Part 26 (1/2)

Janet suddenly jerked herself free and stepped back, her head held high and proud.

”You'll never touch me again, you coward. Look behind you,” she exclaimed.

Involuntarily Sorenson turned head on shoulder. The frown still darkened his liquor-flushed face and the sneer yet twisted his lips so that his mustache was drawn back from his teeth. Thus he remained as if changed to stone.

What he saw was the man he most dreaded, with a shadow of a smile on his lips, his figure motionless, his hand ready, like an avenging Nemesis from out of the night. A perceptible shudder shook the fellow.

Weir it was--”Cold Steel,” whose counter-stroke against one man already had been swift and deadly, whom nothing checked or turned or terrified, who now for a second time was plucking away the fruit of Sorenson's efforts, who probably on this occasion would shoot him outright.

For a moment Steele Weir regarded him in silence. But at last he spoke:

”Stand away from that lady, you skunk!”

Sorenson moved hastily aside.

CHAPTER XVII

EARTH'S RETRIBUTION

Steele Weir crossed the cabin to Janet's side.

”You are unhurt?” he asked, his eyes scanning her face anxiously.

”Yes. And, oh, how glad I am you came!” she cried, low. ”I knew you would not fail me if you but learned of my plight; but it's wonderful you should be here so soon. I prayed every minute of my ride that Juanita would find and tell you.”

”I couldn't come half as fast as I wished.” His smile a.s.sured and cheered her. Then as his glance fell on her wrists, still red and creased from being bound, he exclaimed, ”What's this? Let me see.” And he caught and lifted her hands to look.

”He had you tied?” Weir's gaze moved away to Sorenson.

”Yes. Hands and feet.”

”All the way? All the long ride?”

”Yes--look out!”

Janet's words, half a gasp, half a shriek, gave warning of Sorenson's movement, though none was needed. While apparently neglecting to watch the other, Weir had kept the man sharp in the corner of his eye. The motion with which his hand darted to his hip and up again was a single lightning-like sweep; and his weapon covered his enemy before the latter's hand so much as got his revolver in grasp.

”Drop it; drop it on the floor!” the engineer ordered. The gun clattered on the rough-hewn logs. ”Now put your hands up and turn your back this way.” Sorenson obeyed, not without his eyes speaking the disappointed wrath and hatred his tongue dared not utter. ”I should have allowed you to make a full draw and then killed you,” Steele Weir went on. ”That would have been the simplest way to settle your case.

Only I don't like to kill bunglers, even when they deserve it.”

He re-sheathed his own gun and strode forward, picking up the one on the floor--a black, ugly-looking automatic. This he dropped into a coat pocket.

”Now face about, you cur,” he commanded. ”I want a good look at a man--no, I'll not call you a man--at a low-lived imitation of a man who is such a sneaking, dirty beast that all he can do is to trap and tie up a helpless girl. I don't know yet just what I shall do with you, but I know what I ought to do--I ought to choke the miserable life out of you! You're not fit to live. You soil the earth and pollute the air. But you're of the same treacherous, underhanded, scoundrelly breed as your father, same yellow flesh and blood, same crooked mind and heart, same sort of poisonous snake, and since you get it all from him I suppose it can't be helped. Nor changed, except by killing and burying you. One thing is sure, when I'm done you won't be trying any more deals like this. Bah, you slimy reptile, you belong in a cess-pool!”

Under Steele Weir's biting speech Sorenson's face went red and pale by turns. His lips twitched and worked, moving his mustache in little angry lifts, while he breathed with short spasmodic intakes.

”First, you're after Mexican girls,” Weir went on mercilessly. ”Then Mary Johnson, whom I pulled out of your vile fingers. And now it's--”

The engineer's fist arose suddenly above the other's head. ”Why, I ought to drop you dead in your tracks for so much as looking at Janet Hosmer! Why don't you fight? Why don't you give me a chance, you cowardly girl-robber? Haven't you a spark of--well, you haven't, I see. I'll just tie you up and later figure out some way to make you suffer for this night's work.” And with a gesture of disgust Weir turned away.