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believe it, chief?”

“If he’s using his right name,” said Jenkins, “he’ll do that and more.”

“Then how come he tried to murder Blondy from behind.”

“Maybe Blondy lied about it.”

“But old Bennett and the girl both seen Blondy carry Doone into the house.”

“Now,” groaned Jenkins, “I dunno what to think. All I know is this: that if Blondy Loring rides into town tomorrow and don’t find nobody waiting for him, or if he comes in and cleans up on Ronicky Doone, Twin Springs as a town ain’t going to have no more name than a jack rabbit around these parts.”

Curly nodded.

“They’s a worse thing than that,” he said. “Some of the boys take to Blondy real strong. They say that if a gent like Blondy will stick to Bennett, Bennett can’t be so bad. And, besides, I’ve heard ‘em talking that you’re kind of hard on the old man, the colonel, as they call him.”

“Colonel nothing!” shouted Jenkins. “All it needs is a little bit more,” Curly declared, “and Bennett can have a fine crew of hands working out on his ranch, and then the rustling stops!”

He lowered his voice and became serious as he said this. Jenkins also glanced guiltily around.

“You talk like it was murder,” he muttered at length. “But all I’m doing is what was done to me. Bennett busted me the same way that I’m busting him. Besides he stabbed me in the back when I thought he was my friend. But what I’m doing to him he knows I’m doing.”

“Well,” said Curly, “you can call it what you want; I’d hate to get caught at it. But you got to step light, chief. You got a bunch of rough customers working for you, and they can scare out a bunch of regular cow-punchers, and they can buy out a lot of tramps like them that are working for Bennett now. But if you was to run into some real fighters on the Bennett range you might have a hand full of trouble.”

Al Jenkins nodded. The truth of this was manifest.

“I know that,” he agreed. “It’s a ticklish business. But, Curly, I’m going to stay by it till I do to him the same as he’s done to me in the past. Ain’t that fair and square?”

Curly nodded. Such argument seemed to him too clearly established to admit of dispute.

“You got the right of it, chief,” he said. “The only thing is that it would look sort of crooked if every one was to find out what’s going on. And if some more like Blondy get up on the Bennett ranch, you’ll have a lot on your hands.”

“No more like him are going to get there,” affirmed Jenkins. “One week from to-day I’m going to make a scoop — a scoop that’ll clean him out and break his heart!”

And he turned away upon his heel and went off, humming to himself. As for Curly, he stared after his master with amazement and awe. Such hardness of heart was to him something to be admired from a great distance. And yet, as he had told Jenkins, the justice of it was unimpeachable. But how were they to stampede Blondy?

Looking toward the end of the veranda, his eye rested upon the slender form of Ronicky Doone in the chair, a form now barely perceptible against the gathering darkness. Curly shook his head. Such a man as this was hardly the force which should be pitted against big Blondy Loring.

Also his heart ached for the fair town of Twin Springs. Just as Al Jenkins said, if big Blondy were allowed to ride unscathed and defiant into Twin Springs and out of it again, the reputation of those who dwelt in the little place would be down at zero.

“What’s on old Jenkins’ mind?” asked a cow-puncher, coming near him.

“I’ll tell you,” said Curly solemnly. “Al took me aside and says to me: ‘I mislike having this Ronicky Doone picked to stand up to a man like Blondy in the name of Twin Springs. If it was you, Curly,’ he says, ‘I’d feel a lot better about it.’”

CHAPTER XVII WOODEN SLUGS

For Twin Springs the night was a troubled one, as it turned and tossed, full of nervous expectation of the trial of the day to come. For Ronicky Doone, who by force of circumstances had become the champion of the town, the night was long and quiet. For he retired and slept until dawn, the sleep of the blessed. Then he wakened, went to the window, saw the industrious world stirring about its work in the beginning of the cold day, and went back to bed to sleep again. For, as he put it himself: “The best time for sleep is the time you steal for it.”

It was midmorning before he rose from his bed, and when he came down the stairs a little later he was given the attention of a king. On every side of him he found anxious faces. Without a murmur, breakfast was served to him late in the dining room, and by the proprietor himself. A score of times he was asked how he felt, and how he had slept; and the whole atmosphere in which he found himself was one of kindly concern — more than that, there was at times an air of desperate interest! And Ronicky, remembering the day before, enjoyed every scruple of the altered temperature.

After breakfast he sought as usual his chair on the edge of the veranda, and there he stretched half in sun and half in shade, awaiting the hour of the battle. And the populace of Twin Springs, fast assembling in points of advantage to await the shooting, looked upon their champion with amazement. Al Jenkins, having by common assent been appointed to the position of manager and chief functionary at this shooting, was bewildered.

