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"Offered Mis' Dale one thousand cold if she'd pull her freight."
"She ain't gonna do it, is she?" demanded the alarmed Mr. Saltoun.
Racey shook his head. "She's gonna stick."
"She must. h.e.l.l, yes. Those papers of Luke's are forged. I know they are."
"So does everybody else," put in Tom Loudon, "but if something don't turn up d.a.m.n quick--" He broke off, shaking a dubious head.
"Something will," declared Racey, making his bluff a second time with an air of supreme confidence.
"You know something, Racey," prodded Mr. Saltoun who prided himself on his perspicacity. "Whadda you know?"
"I ain't telling it," answered Racey, coolly. "I ain't coming back to the ranch to-day, neither."
"Oh, you ain't. Listen to the new owner, Tom."
"That's all right," said Racey. "If I'm going to do the world any good I've got to have a free hand."
"You can have two of 'em," conceded Mr. Saltoun. "The bridle's off."
"Aw right, I'll take Swing Tunstall," Racey hastened to say.
"I meant yore own two hands," demurred Mr. Saltoun.
"I know you did, but I meant the other kind. Listen, do you want Lanpher and Tweezy to get this ranch?"
"---- it, no!"
"Then gimme Swing Tunstall."
"Take him. Need anybody else? Wouldn't you like all the rest of the outfit, and me, too?"
"My Gawd, no. This is a job requirin' brains."
"Say, lookit here, Racey--"
"When you get to the ranch tell Swing to come along soon as he can,"
interrupted Racey. "I'll be expecting him."
Tuckety-tuck! Tuckety-tuck! Somewhere beyond the cottonwood grove surrounding Moccasin Spring a galloping horse was coming in. A moment later horse and rider shot past the tail of the cottonwood grove, and bore down on the house.
"Marie!" exclaimed Racey.
"And riding one of my hosses," observed Mr. Saltoun.
At that instant Marie caught sight of the three men and swerved her mount toward them.
"They said at the Bar S you was here," panted the lookout, pulling up in front of Racey Dawson. "So I borrowed a fresh hoss and kep' on.
Somethin's happened in Farewell, Racey. Swing Tunstall's shot."
"Downed?" Racey did not usually jump at conclusions, but Swing Tunstall was his friend.
Marie shook her tousled head. "Nicked--shoulder and leg. But it ain't their fault he wasn't rubbed out."
"Who's responsible?" demanded Racey.
"Doc Coffin."
"You said 'their'."
"Honey Hoke b.u.mped into Swing just as he went after his gun, so Swing couldn't get his gun out a-tall. Swing said Honey grabbed his wrist, but Peaches Austin and Punch-the-breeze Thompson was on the other side in the way so none of the boys seen what happened to Swing exactly till after it had."
"Austin, Thompson, Hoke, and Coffin," said Racey. "What began the fuss?"
"Doc Coffin upset a gla.s.s of whiskey over Swing's arm, and then cussed him for getting his arm in the way."
"And Swing called him a liar, huh?"
"And a ---- one, too," elaborated Marie.
"Put-up job." Gruffly Mr. Saltoun gave his opinion.
"Sh.o.r.e." Tom Loudon nodded gravely.
"Where are those four men now?" Racey asked, quietly, looking at Marie.
"They were in the Starlight when I left town--and _they weren't drinkin_'."
"No, they wouldn't be."
"And the sheriff and Kansas went to Dogville this morning, and the marshal is sick. I thought you ought to know. My Gawd, I thought you'd hear the news from somebody else before I got here and go bustin' in regardless, and--"
"I guess I'll go in all right," he told her with a slight smile, "but it won't be regardless."
With that he turned on a spurred heel and crossed springily to where his horse stood.
"Aw, the devil!" exclaimed Marie, looking helplessly at Tom Loudon and Mr. Saltoun. "And he'll do it, too."
Then she "kissed" to her horse and rode into the cottonwood grove for a drink at the spring.
Racey, sticking foot in stirrup, found Molly Dale at his elbow. She was looking at him the way women do when they either don't understand or think they understand only too well.
"Who is that woman?" asked Molly Dale.
"Huh?" Thus Racey, stupidly. He was thinking of his friend lying wounded in Farewell. "What woman you mean?... Oh, her, that's Marie, she's--she's lookout in the Happy Heart."
"Oh, yes, Marie. I--I've seen you with her--one evening when you and she were crossing the street and I drove past. I--I, yes, indeed."