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The Bell-Ringer of Angel's, and Other Stories
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The Bell-Ringer of Angel's, and Other Stories

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The Bell-Ringer of Angel's, and Other Stories

“I reckon you needn’t trouble yourself beyond No. 1,” returned the major with dry significance. Nevertheless, he opened a rude cupboard in the corner and brought out a rich silver-mounted cut-glass drinking-flask, which he handed to the stranger.

“I say,” said the half-breed, admiringly, “yours?”

“Certainly.”

“Certainly NOW, but BEFORE, eh?”

Rule No. 2 may have indicated that references to the past held no dishonor. The major, although accustomed to these pleasantries, laughed a little harshly.

“Mine always,” he said. “But you don’t drink?”

The half-breed’s face darkened under its grime.

“Wot you’re givin’ us? I’ve been filled chock up by Simpson over thar. I reckon I know when I’ve got a load on.”

“Were you ever in Sacramento?”

“Yes.”

“When?”

“Last week.”

“Did you hear anything about me?”

The half-breed glanced through his tangled hair at the major in some wonder, not only at the question, but at the almost childish eagerness with which it was asked.

“I didn’t hear much of anything else,” he answered grimly.

“And—what did they SAY?”

“Said you’d got to be TOOK anyhow! They allowed the new sheriff would do it too.”

The major laughed. “Well, you heard HOW the new sheriff did it—skunked away with his whole posse before one-eighth of my men! You saw how the rest of this camp held up your nine troopers, and that sap-headed cub of a lieutenant—didn’t you? You wouldn’t have been standing here if you hadn’t. No; there isn’t the civil process nor the civil power in all California that can take me out of this camp.”

But neither his previous curiosity nor present bravado seemed to impress the ragged stranger with much favor. He glanced sulkily around the cabin and began to shuffle towards the door.

“Stop! Where are you going to? Sit down. I want to talk to you.”

The fugitive hesitated for a moment, and then dropped ungraciously on the edge of a camp-stool near the door. The major looked at him.

“I may have to remind you that I run this camp, and the boys hereabouts do pretty much as I say. What’s your name?”

“Tom.”

“Tom? Well, look here, Tom! D—n it all! Can’t you see that when a man is stuck here alone, as I am, he wants to know what’s going on outside, and hear a little fresh talk?”

The singular weakness of this blended command and appeal apparently struck the fugitive curiously. He fixed his lowering eyes on the major as if in gloomy doubt if he were really the reckless desperado he had been represented. That this man—twice an assassin and the ruler of outlaws as reckless as himself—should approach him in this half-confidential way evidently puzzled him.

“Wot you wanter know?” he asked gruffly.

“Well, what’s my party saying or doing about me?” said the major impatiently. “What’s the ‘Express’ saying about me?”

“I reckon they’re throwing off on you all round; they allow you never represented the party, but worked for yourself,” said the man shortly.

Here the major lashed out. A set of traitors and hirelings! He had bought and paid for them all! He had sunk two thousand dollars in the “Express” and saved the editor from being horsewhipped and jailed for libel! Half the cursed bonds that they were making such a blanked fuss about were handled by these hypocrites—blank them! They were a low-lived crew of thieves and deserters! It is presumed that the major had forgotten himself in this infelicitous selection of epithets, but the stranger’s face only relaxed into a grim smile. More than that, the major had apparently forgotten his desire to hear his guest talk, for he himself at once launched into an elaborate exposition of his own affairs and a specious and equally elaborate defense and justification of himself and denunciation of his accusers. For nearly half an hour he reviewed step by step and detail by detail the charges against him—with plausible explanation and sophistical argument, but always with a singular prolixity and reiteration that spoke of incessant self-consciousness and self-abstraction. Of that dashing self-sufficiency which had dazzled his friends and awed his enemies there was no trace! At last, even the set smile of the degraded recipient of these confidences darkened with a dull, bewildered disgust. Then, to his relief, a step was heard without. The major’s manner instantly changed.

“Well?” he demanded impatiently, as Dawson entered.

“I came to know what you want done with HIM,” said Dawson, indicating the fugitive with a contemptuous finger.

“Take him to your cabin!”

“My cabin! HIM?” ejaculated Dawson, turning sharply on his chief.

