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"Make room there!" he repeated. "Make room!" and again into the crowd, like a snow-plough into a drift, he penetrated until his momentum was exhausted, then paused for a fresh plunge.
But before him a pathway was forming. Seemingly the thing was impossible, but the trick of a spoken name was sufficient.
"It's Ben Blair!" someone had announced, and others had loudly taken up the cry. "It's Ben Blair! Let him through!"
Along the pathway thus cleared the youth made his way and approached the centre of activity. Previously the drama had moved swiftly,--so swiftly that the spectators could merely watch developments, but under the interruption it halted. The man at the pony's bridle--cowboy Buck it was--paused, uncertain what to do, doubtful of the intent of the long-faced man who so suddenly had come beside him. Not so Mick Kennedy.
Well he knew what was in store, and reaching over he gave the pony a resounding slap on the flank.
"Let him go, Buck!" he commanded of the cowboy. "Hurry!"
But already he was too late. With a grip like a trap, Ben's hand was likewise on the rein, holding the little beast, despite his struggles, fairly in his tracks. Ben's head turned, met the bartender's Cyclopean eye squarely, and held it with a look this bulldozer of men had never before received in all his checkered career.
"Mick Kennedy," he said quietly, "another move like that, and in five minutes you'll be hanging from the other side."
For the fraction of a second there was a pause; but, short as it was, the Irishman felt the sweat start. "The day of such as you has pa.s.sed, Mick Kennedy."
There was no time for more. As bystanders gather around a street fight, the grim cowmen had closed in from all sides. On the outskirts men mounted each other's shoulders the better to see. Of a sudden, from behind, Ben felt himself grasped by a mult.i.tude of hands. Angry voices sounded in his ears.
"String him up too if he interferes!" suggested one.
"That's the talk!" echoed a third. "Swing him, too!"
The l.u.s.t of blood was upon the crowd, crying to be satisfied. But they had reckoned wrongly, and were soon to learn their error. Every atom of the long youth's fighting blood was raised to boiling pitch. On the instant, the all but superhuman strength at which we marvel in the insane was his. Like flails, his doubled fists shot out in every direction, meeting resistance at each blow. By the dim light he caught the answering glint on sheath knives, but he took no notice. His hat had come off, and his abundant brown hair shook about his shoulders. His blue eyes blazed. A figure of war incarnate he stood, and a vacant circle which no one cared to cross formed about him. One long hand, with fingers outstretched, was raised above his head. The brilliant eyes searched the surrounding sea of faces for those he knew; as one by one he found them, lingered, conquered. Silence fell intense.
"Men! Gentlemen!" The words went out like pistol-shots reaching every acute ear. "Listen to me. I've a right to speak. Stop a moment, all of you, and think. This is the twentieth century, not the first. We're in America, free America. Think, I say, think! Don't act blindly! Think!
This man is guilty. We all know it. He's caught red-handed. But he can't escape. Remember this, men, and think! As you value your own self-respect, as you honor the country you live in, don't be savages, don't do this deed you contemplate, this thing you've started doing. Let the law take its course!"
The speaker paused for breath, and, as though fascinated by his audacity or something else, friend and enemy remained motionless and waiting.
Well fitting the drama was its setting: the darkness of night broken by the flickering lanterns; on the pony the huddled helpless figure with a running noose about its neck; the row upon row of rugged faces, of gleaming eyes!
"Ranchers, stockmen!" rushed on the insistent voice, "you know responsibility; it's to you I'm talking. A principle is at stake here,--the principle of law or of lawlessness. One of these--you know which--has run this range too long; it's gripping us at this moment.
Before we can be free we must call it halt. Let's do it now; don't wait for the next time or the next, but now, now!" Once more he paused, his eyes for the last time making the circle swiftly, his hand in the air, palm forward. "For law, the law of J. L. Rankin, instead of Judge Lynch!" he challenged. "For civilization instead of savagery--not to-morrow but now, now! Help me to uphold the law!"
So swiftly that the spectators scarcely realized what he was doing, he stepped over to the limp figure upon the pony, loosed the noose from around the neck, and lifted him to the ground.
"Sheriff Ralston!" he called; "come and take your prisoner! Russell!
Stetson! Grannis!" designating each by name, "every man who values life, help me now!"
The cry was the trumpet for action. Instantly every one was in motion.
Again arose the Babel of voices,--voices cursing, arguing, encouraging.
The circle of malevolent faces which had surrounded the youth would not longer be stayed, closed hotly in. He felt the press of their bodies against his, their breath in his face. With an effort, marking his place, the extended right hand went up once more into the air. The slogan again sprang to his tongue.
"For the law of J. L. Rankin, men! The law of--"
The sentence died on his lips. Suddenly, something lightning-like, scorching hot, caught him beneath his right shoulder-blade. Before his eyes the faces, the lighted lanterns, faded into darkness. A sound like falling waters roared in his ears.
CHAPTER XVI
THE QUICK AND THE DEAD
When Ben Blair again woke to consciousness the sunlight was pouring upon him steadily. He was in a strange bed in a strange room; and he looked about him perplexedly. Amid the unfamiliarity his eye caught an object he recognized,--the broad angular back of a man. Memory slowly adjusted itself.
"Grannis--"
The back reversed, showing a rather surprised face.
"Where am I, Grannis?"
The foreman came over to the bed. "In the hotel. In the bridal chamber, they informed me, to be exact."
Ben did not smile. Memory was clear now. "What happened after they--got me last night?"
Grannis's face showed distinct animation. "A lot of things--and mighty fast. You missed the best part." Of a sudden he paused and looked at his charge doubtfully. "But I forgot. You're not to talk: the doctor said so."
Ben made a grimace. "But I can listen, can't I?"
"I suppose so," still doubtfully.
"Well--"
Grannis hearkened equivocally. No one was about, likely to overhear him disobeying instructions, and the temptation was strong.
"You know McFadden?" he queried suddenly.
Blair nodded.
"Well, say, that Scotchman is a tiger. He got to the front somehow when you called for reinforcements, and when you went down he was Johnny-on-the-spot taking your place. Some of the rest of us got in there pretty soon, and for a bit things was lively. It was rather close range for gun-work, but knives were as thick as frogs after a shower."
With a sudden movement Grannis slipped up the sleeve of his left arm, showing a bandage through which the blood had soaked and dried. "All of us got scratched some. One fellow of the opposition--Mick Kennedy--met with an accident."
"Serious?"
"Rather. We planted him after things had quieted down."
For a moment the two men looked at each other steadily, and the subject was dropped.
"Well," suggested Blair once more.
"That's all, I guess--except that Ralston has the prisoner." A grim reminiscent smile came to the speaker's lips. "That is, he's got him if the floors of the cells here are paved good and thick. Last time I saw T. Blair he was fairly shaking post-holes into the ground with his feet."
Ben tried to s.h.i.+ft in bed, but with the movement a sudden pain made him grit his teeth to keep from uttering a groan. For the first time he thought of himself.
"How much am I hurt, Grannis?" he queried directly.
The foreman busied himself doing nothing about the room. "You?"
cheerfully. "Oh, you're all right."