Duane
thought the quiet night would never break to dawn, that there
was no end to the melancholy, brooding plain. But at length a
grayness blotted out the stars and mantled the level of
mesquite and cactus.
Dawn caught the fugitives at a green camping-site on the bank
of a rocky little stream. Stevens fell a dead weight into
Duane’s arms, and one look at the haggard face showed Duane
that the outlaw had taken his last ride. He knew it, too. Yet
that cheerfulness prevailed.
“Buck, my feet are orful tired packin’ them heavy boots,” he
said, and seemed immensely relieved when Duane had removed
them.
This matter of the outlaw’s boots was strange, Duane thought.
He made Stevens as comfortable as possible, then attended to
his own needs. And the outlaw took up the thread of his
conversation where he had left off the night before.
“This trail splits up a ways from here, an’ every branch of it
leads to a hole where you’ll find men–a few, mebbe, like
yourself–some like me–an’ gangs of no-good hoss-thieves,
rustlers, an’ such. It’s easy livin’, Buck. I reckon, though,
that you’ll not find it easy. You’ll never mix in. You’ll be a
lone wolf. I seen that right off. Wal, if a man can stand the
loneliness, an’ if he’s quick on the draw, mebbe lone-wolfin’
it is the best. Shore I don’t know. But these fellers in here
will be suspicious of a man who goes it alone. If they get a
chance they’ll kill you.”
Stevens asked for water several times. He had forgotten or he
did not want the whisky. His voice grew perceptibly weaker.
“Be quiet,” said Duane. “Talking uses up your strength.”
“Aw, I’ll talk till–I’m done,” he replied, doggedly. “See
here, pard, you can gamble on what I’m tellin’ you. An’ it’ll
be useful. From this camp we’ll–you’ll meet men right along.
An’ none of them will be honest men. All the same, some are
better’n others. I’ve lived along the river fer twelve years.
There’s three big gangs of outlaws. King Fisher–you know him,
I reckon, fer he’s half the time livin’ among respectable
folks. King is a pretty good feller. It’ll do to tie up with
him ant his gang. Now, there’s Cheseldine, who hangs out in the
Rim Rock way up the river. He’s an outlaw chief. I never seen
him, though I stayed once right in his camp. Late years he’s
got rich an’ keeps back pretty well hid.
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