The major’s light eyes contracted and his thin lips became a straight line. “I don’t think you understand me, Dawson, and another time you’d better wait until I’m done. I want you to take him to your cabin—and then CLEAR OUT OF IT YOURSELF. You understand? I want him NEAR ME AND ALONE!”

III.

Dawson was not astonished the next morning to see Major Overstone and the half-breed walking together down the gully road, for he had already come to the conclusion that the major was planning some extraordinary reprisals against the invaders, that would ensure the perpetual security of the camp. That he should use so insignificant and unimportant a tool now appeared to him to be quite natural, particularly as the service was probably one in which the man would be sacrificed. “The major,” he suggested to his companions, “ain’t going to risk a white man’s skin, when he can get an Injun’s hide handy.”

The reluctant hesitating step of the half-breed as they walked along seemed to give some color to this hypothesis. He listened sullenly to the major as he pointed out the strategic position of the Bar. “That wagon road is the only approach to Wynyard’s, and a dozen men along the rocks could hold it against a hundred. The trail that you came by, over the ridge, drops straight into this gully, and you saw what that would mean to any blanked fools who might try it. Of course we could be shelled from that ridge if the sheriff had a howitzer, or the men who knew how to work one, but even then we could occupy the ridge before them.” He paused a moment and then added: “I used to be in the army, Tom; I saw service in Mexico before that cub you got away from had his first trousers. I was brought up as a gentleman—blank it all—and HERE I am!”

The man slouched on by his side, casting his surly, furtive glances from left to right, as if seeking to escape from these confidences. Nevertheless, the major kept on through the gully, until reaching the wagon road they crossed it, and began to ascend the opposite slope, half hidden by the underbrush and larches. Here the major paused again and faced about. The cabins of the settlement were already behind the bluff; the little stream which indicated the “bar”—on which some perfunctory mining was still continued—now and then rang out quite clearly at their feet, although the bar itself had disappeared. The sounds of occupation and labor had at last died away in the distance. They were quite alone. The major sat down on a boulder, and pointed to another. The man, however, remained sullenly standing where he was, as if to accent as strongly as possible the enforced companionship. Either the major was too self-absorbed to notice it, or accepted it as a satisfactory characteristic of the half-breed’s race. He continued confidently:—

“Now look here, Tom. I want to leave this cursed hole, and get clear out of the State! Anywhere; over the Oregon line into British Columbia, or to the coast, where I can get a coasting vessel down to Mexico. It will cost money, but I’ve got it. It will cost a lot of risks, but I’ll take them. I want somebody to help me, some one to share risks with me, and some one to share my luck if I succeed. Help to put me on the other side of the border line, by sea or land, and I’ll give you a thousand dollars down BEFORE WE START and a thousand dollars when I’m safe.”

The half-breed had changed his slouching attitude. It seemed more indolent on account of the loosely hanging strap that had once held his haversack, which was still worn in a slovenly fashion over his shoulder as a kind of lazy sling for his shiftless hand.

“Well, Tom, is it a go? You can trust ME, for you’ll have the thousand in your pocket before you start. I can trust YOU, for I’ll kill you quicker than lightning if you say a word of this to any one before I go, or play a single trick on me afterwards.”

Suddenly the two men were rolling over and over in the underbrush. The half-breed had thrown himself upon the major, bearing him down to the ground. The haversack strap for an instant whirled like the loop of a lasso in the air, and descended over the major’s shoulders, pinioning his arms to his side. Then the half-breed, tearing open his ragged blouse, stripped off his waist-belt, and as dexterously slipped it over the ankles of the struggling man.

It was all over in a moment. Neither had spoken a word. Only their rapid panting broke the profound silence. Each probably knew that no outcry would be overheard.

For the first time the half-breed sat down. But there was no trace of triumph or satisfaction in his face, which wore the same lowering look of disgust, as he gazed upon the prostrate man.

“I want to tell you first,” he said, slowly wiping his face, “that I didn’t kalkilate upon doin’ this in this yer kind o’ way. I expected more of a stan’ up fight from you—more risk in gettin’ you out o’ that hole—and a different kind of a man to tackle. I never expected you to play into my hand like this—and it goes against me to hev to take advantage of it.”

“Who are you?” said the major, pantingly.

“I’m the new sheriff of Siskyou!”

He drew from beneath his begrimed shirt a paper wrapping, from which he gingerly extracted with the ends of his dirty fingers a clean, legal-looking folded paper.

