The Man From Bar-20 by Clarence E. Mulford (good romance books to read .txt) 📕
"Don't you tell Logan that I sent you!" he shouted belligerently.
The stranger turned in his saddle, grinning cheerfully, and favored his late host with a well-known, two-handed nose signal. Then he slapped the black horse and shot down the street without another backward glance.
Pop, arms akimbo, watched him sweep out of sight around a bend.
"Huh!" he snorted. "Wonder what yo're doin' down here? Galivantin' around th' country, insultin' honest, hard-workin' folks, an' wearin' two guns, low down an' tied! I reckon when you learns th' lay of th' country, if you stays long enough, you'll wind up by joinin' that gang up in th' Twin Buttes country. I allus like to see triggers on six-shooters, I do." He had not noticed the triggers, but that was no bar to his healthy imagination. Shuffling back to his seat, he watched the indignant Andy pecking at a wet spot on the floor.
"So you didn't chaw hi
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Logan turned and sighed with relief at a problem solved. “Yo’re a right smart frog, Big Mouth,” he grinned. “‘Go ‘round’ is th’ medicine; an’ I’ve got th’ doctor to shove it down their throats! There’s a roundup due in th’ Twin Buttes, an’ it’s started now.”
POP HAYES sighed, raised his head and watched the door as hoofbeats outside ceased abruptly.
“Dearly Beloved!” said an indignant voice. “If you tries any more of yore tricks I’ll gentle you with th’ butt of a six-gun, you barrel-bellied cow! Oh, that’s it, huh? I savvy. You yearns for that shade. Go to it, Pepper.”
“‘Dearly Beloved’” snorted Pop in fine disgust. “You’d think it was a weddin’ tower! Who th’ devil ever heard a cayuse called any such a name as that?” he indignantly demanded of Andrew Jackson; but Andrew paid no attention to him. The bird’s head was cocked on one side and he sidled deliberately toward the door.
A figure jumped backward past the door, followed by a pair of hoofs, which shot into sight and out again. Andy stopped short and craned his neck, his beady eyes glittering with quick suspicion.
“I can shore see where you an’ me has an argument,” said the voice outside. “If you make any more plays like that I’ll just naturally kick yore ribs in. G’wan, now; I ain’t got no sugar, you old fool!” And the smiling two-gun man stepped into the room, with a wary and affectionate backward glance. “Hello, Pop!” he grinned. “You old Piute, you owes me a drink!”
“Like h—l I do!” retorted Pop with no politeness, sitting up very straight in his chair.
“You shore do!” rejoined Johnny firmly. “Didn’t you tell me that th’ CL was a nice ranch to work for?”
“Yo’re loco! I didn’t say nothin’ of th’ kind!” snapped Pop indignantly. “I said they’d work you nigh to death; that’s what I said! “
“Oh; was that it?” asked Johnny dubiously. “I ain’t nowise shore about it; but we’ll let it go as it lays. Then I owe you a drink; so it’s all th’ same. Yo’re a real prophet.”
Pop hastily shuffled to his appointed place and performed the honors gracefully. “So you went an’ got a job over there, huh?” he chuckled. “An’ now yo’re all through with ‘em? Well, I will say that you stuck it out longer than some I knows of. Two weeks with Logan is a long time.”
“It’s so long that I’ve aged considerable,” admitted Johnny, smiling foolishly. “But I’m cured. I’m cured of punchin’ cows for anybody, for a while. Seems to me that all I’ve done, all my life, was to play guardian to fool cows. I’ve had enough for a while. Th’ last two weeks plumb cured me of punchin’.”
He looked down and saw Andy, feathers ruffled, squaring off for another go at the spur, stooped suddenly, scooped the squawking bird into his hand, tossed it into the air, caught it, and quickly shoved it headfirst into a pocket. Andy swore and backed and wriggled, threatened to eat his black heart and to do other unkind and reprehensible things. Giving a desperate heave he plopped out of the pocket and struck the floor with a thud. Shaking himself, he screamed profane defiance at the world at large and then made his clumsy and comical way up the chaps and finally roosted on the butt of one of the six-guns, where he clucked loudly and whistled.
