The Lone Star Ranger by Zane Grey (red white and royal blue hardcover .txt) đ
- Author: Zane Grey
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âHowdy, Buck,â was his greeting to Duane. He spoke carelessly and averted his dark gaze for an instant.
âHowdy, Sol,â replied Duane, slowly. âSay, Sol, I hear thereâs a gent in town looking for me bad.â
âReckon there is, Buck,â replied White. âHe came in heah aboot an hour ago. Shore he was some riled anâ a-roarinâ for gore. Told me confidential a certain party had given you a white silk scarf, anâ he was hell-bent on wearinâ it home spotted red.â
âAnybody with him?â queried Duane.
âBurt anâ Sam Outcalt anâ a little cowpuncher I never seen before. They-all was coaxinâ trim to leave town. But heâs looked on the flowinâ glass, Buck, anâ heâs heah for keeps.â
âWhy doesnât Sheriff Oaks lock him up if heâs that bad?â
âOaks went away with the rangers. Thereâs been another raid at Flesherâs ranch. The King Fisher gang, likely. Anâ so the townâs shore wide open.â
Duane stalked outdoors and faced down the street. He walked the whole length of the long block, meeting many peopleâfarmers, ranchers, clerks, merchants, Mexicans, cowboys, and women. It was a singular fact that when he turned to retrace his steps the street was almost empty. He had not returned a hundred yards on his way when the street was wholly deserted. A few heads protruded from doors and around corners. That main street of Wellston saw some such situation every few days. If it was an instinct for Texans to fight, it was also instinctive for them to sense with remarkable quickness the signs of a coming gunplay. Rumor could not fly so swiftly. In less than ten minutes everybody who had been on the street or in the shops knew that Buck Duane had come forth to meet his enemy.
Duane walked on. When he came to within fifty paces of a saloon he swerved out into the middle of the street, stood there for a moment, then went ahead and back to the sidewalk. He passed on in this way the length of the block. Sol White was standing in the door of his saloon.
âBuck, Iâm a-tippinâ you off,â he said, quick and low-voiced. âCal Bainâs over at Everallâs. If heâs a-huntinâ you bad, as he brags, heâll show there.â
Duane crossed the street and started down. Notwithstanding Whiteâs statement Duane was wary and slow at every door. Nothing happened, and he traversed almost the whole length of the block without seeing a person. Everallâs place was on the corner.
Duane knew himself to be cold, steady. He was conscious of a strange fury that made him want to leap ahead. He seemed to long for this encounter more than anything he had ever wanted. But, vivid as were his sensations, he felt as if in a dream.
Before he reached Everallâs he heard loud voices, one of which was raised high. Then the short door swung outward as if impelled by a vigorous hand. A bow-legged cowboy wearing wooley chaps burst out upon the sidewalk. At sight of Duane he seemed to bound into the air, and he uttered a savage roar.
Duane stopped in his tracks at the outer edge of the sidewalk, perhaps a dozen rods from Everallâs door.
If Bain was drunk he did not show it in his movement. He swaggered forward, rapidly closing up the gap. Red, sweaty, disheveled, and hatless, his face distorted and expressive of the most malignant intent, he was a wild and sinister figure. He had already killed a man, and this showed in his demeanor. His hands were extended before him, the right hand a little lower than the left. At every step he bellowed his rancor in speech mostly curses. Gradually he slowed his walk, then halted. A good twenty-five paces separated the men.
âWonât nothinâ make you draw, youâ!â he shouted, fiercely.
âIâm waitinâ on you, Cal,â replied Duane.
Bainâs right hand stiffenedâmoved. Duane threw his gun as a boy throws a ball underhandâa draw his father had taught him. He pulled twice, his shots almost as one. Bainâs big Colt boomed while it was pointed downward and he was falling. His bullet scattered dust and gravel at Duaneâs feet. He fell loosely, without contortion.
In a flash all was reality for Duane. He went forward and held his gun ready for the slightest movement on the part of Bain. But Bain lay upon his back, and all that moved were his breast and his eyes. How strangely the red had left his faceâand also the distortion! The devil that had showed in Bain was gone. He was sober and conscious. He tried to speak, but failed. His eyes expressed something pitifully human. They changedârolledâset blankly.
Duane drew a deep breath and sheathed his gun. He felt calm and cool, glad the fray was over. One violent expression burst from him. âThe fool!â
When he looked up there were men around him.
âPlumb center,â said one.
Another, a cowboy who evidently had just left the gaming-table, leaned down and pulled open Bainâs shirt. He had the ace of spades in his hand. He laid it on Bainâs breast, and the black figure on the card covered the two bullet-holes just over Bainâs heart.
