Part 13 (1/2)

On his way to return the paper to Dale, Sanderson paused to listen again to Owen, who whispered to him. Sanderson stiffened, looked hard at Owen, and then grinned with straight lips. In less than no time he was out of the house and confronting Dale.

He watched while the latter looked at the signature; he saw the expression of disappointment that swept over Dale's face. Then Sanderson spoke coldly:

”Right and proper, eh, Dale? Now I'll trouble you for that letter that my dad dropped about a year ago--the one you picked up. It was a letter from me, an' dad had let you read it. Fork it over, or I'll bore you an' take it from your clothes!”

CHAPTER XI

THE ULTIMATUM

Dale's face whitened; for a moment he sat rigid, staring, his eyes boring into Sanderson's. Then he reached into a pocket, drew out a dirty envelope, and threw it at Sanderson's feet.

”You're a d.a.m.ned smart boy, ain't you, Bransford?” he sneered. ”But I'm out to get you--remember that!”

”And you remember this, Dale!”

Sanderson was at the head of the horse Dale rode. His eyes were blazing with suppressed fury, brought on by the other's threat.

”There's goin' to be a new deal in the basin. From now on I'm runnin'

things--an' they're runnin' square! I ain't got any use for any law but this!” He tapped the b.u.t.t of his six-shooter significantly. ”An'

if you go to gettin' mixed up with the Double A or the Nyland ranch you'll get it--plenty!”

Dale grinned, hideously. Then he kicked his horse in the ribs and rode away.

Mary Bransford had not moved from her position on the porch. Sanderson watched Dale ride away, then he smiled at Mary and entered the house.

Mary followed him. She saw Owen standing in the sitting-room, and her face showed her surprise.

Sanderson explained. ”Owen an' me framed up on Dale,” he said. ”You saw it work.”

”You'll be careful, won't you, Will?” she said.

”Deal,” smilingly insisted Sanderson.

”Deal,” she repeated, giving him a look that made him blush. Then she went into one of the other rooms, and Sanderson and Owen went outside.

At the corner of the stable Sanderson halted and faced Owen.

”You've got some explainin' to do,” he said. ”How did you know Dale had a letter from Will Bransford to his father; an' how did you know that Dale wanted me to write my name on that brand-registering blank so he could compare it with Will Bransford's name on the letter?”

”Will Bransford told me he wrote such a letter; he showed me a letter from his dad which told how he had dropped Will's letter and how Dale had picked it up. Dale thought old Bransford hadn't seen him pick up the letter--but Bransford did see him. And last night I was snooping around over at the Bar D and I overheard Dale and Silverthorn cooking up this deal.”

Sanderson grinned with relief. ”Well,” he said, ”that name-signing deal sure had me considerable fussed up.” He told Owen of his mental torture following the discovery of the letter that had disappeared from the dresser drawer. ”We've got to run together from now on,” he told Owen. ”I'll be Bransford an' you'll be Bransford's name. Mebbe between us we'll make a whole man.”

Over at the Bar D, Dale was scowling at Silverthorn.

”He ain't Will Bransford,” Dale declared. ”He signed his name all O.K.

an' regular, just the same as it was on the letter. But just the same he ain't a Bransford. There ain't no Bransford ever had an eye in him like he's got. He's a d.a.m.ned iceberg for nerve, an' there's more fight in him than there is in a bunch of wildcats--if you get him started!”