“That’s my warrant! I’ve kept it fresh for you. I reckon you don’t care to read it—you’ve seen it afore. It’s just the same as t’other sheriff had—what you shot.”

“Then this was a plant of yours, and that whelp’s troopers?” said the major.

“Neither him nor the sojers knows any more about it than you,” returned the sheriff slowly. “I enlisted as Injin guide or scout ten days ago. I deserted just as reg’lar and nat’ral like when we passed that ridge yesterday. I could be took to-morrow by the sojers if they caught sight o’ me and court-martialed—it’s as reg’lar as THAT! But I timed to have my posse, under a deputy, draw you off by an attack just as the escort reached the ridge. And here I am.”

“And you’re no half-breed?”

“There’s nothin’ Injin about me that water won’t wash off. I kalkilated you wouldn’t suspect anything so insignificant as an INJIN, when I fixed myself up. You saw Dawson didn’t hanker after me much. But I didn’t reckon on YOUR tumbling to me so quick. That’s what gets me! You must hev been pretty low down for kempany when you took a man like me inter your confidence. I don’t see it yet.”

He looked inquiringly at his captive—with the same wondering surliness. Nor could he understand another thing which was evident. After the first shock of resistance the major had exhibited none of the indignation of a betrayed man, but actually seemed to accept the situation with a calmness that his captor lacked. His voice was quite unemotional as he said:

“And how are you going to get me away from here?”

“That’s MY look out, and needn’t trouble you, major; but, seein’ as how confidential you’ve been to me, I don’t mind tellin’ you. Last night that posse of mine that you ‘skunked,’ you know, halted at the cross roads till them sojers went by. They has only to SEE THEM to know that I had got away. They’ll hang round the cross roads till they see my signal on top of the ridge, and then they’ll make another show against that pass. Your men will have their hands full, I reckon, without huntin’ for YOU, or noticin’ the three men o’ mine that will come along this ridge where the sojers come yesterday—to help me get you down in the same way. You see, major, your little trap in that gully ain’t in this fight—WE’RE THE OTHER SIDE OF IT. I ain’t much of a sojer, but I reckon I’ve got you there! And it’s all owing to YOU. I ain’t,” he added gloomily, “takin’ much pride in it MYSELF.”

“I shouldn’t think you would,” said the major, “and look here! I’ll double that offer I made you just now. Set me down just as I am on the deck of some coasting vessel, and I’ll pay you four thousand dollars. You may have all the glory of having captured me, HERE, and of making your word good before your posse. But you can arrange afterwards on the way to let me give you the slip somewhere near Sacramento.”

The sheriff’s face actually brightened. “Thanks for that, major. I was gettin’ a little sick of my share in this job, but, by God, you’ve put some sand in me. Well, then! there ain’t gold enough in all Californy to make me let you go. You hear me; so drop that. I’ve TOOK you, and TOOK ye’ll remain until I land you in Sacramento jail. I don’t want to kill you, though your life’s forfeit a dozen times over, and I reckon you don’t care for it either way, but if you try any tricks on me I may have to MAIM ye to make you come along comf’able and easy. I ain’t hankerin’ arter THAT either, but come you shall!”

“Give your signal and have an end of this,” said the major curtly.

The sheriff looked at him again curiously. “I never had my hands in another man’s pockets before, major, but I reckon I’ll have to take your derringers from yours.” He slipped his hand into the major’s waistcoat and secured the weapons. “I’ll have to trouble you for your sash, too,” he said, unwinding the knitted silken girdle from the captive’s waist. “You won’t want it, for you ain’t walking, and it’ll come in handy to me just now.”

He bent over, and, passing it across the major’s breast with more gentleness and solicitude than he had yet shown, secured him in an easy sitting posture against the tree. Then, after carefully trying the knots and straps that held his prisoner, he turned and lightly bounded up the hill.

He was absent scarcely ten minutes, yet when he returned the major’s eyes were half closed. But not his lips. “If you expect to hold me until your posse comes you had better take me to some less exposed position,” he said dryly. “There’s a man just crossed the gully, coming into the brush below in the wood.”

“None of your tricks, major!”

“Look for yourself.”

The sheriff glanced quickly below him. A man with an axe on his shoulder could be seen plainly making his way through the underbrush not a hundred yards away. The sheriff instantly clapped his hand upon his captive’s mouth, but at a look from his eyes took it away again.

