Part 18 (1/2)
Mr. Masterson lay out of view and kept his gla.s.ses on a strip five miles away, where the trail ribboned over a swell. There, in the end, he found what he sought; he made out the Tomcat, a bobbing speck in the distance.
Mr. Masterson put aside his gla.s.ses and planted himself where he would do the most good. While concealed he still commanded the approach to the ford. To give his presence weight Mr. Masterson had his sixteen-pound buffalo gun.
”As I remember this party,” soliloquised Mr. Masterson, ”I don't reckon now he's got sense enough to surrender when he's told. And when I think of that little lady dead in Dodge I don't feel like taking many chances.
I'll hail him, and if he hesitates, the risk is his.”
Thirty minutes had come and gone since Mr. Masterson, through his gla.s.ses, followed the Tomcat down the far-off slope. Shylock, staunch as whalebone though he was, had found the clip a killer. He was not covering ground as in the beginning. There they were at last, the weary pony and the hunted man, both showing the wear and tear of pace.
Ballard ready on his hip, the Tomcat, giving a nervous over-shoulder look, brought Shylock to a walk. The broken pony came stumbling down to the ford. Mr. Masterson, with his mighty buffalo gun, aroused himself for official business.
”Drop that rifle!” said Mr. Masterson.
It was like a bolt from the blue to the spent and shaken Tomcat. He caught his breath in a startled way. Then, despair standing in the stead of courage, he tossed the Ballard into his left hand and fired, point-blank, at Mr. Masterson's face where it showed above the bank. The bullet tossed the dust a yard to the left. Mixed bloods and Indians at their best are but poor hands with a rifle, and the Tomcat was at his worst.
With the crack of the Ballard came the bellow of the Sharp's. The great bullet, which would have torn its way through the vitals of a buffalo-bull at eight hundred yards, brought the Tomcat whirling from the saddle like a stricken wild duck. What with sheer weariness and an inadvertent yank at the Spanish bits as the Tomcat went overboard, poor Shylock crossed his tired forelegs, tripped, blundered, and fell. He came down on the Tomcat; in the scramble to get to his feet Shylock fell upon the Tomcat again.
Mr. Masterson slipped another cartridge into the buffalo gun. Then he warily approached the Tomcat, muzzle to the fore, finger on the trigger.
A dying man will sometimes pull a six-shooter with the last flicker of his failing strength, and s.n.a.t.c.h a vengeance as he quits the earth.
Mr. Masterson seized the Tomcat by the shoulders and dragged him from under Shylock-still heaving and plunging to regain his feet. There was no call for a second look; the experienced Mr. Masterson could tell by the ash-colour struggling through the brown that the death-draw was on the Tomcat at the very moment.
The Tomcat, hiccoughing and bleeding, lay on the short stiff gra.s.s and rolled a hateful eye on his executioner. Mr. Masterson, thinking on the girl who died in Dodge, gave back a look as hateful. And this, in the midst of the lonesome plains, is what these two spoke to one another-these, the slayer and the slain, to show how bald is truth!
”You blank-blanked-blankety-blank! you ought to have made a better shot than that!” said the Tomcat. ”Well, you blank-blanked murderer, I did the best I could,” said Mr. Masterson.
Mr. Masterson, as he walked his horse over the hill upon which he had first beheld the coming of the Tomcat, halted and looked back. Shylock of the empty saddle nosed up to Mr. Masterson's horse in a friendly way.
Five miles to the south, on the banks of the Medicine Lodge, a raven wheeled and stooped. Away to the west a coyote yelped; another yelped an answer, and then another. Mr. Masterson shrugged his wide shoulders. The coyote by daylight makes gruesome melody.
”The ground was too hard to dig a grave,” said Mr. Masterson, as he turned his horse's head again towards Dodge, ”even if I'd had the tools.
Besides, I wasn't elected undertaker, but sheriff.”
CHAPTER IX
THE MEDICINE OF LONE WOLF
The Lone Wolf had lost his ”medicine,” and that was a most serious disaster. To lose one's ”medicine” among the Indians is equivalent to losing one's money among the Whites, and means just as bad a mess in one's social and business affairs. One's smell-feast friends of the day before go by one with averted or unseeing eye, while everything and everybody give evidence that one is beneath the notice of a self-respecting world.
Thus it was with the Lone Wolf when now his ”medicine” had left him.
Bear s.h.i.+eld, his chief, looked over him or through him without sign or word that might be construed into an admission of his existence. Fellow Cheyennes who had sat with him in the council or rode knee to knee with him in the charge no longer knew him by mark of face or sound of name.
His squaws moped over the camp-fire with bowed heads; his pappooses whimpered with the shame of what they felt but did not understand; his dogs, cowed and dispirited, crept about with craven tails clewed close between their legs; even his ponies made a disgraced band by themselves, cropping dejected gra.s.s apart, as though unfit to mingle with the reputable mustangs of mankind.
This situation was all the more a jolt to the sensibilities of the Lone Wolf, since he had been a personage of eminence and place. His voice had been high in tribal powwow, his strong hand resistless in war. He was rich in robes and ponies, in pappooses and dogs and wives. The records of the ”medicine” lodge showed him ent.i.tled to sing of the conquest of four scalps-one p.a.w.nee, two Sioux, and one the former headwear of a drunken teamster of Sun City-which four topknots were drying on his tepee pole. By these one may know how to measure the heights from which the melancholy Lone Wolf had been hurled.
The Lone Wolf had lost his ”medicine” without fault, that is fault from the standpoint of a paleface. He came down to the ford at the Beaver, when storms to the west had rendered it boiling and bank full. By reason of the boil and swirl, and the s.h.i.+fting quicksands under hoof, his pony lost its foothold and went down. In the splash and water-scramble that ensued, the Lone Wolf and his half-choked pony reached the sh.o.r.e; but his ”medicine,” torn from his neck in the struggle, was swept away.
There was no argument for a search. In the turbid toss of that ten-mile current the ”medicine” was as hopelessly lost as though it had exhaled.
And yet, while the Lone Wolf could relate this blameless story of his vanished ”medicine,” it availed him naught. There is no such word as accident where one's ”medicine” is concerned. One's separation from it, no matter by what means brought about, is neither to be honourably accounted for nor condoned. One has lost one's ”medicine”; and one is thereby and therefore destroyed. It would be a stain, as even the half-opened paleface eye may see, were it taken from one by the conquering arm of a foe. It is as deep a stain to part with it, as the Lone Wolf parted with his. Such manner of loss makes plain that, because of crimes or cowardices unknown, the justice-loving ghosts have interfered to strip a villain of this basic requisite of a warrior and an honest man. Only in this way can the ghosts of good Cheyennes gone before, having the honour of their tribe in dearest mind, furnish word to their children of him in their midst, so flagrantly vile that a least a.s.sociation with him provides disgrace, while bordering narrowly on actual sin itself.