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But Auguste spoke again before Raoul could fire. "Will you shoot an unarmed man now, Raoul? Go ahead, prove yourself a coward. When you took Victoire away from me, you wouldn't fight me. At Old Man's Creek--de Marion's Run--I stood before you with my hands empty, and then you tried to shoot me. You don't have the sand in you to face me fairly."
Raoul sensed that Auguste's words were aimed not at him, but at the men behind him. He felt angry, trapped.
_Shoot, dammit! Shut him up._
_No, it's too late. All these men heard what he said._
"You're afraid to fight me man to man. I challenged you the day you drove me away from Victoire, and you backed down. I challenge you again, Raoul."
An answer sprang into Raoul's mind. "I accept. Let the weapons be your neck and a rope."
But even as he spoke he had a sinking, uneasy feeling.
He did not hear any of his men laughing.
Armand said, "What the h.e.l.l, Raoul. You've killed hundreds of Indians, some of them a lot bigger than this one. Give him his duel."
For a moment Raoul felt like turning his pistol on Armand. The overseer was paying him back, he realized, for the contempt he'd endured.
"I'm ready to meet you now or any time, mongrel. Let it be tonight. But where there will be no witnesses to charge the winner with murder."
Auguste said, "I would be a fool to trust you and your men."
"You have to," said Raoul. "I'm not giving you any choice. The men will see to it that it's a fair fight. That's what they want." He couldn't keep the bitterness out of his voice. "Come with us, or I'll shoot you down on this doorstep."
Frank Hopkins, pistol pointing at Raoul, crowded into the doorway beside Auguste.
The black O of the muzzle pointed at him chilled Raoul. He'd heard that Frank had fired on the Indians attacking the trading post. Seemed that day had changed him. Now he was a man like any other, taking up the gun like any other.
Frank said, "Auguste is not going with you. There will be no duel. Get away from this house now."
Seeing Frank's foolish defiance in the face of over twenty armed men, Raoul almost laughed.
But that pistol in Frank's hand could end his life. He couldn't shoot Auguste while Frank held it on him.
Raoul swung the barrel of his own pistol to cover Frank's chest.
"Get back inside, Frank," he said, putting a steel edge into it.
Instead, with a sudden movement that almost made Raoul squeeze the trigger, Frank came forward, stepping in front of Auguste.
Raoul saw another movement in the doorway, and then he was staring into his father's glittering eyes. Elysee's rifle, long barrel trembling only slightly, was leveled at him.
Raoul decided the best attack was to laugh at them. "Look at the mongrel's protectors. A weakling who would never carry a pistol and a lame old man in his nights.h.i.+rt."
He heard a few snickers among the men behind him and felt encouraged.
But, he thought with fury, he was still trapped. His pistol was aimed at Frank, but Frank's pistol and his father's rifle were both pointed at him. If he shot Frank, would Elysee shoot him?
With the palm of his hand he pushed back the hammer of his cap-and-ball pistol, the muzzle still aimed square at Frank's chest.
"Papa, Frank, both of you get out of the way, or Frank is a dead man."
But Raoul felt as if the bottom was dropping out of his stomach as he looked at the two men. Neither Elysee nor Frank replied. Raoul saw resolution in Frank's light blue eyes. The man who had never wanted to kill was prepared to die.
_I have to shoot first._
He heard Nicole scream as his finger tightened on the trigger.
Frank and Elysee were pushed apart. Raoul was looking into Auguste's eyes, blazing with a dark fire.
_Kill the mongrel now, and you're done with him forever._
He squeezed the trigger hard. The hammer fell, and the pistol boomed and blossomed red fire and white smoke.
The pistol and the rifle pointed at Raoul both went off, hurling a blinding bitter cloud back into his face.
He stood unhurt.
Elysee and Frank had fired, but by pus.h.i.+ng unexpectedly between them Auguste had spoiled their aim.
The smoke cleared. Raoul saw a black spot on the left side of Auguste's white s.h.i.+rt. In an instant it was a spreading scarlet stain.
Auguste's eyes were shut. He fell back against Nicole, his knees buckled and he sagged to the ground. Nicole, her skirts billowing, threw her arms around Auguste and eased him down.
Raoul felt a surge of triumph.
_At last! I killed the sonofab.i.t.c.h!_
But below the triumph, like chill black water under thin ice, lay fear of what might happen now. His knees trembled.
Raoul saw Nancy Hale staring at him, her eyes full of hate.
_Well, if I couldn't have you, he won't either._
"It was you led me to him, Nancy," he said, grinning as he saw her mouth twist in anguish. "When you came here, we knew he was here."
"I pray that you burn in h.e.l.l for all eternity, Raoul de Marion!"
"Pretty talk for a minister's daughter," he laughed.
"Mon colonel!" Armand called. "We hear men running this way. Must be Regulators. Let us ambush them. We have time to find hiding places."
"No," said Raoul. "We'd have to silence this bunch."
He gestured at Frank, Elysee, Guichard and Nicole, who were lifting Auguste's body into the house.
_Will I truly have to stand trial for murder? Me? I never have before._