“I see,” he said grimly, “you don’t want to lure that man within reach of my revolver by calling to him.”

“I could have called him while you were away,” returned the major quietly.

The sheriff with a darkened face loosened the sash that bound his prisoner to the tree, and then, lifting him in his arms, began to ascend the hill cautiously, dipping into the heavier shadows. But the ascent was difficult, the load a heavy one, and the sheriff was agile rather than muscular. After a few minutes’ climbing he was forced to pause and rest his burden at the foot of a tree. But the valley and the man in the underbrush were no longer in view.

“Come,” said the major quietly, “unstrap my ankles and I’ll WALK up. We’ll never get there at this rate.”

The sheriff paused, wiped his grimy face with his grimier blouse, and stood looking at his prisoner. Then he said slowly:—

“Look yer! Wot’s your little game? Blessed if I kin follow suit.”

For the first time the major burst into a rage. “Blast it all! Don’t you see that if I’m discovered HERE, in this way, there’s not a man on the Bar who would believe that I walked into your trap, not a man, by God, who wouldn’t think it was a trick of yours and mine together?”

“Or,” interrupted the sheriff slowly, fixing his eyes on his prisoner, “not a man who would ever trust Major Overstone for a leader again?”

“Perhaps,” said the major, unmovedly again, “I don’t think EITHER OF US would ever get a chance of being trusted again by any one.”

The sheriff still kept his eyes fixed on his prisoner, his gloomy face growing darker under its grime. “THAT ain’t the reason, major. Life and death don’t mean much more to you than they do to me in this yer game. I know that you’d kill me quicker nor lightning if you got the chance; YOU know that I’m takin’ you to the gallows.”

“The reason is that I want to leave Wynyard’s Bar,” said the major coolly; “and even this way out of it will suit me.”

The sheriff took his revolver from his pocket and deliberately cocked it. Then, leaning down, he unbuckled the strap from the major’s ankles. A wild hope that his incomprehensible captive might seize that moment to develop his real intent—that he might fly, fight, or in some way act up to his reckless reputation—sustained him for a moment, but in the next proved futile. The major only said, “Thank you, Tom,” and stretched his cramped legs.

“Get up and go on,” said the sheriff roughly.

The major began to slowly ascend the hill, the sheriff close on his heels, alert, tingling, and watchful of every movement. For a few moments this strain upon his faculties seemed to invigorate him, and his gloom relaxed, but presently it became too evident that the prisoner’s pinioned arms made it impossible for him to balance or help himself on that steep trail, and once or twice he stumbled and reeled dangerously to one side. With an oath the sheriff caught him, and tore from his arms the only remaining bonds that fettered him. “There!” he said savagely; “go on; we’re equal!”

Without replying, the major continued his ascent; it became steeper as they neared the crest, and at last they were both obliged to drag themselves up by clutching the vines and underbrush. Suddenly the major stopped with a listening gesture. A strange roaring—as of wind or water—was distinctly audible.

“How did you signal?” asked the major abruptly.

“Made a smoke,” said the sheriff as abruptly.

“I thought so—well! you’ve set the woods on fire.”

They both plunged upwards again, now quite abreast, vying with each other to reach the summit as if with the one thought only. Already the sting and smart of acrid fumes were in their eyes and nostrils; when they at last stood on level ground again, it was hidden by a thin film of grayish blue haze that seemed to be creeping along it. But above was the clear sky, seen through the interlacing boughs, and to their surprise—they who had just come from the breathless, stagnant hillside—a fierce wind was blowing! But the roaring was louder than before.

“Unless your three men are already here, your game is up,” said the major calmly. “The wind blows dead along the ridge where they should come, and they can’t get through the smoke and fire.”

It was indeed true! In the scarce twenty minutes that had elapsed since the sheriff’s return the dry and brittle underbrush for half a mile on either side had been converted into a sheet of flame, which at times rose to a furnace blast through the tall chimney-like conductors of tree shafts, from whose shriveled sides bark was crackling, and lighted dead limbs falling in all directions. The whole valley, the gully, the Bar, the very hillside they had just left, were blotted out by a creeping, stifling smoke-fog that scarcely rose breast high, but was beaten down or cut off cleanly by the violent wind that swept the higher level of the forest. At times this gale became a sirocco in temperature, concentrating its heat in withering blasts which they could not face, or focusing its intensity upon some mass of foliage that seemed to shrink at its touch and open a scathed and quivering aisle to its approach. The enormous skeleton of a dead and rotten redwood, not a hundred yards to their right, broke suddenly like a gigantic firework into sparks and flame.