Johnny gave a peculiar whistle in reply, and almost instantly Pop let out a roar and jumped toward the door to drive back a black horse that was coming in.
“Get out of here!” he yelled pugnaciously. Pepper, bared her teeth and slowly backed out again. Turning, Pop glared at the puncher. “Did you see that? Mebby Andy ain’t th’ only animal that drinks,” he jabbed, remembering a former conversation.
Johnny laughed and scratched the bird, which stood first on one foot and then on the other, foolish with ecstatic joy.
Pop regarded the bird with surprise. “Well, if that don’t beat all!” he marveled. “There ain’t another man can do that, ‘cept me, an’ get off with a whole hand, Andy’ll miss you, I reckon.”
“He won’t miss me much,” responded Johnny, comfortably seating himself in Pop’s private chair. “I ain’t leavin’ th’ country.”
“You won’t have to. There’s other ranches, where they treats punchers better’n cows. There’s another chair, over there.”
“No more ranches for me,” replied Johnny, ignoring the hint. “I’m through punching I tell you. I’m goin’ to play a while for a change.”
“Gamblin’s bad business,” replied Pop, turning to get the cards.
“Mebby some gamblin’ is; but there’s some as ain’t,” grinned Johnny. “I ain’t meanin’ cards.”
“Oh,” said Pop, disappointed. “What you mean —shootin’ craps?”
“Nope; I’m goin’ prospectin’; an’ if that ain’t gamblin’ then I never saw anythin’ that was.”
Pop straightened up and stared. “Prospectin?” he demanded, incredulously. “Regular prospectin’? Well, I’ll be cussed! If yo’re goin’ to do it around here, lemme tell you it won’t be no gamble. It’ll be a dead shore loss. A flea couldn’t live on what you’ll earn on that game in this country.”
“Well, I ain’t aimin’ to support no flea, unless Andy leaves me one,” laughed Johnny, again scratching the restless bird. “But I’m tired of cows, an’ I might as well amuse myself prospectin’ as any other way. I like this country an’ I’m goin’ to stay a while. Besides, when I was a kid I shore wanted to be a pirate; then when I got older I saw a prospector an’ hankered to be one. I can’t be a pirate, but I’m goin’ to be a prospector. When my money is gone I’ll guard cows again.”
“Lord help us!” muttered Pop. “Yo’re plumb loco.”
“How can I be plumb an’ loco at th’ same time?”
“Andy!” snapped Pop. “Come away from there! Lord knows you ain’t got no sense, but there ain’t no use riskin’ yore instinct!”
Johnny laughed. “Leavin’ jokes aside, me an’ Pepper are goin’ off by ourselves an’ poke around pannin’ th’ streams an’ bustin’ nuggets off th’ rocks till we get a fortune or our grub runs out. We can have a good time, an’ hey! You got any fishhooks?”
“Fishhooks nothin’!” snorted Pop. “Lot of call I got for fishhooks. Why, I ain’t heard th’ word for ten years. Say!” he grinned sheepishly. “Mebby you’ll get lonesome. Now, if we went off together, with some fishhooks—but, shucks! I can’t leave this here business.”
Johnny hid his relief. “That’s th’ worst of havin’ a business. You certainly can’t go off an’ let everythin’ go to smash.”
“Cuss th’ luck!” growled Pop. “Gosh, I’m all het up over it! I ain’t done no fishin’ since I was a kid, an’ there must be lots of trout in these streams.” Then he brightened a little. “But I dunno. You look too cussed much like Logan to be real comfortable company for me. I reckon I’ll pay attention to business.”
Johnny showed a little irritation. “There you go again! You do a lot of worryin’ about my looks. If they don’t suit you, start right in an’ change ‘em!”
“There you go!” snapped Pop disgustedly. “On th’ prod th’ first thing! You’d show more common sense if you did some of th’ worryin’. But then, I reckon it’ll be all right if you does yore prospectin’ an’ fishin’ south of here.”
“No, sir! I’m goin’ to do it north of here, in th’ Twin Buttes country.”