Duane wheeled and hurried away. He heard another man say:
âReckon Cal got what he deserved. Buck Duaneâs first gunplay. Like father like son!â
A thought kept repeating itself to Duane, and it was that he might have spared himself concern through his imagining how awful it would be to kill a man. He had no such feeling now. He had rid the community of a drunken, bragging, quarrelsome cowboy.
When he came to the gate of his home and saw his uncle there with a mettlesome horse, saddled, with canteen, rope, and bags all in place, a subtle shock pervaded his spirit. It had slipped his mindâthe consequence of his act. But sight of the horse and the look of his uncle recalled the fact that he must now become a fugitive. An unreasonable anger took hold of him.
âThe dâd fool!â he exclaimed, hotly. âMeeting Bain wasnât much, Uncle Jim. He dusted my boots, thatâs all. And for that Iâve got to go on the dodge.â
âSon, you killed himâthen?â asked the uncle, huskily.
âYes. I stood over himâwatched him die. I did as I would have been done by.â
âI knew it. Long ago I saw it cominâ. But now we canât stop to cry over spilt blood. Youâve got to leave town anâ this part of the country.â
âMother!â exclaimed Duane.
âSheâs away from home. You canât wait. Iâll break it to herâwhat she always feared.â
Suddenly Duane sat down and covered his face with his hands.
âMy God! Uncle, what have I done?â His broad shoulders shook.
âListen, son, anâ remember what I say,â replied the elder man, earnestly. âDonât ever forget. Youâre not to blame. Iâm glad to see you take it this way, because maybe youâll never grow hard anâ callous. Youâre not to blame. This is Texas. Youâre your fatherâs son. These are wild times. The law as the rangers are laying it down now canât change life all in a minute. Even your mother, whoâs a good, true woman, has had her share in making you what you are this moment. For she was one of the pioneersâthe fightinâ pioneers of this state. Those years of wild times, before you was born, developed in her instinct to fight, to save her life, her children, anâ that instinct has cropped out in you. It will be many years before it dies out of the boys born in Texas.â
âIâm a murderer,â said Duane, shuddering.
âNo, son, youâre not. Anâ you never will be. But youâve got to be an outlaw till time makes it safe for you to come home.â
âAn outlaw?â
âI said it. If we had money anâ influence weâd risk a trial. But weâve neither. Anâ I reckon the scaffold or jail is no place for Buckley Duane. Strike for the wild country, anâ wherever you go anâ whatever you do-be a man. Live honestly, if thatâs possible. If it isnât, be as honest as you can. If you have to herd with outlaws try not to become bad. There are outlaws who âre not all badâmany who have been driven to the river by such a deal as this you had. When you get among these men avoid brawls. Donât drink; donât gamble. I neednât tell you what to do if it comes to gunplay, as likely it will. You canât come home. When this thing is lived down, if that time ever comes, Iâll get word into the unsettled country. Itâll reach you some day. Thatâs all. Remember, be a man. Goodby.â
Duane, with blurred sight and contracting throat, gripped his uncleâs hand and bade him a wordless farewell. Then he leaped astride the black and rode out of town.
As swiftly as was consistent with a care for his steed, Duane put a distance of fifteen or eighteen miles behind him. With that he slowed up, and the matter of riding did not require all his faculties. He passed several ranches and was seen by men. This did not suit him, and he took an old trail across country. It was a flat region with a poor growth of mesquite and prickly-pear cactus. Occasionally he caught a glimpse of low hills in the distance. He had hunted often in that section, and knew where to find grass and water. When he reached this higher ground he did not, however, halt at the first favorable camping-spot, but went on and on. Once he came out upon the brow of a hill and saw a considerable stretch of country beneath him. It had the gray sameness characterizing all that he had traversed. He seemed to want to see wide spacesâto get a glimpse of the great wilderness lying somewhere beyond to the southwest. It was sunset when he decided to camp at a likely spot he came across. He led the horse to water, and then began searching through the shallow valley for a suitable place to camp. He passed by old camp-sites that he well remembered. These, however, did not strike his fancy this time, and the significance of the change in him did not occur at the moment. At last he found a secluded spot, under cover of thick mesquites and oaks, at a goodly distance from the old trail. He took saddle and pack off the horse. He looked among his effects for a hobble, and, finding that his uncle had failed to put one in, he suddenly remembered that he seldom used a hobble, and never on this horse. He cut a few feet off the end of his lasso and used that. The horse, unused to such hampering of his free movements, had to be driven out upon the grass.
Duane made a small fire, prepared and ate his supper. This done, ending the work of that day, he sat down and filled his pipe. Twilight had waned into dusk. A few wan stars had just begun to show and brighten.
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