'Firebrand' Trevison by Charles Alden Seltzer (ebook reader library TXT) đ
- Author: Charles Alden Seltzer
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He felt hands grasping him, and he fought them off, smashing weakly at faces that appeared around him as he was dragged to his feet. He heard a voice say: âHis armâs bruk,â and the voice seemed to clear the atmosphere. He paused, holding back a blow, and the dancing blur of faces assumed a proper aspect and he saw the man who had hit the banker.
âHello Mullarky!â he grinned, reeling drunkenly in the arms of his friends. âCome to see the picnic? Whereâs myââ
He saw Corrigan leaning against a wall of the room and lurched toward him. A dozen hands held him backâthe room was full of men; and as his brain cleared he recognized some of them. He heard threats, mutterings, against Corrigan, and he laughed, bidding the men to hold their peace, that it was a âfair fight.â Corrigan was unmoved by the threatsâas he was unmoved by Trevisonâs words. He leaned against the wall, weak, his arms hanging at his sides, his face macerated, grinning contemptuously. And then, despite his objections, Trevison was dragged away by Mullarky and the others, leaving Braman stretched out on the floor, and Corrigan, his knees sagging, his chin almost on his chest, standing near the wall. Trevison turned as he was forced out of the door, and grinned tauntingly at his tired enemy. Corrigan spat at him.
Half an hour later, his damaged arm bandaged, and some marks of the battle removed, Trevison was in the banking room. He had forbidden any of his friends to accompany him, but Mullarky and several others stood outside the door and watched him.
A bandage around his head, Braman leaned on the counter behind the wire netting, pale, shaking. In a chair at the desk sat Corrigan, glowering at Trevison. The big manâs face had been attended to, but it was swollen frightfully, and his smashed lips were in a horrible pout. Trevison grinned at him, but it was to the banker that he spoke.
âI want my gun, Braman,â he said, shortly.
The banker took it out of a drawer and silently shoved it across the counter and through a little opening in the wire netting. The banker watched, fearingly, as Trevison shoved the weapon into its holster. Corrigan stolidly followed his movements.
The gun in its holster, Trevison leaned toward the banker.
âI always knew you werenât straight, Braman. But we wonât quarrel about that now. I just want you to know that when this arm of mine is right again, weâll try to square things between us. Broom handles will be barred that day.â
Braman was silent and uneasy as he watched Trevison reach into a pocket and withdraw a leather bill-book. From this he took a paper and tossed it in through the opening of the wire netting.
âCash it,â he directed. âItâs about the matter we were discussing when we were interrupted by our bloodthirsty friend, there.â
He looked at Corrigan while Braman examined the paper, his eyes alight with the mocking, unfearing gleam that had been in them during the fight. Corrigan scowled and Trevison grinned at himâthe indomitable, mirthless grin of the reckless fighting man; and Corrigan filled his lungs slowly, watching him with half-closed eyes. It was as though both knew that a distant day would bring another clash between them.
Braman fingered the paper uncertainly, and looked at Corrigan.
âI suppose this is all regular?â he said. âYou ought to know something about itâitâs a check from the railroad company for the right-of-way through Mr. Trevisonâs land.â
Corriganâs eyes brightened as he examined the check. They filled with a hard, sinister light.
âNo,â he said; âit isnât regular.â He took the check from Braman and deliberately tore it into small pieces, scattering them on the floor at his feet. He smiled vindictively, settling back into his chair. ââBrandâ Trevison, eh?â he said. âWell, Mr. Trevison, the railroad company isnât ready to close with you.â
Trevison had watched the destruction of the check without the quiver of an eyelash. A faint, ironic smile curved the corners of his mouth as Corrigan concluded.
âI see,â he said quietly. âYou were not man enough to beat me a little while agoâeven with the help of Bramanâs broom. Youâre going to take it out on me through the railroad; youâre going to sneak and scheme. Well, youâre in good companyâanything that you donât know about skinning people Braman will tell you. But Iâm letting you know this: The railroad companyâs option on my land expired last night, and it wonât be renewed. If itâs fight youâre looking for, Iâll do my best to accommodate you.â
Corrigan grunted, and idly drummed with the fingers of one hand on the top of the desk, watching Trevison steadily. The latter opened his lips to speak, changed his mind, grinned and went out. Corrigan and Braman watched him as he stopped for a moment outside to talk with his friends, and their gaze followed him until he mounted Nigger and rode out of town. Then the banker looked at Corrigan, his brows wrinkling.
âYou know your business, Jeff,â he said; âbut youâve picked a tough man in Trevison.â
Corrigan did not answer. He was glowering at the pieces of the check that lay on the floor at his feet.
Presently Corrigan lit a cigar, biting the end off carefully, to keep it from coming in contact with his bruised lips. When the cigar was going well, he looked at Braman.
