The Max Brand Megapack. Max Brand
regarded Lawlor again with that considerate, expectant eye, and then turned on his heel and strode from the room. Back to Bard came fragments of tremendous cursing of an epic breadth and a world-wide inclusiveness.
“Got to do things like this once in a while to keep ’em under my thumb,” Lawlor explained genially.
With all his might Bard was struggling to reconcile this big-handed vulgarian with his mental picture of the man who could write for an epitaph: “Here sleeps Joan, the wife of William Drew. She chose this place for rest.” But the two ideas were not inclusive.
He said aloud: “Aren’t you afraid that that black-eyed fellow will run a knife between your ribs one of these dark nights?”
“Who? My ribs?” exclaimed Lawlor, nevertheless stirring somewhat uneasily in his chair. “Nope, they know that I’m William Drew. They may be hard, but they know I’m harder.”
“Oh,” drawled the other, and his eyes held with uncomfortable steadiness on the rosy face of Lawlor. “I understand.”
To cover his confusion Lawlor seized his glass.
“Here’s to you—drinkin’ deep.”
And he tossed off the mighty potion. Bard had poured only a few drops into his glass; he had too much sympathy for his empty stomach to do more. His host leaned back, coughing, with tears of pleasure in his eyes.
“Damn me!” he breathed reverently. “I ain’t touched stuff like this in ten years.”
“Is this a new stock?” inquired Bard, apparently puzzled.
“This?” said Lawlor, recalling his position with a start. “Sure it is; brand new. Yep, stuff ain’t been in more’n five days. Smooth, ain’t it? Medicine, that’s what I call it; a gentleman’s drink—goes down like water.”
Observing a rather quizzical light in the eyes of Bard, he felt that he had probably been making a few missteps, and being warmed greatly at the heart by the whisky, he launched forth in a new phase of the conversation.
CHAPTER XXVI
“THE CRITIQUE OF PURE REASON”
“Speakin’ of hard cattlemen,” he said, “I could maybe tell you a few things, son.”
“No doubt of it,” smiled Anthony. “I presume it would take a _very_ hard man to handle this crowd.”
“Fairly hard,” nodded the redoubtable Lawlor, “but they ain’t nothin’ to the men that used to ride the range in the old days.”
“No?”
“Nope. One of them men—why, he’d eat a dozen like Kilrain and think nothin’ of it. Them was the sort I learned to ride the range with.”
“I’ve heard something about a fight which you and John Bard had against the Piotto gang. Care to tell me anything of it?”
Lawlor lolled easily back in his chair and balanced a second large drink between thumb and forefinger.
“There ain’t no harm in talk, son; sure I’ll tell you about it. What d’you want to know?”
“The way Bard fought—the way you both fought.”
“Lemme see.”
He closed his eyes like one who strives to recollect; he was, in fact, carefully recalling the skeleton of facts which Drew had told him earlier in the day.
“Six months, me and Bard had been trailin’ Piotto, damn his old soul! Bard—he’d of quit cold a couple of times, but I kept him at it.”
“John Bard would have quit?” asked Anthony softly.
“Sure. He was a big man, was Bard, but he didn’t have none too much endurance.”
“Go on,” nodded Anthony.
“Six months, I say, we was ridin’ day and night and wearin’ out a hoss about every week of that time. Then we got jest a hint from a bartender that maybe the Piottos was nearby in that section.
“It didn’t need no more than a hint for us to get busy on the trail. We hit a circle through the mountains—it was over near Twin Rivers where the ground ain’t got a level stretch of a hundred yards in a whole day’s ridin’. And along about evenin’ of the second day we come to the house of Tom Shaw, a squatter.
“Bard would of passed the house up, because he knew Shaw and said there wasn’t nothin’ crooked about him, but I didn’t trust nobody in them days—and I ain’t changed a pile since.”
“That,” remarked Anthony, “is an example I think I shall follow.”
“Eh?” said Lawlor, somewhat blankly. “Well, we rode up on the blind side of the house—from the north, see, got off, and sneaked around to the east end of the shack. The windows was covered with cloths on the inside, which didn’t make me none too sure about Shaw havin’ no dealin’s with crooks. It ain’t ordinary for a feller to be so savin’ on light. Pretty soon we found a tear in one of the cloths, and lookin’ through that we seen old Piotto sittin’ beside Tom Shaw with his daughter on the other side.
“We went back to the north side of the house and figured out different ways of tacklin’ the job. There was only the two of us, see, and the fellers inside that house was all cut out for man-killers. How would you have gone after ’em, son?”
“Opened the door, I suppose, and started shooting,” said Bard, “if I had the courage.”
The other stared at him.
“You heard this story before?”
“Not this part.”
“Well, that was jest what we done. First off, it sounds like a fool way of tacklin’ them; but when you think twice it was the best of all. They never was expectin’ anybody fool enough to walk right into that room and start fightin’. We went back and had a look at the door.
“It wasn’t none too husky. John Bard, he tried the latch, soft, but the thing was locked, and when he pulled there was a snap.
“‘Who’s there?’ hollers someone inside.
“We froze ag’in’ the side of the house, lookin’ at each other pretty sick.
“‘Nobody’s there,’ sings out the voice of old Piotto. ‘We can trust Tom Shaw, jest because he knows that if he double-crossed us he’d be the first man to die.’
“And we heard Tom say, sort of quaverin’: ‘God’s sake, boys, what d’you think I am?’
“‘Now,’ says Bard, and we put our shoulders to the door, and takes our guns in our hands—we each had two.
“The door went down like nothin’, because we was both husky fellers in them days, and as she smashed in the fall upset two of the boys sittin’ closest and gave ’em no chance on a quick draw. The rest of ’em was too paralyzed at first, except old Piotto. He pulled his gun, but what he shot was Tom Shaw, who jest leaned forward in his chair and crumpled up dead.
“We went at ’em, pumpin’ lead. It wasn’t no fight at first and half of ’em was down before they had their guns workin’. But when the real hell started it wasn’t no fireside story, I’ll tell a man. We had the jump on ’em, but they meant business. I dropped to the floor and lay on my side, shootin’; Bard, he followered suit. They went down like tenpins till our guns were empty. Then we up and rushed what was left of ’em—Piotto and his daughter. Bard makes a pass to knock the gun out of the hand of Joan and wallops her on the head instead. Down she goes. I finished Piotto with my bare hands.”
“Broke his back, eh?”
“Me? Whoever heard of breakin’ a man’s back? Ha, ha, ha! You been hearin’ fairy tales, son. Nope, I choked the old rat.”
“Were