Pop’s expression baffled description, and his Adam’s apple bobbed up and down like a monkey on a stick. “Good Lord! You stick to Devil’s Gap, an’ south of there!”
Johnny’s eyes narrowed and he sat up very straight. “This is a free country an’ I goes where I please. It’s a habit of mine. I said north, an’ that’s where I’m goin’. I wasn’t so set on it before; but now I’m as set as a Missouri mule.”
Pop growled. “There ain’t no chance of you havin’ my company; an’ you leave th’ name an’ address of yore next of kin before you starts.”
Johnny laughed derisively. “I ain’t worryin’. An’ now let’s figger out what a regular prospector needs. Bein’ new at th’ game I reckon I better get some advice. What I’m dubious about are th’ proper things to pry th’ nuggets loose with, an’ hoist ‘em on my cayuse,” he grinned. “Ought to have a pick, shovel, gold pan for placer fussin’ ‘gold pan’ sounds regular, don’t it? an’ some sacks to tie it up in. A dozen’ll do for a starter. I can allus come back for more.”
“Or you can borrow a chuck waggin; that would be handy because it would make it easy to get yore body out, ‘though I reckon they’ll just bury you an’ let it go that way.”
“They? Meanin’who?”
“I ain’t got a word to say.”
“There’s some consolation in that,” jeered Johnny.
“Yo’re a fool!” snorted Pop heatedly.
“An’ so that’s went an’ follered me down here, too,” sighed Johnny. “A man can’t get away from some things. Well, let’s get back on th’ trail. All th’ prospectors I ever saw wore cowhide boots, with low, flat heels. Somehow I can’t see myself trampin’ around with these I’m wearin’; an’ they’re too expensive to wear ‘em out that way. What else? Need any blastin’ powder?”
“Cussed if I wouldn’t grubstake you if you wasn’t goin’ up there,” grinned Pop. “It takes a fool for luck; an’ it’ll be just like you to fall down a canyon an’ butt th’ dirt off’n a million dollar nugget. I got a notion to do it anyhow.”
“You needn’t get no notions!” retorted Johnny. “I’m goin’ to hog it. Prospectors never get grubstaked unless they’re busted; an’ I ain’t got there yet. Oh, yes; I got to get them fishhooks you see, I ain’t aimin’ to cripple my back workin’ hard all th’ time. I’ll fill a sack in th’ mornin’, eat my dinner an’ rest all afternoon. Next day I’ll fill another sack, an’ so on. Now, what am I goin’ to get for my outfit? I’ll need a lot of things.”
“Go see Charley James, acrost th’ street. He keeps th’ general store; an’ he’s got more trash than anybody I ever saw.”
“Mebby he can tell me what I need,” suggested Johnny, hopefully.
As Pop started to answer, the doorway darkened and a man stepped into the room. Pop’s face paled and he swiftly moved to one side, out of range. The newcomer glanced at Johnny, swore under his breath and his hand streaked to his holster. It remained there, for he discovered that he was glaring squarely down a revolver barrel.
“Let loose of it!” snapped Johnny. “Now, then: What’s eatin’ you?”
“Why why, I mistook you for somebody else!” muttered the other. “Comin’ in from th’ sunlight, sudden like, I couldn’t see very well. My mistake, Stran ger. What’ll you have?”
Johnny grunted skeptically. “Yo’re shore you can see all right now?”
“It’s all right, Nelson,” hastily interposed the anxious proprietor, nodding emphatic assurance. “It’s all right!”
“My mistake, Mr. Nelson,” smiled the stranger. “I shouldn’t ‘a’ been so hasty but I was fooled. Yore looks are shore misleadin’.”
“They suits me. What’s wrong about ‘em?” demanded Johnny.
“There you go again!” snorted Pop in quick disgust. “A gent makes a mistake, says he didn’t mean no harm in it, an’ you goes on th’ prod! Didn’t I tell you that yore looks would get you into trouble? Didn’t I?”
“Oh! Is that it?” He arose and slipped the gun back into its holster. “I’ll take th’ same, Stranger.”
“Now yo’re gettin’ some sense,” beamed Pop, smiling with relief. “Mr.
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