“Either he’s a great bluff,” he declared, “or else he’s dead sure of himself. But he ain’t seeming to worry about the condition his gun is in, or how his nerves might be. He seems to figure that everything is the way it ought to be. I’m going to talk to him a little. The rest of you keep clear of him. Too much talking might be bad for him.”

And so saying he approached Ronicky Doone and stood beside him, just as he had stood the day before. Only now how different was his attitude, how different the voice in which he spoke.

“Doone,” he said, “you seem to be getting on pretty well.”

“Tolerable well,” said Ronicky. “Thanks.”

“Which I been thinking back to our talk of yesterday,” went on Al. “And I been figuring out that I said a lot too much and a lot too loud.”

“Forget about it,” said Ronicky, “the same as I have forgotten.”

Al Jenkins sighed. This was more than he could have hoped. At the same time he reserved a deep suspicion in his brain. These smooth-speaking fellows were apt to carry a poisoned knife.

“I was just wondering,” said Jenkins, “if you wouldn’t want to oil up your gun and get it warmed up a bit. I got all the ammunition that you want ready and handy for you, and there’s a nice clear stretch right behind the hotel where you could unlimber a few slugs, if you felt like it.”

“Thanks,” said Ronicky Doone. “But shooting plumb jars my hands. I don’t do no more of it than I can help. You see?”

Al Jenkins gasped.

“You don’t practice much?” he asked.

“I practice a bit now and then,” said Ronicky. “But I figure that a gent has to trust a lot to luck when it comes to hitting anything with a revolver.”

Jenkins merely turned on his heel and hurried away. This was an attitude before a mortal combat which he had never before encountered, and which he never expected to find again. He turned into the hotel and in the lobby he sat down panting in the circle of serious-faced men. They became doubly concerned when they noted the expression on his face.

“What’s happened?” they asked. “Is Doone losing his nerve?”

“I dunno,” groaned Jenkins. “He beats me. He’s just different! He says that he doesn’t do much practicing because it jars his hands too much!”

His gasp found a score of echoes.

“Anyway,” went on Jenkins, “the only thing that we can do is to wait and hope. Here, Curly! You go out and start talking to Doone and telling him some stories that’ll cheer him up. Just talk about anything so long as it’ll keep his mind off the subject of what’s about to happen to him. But I’m afraid that it ain’t going to be much good. That gent out there that calls himself Ronicky Doone is just some nut that’s got a pet illusion that he’s a gun fighter. But go ahead, Curly. Do what you can!”

Feeling that the hopes of Twin Springs were, to no small degree, resting upon his shoulders, Curly sauntered out upon the veranda, tightening his belt as he went and rolling a thousand possible topics in his mind. Actually to be encouraged to talk was a new experience for Curly. After all, the quality for which they so often laughed at him or abused him, they were now coming to applaud as a rare talent.

Going to Ronicky he broached conversation easily on the first topic that came into his head, which happened to be the fine make of boots which now clothed the feet of the cow-puncher. And when Ronicky replied with the usual kindness and quiet of voice, Curly drew up a chair and sat down. He would have passed from the topic of the boots to some kindred vein, but Ronicky rather abruptly stopped him with the question: “What d’you know about this Blondy Loring that I’m going to meet up with to-day, partner?”

Curly scratched his head. He had an idea that the last thing his employer wanted him to do was to talk about Loring with the champion. But a great and evil idea popped into his head. He could not resist it. As a matter of fact, he knew nothing at all about Loring. Neither did any one else in Twin Springs, except that Blondy had come into that part of the country some few weeks before, and that since then he had been the active partisan of Bennett. Other than this, Blondy was a perfect stranger to them all. It was the very meagerness of his knowledge that supplied so powerful a stimulus to the brain of Curly.

He sighed as he leaned back in the chair.

“Blondy Loring?” he said. “Sure I know about him. I used to live across the street from him in his own home town.”

“The devil you did!”

“The devil I didn’t! Me and Loring was pals together when I started to school — “

“You look eight years older than Blondy, though.”

“Blondy? Who said anything about Blondy? I said Loring — Blondy’s brother, Jack Loring. Him and me went to school together. But Jack ran away before he got through the third grade and never was heard of again. Sure I know Blondy Loring.”

“Well, what d’you know about him?”

“Nothing that’s good,” said Curly sadly. “I sure don’t know nothing that’s good about him. He was always a devil from the time that he sicced his dog on my old cat, Jerry, the best squirrel catcher I ever seen. His dog killed Jerry. I never seen such a cat; and while the dog was chewing up old Jerry, Blondy Loring stood right across the street, dancing and clapping his hands together. That’s the kind he was when he was a kid.”

Ronicky Doone,

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