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"Where's Hooven?" enquired Cutter.
"I don't know," Osterman replied. "He was out watching the Lower Road with Harran Derrick. Oh, Harran," he called, "isn't Hooven coming in?"
"I don't know what he is waiting for," answered Harran. "He was to have come in just after me. He thought maybe the marshal's party might make a feint in this direction, then go around by the Upper Road, after all. He wanted to watch them a little longer. But he ought to be here now."
"Think he'll take a shot at them on his own account?"
"Oh, no, he wouldn't do that."
"Maybe they took him prisoner."
"Well, that's to be thought of, too."
Suddenly there was a cry. Around the bend of the road in front of them came a cloud of dust. From it emerged a horse's head.
"h.e.l.lo, h.e.l.lo, there's something."
"Remember, we are not to fire first."
"Perhaps that's Hooven; I can't see. Is it? There only seems to be one horse."
"Too much dust for one horse."
Annixter, who had taken his field gla.s.ses from Harran, adjusted them to his eyes.
"That's not them," he announced presently, "nor Hooven either. That's a cart." Then after another moment, he added, "The butcher's cart from Guadalajara."
The tension was relaxed. The men drew long breaths, settling back in their places.
"Do we let him go on, Governor?"
"The bridge is down. He can't go by and we must not let him go back. We shall have to detain him and question him. I wonder the marshal let him pa.s.s."
The cart approached at a lively trot.
"Anybody else in that cart, Mr. Annixter?" asked Magnus. "Look carefully. It may be a ruse. It is strange the marshal should have let him pa.s.s."
The Leaguers roused themselves again. Osterman laid his hand on his revolver.
"No," called Annixter, in another instant, "no, there's only one man in it."
The cart came up, and Cutter and Phelps, clambering from the ditch, stopped it as it arrived in front of the party.
"Hey--what--what?" exclaimed the young butcher, pulling up. "Is that bridge broke?"
But at the idea of being held, the boy protested at top voice, badly frightened, bewildered, not knowing what was to happen next.
"No, no, I got my meat to deliver. Say, you let me go. Say, I ain't got nothing to do with you."
He tugged at the reins, trying to turn the cart about. Cutter, with his jack-knife, parted the reins just back of the bit.
"You'll stay where you are, m' son, for a while. We're not going to hurt you. But you are not going back to town till we say so. Did you pa.s.s anybody on the road out of town?"
In reply to the Leaguers' questions, the young butcher at last told them he had pa.s.sed a two-horse buggy and a lot of men on horseback just beyond the railroad tracks. They were headed for Los Muertos.
"That's them, all right," muttered Annixter. "They're coming by this road, sure."
The butcher's horse and cart were led to one side of the road, and the horse tied to the fence with one of the severed lines. The butcher, himself, was pa.s.sed over to Presley, who locked him in Hooven's barn.
"Well, what the devil," demanded Osterman, "has become of Bismarck?"
In fact, the butcher had seen nothing of Hooven. The minutes were pa.s.sing, and still he failed to appear.
"What's he up to, anyways?"
"Bet you what you like, they caught him. Just like that crazy Dutchman to get excited and go too near. You can always depend on Hooven to lose his head."
Five minutes pa.s.sed, then ten. The road towards Guadalajara lay empty, baking and white under the sun.
"Well, the marshal and S. Behrman don't seem to be in any hurry, either."
"Shall I go forward and reconnoitre, Governor?" asked Harran.
But Dabney, who stood next to Annixter, touched him on the shoulder and, without speaking, pointed down the road. Annixter looked, then suddenly cried out:
"Here comes Hooven."
The German galloped into sight, around the turn of the road, his rifle laid across his saddle. He came on rapidly, pulled up, and dismounted at the ditch.
"Dey're commen," he cried, trembling with excitement. "I watch um long dime bei der side oaf der roadt in der busches. Dey shtop bei der gate oder side der relroadt trecks and talk long dime mit one n'udder. Den dey gome on. Dey're gowun sure do zum monkey-doodle pizeness. Me, I see Gritschun put der kertridges in his guhn. I tink dey gowun to gome MY blace first. Dey gowun to try put me off, tek my home, bei Gott."
"All right, get down in here and keep quiet, Hooven. Don't fire unless----"
"Here they are."
A half-dozen voices uttered the cry at once.
There could be no mistake this time. A buggy, drawn by two horses, came into view around the curve of the road. Three riders accompanied it, and behind these, seen at intervals in a cloud of dust were two--three--five--six others.
This, then, was S. Behrman with the United States marshal and his posse.
The event that had been so long in preparation, the event which it had been said would never come to pa.s.s, the last trial of strength, the last fight between the Trust and the People, the direct, brutal grapple of armed men, the law defied, the Government ignored, behold, here it was close at hand.
Osterman c.o.c.ked his revolver, and in the profound silence that had fallen upon the scene, the click was plainly audible from end to end of the line.
"Remember our agreement, gentlemen," cried Magnus, in a warning voice.
"Mr. Osterman, I must ask you to let down the hammer of your weapon."
No one answered. In absolute quiet, standing motionless in their places, the Leaguers watched the approach of the marshal.