The sheriff had grasped the full meaning of their situation. In spite of his first error—the very carelessness of familiarity—his knowledge of woodcraft was greater than his companion’s, and he saw their danger. “Come,” he said quickly, “we must make for an opening or we shall be caught.”

The major smiled in misapprehension.

“Who could catch us here?”

The sheriff pointed to the blazing tree.

“THAT,” he said. “In five minutes IT will have a posse that will wipe us both out.”

He caught the major by the arm and rushed him into the smoke, apparently in the direction of the greatest mass of flame. The heat was suffocating, but it struck the major that the more they approached the actual scene of conflagration the heat and smoke became less, until he saw that the fire was retreating before them and the following wind. In a few moments their haven of safety—the expanse already burnt over—came in sight. Here and there, seen dimly through the drifting smoke, the scattered embers that still strewed the forest floor glowed in weird nebulous spots like will-o’-the-wisps. For an instant the major hesitated; the sheriff cast a significant glance behind them.

“Go on; it’s our only chance,” he said imperatively.

They darted on, skimming the blackened or smouldering surface, which at times struck out sparks and flame from their heavier footprints as they passed. Their boots crackled and scorched beneath them; their shreds of clothing were on fire; their breathing became more difficult, until, providentially, they fell upon an abrupt, fissure-like depression of the soil, which the fire had leaped, and into which they blindly plunged and rolled together. A moment of relief and coolness followed, as they crept along the fissure, filled with damp and rotting leaves.

“Why not stay here?” said the exhausted prisoner.

“And be roasted like sweet potatoes when these trees catch,” returned the sheriff grimly. “No.” Even as he spoke, a dropping rain of fire spattered through the leaves from a splintered redwood, before overlooked, that was now blazing fiercely in the upper wind. A vague and indefinable terror was in the air. The conflagration no longer seemed to obey any rule of direction. The incendiary torch had passed invisibly everywhere. They scrambled out of the hollow, and again dashed desperately forward.

Beaten, bruised, blackened, and smoke-grimed—looking less human than the animals who had long since deserted the crest—they at last limped into a “wind opening” in the woods that the fire had skirted. The major sank exhaustedly to the ground; the sheriff threw himself beside him. Their strange relations to each other seemed to have been forgotten; they looked and acted as if they no longer thought of anything beyond the present. And when the sheriff finally arose and, disappearing for several minutes, brought his hat full of water for his prisoner from a distant spring that they had passed in their flight, he found him where he had left him—unchanged and unmoved.

He took the water gratefully, and after a pause fixed his eyes earnestly upon his captor. “I want you to do a favor to me,” he said slowly. “I’m not going to offer you a bribe to do it either, nor ask you anything that isn’t in a line with your duty. I think I understand you now, if I didn’t before. Do you know Briggs’s restaurant in Sacramento?”

The sheriff nodded.

“Well! over the restaurant are my private rooms, the finest in Sacramento. Nobody knows it but Briggs, and he has never told. They’ve been locked ever since I left; I’ve got the key still in my pocket. Now when we get to Sacramento, instead of taking me straight to jail, I want you to hold me THERE as your prisoner for a day and a night. I don’t want to get away; you can take what precautions you like—surround the house with policemen, and sleep yourself in the ante-room. I don’t want to destroy any papers or evidence; you can go through the rooms and examine everything before and after; I only want to stay there a day and a night; I want to be in my old rooms, have my meals from the restaurant as I used to, and sleep in my own bed once more. I want to live for one day like a gentleman, as I used to live before I came here. That’s all! It isn’t much, Tom. You can do it and say you require to do it to get evidence against me, or that you want to search the rooms.”

The expression of wonder which had come into the sheriff’s face at the beginning of this speech deepened into his old look of surly dissatisfaction. “And that’s all ye want?” he said gloomily. “Ye don’t want no friends—no lawyer? For I tell you, straight out, major, there ain’t no hope for ye, when the law once gets hold of ye in Sacramento.”

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