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Jo shuddered. "Thank Heaven I was blindfolded!" was her grateful thought. "But how ridiculous, boys! A razor! If they'd wanted to kill me, at least one of them had a gat. Ask Hiram."
"Maybe they was just goin' to cut you loose and tell you why they'd swiped you, when the Gentle Wild Cat went wild again," suggested Gulick.
"Cut a perfectly good lariat!" Jo picked it up. "Couldn't they have untied the knots?"
Gulick took the lariat and examined it. "Thirty-five feet," he said.
"Rawhide--six-strand plait Been rubbed with cow's liver to soften 'er, too. What else? Whoop! What's this?"
He was studying the honda, also of rawhide, pressed flat when soaked and riveted in shape, a plaited b.u.t.ton on the end of the lariat proper to keep it from slipping through the hole.
"Letters cut in this," Gulick announced. "T. H.' Who's that stand for?"
All went silent for a time, thinking; then Hiram Hooker said quietly, as if what he suggested mattered but little:
"Tehachapi Hank."
All talked at once now. Not one was there that was not sure Hiram had hit upon a clew.
"And Tehachapi Hank's a bad man," said Heine. "Admitted it himself.
And he's a side-kick of that cholo-faced Drummond!"
Study of the razor, now red with rust, showed the amateur detectives nothing.
"And ye saw only the face of one of 'em, Hiram?" Blink Keddie asked it.
"Only one. The others managed to keep their masks on."
"Tehachapi Hank and Al Drummond them other two was," said McAllen positively. "Too bad it wasn't one o' them you knocked the mask off of, Wild Cat."
"And you never saw this fella that you got a look at?" asked Schultz.
Hiram shook his head. "I didn't even see him well," he added.
"Through revolver smoke--and the rain pouring--and next instant his face didn't look like anything much. That was a wicked old pine knot."
"I'll say she was, boy! But about the razor?" Keddie kept on.
Again Hiram could not answer.
"Why, that's easy!" laughed Heine Schultz. "They was gonta give Jo a shave!"
Jo and Hiram walked together behind the rest and talked as the party returned to the wagons. For the first time she told him of what her skinners had had to report when they were over their sickness following the doping at Ragtown. One and all, they said, they had been invited to the little cabin of the girl who ran the shooting gallery for a drink; after having fired several strings of shots and "joshed" with her out in front. From there they had gone to the Palace, and afterward, being dazed and feeling drowsy, had wandered in a group into the Dugout, a place that they seldom frequented, and could remember nothing after that.
"Why--why--do they think Lucy doped them?" cried Hiram.
Jo shrugged. "They can't remember drinking anywhere but with her and in the Palace," she said. "They got it one place or the other, Hiram."
"The Palace, of course, then. Why--Lucy--she----"
"Is a friend of Al Drummond," Jo helped him out, her red lips set.
"Did you find out whether or not Drummond was in Ragtown at the time?"
"I looked into all that I dared, but it was nine days before I got back. Oh, I had an awful time, with n.o.body to help me but a few green men I'd picked up at Julia--finding the horses and all. But Huber got his hay!" she added proudly. "When I got back to Ragtown, of course n.o.body remembered whether Drummond had been there that day or not. He goes and comes frequently, you know. And I didn't dare press questions. I told the boys to keep still about it all. I thought that best."
"Was Drummond there on your last trip in?" he asked.
"Yes."
"Beaten up? I'm sure I must have left my mark on all three of them."
"I didn't get to see him, but no one said anything about any injury."
"Much as we dislike him, it's hard to think that Drummond would be concerned in such a plot," Hiram remarked.
"Plot?"
"Of course, Jo."
"Against me? What have I done?"
"We're getting nowhere with such speculation, Jo," said Hiram. "We boys will just have to keep our eyes open and see what we can find out.
There's more back of it than the idea to tantalize you because you beat Al Drummond in the freighting game. I wish I knew what the razor was for."
"Of course, they weren't going to kill me, Hiram. No need for all that monkeywork, if that had been the case."
"I only saw the man with the razor," Hiram told her, "and got busy. Of course, I didn't even know it was a razor then, but I saw steel. I thought they were going to kill you. Didn't take much time to think, at that."
"You terrible sc.r.a.pper!" laughed the girl. "Who'd have thought that I'd ever have needed such a man--and got him! Hiram, you've--you've never kissed me since that night."
Hiram's face turned red as fire. "I ain't worthy to kiss ye, Jo," he said, lapsing into his backwoods drawl. "Wait'll I settle this thing that's come up for you. Wait'll I find out about 'the paper.' Then maybe I'll have somethin' to offer you."
In his great embarra.s.sment he pointed to the ground, where were tracks and scratches.
"Ben a bob cat usin' thereabouts," he drawled.
With Twitter-or-Tweet Orr Tweet the month that Hiram had been laid up had developed a new and unforeseen situation. He laid the particulars before Jerkline Jo and Hiram, both investors in his enterprise. The conference took place when Jo's freight outfit jingled into Ragtown two days later.
Tweet invited them to dinner in the Wigwam, a saloon and restaurant and gambling house combined, where the patrons sat on stools before a high counter which was in the nature of a continuation of the bar. The three took seats at the farther end, so that their conversation would be less likely to be overheard.
"Playmates," Tweet began, when their orders were before them, "I didn't think our Uncle Sam would go to work and hand us a package just when we were gettin' us a toehold. But that's just what he's done. I been watchin' for it to develop for some little time. Now the leak has sprung.
"You see, outside o' Paloma Rancho, every other section o' land in here b'longs to the Gold Belt Cut-off, and adjoinin' sections are government land. Maybe you c'n guess what's happened."
"Thrown open," Jerkline Jo said promptly.
"Yep--open to homesteaders. They're flockin' in in automobiles, in perambulators, on motor cycles, burros, horseback, and afoot--in everything but submarines. So far as any one can see, they're gettin'
just as good land as Paloma Rancho; and the folks we've sold to are castin' dark looks at one Tweet. As if I was to blame! Two fellas that hadn't paid in much have jumped their contracts with us, and are takin' up claims. If many more pull stuff like that--say, somebody'll be in bad!