An’ see the tow-headed
youngster. Thet’s Kid Fuller, the kid of Bland’s gang. Fuller
has hit the pace hard, an’ he won’t last the year out on the
border. He killed his sweetheart’s father, got run out of
Staceytown, took to stealin’ hosses. An’ next he’s here with
Bland. Another boy gone wrong, an’ now shore a hard nut.”
Euchre went on calling Duane’s attention to other men, just as
he happened to glance over them. Any one of them would have
been a marked man in a respectable crowd. Here each took his
place with more or less distinction, according to the record of
his past wild prowess and his present possibilities. Duane,
realizing that he was tolerated there, received in careless
friendly spirit by this terrible class of outcasts, experienced
a feeling of revulsion that amounted almost to horror. Was his
being there not an ugly dream? What had he in common with such
ruffians? Then in a flash of memory came the painful proof–he
was a criminal in sight of Texas law; he, too, was an outcast.
For the moment Duane was wrapped up in painful reflections; but
Euchre’s heavy hand, clapping with a warning hold on his arm,
brought him back to outside things.
The hum of voices, the clink of coin, the loud laughter had
ceased. There was a silence that manifestly had followed some
unusual word or action sufficient to still the room. It was
broken by a harsh curse and the scrape of a bench on the floor.
Some man had risen.
“You stacked the cards, you–!”
“Say that twice,” another voice replied, so different in its
cool, ominous tone from the other.
“I’ll say it twice,” returned the first gamester, in hot haste.
“I’ll say it three times. I’ll whistle it. Are you deaf? You
light-fingered gent! You stacked the cards!”
Silence ensued, deeper than before, pregnant with meaning. For
all that Duane saw, not an outlaw moved for a full moment. Then
suddenly the room was full of disorder as men rose and ran and
dived everywhere.
“Run or duck!” yelled Euchre, close to Duane’s ear. With that
he dashed for the door. Duane leaped after him. They ran into a
jostling mob. Heavy gun-shots and hoarse yells hurried the
crowd Duane was with pell-mell out into the darkness. There
they all halted, and several peeped in at the door.
“Who was the Kid callin’?” asked one outlaw.
“Bud Marsh,” replied another.
“I reckon them fust shots was Bud’s. Adios Kid. It was comin’
to him,” went on yet another.
“How many shots?”
“Three or four, I counted.”
“Three heavy an’ one light. Thet light one was the Kid’s .38.
Listen! There’s the Kid hollerin’ now. He ain’t cashed,
anyway.”
At this juncture most of the outlaws began to file back into
the room. Duane thought he had seen and heard enough in
Benson’s den for one night and he started slowly down the walk.
Presently Euchre caught up with him.
“Nobody hurt much, which’s shore some strange,” he said. “The
Kid–young Fuller thet I was tellin’ you about–he was drinkin’
an’ losin’. Lost his nut, too, callin’ Bud Marsh thet way.
Bud’s as straight at cards as any of ‘em. Somebody grabbed Bud,
who shot into the roof. An’ Fuller’s arm was knocked up.
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