ll probably have his killer, Jake Walters, with him,” Brandell warned. “Some more of his men, too. Ned, this well, I’m a little afraid for yuh.”
“Shucks!” Houston scoffed. “You just ‘tend to the tradin’ post. And you, Clara, keep out of dangerous places. My name’s on the sign now, and I’ve got a right to defend my property and business. I’m mad, too, which helps a lot. Bein’ shot at from the dark, and then somebody tryin’ to burn me to death — that’s enough to make any man mad.”
Ned Houston finished his breakfast and walked through the storeroom and out upon the street. Making and lighting a cigarette, he went across to the saloon. Most of the men of the town were gathered there now, with the exception of those who were helping Dawes.
“If there’d been a wind, the whole place might have burned,” the saloon man was saying. “Mebbe Dawes set it afire with his pipe.”
“After barricadin’ the doors on the outside?” Houston asked, as he stepped forward. “If yuh’re afraid to speak out and say who yuh think is responsible, don’t talk at all. And if yuh’re tryin’ to defend the man who done it —”
“Me, I ain’t takin’ sides in any ruckus,” the saloon man quickly interrupted.
“There’s times when everybody should take sides,” Houston said. “That’s when some hombre ain’t playin’ fair.”
“Them’s my sentiments.” The speaker was Silky Gadley, the gambler. He wore a gun-belt beneath his long black coat, which was unusual for him. “If men want to fight, and do it fair and square, that’s their business. When they don’t play fair and square, it’s every decent man’s business to go after ‘em —”
“I want to see this Sid Jarles if he comes to town,” Houston said, “I come over to ask of yuh to tell him that. I never believe in postponin’ a showdown. I’ll be at the tradin’ post.”
He left the saloon and returned to the store. With Clara to help him, he got busy cleaning and rearranging some of the stock, while Brandell sat in an easy chair at the rear end of the counter. Both Houston and Clara knew they were working merely to keep their nerves down under the tension of waiting.
It was mid-morning when riders came into town off the south trail. Sid Jarles rode ahead. Jake Walters was with him, as were five other men. They dismounted in front of the saloon and tied their horses, slapped the dust from their shoulders and tucked their riding gauntlets away as they stepped up on the plank walk.
Houston watched through the window as Clara pointed out the men to him. Sid Jarles was a tall, powerfully built man with graying
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