âWhat is Trevison?â
Pale, still dizzy from the effects of the blow on the head, Braman, who was leaning heavily on the counter, smiled wryly:
âHeâs a holy terrorâyou ought to know that. Heâs a reckless, donât-give-a-damn fool who has forgotten thereâs such a thing as consequences. âFirebrandâ Trevison, they call him. And he lives up to what that means. The folks in this section of the country swear by him.â
Corrigan made a gesture of impatience. âI meanâwhat does he do? Of course I know he owns some land here. But how much land does he own?â
âYou saw the figure on the check, didnât you? He owns five thousand acres.â
âHow long has he been here?â
âYouâve got me. More than ten years, I guess, from what I can gather.â
âWhat was he before he came here?â
âI couldnât even surmise thatâhe donât talk about his past. From the way he waded into you, I should judge he was a prize fighter before becoming a cow-puncher.â
Corrigan glared at the banker. âYes; itâs damned funny,â he said. âHow did he get his land?â
âProved on a quarter-section. Bought the rest of itâand bought it mighty cheap.â Bramanâs eyes brightened. âFigure on attacking his title?â
Corrigan grunted. âI notice he asked you for cash. Youâre not his banker, evidently.â
âHe banks in Las Vegas, I guess.â
âWhat about his cattle?â
âHe shipped three thousand head last season.â
âHow big is his outfit?â
âHeâs got about twenty men. Theyâre all hard casesâlike him, and theyâd shoot themselves for him.â
Corrigan got up and walked to the window, from where he looked out at Manti. The town looked like an army camp. Lumber, merchandise, supplies of every description, littered the street in mounds and scattered heaps, awaiting the erection of tent-house and building. But there was none of that activity that might have been expected from the quantity of material on hand; it seemed that the owners were waiting, delaying in anticipation of some force that would give them encouragement. They were reluctant to risk their money in erecting buildings on the strength of mere rumor. But they had come, hoping.
Corrigan grinned at Braman. âTheyâre afraid to take a chance,â he said, meaning Mantiâs citizens.
âDonât blame them. Iâve spread the stuff aroundâas you told me. Thatâs all theyâve heard. Theyâre here on a forlorn hope. The boom they are looking for, seems, from present conditions, to be lurking somewhere in the future, shadowed by an indefiniteness that to them is vaguely connected with somebodyâs promise of a dam, agricultural activity to follow, and factories. They havenât been able to trace the rumors, but theyâre here, and theyâll make things hum if they get a chance.â
âSure,â grinned Corrigan. âA boom town is always a graft for first arrivals. That is, boom towns have been. But Mantiââ He paused.
âYes, different,â chuckled the banker. âIt must have cost a wad to shove that water grant through.â
âBenham kicked on the priceâit was enough.â
âThat maximum rate clause is a pippin. You can soak them the limit right from the jump.â
âAnd scare them out,â scoffed Corrigan. âThat isnât the game. Get them here, first. Thenââ
The banker licked his lips. âHow does old Benham take it?â
âMr. Benham is enthusiastic because everything will be done in a perfectly legitimate wayâhe thinks.â
âAnd the courts?â
âJudge Lindman, of the District Court now in Dry Bottom, is going to establish himself here. Benham pulled that string.â
âGood!â said Braman. âWhen is Lindman coming?â
Corriganâs smile was crooked; it told eloquently of conscious power over the man he had named.
âHeâll come whenever I give the word. Benhamâs got something on him.â
âYou always were a clever son-of-a-gun!â laughed the banker, admiringly.
Ignoring the compliment, Corrigan walked into the rear room, where he gazed frowningly at his reflection in a small glass affixed to the wall. Re-entering the banking room he said:
âIâm in no condition to face Miss Benham. Go down to the car and tell her that I shall be very busy here all day, and that I wonât be able to see her until late tonight.â
Miss Benhamâs name was on the tip of the bankerâs tongue, but, glancing at Corriganâs face, he decided that it was no time for that particular brand of levity. He grabbed his hat and stepped out of the front door.
Left alone, Corrigan paced slowly back and forth in the room, his brows furrowed thoughtfully. Trevison had become an important figure in his mind. Corrigan had not hinted to Braman, to Trevison, or to Miss Benham, of the actual situationânor would he. But during his first visit to town that morning he had stood in one of the front windows of a saloon across the street. He had not been getting acquainted, as he had told Miss Benham, for the saloon had been the first place that he had entered, and after getting a drink at the bar he had sauntered to the window. From there he had seen âBrandâ Trevison ride into town, and because Trevison made an impressive figure he had watched him, instinctively aware that in the rider of the black horse was a quality of manhood that one meets rarely. Trevisonâs appearance had caused him a throb of disquieting envy.
He had noticed Trevisonâs start upon getting his first glimpse of the private car on the siding. He had followed Trevisonâs movements carefully, and with increased disquiet. For, instead of dismounting and going into a saloon or a store, Trevison had urged the black on, past the private car, which he had examined leisurely and intently. The clear morning air made objects at a distance very distinct, and as Trevison had ridden past the car, Corrigan had seen a flutter at one of the windows; had caught a fleeting glimpse of Rosalind Benhamâs face. He had seen Trevison ride away, to return for a second view of the car a few minutes later. At breakfast, Corrigan had not failed to note Miss Benhamâs lingering glances at the black horse, and again, in the bank, with her standing at the door, he had noticed her interest in the black horse and its rider. His quickly-aroused jealousy and hatred had driven him to the folly of impulsive
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